Tag: Bello

  • Kogi: INEC‘s indictment, Bello and second term delusion

    Kogi: INEC‘s indictment, Bello and second term delusion

    The drums will tomorrow be rolled out in Kogi State to celebrate Governor Yahaya Bello’s second year anniversary in the saddle. But Ayo Oluwadare, a lawyer, insists Bello rode to the office on the back of a conspiratorial scheme of the All Progressives Congress (APC) leadership, aided and abetted by ‘suspicious judiciary’. In this article, the lawyer lists the odds against the governor’s second term bid.

    By tomorrow, Alhaji Yahaya Bello will be celebrating his second anniversary as governor of Kogi State. His emergence as governor of the Confluence State was not without events.

    On November 21, 2015, the governorship election held throughout Kogi State. The late Prince Abubakar Audu contested the election on the platform of All Progressives Congress (APC), with House of Representatives member James Abiodun Faleke as his running mate. At the end of the polls, the joint ticket of Audu/Faleke scored majority of 240,867 lawful votes.

    Significantly, the results in all the 21 local government areas of the state were collated and announced. Curiously, however, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) deliberately delayed the announcement of the final result for a reason that later became obvious: INEC got wind that the winner of the election, the late Prince Audu, had died. Thus, the stage was set for all kinds of political manipulations and manoeuvres.

    Ultimately, the process was hijacked by political hawkers and jobbers and the table was unjustly turned against the running mate of the late Prince Audu, who was on ground to continue the election. The process was skewed eventually in favour of Alhaji Yahaya Bello, who had earlier lost out in the primaries of the parties.

    Bello was made to substitute the late Audu in a questionable supplementary election that was designed to hoodwink the people of Kogi in a well-orchestrated contrivance. At the end of the day, Bello was returned governor upon winning just 6,885 votes! Consequently, it turned out that a man the people of Kogi did not vote for was installed as governor of the state.

    The concern of this piece is to x-ray the recent indictment of Governor Bello by INEC for double registration as a voter. It is no longer news that INEC recently came up heavily against the governor, having proved against him the allegation of illegal double registration as a voter. INEC confirmed that Bello registered twice for the Permanent Voter Card (PVC).

    According to the electoral umpire, the governor illegally registered as a voter in Abuja and Kogi State. The commission bravely provided details of Bello’s double registration. It stated that his first registration was on January 30, 2011 in Wuse Zone 4, Abuja. It also found out that Bello registered as a voter for the second time on Tuesday, May 23, 2017 in the Government House, Lokoja, outside INEC’s designated centres, which, according to the commission, is another act of illegality.

    Consequent upon the foregoing, the commission approved the summary dismissal of two of its staff for acts of gross misconduct and compulsorily retired an electoral officer. In respect of Governor Bello, INEC stated that it would have prosecuted him but for the fact that he is currently covered by the immunity clause under Section 308 of the Constitution.

    Governor Bello responded to the allegation. In a mendacious manner, characteristic of him, he stated that he was not in the country as at the alleged date of the second registration. The governor’s political aides were his undoing. The governor forgot that when he registered the second time at the Government House in Lokoja, his political aides counted it for him as a big achievement. Gleefully, they went viral, posting the pictures of his registration, which turned out to be his second one, into the social media, with the caption: our digital governor now registered in Kogi. In their ignorance, little did they know that they were advertising the governor’s act of criminality.

    The act of the governor, deliberately flouting the electoral law, is simply scandalous. In civilised climes, it is capable of igniting a process of impeachment against him, if he failed to resign honourably. Regrettably, this is a land where honour means nothing to a man, particularly in Kogi State, where anything goes and the political class is reputed for their complacency.

     

    What the law says

     

    The process of registering as a voter is guided by the provisions of Electoral Act 2010 (as amended).  Section 12 (1) (a) – (e) of the Act stipulates the qualifications for registration thus:

    12 (1): A person shall be qualified to be registered as a voter if such a person

    (a)           is a citizen of Nigeria;

    (b) has attained the age of 18 years;

    (c)  is ordinarily resident, works in, originates from the local government  area, council or ward;

    (d) presents himself to the registration officers of the commission for registration as a voter;

    (e) is not subject to any legal incapacity to vote under any law, rule or regulation in force.

    Presumably, it was upon meeting the above qualifications that Bello was registered as a voter in Wuze Zone 4 in 2011.

    The Electoral Act envisages the possibility of a voter relocating from his place of primary registration and accordingly, provides for transfer of the PVC to the new constituency of his relocation. Governor Bello would simply have taken advantage of the provisions of the law by applying to transfer his PVC to Kogi State from Abuja. Section 13(1) of the Electoral Act is explicit on this as it provides:  that “a person who before the election is resident in a constituency other than the one in which he was registered may apply to the Electoral Commissioner of the state where he is currently resident for his name to be registered on the transferred voters list for the constituency.

    Curiously, perhaps due to ignorance, Bello did not follow this simple procedure but chose to follow the path of illegality and criminality.

     

    Double registration as an offence

     

    Double registration is a criminal offence under the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended). Section 12 (2) and (3) criminalise the act:

    (2) A person shall not register in more than one registration centre or register more than once in the same.

    (3) Any person who contravenes the provisions of subsection (2) of this section commits an offence and is liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding       N100, 000 or imprisonment for a term not exceeding one year or both.

    From the above provisions, the offence of double registration occurs where a person registers twice, either at same registration centre, or at different registration points. The punishment is specifically spelt out in sub-section (3). INEC has also stated that the Government House, Lokoja, where the governor registered, is not a place designated for registration, which act, according to the commission, constitutes another offence under the Electoral Act. It follows that the governor now has two electoral offences hanging on his neck.

     

    Can Bello now transfer his voter card?

     

    One pertinent issue that arises here is, can Governor Bello now transfer his voter’s card to Kogi State to qualify him for the next election? Going by the provisions of the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended), he cannot. He has bungled the process. He has shot himself in the foot. He has disqualified himself.

    Section 13 of the Electoral Act that provides for transfer of a voter card to a constituency in a new location pre-supposes that such a voter has not registered in the new place of residency at all. Now, having illegally registered in Kogi State, Bello cannot seek to transfer his card to the same state as long as the criminal allegations against him hang on his neck. He who comes to equity must come with clean hands. In any event, Section 13(3) places a duty on the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) to whom an application for transfer is made, to investigate the registration status of the applicant.

    The governor should, therefore, stop amusing himself of the possibility of a second term in Kogi State. He could seek a further term in the constituency where he is a registered voter. He surely does not belong to the electoral community of Kogi State. He remains an unregistered voter in Kogi. He can neither vote nor be voted for. It is no longer going to be a solitary fight of Faleke but a collective fight of all well-meaning Kogites and lovers of democracy who will not allow the altar of democracy to be desecrated again in the state!

    The governor should also not imagine that the political and judicial abracadabra that catapulted and transfigured him to Lugard House, Lokoja, on a platter of gold at the expense of the efforts of others will work in 2020. Kogites are all the wiser now. And, it is doubtful if the Judiciary that was battered on his own account would do the biddings of mentors again.

    It would be recalled that the Supreme Court delivered reasons for its mysterious judgment on September 30, 2016, and the home of Justice Sylvester Ngwuta, who curiously chaired all the panels that heard all the cases relating to the governorship seat of Kogi State, was raided seven days later by the Department of State Services (DSS). He is currently being tried at the Federal High Court.

     

    Commendation for INEC

     

    INEC must be commended for its courage and forthrightness in handling the governor’s double registration saga. The commission could easily have swept the matter under the carpet, given the status and position of the governor. After all, we live in a society where, unfortunately, the law is applied with two weights and measures – one for the rich and powerful individuals and another for the poor.

    It is, however, hoped that INEC will keep its words by pursuing the case to its logical conclusions at the expiration of the governor’s tenure so that the full weight of the law can be applied. Governor Bello should not be spared. Time does not run against a crime.

     

    How judiciary inflicted injustice on Kogites

     

    The electoral status of Yahaya Bello was contested through all the rungs of the judiciary; from the Federal High Court through the Election Petition Tribunal, and the Court of Appeal, to the Supreme Court. The fact that Bello registered as a voter in Abuja and not in Kogi State and, therefore, not qualified to vote or be voted for in the state was duly established before the courts. Disappointingly, the courts prevaricated and gave a dubious, questionable and unjust stamp of authority to legitimise an obvious illegitimacy.

    At the end of it all, the will of the people of Kogi State was subverted by judicial process. This is the greatest injustice that can be inflicted on a people.

    One of the grounds upon which his ‘election’ was challenged was that at the time of that supplementary election that transmuted him to power, Bello was not qualified to contest the election because he was not a registered voter in Kogi State. The voters’ register of his Agassa Okene Ward was tendered. His name was not found there. His sole witness, one Edward Onoja, indeed, confirmed, under cross-examination, that his application to transfer his voter card to Kogi State had not been approved. It was further established, as INEC now confirmed, that he registered at Wuse Zone 4, Abuja. Nigerian judiciary closed it eyes against this fundamental point.

    The Supreme Court, in the past had tangentially pronounced upon a situation of this nature in Yusuf vs. Obasanjo (2005) 18 NWLR (Pt. 956) 96 at 166 paras: D-E, holding that an unregistered voter cannot be validly nominated and can neither vote nor be voted for. The Supreme Court said: “I do not think the eleventh petitioner’s witness was a witness of truth. He claimed to be the gubernatorial candidate of the second petitioner for Imo State whereas he was not registered in his village in Imo State where he alleged to have voted after evading military road block by passing through footpath to exercise his franchise.

    He testified to be registered at Ogudu GRA in Lagos. In that circumstance, could he have been nominated as a governorship candidate for Imo State when it was basic that to be validly nominated, one must be a registered elector within the constituency? I do not think so. Could he have been able to vote in his village, as he claimed, when he was not on the voters’ register there? Certainly not! And if he did, he did so unlawfully or dishonestly”.

    Faleke’s case, wherein the issue of non-registration of Bello as a voter in Kogi State was raised and his electoral status challenged, provided the Supreme Court the rare opportunity of advancing the law and tenets of democracy by consolidating on its earlier pronouncement in Yusuf v. Obasanjo (supra). Regrettably, the opportunity was sacrificed on the altar of political expediency, reading of body language, and judicial timidity and timorousness. The Election Tribunal made a finding of fact that Bello registered in Abuja but drew no conclusion therefrom. The Court of Appeal told an outright lie by holding that Bello voted, a fact which the trial tribunal never found and which was never proved. The Supreme Court unjustly avoided the point like a plague, making no pronouncement on it. It behaved as if the point was never made.

    All these happened in order to reach a pre-determined end and favour a particular person and party. The effect of that singular injustice is what we have today in Kogi State.

    Bello, as governor of Kogi State is a product of a conspiratorial scheme at the top echelon of the leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC), aided and abetted by a timid and corrupt judiciary.

    The aftermath of this is the imposition of an incompetent and visionless man who finds himself wearing over-sized shoes of governance. He finds himself doing a job he least prepared for.

    Consequently, what we see today in Kogi, is a spectacle of pains, distress, agony, misery, torture, suicides and despair being inflicted on the people, who should have been enjoying dividends of democracy.

    Impunity, terror and mendacity have been instituted as guiding principles of governance in Kogi State. Never in the history of the state have Kogites been subjected to hardship and humiliation of the magnitude they are currently experiencing. The cries, anguish, complaints and murmurings in the land are unprecedented. The full story of how Governor Bello succeeded in pauperising and terrorising the people of Kogi State, making destitute of them, is being chronicled. In the fullness of time, it will be told.

  • Bello swears in 14 new commissioners

    Bello swears in 14 new commissioners

    Gov. Sani Bello of Niger on Wednesday sworn in 14 new commissioners, warning them against all forms of corrupt practices.

    Speaking at the occasion in Minna, Bello also urged them to work hard to uphold the confidence reposed on them.

    “It will interest you to know that we have put in place a mechanism to monitor, evaluate and assess your performance.

    “I congratulate you and urge you to take this call to service as a golden privilege to contribute your quota towards the development of our dear state.

    “I have no doubt that your appointment will further boost our resolve to transform the state to one of the most socio-economically developed in Nigeria,” he said.

    The governor urged them to be proactive, exhibit high sense of patriotism and work hard to enable his administration to consolidate on its achievements in office.

    He said the state government would not tolerate laxity and disrespect to established rules and regulations.

    Bello had in November last year submitted names of 18 nominees to the state House of Assembly for confirmation as commissioners following the dissolution of the cabinet in October, 2017.

    The commissioners include Alhaji Idris Jibrin, Alhaji Zakari Bawa, Alhaji Ibrahim Panti, Alhaji Zakari Abubakar, Hajiya Rahamtu Yaradu and Alhaji Mohammed Mundi.

    Others are Dr Mustapha Jibrin, Alhaji Mamman Musa, Hajiya Amina Musa, Alhaji Ibrahim Shiroro, Alhaji Ibrahim Balarabe, Hajiya Fatima Madugu, Alhaji Haliru Jikantoro and Mr Nasara Dan-Malam.

  • Faleke berates Bello for donating cars, cash to masqueraders

    Faleke berates Bello for donating cars, cash to masqueraders

    House of Representatives member, James Faleke, has described Governor Yahaya Bello’s gift of six cars and N2 million to masqueradesr in Okene as the “height of absurdity”.

    Faleke said it was absurd that Bello could buy cars for masqueraders when he has neither paid salaries nor cleared outstanding pensions.

    His words: “I honestly don’t know what is happening in our state. We thought the governor would heed calls to settle outstanding salaries and pensions last December, as he promised, after receiving about N12 billion from the Paris Club refund, only for him to pay 40 per cent of two months.

    “So where did the rest of the money go? Next we heard was the news of the six cars and N2 million cash he gave masqueraders in Okene, through their minders.

    “How else can one be so insensitive to the welfare, yearnings and aspirations of his people?”

    Faleke berated the government for relasing a fresh list of “cleared staff” after saying there were no outstanding lists.

    “What this means is that those workers, whose names were just released, had been without pay since the screeing started two years ago. So who is fooling who?”

    The lawmaker bemoaned a situation where, instead of providing succour for the people, what obtains is intimidation of hapless and harmless people.

    He said: “An example is the recent attack on some youths who were distributing gifts to APC members. They were attacked by the security men of administrator of Ijumu Local Government, Taoffek Isah. As an administrator, the government provided him soldiers with which he harasses perceived political opponents.

    “Of course, the newsstands were agog few days ago with the news of how “unidentified” thugs hijacked the first batch of rice consignments donated by some Senators to alleviate the hunger ravaging workers’ homes. That is the reality of our dear state at the moment.”

    Faleke called on Governor Bello to “turn a new leaf this year by re-ordering his government’s priorities away from childish, wasteful, unproductive extravaganza to meaningful statecraft aimed at ameliorating the unacceptable level of pains being inflicted on the people.

     

  • Shippers’ Council  to rake in N17bn annually from cargo tracking, says Bello

    Shippers’ Council  to rake in N17bn annually from cargo tracking, says Bello

    The Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Shippers Council (NSC), Mr. Hassan Bello, yesterday said the Federal Government is capable of realizing more than N17bn per annum from the implementation of the International Cargo Tracking Note (ICTN).

    He also said the council can stop illegal arms importation into Nigeria.

    Bello, who made the disclosures in a chat with our correspondent, said the International Cargo Tracking Note (ICTN), a global initiative to monitor and verify cargo on transit from port of origin to the port destination.

    He said: “With the ICTN, cargoes including arms and ammunition being illegally imported into Nigeria can be tracked from the port of loading to the port of discharge.

    “With the new technology, cargoes in transit can be tracked from port of loading to port of destination in terms of risk profiling of vessels, crew members, port of call, midstream operations and cargo characteristics.”

    “The ICTN will also check fraudulent declarations by importers and even ship owners, which will shore up revenue collection by the Nigerian Customs Service (NCS).

    Responding to a question, he  said the Federal Government will “realize more than N17bn per annum from the implementation of the International Cargo Tracking Note (ICTN).

    He added: “Based on the 2014 NPA operational cargo throughput(statistics), the sum of N17, 238,054, 156.84($87,060,879.58) is estimated to be ICTN scheme proceeds to be generated at the current rate of the scheme’s applicable token administrative fee for different cargo types.

    “The Cargo Tracking Note will bring to an end the increasing incidence of under declaration of cargoes and concealments which has been denying the Federal Government of huge revenues.

    “We are already fine-tuning the system to ensure that government benefits maximally from the initiative.

    “We want to give Nigerians a perfect platform, a system that is robust and conforms to world best practices.

    “Once it is fine-tuned and kick off and closely monitor compliance to ensure that Nigeria does not lose kobo as a result of under declaration.”

    Bello said his Council was worried about the security situation and expressed the hope that the ICTN was one important project that would make the nation more secure and help accelerate cargo clearance.

    “The ICTN was first introduced in Nigeria in 2009 under the management of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA).

    “In 2013, the Federal Government through the Nigerian Shippers Council reintroduced it to curb the activities of importers and ship owners to swindle the FG of much needed revenue from the ports through under declaration of tonnages.”

  • Governor Bello, let common-sense prevail

    Governor Bello, let common-sense prevail

    SIR; These past days, the internet and social media have been awash with news and pictures of the newly built mansion of Governor Yahaya Bello of Kogi State in his home town of Okene. Some news platforms have alleged that the expensive house is worth billions of naira, while others have described it as an architectural masterpiece of the century.

    The question I asked some of the governor’s critics is: when and how has it become a sin for a sitting governor to build a house? If a similar house was built by a performing governor, would it have attracted the kind of reaction, condemnation and bashing that the palatial mansion has received so far?

    It has since dawned on me that it isn’t really about the house, which some persons have described as a heaven on earth, but the timing, the funfair, extravagant ceremony and the unnecessary flaunting of the magnificent edifice by the governor’s praise singers and clueless appointees who go about posting and celebrating the mansion as if it is a sort of a dividend of democracy and a gift to the people of Kogi State.

    Common-sense demands that since the governor is doing little or nothing to ameliorate the sufferings of the masses of Kogi State, he would stop doing things that will further increase their pain and frustrations. Erecting a gigantic multi-million naira mansion and rubbing it on the faces of the hungry masses is tantamount to dancing on the graves of those who have lost their lives to accidents while travelling to participate in the more than one year screening exercise that the administration embarked upon with no tangible result to show for it. It insults the patience and sensibilities of the workers who have endured hunger and humiliation as a result of the hardship imposed on them by the Yahaya Bello administration.

    The families of those who have committed suicide as a result of the economic hardship in the state wouldn’t smile at the mansion whenever they walk past it. Aside the fact that many of the governor’s appointees have allegedly become so rich that they are also building mansions of their own in choice areas across the state and beyond. The only thing they seem to be good at is haul insults at constructive critics, using gutter and garage languages. It is said that a sensible leader selects the best of the best and empower them to deliver on set goals and objectives.

    Our dear governor, you were not wrong to have built a house of your own in your home town, but the timing was wrong and so was the funfair and publicity it attracted. It makes no iota of common-sense that while President Muhammadu Buhari was away in Kano State commissioning state-of-the-art hospitals, roads and factories that has the capacity to employ more than 5000 unemployed, you were commissioning your mansion amidst hungry and poor Kogites.

     

    • Hussain Obaro,

    Lokoja, Kogi State.

  • Wife stabs son of ex-PDP chair Bello to death over text messages

    Wife stabs son of ex-PDP chair Bello to death over text messages

    The police are probing the stabbing to death of Bilyamin Muhammed Bello by his wife, Maryam, in Abuja.

    Bilyamin is a son of a former National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and one-time minister, Dr. Haliru Bello.

    His wife, who is the suspect, is a daughter of former Aso Savings boss Hajia Maimuna Aliyu.

    Hajia Aliyu was recently nominated into the board of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC).

    The couple before the weekend tragic incident had a one-year old daughter.

    “The FCT Police Command has commenced investigation into the matter.

    “The case has been transferred to the Homicide Section for discreet investigation,” spokesman Anjuguri Manzah stated in a text message on Sunday.

    The suspect is being detained by the police while the deceased was buried yesterday after the Janazar prayer at the Central Mosque in Abuja.

    Maryam was taken to her residence by homicide detectives for a search, fingerprints and forensic investigation.

    She was saved from being mobbed by angry siblings and relatives of the deceased husband.

    Clinging to her seven-month old baby girl, Maryam, who looked remorseful, burst into tears after being led into the flat where she allegedly killed her husband.

    According to sources, the jealous wife was uncomfortable with the text messages her late husband had been receiving from some women.

    It was gathered that a particular message from a banker made the wife to attack her husband.

    The source added: “They were at home when the wife became berserk over some text messages, including one allegedly suspected to be from a female banker.

    “After engaging in a shouting match, the wife was embroiled in fighting with her husband before heading to the kitchen where she picked a knife to stab Bilyamin three times, including on his private parts.

    “Drenched with blood, Bilyamin fought hard by crawling out of the couple’s flat to ask for help from neighbours.

    “Upon hearing his distress call, neighbours, who had heard the exchange of words and banging of doors at the flat, ferried Bilyamin to a hospital.

    “Unfortunately, the husband died in the hospital. The incident was reported to the police and Maryam was arrested by homicide detectives.”

    Maryam is a graduate with two degrees from British university.

    In a Whatsapp message on Sunday afternoon, her mother Hajia Aliyu expressed shock and feeling of loss over the sad development.

    “It is with a heavy heart but with total submission to the will of Allah that I announce the death of my son in-law, Bilyamin Bello Haliru, which sad event took place in the early hours of today.

    “Prayers will be held at the Central Mosque…

    “May Allah grant his soul Aljannah Firdaus as his permanent place of abode,” the grieving mother in-law stated.

    There had been whispers of a rocky relationship in a marriage meant to bring two prominent families together but allegations of infidelity and plans to marry another wife might have caused the insecurity in Bilyamin’s Maitama home.

    The patriarch of the family, Bello, is said to be away in the United States for medical attention.

    “We were all sad, it was just too heavy for us to break the news to our father,” a family source added.

  • Bello launches Kogi GIS

    Bello launches Kogi GIS

    Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello has inaugurated the Kogi State Geographic Information Systems (KOGIS). This, he said, would ensure an efficient land management system in processing, analysing, storing and retrieving land data electronically.

    Bello said the launch would move the state away from the inefficient era of analogue land documentation, to increase the channels of service delivery to the public.

    Under the KOGIS, property owners would recertify their Certificates of Occupancies (CofO), while holders of Right of Occupancies (ROO) are to obtain the secured CofO.

    Commissioner for Works Abdulmumuni Sadiq  noted that the new system will end land racketeering, double allocation, missing land files, haphazard land allocations, document mutilation, outright fraud and land encroachment, among others.

    “We cannot continue to do the same thing the same way and expect a different result. And so on assumption of office, I put on the table the new direction policy of this administration, and together, we resolved to deliver a seamless Land Administration,” he said.

     

  • UNICEF, Niger sign N600m MoU for 2017 work plan

    UNICEF, Niger sign N600m MoU for 2017 work plan

    The United Nations Children’s Education Fund ( UNICEF ) has signed N600 million Memorandum of Understanding with Niger Government for the 2017 annual work plan.

    Malam Idris Baba, Officer in Charge, UNICEF Kaduna Field Office, dropped the hint on Thursday in Minna.

    He said that it was the last plan of the four-year country programme that UNICEF was running with Niger government and was designed to run from 2014 to 2017.

    Baba said that the four-year plan was part of UNICEF commitment to give intervention and assistance to Niger state government in four key areas.

    He said the areas include; maternal and new born child component, communication for development, basic education and media relations.

    He disclosed that immediately after the 2017 plan, UNICEF will develop a five-year plan with Niger government that would run from 2018 to 2022 to cover another five-year period.

    “We signed one MoU in 2014; one in 2015, one in 2016 and we are signing the last bit of the four-year’s plan in 2017.

    “The plan is meant to guide us to commit ourselves in ensuring that we deliver results to children and women in Niger state.

    “We also use the plan to mark commitment because we share the same goals and vision for children and women of Niger state and to ensure that some amount of money is meant for bettering the lives of women and children in the state,’’ he said.

    Baba, however, commended the state government for its continuous support and for providing enabling environment for UNICEF activities in the state.

    Responding, Bello, commended UNICEF intervention programme in the state, adding that such intervention had impacted positively on the lives of women and children.

    He urged UNICEF to increase its areas of intervention to the development of infrastructures, especially in primary and secondary schools in the state.

    According to him, there was deficit of infrastructure in the educational sector that needed urgent attention from state government and our development partners.

    “There is massive deficit of infrastructure in our public schools. We have spent a lot of money in renovating nine schools, and as government we cannot do it all alone.

    “As state, we will continue to contribute our quota and increase our budget, especially in education sector so as to bridge the gap,’’ he said.

    Bello advised UNICEF to make its area of intervention and activities known in the state by using the media to publicise its activities for people to key in.

    Bello signed the MoU on behalf of the state government, while Baba signed on behalf of UNICEF.

    NAN

  • Bello orders arrest of quack health workers

    Bello orders arrest of quack health workers

    •Signs N1.2b MoU on health

    Niger State Governor Abubakar Sani-Bello has ordered Commissioner of Health, Dr. Mustapha Jibril, to raise a task force for the arrest and detention of illegal health workers across the state.

    He said these illegal health workers, who set up practices in the rural areas due to the unavailability of Primary healthcare centres, put people’s lives by increasing mortality rate.

    The governor spoke after signing a N1.5 billion Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, to strengthen the Primary Healthcare System and recruit 2,500 health workers across the state.

    He noted that the rise of quack clinics in the rural areas have risen due to the government’s inability to provide functional healthcare in these areas.

    He said: “Most of the health workers in the rural areas are quacks and this is because of our failure to provide a functional healthcare system. In the process, there are lots of casualties because a lot of them are not trained. I believe paying attention to primary healthcare is the way forward.”

    Sani-Bello said with the recruitment of 2,500 qualified health workers, there would be eligible personnel to handle the healthcare system, while illegal ones would be flushed out.

    He thanked the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for partnering with the government to strengthen and revive its health sector.

  • ‘Bello’s critics are pursuing personal interests’

    ‘Bello’s critics are pursuing personal interests’

    Alhaji Mohammed Bologi, a former Senior Legislative Assistant at the National Assembly and politician, is an ardent supporter of Governor Bello Yahaya of Kogi State. In this interview with JAMES AZANIA, he speaks on the crisis rocking the Kogi State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC), the industrial crisis in the state, the achievements of the administration and other partisan issues. 

    You were an ardent supporter of the late Prince Abubakar Audu, who was on the verge of winning the November 21, 2015 Kogi State governorship election, but died and Governor Bello inherited the APC ticket. Bello’s emergence as governor under those circumstances is believed to be the genesis of the political crisis in the state, because the Audu-Faleke group says they were short-changed. Can you throw more light on the matter?

    To begin with, I want to say there is nothing acrimonious about how Governor Yahaya Bello emerged. Our late leader, Prince Abubakar Audu, contested and almost won the election before he unfortunately died. It became another constitutional lacuna, because the framers of the constitution did not envisage this kind of emergency and so, did not provide for it under our laws as at the relevant time. Therefore, providence favoured our dynamic and courageous governor who came second to late Prince Audu. Expert legal opinion was sought to guide the process and this led to Bello continuing the race. And as you know, this matter progressed even up to the Supreme Court and the highest court in the land okayed the party’s decision in transferring the votes to Bello, who came second in the primary. So, there was no acrimonious circumstance.

    It was a straight forward matter as the highest jurisprudence has shown. It is quite unfortunate that it appears to you that I have distanced myself from what you call the Audu-Faleke group and I equally don’t understand what you mean by ‘being short changed’. I have a good rapport with everybody in the party. The primary aim of going into politics is to bring services and dividends of democracy to the people; I mean the grassroots. If the governor is giving these to the people and certain people are saying they are short-changed, that means they have interests other than the people.

    We should be able to think outside the box and play politics for the benefit of the people. Take myself for example, I hail from Lokoja Local Government, from Ward C, the traditional area, but presently the P.A to Hon. Ned Nwoko, and this is a position, I have held for over 17 years now. My boss retained my services up to date, due to my capacity to think outside the box. Yet, I have remained connected to the grassroots. And, despite my being of the same parents with the one-time chairman of Lokoja Local Government and two-term commissioner under Capt. Idris Wada’s government —- while my brother believes in the PDP platform, I do not share the same ideologies. We see things from different perspectives. They belong to the old block of politicians, while I am in the same age bracket as the hardworking Governor Yahaya Bello. We can play politics devoid of rancour, bitterness or other ulterior motives.

    What are the chances of resolving the lingering crisis within the ruling APC, considering that the 2019 general elections is getting closer by the day?

    It’s unfortunate that the Kogi APC is in such a mess. But, we thank Allah that in less than two years, it has done considerably well, compared to what the previous government/party did during the long period it was in power. I can assure you that what you call crises will be resolved in no time, because the governor does not want the crises to linger. He has said it over and over again that his doors are open. The only problem is the governor’s insistence that everybody in the present government must eschew personal interests for the collective interest of the people.

    In your opinion, what are the achievements of the governor in his close to two years in power?

    They are too numerous to mention, but I must confess that this is a serious question. I have addressed this matter when I mentioned the achievements on security, the infrastructural development across the state, building of classrooms, employment of qualified teachers and a series of empowerment programmes for youth and the indigent. There are also reforms in the civil service and continuous employment within the service of capable hands, enhanced revenue generation and decimation of godfatherism, equality, fairness and justice… Salaries and entitlements are also being paid as cleared. I personally have seen what Governor Bello is doing to transform the state. Look at the security architecture, for instance. The governor is a pacesetter in the whole country. This much was confirmed by no less a person than the Inspector General of Police, after he visited and undertook a study of the security situation in Kogi State. In the past, so much insecurity pervaded the state capital and its environs. Kidnappers, armed robbers who were having a field day have since relocated, due to the commitment of the administration in the fight against criminality in all ramifications. The same can be said about thuggery and other vices. The state is wearing a new look, with streetlights everywhere and constant raiding of dark spots by security agents. This was made possible because of the massive purchase of security vehicles and equipment by the administration.

    What is your take on allegations by some of the Kogi stakeholders, including Senator Dino Melaye and Hon. James Faleke, to the effect that the administration has nothing to show for the billions of naira it has so far received from the Federal Government, particularly the over N50 billion received as bailout fund and the Paris Club Loan Refund?

    The government runs a transparent administration with records in the open. Nothing is shrouded in secrecy. The administration has explained all the receipts of funds either from Paris Club, bail out or even allocations. These monies have been judiciously applied for their intended purposes. The website of the government is there for everyone whose seeks clarifications to visit.