Tag: BUHARI

  • Buhari initiated critical reforms, left enduring legacies – Lawan

    Buhari initiated critical reforms, left enduring legacies – Lawan

    Former president of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan, on Saturday,  December 16, said ex-president Muhammadu Buhari, initiated critical reforms and impactful economic policies which benefitted Nigeria during his eight-year administration from 2015 to 2023.

    The former Senate president made this known in a statement to celebrate Buhari on his 81st birthday anniversary.

    Lawan described the former president as a remarkable leader who dedicated his life to the service of the country and left enduring legacies.

    He said: “I am thrilled to celebrate the birthday of our dear leader, His Excellency, former President Muhammadu Buhari. As he marks another year, we reflect on the remarkable accomplishments and enduring legacy of a leader who has dedicated his life to the service of Nigeria and its people.

    Read Also: Buhari wasn’t in charge of his govt, says Ndume

    “During his time in office, he implemented a number of critical reforms and initiatives that have had a lasting impact on the country. His administration was committed to tackling corruption, improving the economy, and enhancing security for all Nigerians.

    “The former president’s dedication to the nation and his unwavering commitment to improving the lives of all Nigerians are a testament to his leadership and vision. His legacy will continue to inspire future generations and serve as a reminder of the positive impact that can be achieved through strong and principled leadership.

    “As we celebrate the occasion of his 81st birthday anniversary, I extend my warmest wishes to former President Muhammadu Buhari and express our gratitude for his service to Nigeria. I wish him good health, happiness, and continued success in all his future endeavors.”

  • Buhari’s integrity, commitment to nation building unparallel – APC

    Buhari’s integrity, commitment to nation building unparallel – APC

    The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) has eulogised former President Muhammadu Buhari’s unparalleled integrity, incorruptibility and uncanny dedication to nation-building.

    This commendation was contained in a goodwill message by the party to mark the 81st birthday anniversary of the immediate past president.

    The statement signed by the party’s national publicity secretary, Felix Morka read: “The All Progressives Congress (APC) heartily felicitates with former President Muhammadu Buhari on the auspicious occasion of his 81st birthday anniversary. 

    “Legendary for his unparalleled integrity, incorruptibility and uncanny dedication to nation-building, we celebrate a visionary leader, elder statesman, patriot and democrat.

    Read Also: Danjuma served Army with pride, valour, says Buhari

    “Your Excellency’s progressive proclivity and commitment to rescuing our dear nation from the precipice factored in the historic merger that birthed our great Party. With you as the pioneer presidential candidate in 2015, the Party ousted the incumbent and coasted home to a resounding victory. 

    “As two-term President, your administration did a commendable job of cleaning the Augean stable and laying an enduring foundation for the development and greatness of our dear country. We are confident that the Renewed Hope agenda of the current APC-led administration will consolidate the legacies of your administration. 

    “On behalf of the National Chairman, Dr Abdullahi Umar Ganduje (CON), the National Working Committee (NWC) and all stakeholders of our great Party, we pray for long life and excellent health for our dear former President, Muhammadu Buhari, as he continues to contribute to the development of our country and growth of our great party.”

  • Tinubu celebrates ‘peerless’ Buhari at 81

    Tinubu celebrates ‘peerless’ Buhari at 81

    President Bola Tinubu has celebrated his friend and ally, former President Muhammadu Buhari, as he clocks 81 years of age,  describing him as an icon of truth, justice, and patriotism.

    In a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Ajuri Ngelale, President Tinubu extols the peerless leadership credentials and feats of the former president, recalling his meritorious service to the nation at various times as Head of State and as President.

    Reeling out former President Buhari’s unparalleled record of infrastructural provision, comprising several new international airports, multiple standard-gauge railway lines, new seaport development, dozens of new dams, power stations, oil and gas infrastructure, expressways and mega-bridges, in addition to establishing Nigeria’s first-ever national social investment and protection programme, amongst many other feats, President Tinubu fondly recalled the former President’s aggressive push to modernize Nigeria’s defence architecture while working towards import substitution with the empowerment of millions of Nigerian farmers in his progressive initiative to enhance food security in the country.

    The president described former President Buhari as the finest paradigm of sacrifice, devotion, patriotism, and fidelity to the national cause.

    Read Also: Tinubu, govs, Ohanaeze, others mourn Ezeife

    “President Buhari is from the rarest phylum of virtuous servant-leaders. He has devoted his life to the service of the nation, even earning himself detention for his patriotism and service to our Fatherland. The emergence of leaders like my good friend, Buhari, happens only by divine orchestration. He is a man of absolute and undiluted integrity. His yea is yea, and his nay is nay,” the President says.

    He expressed appreciation to his predecessor for his friendship and vote of confidence shown through his stalwart support for the administration. 

    While wishing the elder statesman longevity and strength, President Tinubu assured the former President that the hope of a prosperous, peaceful, and progressive Nigeria, which he has always worked for, will not be dashed.

  • Buhari wasn’t in charge of his govt, says Ndume

    Buhari wasn’t in charge of his govt, says Ndume

    The lawmaker representing Borno South, Senator Ali Ndume, says ex-President Muhammadu Buhari was not in charge during his reign as he didn’t endeavor to supervise the assignments that he gave.

    Ndume who spoke yesterday on Channels Television’s Politics Today, said that some kleptocrats were in the immediate past administration.

     “The President here is in charge. He takes charge, unlike our former President. That President will just give you an assignment, he will not look over you,” Ndume, who is also the Senate Chief Whip, and member of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), said.

    “That is where the problem is and he (Buhari) knows that. That was the mistake President Buhari made. He ended up confessing these days that he had more kleptocrats in his government than people that had more interest at heart.”

    Read Also: Obaseki congratulates Shaibu on 54th birthday

    Ndume went on to defend the rendition of President Bola Tinubu’s campaign tune at the hallowed chamber of the National Assembly during the presentation of the 2024 budget.

    During President Tinubu’s presentation of the appropriation bill earlier in the week, the lawmakers stood up as a symbol of respect, but the band was heard playing Tinubu’s campaign song from when he was a presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    While the lawmakers have come under criticism, Ndume who represents Borno South, however, feels there is nothing wrong with the action.

    He argued that under the era of former President Muhammadu Buhari, the ‘sai baba’ mantra was also recited by the lawmakers.

    “It is not a crime. Honestly, it is not a big deal. In this country, we pick on trivial things. When a President walks in, there are times that some members take advantage of that situation to even challenge the President directly.

  • NTA interview: Buhari says little unpretentiously

    NTA interview: Buhari says little unpretentiously

    It was ex-president Muhammadu Buhari’s first major interview since he left office in May. It didn’t quite have the kind of enigmatic impact he and his supporters expected. But the country is grateful that he gave the interview, particularly on some issues that agitated the minds of many Nigerians. Yet, the interview was almost anticlimactic in its effect. Perhaps he should have held on for a little longer to give his reflections time to mature and be refined in order to avoid being precipitate in doubling down on some of his controversial policies or showing contrition on policies that had plunged the country into turmoil. The Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) interviewer, Thecla Wilkie, was empathetic, pleasant and restrained, sometimes rephrasing her statements to make them accessible to the often nonplussed former president. But when she sensed his dilemma notwithstanding, she baulked at pursuing her quarry, preferring instead to let go altogether or to gloss over the question with a fetching grin.

    The interview was hugely revelatory. It confirmed all everyone knows about his difficulty with words and his discomfort with complex and nuanced policy issues, especially those bearing exotic labels. It confirmed his expedient resort to deploying, often inadvertently, extraneous and tangential issues to explicate difficult or inaccessible questions. The Borno State governor Babagana Zulum story of thrift and ‘virtually incorruptibility’ was very handy to him. The former president has obviously nurtured his long-standing wisecracks, and was sometimes convulsed by his own laughter that flowed from his self-deprecating humour. His thoughts may wander sometimes, yet he remained his good old self, comfortable in his own skin, healthier it seemed, and mightily relieved that the nuisance which governing the country had become had been passed on to another perhaps luckless administration. He concluded derisively that governing Nigeria was a near impossible task when everyone else knew how to do it better than the hapless and vilified president.

    The former president spoke about being too preoccupied with domestic issues to bother about external and diplomatic relations; but it was clear that as widely travelled as he was, particularly during his presidency, his response to a question on Nigerian diplomacy was a cover-up for his inability to decipher what seemed to him an inscrutable puzzle. Nigerian borders were too extensive to be manned by Nigerian security personnel, he sighed, and then concluded that only God could do it. His views on borders were not new, of course, considering that his administration simply slammed them shut as a tool for curbing smuggling. And when he was asked, as a former military and elected president, to compare military rule and democracy, especially to find out how he navigated the strictures of checks and balances, he quibbled considerably, and eventually returned to the subject of his eternal fascination, insecurity. Thrice the interviewer tried to reroute the question, thrice the former president returned to insecurity. Ms Wilkie was gracious on all three occasions, rather than exasperated. What is more, neither the interviewed nor the interviewer fared better on the subject of the cause célèbre, Process and Industrial Developments Ltd (P&ID), which tried to scam Nigeria out of about $11bn arbitral award as a result of a bungled oil and gas contract in Calabar, Cross River State.

    Read Also: Ex-agitators to Tinubu: probe alleged upfront sales of crude oil in Buhari’s administration

    Three other germane questions lent themselves to him to finally display a fundamental grasp of governance and politics. It is unclear whether he satisfied himself with his sometimes convoluted and tangential answers. For his larger audience, they are more likely to be mystified by his responses than entertained. Indeed, that larger audience may become more convinced than ever why Nigeria went both broke and broken in eight giddy years of a president doing little in undistinguished ways. The naira redesign policy must rank as one of the hottest issues of the Buhari presidency, coming frightfully close to the end of his presidency as well as the fateful election of February 25, a mere few weeks away at the time. Answering the question of what spurred him to enact that deeply offensive and despised policy, he cited the objective of curbing Nigerian materialism as a factor in politics. In his view the policy became imperative to try and make Nigerians believe that there was no shortcut to successful leadership. He didn’t actually say how one fiery and disruptive policy a few weeks to an election could change in fundamental ways a country’s political behavior. Was the idea entirely his or was it what he was made to believe? It is hard to tell. Whatever its origins, and whichever way it is considered, it was a policy that made little sense.

    Then there were the quibbles on whether he knew a cabal had hijacked his administration as well as how he rated his administration. He did his best, he said ruefully, echoing what he had said a long time ago about suspecting that few Nigerians were impressed with his performance as president, but was unsure he had convinced the people he led. And on the cabal issue, he was tentative, almost indifferent. Perhaps a hijack took place, he said bemusingly, but no one who ran afoul of the law escaped punishment. He will be unable to prove that assertion, not even if he tried in a million years. On his watch the long arm of the law became the withered arm of the law, with justice blinder than a bat. On the whole, the interview ended without a major incident; yes, a few howlers, one or two deadpans, but nothing astonishing, and nothing provocative. But for those who expected a pearl or two, at least from a two-term president who had even had a stint as military head of state, they will have to go much farther afield than the mind can conjure to find a competent and diligent leader.

  • Nigerians are so impressed by material success – Buhari

    Nigerians are so impressed by material success – Buhari

    ⁣Former President Muhammadu Buhari has said that Nigerians place too much value on material things.

    He claimed that this made it challenging for him to win over many powerful people in his unsuccessful presidential campaigns in 2003, 2007 and 2011.

    “Nigeria, believe it or not, we’re an underdeveloped country. We get so impressed by our material things and sometimes ruthlessly don’t care how you make the money…you should be rich, have a fantastic house, flashy cars, going overseas regularly,” Buhari said in a retrospective interview on Nigeria Television Authority (NTA) late Monday.⁣

    Read Also: Tinubu, Buhari, governors hail elections

    Thinking back on his three failed presidential bids, he said “I found myself struggling to gain support because Nigerians seem to be impressed more by material success rather than be honored by the less privileged, we’re a fantastic initiative.”⁣

  • If Nigeria had lost P&ID case, it would have cost us $15bn – Buhari

    If Nigeria had lost P&ID case, it would have cost us $15bn – Buhari

    Former President Muhammadu Buhari has stated that if the country had lost its arbitration dispute with Process & Industrial Development (P&ID), it would have cost the country close to $15 billion.

    In an article titled: “A matter of principle” released Sunday, Buhari noted that during his tenure, he had tasked his former chief-of-staff Abba Kyari, and Attorney General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, to find a way out on the issue.

    The Nation reports a Business and Property Court in London last week halted the enforcement of the $11bn arbitration award in favour of P&ID against Nigeria in a case marked CL-2019-000752.

    In a judgment delivered by Justice Robert Knowles, it was held that the process through which P&ID secured a 2010 contract to build a gas processing plant in Calabar, Cross River State, was fraudulent.

    Reacting, Buhari said: “Rarely in modern times can so few have tried to take so much from so many. If Nigeria had lost its arbitration dispute with Process & Industrial Development in a London court on 23 October, it would have cost our people close to USD15 billion.

    “We won, and all decent people can sleep easier as a result. Justice Robin Knowles said Nigeria had been the victim of a monstrous fraud. But it was a close-run thing. As the judge said: “I end the case acutely conscious of how readily the outcome could have been different, and of the enormous resources ultimately required from Nigeria as the successful party to make good its challenge.”

    “But ordinary Nigerians never took the decisions that ended up before Justice Knowles. Had Nigeria lost, it would have required schools not to be built, nurses not to be trained and roads not to repaired, on an epic scale, to pay a handful of contractors, lawyers and their allies – for a project that never broke ground.

    “How did it get to this point? How did Nigeria prevail? Was this a one-off, or par for a shabby and distasteful course? What are the lessons for the future?

    “The ‘P&ID Affair’ was already firmly set by the time I came into office in 2015. A company registered in the British Virgin Islands that no one had heard of, with hardly any staff or assets, had won a contract to build a gas processing plant in Cross Rivers. The company was owned by Irish intermediaries who knew Nigeria well and had done business in everything from healthcare to fixing tanks.

    “The previous government could not supply the gas. The plant was never built. Construction was not started. P&ID did not even buy the land for the facility. But the contract, incredibly, was clear: P&ID could sue Nigeria, and claim all the profits it might have made over 20 years as if everything had been completed.

    Read Also: SERAP writes INEC, seeks recognition of right to vote securely

    “Nigeria was in court in London, trying to talk down liability and costs. Back at home, fixers were looking to work out a quiet settlement. This is often the way. A lot of contracts end up in dispute. P&ID won a settlement in 2017 of USD6 billion, with compound interest. People, including out of work ex-British Cabinet Minister Priti Patel, were queuing up to insist we paid, or risk Nigeria becoming an untrustworthy trade pariah.

    “It was clear that far from the whole story had been told. I tasked Abba Kyari, my chief- of-staff and Attorney General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, with finding a way, even at that late stage and despite so much conflicting advice, to get us a fair hearing. Working with a number of different agencies and senior officials of government, we began to find a huge amount of evidence, not all of which Justice Knowles was to accept. But he agreed that P&ID had paid bribes. He agreed that one of P&ID’s founders had committed perjury. And he agreed that P&ID had somehow found in its possession a steady supply of Nigeria’s privileged internal legal documents, outlining our plans, strategies and problems.

    “My own view is that this whole, sorry affair shows how important it is to follow the legal process in resolving a dispute. It shows that given time and opportunity for each side to present their case, the temple of justice can satisfactorily resolve all disputes without resort to extra-judicial measures. It was definitely worth the struggle: this was an attempted heist of historic proportions, an attempt to steal from the treasury a third of Nigeria’s foreign reserves.

    “But even at this moment, we should note what the English judge cautioned. The arbitration process in London “was a shell that got nowhere near the truth.” We need better contracts, in the public and private sector. And we need greater transparency: the reality is that, had P&ID not conjured up quite such an outlandish ransom, they may have found themselves in the same place as the myriad other invisible contractors who all too often quietly take Nigeria for many millions in out of court settlements. Sterner sanctions are indicated for Nigerian public officials who have been proven to connive with foreign criminals to defraud our country.

    “Nigeria has won this battle with corruption, but the war is far from over. As Justice Knowles concluded: “This case has also, sadly, brought together a combination of examples of what some individuals will do for money. Driven by greed and prepared to use corruption; giving no thought to what their enrichment would mean in terms of harm for others. Others that in the present case include the people of Nigeria, already let down in so many ways over the history of this matter by a number of individuals in politics and administration whose duty it was to serve them and protect them.”

  • Verdict ends eight-month legal battle, says Buhari

    Verdict ends eight-month legal battle, says Buhari

    Yesterday’s dismissal of the appeals by Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP) by the Supreme Court is a welcome relief to former President Muhammadu Buhari, his spokesman, Mallam Garba Shehu said.

    The decision by the apex court “ended a tortuous 8-month of expensive legal journey”, he quoted the immediate-past leader as saying in a statement.

    Buhari described the verdict as a reaffirmation of majority of Nigerians who voted at the February 25 presidential poll.

    The statement reads: “The former President repeated what he said on the September 6 judgment of the Presidential Election Petition Court which affirmed President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s victory that the decision is a reaffirmation of the will of the majority of the people against the determined will of a hard-fighting minority.

    Read Also: No apologies for supporting Tinubu in 2023 election – Wike

     ”Now that we have arrived at the last bus stop, after a tortuous eight-month of expensive legal journey, the nation deserves a break.

    “The opposition has fought a good fight. Having now exhausted their rights as constitutionally allowed, they should take the hand of fellowship extended by the Tinubu/Shettima APC government.

    “Let them allow the government to run their administration and the people to have the benefit of the promises the APC made.

    “The former president expressed concern over low voting percentage all over the country, especially in urban areas and said this should change given the acceptance and vibrancy of democracy in Nigeria.”

    Buhari wished his successor and his team a successful term in office.

  • BREAKING: Ex-president Buhari congratulates Tinubu, welcomes Supreme Court verdict

    BREAKING: Ex-president Buhari congratulates Tinubu, welcomes Supreme Court verdict

    Former President Muhammadu Buhari has congratulated President Tinubu on the verdict of the Supreme Court affirming his election victory.

    He wished the president and his team a successful term in office.

    Buhari noted that the decision to dismiss the appeals by Alhaji Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP), by the Supreme Court, is a welcome relief to him and to a majority of the citizens of Nigeria.

    A statement signed by ex-president’s Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu noted that Buhari repeated what he said on the earlier 6 September verdict of the Presidential Election Petition Court, which affirmed President Tinubu’s victory, that the welcome decision is “a reaffirmation of the will of the majority of the people against the determined will of a hard-fighting minority.”

    Read Also: BREAKING: Supreme Court dismisses Obi’s appeal, affirms Tinubu’s election

    He said: “Now that we have arrived at the last bus stop, after a tortuous 8-months of expensive legal journey, the nation deserves a break.

    “The opposition has fought a good fight. Having now exhausted their rights as constitutionally allowed, they should take the hand of fellowship extended by the Tinubu/Shettima @OfficialAPCNg government.

    “Let them allow the Government to run their administration and the people to enjoy the full benefits of the promises the All Progressives Congress (APC) made.”

    The former president also expressed concern over low voting percentages all over the country, especially in urban areas, and said this should change, given the acceptance and vibrancy of democracy in Nigeria.

  • Ganduje, APC NWC, visits Buhari in Daura

    Ganduje, APC NWC, visits Buhari in Daura

    The National Chairman of the ruling  All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, and the party’s National Working Committee (NWC) members yesterday visited former President Muhammadu Buhari at his residence in Daura, Katsina State.

    The APC chairman told the former President that the visit was meant to accord him his pride of place and congratulate him on Nigeria’s 63rd Independence anniversary held on Sunday.

    He explained that the visit was also meant to introduce the party’s newly reconstituted NWC to him.

    Read Also: Independence Day: Buhari, Akpabio, govs, others optimistic about Nigeria’s future

    Ganduje assured the former Nigerian leader that the party was working hard to win the forthcoming governorship elections in Kogi, Imo, Bayelsa, and Edo states.

    He said: “We shall work hard to keep the momentum of electoral victories recently recorded at the various electoral tribunals in the country.”

    Welcoming his visitors, the former President advised the APC leadership to ensure the party retains its leading political position in the country.

    Ganduje and the NWC members also visited the 92-year-old Emir of Daura, HRH Umar Umar, at his palace.

    They alter visited the APC local government office where the national chairman met with party members and officials.