Tag: BUHARI

  • Jonathan’s, Buhari’s supporters clash

    Jonathan’s, Buhari’s supporters clash

    Some supporters of the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, and a group of Nigerians believed to have been sponsored by the Federal Government yesterday clashed at the premises of Chatham House, where Gen. Buhari delivered a lecture.

    An amorphous group had been procured for $20,000 by some top government functionaries to stage a protest against Gen Buhari. Before he arrived for the event, a handful of placard-bearing protesters gathered in front of the venue, singing protest songs.

    The anti-Buhari demonstrators bore placards, with the inscriptions such as “Buhari belongs to the past, etc. Others wore T-shirts, with inscriptions, such as “Diaspora says no to a tyrant”.

    However, to counter the protest, the members of the United Kingdom chapter of the APC also stormed the venue to confront the PDP supporters during which a verbal clash erupted.

    The pro-Buhari elements had placards bearing messages such as “Nigerians deserve better than 16 years misrule” and “Vote Buhari/Osinbajo.”

  • Buhari ready to rule, says Aregbesola

    Buhari ready to rule, says Aregbesola

    THE  SouthWest Coordinator of the Buhari-Osinbajo Presidential Campaign, Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has described Gen. Muhammadu Buhari as ready to take charge of the country.

    According to him, the comprehensive talk Gen. Buhari gave at Chatham House yesterday has reinforced the party’s readiness and commitment to rescue Nigeria from the claws of its predators.

    Aregbesola said Gen. Buhari’s articulate presentation is a show of how prepared the party is for the rescue mission. He spoke in a statement by the Director, Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon.

     ”Nigeria has on her laps at the moment the tragedy of a party that has no idea of how to take the country out of the woods; a party and its government at a loss how to confront the horror of terrorism, which is unfortunately fuelled by the poverty its anti-people policies have also bred and the endemic corruption which has been elevated to the level of state policy.

    “There is no doubt that the Jonathan administration is too fickle-minded to surmount the many areas of urgent needs, which our people are craving for. This is why the clamour for change has attained this all-time high in the history of our country,”

    Aregbesola said after the Chatham House talk, even Gen. Buhari’s worst critics must have come to terms and embraced the positive change ideas that he and the APC represent.

    He added, “Nigerians and the international community by now understand the determination of Buhari, the fecundity of his ideas and the clarity of his vision to take Nigeria out of the present morass.”

    The governor said Nigerians must put the disappointment of the postponement of the election behind them and re-energise towards the March 28 and April 11 dates, adding that the endurance of the next few weeks would guarantee the survival of Nigeria under a transparent, focus-driven and people-oriented government of the APC.

  • Update: No amnesty for Boko Haram if elected President – Buhari

    Update: No amnesty for Boko Haram if elected President – Buhari

    Says, I’m fit, ready for March poll

    The presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, on Thursday said he would not grant amnesty to Boko Haram insurgents if elected President next month.

    He also said he is fit and ready for the poll.

    The former head of state assured the audience that Nigeria will not break.

    Buhari, who made the submissions during a question and answer session at Chatham House in London, said he would also personally lead the battle against Boko Haram.

    He said: “I think I will not go to that office with that promise. I have said in my address how, at least 13,000 Nigerians have been killed by Boko Haram, how millions of them have been displaced and are now kept in different camps called Internally Displaced Persons camps.

    “Schools have been burnt, there is so much disruption to normal life, people could not farm and where they are able to farm, they cannot harvest. So, granting amnesty to Boko Haram will be unfair to the system.

    “We will secure Nigeria. We must have the time to collect enough intelligence to make sure that those that we got are given the chance in civil courts to be properly prosecuted.”

    On his alleged health challenge, Buhari said he is fit as fiddle and battle ready for the March poll.

    He added: “I am very happy that I have been able to visit 35 states out of the 36. I haven’t broken down even though somebody announced my death yesterday (Wednesday).

    “I had a call from Maiduguri that somebody rushed into a friend’s house crying and said they have just announced that Buhari has died in hospital in London and so, he called me and I laughed my head off.

    “Certainly, I will be expecting too much if I don’t expect people to wish me dead. But I am very pleased that I am fit, the doctors have declared me fit and I am going back for the final onslaught.”

    Responding to a question, Buhari said Nigeria cannot afford to break up again as a nation because its nationalities have bonded.

    He said: “I appreciate the full import of this question. We have a problem as a people and if you are following my statements, I warned about six months ago that we have to be careful of Somalialization of Nigeria.

    “We are a group of nationalities like some people wants to call it. We are very different people, religiously, culturally and from different background and we happen to have come together after the amalgamation by the British in 1914.

    “We find it difficult to separate now because there have been so many inter-marriages and some, we have become interdependent. Our constitution has been very deliberate in respecting our sensitivities and the freedom given in that constitution is a guarantee that we will certainly manage our differences.

    “We are making a lot of efforts to make sure that we continue to understand ourselves and accommodate ourselves in spite of whatever impression is created among ourselves especially when people are talking so much about religion.”

    The APC presidential candidate also spoke on his top three priorities to attract foreign investment.

    Buhari said: “Nobody will take his investment to an environment that is insecure. That is why security is going to be one of our major priorities. We will secure the country and efficiently manage it. That efficient management is stopping corruption and getting jobs among others.

    “The way of attracting investors is to persuade investors the world over that Nigeria is poised to cooperate with them by securing the country and helping them recoup their investment. It is not a question of having a free ride. They don’t invest for humanitarian reasons, but so that they can recover their capital and make some profit because that is what sustains them.

    “So, we have to think very quickly and put in place assurances and improve the system so that the environment can be suitable for investment.”

     

  • I have nothing personal against Buhari – Fayose

    I have nothing personal against Buhari – Fayose

    Following the buffet of criticisms trailing his death wish for the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, the Ekiti State Governor, Ayo Fayose, has said he has nothing personal against the former head of state.

    The governor, who spoke on Thursday through a statement issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Idowu Adelusi, said he is not wishing Buhari dead as widely believed in many quarters, but maintained that the APC presidential flag bearer is too old to govern a complex country like Nigeria.

    Fayose explained that he is opposed to the emergence of Buhari as president because Nigerians do not deserve a leader that will govern by proxy.

    The Ekiti governor said his experience as chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) ad hoc committee which shopped for a suitable presidential candidate for the party in the run-up to the 2007 presidential election informed his opposition to Buhari’s candidature.

    He revealed that his committee did not recommend the late President Umaru Yar’ Adua, whom he said initially rejected the offer before he (Yar’Adua) was allegedly opposed by former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    Fayose said the criticisms trailing his mode of campaign for the re-election of the PDP candidate, President Goodluck Jonathan, are unnecessary, accusing the APC leaders promoting Buhari’s candidature as insincere.

    The governor, who said he owed nobody any apology for exposing the hypocrisy of APC leaders, accused them of placing personal interests far above national interests.

    He alleged that‎ the APC had not only packaged lies and tried to foist such on Nigerians, but had compromised the Independent National Electoral Commission to rig the elections if it had held on February 14.

    Going down the memory lane on how the late Yar’Adua was preferred by Obasanjo, Fayose said he does not want the events that took place in the PDP presidential primary in December 2006 to be re-enacted in 2015.

    Fayose said: “I remember then as the ad hoc chairman of the PDP committee that shopped for the presidential candidate to replace former President Olusegun Obasanjo, a crop of suitable, brilliant, healthy and competent northern politicians‎ in the PDP were shortlisted by me for Obasanjo to pick from, but he overruled the list and asked me to contact the late Umaru Musa Yar’ Adua because he preferred him.

    “In fairness to the late president, he objected to the offer on health ground, but Obasanjo insisted that he must be the president.

     

  • Full text of Buhari’s speech @Chatham House

    Full text of Buhari’s speech @Chatham House

    Permit me to start by thanking Chatham House for the invitation to talk about this important topic at this crucial time. When speaking about Nigeria overseas, I normally prefer to be my country’s public relations and marketing officer, extolling her virtues and hoping to attract investments and tourists. But as we all know, Nigeria is now battling with many challenges, and if I refer to them, I do so only to impress on our friends in the United Kingdom that we are quite aware of our shortcomings and are doing our best to address them.

    The 2015 general election in Nigeria is generating a lot of interests within and outside the country. This is understandable. Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country and largest economy, is at a defining moment, a moment that has great implications beyond the democratic project and beyond the borders of my dear country.

    So let me say upfront that the global interest in Nigeria’s landmark election is not misplaced at all and indeed should be commended; for this is an election that has serious import for the world. I urge the international community to continue to focus on Nigeria at this very critical moment. Given increasing global linkages, it is in our collective interests that the postponed elections should hold on the rescheduled dates; that they should be free and fair; that their outcomes should be respected by all parties; and that any form of extension, under whichever guise, is unconstitutional and will not be tolerated.

    With the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, the collapse of communism and the end of the Cold War, democracy became the dominant and most preferred system of government across the globe. That global transition has been aptly captured as the triumph of democracy and the ‘most pre-eminent political idea of our time.’ On a personal note, the phased end of the USSR was a turning point for me. It convinced me that change can be brought about without firing a single shot.

    As you all know, I had been a military head of state in Nigeria for twenty months. We intervened because we were unhappy with the state of affairs in our country. We wanted to arrest the drift. Driven by patriotism, influenced by the prevalence and popularity of such drastic measures all over Africa and elsewhere, we fought our way to power. But the global triumph of democracy has shown that another and a preferable path to change is possible. It is an important lesson I have carried with me since, and a lesson that is not lost on the African continent.

    In the last two decades, democracy has grown strong roots in Africa. Elections, once so rare, are now so commonplace. As at the time I was a military head of state between 1983 and 1985, only four African countries held regular multi-party elections. But the number of electoral democracies in Africa, according to Freedom House, jumped to 10 in 1992/1993 then to 18 in 1994/1995 and to 24 in 2005/2006. According to the New York Times, 42 of the 48 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa conducted multi-party elections between 1990 and 2002.

    The newspaper also reported that between 2000 and 2002, ruling parties in four African countries (Senegal, Mauritius, Ghana and Mali) peacefully handed over power to victorious opposition parties. In addition, the proportion of African countries categorized as not free by Freedom House declined from 59% in 1983 to 35% in 2003. Without doubt, Africa has been part of the current global wave of democratisation.

    But the growth of democracy on the continent has been uneven. According to Freedom House, the number of electoral democracies in Africa slipped from 24 in 2007/2008 to 19 in 2011/2012; while the percentage of countries categorised as ‘not free’ assuming for the sake of argument that we accept their definition of “free” increased from 35% in 2003 to 41% in 2013. Also, there have been some reversals at different times in Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Cote D’Ivoire, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Lesotho, Mali, Madagascar, Mauritania and Togo. We can choose to look at the glass of democracy in Africa as either half full or half empty.

    While you can’t have representative democracy without elections, it is equally important to look at the quality of the elections and to remember that mere elections do not democracy make. It is globally agreed that democracy is not an event, but a journey. And that the destination of that journey is democratic consolidation – that state where democracy has become so rooted and so routine and widely accepted by all actors.

    With this important destination in mind, it is clear that though many African countries now hold regular elections, very few of them have consolidated the practice of democracy. It is important to also state at this point that just as with elections, a consolidated democracy cannot be an end by itself. I will argue that it is not enough to hold a series of elections or even to peacefully alternate power among parties.

    It is much more important that the promise of democracy goes beyond just allowing people to freely choose their leaders. It is much more important that democracy should deliver on the promise of choice, of freedoms, of security of lives and property, of transparency and accountability, of rule of law, of good governance and of shared prosperity. It is very important that the promise embedded in the concept of democracy, the promise of a better life for the generality of the people, is not delivered in the breach.

    Now, let me quickly turn to Nigeria. As you all know, Nigeria’s fourth republic is in its 16th year and this general election will be the fifth in a row. This is a major sign of progress for us, given that our first republic lasted five years and three months, the second republic ended after four years and two months and the third republic was a still-birth. However, longevity is not the only reason why everyone is so interested in this election.

    The major difference this time around is that for the very first time since transition to civil rule in 1999, the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is facing its stiffest opposition so far from our party the All Progressives Congress (APC). We once had about 50 political parties, but with no real competition. Now Nigeria is transitioning from a dominant party system to a competitive electoral polity, which is a major marker on the road to democratic consolidation. As you know, peaceful alternation of power through competitive elections have happened in Ghana, Senegal, Malawi and Mauritius in recent times. The prospects of democratic consolidation in Africa will be further brightened when that eventually happens in Nigeria.

    But there are other reasons why Nigerians and the whole world are intensely focussed on this year’s elections, chief of which is that the elections are holding in the shadow of huge security, economic and social uncertainties in Africa’s most populous country and largest economy. On insecurity, there is a genuine cause for worry, both within and outside Nigeria. Apart from the civil war era, at no other time in our history has Nigeria been this insecure.

    Boko Haram has sadly put Nigeria on the terrorism map, killing more than 13,000 of our nationals, displacing millions internally and externally, and at a time holding on to portions of our territory the size of Belgium. What has been consistently lacking is the required leadership in our battle against insurgency. I, as a retired general and a former head of state, have always known about our soldiers: they are capable, well trained, patriotic, brave and always ready to do their duty in the service of our country.

    You all can bear witness to the gallant role of our military in Burma, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Darfur and in many other peacekeeping operations in several parts of the world. But in the matter of this insurgency, our soldiers have neither received the necessary support nor the required incentives to tackle this problem. The government has also failed in any effort towards a multi-dimensional response to this problem leading to a situation in which we have now become dependent on our neighbours to come to our rescue.

    Let me assure you that if I am elected president, the world will have no cause to worry about Nigeria as it has had to recently; that Nigeria will return to its stabilising role in West Africa; and that no inch of Nigerian territory will ever be lost to the enemy because we will pay special attention to the welfare of our soldiers in and out of service, we will give them adequate and modern arms and ammunitions to work with, we will improve intelligence gathering and border controls to choke Boko Haram’s financial and equipment channels, we will be tough on terrorism and tough on its root causes by initiating a comprehensive economic development plan promoting infrastructural development, job creation, agriculture and industry in the affected areas. We will always act on time and not allow problems to irresponsibly fester, and I,

    Muhammadu Buhari, will always lead from the front and return Nigeria to its leadership role in regional and international efforts to combat terrorism.
    On the economy, the fall in prices of oil has brought our economic and social stress into full relief. After the rebasing exercise in April 2014, Nigeria overtook South Africa as Africa’s largest economy. Our GDP is now valued at $510 billion and our economy rated 26th in the world. Also on the bright side, inflation has been kept at single digit for a while and our economy has grown at an average of 7% for about a decade.

    But it is more of paper growth, a growth that, on account of mismanagement, profligacy and corruption, has not translated to human development or shared prosperity. A development economist once said three questions should be asked about a country’s development: one, what is happening to poverty? Two, what is happening to unemployment? And three, what is happening to inequality?

    The answers to these questions in Nigeria show that the current administration has created two economies in one country, a sorry tale of two nations: one economy for a few who have so much in their tiny island of prosperity; and the other economy for the many who have so little in their vast ocean of misery.

    Even by official figures, 33.1% of Nigerians live in extreme poverty. That’s at almost 60 million, almost the population of the United Kingdom. There is also the unemployment crisis simmering beneath the surface, ready to explode at the slightest stress, with officially 23.9% of our adult population and almost 60% of our youth unemployed. We also have one of the highest rates of inequalities in the world.

    With all these, it is not surprising that our performance on most governance and development indicators (like Mo Ibrahim Index on African Governance and UNDP’s Human Development Index.) are unflattering. With fall in the prices of oil, which accounts for more than 70% of government revenues, and lack of savings from more than a decade of oil boom, the poor will be disproportionately impacted.

    In the face of dwindling revenues, a good place to start the repositioning of Nigeria’s economy is to swiftly tackle two ills that have ballooned under the present administration: waste and corruption. And in doing this, I will, if elected, lead the way, with the force of personal example.

    On corruption, there will be no confusion as to where I stand. Corruption will have no place and the corrupt will not be appointed into my administration. First and foremost, we will plug the holes in the budgetary process. Revenue producing entities such as NNPC and Customs and Excise will have one set of books only. Their revenues will be publicly disclosed and regularly audited. The institutions of state dedicated to fighting corruption will be given independence and prosecutorial authority without political interference.

    But I must emphasise that any war waged on corruption should not be misconstrued as settling old scores or a witch-hunt. I’m running for President to lead Nigeria to prosperity and not adversity.

    In reforming the economy, we will use savings that arise from blocking these leakages and the proceeds recovered from corruption to fund our party’s social investments programmes in education, health, and safety nets such as free school meals for children, emergency public works for unemployed youth and pensions for the elderly.

    As a progressive party, we must reform our political economy to unleash the pent-up ingenuity and productivity of the Nigerian people thus freeing them from the curse of poverty. We will run a private sector-led economy but maintain an active role for government through strong regulatory oversight and deliberate interventions and incentives to diversify the base of our economy, strengthen productive sectors, improve the productive capacities of our people and create jobs for our teeming youths.

    In short, we will run a functional economy driven by a worldview that sees growth not as an end by itself, but as a tool to create a society that works for all, rich and poor alike. On March 28, Nigeria has a decision to make. To vote for the continuity of failure or to elect progressive change. I believe the people will choose wisely.

    In sum, I think that given its strategic importance, Nigeria can trigger a wave of democratic consolidation in Africa. But as a starting point we need to get this critical election right by ensuring that they go ahead, and depriving those who want to scuttle it the benefit of derailing our fledgling democracy. That way, we will all see democracy and democratic consolidation as tools for solving pressing problems in a sustainable way, not as ends in themselves.
    Prospects for Democratic Consolidation in Africa: Nigeria’s Transition

    Permit me to close this discussion on a personal note. I have heard and read references to me as a former dictator in many respected British newspapers including the well regarded Economist. Let me say without sounding defensive that dictatorship goes with military rule, though some might be less dictatorial than others. I take responsibility for whatever happened under my watch.

    I cannot change the past. But I can change the present and the future. So before you is a former military ruler and a converted democrat who is ready to operate under democratic norms and is subjecting himself to the rigours of democratic elections for the fourth time.

    You may ask: why is he doing this? This is a question I ask myself all the time too. And here is my humble answer: because the work of making Nigeria great is not yet done, because I still believe that change is possible, this time through the ballot, and most importantly, because I still have the capacity and the passion to dream and work for a Nigeria that will be respected again in the comity of nations and that all Nigerians will be proud of.

    I thank you for listening.

     

  • Buhari@Chatham House: I will tackle terrorism, corruption

    Buhari@Chatham House: I will tackle terrorism, corruption

    The presidential candidate of the All Progressive Congress, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, spoke at the Royal Institute of International Affairs (RIIA), better known as Chatham House, United Kingdom, on Thursday morning, vowing to tackle terrorism and corruption if elected as Nigeria’s president in next month’s election.

    The former head of state, who spoke on a topic – “Prospects for Democratic Consolidation in Africa: Nigeria’s Transition,” said the focus of the international community on Nigeria’s election is not misplaced, requesting that the interest should continue.

    Speaking on Boko Haram, Buhari  promised that if elected as  president, his government would not allow the loss of any Nigerian territory to terrorists.

    “Let me assure you that if I am elected president, the world will not have to worry about Nigeria,” he stated.

    He reiterated his determination to fight corruption, saying “On corruption, there is no confusion on where I stand. First and foremost, we will plug the holes in the budgetary process. All revenue-generating arms of the government, led by NNPC, would have a single book, while anti-corruption agencies would operate without government interference.”

    He also spoke on the emergence of democracy as the preferred system of governance across the world.

    The APC candidate said the defunct USSR experience was a personal turning point for him,  stressing that the process thought him that “change could be effected without firing a single shot”.

    On democracy in Africa, Buhari cited the example of four countries where the ruling party peacefully handed over to victorious opposition parties.

    He also listed Togo, Central African Republic, Guinea Bissau, Mali and other countries where democracy has suffered, saying that can be “viewed from two prisms, or can be seen as a glass that is half-full.”

     

     

  • Buhari’s supporters warn against removing Jega

    Buhari’s supporters warn against removing Jega

    Buhari Support Organisation (BSO), the umbrella body of all voluntary groups working for the election of the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari, has warned against any attempt to change the leadership of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Such alteration, it said, would amount to tampering with the credibility of the elections and the independence of the commission.

     The group also alerted to plots by President Goodluck Jonathan and his supporters to bring back the inglorious days of the Association for Better Nigeria (ABN) by using the courts to scuttle of the elections.

    Addressing a news conference in Abuja yesterday, BSO’s Director of Media, Dr. Chidia Maduekwe, said the campaign against INEC by paid commentators and supporters of Jonathan was aimed at tampering with the conduct of the election and returning the country to the days of June 12 when the election of Chief MKO Abiola was annulled.

     Maduekwe also alerted to a possible legal plan to consolidate several cases about the elections and candidates still pending in court, by pro-government sympathisers that might seek injunctions to stop the elections until such cases are resolved.

     He said part of the propaganda would be to force the Chairman of INEC, Prof. Attahiru Jega to resign or be forced to proceed on terminal leave and be replaced by another northern Muslim professor, who will carry out the bidding of the government and its agents.

    He said: “It has become imperative to ask Mr. President to rein in his aides if he must be seen to walk his talk that his ambition is not worth any spill of human blood. His aides and associates are disingenuously currently working at cross-purposes to this his favourite cliché by daily fanning the ambers of hate, pursuance of death wish and even going as far as stalking of GMB outside the shores of this country.”

    He added: “We certainly shall not subscribe to any script that is centered on how to oust Jega by forcefully sending him on terminal leave and replacing him with another northern Muslim professor considered to be a more pliable successor. Such a scenario demanding for more time to enable the new commission chair to settle down before holding any elections is another shifting of the goal post.

     “The worse would be the push to stop INEC from using the new electronic PVC-card readers, thereby allowing unfettered access to intended election-day fraud without deterrence.

     “In tandem with above scenario, we are presently being bombarded with multiple pro-government TV and Radio talk show commentators and apologists strenuously mould public opinion on the issue that INEC has not tested the card reader in any previous local election and should not use the presidential and National Assembly polls to do so.”

  • Southsouth residents endorse Buhari, Ambode

    Southsouth residents in Lagos State have endorsed the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Gen Muhammadu Buhari.

    At a briefing yesterday in Lagos, their spokesman, Otunba Isaac Emiyede, said Buhari was a tested and trusted leader who would move the country forward, noting that their kinsman, President Goodluck Jonathan, had disappointed Nigerians.

    He said what was happening in the country today is not about sentiment or region, but about the ability to deliver electoral promises.

    “General Buhari has shown leadership by example. We don’t need a microscope to see through him. He has shown integrity and discipline. This is a man who retired as head of state and has no building in Abuja or Lagos. He has only a storey-building in Kaduna. He does not give out money to people or encourage bribery.

    “So, you know he is not corrupt. He has given a sign of where he is going. He is incorruptible. When the head is good, the body will be good. But when the head is rotten, the body cannot be good. So, if they say Gen. Buhari’s followers are not good, let us wait and give him a chance. It is the head that will drive the rest of the body. He is the one who will be in charge of appointments.”

    Emiyede said the situation had made the common man on the street to lose hope, while a few rich people were smiling to the banks everyday.

    “In 2007, Jonathan and former President Umaru Yar’Adua met 3,000 megawatts (MW) on ground. Last year, we were producing only 3,450 MW after spending more than $50 billion. That is trillions of naira. So, Jonathan and Yar’Adua combined could only produce 450 megawatts of electricity. Can we continue with this system?

     “The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) never knew that there will be a time as this in Nigeria, when Nigerians will be asking for change, not because of the APC but because they are tired of what is going on. No matter the lies you tell, Nigerians just want change.”

    He said the Southsouth would vote for the APC’s governorship candidate Akinwunmi Ambode on April 11, saying with over 1.6 million Southsouth people in Lagos over 80 per cent of the people would vote APC.

    “There are over 1.6million South/South indigenes in Lagos. We are very mindful of the laudable achievements of APC administration in the state.

    “The APC led administration has been enrolling our children into schools without discrimination. Providing vacation jobs for our children, reduced land charges.

    “The change is going to happen in Abuja but Lagos will continue the way it is because it’s better than most states in Nigeria.”

  • Blasts: Buhari seeks more vigilance, strategies against terrorists

    Blasts: Buhari seeks more vigilance, strategies against terrorists

    The presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress,  Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, has condemned the latest bombings in Yobe and Kano States, and called for greater vigilance and new strategies in dealing with the insurgents.

    A statement signed by the Director of Buhari Campaign Organization, Mallam Garba Shehu, quoted the former head of state as regretting that the latest blasts came on the eve of the first anniversary of the Buni Yadi terror attack which killed several students of a Federal Government College in their sleep.

    While regretting the frequency at which terrorists destroyed lives of innocent people, the statement said that a situation where terrorists get bolder with every passing day calls for serious reflection and concern.

    While commending the efforts and sacrifices of the counter-terrorism forces in fighting the insurgents, Buhari said there is the need for greater vigilance and new strategies.

    He said further the APC recognises the complexity of terrorism and its peculiar challenges and called for more and tougher strategies.

    The APC candidate added that a situation where the criminals outsmart the system is disturbing.

    He called on the Federal Government to take proactive steps to stem the frequency at which the terrorists penetrate security cordon and checkpoints with maximum ease and strike their targets with extreme cruelty.

  • Buhari team to Fayose: Stop playing God

    Buhari team to Fayose: Stop playing God

    The Ekiti State Chapter of the Buhari Campaign Organization has warned Governor Ayo Fayose to stop playing God in his death wish for the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.

    The Coordinator of the organization in the state, Hon. Gbenga Agbeyo, in a chat with The Nation, said Fayose has carried his attack on Buhari to a very ridiculous level, noting that it is only God that knows when each mortal would die.

    He expressed surprise that Fayose who had earlier claimed that Buhari was not invited to deliver a speech at Chatham House in London only to make a fresh claim that the APC presidential candidate bought the opportunity to deliver lecture at the event.

    Agbeyo said Fayose’s constant death wish through newspaper adverts and media interview is a proof that he (Fayose) is a wrong person to mount the seat of a governor.

    He noted that the endless vituperations against Buhari by Fayose and his aides have no effect on the former head of state chances of winning the March 28 presidential poll.

    He expressed regrets that Fayose’s action has brought negative publicity to Ekiti and its people whom he said are not brought up to wish somebody else evil.

    According to Agbeyo, such attitude runs contrary to the core values of brotherhood, love for fellow human beings, respect for the elderly and other virtues the Ekiti people are known for all over the world and which had helped them to excel in their chosen fields.

    He said, “Why is this man (Fayose) playing God? He must be told that he is not God, he has no power over the life span of Gen. Buhari or that of any other individual.

    “Fayose must stop his buffoonery and face governance, his antics won’t change the minds of Nigerians who are determined to elect Buhari as the next President of Nigeria.”