Tag: BUHARI

  • Who is afraid of General Muhammadu Buhari?

    Who is afraid of General Muhammadu Buhari?

    The attempt to snuff life out of one of Nigeria’s most revered former Head of State, General Muhammadu Buhari, in a fiendish operation which would have passed for a routine Boko Haram attack, would have thrown Nigeria in turmoil of unimaginable proportions as President Jonathan submitted days ago.

    The failed “assassination attempt” as Buhari tagged it, may not be unconnected with the grand plot to silence the opposition. This is coming on the heels of the impeachment of Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa state and the tightening of impeachment noose around Governor Umaru Tanko Al-Makura of Nasarawa state before he was cleared of charges against him yesterday.

    Clearly, the shades of the varying scope of operation to hunt down those who pose a threat to the present government as enshrined in the alleged sniper’s list former President Olusegun Obasanjo divulged in his missive is being made manifest.

    Surely, the mere knowledge of an alleged sniper’s list should be instructive to the opposition party leaders.Impeaching opposition Governors one after the other, it now appears, is part of the grand scheme.

    To underscore the gruesome motive of the perpetrators, eyewitness accounts said the bomb-laden car single-mindedly targeted the vehicle conveying the APC chieftain to Daura, his ancestral home from Kaduna. It hit target but the bulletproof construction of the SUV ensured the General escaped death by the whiskers. To the ‘terrorists’, they came agonisingly close.

    How can we forget retired General Muhammadu Mamman Shuwa? In November 2012, the civil war veteran was killed in cold blood by unknown gunmen in his Maiduguri home yards away from soldiers idling away in enforcement of law and order. Boko Haram, the usual suspects were fingered. Had Buhari suffered a similar fate, the perpetrators would use the sect to divert attention from the perpetrators.

    The PDP have sold a dummy to Nigerians for too long that the sponsors of terror were members of the opposition, All Progressive Congress (APC), but this attack have vindicated the much maligned progressives. Buhari has openly challenged those who accuse him of religious fundamentalism to come out and show proof. No one till this day has any clue.

    Forirredentists, who think the attack on Buhari’s life was stage-managed, let them continue to stew in their bitterness and wallow in their chutzpah. Same people who peddle such falsehood of a self-masterminded attack won’t roam within a metre radius of a spot of a bomb scare. Any reasonable Nigerian will acknowledge the risk in masterminding such an attack as the probability that it could spiral out of control is higher than its success.

    The political elite in the ruling party must truly be frightened by Buhari’s growing popularity ahead of the 2015 elections even though the media coverage on the General is frequently negative with unfounded and unsubstantiated allegations. It has rather won him more support from discerning Nigerians who cannot be misinformed or misled by needless propaganda.

    For his loyalists across the country, they can boldly say of him, “All I need from Buhari is his word I can take it to the bank.”Such is the cult-like following that Gen. Buhari wields that he need not rent a crowd, or share rice to garner support.

    This is because of his glowing and incorruptible antecedents.Very few people in this country will occupy the number one position to live a modest and Spartan life afterwards like him. He occupied lofty positions like the Governor of the defunct North-Eastern State of Nigeria, Head of State, Minister for Petroleum and Natural Resources and Chairman of NNPC, Chairman of Petroleum (Special) Trust Fund (PTF).

    He could easily be one of Nigeria’s wealthiest politicians with oil blocs to boot because he birthed and supervised the establishment of our existing refineries. Today, we import 70 per cent of the fuel we use because those after him have literally crippled the refineries. He could have retired into stupendous opulence like the Danjumas, Obasanjos, and Abachas of this world. But Buhari bucked the trend and chose the honourable path.

    His detractors and traducers are uncomfortable with him around the political scene. Maybe he scares them with his incorruptible, uncompromising, sober, painstaking personae he exudes; his intolerance of impropriety – a major fault of the privileged political elite – scares them. He is everything they are not.

    There have been various attempts to erode the electoral value of a man who has validated his cast iron reputation for accountability and transparency coming out unscathed from probes regarding his tenure as Chairman of PTF. And as Buhari’s staunch loyalist in Mallam Nasir el-Rufai posited that his antagonists “have changed our politics into that of ethnicity and religion to divert attention from their incompetence, lack of capacity and looting of the treasury… PDP is scared of Buhari’s integrity and his track record of doing the right thing and ensuring that people are brought to justice when they break the law. They are afraid of that day when he will become President.”

    With the failed attempt to take General Buhari’s life, the burgeoning army of opposition against the General of impeccable integrity would now sit back, maybe have a rethink, recall their foot soldiers masked in the toga of Jihadists cutting short the lives of “infidels” they see as living corpses.

    In the 2011 presidential elections, the man they hate to see even in their dreams, got over 12 million votes with a party that was formed barely 10 months to the election without the support structure and votes a state Governor or even a Local Government chairman would have brought into the party. He had no war chest or federal might to manipulate voters and electoral officers, a trick the PDP has perfected over the years. But Buhari’s enormous star power earned him a couple of senators and a state governor after the elections. It won’t take a political scientist, a Nostradamus or some prophetic unction to work the numbers in votes the General will pull in 2015 with the 15 Governors in the APC fold!

    Those who plotted the dastardly act are enemies of Nigeria, they neither seek its prosperity nor tranquilitybut thrive and profit from the chaos, bloodshed and colossal sleaze. They are afraid of the intimidating profile of the former Head of State and his acolytes in the opposition party.

    Whoever wanted Buhari dead has made a super hero of him. Of all the reasons why Buhari was wanted dead, the 2015 general elections keep popping out of every possibility and conspiracy theory. Inadvertently, they only succeeded in raising his popularity meter. With the overwhelming outpouring of emotion and support, the retired General has reaffirmed his status as a political heavyweight and gladiator who remains a top contender for next year’s general elections.

     

    Please follow the writer on twitter, @tilevbare.

  • FG not involved in Kaduna bombings – IGP

    FG not involved in Kaduna bombings – IGP

    The Acting Inspector General of Police, Suleiman Abba, has declared that findings by police investigators on the July 23 twin bombings in Kaduna State indicated that the Federal Government had no hand in the attacks.

    A former Head of State and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Muhammadu Buhari, who was reportedly the target of the attacks, escaped by the whiskers. His convoy, including the vehicle he was traveling in was however badly damaged by the blasts.

    Critics of the government, including the leadership of the APC had raised the alarm, accusing the federal government of having a hand in the attempt on Buhari’s life.

    Abba, however, dismissed the claims, saying although a suspect is being held in connection with the blasts, there was no indication that the federal government was involved in the attack.

    Abba said: “A competent team of police investigators, including forensic experts had visited the scene of the blasts. The investigators also visited victims of the blasts in hospitals and the mortuaries.

    “They met with witnesses, including the highly respected Gen. Buhari and his aides who were with him on the day of the incident. But the report of the investigation absolved the government of any complicity in the attacks.”

    The new police helmsman spoke at the Force Headquarters, Abuja, on Monday during his first meeting with Assistant Inspectors General of Police (AIGs) and Commissioners of Police across the 36 states of the federation.

    On Saturday’s governorship election in Osun State, the police boss assured the parties and other stakeholders that arrangements were on ground to ensure integrity of the poll.

    “Arrangements are on ground for adequate security for the election. We only need to make a few adjustments here and there. An advance team of officers and men are already on ground in Osun since last Saturday. We are going to deploy another team on Wednesday to join the personnel on ground.

    “I will not disclose the number of personnel to be deployed in Osun, but we are going to deploy enough hands. There won’t be any problem because we are doing everything possible to ensure that the integrity of the poll is maintained,” Abba stated.

    The Acting IGP assured that police personnel would observe established code of conduct and ethics before, during and after the elections.

    He disclosed that as the DIG in charge of Zone 7, he chaired a special committee that drew up arrangements and preparations for the 2015 general election before his appointment as IGP last week.

  • Close shave

    Close shave

    Buhari assassination miss saved Nigeria from catastrophe. So, it’s time to unite against terrorism   

    It is a season of high insanity. That is emblematised by the claim by former Niger Delta warlord, Asari Dokubo, that Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, former military head of state and All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain, might have staged his own botched assassination.

    Another rogue supposition, this time from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) camp, suggested the assassination bid was a fall-out of an APC in-fighting. A Buhari elimination, it hinted, would have rid Buhari’s APC rivals, perhaps for the party’s presidential ticket, of their nemesis, once and for all.

    Yet, another rogue conspiracy theory suggested the Buhari elimination plot could have arisen from the Jonathan Presidency. Child’s-death-after-a-witch’s-cry version, these theorists wondered why the Buhari attack came a few days after the former head of state’s widely reported criticism of the president.

    Still, a voice of reason has come from Col. Dangiwa Abubakar Umar, the highly principled and respected former military officer: any supposition that the suicide bomber could have had government’s prompting was pure nonsense, since it was the same Federal Government that had upgraded Gen. Buhari’s security infrastructure, after his famous lampoon of Boko Haram. It is also reassuring that the Presidency has distanced itself from the theory of Olisa Metuh, the PDP national publicity secretary, though it has stayed loudly silent on Dokubo’s rather reckless claim.

    But whatever claims, warped and reasoned, and responses to them, a chilly reality is here: terrorism, with its mass slaughter of innocent citizens, is getting out of hand — if it has not already done so. That should awaken everyone from their partisan stupor; and force a united front against a menace that would eliminate everyone if it is not first eliminated. That is the stark reality facing Nigeria today.  However it is tackled will determine if, for us, there would be a tomorrow as a country.

    Still, while aiming at that tomorrow, it is good to look back at yesterday; and trace how this hideous menace has crept on us. That would help us adjust our today, in order to secure our future.

    Nigeria at independence had a near-zero record of political assassination. But then came the long spell of military rule, with its mass violence, wide-spread impunity, devil-may-care injustices, and militarisation of the Nigerian psyche. All these had built the fundaments of Boko Haram, with its mass disorientation and hopelessness; not to talk of pervading youth joblessness that gives Boko Haram’s murderous philosophy such fillip. All these have not been helped by the advent of military-minded politicians in democratic garb, proud and eager to project power, even if that power brazenly subverts the law and murders due process. That is what has got us to this sorry pass.

    By their anarchic philosophy, Boko Haram terrorists would seek to hit high profile targets, set the country ablaze and set afoot the confusion, anomie and eventual anarchy they need so badly to thrive.

    That was as close to peril the country got in the botched bombing of Gen. Buhari and Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi, the leader of the Tijjaniyyat in Nigeria, one of the sects in the mainstream Sunni Islam, as distinct from the Shia.

    The death of both could have set the country on fire, both on religious and political fronts — and only God knows if Nigeria could have emerged from it unscathed as a united country. That narrow escape notwithstanding, it still puts Nigeria at a very grave juncture, in the gallop to terror-induced anarchy.

    Can this gallop to doom be halted? No doubt, even if it would take some doing; for the country has reached a dangerous phase in terror killing. Still, the first step to halting this catastrophe is for the Jonathan Presidency to start — and fast — its promised probe into the attacks on Gen. Buhari and Sheikh Bauchi.

    A very dangerous mindset is to assume that only Boko Haram could have done it. Yes, Boko Haram has logged fearsome notoriety these past few years, such that any bombing is automatically adduced to its unending capacity for evil. But it is also true that, as Boko Haram is a good cover, there might well be other small but no less vicious players in this unfortunate era of equal-opportunity terrorism and anarchy. The earlier the government gets to the root of this bombing, the better it is for everybody; and for its own confidence level, as an effective bastion against terrorism and needless slaughter of innocent souls.

    But beyond getting to the root of this twin-bombing, the Jonathan Presidency needs to pick itself up and demonstrate to Nigerians that it does, indeed, have the capacity to checkmate the terrorists. After all, before the audacious attempt on the duo, there had been near-countless bomb attacks — and there is no guarantee that there would not be more in the future.

    Unfortunately, the sound bites from inside the government are less than reassuring.  Lt-Gen. Kenneth Minimah, the chief of Army Staff, practically said the other day that his troops were ill-trained to face Boko Haram. By requesting for a US $1 billion foreign loan, President Goodluck Jonathan himself would appear to be at the end of his own tether. More unfortunately, the president has not demonstrated how the crippling corruption in the system, that had spectacularly undid past spends on the military, would not undo his proposed new loan.

    However, one thing is sure. Beyond immediate sentiments and excuses (no matter how genuine or sincere), President Jonathan has the ultimate duty to checkmate Boko Haram; and secure Nigerians under his charge. That is why he must tap into as many minds as possible — including the opposition APC’s, which has often accused him of unwise insularity — to save our country from destruction and disintegration.

    This is the time to unite and live; than divide and die. It is time to unite against terrorism.

  • Stop linking FG with bomb attack on Buhari -Col Umar

    Stop linking FG with bomb attack on Buhari -Col Umar

    Former military Governor of Kaduna State, Colonel Abubakar Dangiwa Umar (Rtd) has told loyalists of former Military Head of State, General Muhammadu Buhari to stop linking the Federal Government with the foiled bomb attack on Buhari.

    He said, the Federal Government would not have provided General Buhari with additional security if it has the intention of assassinating him.

    Colonel Umar stated this in a statement he issued in Kaduna on Tuesday in reaction to an interview granted the Hausa service of the BBC by one of the General’s loyalists, where he allegedly blamed the Federal Government for the attack on General Buhari.

    According to him, “When on Wednesday 23rd July 2014 some yet to be identified persons attacked the convoy of General Muhammadu Buhari with a car bomb, some of his supporters or his representatives as one of them claimed on BBC radio Hausa service accused the federal government of complicity. This was even before investigations commenced.

    “I was concerned and worried by possible dangerous repercussions of such allegations on the peace and unity of the country, which is currently under severe stress. I therefore decided not only to condemn their actions but also to adduce evidence to counter their wrong and preposterous allegations. Unfortunately my press statement, which was published, did not entirely include most of the points I raised in my rebuttal. To avoid misrepresentation and misunderstanding, I find it necessary to issue this clarification.

    “When about 4 months ago General Muhammadu Buhari issued a condemnation of the activities of Boko Haram (BH) sect, the presidency praised him for what it saw as an act of courage and statesmanship. Some of us agreed and welcomed this reaction particularly because it would have the positive effect of building the much-needed consensus in the war against the BH insurgency. We were also delighted by General Buhari’s action because it provided another evidence, if any was needed, that he was not a religious bigot, and like most Northerners did not share or support any terrorist religious ideology.

    “However, fearing the usual BH reprisal we advised the federal government to beef up security around the General. The FG agreed and reached out to General Buhari with this proposal. By mutual consent, his security was upgraded. I have no doubt that this must have contributed to his survival of the attack.

    “The point then is how can a government that is intent on assassinating the general provide him with added security? It would have been most strange indeed for a government planning to assassinate this very popular Northern icon to retain as its National Security Advisor, Colonel M.S. Dasuki, son of the Sultan of Sokoto and his brother-in –law, General Aliyu Gusau as its Minister of Defence, or even its Inspector General of Police, M.D. Abubakar from Zamfara State.

    “Not entirely satisfied with what was published from my earlier press release I decided to discuss this issue with my friend and brother Basorun Akin Osuntokun. He offered to carry some of the details in his Thisday Friday column-which he did.

    “I have since learned that the bulletproof vehicle, in which General Buhari was riding at the time of the attack, was provided to him by an APC chieftain possibly an APC governor. My reaction to this is that it does not detract from the fact that the federal government indeed reinforced the General’s security about four months ago. Bulletproof vehicle is only a component of the security infrastructure. General Buhari himself was reported to have told Sahara TV “I am not bothered by them (BH) targeting me. The government has given me adequate protection.” The statement read.
    Dangiwa Umar also appealed to political elites to desist from politics of brinkmanship aimed at achieving their narrow political interests.
    ” They need not be reminded that a violent disintegration of Nigeria would be an ill wind that will blow nobody any good, as my brother Akin would say,” Umar said.

  • Dokubo faults  Jonathan over statement on Buhari

    Dokubo faults Jonathan over statement on Buhari

    Leader of Niger-Delta Peoples Volunteers Force (NDPVF), Alhaji Mujahid‎ Dokubo-Asari has lashed out at  President Goodluck Jonathan for allegedly placing more value on  the life of former Head of State, General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) than other Nigerians.
    President Jonathan had said Nigeria would have boiled had Gen. Buhari died in a recent bomb attack in Kaduna.
    Saying that such comment was uncalled for, the ex-militant leader also rejected insinuations that he paid the mastermind of the blast N5m.
    Dokubo, who denied working  for President Jonathan also said  that the insinuation was meant to tarnish his image as a way of shutting him out of 2015 electioneering process.
    Speaking in Abuja on Tuesday, he  insisted his stance that General Buhari has no good intentions for Nigeria as a result of the  support he (Buhari) gets from foreign leaders and organizations aiming to destabilize the country.
    He said: “I do not work for Jonathan. What the President said was wrong. The life of Buhari is not more important than 87 people that died in that blast. It is unfortunate that the president made such a statement. I wonder why the President will be promoting one person above that of other Nigerians.
    “That statement from the President was very unfortunate. I do have the capacity to tell the President to apologize, but I still insist that he should not have made such a statement.
    “Soon after the blast, a cross-gender person came out and was arrested. Even the mother of the person arrested said he was insane”. 
    On working for President Jonathan, Dokubo said, “Social media reports said I gave them N5 million to carry out the attack. These things are masterminded. The first one is against President Jonathan and the other is against me.
    “I did not pay anybody to carry out any assassination attempt on Buhari. I do not have anything against him. He is not a threat. He will fail in 2015. For the records, I do not operate a Twitter ‎account and anyone saying I tweeted that there will be more attacks is only using my name.”
    “They want to silence me because they know the role I will play in 2015. They have also sponsored reports in Benin Republic that I am the person financing Boko Haram.
    “Another islamic scholar also said I am the one sponsoring Boko Haram to destroy the north on behalf of President Jonathan.
    “The Deputy Minority Leader in the House of Representatives said I spoke on behalf of President Jonathan. That means Buhari is the commander-in-chief of Boko Haram in the north. His allies came out and made inflammatory statements during the 2011 elections.”
    Dokubo said he can prove how Gen Buhari was being funded by the late Leader of Libya, Col.  Muammar Gaddafi

     

  • Who wants Buhari dead?

    Who wants Buhari dead?

    Since the bomb blast in Kaduna State which apparently targeted former Head of State and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Gen Muhammadu Buhari, there has been a constant stream of comments, perspectives and questions. Some said the attack was just another act of terrorism, a familiar occurrence, especially in the North, and that it was neither politically motivated nor an attempt to muzzle the opposition, of which the retired infantry officer is a key figure.

    Still, the question won’t go away. Who wants Gen. Buhari dead and why?

    The General was unhurt. His aides were injured, treated and discharged, although many innocent passersby died.

    Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi, another prominent figure and uncompromising critic of terrorists, also escaped death in the other Kaduna blast and has since gone to Saudi Arabia for the lesser Hajj.

    It was not the first time that Islamic religious leaders were targeted by members of the Boko Haram group during the period of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Sheikh Ahmed Gumi, in 2012, was rounding off his Tafsir at the Sultan Bello Mosque when the terrorists went for him. Luckily, it was those carrying the explosive meant for him and probably his congregation who rather died when the bomb exploded near his house. He had taken a different route to the mosque.

    While Sheikh Bauchi came away unhurt, those who attended his Tafsir lecture at the Murtala Square in Kaduna were not that lucky. The bomb targeting him exploded when the worshippers were returning from the event, killing over 25 of them instantly. Many others were seriously wounded, some maimed for life.

    The suicide who went after Buhari in the Kawo area of the metropolis, chose a busy spot to detonate the explosive and may have followed the retired General from his house.

    The APC leader reportedly said his his assailants made several attempts to overtake him and maybe gain access his car.

    The explosion, which Buhari said was an attempt to assasinate him, was coming barely two days after he issued a statement accusing the government of launching an offensive against the opposition parties in the country.

    Following the explosion, some angry youths started hurling stones at security agents  while others wielding sticks started marching towards the Government House, believing that the government was responsible for the attack on General Buhari.

    Kaduna State Governor Mukthar Ramalan Yero said in a statement that the two explosions were clear manifestation of the resolve by ‘agents of darkness’ to soak the land with the blood of innocent people for no just cause.

    He said “enemies of peace have visited us with their ungodly venom of wanton destruction of human lives. This blast, coming in the Holy month is a clear indication that those behind the act have no iota of fear of God as they have none for the sanctity of human life.”

    Gen. Buhari’s immediate reaction to the incident was that the explosion was targeted at him and he had cause to believe so.

    He said “I am personally involved in a clearly targeted bomb attack today at about 2:30pm on my way to Daura. The unfortunate event, clearly an assassination attempt, came from a fast-moving vehicle that made many attempts to overtake my security car, but was blocked by the escort vehicle. We reached the market area of Kawo where he took advantage of our slowing down and attempted to ram into my car. He instantly detonated the bomb which destroyed all the three cars in our convoy. Unfortunately, when I came out of my vehicle, I saw bodies littered around. They were innocent people going about their daily business, who became victims of mass murder. Thank God for His mercy, I came out unhurt, but with three of my security staff sustaining minor injuries. They have since been treated in hospital and discharged.”

    He said while receiving Governor Yero at his residence a day later that the nation can actually deal with the insecurity posed by activities of the Boko Haram group. The General has been very critical of activities of the insurgents, especially after the Nyanya bombing. In a widely published article, he condemned their activities.

    He said: “My heart breaks every time I take to this platform to offer condolences in this tormenting season of seemingly endless violence. I understand that it is difficult for the government to prevent every terrorist attack, but we can always do more to protect our defenceless citizens by boosting our intelligence and counterterrorism capabilities. Our security and stability cannot be conditioned on any ideology or partisan agenda. Every Nigerian reserves the right to his own security, to his own freedom and dignity, and no amount of terrorist blackmail can make us surrender these. May God unite our hearts as we confront this evil.”

    During Governor Yero’s visit, Gen. Buhari reportedly recalled the first statement he made on Boko Haram. “I’m  sure that the first statement I made about 18 months ago is on record. I said no religion advocates what is happening. So, basically, it is no case of religion; it is neither ethnic, when they kill children in schools in the Northeast, they kill teachers, they burn churches, they burn mosques, they burn motor parks, they burn markets. Where is religion there? Where is ethnicity there? This is terrorism and I hope the government will come to grips with it. Nigeria is capable of dealing with this; we dealt with the civil war, for 30 months, we fought and we kept Nigeria one and, God willing, we are going to keep Nigeria one. I commiserate with the families of those that died, because this thing was ignited at exactly where my car was almost side-by-side with this thing. I came out, there was blood on my dress. I did not know how it came about because I did not have a scratch myself, but dead bodies all over the place. The security tried to move me to the other side and we just got one of the vehicles passing and they brought me home. I hope the law enforcement agencies and the chief executives of the states will succeed in securing the country”.

    Before the twin explosions in the metropolis, two people were killed in cold blood in their homes by unknown gunmen. The first was the General Manager of a Kaduna-based newspaper, the New Democrat, while the other was a lecturer with the state School of Health Technology.

    The Nation was informed that this was a clear indication that the Boko Haram members were around in ten states and preparing to attack.

    Many believe the explosion was the ruling government’s attempt to silence the opposition. But civil rights crusader and stalwart of the APC in Kaduna State, Mallam Shehu Sani warned against attributing the act to the government or even President Goodluck Jonathan.

    He said that “the multiple bombings in Kaduna and Kano which targeted Muhammadu Buhari and Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi stands unreservedly condemned. The assassination attempt once again demonstrated the annihilating danger faced by the Nigerian state. The attack, if successful, could have triggered a serious civil unrest which the architect must have intended to achieve.

    “The ongoing insurgency and the overall security situation in the country should be a matter of concern to all. With the attack on these two prominent Nigerians, it’s evidently clear now that we are in a situation where everyone is vulnerable.”

    He argued that there is an urgent  need for national unity and solidarity in tackling the menace, adding that “violence will continue as long as there is no exigent national cohesion to combat it; political bickering and blame game between the Government and the opposition and warmongering between the North and the South helps in sustaining the violence. It’s utterly wrong for the ruling party to ascribe the ongoing insurgency to the opposition without any iota of proof to that and it’s utterly false for anyone to concoct conspiracy theory that  links President Jonathan or the Federal Government to attacks that clearly and evidently have the hallmark of the insurgents. We have a crisis at hand and a historic challenge to address it. These are special moments in the history of our nation which appeals to our conscience and concern and needs our convergence. The ill wind of violence is threatening to uproot the standing pillar that upholds our national flag; we must all lend our hands and defy these digusting forces. In the crisis we find ourselves, what will matter most to posterity is not the individual opinion we hold about it but the collective position we took about it. When a nation’s faith is tested by crisis, it must be found strong if that nation is to survive. Each bomb explosion should generate a wave of patriotism to extinguish its motive and detonate its essence.”

     

     

  • Buhari: Nigeria would ’ve been in turmoil, says Jonathan

    Buhari: Nigeria would ’ve been in turmoil, says Jonathan

    •APC seeks international probe 

    President Goodluck Jonathan was all gratitude to Allah yesterday for sparing the lives of former Head of State Gen. Muhammadu Buhari and top Islamic preacher Sheik Dahiru Bauchi.

    The duo escaped assassination on Wednesday  when the fundamentalist sect, Boko Haram, detonated two bombs in Kaduna.

    Jonathan, receiving Muslim leaders in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) on the Eid-el-Fitri Sallah homage at the Presidential Villa, said that the country would have been in turmoil if the terrorists had succeeded.

    The President who fasted during Ramadan, described the period as a time to reflect and be our neighbours’ keepers.

    He said: “Not too long ago, we had these dastardly attacks in Kano and Kaduna. We stand to condemn these acts of terror on our people. And we extend our condolences and sympathy to the bereaved and those who might have been injured. The recent attacks in Kaduna, especially where Sheik Dahiru Bauchi was a target and Gen. Muhammadu Buhari was also a target.”

    “You can imagine if these two people had died in those attacks. Shiekh Bauchi is one of our top Islamic preachers; he has millions of followers. Buhari, former Head of State, a leading political figure, has massive supporters.”

    “On the same day people wanted to kill them; those who planned the attacks are clearly sons of the devil. If they had killed these two people, we wouldn’t have been here today. This country would have been in turmoil; we couldn’t have gathered here to celebrate.”

    The President went on: “We thank Allah for saving their lives and preventing a major calamity that would have befallen our country. I use this opportunity to call on all Nigerians to work with government to see that collectively we bring to an end the excesses of Boko Haram and other terrorist groups. We are doing everything humanly possible to end it.”

    Jonathan urged clerics to always preach peace and unity and not hate.

    Nigeria, he said, cannot develop without peace and unity.

    “In a conflict situation people move away from such zones and we cannot develop our communities, our local governments, states and our country in a conflict situation,” he said.

    He said the government was looking at ways to raise funds to cater for widows and orphans as well as those whose business premises were vandalized. Worship places that were destroyed.

    Stressing that the government cannot do it alone, the President said that the fund would be launched on Thursday.

    He said: “Government cannot do it alone because we will need huge sums of money. The Nigerian private sector are vibrant and willing if they see sincerity in government. We have demonstrated that very clearly and we are hopeful that that day reasonable amount of money will be raised.”

    “And we will continue to raise money until we are able to cushion the effect of these excesses and at the same time we are strengthening our security services so that they will be able to confront this menace,” he added.

    Speaking earlier, Vice President, Namadi Sambo thanked the President for accepting to receive them as they celebrate the end of the Ramadan.

    Praying God to continue to give the President wisdom and guidance to rule, for peace and for all the evil including Boko Haram, to end, he praised him for fasting alongside Muslims during the Ramadan.

    He also urged Nigerians to be their brothers’ keepers, as he prayed for tranquility in the country and for total reconciliation and stability.

    Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister Bala Mohammed said: “We have always enjoyed humane and civil disposition; that is why you see Muslims and Christians coming to pay homage – in line with your exemplary leadership.”

    He prayed for courage and wisdom for the President to continue to steer the ship of leadership despite the security challenges.

  • Jonathan, Buhari and demonisation of the North

    Jonathan, Buhari and demonisation of the North

    Former head of state, Muhammadu Buhari, may not have reached mythical status like the eponymous Sardauna of Sokoto, Sir Ahmadu Bello, but he has clearly become a genuine hero whose death, had it occurred in last week’s Kaduna blast that claimed more than 100 lives, would have had dire consequences for the country and the Jonathan presidency. Two days before suicide bombers targeted him, the retired general had excoriated President Goodluck Jonathan for insensitively declaring war on Nigeria, a war he said the president could not hope to win for natural and historical reasons. Even if the two incidents were unrelated, majority of the general’s admirers would never allow themselves be persuaded that the Jonathan government did not have a hand in it. All that was needed for conflagration to break out was a spark in Kaduna, and another fuse lit somewhere else in the far North where the stoic and bold general had made his reputation as a friend of the dispossessed.

    If Dr Jonathan cannot take counsel from the Buhari incident, then he is probably more unwise than he is globally – as a result of his poor handling of the Chibok abductions – reputed. The president remorselessly exploits Nigeria’s political, religious and cultural fissures, and it is doubtful whether he is sensitive to the implications of a political explosion. If the unthinkable had happened in Kaduna last week, and mayhem had been unleashed, would the president feel confident to exonerate himself and his brand of politics from the catastrophe? A Nigerian president is required to understanding the history of his country, where the dividing lines must be drawn, which boundaries he must never cross, what sentiments he must never exploit, and what defenders he must never permit to rally to his cause, let alone entertain openly and shamelessly. There is nothing to suggest that the president appreciates these lessons, nor does he have the discipline to let the lessons, were he to understand them, constrain his actions and policies.

    No one doubts that Dr Jonathan is Nigeria’s most divisive president. He and his aides may think this label harsh and undeserved, but more and more, as if determined to keep flying in the face of providence, he exploits and exacerbate these divisions. For instance, rather than see the opposition as an integral part of democracy, and indeed as an ingredient, if not a fulcrum, for the stabilisation of Nigerian politics, both he and his party, and also his overzealous and uncontrollable aides, believe that the only way to normalise politics in these parts is either to extirpate the opposition like a pest, stigmatise their leaders, or defang it so comprehensively until it becomes unrecognisable and impotent. This depressing worldview manifests in the rash of impeachment intrigues inspired and instigated by the ruling party, and connived at by the presidency, notwithstanding Dr Jonathan’s half-hearted dissociation from the Adamawa, Nasarawa and other impeachment plots.

    In addition, and just like during military regimes when the line between a ruler’s private and public/national interest becomes deliberately and short-sightedly blurred, Dr Jonathan has deployed national security organisations, whose operations are guided by definitive constitutional provisions, to wholly private and skewed interests of the president. The military, particularly the army, secret service, and other instruments of coercion have been completely reoriented towards the preservation and advancement of the Jonathan presidency. Little thought is spared for the cohesion and operational effectiveness of those security organisations.

    Gen Buhari’s poignant and controversial statement also alludes to something more debilitating and truly worrisome about the president’s style. Dr Jonathan’s presidency is not only divisive; it has engaged, more than any other government before it, in the demonisation of the North, the North liberally defined. Taking advantage of the ingratiating style of Nigerian politicians, their sycophancy, their unending greed for power and their impotence in the face of tyranny, Dr Jonathan has either by public statements, body language, or indifference to the plight of the Northeast encouraged or allowed the continuing demonisation of the North. This attitude is unsafe and unhealthy.

    For a long time, and even more remarkably so now, the presidency has argued that the political and business elites of the North are behind Boko Haram. Many South-South groups and individuals, and now alarmingly many Southwest groups and individuals, actually parrot the view that Boko Haram, in spite of its beginnings and chronology, was hatched to undermine the Jonathan presidency. Like all other elites in the country, but perhaps more guiltily, the northern elite was at first slow in recognising the danger constituted by Boko Haram. In fact, given its initial silence and knowing winks, it appeared that the northern elite were indifferent to the violence. They probably recall having lost the power stakes midway into the Umaru Yar’Adua presidency, and then to Dr Jonathan after the 2011 general elections. For a period, they became dangerously inured to the damage caused by Boko Haram and the long-time social, economic and political impact of the sect’s anarchic campaigns. But to conclude they hatched, inspired and funded the insurgency was a little too fanatical and specious.

    Surprisingly, even leading members of the Afenifere and some other top Yoruba elite hitherto reputed for deep thinking and calmness in analysing national issues have become converted to Dr Jonathan’s fallacy. Such conversions in the Southwest must, however, be properly situated within the framework of the emerging ideological and power struggles in the zone. To assuage their guilt for abandoning what is believed to be the mainstream progressive politics in the Southwest, former so-called Awoists and other self-proclaimed progressives have suggested that both the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC) contain progressive elements, or that at any rate, the APC is not even truly progressive. Having argued thus, it became both desirable and ineluctable for the Jonathan supporters in the Southwest to embrace the silly and unfounded notion that northerners support Boko Haram’s subversive campaign because they see leadership as their birthright.

    When Dr Jonathan permitted himself the luxury of visiting the Northeast a few years back, he had accused the elite of harbouring Boko Haram insurgents, an accusation still repeated by many even in the Afenifere. He made no mention of the impotence of his security organisations, which he controls exclusively and deploys as he pleases. He even threatened his hosts with fire and brimstone should one more of his troops be killed by the insurgents. Since then, the militants have killed more so-called ‘northern supporters of Boko Haram’ than soldiers and southerners, and it is not certain how many more northerners they need to kill to persuade southerners to revise their theories. The militants have killed respected members of the North’s military elite such as Gen Mohammed Shuwa, and other members of the political and traditional elites. Yet, neither Dr Jonathan nor his Southwest supporters have felt the need to properly situate the ongoing terror war within the context of the global terror war and international extreme political and even jihadist tendencies.

    The PDP’s insistence on blaming the APC for the large-scale insecurity the country is experiencing, in spite of evidence to the contrary, not to say its adamantine resolve to equate the opposition with religious fanaticism, has led many in the opposition to believe that the Boko Haram insurgency is actually nurtured by the ruling party for private and political ends. There will be no end to the accusations and counterarguments. But in terms of misinformation and disinformation, there is little doubt that the Jonathan government and the ruling party are cruelly and effectively exploiting the Boko Haram insurgency to retain control of the political space and to cynically manipulate the minds of the gullible, especially in the Southwest, Southeast, South-South and North-Central.

    Gen Buhari has timeously warned the president about how close to the brink his government has brought Nigeria with his divisive and exploitative politics. Given the kind of people he has surrounded himself with, and his own deplorable inability to go beyond the surface in analysing and understanding the dynamics of Nigerian politics, power and peoples, I fear Dr Jonathan is quite unable to grasp the fears that trouble Gen Buhari’s mind. For, as it has long been evident, even the ability to appreciate danger requires some depth of understanding, a quality altogether lacking in the present government.

  • Attack on Buhari: Military arrests suspected ‘mastermind’

    Attack on Buhari: Military arrests suspected ‘mastermind’

    •IG sets up panel to investigate  blasts

    The Defence Headquarters (DHQ) yesterday announced the capture of a man it described as the mastermind of Wednesday’s  botched suicide attack on  former Head of State, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.

    The suspect was arrested at the scene  of the blast in Kaduna  dressed like a woman.

    His true sex was established  only after  his arrest.

    He is already being interrogated, the Director of Defence Information, Maj-Gen. Chris Olukolade, said in a statement.

    Inspector-General of Police   Mohammed Abubakar   yesterday  ordered a probe into the  bomb blasts in Kaduna  which has so far claimed over 100 lives.

    The ‘mastermind’ according to Gen.Olukolade  was apprehended by  the military patrol team that swooped on the area immediately after the explosion.

    He said the suspect  ”had disguised as a woman clad in female garb to exude femininity with a brazier affixed to his chest.

    “The suspect was arrested while trying to fizzle into a crowd of onlookers when the patrol team arrived the scene.

    “Youths in the area attempted to mob him while he was being arrested, but were restrained by troops who quickly whisked him away in an armoured personnel carrier.

    He is currently being interrogated by security agencies in a bid to ascertain his links.”

    The Nation gathered   the State Security Service (SSS) is  handling the investigation of the suspect  in Kaduna.

    “One bend of the ongoing probe is that the man is suspected to have remotely controlled the IEDs used to attack Buhari’s convoy,”  one source  said.

    The source said he might   be transferred to Abuja for further questionning  .

    Police anti-bomb and forensic experts    are already analyzing the remains of IEDs  recovered from the scenes of the twin explosions.

    The second blast was apparently targeted at the popular Islamic preacher,Sheick Dahiru Bauchi.

    Another source said: “The police are handling the comprehensive investigation into the incident based on orders from President Goodluck Jonathan who personally assured Buhari that security agencies will get to the root of the explosion.

    “Some of the recovered items are going through forensic examination in order to verify some suspected links.”

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar  yesterday  instituted a probe into the  bomb blasts .

    The  panel, headed by  the Commissioner of Police in charge of Legal Department, Mr. Nwodibo Ekechukwu, is  expected to work in close collaboration with other security agencies.

    The Force Public Relations Officer, Mr. Frank Mba,  named the other members of the committee as DCP Chris Ezike of the Federal SARS; DCP Dan Mallam of the Monitoring Unit ;and DCP Adeyemi Ogunjemilusi of the Interpol Unit.

    The IGP also ordered that security be beefed up across the states, especially  states perceived to be more vulnerable to terror attacks.

    The IGP appealed to Nigerians, particularly Kaduna residents to remain calm and enjoined the citizenry to cooperate with the security agencies by providing them with relevant information.

    Also yesterday, the Kano State police command  promised to put in place adequate security ahead of the Eid-Fitr festival.

    The  arrangement includes stop and search of vehicles,police spokesman , ASP Magaji Musa Majiya said.

    He advised worshippers attending Eid grounds to  avoid “taking unnecessary objects other than their praying mats.”

    He said: “People attending recreation centre and places of gatherings during the Sallah celebration  should be extra careful by taking cognizance of people and objects around, with a view to report any suspicious move to security agencies .

    “Parents and guardians should accompany their children with adult to guide them throughout the festivities . This will checkmate the rampant cases of missing children.”

    The Nigeria Security and Civil Defense Corps (NSCDC)  is deploying 50,000 troops and counterterrorism units, including special forces, a nuclear, biological chemical and radioactive squad and “sniffer dogs” across the country ahead of the Sallah.

    Emmanuel Okeh,  spokesman for  the organisation  said personnel  will patrol gathering spots, highways and other “strategic places.”

  • Presidency: Don’t politicise attack on Buhari

    Presidency: Don’t politicise attack on Buhari

    The Presidency yesterday urged caution  by the political class  in appraising Wednesday’s bomb attack targeted at former Head of State and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Gen. Mohammadu Buhari.

    Speaking in Abuja on Friday, the Political Adviser to the President, Prof. Rufai Ahmed Alkali said resorting to blame game could be counter productive to the war against terrorism.

    Alkali sympathised with Buhari over the attack, saying it was by providence that the nation was saved the trauma of having the former Head of State and Sheik Dahiru Bauchi come to harm.

    Alkali said: “I want to also state that in a season like this, the usual thing is what has become the popular culture of blame game. I don’t think anybody in this country would be associated with such thing in any way or form.

    “Therefore, those who want to trivialise or personalise these issues by attributing it to this government or the leadership of this government in any form, directly or indirectly, should desist from that.

    “This government is committed to the security of this nation, it is committed to lasting peace in this country and Mr. President is deeply committed to bringing stability in our political environment.

    “We should not over dramatise these issues. All of us must come together, we have a collective responsibility to protect and defend our country. This is not a time for politicising issues.

    “Security matters are not for politicians. There are people who have been trained and who are responsible for security. We cannot do their job for them; they should be allowed to do their job.”