Tag: BUHARI

  • Akpabio, Yuguda rally support for Buhari

    FORMER Akwa Ibom State Governor Godswill Akpabio has urged members of the Presidential Support Committee (PSC) for President Muhammadu Buhari’s re-election to intensify their campaign to ensure that the President defeats his major opponent, former Vice President Abubakar Atiku by a minimum of 10 million votes.

    Akpabio spoke in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, while inaugurating the the group’s Southwest zonal leadership.

    Also, former Bauchi State Governor and Chairman, Miners for Buhari/ Osinbajo Mallam Isa Yuguda pledged five million votes for Buhari’s re-election bid.

    Yuguda stated this yesterday in Abuja at a news conference organised by Miners for Buhari and Osinbajo (MFBO).

    Buhari is contesting on the platform of All Progressives Congress (APC) and Atiku is  People’s Democratic Party (PDP)  candidate in the February 16 presidential election.

    Akpabio, who is the national coordinator of the PSC Committee, said it is made up of over 1,900 volunteer groups who are mobilising support for the President’s re-election.

    He said: “You must set a target for yourselves. Mr. President must have over 10 million votes more than the next person.

    “Our states are for the APC and President Buhari. God has guaranteed victory for APC in 2019 because when we go for campaigns, we always plead with the security not to allow people into the stadium because everywhere we have been to for campaigns, you will see crowd,” he added.

    The former Senate Minority Leader described Buhari as a rare kind of leader that comes once in a generation.

    “This man, who has integrity, has brought back respect to Nigeria. His integrity and honesty made African heads of state crown him czar of anti-corruption in Africa. I joined APC because I believe in transformational leadership.

    “When I was governor in 2012, we were getting zero allocation. There was massive corruption in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Petroleum Ministry. The President brought Treasury Single Account (TSA) and everything improved. Yesterday at the University of Nigeria in Enugu, the president commissioned an edifice, an academic centre of excellence built by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). There were three of them awarded in 2006 but nothing was done. But the president came and commissioned one of it yesterday and the remaining two are also ready to be commissioned.

    “He has improved power generation from 2.3 megawatts to seven megawatts. He has also been fair to all the states by giving them bail out funds. He didn’t say you are PDP or you are APGA; he gave everybody bail out funds”. Akpabio said.

    PSC Deputy National Coordinator (South) Senator Akin Odunsi gave kudos to the various groups mobilising grassroots support for Buhari/Osinbajo and APC candidates.

    He said PSC would hold mega rallies in the six Southwest states on the same day to support Buhari’s re-election.

    But the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Political Affairs, Gideon Zamani warned the members of the group that their job won’t be so easy.

    Senator Ajayi Boroffice will serve as the Zonal Coordinator of PSC in the Southwest and Dele Olanubi, an engineer, will serve as the secretary.

    Some other members of the committee are: Women Leader, Chief(Mr.) Yetunde Babajide; Deputy Women Leader Mrs. Folasade Tinubu-Ojo; Treasurer, Rilwan Akinjagunla; Organising Secretary I Olugbenga Ogundare; Organising Secretary II, Adebisi Abraham; Director, Mobilisation and Contact Alhaji Garuba Goniya and Doyin Johnson will serve as Publicity Secretary.

    The State Coordinators are Moshood Salvador (Lagos); Olajide Adelani (Ondo); Erelu Laide Badmus (Oyo); Lukman Abimbola Bello (Osun); Suraj Fadairo (Ogun) and Chief Tunde Arifayan (Ekiti).

    Dignitaries at the event include the APC National Women Leader Hajia Salamatu Baiwa; the Iyaloja general of Oyo State, Chief (Mrs.) Juliana Raheem; APC southwest Women Leader Chief (Mrs.) Kemi Nelson; Mr. Woke Arisekola; Chief Femi Olaore; Chief Gbolagade Andre; Prof. Fasina Nelson; Chief Olajide Onaolapo; Chief (Mrs.) Bisi Otunba; Statistician General of the Federation Dr. Yemi Kale and former Deputy Governor of Ondo State Alhaji Alli Olanusi.

    Yuguda, in Abuja, said from the series of consultations carried out by the association in places where mining activities occur, it was agreed by miners that the enabling environment they are enjoying was due to Buhari administration’s policies.

    Yuguda added that anything short of continuity would make the mining industry suffer a setback.

  • CNPP backs Buhari on suspension

    The local chapter of the Conference of Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP) in Ekiti State yesterday commended President Muhammadu Buhari over the suspension of the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen and immediate appointment of Justice Ibrahim Tanko Mohammed in acting capacity.

    The CNPP said the bravery displayed by President Buhari indicated that he had the capacity to end corruption in the country, by making big men to be held accountable for their actions in their respective offices.

    The political group, however,  advised  Justice Onnoghen not to pander to the dictate of the “distraught opposition elements who wanted to  push him by their caustic comments to confront the All Progressives Congress (APC) on the action taken by President Buhari.

    “But rather, Justice Onnoghen should go ahead to clear himself of some of the allegations levelled against him by the Code of Conduct Tribunal to protect his name and the Judiciary.”

    In a statement in Ado Ekiti by its State Chairman, Deacon Olu Akomolafe, the CNPP said: “Onnoghen as a chief law officer was supposed to have stepped aside or resigned to allow free, fair and unbiased trial since the beginning of the imbroglio that led to his suspension as the CJN in order to uphold the sanctity of the judiciary.”

    The coalition added further that the latest move by the President has again confirmed that, the fight against corruption has gone beyond mere sloganeering.

    It said: “There is no doubt that, the development will further strengthen the judiciary in the country and make the common man to have more confidence and trust in it as their last hope.”

  • PDP alleges plots to bribe senators to block sanctions against Buhari

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has alerted of moves by some unnamed agents of the Presidency to bribe senators of the All Progressives Congress (APC) extraction to protect President Muhammadu Buhari from imminent parliamentary sanctions for alleged constitutional breaches and gross misconduct.

    The main opposition party said in a statement Sunday that intelligence available to it indicated that it was for this reason Presidency summoned all APC senators for a meeting at the Presidential Villa.

    The meeting at the Villa is slated for Monday night, ahead of the Senate’s planned resumption on Tuesday.
    Spokesman for the PDP, Kola Ologbondiyan, who signed the statement, said the Presidency was unsettled by the national and international outcry that greeted President Buhari’s suspension and replacement of Justice Walter Onnoghen as the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN).
    The statement said, “President Buhari is not only apprehensive that the Senate might sanction him for violating the constitution and usurping its statutory duties regarding the handling of issues related to a CJN, the parliament might also open an inquest into how President Buhari, who parades as Mr. Integrity, allegedly procured an Order from the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) upon which he announced the illegal suspension of the CJN.

    “There are reports that the said order is suspicious and subject to investigation, being not argued or issued in the open court; following which a distressed Buhari Presidency now seeks to corrupt and undermine the Senate.

    “The PDP has been made aware of how money has been moved from the coffers of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to bribe the APC senators, as well as how each APC senator has been offered huge sums of money in foreign currency to engage in heckling during the session, particularly when the matter is raised.

    “However, the PDP wants the APC senators to note that the issue at hand is not partisan; it is not even about Justice Walter Onnoghen, but about nationhood, as well as the protection of our democracy and constitution from despotism.

    “The Buhari Presidency is bent on corrupting our democratic institutions but Nigerians are watching the action of our lawmakers at this critical time”.

  • Onnoghen: Buhari cuts Gordian knot, executes coup against constitution

    LESS than a week after ex-president Olsuegun Obasanjo characterised the Muhammadu Buhari presidency as a return to the Sani Abacha dictatorship, the president last Friday summarily suspended from office the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Walter Onnoghen.

    The president claimed to be executing the orders of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) which on January 23, 2019, asked him to swear in a replacement for the CJN. In his speech before swearing in the replacement, Tanko Muhammad, a Justice of the Supreme Court, the president chivalrously bemoaned seeing “the full weight of the Chief Justice of Nigeria descend on the tender head of one of the organs of justice under his control”. It is clear he spoke of the CCT. He also adds that “There is simply no way the officers of that court, from the Chairman to the bailiffs, can pretend to be unaffected by the influence of the leader of the Judiciary.”

    Switching to accusatory mode, in consonance with the instinct and culture of his government, the president lamented that “Practically every other day since his trial commenced, the nation has witnessed various courts granting orders and counter-orders in favour of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, all of them characterised by an unholy alacrity between the time of filing, hearing and delivery of judgment in same.” Blinded by venomous rage against lawyers whom he accused of insisting “that (court) orders, whether right or wrong are technically valid, and must be obeyed till an appellate court says otherwise”, the president betrayed his suspicion of the judiciary, if not distaste for their methods. “No doubt, that it is the proper interpretation,” he acknowledged with his unfailing inquisitorial tone, “but is it the right disposition for our nation?”

    Insisting that “In the midst of all these distracting events, the essential question of whether the accused CJN actually has a case to answer has been lost in the squabble over the form and nature of his trial”, the president magisterially decreed that “This should not be so”. Not done, the president adds in a tone that suggests that he knows justice when he sees it: “If Justice cannot be done and clearly seen to be done, society itself is at risk of the most unimaginable chaos. As a Government, we cannot stand by wailing and wringing our hands…” Then he launches into his default anti-corruption mode, rails against corruption, all but trying the CJN on media platforms, and convicts him without recourse to fair hearing or even appeal. Satisfied that he stood on unimpeachable ground, the president proceeded to cut the Gordian knot, leaned on the lame feet of the CCT order, and swore in the next in rank to Justice Onnoghen, the Justice he had all along wanted in the topmost judicial office in the land, Justice Muhammad.

    It mattered little to President Buhari that the Federal High Court, Appeal Court and Supreme Court are all headed by the Bauchi-Gombe axis. He will of course see it, as usual, as a co-incidence, perhaps in the same meritorious way he sees the concentration of the nation’s security apparatuses in the hands of his northern compatriots. As he often says, most of those appointees are people he had not met before. The president’s backers insist it is not obligatory for him to spread his appointments, or even see the country from the expansively nationalistic prism that conduces to stability and representativeness. But the question the president has never answered, and which traducers like Chief Obasanjo often needles him with is whether he needed to be persuaded to see Nigeria’s existential issues, particularly its national question, from a wide perspective.

    President Buhari anchors his suspension (which in Nigeria is tantamount to removal) of the CJN on the order of the CCT and his reading of the judicial process or, as he surmises it, judicial travesty. He says, for instance, that he deplores the alacrity with which the CJN’s lawyers and the courts were achieving their aims with “unholy alacrity between the time of filing, hearing and delivery of judgment”. The president is now widely recognised as forgetful and distracted, but even he exceeds himself when he spoke of unholy alacrity — obviously not his words, but that of a speech writer or a conspirator in the unfolding constitutional crisis in the land — between the courts, and insinuates a judicial conspiracy in favour of the CJN. Alacrity? It took more than two weeks for the CJN to get the courts to grant him some weak and tentative reprieve, from the time a former media aide of the president, Dennis Aghanya, filed a petition at the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) on January 9, 2019, and the stay of proceeding ordered by the Appeal Court on January 24, 2019.

    In contrast, it took only three working days — January 9 and January 14 — to deliver Mr Aghanya’s petition and then arraign the CJN. Though the petition was dated January 7, the CCB received it January 9, investigated it post haste before or by January 10, and filed a six-count charge against the CJN on January 11. It was obscenely hasty, far more provocative and deplorable than the alacrity the president alluded to in his speech. And as it is characteristic of conspiracies and hurried, malevolent actions, too many loopholes were created by the government action. The president claimed to have acted upon the CCT ex parte order. By now it is well known that the president is not gifted in paying attention to both logic and details. Otherwise why would it not occur to him, even if his aides had quoted some mischievous laws, that a tribunal that is not a court of superior record could not order the dethronement of a Chief Justice? Indeed that sweeping power does not inhere in any court in Nigeria.

    Even more damning is the chronology of the conspiracy against the CJN. The CCT claimed to have acted on a motion ex parte brought on January 9, 2019 by one James Akpala, an investigator of the CCB, praying the tribunal to order the CJN to step aside pending the determination of the Motion on Notice dated January 10, 2019, and for the president to swear in a replacement. Motion on Notice often comes before Motion Ex parte, or at worst the same time. Motion ex parte does not come before motion on notice as occurred in the CCB case before the CCT. Also, note very carefully that obviously, given the dates on the motions, and except the CCT made a mistake in typing its order, everything had been prepared to skewer the CJN when Mr Aghanya delivered his so-called petition on January 9. Clearly, Mr Aghanya was just a willing, idle hand to actuate a wide-ranging conspiracy that had little to do with the law and anti-corruption war.

    What is also indisputable from the proceedings before the CCT is that the presidency was not even sure how to proceed from the beginning. The Motion on Notice and Motion Ex parte were obviously firs kept in abeyance until the government feared last Thursday that its conspiracy was collapsing. Nothing was said about the motions brought by the CCB’s Mr Akpala when the CCT first heard the case and adjourned twice between January 14, 2019 and January 28, 2019. Suddenly, while its jurisdiction was still being challenged, and three days before its next adjournment, the CCT granted Mr Akpala’s Motion Ex parte, when customarily, it is the injured party, the victim of oppression, that seeks ex parte orders to protect the status quo until the determination of the case. How the president still blames the CJN and his lawyers for the abuse of the judicial process is hard to understand.

    There is no part of the constitution that empowers the CCT to assume the jurisdiction it claimed in the CJN case. Absolutely none, not Section 158 or 292, and not even the Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal Act which in Section Three enables a public officer to admit errors and make amends without being dragged before the CCT. It is unfortunate that the presidency has tried to conflate the CJN’s problem with assets declaration with the government’s anti-corruption war, to the extent of seeing everyone who defends due process as being tolerant of corruption. It is a disingenuous attempt to weaken the hands of those who have long seen the Buhari presidency as surreptitiously, but now openly, dictatorial. The natural instinct of the Buhari presidency is clearly totalitarian. It has no scintilla of democracy in its veins, and cannot have, despite its patently false claims to the contrary in his Friday speech. Indeed, it can only get worse.

    No one of course suggests that the CJN had no case to answer, despite the president’s malicious inferences, however, the  constitution is abundantly clear how to deal with him, who has the power to suspend him, in this case not the president, and by what process he could be removed, in this case too, through the Senate. The clarity of the law and the constitution, particularly the role of the National Judicial Council (NJC), is to the intent that the CJN could not be tried while still a judicial officer. The president’s peremptory actions are anchored on his fears that he could not have his way in both the NJC and the Senate. He should have anticipated this a long time ago and sponsored the appropriate judicial and even constitutional reforms. After all, he had had almost two years to nurse his grudge, which he tries to paint in altruistic colours, to maturity, and find constitutional ways of tackling whatever ails him about the judiciary with which he is eternally at odds.

    The president swears in his speech that he is a proponent of the rule of law and lover of constitutional democracy. There is no part of his more than three years in office, or of his response to the CJN case, that portrays him as a democrat of exponent of the rule of law. He fantasises his obedience to the unlawful CCT order as an indication of his respect for the rule of law. The public will snicker at his claims on the grounds of his appalling disobedience to court orders in the cases of Sambo Dasuki, a former National Security Adviser (NSA) more than thrice admitted to bail but still kept in chains, and Ibrahim El-Zakzaky, the Shiite leader ordered to be released and compensated by the courts, but still in chains. No one believes the president has respect for the rule of law except his speechwriters.

    By embracing the CCT’s atrocious order and clearly subordinating the judiciary to the executive branch, President Buhari has empowered his government and the numerous conspirators hanging around him to gravely undermine constitutional rule. He has been honest enough not to rest his actions on any part of the constitution, but on the spurious claims and orders of the CCT. In one fell swoop, the president has managed to compromise the integrity of the leadership of the CCT, castrated the acting CJN, and poisoned constitutional democracy. Even if he reverses himself based on public protests and actions, assuming Nigerians understand that fascism begins as inexorably and surreptitiously as this, his essential undemocratic self will remain as pernicious as ever, unaffected by logical or legal arguments, and unaffected by conventions. The former CJN, Mahmud Mohammed, once warned that presidents or chairmen of tribunals, such as the Tax Appeal Tribunal and Code of Conduct Tribunal, must never be referred to as Justices. Who could tell at the time that a sitting president would sometime in the future base his illegal dethronement of a chief justice on the orders of someone who is not a justice?

    No visionary president who cares about the future of his country would take these fateful steps of subverting constitutionalism, scarifying the CCT chairman and the acting CJN, and opening the country to all sorts of desperate political and judicial scheming. It can only be because, as this column maintained last week, the implications of his many actions quite seriously escape him. President Buhari’s government is used to trying cases on media platforms, social, electronic and print. Because he receives hearing and backing, he has continued the atrocious practice. He is unlikely to stop. The country campaigns to gift him another four years, despite showing his hands quite early. No people can be so remorseless and so fatalistic.

    It is humiliating for everyone concerned that a controversy was stirred over the CJN matter. The president considers the CJN’s moral authority as wounded, and expected him to step aside on his own volition. His refusal to relinquish office led to the president’s drastic and conspiratorial action. The president’s address was, therefore, a litany of self-help and extrajudicial measures, unfitting for the president of the most populous black nation on earth. Nigeria faces a clear case of mindless corruption. But that corruption is not limited to only financial corruption. It also includes the kind of corruption that sees political leaders taking extraordinary and unlawful steps to short-change the society and subvert law and order. The Buhari presidency is no less guilty. It was expected to find very intelligent ways of addressing the cankerworm. It has instead chosen abominable ways of fighting the evil, ways that are bound to have painful and deleterious effects on the constitution and the future of the country.

    Even though the constitution is clear on what should be done if and when a CJN is accused of misconduct, politicians and lawyers may, however, refuse to agree on how to proceed. What undermines the fight against corruption and other ills in Nigeria is not so much the provisions of the law, as the inability of those in high offices to summon the principles and intellect to fight the evils in lawful, sophisticated ways that do not damage the reputation of the country.

  • People with disabilities endorse Buhari

    People Living With Disability (PLWD) said they will be rewarding President Muhammadu Buhari with their votes on February 16 for showing them love and signing into law, the National Disability Act which was recently passed into law by the national assembly after about 16 years of agitation. The President had assured of prompt signing of the law when transmitted to him when he appeared on a television programme with Vice President Yemi Osinbajo recently.

    Special Adviser to the President on Disability Matters, Dr. Samuel Ankeli said at a news conference that the signing of the bill into law has given the PWD community in Nigeria a sense of belonging, adding that they owe him a duty to reciprocate the gesture by giving him their votes. He said: “God has used a father and a man of the people, President Muhammadu Buhari to do this thing for us. It is a worthy course and we are very proud of it. Three things are common in this.

    “First, we now belong to the international community of persons with disability. Secondly, we now have access to governance. We can now occupy office even as high as that of the President. We can become chairmen of local government now without inhibition. Our rights are now protected for political participation and governance. We can now have access to Finance because the banks will now open their doors to us whether they like it or not. We now have access to schools and you cannot deny us admission and you must give us access to class rooms and lecture halls. It is now left for us to wake up and take advantage of this opportunity.

    “Thirdly, the need has come for us to educate the public on the need for them to understand this law. We want the whole world to know that this Law is not meant to harass any individual, but to let them know that we are citizens of this country and have rights that need to be protected and if you violate the rights, the law will come down on you. We are no longer going to take charity, but deal with us as colleagues and as true Nigerians. We are calling on our colleagues who have not decided on where they stand to know that if you have a father that believe in you, you ought to believe in that father.”

     

  • I have fulfilled my promises, Buhari to Osun people

    • Says APC not renting crowd to fill rally grounds

    President Mohammadu Buhari yesterday told supporters in Osogbo, Osun State, that he had fulfilled his campaign promises to Nigerians.

    The President, who spoke at a mega rally of the All Progressives Congress ahead of the February/March elections, reminded Nigerians of the condition in which he met the economy and national security in May, 2015.

    Buhari, who also said he had done his best in fighting corruption, vowed that anyone found to be corrupt would not be spared.

    “They will be prosecuted and brought to justice,” he said.

    Acknowledging people’s support for him, he expressed gratitude to the people for “trooping out and lining up the streets in the scorching sun to receive him and his entourage.”

    He pledged that he and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo would not let Nigerians down if re-elected.

    Also addressing the rally, Osinbajo said those contending power with the APC did not mean well for Nigeria.

    “They are determined to draw us back but by the grace of God we are moving on and higher,” he said.

    Governor  Gboyega Oyetola, the APC National Chairman, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, the party’s National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, its pioneer Chaiman, Chief Bisi Akande  and the immediate past governor of the state, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, all   asked  the people of the state to return Buhari for a second term, saying his administration had done so much in the areas of social investment and youth empowerment, road construction, health, agriculture.

    Akande thanked President Buhari for his love for the people of Osun and Nigeria while Tinubu said PDP’s 16 years in power at the federal level only impoverished Nigerians.

    He said: “PDP’s misrule denied our youths a lot of employment opportunities,” pleading with Nigerians not to allow the efforts of the progressives for 15 years to protect nation’s democracy go in vain, adding that Buhari had re-established importance of agriculture, which he said older Nigerian generation had utilized to train their children and contribute to the national development.

     

     

     

  • I suspended Onnoghen on CCT’s order –Buhari

    CITING an order of a Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday suspended the embattled Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen and immediately swore in an acting CJN. He is Justice Ibrahim Tanko Mohammed,who is next in ranking to Onnoghen at the Supreme Court.

    The January 23,2019 interim order directed Onnoghen   to “step aside as the Chief Justice of Nigeria and the Chairman of the National Judicial Council over an allegation of contravening the provisions of the Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal Act CAP C15 Laws of the Federation 2004 pending the determination of the Motion on Notice dated 10th Day of January 2019.”

    It also mandated the President to “take all necessary measure to swear the most Senior Justice of the Supreme Court of Nigeria as Acting Chief Justice of Nigeria and Chairman National Judicial Council in order to prevent a vacuum in the judicial arm of government pending the determination of the motion on Notice.” The motion ex parte filed by  the Federal Government against Onnoghen. Attached to the motion,according to the CCT, were an affidavit  of urgency and an affidavit  in support of the motion by “one James Akpala,an investigator with the Code of Conduct Bureau  for the Complainant/Applicant.”

    Justice Mohammed was conveyed to the Presidential Villa at about 4:30pm in a black Mercedes Benz C240 with number plate GWA:900FA. Buhari,in a 20-paragraph speech soon after swearing in the acting CJN, decried  “the drama around the trial of the Chief Justice of Nigeria,” which he said,  “has challenged that pillar of justice in the perception of the ordinary man on the street.” He said government could not allow the situation to continue unabated. His words: “A short while ago, I was served with an Order of the Code of Conduct Tribunal issued on Wednesday 23rd January 2019, directing the suspension of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Honourable Justice Walter Nkanu Samuel Onnoghen from office the pending final determination of the cases against him at the Code of Conduct Tribunal and several other fora relating to his alleged breach of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers. “The nation has been gripped by the tragic realities of no less a personality than the Chief Justice of Nigeria himself becoming the accused person in a corruption trial since details of the petition against him by a Civil Society Organisation first became public about a fortnight ago.

    “Although the allegations in the petition are grievous enough in themselves, the security agencies have since then traced other suspicious transactions running into millions of dollars to the CJN’s personal accounts, all  undeclared or improperly declared as required by law. “Perhaps more worrisome is the Chief Justice of Nigeria’s own written admission to the charges that he indeed failed to follow the spirit and letter of the law in declaring his assets, citing ’’mistake’’ and ’’forgetfulness,’’ which are totally unknown to our laws as defences in the circumstances of his case. “One expected that with his moral authority so wounded by these serious charges of corruption, more so by his own written admission, Mr. Justice Walter Onnoghen would have acted swiftly to spare our Judicial Arm further disrepute by removing himself from superintending over it while his trial lasted.

    “Unfortunately, he has not done so. Instead, the nation has been treated to the sordid spectacle of a judicial game of wits in which the Chief Justice of Nigeria and his legal team have made nonsense of the efforts of the Code of Conduct Tribunal to hear the allegation on merit and conclude the trial as quickly as possible considering the nature of the times in which we live. “Whether deliberately or inadvertently, we have all seen the full weight of the Chief Justice of Nigeria descend on the tender head of one of the organs of justice under his control. There is simply no way the officers of that court, from the Chairman to the bailiffs, can pretend to be unaffected by the influence of the leader of the Judiciary.

    “Not only the trial court, but others have been put on the spot. Practically, every other day since his trial commenced, the nation has witnessed various courts granting orders and counter-orders in favour of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, all of them characterised by an unholy alacrity between the time of filing, hearing and delivery of judgment in same. “The real effect has been a stalling of the trial of Justice Onnoghen, helped along by lawyers who insist that these orders, whether right or wrong, are technically valid, and must be obeyed till an appellate court says otherwise. No doubt, that it is the proper interpretation, but is it the right disposition for our nation? “Nigeria is a constitutional democracy and no one must be, or be seen to be, above the law. Unfortunately, the drama around the trial of the Chief Justice of Nigeria has challenged that pillar of justice in the perception of the ordinary man on the street.

    For it is certain that no ordinary Nigerian can get the swift and special treatment Justice Onnoghen has enjoyed from his subordinates and privies in our Judicature. “In the midst of all these distracting events, the essential question of whether the accused CJN actually has a case to answer has been lost in the squabble over the form and nature of his trial. This should not be so. “If Justice cannot be done and clearly seen to be done, society itself is at risk of the most unimaginable chaos. As a government, we cannot stand by wailing and wringing our hands helplessly but give our full backing and support to those brave elements within the Judiciary who act forthrightly, irrespective of who is involved. “As you are all aware, the fight against corruption is one of the tripods of policies promised to Nigerians by this administration.

    Needless to say that it is an existential policy which must be given adequate attention and commitment by all the three arms of government. The efforts of the Executive will amount to nothing without the cooperation of the Legislature and especially the Judiciary. “It is no secret that this government is dissatisfied with the alarming rate in which the Supreme Court of Nigeria under the oversight of Justice Walter Onnoghen has serially set free, persons accused of the most dire acts of corruption, often on mere technicalities, and after quite a number of them have been convicted by the trial and appellate courts. “Since there is nothing the Executive Arm can do after the apex court of the land has spoken on any matter, several of these individuals walk free among us today, enjoying what are clearly the proceeds of the corruption which for so long has defeated the efforts of this nation to develop and prosper.

    “It is against this background that I have received the Order of the Code of Conduct Tribunal directing me to suspend the Chief Justice pending final determination of the cases against him. It also explains why I am not only complying immediately, but with some degree of relief for the battered sensibilities of ordinary Nigerians whose patience must have become severely over-taxed by these anomalies. “In line with this administration’s avowed respect for the Rule of Law, I have wholeheartedly obeyed the Order of the Code of Conduct Tribunal,dated 23rd Janu ary 2019. “Accordingly, I hereby suspend the Honourable Mr. Justice Walter Nkanu Samuel Onnoghen, GCON, as the Chief Justice of Nigeria pending final determination of the case against him at the Code of Conduct Tribunal.

    “In further compliance with the same Order of the Code of Conduct Tribunal, I hereby invite Honourable Justice Ibrahim Tanko Mohammed,JSC, being the next most Senior Justice in the Supreme Court, to come forward to take the Judicial Oath as Chief Justice of Nigeria in an Acting Capacity. “Fellow Nigerians, we can only stand a chance to win the fight against corruption, and position our dear nation for accelerated development when we stand together to contend against it.” The CCT interim order was signed by the Chairman of the tribunal, Hon Danladi Y. Umar, and Mrs. Julie A. Anabor (Hon Member II).

  • Buhari kicks-off South-west campaign in Osun, Oyo states today

    President Muhammadu Buhari, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) would storm the capital cities of Oyo and Osun for the kick off of the party’s presidential and legislative elections campaign in the region.

    While the Ibadan rally is scheduled to start by 10am, the Osogbo campaign is slated for 1pm.

    Among those expected at the rally are Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Chief Bisi Akande, Chief Olusegun Osoba, governors of the six South western region, former governors, including Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, South west Buhari Support Organisation (BSO) Chairman, Prince Felix Awofisayo, APC chairmen in the region among others.

    The BSO in the  South West, will be coordinating a massive presidential campaign in Ibadan and Osogbo to drum support for the president and the party at large.

    The BSO chairman, Awofisayo, while speaking on the plan for the rally said, “the South west region is very relevant and key to the election of President Buhari come February 16 because the region has the second largest number of Permanent Voters’ Card holders in Nigeria outside North West

    According to him, the people of the region are well aware of the need to ensure continuity of the ongoing development in Nigeria under the Buhari administration and are determined to work towards it through massive mobilisation of voters.

    He said it would be suicidal to have a government that would truncate the ongoing development, adding that, that is why the South west really is very crucial.

    Awofisayo then charged electorate in the region not to be deceived by the antics of the opposition parties, particularly the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and their allies in deciding who governs them for the next four years.

  • COSEG urges Yoruba to vote for Buhari

    THE Coalition of Oodua Self-Determination Groups (COSEG) has called on the Yoruba to massively vote for President Muhammadu Buhari in the presidential election holding on February 16.

    In a statement signed by Comrade Dayo Ogunlana, the Chairman of the Coordinating Council of the organization, Yoruba were advised to reject the Peoples’ Democratic party (PDP) in the elction and vote for the All Progressive Congress (APC) in the interest of Yoruba race which would produce the president of the country in 2023.

    The statement further said: The Coalition of Oodua Self Determination Groups was formed to clearly protect and promote the interest of the Yoruba at all times, irrespective of whose ox is gored, and as a matter of fact, we have not derailed from this core objective that has been our guiding principle till date.

    “We have remained focused and we shall continue to remain so.

    Flowing from the above, we, therefore, call on our sons and daughters to critically dissect the recent political developments, putting in mind the main interest of our race which is very sacrosanct.

    “The Yoruba  in the opposition and their collaborators should clearly place the race uppermost in their hearts. They should, therefore, retrace their steps and support the Buhari/ Osinbajo presidency that loves and accords our race respect we deserve,  if and only if they want us to accord them respect.

    “Let us all appreciate this present government for the trust they repose in our race and for what they have done for the race by voting Buhari /Osinbajo again  knowing full well that our massive support this 2019 for them is a pointer and collaborative support that will guarantee the Yoruba race the 2023 presidency. This is where we stand and this is where we are.

    “2023 is our time and must not be joked with and the only route or  road to it must not be abandoned.

    The only way to get this automatically is to massively use our voting strength to elect the Buhari / Osinbajo-led government come February 2019.

    “We, therefore, enjoin all Yoruba, irrespective of their political inclinations, and those that  have the real blood of omoluabi in their veins to vote and vote massively for the Buhari/Osinbajo presidency”.

  • Buhari signs Executive Order to tackle road infrastructure

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday signed an Executive Order designed to improve road infrastructure across the country.

    Known as Executive Order 007 of 2019 on   Road Infrastructure Development and Refurbishment Investment Tax Credit Scheme, the instrument is aimed at developing and delivering  Public-Private Partnerships with notable investors for the purpose of closing the road infrastructure gap in the transportation sector.

    Buhari, speaking at the signing said that under the arrangement, 19 eligible road projects will be undertaken by six leading manufacturing and construction firms in 11 states, and the six geo-political zones.

    The President said the Federal Government remains committed to keeping its promises to deliver qualitative roads and transportation infrastructure.

    The President noted that government has consistently adopted innovative solutions to complement the annual budgetary spending on infrastructure and cited the  Presidential Infrastructure Development Fund, through which the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority is investing in critical roads and power projects nationwide such as the 2nd Niger Bridge, Lagos to Ibadan Expressway, East-West Road, Abuja – Kano Road, and the Mambila Hydroelectric Power Project.

    President Buhari explained that the country’s reliance on annual budgetary allocations to fund road development has been disappointing, given that our budget proposals have not always been passed in an expeditious manner by the National Assembly.

    Speaking on the new order, Finance Minister  Zainab Ahmed, said the scheme is based on the demand for road projects by companies and other corporate sponsors, who are willing to deploy their own working capital and financial resources to fund road projects located in the major economic corridors of the country where they have significant businesses and operations.

    Six private sector companies have chosen to participate in the scheme:

    They are:   Dangote Industries Limited, Lafarge Africa Plc, Unilever Nigeria Plc, Flour Mills of Nigeria Plc, Nigeria LNG Limited, and  China Road and Bridge Corporation Nigeria Limited.

    They  will be investing in 19 Eligible Road Projects, totalling 794.4km which have been prioritised in 11 states across each of the six geo-political zones:

    They include    Ashaka-Bajoga Highway in Gombe State;  Dikwa-GambaruNgala Road in Borno State;  Bama-Banki Road in Borno State;  Sharada Road in Kano State;  Nnamdi Azikiwe Expressway / Bypass, in Kaduna State;  Birnin Gwari Expressway – Road in Kaduna State;  Birnin Gwari – Dansadau Road in Kaduna State;  Makurdi-Yandev-Gboko Road in Benue State;  Zone Roundabout-House of Assembly Road in Benue State;and  Obajana-Kabba Road in Kogi State;

    Others are :Ekuku-Idoma-Obehira Road in Kogi State;  AdaviEba-Ikuehi-Obeiba-Obokore Road in Kogi State;  Lokoja-Ganaja Road in Kogi State;  Ofeme Community Road Network and Bridges in Abia State;  Obele-Ilaro-Papalanto-Shagamu Road in Ogun State;  Sokoto Road in Ogun State;  Apapa-Oshodi-Oworonshoki-Ojota Road in Lagos State;  Bodo-Bonny Road & Bridges across Opobo Channel in Rivers State; and  Benin City – Asaba Road in Edo State.”