Tag: Buhari’s

  • Buhari’s Presidential handshake

    Buhari’s Presidential handshake

    President- elect, Muhammadu Buhari and wife of Edo Governor, Iara Oshiomhole
    President- elect, Muhammadu Buhari and wife of Edo Governor, Iara Oshiomhole
  • Buhari’s reform ‘ll be pro-masses, says group

    The National Coordinator Nigerian League of Democrats (NLD), Otunba Niyi Adebanjo, has said President-elect Muhammadu Buhari will transform the country.

    He said the emergence of Buhari has put an end to the 16 years of the Peoples Democratic Partys (PDP’s) arrogance, adding that the self acclaimed biggest party in Africa fell from the people’s favour.

    He said: “At its height and in control of the Federal Government the PDP with so much impunity and  with little thought for Nigerians who were groaning under the weight of a massively corrupt government, the looming presence of insecurity, grinding poverty, wholesale unemployment and the darkness foisted on the people, the party acted as if nothing was wrong.

    “The fate of the PDP is therefore a veritable lesson note from which to draw nuggets of wisdom in governance to offer as recipes, guidelines, signposts and even beacons to the government in waiting. That is what the NLD has done in the form of suggestions that the organisation has carefully put together for General Muhammadu Buhari as he prepares to lead a team of change agents into Aso Rocks come May 29, 2015,” he said.

    Adebanjo explained that Buhari has the capacity to change the country to where everybody will live in peace.  “It is our belief that as a former army general, with a lot of war strategies under his epaulettes, it should be expected that the president elect is aware that he cannot fail in the battle field.

    “The president-elect should give consideration and attention to the number of national problems and tackle them headlong as government begins business. General Buhari should avoid the disease that commonly plagues governments at the local, state and federal level when they try to dissipate energy in covering the entire field without getting anything done at the end of their tenure.

    “The battle to reach zero tolerance for corruption, provision of affordable electricity, reduction in the army of unemployed youths and improvement in the level of infrastructure development should rank very high for the administration.

    “The NLD believes that people guilty of corruption should not only be made to forfeit the proceeds of self-enrichment but should equally serve a term of jail time, to make them suffer just in the same way they inflicted punishment on the citizens who were denied of the provisions that was due to them if the money so allocated was not misappropriated.

    Adebanjo called for a synergy that will guarantee a seamless operation in government, noting that Buhari must revisit the Steve Oronsaye’s report on civil service reform. “Premium should be paid on professionalism in the civil service. A radical approach that will bring the civil service to the admirable service oriented public office of the 1960s should be the standard that the new government must resolve to reach.

     

     

  • Police: why we stopped Buhari’s one million man march

    The police authority in Kano has explained why it stopped Gen. Muhammadu Buhari’s one-million-man march by youth groups.

    Briefing reporters on the development, police spokesman Magaji Musa Majia said the Sani Abacha Stadium venue proposed by the group for the rally was already booked for a Premier League match between Kano Pillars and Bayelsa United.

    He said the booking of the venue was done by the supervising authority on first-come-first-served,  adding that three groups applied to use the venue on the same day.

    The police spokesman said: “The Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) and a Muslim group, whose Quran recitation was scheduled for Saturday, were among the groups, which applied for the usage of the facility. NFF got the nod on the basis of first-come-first- serve.”

    He said a street procession proposed by President Goodluck Jonathan’s Special Adviser on Agriculture, Dr. Baraka Sani, was denied permission, stressing that “Kano is not like other cities and we have the responsibility to safeguard its security.”

    Majia dismissed as a blackmail, insinuations that the police action was politically-motivated,  adding: “In a free world, people are free to hold an opinion.”

     

  • Buhari’s  qualifications: Matters arising

    Buhari’s qualifications: Matters arising

    The controversy on the status of General Muhammadu Buhari’s qualifications in relation to his eligibility to aspire for election into the office of the president of the Federal Republic has been generating intense debate in recent times forcing a closer examination of relevant constitutional provisions with a view to offering insights into the legal position on the matter.
    Let me start by saying that the issue as to whether Buhari or any candidate is eligible or qualified in terms of qualifications to aspire to the office of the president of Nigeria is not a trivial matter or a non-issue but one of fundamental constitutional significance that clearly falls in the realm of issue based campaign. I, therefore, disagree with any suggestion that those raising the issue are petty or engaged in any smear campaign against Buhari’s candidacy. It is, therefore, proposed in this intervention to examine relevant constitutional provisions on the matter including judicial attitude through the cases in order to assist informed analysis on the subject matter.
    Section 131(d) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended) dealing with qualification for election for the office of the president provides as follows:
    “A person shall be qualified for election to the office of the President if – … he has been educated up to at least School Certificate level or its equivalent”.
    On the surface, one may be inclined to think that theclear import of this constitutional provision is that the minimum qualification that an aspirant for such exalted high office must possess is education up to at least the Secondary School level.  What then is the meaning of the phrase ‘minimum’?
    The Black’s Law Dictionary 8th edition page 1016 defines minimum as follows:
    “Of, relating to, or constituting the smallest acceptable or possible quantity in a given case …”
    The question that arises is whether in the light of the above constitutional provision, such aspirant necessarily must acquire such Secondary School Certificate or whether merely passing through the four walls of a Secondary School without graduation from the said Secondary School will suffice to satisfy the provision.  In the case of HASKE V MAGAGI (2008) 3 LRECN PG. 127 AT 130 RATIO 2the Court of Appeal Kaduna Division held on the meaning of ‘Education up to Secondary School Certificate level or its equivalent as follows:
    “Section 318(1) of the 1999 Constitution defines, “School Certificate or its equivalent” in sub-paragraph (b) thereof to inter alia mean, “education up to secondary school certificate level.” It is the law, that where a word or phrase has been legally defined in an enactment, not only will its ordinary or popular meaning give way, its meaning according to its definition in another legislation can also not be imported into the enactment in which it has also been defined.  See Yaro v Kurdah&Anor (1989) 1 NEPLER 1. Thus, in a number of decided cases, this court held that the meaning of definition of level of school certificate or its equivalent as contained under section 318 of the 1999 Constitution, can accommodate candidate who woefully failed in their bid to obtain a West African School Certificate (WASC).  They are described as WASC “attempted” to “failures”. In essence, a candidate need not to have obtained the secondary school certificate level or passed the secondary school certificate examination.  It is sufficient that such a person has attended a secondary school and read or studied up to the secondary school level, without passing and obtaining the certificate.  See Bayo v. Njidda (2004) 8 NWLR (Pt. 876) 544; (2003) 3 LRECN 114. Chukwu v. Icheonwo (1999) 4 NWLR (Pt. 800) 597; (1999) 4 LRECN 332.(Pp. 143-144, paras, G-C).”
    Similarly in the case of AIKULOLA VS. AKOGWU (2006) 41WRN pg. 29 – 111, particularly at 46 ratio 11 the Court of Appeal Abuja Division while construing the meaning of the words ‘School Certificate’under Section 318 of the 1999 Constitution held as follows:
    “Under section 318 of the 1999 Constitution, the words “school certificate” or its equivalent mean:
    (a)   Secondary School Certificate or its equivalent or Grade II Teachers Certificate, the City and Guilds Certificate; or
    (b)  Education up to Secondary school level; or
    (c) Primary Six Leaving Certificate or its equivalent plus
    (i) Service in the public or private sector in the Federal in any capacity acceptable to the Independent National Electoral Commission for a minimum of 10 years and
    (ii) Attendance at course and training in such institutions as may be acceptable to the Independent National Electoral Commission for periods totaling up to a minimum of one year; and
    (iii) The ability to read, write and understand and communicate in the English language to the satisfaction of the Commission.
    In effect, a person seeking to become a candidate for an election to the House of Assembly of any State in the Federal Republic of Nigeria must possess at least one of the qualifications set out in (a) or (b) or (c) above. See Bayo v. Njidda (2004) 8 NWLR (Pt. 876) 544 at 618 – 620.”
    Per Odili, JCA (Pp. 81 – 82) lines 45 – 35
    ‘School certificate or its equivalent’ means
    (a)   A Secondary School Certificate or its equivalent, or Grade II Teacher’s Certificate, the City and Guilds Certificate; or (G) education up to Secondary School Certificate level; or (c) Primary Six School Leaving Certificate or its equivalent.”
    Per Rhodes-Vivour, JCA (P. 104) lines. 30 – 45.
    In the case of DIGAI V. NANCHANG (2003) 2 LRECN pg. 513 –546 at pg. 515 ratio 4 dealing with the requisite educational qualification for membership of a state house of assembly the Court of Appeal Jos Division held as follows:
    “From the provision of section 106(c) of the  Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, all that is required of a member of a House of Assembly by way of educational qualification, is that he has been educated up to the School Certificate level or its equivalent.
    Section 318 defines what is meant by school certificate or its equivalent…A close reading and analysis of Section 106(c) and section 318 clearly shows that all that is required of a candidate for the membership of House of Assembly, is that he had attended a secondary school up to school certificate level or its equivalent. To my mind, a testimonial from secondary school showing clearly that the 1st respondent attended and completed a secondary school as prescribed in section 106 (c) of the Constitution. What is required under the law is that there must be evidence that  a candidate is educated up to the school certificate level, and not that he must produce a certificate to that effect. (Pp. 542-543, paras G-D)”.
    On whether the candidate need possess such school certificate to be eligible to contest, the same court held in the same ruling as follows:
    “I agree that since there is evidence that the 2nd respondent sat for the school certificate examination on May/June 1975, this is sufficient to satisfy the requirement of section 10(c) of the Decree.  While the acquisition of sound education may be desirable to enable one discharge the functions as Chairman of Local Government Council, it is not absolutely necessary that such a person must possess a certificate to enable him function effectively.” (P. 545, paras. B-D)”.
    The other issue that is relevant is the person who has the burden to prove such qualification whether it is the candidate who is aspiring for such office that must show that he has passed through a secondary school or the person alleging otherwise that must show that the aspirant does not hold such qualification? The answer to this poser was given in the case of Haske v. Mogaji (supra) where the court held on the question of onus to prove as follows:
    “It is both legal and logical that the mere fact that a party has pleaded in his petition that the other party is not qualified to contest an election, because he lacked the requisite educational qualification is not sufficient for the Tribunal to latch unto it and decide on it, in the absence of cogent and credible evidence of such non-qualification or disqualification being placed before the Tribunal. In the absence of evidence, such a plea in the petition ends and/or terminates with the petition”.
    It is clear from the foregoing that it is the person alleging non-qualification of the candidate that has the responsibility of showing by cogent/convincing evidence that such aspirant never attended any such secondary school as alleged.
    The foregoing analysis may have revealed the following:
    (a)  Buhari’s eligibility to contest for the office of the president of Nigeria can only be challenged if those making the allegation can show either that he has never attended any secondary school, that he never possessed any primary school leaving certificate, that he has never served in any public service for a period of 10 years in addition to his primary school certificate or that he has never sat for any school certificate examination.  It is immaterial whether he passed or failed such examination. To succeed, they must also show that he does not possess any higher qualification above the minimum requirement of secondary school certificate. In otherwords, they must show that all certificates acquired by the General in consequence of his military training at home and abroad culminating in his rising to the position of a Major-General in the Army were certificates below secondary school level or certificate. It is those making these allegations who must prove the allegations against the General. It is not the General who must show that he possesses such qualifications.  The law is, ‘He who asserts must prove’.
    (b)   The army authorities had publicly admitted that they have records of Buhari’s qualifications in their custody. The army being a public institution can furnish the Certified True Copies of Buhari’s qualifications to appropriate authorities, including INEC at the request of those making the allegations without bordering the General for such obligations.
    It can be said that those who have raised the issue of the General’s qualifications and eligibility may have served patriotic intentions, but they need to do more by showing through concrete, cogent, compelling and believable evidence that the General neither attended any secondary school nor possesses any primary school leaving certificate, including showing that his period of service in the army, including service as Head of State in total do not rank up to 10 years for them to succeed in their patriotic crusade.
    Finally, having raised the constitutional issue of qualification, no doubt an issue based campaign, those interested in taking the issue further are advised to be guided by judicial pronouncements quoted copiously above if they want to be taken seriously.  However, if they are basing their conclusion on speculations not backed up with empirical evidence, it is wise to advise them to consider the issue as closed while moving to other issues in the campaign that ought to be dictated by issues and not sentiments.

     

  • Buhari’s the surest bet

    SIR: Muhammadu Buhari a successful battle against indiscipline, lawlessness, and corruption during the short period of his administration.

    He controlled the nation’s spending in the best interest of Nigeria and in accordance with the law. He only had enemies among those corrupt leaders and rogues among the society.

    Buhari is a tested leader, when he was pushed out of power, there was no trace of him stealing the nation’s money. He remained clean and pure.

    Unfortunately, after Buhari was overthrown, corruption and indiscipline came became the order of the day and without control.

    What have we to say about the very younger elements who have no other record than looting the national treasury when they were in power for which Rev. Sunday Mbang cried out by saying “Every evil has become an accepted standard of Nigerian life”.

    So it is not the age that matters in government, but the sincerity and ability to perform of which Buhari stands out. He is going into politics this time around with a mission, vision and compass to serve the nation and not ambition for personal profit.

    He is coming to put a full stop to “Non-construction but payment for bridges where there is no river”.

     

    • Michael O. Faniyi mni. Jp

    Esa Oke,

    Osun State.

  • Buhari’s evolution

    Buhari’s evolution

    W hen General Muhammadu Buhari emerged as the All Progressives Congress (APC) standard-bearer, my mind did not ponder the future. I did not contemplate President Goodluck Jonathan, his opponent. Neither did I mull over permutations of his running mate, and the fiery battle in the offing.

    I zoomed back into important memories, but not in a sequential order. The first was a story I read about him during those years of long fuel queues in the 1990s. Ironically we are experiencing that now in Lagos again. The Buhari story took place in a Kaduna fuel station. The line, huddled bumper to bumper in a serpentine and interminable sweep, kept the commuters hopeful. Word passed from car to car, commuter to commuter, that a certain dignitary was at the tail end, waiting his turn. This man did not send somebody, like other big men, to sweat it in the oven of the afternoon wait.

    Who was he?  A stir of curiosity followed a consensus of sympathy. It was Buhari, the former head of state. He became a spectacle, subdued, without the frills and pomp associated with personages like him. Some walked back to confirm and to nod in obeisance, and passed the good news to all. He was one of them, in the gruelling grind of irony, the irony of a fuel-soaked land pining for drops of energy.

    Suddenly, by common consent, all cars yielded for the tall, gangly man with the enigmatic, if sometimes cherubic, smile. They paid homage in hand waves and cheers as Buhari drove in and filled his tank.

    The other was when the media asked him, after he became Nigeria’s military leader, what he would do with the media. “The press,” he roared back, his eyes aglow with rage, “I will tamper with that.” He followed with Decree 4 and jailed journalists. In that interview, he also evinced contempt for democracy.

    Another memory: He was a GOC and our border with Chad was collapsing under the firepower of insurgents. Garba Wushishi was his boss in Lagos and dithered over whether Nigeria should flush them out– sounds familiar. Buhari defied his boss and rallied his troops to rumble North and restore Nigeria’s pride and border. When Buhari was announced as head of state, I read an article in a newspaper cutting of the Nigerian Tribune on a notice board at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife written by Ebenezer Babatope, a former role model in that light. Babatope wrote it during the Buhari border soldiery and alerted Nigerians to the messianic spirit of the general. Babatope was quite prescient then, a quality he has lost.

    Buhari is one of the few men in public life who have evolved before our eyes. But neither he nor some Nigerians seem conscious of it. With a calm face and taciturn tongue, he cuts the image of the anti-politician. Yet, if military idiosyncrasy teaches guile, he did not imbibe it. We know the other military virtues: outspokenness, courage, discipline. Yet, no great soldier, from Wellington to Napoleon to Grant to Alexander the Great to our own Adekunle, ever snatched victory without the ultimate war quality: surprise.

    Buhari is perhaps the most predictable politician in Nigerian history. He does not seem to surprise everyone. Yet, he is the most surprising politician in our history. Some say he is the most predictable because, one, he is above board. He is a top politician who owns no business firm, owns only a house, travels light, has little money. Two, that he does not love other tribes. Three, that he is a religious bigot. Four, that he cannot be a democrat because he has no taste for cooperative action.

    Yet, the Fulani Jingoist picked a pastor as his running mate. He has an unadvertised familiarity with some of the major evangelicals in Nigeria. He is called a religious fundamentalist, but he was almost killed by those some said he sponsored. Only a few months ago, his convoy fell to the bombs and bullets of Boko Haram, ending the lives of some of his associates and aides. That paralysed the critics who accused him of being a sponsor.

    A democrat? He disavowed this as head of state, but after soul searching, he decided to give it the loyalty of his emotion. Yet, Buhari is no archetypal democrat.  Without cunning, how does a man like him become a presidential candidate four times? How does a man without money form a political party of influence? He is a counterfoil to a Nigeria where money answers everything. In the last primary, he contested against a money bag, and two governors, each of them capable of razing the bank. He does not schmooze with his fellow politicians. He is not gregarious. A politician orates to compensate for financial insufficiency. He is an unadorned speaker.

    He is said to present only one attribute for presidency: his integrity. He will stop the financial bleeding in this Jonathan world leaky with billions. Yet, he gave an illuminating insight in a recent Channels interview with Seun Akinbaloye. Buhari noted that to tackle Boko Haram, Nigeria should have held a conference with our three border nations Chad, Cameroun and Niger, and signed a treaty over border movements with infrastructure of implementation. Rather, President Jonathan keeps travelling to meet a head of state who is in cahoots with a suspected terrorist who was given a so-called guided tour of a plane loaded with arms headed for the country where the insurgents thrive and preen. A bigot would not think so creatively and so publicly as Buhari did in the Channels interview.

    If we say he is not a politician, he beat that tribe to be a standard- bearer four times. He has no money, he beat money bags several times. He is called a bigot and almost died in their hands and gave us perhaps the best idea yet on how to mow them down. We say he is not a democrat, but he formed two political parties and helped form a third and rose to become its standard-bearer in the most exquisite presidential primary ever held in our history.

    He is described as an ethnic bigot, but in the primary he garnered heavy votes from across the country. Yet Buhari projects a sort of ‘innocence’ in his public persona. In spite of his virtues, he lives with the barbs on his personality. He is not in a hurry to deny charges. He inhabits a disturbing equanimity, and that is perhaps why some Nigerians do not know that the Buhari of 1983, who appeared on television to give his coup broadcast in a beret on a winsome young face, has evolved over the decades.

    He is vilified as a sectional leader, but without money, oratory, cajoling and the bravura of political structure, he is at the head of the greatest political coalition in our history. That makes the challenge for the electioneering campaign compelling. His image, speeches, character, Nigerianness and ideological projection require an animation and brio.

    Buhari has evolved but it is time for his image to keep pace.

  • Salisu Buhari’s UNN appointment

    SIR: In April, the Goodluck Jonathan-led Federal Government, in exercise of its executive powers, reconstituted the governing councils of federal universities and made elaborate appointments therein including, the appointment of Salisu Buhari into the Governing Council of the University of Nigeria, (UNN).

    As a proud alumnus of that great institution, I feel thoroughly scandalized by the thoughts and decision of the Jonathan administration to embarrass the entire university community and her alumni with such unmeritorious appointment. This particular appointment, like the Alamieyeseigha’s pardon, sends a very clear signal that crimes and criminal activities are not only condoned but rewarded, under the present administration.

    It would be recalled that the beneficiary of the present appointment, Alhaji Salisu Buhari, was the first elected Speaker of the House of Representatives in 1999 upon the return of civil rule in Nigeria. He was tried and convicted for forging a certificate purportedly obtained from a Canadian University which subsequently enjoyed the infamous notoriety otherwise known as the “Toronto Certificate saga” . He was accordingly removed as Speaker on account of the forgery. Although he was allegedly pardoned by the Obasanjo administration, yet such alleged pardon does not detract from the fact that he was once convicted for a criminal offence of forgery and misconduct. The integrity of the University of Nigeria conceived by visionary leader Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe and founded on high academic and moral grounds with a distinctive mission statement and motto: To Restore the Dignity of Man cannot afford to parade men and women of questionable characters in her Governing Council. Such would be antithetical to the objectives and the high moral pedestal on which the institution is founded.

    As an institution that is resolute on the quality and content of its grandaunts particularly in Learning and Character, this development constitutes a dangerous set back as the signal already created is one that justifies moral transgressions and misrepresent the values for which the institution is known and associated.

    Mr. President, as the Visitor of the University is enjoined to invoke his powers under Sections 14 and 15 of the University of Nigeria Act Laws of the Federation and remove or drop Buhari from the Governing Council of the university.

    To be sure, the appointment of Salisu Buhari, is ill-advised, Unmeritorious, totally completely condemnable and accordingly rejected.

    • Malachy Ugwummadu

    Legal Adviser, University of Nigeria Alumni Association

    Lagos Branch.