Tag: Bukola Saraki

  • Saraki blasts Jonathan over sack of Sports Minister

    Saraki blasts Jonathan over sack of Sports Minister

    •10 governors, other stakeholders to attend grand reception to celebrate Abdullahi

    THE immediate past Governor of Kwara State, Dr. Bukola Saraki, yesterday faulted President Goodluck Jonathan for sacking Mr. Bolaji Abdullahi as sports minister.

    He was sad that the presidency could sacrifice competence for sheer politics.

    Abdullahi was dropped last Wednesday for what the presidency sources described as his refusal to openly identify with President Goodluck Jonathan ahead of the 2015 elections, and for his closeness to Senator Saraki.

    He had reportedly told the chairman of the PDP Caretaker Committee in the state that he” is not a politician.”

    He was, at the time of his sack, outside the country on official assignment.

    Notwithstanding, a grand reception awaits the ex-minister in Ilorin, his home town with no fewer than 10 state governors and eminent Kwarans expected to attend.

    The date and scope of the reception were being worked out at press time.

    But Saraki, who broke his silence on Abdulahi’s sack in response to an enquiry from our correspondent, said the ex-minister had always been a professional right from his time as a commissioner under his administration between 2003 and 2011.

    He said: “It is shameful that Bolaji Abdullahi was relieved of his duty as minister mainly because of politics and certainly not for non performance.

    “It is disappointing that in the interest of politics we have compromised competence, and invariably denied our nation the progress it deserves.

    “I do wish Mallam Abdullahi the best of luck in his future endeavours and I am sure wherever he finds himself he will put in his very best as always with the interest of the nation at heart.”

    Speaking on Abdulahi’s character, Saraki said: “I can testify that he has always been professional since he was commissioner under my tenure as Governor in Kwara State. Monumental achievements made under him are still being built upon today.

    “As a fellow Kwaran, I am proud of him for showing Nigerians and the world at large what Kwarans are made of.”

    He said in spite of the sack, it was difficult to write off the incredible performance of Abdullahi.

    He said: “Abdullahi is a great son of Kwara with several milestones at state and national levels. His laudable achievements as Minister of Sports, which include Nigeria’s victory at the last Africa Nations Cup, performance at the Olympics, FIFA World Cup has endeared him to sport lovers and Nigerians in all works of life.”

    Meanwhile, about 10 serving governors have indicated interest in the proposed grand reception for Abdullahi in Ilorin to celebrate his meritorious service to the nation.

    A reliable source, who spoke in confidence, said most stakeholders in the state have also signified interest in the rally.

    “We are working out a grand reception/ rally for Abdullahi to only mark his excellent performance in office and to send a message that we should not sacrifice merit for partisan politics,” the source said.

    “About 10 governors have indicated interest in the rally. If the PDP can organise unity rally, we also have the right to host merit rally.

    “Contrary to the permutations of the presidency, the sack of Abdullahi will backfire for the president in 2015 in the state. Already, public opinion nationwide does not support the action of the president.”

     

  • Saraki: Jonathan can’t justify

    Saraki: Jonathan can’t justify

    Former Kwara State governor, Senator Bukola Saraki, yesterday said President Goodluck Jonathan cannot justify his decision to suspend Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mallam Lamido Sanusi

    Saraki, who is the chairman Senate Committee on Environment and Ecology, also denied reports making the rounds that the upper legislative chamber has approved Sanusi’s suspension.

    He said that the Senate was yet to be formally briefed on the Sanusi’s controversy, insisting that the provisions of the CBN Act are clear and unambiguous on the removal or suspension of the apex bank governor.

    Saraki spoke yesterday in his Ilorin, Kwara State, capital home.

    He said it was clear Jonathan has been ill-advised on the issue and warned that such developments will affect other institutions meant to stabilise the country.

    He expressed concerns that investors would be wary of doing business again with the country given the alleged arbitrary nature of suspending Sanusi.

    According to him: “Today, it is the CBN governor. Who knows the president may wake up tomorrow and suspend the chairman of INEC?

    “With my own knowledge of the CBN Act and the relevant sections, which I have gone through, no part of that Act supports the action taken by the president.

    “And I think this kind of thing is not about Sanusi. It is even more about the new governor who is coming in.

    “Can that governor really say that his tenure is five years? There can be a new president tomorrow down the line who would say, ‘in 2014, this is what happened.’’’

    He added: “The independence of the position of the governor of Central Bank is no longer there and there are investors outside the country, fund managers that will have about N20bn invested in this country who took those decisions based on the fact that the CBN is independent.

    “The moment those institutions are not protected, they have far-reaching effect on the economy. I think in a way the president was ill-advised.

    “Whatever he was trying to achieve is lost because those institutions are more important than the issue of the individual. Also the law states clearly how the governor of Central Bank can be removed or suspended.”

    He debunked the notion that the Senate had backed the suspension of Sanusi.

    Saraki said: “I was reading in the newspapers that the Senate has taken a position on the Sanusi’s issue and I want to say that the Senate has not at any time discussed the issue.

    “I think the senator who was quoted was talking on his personal recognition.

    “From reading the CBN Act, there is no room for the president to either suspend or remove the CBN governor.

    “There is no letter or request before us; maybe when we get back, we will get the letter. We must follow the laws.”

    On the gang-up against his political leadership in the state, the former governor, who has defected to the All Progressive Congress (APC), said any talk about taking over from him is mere day dreaming.

    He explained the latest figures from the registration of the APC membership in the state has shown that it can conveniently win the next elections.

  • Saraki, Abe, Adamu, Ake, Al-Hassan,  others to Mark: we’re for APC

    Saraki, Abe, Adamu, Ake, Al-Hassan, others to Mark: we’re for APC

    •Rattled PDP Senators hold emergency meeting

    Five Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) senators took the bull by the horns yesterday on the floor of the Senate.

    Abubakar Bukola Saraki (Kwara Central), Magnus Abe (Rivers South East), Abdullahi Adamu (Nasarawa West), Wilson Ake (Rivers West) and Aisha Jumai Al-Hassan openly declared for the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The open declaration for APC may have been informed by the refusal of the Senate President, David Mark, to read a letter by 11 PDP senators informing the Senate of their defection to the APC.

    It was apparent that the open declaration of the PDP lawmakers for the APC rattled Mark.

    Each of the defectors raised a Point of Order to announce his defection to the opposition party.

    Proceedings were held up for over one hour as the defectors rose to insist on the enforcement of their privilege to associate freely.

    But Mark however relied on Senate Order 53(3) to rule the defectors out of Order.

    For Mark, the matter of defection of the senators is in court and no reference shall be made to it, according to the Senate’s rule.

    Saraki, who led the group of defectors raised Order 14(a) which deals with privileges.

    Order 14 (a) states: “Privileges are the rights enjoyed by the Senate collectively and the members of the Senate individually conferred by the Legislative Houses (Powers and Privileges) Act Cap 208 Laws of the Federation 1990 and other statutes, or by practice, precedent usage and custom.

    (b) “Whenever a matter of privilege arises, it shall be taken up immediately.”

    Saraki listed the names of PDP senators who wrote the Senate to announce their defection to APC.

    Mark told Saraki that the matter was pending in court and the Senate would not make reference to it.

    Mark noted that “privilege does not apply here because you were the person who went to court”.

    Saraki replied: “Presently, under Privilege, I have informed the Senate that I have defected from the PDP to the APC and the matter in court is not about defection but the declaration of my seat vacant.”

    Mark said that his interpretation of the issue in court was not that of declaration of seat vacant.

    He added: “In any case, you have come by a Point of Order, but because the matter is in court, I shall have no further discussion on it because our Order is very clear – No reference shall be made to any matter that is before a court. Therefore, I rule out of Order.”

    Mark noted that the defectors went to court, which said that the status quo should be maintained.

    He ruled Saraki out of order and asked Senate Leader, Victor Ndoma-Egba to move the Order of the day.

    Hardly had the Senate Leader stood up when Minority Leader George Akume intervened.

    Akume reminded the Senate that the privileges of members are guaranteed by the Constitution.

    He noted that the defection of 11 PDP senators to the APC had dragged on for so long.

    The lawmaker insisted that the privilege of members must be complied with.

    “The Senate leadership cannot stop people from freely associating,” Akume said.

    He warned about unbridled breaching of the privileges of senators.

    Mark cut Akume short by asking him to name the privileges that have been breached. He ruled Akume out of Order.

    But Akume was not yet done. The Benue State lawmaker noted that by the power conferred on him as the Minority leader, he is expected to defend the defectors.

    Senator Anthony Adeniyi (APC, Ekiti South) in a Point of Order, reminded the Senate President that every senator is entitled to associate freely.

    Adeniyi said that the issues raised by Saraki and Akume about 11 PDP senators who desired to defect to APC should not be wished away, especially when the matter has to do with the fundamental right of the lawmakers.

    Mark also ruled him out of Order “because the matter is in court”.

    Akume said that the court order Mark referred to was not being well interpreted. He insisted that letter of defection of the 11 PDP senators to the APC should be read.

    Senators Adamu, Abe, Ake, Al-Hassan also raised the matter of privilege to declare their defection to APC.

    Mark ruled them out of Order.

    As the chamber was getting hotter for Mark to control, the Senate President signaled to the Senate Leader to move for the adjournment of the upper chamber.

    Ndoma-Egba jokingly said that “having exhausted all Point of Orders and all items on the Order paper, I hereby move that the Senate do now adjourn to another legislative day”.

    Abe and Al-Hassan, who spoke to reporters after the plenary, said they consulted with their constituents before defecting to the APC.

    Al-Hassan specifically said that she felt that moving to the APC would offer her justice, which she, could not find in PDP.

    The PDP Senate caucus summoned an emergency meeting last night.

    Insiders said the meeting was scheduled to discuss the gale of defections from the party to the APC.

     

  • Kwara and the politics  of betrayals

    Kwara and the politics of betrayals

    We are indeed in a season of politics.  It is also repulsively, a period for betrayals; when it is more beneficial to betray your benefactor for a pot of political favour from the centre of administrative gravity than to stay on the godly principle of faithfulness.

    Things have gone so bizarre that politicians can now sell their birth rights for temporary political and economic imaginary benefits.

    I was not old enough to understand how things went in Nigeria’s first republic but I have read enough to appreciate the commitment of participants in the politics of that era to the principles of friendships and relationships as veritable platform for building lasting political legacies. That is why we still have several political children of the leaders of that era till date.

    The same scenario could be said to have also manifested during the second republic where men followed those who were their leaders and committed themselves to the emancipation of their groups’ political philosophies. Of course, some of the men of that period were active participants in the politics of the earlier republic. Bear me out; it wasn’t that there were no instances and elements of betrayals in those days, no. We can’t forget the classic parting of ways between the legendary Obafemi Awolowo and some of his closest associates in the South-west.

    History is replete with cases of betrayals. We read often of the betrayal of Jesus Christ by Judas Iscariot and we are appalled that a man could so sell his eternity for a mere 30 dirty shekels of silver.

    Yet I wonder why men have failed to learn from the history of betrayals; if the story of Judas, particularly how he ended it all, is too remote in time to relate with, what of those people we see around us? No one who betrays his source of help can enjoy sufficient help elsewhere. It is not a curse but the reality of life, and it is because he who betrays his friend today to gain the approval of another man will similarly betray the latter.

    Men who betray don’t have honour; men who betray are never bold, they lack guts; the ability to come out openly and say it before it is too late. I say this because my understanding is that such men often have a deep-seated dissatisfaction with their victim which they however are always unable to confront because they lack the spine and character to open their mind to their victims who might thereafter give reasons to clear their doubts and settle their misgivings.

    I have read some of the reasons given to justify the betrayal of Senator Bukola Saraki by few of his former friends who have now found a temporary haven in the midst of Saraki-bashers and I shiver for the apparent lack of guts by these men. How could we have entrusted legacies and platforms to them? I sympathize with Senator Saraki. He trusted dishonourable men; men without conscience, without dignity and with zest for money. A pity!

    I hope it is not true that the individual who spent almost 11 years in government, eight of those with Saraki as a governor, is now alleging that he was not empowered, even while boasting that he has houses every where, including the United Kingdom?

    How ridiculous is the argument by Alhaji Bio Ibrahim that Saraki refused to relate with him after the conclusion of the 2011 gubernatorial primaries in Kwara State where he was not picked as the candidate? And is that reason strong enough to warrant the kind of vituperation that has been coming from the former minister against Saraki? Well truth is that deep within him, Bio had always harbour hatred for the leader; the result of the primaries only served as an opportunity to vent his animosity.

    There is a saying that whatever you utter after many bottles of beer is what had actually laid deep down within you but which you probably had no gut to say.

    What is the justification for our professor’s intransigence?  A man rehabilitated by the elder Saraki after his tenure as vice chancellor, who pretended to be Sarakite until he lost the bid to be governor?  I wonder what he would have done if he became governor.  What can we say of Senator Simeon Ajibola who was literally rejected by his own kinsmen during the campaigns for the last election and took open pleadings by Bukola on the campaign podium for those rural but politically intelligent folks to change their minds? Ajibola himself knows that the ballot that brought him back to the senate in 2011 was cast for Bukola and not for a Simeon Ajibola that had literally abandoned his constituency and refused to initiate any development works in their midst.

    I am appalled that so soon Ajibola can point to the number of times he has “defeated” Saraki in elections! What a tongue! But should we blame them? Selfishness is the prime factor of betrayals.

    And that is why when you find an exception in the season of anomie, lets not pretend but celebrate such. Today I celebrate the men and women who have decided to shun the porridge of affliction disguised as political opportunities from the paymaster and have rather stayed with the true leader. I cannot list their names in full but they are out there in the ‘cold’ of political reckoning because they have chosen to follow their leader and therefore become cut off from the largesse their counterparts are running to eat.

    But I cannot afford to miss mentioning the name of Abdulfatah Ahmed; the great son of Igbomina stock who has stood with his boss without shame.  We have been witnesses to the gale of betrayals by former deputies who seize the entire throne once given the opportunity to occupy a space in the power equilibrium but here in Kwara, Ahmed has not hidden the fact that in the political calculations of the state, he is the governor but there is a leader.

    I have watched from afar and in some instances at close quarters the disposition of the incumbent governor of Kwara State, Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed to the existing relationship between him and the political leader and I am truly impressed.

    Many might deride him for being slavish, but men of deep insight will applaud his humility and commitment to friendship and relationships. It is the stock for which men of honour are made. And such men often go to very great places in return. Ahmed is a study in humility, hard work, resourcefulness, dedication, piety, and loyalty. I won’t be surprised if Ahmed becomes the president tomorrow.

    But betrayals, except they repent and retrace, always end up in agony and destruction.

    Khadijat writes from Ilorin

  • Saraki: I advised Tukur not to fight Nyako

    Saraki: I advised Tukur not to fight Nyako

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kwara State, Senator Bukola Saraki, at the weekend said he advised the embattled Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, to avoid conflict with Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa State.

    Saraki spoke in Ilorin when he explained his defection and that of other defunct New PDP members to the APC.

    The former governor, who addressed party members at Ile-Arugbo, explained that instead of ensuring an harmonious relationship with Governor Nyako, Tukur became vindictive by dissolving the party’s Excos in his home state.

    The senator traced the problems in PDP to undue intervention of the party’s National Executive Council in the internal affairs of state chapters.

    He named the most affected states as Adamawa and Rivers.

    The senator told his supporters that the defection to the APC was necessitated by the need to sustain the collective interest of the people and not out of selfish interest.

    Saraki urged party members and supporters to register when APC begins the exercise next year.

    Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed said the non-reinstatement of Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola as the party secretary, despite a court judgment, was among reasons the PDP had become retrogressive and devoid of respect for the rule of law.

    The governor promised the people that his administration, in 2014, would create 6,000 jobs.

  • Gbemi  Saraki back on  social radar

    Gbemi Saraki back on social radar

    Two years after her governorship ambition was truncated by her own brother and immediate past governor of Kwara State, Dr. Bukola Saraki, followed a few months later by the death of her father and political backbone, Dr. Olusola Saraki, Senator Gbemi Saraki has resurfaced after taking a sabbatical from both the political firmament and the social space.

    While the pretty politician was away in her anonymous cocoon, tongues wagged with rumours. Some said she was trying to make a family, others said she was nursing the political wound inflicted on her by her own brother. The only major appearance she had made since then was at her father’s one year remembrance a few weeks ago.

    A few days ago, however, she was sighted at Senator Teslim Folarin’s 50th birthday in Ibadan. Gbemi radiated the kind of joy associated with inner peace at the occasion. In fact, a serving senator was quoted as saying that no woman could be so peacefully beautiful without a man in his life.

    Meanwhile, her name is being rumoured as one of those penciled down for ministerial appointment by the Presidency any time soon. Information available to Celeb Watch indicates that her name has already been sent to security agents for screening.

  • Saraki to Usman: I didn’t film meeting

    Saraki to Usman: I didn’t film meeting

    Senator Bukola Saraki yesterday denied filming the meeting he had with Senator Esther Nenadi Usman.

    Saraki, who represents Kwara Central, said Usman painted him as a man who could not be trusted by claiming that he video-taped their discussion.

    Usman, who represents Kaduna South, had in her contribution during the confirmation of Prof. Shuaibu Oba Abdulraheem as chairman of Federal Character Commission, said as members of the committee which screened Oba she went with Senator James Manager to seek Saraki’s support for Abdulraheem’s confirmation.

    Saraki was one of the two senators from Kwara State, who opposed the confirmation.

    But Usman asked her colleagues to go ahead and confirm the nomination of Abdulraheem as FCC boss.

    Usman noted that she was surprised to discover that immediately after the meeting with Saraki, the film of their discussion went viral in Kwara State.

    She noted that Saraki boasted that if he was not important why were people coming to beg him to support the confirmation.

    But Saraki, who raised a Point of Order yesterday over the issue, denied ever filming the discussion he had with Usman and Manager.

    The lawmaker said Usman gave the impression he is a man who could not be trusted.

    He prayed the Senate to ask Usman to withdraw the statement or to refer the matter to the Ethics and Privileges Committee for further investigation.

    Senate President David Mark said he did not want to take what Saraki said further.

    Mark said he would meet the two senators on a later date.

  • ‘Merger’ll boost development’

    ‘Merger’ll boost development’

    A group, Kwara Coalition for Positive Change (KCPC), yesterday said the merger of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and new Peoples Democratic Party (nPDP) in Kwara State will enhance the state’s development.

    A statement by KCPC leaders, Idera Jimoh, Mohammed Sha’aba Patigi and Lamidi Okiki Sanni, welcomed “all members of the nPDP under the leadership of Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed and Senator Bukola Saraki and their supporters to APC.

    “We pray that the togetherness will not only consolidate the APC in Kwara State but will further enhance the development of the state.

    “We also appreciate the APC’s Interim National Publicity Secretary, Lai Mohammed, for coming home to appraise the political situation of the merging parties.

    “His explanation had diffused all dissenting speculations that were intended to cause disaffection among willing and committed members of the APC.”

    An aide of former Gombe State Governor Danjuma Goje has said the merger would create a deviation from “the current situation where only one party has continued to dominate the polity through monopoly.”

    Dauda Simon said the defection will make the country a two-party state and help create a comfortable free environment synonymous with healthy democratic system.”

  • Jennifer Uzor  takes a back seat

    Jennifer Uzor takes a back seat

    FOR a long while, Jennifer Uzor, a former model-turned-business woman has taken a back seat in the social circles. Known in social circles as a socialite with a difference, her withdrawal took many by surprise. But the former stakeholder in Movida, one of the top rated clubs in Lagos, is said to withdraw into her shell after her marriage to Madu, a former aide to Senator Bukola Saraki, a former governor of Kwara State.

    Sources said she is happy to be off the social circuit and has been enjoying her confinement to her matrimonial home.

  • ‘Baraje faction can’t survive’

    ‘Baraje faction can’t survive’

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain and former Transport Minister Hon. Ibrahim Isah Bio contested for the governorship in Kwara State in 2011. He spoke with EMMANUEL OLADESU on the crisis in the party and how it has affected the Kwara Chapter

    Senator Bukola Saraki is the leader of the aggrieved members of the Peoples Democratic Party. Are you with him in that boat?

    I am not with him and I am not going to be with the new PDP. I belong to the PDP and I don’t believe in the struggle or the ideals of the new PDP. I’m an ardent follower of Dr. Abubakar Olusola Saraki, the great Waziri of Ilorin, and for the last 20 years, I have been very close to Baba Saraki (may his soul rest in peace). I believe in his leadership because it is genuine and transparent. You could see the zeal in what he was doing and you could see him being a good philanthropist, kind and focused.

    By 1998, I was one of the people liaising for Kwara State for those people who wanted to be in the PDP. But shortly after, I was almost neck deep in the PDP when we realised that Baba Saraki was going to join All Peoples Party (APP). So, most of us left the PDP and followed him to the APP. Unfortunately, in 1999, they denied him the presidential ticket in Kaduna and gave it to Ogbonnaya Onu, if you can recall, and it metamorphosed to Chief Olu Falae/ Shinkafi ticket. But Baba Saraki did not revolt in Kaduna. He pleaded with us to stay calm rather than being violent. He left in the night to avoid violence. These are good qualities of a leader. In politics, you don’t win all the time. You lose some time and at other times you gain. That is the kind of philosophy I believe and agree with.

    But the present leadership of Bukola Saraki that we have is about the politics of elimination, politics of coercion and politics of me first before others. It’s no more politics of carrying people along.

    Are you faulting the style of the new PDP?

    When they came up with the issue of the new PDP, I believed it was ill-timed, ill-conceived and very selfish. In every organisation, there are supposed to be grievances and misunderstanding; there are supposed to be some sort of disaffection. But you don’t tear an organisation because you are not getting your issues addressed. There are structured ways of addressing grievances in any organisation, including your house. If your child is aggrieved, he will go and tell his mother that Daddy didn’t pay my school fees or Daddy didn’t do my shoe, not that the boy will just get rid of you. I think they have taken are wrong because there are better ways they could have expressed their grievances and they could have been heard.

    Again, those people that are complaining, most of them have presidential ambitions. I know the governor of Niger State, Babangida Aliyu, has a presidential ambition. It is not a secret that Sule Lamido has presidential ambition. It is not a secret that Dr. Bukola Saraki has presidential ambition; neither is it a secret that Rabiu Kwankwaso has a presidential ambition and they believe the best way to go about this is to, first of all, get rid of President Goodluck Jonathan ,who is the current President, and the coast will be clear for them.

    If you want the party to survive and you want the Presidency to be honoured as the highest authority in the country, then, people should respect that office and negotiate. But in any case, whether we like it or not, President Jonathan is already there. 2015 is the hand of God. Who knows who will be alive in 2015? Who knows what will happen in 2015? You sit down with him and say Mr. President; you have already gone more than half way. If the constitution allows you to go for a second term, so be it; then, we can renegotiate. After the Southsouth has gone, let it come back to the North. But for people to say they must tear the party or disgrace the President, I don’t buy it and I don’t believe it’s the right thing to do. I don’t think I should belong to that kind of arrangement. Even, in the school, there are ways of addressing grievances. In your family, there are ways of addressing grievances. The same goes for a political organisation.

    You were a close ally of late Olusola Saraki and Governor Bukola Saraki. Did he not take you into confidence on the agitations?

    Regrettably, I don’t think Bukola Saraki trusts me as much as Baba Saraki did. I have personal issues, which I’m not ready to discuss at this moment because I’ve followed Bukola Saraki and I’ve come to a conclusion that this is a man who does not trust me the way Baba trusted me. I tried to belong, but invariably, I found out that I wasn’t fitting into his system. So, I stayed back. For instance, way back in 2003, I was in the House of Reps when Baba Saraki said I should leave the House of Reps. He initially promised that I was going to the Senate. But later he said, please, can you come back to serve the people because I don’t want the kind of political infringement I had with late Lawal. That is why people unanimously agreed that Dr. Saraki should bring Bukola on board to be the next Governor so that he wouldn’t have crisis with any other Governor and he said he wanted somebody with experience and whom he trusts to come and handle the House of Assembly and I accepted. I left the House of Reps and became the Speaker of Kwara Assembly for six years. But the same Baba who told me that if by the grace of God governorship comes to my area, he was grooming me up later said he needed to give me national exposure. That was why he asked me to be Minister. Before the 2011 election, I sat down together with Bukola and I said, can I put in, if it is the wish of God to succeed you. He said go ahead. I bought the form. But later, Bukola Saraki denied that he ever asked me to buy the form.

    I left, flagged off my campaign and I asked all Kwarans to elect me as governor. It was the mother of all campaigns, only for Bukola Saraki to call me around 2.00 am on the night of the primaries and said he had decided to zone to Kwara South and give it to Abdufattah Ahmed. I took it with faith. After all, it’s not everything that one wishes that one would get. But while I expected Bukola to have called me and said okay, it’s not everything you look for that you get, and sooth the balm of all the injuries he has caused me, he continued to treat me like a cancerous part of the body.

    Apart from that, he promised to refund my campaign money. But up till today, he has not and it has been very well known in Kwara State that anybody close to me in Kwara has never been given any appointment, whether as SA or even a Commissioner or an Assistant. Even, the ward chairman in my place, anybody close to me, they make sure he is eliminated. So, I decided that let me stay aloof and watch. So, that is the difference between’s Baba’s leadership and Dr Bukola Saraki. Bukola Saraki’s leadership is the leadership of annihilation; break them and extinct them. If Baba offends you, he will call you and one way or the other sooth you and make you feel that you are important and you go ahead fighting a common cause for the party.

    If the Baraje faction leaves the PDP, do you think it will spell doom for the party?

    Let me confess to you that the loyalty Baba Saraki commanded for 42 years, I don’t think Bukola Saraki has the capacity and wherewithal to command that kind of loyalty and support of the people. Well meaning people, well meaning Kwarans and well meaning politicians are not happy with the events in Kwara. For some of us, we just stayed aside and said let’s watch. For instance, look at thelocal government election that took place in Offa. Everybody saw it and it is still in the internet. The APC had about 11,000 votes and PDP had about 4,000 votes. Then, they went and changed it overnight and announced the PDP with 25,000 and made the APC 20,000 votes. That’s not the quality of good leadership and that is not a democratic culture in the state. People are aggrieved and people are not happy with that kind of thing. The last local government election that took place sometimes on the 26th of October was a kangaroo election where they bought the SDP and one party called Labour Party and no other party had a candidate in the whole of the 15 Local Governments in the State, either as a Councilor or a Chairman. The beauty of democracy is let the people have their say, and then the majority will have their way. But when you cajole the people, you oppress the people and you use state machinery and you think you are a good leader that people will follow, you just watch and see. People are fed up with the kind of system we are practicing. I believe PDP is the party that everybody wants to follow.

    The major grievance of the ‘G-7 Governors’ of the PDP is that there was a certain agreement with President Jonathan not to re-contest. Are you are aware of such agreement?

    The way the seven governors are going, if there was actually a written agreement, they would have published it by now. Commonsense would have prevailed on them by now to produce that agreement to the press and to Nigerians.

    One of the issues that the G-7 Governors are talking about is power shift to the North. Should power shift to the North in 2015?

    Power shift or party arrangement or zoning arrangement, either agreement with Jonathan, those are based on moral understanding and political ethics. But the issue of legality and constitutional power to contest, nobody can take that one from you. The only person who can say okay power should shift to the North is, if Jonathan is not interested. But if he is interested, he has the rights and the Constitution says he should contest, if he so desires. So, the issue of power shift, zoning and rotation doesn’t arise, unless we remove the legal issue. But when the man says he is interested, it has overridden every other thing.

    it is the main thing that the President is trying to fix and I admire it a lot.

     

    One of the reasons Nigerians are against Jonathan’s President is the issue of insecurity. Secondly, is the issue of corruption. I remember there was a time he said some Directors in Abuja have more houses than Dangote. People are worried that not much is being done to curtail this. You have seen the man accused of pension scam. The man is still hiding and the police have been unable to arrest him, even after declaring him wanted?

     

     

     

    Let me talk on security first. Security issue is a very complex issue. For instance, who would have believed that the al-Quaida that Bin Laden started will now come and engulf the whole world today. Bin Laden is long gone, but we still have elements of Al-Quaida which had metamorphosed into Boko Haram, Taliban and all sorts of things. The security challenge we have with Boko Haram in the North-Eastern part of the country, I think the President has tried to address the issue as a human being who does not have the monopoly of wisdom. First of all, he opened the window for dialogue and called all of the Boko Haram members to put down their arms, just the way they handled the Niger Delta issue and that they will give them amnesty. That is a leadership that wants to resolve an issue. That is dangling the carrot. Then he set up a Committee led by Hon. Minister of Special Duties, Barrister Turaki to go round the whole place and try to get the Boko Haram to come to dialogue. That is an attempt. Then when all those ones failed, he imposed curfew, declared state of emergency and then the soldiers have been asked to address the insecurity which is on-going.

     

    You can agree with me that since the last five or six months, we’ve been sleeping well in Abuja. There is relative calm in Kaduna now and there is relative calm in Kano as well. In the past, we were not even safe in Abuja. We had at least three attacks. A military barrack was attacked, the Police Force Headquarters was attacked and the UN was attacked. Thisday was attacked in Abuja. But within the last six months, I don’t think Boko Haram has been able to attack Abuja and Kaduna. So, these are the progress being made in my own assessment. You can see America using Drones to kill Taliban daily. But it has not come to that level in Nigeria. Even the people in the North have come to agree that these things are no more religious issues. I don’t believe a Muslim will slaughter another human being like a ram and be happy. I believe that there are more undertones, which is predominantly the issue of unemployment and people have been left aggrieved for long. They say an idle man is a devil’s workshop. They didn’t emanate or start with Jonathan. They are things that have been there over the years and apparently we are seeing the overflow now and he is doing his best in addressing them.

     

    The issue of corruption, you will agree with me that corruption has become so endemic in Nigeria. It has almost become our way of life. In our individual homes, we all witness corruption. If you send your brother to go and buy petrol, seven of them will buy petrol of N7,000 and tell you it is N10,000. If care is not taken, you go to school, you find teachers probating marks and sleeping with students and students ready to buy ties and shirts for lecturers just to get marks. Corruption is not only in government. Corruption has eaten deep down in the fabrics of our moral existence in this country and it is going to take a long time. I believe the religious leaders must intervene from the mosques and the churches for people to develop moral righteousness. It’s not an issue of carrot and stick that will address Nigeria’s corruption because it has gone deeper than that. It’s not just the ones you see in government because there is corruption everywhere. Today for instance, I came back from Lagos and by the time you come down, somebody who opened the booth for you is expecting you to give him gratification. By the time somebody weighs your clothes and luggage, he is expecting you to give him gratification. So, it has become our way of life. It’s a national malaise and it cuts across even in our homes. If you ask your boy to go and buy you bread, if you have a balance, he will not give you until you ask. It’s a sort of corruption. In as much as I’m not going to hold forth for President because he holds the ace, corruption should be tackled vertically and horizontally and both at government level, religious level, in our homes and at the village level. So, I will ask Mr. President to take a more serious stand against corruption so that he will be adjudged to have done his own bit while in office, just like I’m appealing to all Nigerians to do their own bit both in the house, in the communities, even in the churches and mosques.

     

    ENDS.