Tag: Cabal

  • Cabal: PDP can’t make family issue for 2019 campaign, says Presidency

    The Presidency yesterday said that the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) cannot afford to make family the issue for next year’s general elections.

    It also noted that the PDP is engaging in mud-slinging because it finds it easier than speaking on “their despicable 16-year record in the course of which they abused the trust of Nigerians.”

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media & Publicity, Garba Shehu, told reporters in Abuja that the APC will welcome the opposition PDP should it decide to make family the issue in the coming elections.

    Reacting to various comments by several organs of the opposition party on remarks made by the President on views publicly expressed by his wife, Aisha in an interview, the presidential spokesman described the questions raised of the President in regard to his wife as an own goal against the PDP.

    He said: “The PDP leadership cannot afford to make family an issue in this campaign. Need I say more? The only thing I want to add is that PDP is engaging in mud-slinging because it finds it easier than speaking on their despicable 16-year record in the course of which they abused the trust of Nigerians.”

    Shehu also pointed: “President Buhari is on mission to correct the past mistakes of the PDP. The PDP made a mess of everything, including the economy, security and infrastructure. It has come to the destiny of President Muhammadu Buhari to correct their mistakes.

    “The PDP doesn’t see anything beyond grabbing power, power at all costs. As an opposition party, they have failed. They have remained disconnected with the masses of our people. It is an irony that a party that boasted as being the largest in Africa is now begging small parties for alliances.

    “Even if they get all those paper parties behind them, they will still fail. A presidential contest is more than the issuance of daily press releases containing falsehoods.

    “They have launched a campaign for the presidency, a campaign that has failed to get any traction. PDP members are themselves admitting that the campaign hadn’t made a good start, that attendance at rallies had unarguably been thin. The whole thing is not working; that President Buhari is unstoppable.”

    He added: “Rather than a so-called cabal, an imaginary creation attached to all past governments of the country, President Buhari is remotely-controlled by the 200 million-plus Nigerian people whose interest is uppermost in everything he says and does.

    “The PDP doesn’t have the strength and support to fight President Buhari. They don’t have the records in security, economy and the war against corruption to mount any meaningful challenge.

    “They have no records of accomplishments in infrastructure. In the 16 years they held sway, they have nothing to show for the colossal oil revenues earned, including $16 billion doled upfront from the Central Bank oF Nigeria (CBN) for power, without a single megawatt to show for all that money. That is why they are dragging the President’s wife into their politics,” he said

  • Buhari should do away with cabal, says Vatsa

    Buhari should do away with cabal, says Vatsa

    All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain in River State Hon. Jonathan Vatsa has called on President Muhammadu Buhari to sack the cabals in his cabinet to complete his fight against corruption.

    He said the president should use his appointment as the continental anti-corruption crusader to clean the system, adding that charity begins at home.

    Vatsa said Nigerians will never believe in the president’s fight against corruption, if corruption people are still holding positions in his cabinet.

    He said: “I am saying this to President Buhari, until you do away with the cabals, Nigerians will never take your anti-corruption war seriously.”

    Vatsa, a former Commissioner for Information, said in Minna, the state capital, that President Buhari had appointed some of his kinsmen who are now cabals in his cabinet.

    He said: “President Buhari must have the political will to eject his kinsmen and the cabals who have hijacked the government and inject new people, especially technocrats with new ideas who are ready to reshape this country.

    “His silence has kept many Nigerians in doubt whether he meant all the promises made during campaigns and after his resumption of office. We worked for the APC and what we envisaged is not what we are witnessing. President Buhari should keep to his words especially his inaugural speech when he said ‘I belong to everybody and I belong to nobody.

    Vatsa added: “Until he can do away with them, Nigerians can never believe that he is fighting corruption. He should prove to us that he is ready to save Nigeria.

    “Now that the Appeal Court has ruled that Magu be removed, President Buhari should quickly replace him because he is not the only credible Nigerian. There are other Nigerians that can even do better.”

  • No cabal can cage Buhari, says Presidency

    No cabal can cage Buhari, says Presidency

    •’President not sidelining Osinbajo’

    No cabal or Presidency official can hijack the powers of President Muhammadu Buhari, the Presidency declared yesterday.

    A statement by the Senior Special Assistant on media and publicity, Garba Shehu, said President Buhari has been painstaking in carrying out his responsibilities as stated in the 1999 Constitution.

    According to him, that it will be impossible for any government official to manipulate Buhari because “he pays attention to all necessary details”.

    The statement reads: “Over the past few months, some media organisations have published a stream of allegations against some persons around the President attributing them to ‘persistent rumors and speculations,’ with no other objective but to generate hatred and disgust against these hardworking people.

    “As the good Nigerian public can imagine, little time would be left for other tasks more beneficial to the entire nation, if the Presidency were to respond to every single fable published by the free Nigerian press.

    “However, in the process of advancing their suspicious anti-Buhari agenda, whoever is behind these allegations knowingly or unknowingly has cast some of the most ridiculous aspersions on President Buhari’s competence as a leader of a great country.

    “To begin with, it is absolutely nonsensical and absurd to write that in one week of the President’s return, the Vice President (Prof. Yemi Osinbajo) has been sidelined. Quite to the contrary, the Vice President remains the confidant and the closest adviser to the President.”

    According to him, the vice president has attended all the President’s engagements in the last one week, with exception to two functions including the one held while Osinbajo was away to Taraba State and the Juma’at Muslim prayer because Osinbajo is a Christian.

    He said: “It is difficult to understand what anyone wants to achieve peddling such falsehood that the President, himself a former military general and Head of State and Commander-in-Chief is subject to undue influence and manipulation. It is both ridiculous and inconceivable.

    “As someone who works very closely with President Buhari, I can testify to how my years of experience as a newspaper editor are often put to the test by the sheer thoroughness with which the President edits every single document brought to his desk.  Every memo, statement, speech, is subject to his intense scrutiny, right down to the placement of commas and full stops.

    “Therefore, alleging that President Buhari signs memos brought to him by government officials or a so-called cabal without reading them, immediately casts doubts on the credibility of the ubiquitous unnamed sources that the reporters of these articles quote.”

    Stressing that Buhari cannot do everything, the presidential aide said that was the main reason “he needs close and trustworthy officials, who will be willing to offend others in the process of ensuring Buhari’s safety and wellbeing, and the advancement of his vision for Nigeria.”

    He pointed out that the attacks on Malam Abba Kyari, the Chief of Staff (CoS) to the President, have been levelled with such imperiousness that they must no longer be laughed off as crazy.

    He said: “The CoS is like the headman of all the President’s political appointees.  He has direct responsibility for multiple levels of staff working for the President.

    “Part of his role includes liaising with ministries and parastatals, so that he can have a full awareness of the issues being discussed whenever these groups meet with the President. It goes without saying that anybody who occupies such office has impeccable credentials of total loyalty to the President.

    “Clearly, some consider this oversight role as a usurping of the President’s powers, and it is their misunderstanding of the situation that some media organisations have swallowed hook, line and sinker.

    “Under this administration, as the ones before it, the office of the Chief of Staff is a branch of the President’s office. There are no power centers here. The only power center is that of the President who is sensitive to grassroots level administration which the Chief of Staff must ensure.

    “For Abba Kyari, there is no life after work. He is available to the President 24/7.

    “President Buhari is working day and night to steer Nigeria through these trying times. There are important issues in the hand of government such as poverty reduction, turning around the economy, creating jobs, fighting corruption and terrorism, railway, agriculture, roads, power and rural and urban development that there simply is not enough time to be spent answering baseless allegations in the media.

    “As he builds a new foundation from the mess left behind by previous irresponsible governments, the President cannot do it alone.  He needs the absolute loyalty of his CoS, he needs the acumen of government officials, he needs the courage and understanding of the Nigerian people, and he needs the support of institutions such as the media.”

  • Fixing the LMC cabal

    My telephones haven’t stopped ringing since I wrote on the Nigeria Premier Football League (NPFL) and its organisers, the League Management Company (LMC) last weekend. My ears are full with stories of the unexpected in the domestic game. I will leave the ones that smack of hatred, the libelous ones and talk about those that concern key actors in the game.

    My posers will be rhetorical, largely because they look quite unbelievable but it could be the reason for the poor officiating in penultimate Saturday’s game between Kano Pillars and the Ifeanyiubah FC of Nnewi.

    Statisticians of the domestic game informed this writer that Referee Folusho Ajayi had handled two stalemated games in the past. I wonder how such a match arbiter could be given a season’s highflying opening game. I was told that she fumbled in the 2016 Federation Cup quarter-finals between Rivers United and Enyimba at the Lekan Salami Stadium in Ibadan. I quickly reminded my informant that it wasn’t the duty of the Rivers State Government’s officials to ask their players to abandon the game. I told my excited informant that Rivers United abandoned the game, not the referee.

    Not done, this informant recalled the final day of the 2015/2016 NPFL game between Plateau United and relegated Heartland FC of Owerri at the Rwang Pam Stadium in Jos. I couldn’t offer any defence this time, largely because not all our domestic league games are shown live. Even at that, I wonder how the LMC could sign a contract that wouldn’t mirror what happens elsewhere. In other climes, clips of all the matches are shown repeatedly, especially the contentious ones to see if the decisions taken were justified. Interestingly, these playbacks have helped some wrongfully dismissed players and coaches to earn their reprieve, with the decisions reversed. Curiously, but rightly so, some incidentes that the match referees didn’t capture in their reports are addressed and the offenders punished. Even with the damning visuals, offenders are given the opportunity to defend themselves. No arbitrariness as we have here.

    With such a pedigree, only the cabal in the domestic game could have listed such a match arbiter when no verdict was given against her. Isn’t it late for critics to highlight these instances? Besides, one would need to ask the Referees Appointment Committee (RAC) what it does with its match reports, especially those with disputes that require sanctions.

    A caller told me that a club from the state where a top official comes from in the referees’ appointment body didn’t draw any home game last season. I retorted by saying, “so what?” This angry reader argued further that this team lost all its away games, adding that if the team was that efficient at home, why couldn’t they draw at least a game against one of the relegated teams away from their base? I retorted that if he had any misgiving with the top official in the Referees’ Appointment Committee favouring his team, such an official could have influenced one of the team’s away results last season.

    This man dropped the phone on me but called back to apologise, stressing that: “I know why you are playing the devils’ advocate in this matter. But you know that it would have amounted to hara-kiri, if the member did that, knowing the team cannot aspire to win the league trophy. Multiply three points by 19 home matches, what you get (57 points) keeps you in the division every season. Isn’t that enough for such a team?”

    I thought I was done with the readers’ calls until my phone rang again at 12.34 am on Sunday. This caller was very bitter. He told me he had been calling my lines which were switched off. I accepted because I was at a wedding in Ikorodu. I think I forgot to switch on the phones during the reception.

    The reader said that: “Ade, is it right for an important committee in the running of the domestic game to run to a governor, asking for N10 million to organise its programmes?”

    He revealed how he claimed this same body had been financed by one of the wealthy proprietors in the NPFL competition. He concluded by asking if the members of this key committee could be neutral when teams belonging to these two deep pockets meet.

    I have deliberately removed the name of this critical committee, believing that the members know themselves. They must stop this disgraceful act, if we want the NPFL competition to produce good representatives for the country at the continental level.

    Dear LMC members, it is apparent that there is something wrong with the Referees’ Appointment Committee. It is quite worrisome that in just two weeks, complaints about officiating have become the competition’s sore thumb. It also reinforces the poser about how referees were graded last season. If in two weeks we have had questionable handling of matches then the LMC needs to do more to get sponsors back to fund the league.

    The molestation of the centre referee who handled Remo Stars’ game against Abia Warriors last weekend in Shagamu leaves much to be desired. I say this because Remo Stars lost its first home game and everyone went home. Why then should Abia Warriors’ players perceive anything untoward with the last-minute penalty kick which resulted in the winning goal?

    LMC’s decision to stop Referee Dankano Abdullahi from future NPFL games, pending full investigation into his performance in the game, gives the impression that the home side may have influenced its decisions. This is wrong in the circumstances, except the body has incontrovertible evidence.

    Punishing the team for the players’ unsportsmanlike conduct isn’t enough. A few of them who harassed Ref. Dankano should be given at least 10 weeks ban, based on the visuals of the incident. If the LMC is serious about sanitising the ills of the league, its organisers must show us footages of all the games, especially the ones with issues to talk about. I hope the LMC knows the implication of that statement against the backdrop of match-fixing. The referee didn’t pick himself for the game. The body that appointed him should speak up, lest they are accused of being incompetent. Or does the LMC want to take over the function of picking referees for its league games? It wouldn’t have been a bad idea, except that club owners would hijack the process like they did in the past when referees were intimidated to decide games in their favours.

    I almost wept reading the proprietor of Remo Stars’ statement saying that he didn’t influence Dankano to award the last-minute penalty against Abia Warriors. He argued that he initially thought the referee was right until he saw the replay on television. It therefore means it was a human error, but the referee appointment body suspended Dankano. That is the essence of watching replays. Even Dankano will regret his inability to judge the incident well. The truth is that this was a human error, not otherwise.

    During the Interim League Committee (ILC), we deployed referees with strong character and experience to bigger matches and venues where we expected crises. Indeed, at that time, there were referees with antecedents known to ardent football lovers. Such strict referees should be assigned the task of handling big games. The English FA always assigns big games to Mark Clattenburg. He has sent off Jose ‘the Special One’ Mourinho several times. A red card was recently flashed at the temperamental but efficient manager.

    In fact, the English FA assigns the big games to Sunday from noon till night, such that all the proceedings are seen in the star matches of the week. The NPFL should review the quality of match commissioners assigned to games. Some of them who have cases of being at venues where games were stalemated should never be given high profile games.

    Discipline in matches starts from how the match commissioners handle their pre-match meetings. If a match commissioner takes stringent measures, which he ensures are complied with, the fans and everyone in the game will sit up. The LMC must set age targets for match commissioners beyond their experience. I have seen instances where the match commissioners slept off in the state box during games. It isn’t a laughing matter. How could such snoring match commissioners know what transpired on the pitch when issues arise? The romance between some match commissioners and teams explains why they fall prey to attacks from clubs.

    LMC men must learn how to cultivate Nigerians who own domestic league clubs by ensuring that the competition is free of poor officiating. Only credible and efficient match officials should be assigned to matches. It is the practice in other climes. The body must do everything to ensure that its processes are not hijacked by the cabal that destroyed the game in the past.

    It is a shame, to put it mildly, that venues used by our domestic league representatives for continental competitions this year have been rejected. It says a lot about the character of those who passed such pitches as fit for the domestic game. The rot at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium in Enugu and the Ifeanyiubah Stadium in Nnewi, for instance, didn’t start today. I wonder the type of match reports these commissioners submit to the LMC, if no mention was made about the playing turfs, malfunctioning urinary systems resulting in the stench around such places, the unkempt surroundings within these stadia, not forgetting the loose bricks around the stadia from broken structures within the premises, which turn out to be handy weapons when fans are unhappy with referees.

    Incident-free stadia can only happen when the referee is upright and can withstand the pressure from the fans, players and losing teams’ officials. However, a referee will have the courage to interpret the rules to the letter, when he/she knows that his/her safety is guaranteed. LMC men must relate with the security operatives to help in creating the enabling environment for the referees to perform.

     

  • Buhari under influence of a cabal, says cleric

    Buhari under influence of a cabal, says cleric

    Prophet Lai Bamidele has declared a cabal within his administration is misguiding President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The cabal made up of close aides of the president, he said, is prodding him to take certain steps that will put him in trouble and affect Nigerians negatively.

    The General Overseer of Christ Glorious End-Time Evangelical Ministries, with headquarters in Lagos, said God revealed to him after a 21-day prayer and fasting session that Buhari had been caged by some persons pushing him to engage in needless political witch-hunting.

    He said if the president fails to ignore the cabal and disembark from what he calls “reign of political witch-hunting”, his administration risks unpleasant consequences this year.

    “Buhari has been caged by a cabal. It was a cabal that caged former President Goodluck Jonathan. That was what led to his downfall.

    “Again, Buhari should desist from this act of political witch-hunting and focus on re-building the economy as the masses are hungry. I can see that he has embarked on witch-hunting some politicians as he is scheming to come back in 2019.”

    The cleric further warned the president against launching subtle attacks on notable Yoruba political leaders who helped him to win the 2015 election, noting that such a move would boomerang and leave his administration widely discredited.

    He also said that he saw a new political party springing up this year, “that will fight APC, power for power and money for money; but there will be a lot of political witch-hunting from Buhari.”

    According to him, the president is not the country’s messiah but one designed by God to lay the foundation for the emergence of a masses-oriented leader.

    Bamidele also said from what was revealed to him, Nigerians should prepare for a tough 2017, stressing, “I don’t see any more changes in the policies of this government; I see that naira will fall further than the way it is reeling down the slope.”

    However, the cleric said there is a glimmer of hope for the country, as “a certain mineral resource will be discovered in Nigeria this year, which will bolster our economy in the long run; but God did not reveal to me the specific part of the country where this mineral resource will be discovered.”

    He also criticised the anti-corruption crusade of the Buhari administration, describing it as “generally inconclusive, as no one has been convicted among all the people arrested.

    “I would rather that the president should concentrate on re-building the economy as people are hungry; there is no food on the table,” he lamented.

  • Beware of cabal around you, Muhammed warns Buhari

    Beware of cabal around you, Muhammed warns Buhari

    Second Republic lawmaker Dr Junaid Muhammed has advised President Muhammadu Buhari not to allow power brokers in the corridors of power to truncate his administration’s fight against corruption.

    Speaking in an interview with our reporter, Junaid alleged that the cabal is using their influence to prevent the President from making public the report of the panel that probed arms contracts in the army during the last administration. He said their argument was that if the report was released, it would embarrass the government.

    The fiery politician reasoned that not making the report public would amount to double standards, since a similar report concerning the navy has been released, with the retired and serving officers implicated now facing charges in court.

    According to him, the cabal has convinced the President not to make the report public. “If President Buhari eventually succumbs to the idea, it will affect the credibility of his anti-corruption crusade,” he added.

    Mohammed suggested that serving army officers involved in arm contracts should step aside in the interest of justice and fairness. He said making the report public will clear the air on the involvement of the former Chief of Army Staff, General Azubike Ihejirika and his successor, General Kenneth Minima, who were suspected to have been involved.

    Similarly, he said releasing the report will also clear the air about whether or not the Minister of Interior, Gen. AbdulRahaman Dambazau who served as Chief of Army Staff under the late President Umaru Yar’Adua and the current office holder, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai, were involved.

    Mohammed said it is necessary for  Dambazau to step aside, because, as Minister of Interior, he oversees the police affairs and the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC). He added: “Otherwise, it amounts to Dambazau presiding over the organisation investigating him; he cannot be a judge and prosecutor in his own case.”

    As for Gen. Buratai, the radical politician said he should be investigated, because he was a former Director of Procurement at the Defence Headquarters. He said: “He should be investigated against the background of alleged properties acquired in Dubai and Abuja. Buratai should tell us what his total earnings were since day one he joined the army.

    “Both Dambazau and Buratai must be investigated and they should vacate their offices, pending the outcome of the report; anyone being suspected for anything should step aside to enhance the credibility of the Buhari’s administration anti-graft war.”

  • How a cabal hijacked cooking gas business

    How a cabal hijacked cooking gas business

    Last month, the price of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), commonly called cooking gas, went up by almost 30 per cent. What is responsible? A cabal in the LPG sub-sector has hijacked the business, thwarting the objective of the Federal Governmen to make the product affordable. What is the solution to the problem? EMEKA UGWUANYI examines the situation.

    The Nigerian Association of Liquefied Petroleum Gas Marketers (NALPGAM) saw it coming. Last June 3, it raised the alarm over the malpractices in the liquefied petroleum subsector, warning that if nothing was done, price rise was imminent.

    Shortly after, the price of cooking gas rose sharply from N2.3 million  to N4.3 million for 20 tonnes. The cost of filling a 12.5-kilogramme cylinder went up from N3,000 to N4,000.

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that off-takers appointed by the Nigeria LNG hijacked the LPG business as they control the shipping and the terminals from which the product is supplied to various sales points in the country.

    After a screening, the NLNG appointed six firms to lift the product to terminals and depots in Lagos for distribution to consumers. The off-takers, which are Le Global, Harig, Linetrade, Chimons, Greenfield, and Hyson, an arm of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), lift 150,000 metric tonnes yearly. However, it was alleged that the off-takers were conniving with terminal owners to hike the price.

    According to sources, this happened because the NLNG and other regulatory bodies failed in their supervisory roles.

    The Liquefied Petroleum Gas Retailers (LPGAR) National Chairman, Mr. Michael Umudu, confirmed that the LPG business has been hijacked  by a cabal. But he did not mention names.

    He said: “I am not here to mention names, but we all know that NLNG appointed a selected number of firms to receive and market the product. They should explain to us the factors that brought us to this precarious situation. They (off-takers) should explain to LPG stakeholders, the government and the consumers what happened. We worked together to persuade the government to intervene when the sector was almost dead in 2007. They were appointed to receive and redistribute with the intention of making the product available to other marketers because it is not possible for every marketer to receive directly. Now see what is happening. Our common patrimony has been hijacked by some people who are playing the ostrich.

    “I know what we suffered in the past to rescue this industry and now a few privileged ones are taking advantage of the sector. This has not happened in the industry before. We have never witnessed supply shortage without any known cause. The last major scarcity we had was in 2013 when NLNG had a dispute with NIMASA and the distribution was halted as part of sanctions placed on NLNG by NIMASA. The crisis lasted for weeks, but LPG price was not up to what it is today. There were marginal rise in price in the past, which were caused by rise in price of crude oil.

    “We were able to easily adjust because the effect was minimal. But now no genuine reason has been given, and the price kept going up. We suspect stage-managed supply shortages to be cause. The situation is such that the LPG industry has been pocketed by a few. Some of them did not even participate in the process that led to the relative growth  being witnessed in the sector in recent years.”

    According to him, the alleged cabal does not think about the growth and future of the LPG sub-sector, because “all they think is self, self and only self”.

    “The cabal protects its members interest only. They are organised and cohesive in their dealings,” he added.

    The alleged hijack of the LPG business, it was learnt, started when a private depot was the only depot selling LPG. “The depot kept increasing  the price and everyone was complaining, including some off-takers, mainly Nigerians. The depot was accused of being owned by foreigners, whose interest was not the progress of Nigeria, but to exploit Nigerians. Eventually, another consignment arrived three weeks after in which many indigenous off-takers had allocation. We expected them to sell at normal price or at least bearable price as a show of patriotism, but instead the price continued to go up higher,” a source said.

    According to the source, members of the cabal are so powerful that they presented one-sided data to the NLNG. “They are highly connected. They present themselves as if they represent the common interests of the sector. So, what is happening is that the NLNG is made to believe that there is normalcy in the sector whereas the reverse is the case. It is just unfortunate,” he added.

    On what the members of ALPGAM, NALPGAM and LPGAR are doing to address the problem, Umudu told The Nation that the only organisation that is independent of this cartel is the one he heads and that is LPGAR branch of NUPENG.

    “They are so powerful and parade a lot of cash. Of course, you know what money can do in Nigeria. They do everything to suppress and impoverish gas retailers and their umbrella body – LPGAR. But we don’t mind. We will continue to provide checks and balances in the sector. “We are planning a number of events to tell the whole world what is happening.

    “Apart from publicity, we are planning to petition relevant authorities and if that does not suffice, we move to the next stage which is protest. Our lawyers are already instructed to secure for us necessary police clearance. We are planning to stage some protests to bring this to the notice of some arms of government.

    “We are peace loving people but should not submit to this kind of exploitation. Though the president of Nigeria LP Gas Association, Mr. Dayo Adeshina, told me he is planning a meeting of the stakeholders to address the problem. We are waiting and hope it happens soon.’’

    Umudu said LPG retailers planned to meet with agencies, such as the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and Products and Pipeline Marketing Company (PPMC), on the issue. “Meeting the regulatory bodies is part of activities we have planned for next week and beyond. This battle may take longer than one may ordinarily imagine because the powers of the people and organisations involved. I don’t take them for granted at all. They approximate themselves to the whole sector.

    “They often advance the argument that it is a free market. But they don’t realise that even in the Western world where liberalisation originated, you dare not manipulate the system for personal gains,” he said, adding that the monopoly must be broken and the NLNG should get more involved in the process beyond making the product available. They should monitor what happens at the transportation level.

  • Dogara: I’m not aware of cabal in Presidency

    Dogara: I’m not aware of cabal in Presidency

    House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara spoke at the weekend in Lagos on the fight against corruption, the trial of Senate President Bukola Saraki and his deputy Ike Ekweremadu, among other issues. OLUKOREDE YISHAU was there.

    You will recall that the fight against corruption is one of the cardinal promises that Mr President made before assumption of office. He had course to say that we have to kill corruption before corruption kills us and I know he is committed to fighting corruption to a standstill. The process of doing that has become a subject of concern to some people. The EFCC is actually the agency, as we all know, that is in charge of this fight and if you look at what it has done so far, there is even a discussion as to whether they are proceeding in the right direction and whether it is not time for us to sit down and do an assessment of how the fight has been in view of the fact that in the last one year, I do not think there has been any major conviction. And it has always been a case of this person has been arrested and detained and some things have been done or he has been charged to court and then the story ends there. Whether if we continue like this we will succeed in fighting corruption, only God knows. If the end is just to arrest people, charge them to court and thereafter nothing happens, no one is convicted; because conviction, even if you are not jailed, has a way of deterring people. The fact that you are carrying that negative appellation as a former convict has the potential to deter people from corruption in the future.

    But if I am just arrested, charged to court and maybe some money recovered from me and at the end of the day, nothing happens, a lot of people may not be deterred in the future from engaging in corrupt practices. But if you look at the massive looting of the treasury, actually, I have been in government for quite some time, I never, never, could have imagined the scale of corruption that we are witnessing right now where people took lots of money running into billions and buried them in farms. As we are speaking now, they are recovering monies from someone’s farm somewhere around Abuja. It is very unfortunate when people stole money just for the sake of stealing. If you were the one who was in charge of fighting corruption, you would have even been shocked by the scale of the problem.

    And I guess part of the problem we have is that the scale of the problem far outweighs the anticipation of the agencies. So, if care is not taken in the process, we may not get things right. They will have to keep their heads level to be able to be in charge of this fight and to do it effectively.

     

    Alleged selective war against corruption

    On the question of one-sided approach, if we are talking about corruption, naturally, it will relate to those that had opportunity to serve in government. You will recall that, especially, that the PDP has been in power for a number of years, more than a decade and if you were to weigh members of opposition that are in government now and had opportunity to serve, those that would have tendencies to engage in pilfering of resources, majority will come from PDP, except we are not being realistic. Even though we can’t claim that all the members of APC are saints, you pointed out that APC spent money in the course of the campaign, but where did this money come from? Because as it is, we haven’t really had any had facts about government officials forwarding money to the cause of the campaign. Majority of the money that was stolen was channeled towards the PDP campaign.

    You know that this arms purchase monies, for instance, virtually everything was given for the prosecution of PDP campaign. I do not think a dime went to any member of the APC. We were all in government then. I can’t remember a discussion like that then but I knew when some of the funds were being given to some of our friends as well but I believe that no one that is of APC stock was given that money. The whole thing was scripted.

    I don’t think the fight has really been one-sided. If you recall, one of the closest aides to the president, when he was picked up, everyone was shocked that that man could be picked up. He had been one of the most dutiful, one of the people that is very, very close to the president. Yet, he wasn’t spared when evidence was adduced that he benefitted from it and he had to refund the money. And recently, one of the closest people to the Villa as well, was picked up, he has been detained and questioned. Some recoveries were made from him and if the intention was that the fight should be one-sided, I can guarantee you that if it were to be a case that would have sacred cows, these two amply qualify as sacred cows that should not be touched.

    I sincerely believe that the problem is that of evidence. If there is anybody in the APC government that perpetuated corruption and didn’t get dealt with, it could be that there is no evidence before the government right now and I know that there will be more that will come under serious searchlight of the anti-graft agencies and it doesn’t matter where they are. One thing I will say is that in a civil society, what is important is the issue of justice. Justice comes first even before the issue of wealth, of power and everything. Following from justice is wealth and equality. Without that, you cannot even have democracy. So, for us to succeed really, we have to apply the rules across board. It doesn’t matter if you are a member of the ruling party or in opposition, if you are corrupt, you have to be dealt with.

    In Nigeria, politics is not a straitjacket approach; it is not that if I am in APC, I am going to remain in APC forever or if I am in PDP, I am going to be in PDP forever just like it is in other jurisdictions. There are frequent cases of cross-carpeting which will still happen but if the case were that if you are a member of APC you will not face prosecution, I believe that more members would have cross-carpeted to APC right now. So, it is a question of perception.

     

    Senate forgery case

    On the Senate forgery case, so much has happened. By virtue of my training, when a matter is in court, I really do not want to offer an opinion on it because as we say, it is subjudice. But I must say that there is an importance attached to all these institutions of democracy, where you have the case of government’s power being carved out and vertically or horizontally shared. They are all for some purposes. I believe that the National Assembly in any country is the bastion of democracy. Where you do not have an independent National Assembly, you definitely will have some kind of totalitarian tendencies in the government. In the past, there has been stability in regards to the work of the judiciary and the executive because usually, during military regimes or intervention, the institution that was suspended was the National Assembly and for obvious reasons. The body that now makes the law is the executive body. Ours is a democracy that is still evolving, it is not as nascent as it used to be but we still have a lot to learn.

    If the goal is that they want to strangle the parliament, then definitely, we are going to run into serious problems and that will be an affront, a serious affront, on democracy and that will be totally unacceptable. But since the matter is in court, it doesn’t mean that when allegations are made, that they are true. It doesn’t. A lot of people have been charged to court before and at the end of the day, insufficient evidence is given. And in a case of forgery, forgery is a criminal offence and the standard of proof, the burden of proof is beyond reasonable doubt. The Senate has spoken, it is an issue that all of us, including the Senate and the House of Representatives, will have to really sit down and analyse. As it is, I haven’t really seen the papers. I haven’t seen the charges, I don’t know whether they are grounded or not but I have asked, as a lawyer too, that I needed to see the nature of the evidence against the presiding officers that are being charged to court in a case of forgery. And if there is a compelling case, we won’t say he should be exempted because we are legislators.

    I know that right now, there is an ongoing discussion about the propriety or otherwise of immunity being given to presiding officers of the National Assembly. I have had attacks on the social media and the conventional media. A lot of people have expressed divergent views. So, if the view is that we are not entitled to immunity, then it will mean that we are conferring some kind of legitimacy on this kind of trial because in the future, we cannot stop any government that says it wants to proffer charges against a presiding officer and at the end of the day, if the goal is really to emasculate the National Assembly, that will easily be attained. But like I said, without an independent, effective National Assembly, there is bound to be problems in any given democracy. This thing was said long ago, long, long ago by Lord Acton, when he said “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”

    A lot of people believe why do we have the a Senate and the House of Representatives? Why can’t we even have one house? But like they say, if you think that education is expensive, why don’t you try ignorance? There are reasons behind the creation of all these institutions. Social scientists sat, they looked at the act of governance and said, “look, this is the best way to guarantee liberty”. Their first task was that a free person can engage in virtually everything, in wealth generation, he can use his freedom to advance democracy and they were careful not to compromise individual liberties and they crafted this system of government to make sure that leaders are made to be true to the oath of their offices. And when there is compromise or an attempt to strangulate these departments of government, you will find out that the government does not function effectively.

    So, if there is no basis, serious basis, justifiable basis, for preferring the charge, I believe that the accusation by the Senate may ultimately be right. That is the situation as I have seen myself. The matter is in court, we will allow the judiciary to do their work and I sincerely believe that if they are guilty as they are alleged, that the proof of evidence will disclose any material allegation against them, then they will be free and we will continue to do the work we do in parliament without fear of any intimidation.

     

    Allegation of government within government

    I guess the allegation of government within government came against this charge that was preferred against the President of the Senate and the Deputy Senate President. We deal with the issues based on perception and sometimes, based on the light that is available to us. The Senate President has his own sources of information. He is a close watcher of development of government; he has been in the system far longer than myself and so, for him to have made this allegation, it means he had seen certain things or certain trends that lent credence to what he said. But that is ultimately within the purview of the light that is available to him. In my own case, I cannot say that I have seen a situation where a cabal that sits in government can make a decision. I don’t know, but I believe that since he is the one that said it, he will be in a better position to throw light on this and I wish he were here so that he can better educate us on this government within a government.

    Like I said, his reach in government is far wider than mine. So, obviously he will observe certain things, know certain things, be aware of certain things that I may not be aware of. He has said there is a cabal, that there is a government within a government, so I believe that in due course, he will educate us more, throw more light into it and maybe we can unveil the cabal. That is a job journalists can really do effectively.

     

    One year of APC government

    Now, the achievement of APC in the last one year. Fortunately, I am not Lai Mohammed, I don’t speak for the government. I am a legislator but I can’t run away from the fact that it is our government and whether I am speaker or not, I have to apply my mind as a politician to what we are doing and whether we are getting it right.

    I would say that a lot has been spoken about the fight against corruption, which is very important to ensure that the meager resources that we have are not frittered away and there is an ongoing discussion as well as to the effectiveness of the war against insurgency in the Northeast which has helped to improve security in the land. In those days, there were even fears of Boko Haram making incursions into safe cities like Lagos. I think they even attempted. But right now, we don’t have that kind of situation. So, security has been enhanced.

    When you talk of the economy, it is something that we will have to look at closely. I sincerely believe we need a very strong team that will superintend our economy because we are faced with dire challenges like this, we have to do something.

    When Obama came into government in the U.S., there was virtual collapse of the economy at that time. He had to look for serious-minded people who sat and charted a way out of that crisis. I sincerely believe that in Nigeria as well, we are rich in diverse ways. If we can put together a solid team to manage this economy, it doesn’t matter, I don’t think under Obasanjo we had the oil boom, we were earning far less than what we did subsequently, but we were able to manage the meagre resources we had. So, I sincerely believe it is just a matter of management and if we are able to get the right people in place, we will be able to swim through these dangerous waters. But as it, as they say, we are in the waters, and everything seems to be heading south. Things seem to be defying the traditional way of resolving these kind of problems. So, we need new methods. We need a strong team to really be in charge of the economy.

    In terms of progress, progress cannot be made without appropriation. If we recall, the budget was passed not long ago, and I had cause to talk about the Procurement Act yesterday (Friday). If you are to procure, by the standard of the laws that we have in place, it will take you, in some cases, minimum of six months. So, we are looking at the possibility of amending the Procurement Act itself because this is the only way we can guarantee that money is pumped into the economy because right now, if you have the money, you want to pay for procurement, the procurement process is just on and it will be close to November, judging by the standard that we have in place, for this procurement process to be complete and before you start drawing out the money, it is almost December. This has been the process and I think it is unacceptable. So, very soon, we are coming up with an amendment to the Procurement Act in two respects. One, to shorten the procurement process to a maximum of two months because now, there is virtually nothing that you can not get on Google. All you need to do now is Google prices and it will give you virtually everything. I don’t see any reason why you will spend six months doing analysis, financial bids, technical bids and all those kind of things when you can sit down with your laptop and in a few hours you are done.

    We want to reduce the procurement process and then the issue of payment of mobilisation, which is another big problem. It is pegged at 15 per cent and we believe it is unduly restricted, more so that we have this forex crisis right now. If you have a contract with offshore element, 15 per cent of your payment may not even procure a half or even a quarter of what you need. We want a situation where we will raise the bar to not more than 50 percent. The Procurement entity will apply its discretion in saying this contract has some offshore elements, let’s pay 40 per cent, 45 per cent or the maximum of 50 per cent to the contractor or say, everything will be locally sourced; so, let’s pay 15 or 20 per cent. At least, we want to give procurement entities discretion with which to operate.

    So, I guess one year may be a small period of time for us to begin to assess the progress of this government. We have not even started implementing the budget in its true sense and that will be done after procurement processes are over. That is one of the challenges that we have have on ground.

     

    Malami and  Senate

    Whether we should approach the court and ask for interpretation of our powers to summon ministers, I don’t think that is in doubt. The provision of the Constitution is manifestly and patently clear about powers in pursuance of a resolution published in a gazette. In the case of Diezani, what she did was a clever way of saying there was no publication in a gazette and so we had not complied with the constitutional provision to compel her. That was neither here nor there but the constitution is very clear that in pursuance to our resolution published in a gazette we can invite any authority in Nigeria or any place to give evidence in clear exercise of our legislative powers. It is manifestly provided for in our constitution. We will see what we can if it is necessary to approach the court again, maybe the Supreme Court, to say make a pronouncement on this. By if you have a clear crystal definition of the law like that and someone who is a lawyer says he is not bound by that, maybe the same discussion will arise even if the Supreme Court says “look, you are bound to appear if you have been summoned before parliament”.

    What we should correct more in Nigeria is this culture of impunity. It is not a question of law, it is just a matter of when an individual feels that to some extent, I can manoeuvre my way through the system so I’m not bound by the provisions of the law.

    The attorney-general has had cause to appear before committees of the National Assembly in the past, especially when we were dealing with the issues of Kogi State, MTN and others. So, it is a bit strange to say he is not going to honour Senate’s invitation because he is not answerable to them. It is left for him to explain but like they say in law, you cannot approbate and reprobate.

     

    Amnesty Programme

    With regards to amnesty, I don’t think the government has stopped the Amnesty Programme. The contention, as I heard, is that the funds appropriated were not enough. It is not the case that there is an outright ban on Amnesty Programme. All of us believe that this is the right way to approach this. We were in government when this decision was taken and we sincerely believe that it provides a great window for managing this crisis in the Niger Delta, so it is not one of the things the executive can simply wish away without some dire consequences.

  • We won’t allow cabal destroy our party – Kaduna APC

    We won’t allow cabal destroy our party – Kaduna APC

    The Kaduna State chapter of All Progressives Congress (APC), on Monday said it will never allow cabal and mischief makers destroy the party for their selfish interest.

    Addressing a news conference in Kaduna over what it described as continuous attacks on its party leaders by Senator Shehu Sani led group ‘APC AKIDA’, State acting Publicity Secretary, Salisu Tanko Wusono said, there is no room for egoism in the party, insisting that all efforts to reform Sani and his group have failed and they will soon be shown the way out.

    Senator Shehu Sani (APC, Kaduna Central), 2015 APC guber aspirant, Hon. Isa Ashiru, former federal permanent secretary, Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, among others had introduced a group known as APC AKIDA.

    But, according to State APC spokesman who explained the faces of APC AKIDA members said: “We have tolerated these indisciplined group since 2014 because a party has a duty to train its members, but it appears that they are unwilling to be redeemed. They have remained hostile to the party and its structures, floating its rules and refusing to respect the democratic choices made by our members.”

    APC added that, “It is pertinent at this stage to chronicle the serial disrespect that this group of misguided persons has shown for party structures. Not only that they have exhibited unwillingness to accept and respect the democratic choices that our members have made.

    “For instance, Dr. Hakeem Baba Ahmed who was interim state chairman of the party following the merger that produced our, party has expressed his intention to emerge as the substantive chairman of the APC in the state. He did not achieve his wish. The party congress elected Architect Barnabas Yusuf Bala as chairman. From that point in 2014, Dr. Baba Ahmed has tried to elevate himself above the party as if the party without him would not be a party.

    “He has invested his time in creating structures extraneous to the party, calling themselves elders, stakeholders or other names. He accompanied his disdain for the APC Kaduna state executive with a campaign against the emergence of General Muhammadu Buhari as the presidential candidate of the APC. He warned Buhari not to contest, but the members of the APC nationwide thought differently and elected General Buhari as the APC presidential candidate.

    “His collaborators in the failed attempt to distract the APC in Kaduna state share with him a joint interest to reduce the APC into a vehicle to placate and massage their egos.”

    On the 2015 APC gubernatorial aspirant, Hon. Isa Ashiru, State APC spokesman said, when he lost the governorship contest , he sorted  to be compensated with the senatorial ticket already won by Senator Suleiman Hunkuyi, saying “that is the backward distributive tendency typical of the PDP, and this is not welcomed in the APC”.

    On Senator Sani, he continued that, “The APC did not have much to say about Senator Shehu Sani, their partner in mischief and indiscipline. His opposition to President Muhammadu Buhari, Governor Nasir El-Rufai and the APC is well known. He would oppose anything that is good, progress and enhance the wellbeing of our people. He is part of those that defiled our party at the National level and foisted a strange leadership on the senate,” Wusono said.

  • Saraki and anti-Amaechi cabal

    Saraki and anti-Amaechi cabal

    In this piece, Dr Fred Latimore Oghenesivbe, an All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain in Delta State, examines rthe power game surrounding the ongoing screening and confirmation of ministerial nominees by the Senate, saying Senate President Bukola saraki and his supporters in the upper legislative chamber are determined to have their way. 

    The 8th Senate began with serious controversy for which Senator Bukola Saraki emerged as the President of the distinguished Senate. It was glaring to the nation that the 8th Senate will be full of surprises and with signs of vindictive radicalism, politically.

    To my mind, there seem to be a mega political force against the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader, Senator Asiwaju Bola Tinubu which may have prompted the setbacks suffered by his key loyalists at the Senate and House of Representatives while the struggle for key positions in the two Chambers lasted.

    It is a truism that former Governor Rotimi Amaechi is also one of Asiwaju’s key political associates. Therefore, it will be safe to assert that the AmaechiGate is a double edge sword. First, for the roles he played to dislodge PDP from national government and two, for being a close buddy of the APC National Leader.

    I am particularly pained that the 8th Senate is hitting back at those who spent time and huge financial resources to stabilize our democracy and assisted in several ways to stop the 16 years of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) misrule which is now reflected in the retrogressive socioeconomic status of our nation.

    Corruption also bedeviled the PDP 16 years of mismanagement of valuable resources and looting of our commonwealth for which the likes of former Petroleum Minister, Mrs. Deziani Allison Maduekwe is being held for criminal charges in the United Kingdom over money laundering and corruption involving trillions of dollars carted away through the back-door from our national treasury while our people languish in abject poverty, joblessness and penury.

    Before now, Senate President Saraki was in the Senate and showed signs of loyalty to the APC while the 7th Senate lasted. But indications are ripe to show that his loyalty in the 8th Senate may not be as solid as it was during the 7th Senate.

    The question is: Why the sudden U-turn by Senator Saraki? This question can only be answered by him and other key players in our national polity.

    However, the funny scenario playing out at the Senate since inception coupled with the power game surrounding the screening and confirmation of Amaechi are bad signs for the way forward and conjures not too good omen for the present administration of President Buhari. It has to be resolved urgently if the nation must achieve the Change mantra dreams that Nigerians massively voted for.

    Another political cobra to watch out for in the 8th Senate is Senator Dino Melaye, Senate Committee Chairman on Media. He has demonstrated sufficient political rascality in the discharge of his duties to suggest that the APC as a party is parading a sizable number of BLACK LEGS among its fold in the Red Chambers. This has to be tackled by the party leadership.

    Where do we go from here?  The APC leadership will have to meet with President Buhari to immediately identify the INVISIBLE HANDS operating in the 8th Senate and House of Representatives. There is a mega political force behind Senate President Saraki and his highly radicalized group  and this must be checked and handled with the strictest political tactics that it deserves.

    Senator Dino Maleye told the nation a while ago that Amaechi will be screened tomorrow (Wednesday). This is the wish and aspirations of Nigerians, for Amaechi to get on board quickly as Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, to enable him continue with his superlative leadership roles in the Niger Delta in particular and to generally continue to serve our great nation in higher capacity.

    Senate President Saraki and his political machinery at the Senate should know it that Nigerians are watching, the world is watching and that whatever he is up to now will certainly determine where he will be tomorrow.

    With due respect to the 8th Senate and to Senate President Saraki, I am indeed flabbergasted and only wish that my Champagne will get out of the fridge tomorrow and be poured into glasses so as to celebrated the long awaited confirmation of the political Lion of the Niger Delta as Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    The truth is bitter but it MUST to be told for the good of society and in obedience to GOD’s command.