Tag: Controversy

  • Controversy over Zamfara APC congresses

    The Zamfara State All Progressives Congress (APC) has been hit by a crisis, following its disputed ward, local government and state congresses. The battle line is drawn between supporters of Governor Abdulazeez Yari and those of Senator Kabiru Marafa. Who laughs last? Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU examines the effects of the acrimony on the troubled chapter.

    Zamfara State Governor Abdulaziz Yari and Senator Kabiru Marafa have not closed ranks, months after the rancorous ward, council and state congresses of the All Progressives Congress (APC). The war of attrition has polarised the party and affected its cohesion. Is there an end in sight to the acrimony and division?

    The battle is between two forces holding on to two antagonistic strands of opinion. The dispute underscores the tension between consensus and election. The constitution of the party provides for consensus. That informed the decision of the State Working Committee to issue a guideline along that line. The advantage of consensus is that it prevents bickering and the logjam associated with delegate elections and direct primaries.

    But, according to the guidelines, where party faithful fail to agree on consensus, the logical answer is intra-party election, which is final.

    The two APC camps were locked in suspicion and mutual distrust. Since the congresses would lay the foundation for politics of nominations ahead of next year’s elections, they perceived the congresses as the first phase of the ‘2019 battle.’ The camp of the governor was favourably disposed to consensus. Marafa and his group were irked by the option, pointing out that it was undemocratic. Before the commencement of the exercise on May 5, the faction loyal to the senator reiterated its objection to what it described as imposition, urging the congress panel chaired by Ambassador Dauda Danladi to conduct an elective congress. Copies of the protest letters were sent to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Zamfara State Resident Electoral Commissioner, Police Commissioner and Director of State Security Service (SSS).

    The petition was ignored. On the day of the exercise, the candidates of the governor emerged as party officers through affirmation. Marafa, who represents Zamfara Central in the Upper Chamber, cried foul, saying it was fraudulent. He said it was wrong to go ahead with the state congress without permitting his group to ventilate its grievances. The senator alleged that while his faction fulfilled the guidelines by paying the prescribed fees for contestants, those who contested in Yari camp did not pay as required by law. He accused the Congress Planning Committee of bias, stressing that they took sides in the dispute.

    Marafa’s supporters said they were prepared for an elective congress, unlike the governor who insisted on consensus and affirmation. The faction queried: “Why is the governor afraid of election? Any politician that is afraid of election has no business in politics. Why was the guideline flouted?”

    But, Yari supporters fired back, saying the congresses complied with the laid down regulations.

    According to the guidelines, forms should be obtained, following the presentation of bank tellers. The forms should be filled and returned before the commencement of the elections. But, as Marafa claimed, the congress committee arrived Gusau, the state capital, less than 12 hours to the exercise on May 5. Although the faction paid for 4,704 forms, only 1,400 forms were issued to the group. Also, Marafa’s supporters were taken aback when they discovered that the committee could not lay its hand on the register of party members, which the guidelines said it should be used to conduct the election. The committee did not have the list of three ad hoc staff per ward that should be posted to wards other than their own to conduct the congresses. Although the guidelines stipulated that the names of contestants should be didplayed in each ward where voting will take place, the condition was not fulfilled.

    Aggrieved party members said history was repeating itself in Zamfara, recalling that the same exclusion happened during the time of former Governor Aliyu Shinkafi when Marafa was denied the senatorial ticket in 2011, contrary to the advise of stakeholders who insisted on the election of their flag bearers for the elections. Although the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was in control of the federal, state and local governments, the people of Central District defiled the party and voted for Marafa, who contested against the PDP candidate in the senatorial poll. Marafa scored 203,000 votes while the PDP candidate polled 93,000. Rejecting the imposition of candidates, the people voted for popular candidates who lacked the governor’s backing. That circumstances prepared the ground for the emergence of Yari as governor.

    According to party chieftains, Marafa, the Chairman of Senate Committee on Petroleum (Upstream), is still popular. They said the APC cannot risk his defection to another platform because his zone accounts for 48 per cent of the total registered voters, although it has not produced the governor of the state since 1999.

    Marafa is bitter. His supporters said the bitterness is justifiable. He told the Congress Appeal Panel that he was excluded from the exercise deliberately, despite the fact that he paid for forms that were denied his group. He maintained that the forms issued to Yari’s supporters from the APC National Secretariat were not paid for, He challenged the congress committee to tender the evidence of payment before the exercise. He tendered the bank tellers from his group as evidence of compliance with guidelines.

    The senator complained that the venue of the congress in Gusau was cordoned off to prevent members of his faction from participating in the exercise. He said he was denied access to the venue of the Tsafe Local Government Congress on May 12, although he is a statutory delegate. He also complained that his security details were disarmed, tear gassed and arrested by over-zealous mobile policemen.

    In Marafa’s view, there were no congresses in Zamfara, stressing that what took place was a charade.  Alarmed at the complaints, Danladi acknowledged that Zamfara APC was beset with problems. He tried to pacify the aggrieved, saying it is a family matter that can be settled amicably.

    The congress at a time also became a bone of contention between Yari and his distant predecessor, Senator Yerima. The former governor had raised an objection when Yari allegedly tried to sponsor a chieftain who is not in Yerima’s good book. In fact, Yerima threatened to walk out of the venue in protest. Sources said Yari, who quickly retraced his steps, drafted one of his commissioners to the chairmanship race. Marafa doubted if the emergency candidate obtained a form.

    He added: “All the governor’s candidates who never obtained forms as at the time of election as stipulated by the guidelines were all affirmed and returned elected.”

    What is the way out of the logjam? The senator urged the national chairman, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole and the National Working Committee (NWC) to investigate what he described as “infractions in Zamfara APC.” He advised the national leadership to call a meeting of Zamfara APC stakeholders for the purpose of correcting the anomalies, which, in his view, can affect the chances of the party in next year’s elections. He feared that affirmation may also be adopted during the proposed primaries, thereby party on fire.

    The Zamfara APC imbroglio may portend danger to its future electoral interest. It is escalating at a tome  Oshiomhole and the NWC are working assiduously to douse tension in the party nationwide. Scores of chieftains, led by Buba Galadima, have defected from the party to another party. Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom is still being pacified to jettison his defection plan. Although Marafa has not indicated that he will defect, his followers are disenchanted and restless.

    The senator said:”I am calling for reconciliation as the aggrieved party chieftains who were excluded from the congresses have genuine grievances that can still be resolved before 2019 polls.”

    But, the new chairman, Alhaji Lawan Liman, said there is no crisis in the chapter, adding that it is a figment of imagination. He gave an impression of personality clash between the governor and the senator, which, in his opinion, may not have bearing on party management. He said the party has given opportunity to the senator to ventilate his grievances before the appeal panel. The chairman said the national leadership of the party does not believe that there is crisis in the Zamfara chapter.

    Liman added: “I don’t know anything about crisis in Zamfara. You were at the convention of the party. Was Zamfara listed among states where we had crisis? After the inauguration, they mentioned just three states-Imo, Delta and Oyo- and they were urged to go and settle. Ee have since moved on in Zamfara because the governor is interested in a united party ahead of the election.

    “As a party, there are procedures. If he( senator) thinks that he has an issue with the governor, he should go back and settle with the governor. We are not aware we have any issue with him (Marafa) as a party. He has gone to the Appeal Committee. If he had case, the committee would have listened.

    In Zamfara, we don’t have any crisis.”

  • A Presidential Order of controversy

    In the report, Dare Odufowokan, Assistant Editor, examines the raging debate over the Presidential Executive Order Number 6, signed last week by President Muhammadu Buhari. Both chambers of the National Assembly have at chaotic plenaries objected the Order.

    SINCE emerging as President in 2015, President Muhammadu Buhari has left nobody in doubt of his desire to clean the nation’s Aegean’s stable by confronting the menace of corruption headlong. While his efforts so far have been acknowledged by some within and outside the shores of the country, not a few people are insisting that nothing much has changed.

    Perhaps, determined to see to it that something more changes, Buhari last week Thursday in Abuja, signed the new Executive Order No. 6 on preservation of assets connected with corruption. The President holds the view that after three years in office it was another good time to further review the achievements of the administration and set goals in a key policy area, the anti-corruption war.

    He posited that there is urgent need “to re-kit and re-tool our arsenal to be able to effectively tackle corruption’s perilous counter-attack against the Nigerian State.” As a result, the Federal Government had “declared a national emergency to deal with that crisis.”

    President Buhari came to power in 2015 vowing to fight corruption which had been undermining the country’s economy, politics, governance and entire society.

    Insisting that corruption is one of the country’s major challenges, the President appealed that everything possible must be done to address the menace that had obstructed the country’s drive toward meaningful development for many decades. In his opinion, the new Executive Order is another document meant to help Nigeria kill corruption before the latter kills the country.

    Not only the President expected every Nigerians to rejoice at the new order, many of his aides and associates, as well as a good number of pro-democracy activists, were optimistic that the Executive Order would be widely viewed as a welcome development. But events of the last few days may have proved them all wrong and possibly force them to take another look at now controversial PEO No 6, as it is called.

    While many Nigerians are still coming to terms with the name and intentions of the new Executive Order, the National Assembly may have rejected the PEO No 6 after debating it at the upper and lower chambers during the week as they are now urging the President to suspend its implementation, noting that it is similar to Decree 2 of 1984.

    While the House of Representatives, after a rancorous and chaotic debate of the issue, eventually resolved to constitute an ad hoc committee to investigate all the Executive Orders signed and other subsidiary legislations, the Senate simply asked the Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), Abubakar Malami, to appear before it to explain the constitutional basis for the Order.

    The House gave its Ad-hoc Committee four weeks to complete its assignment. It equally directed Malami and the Nigerian Law Reform Commission (NLRC), to make available to it a comprehensive list of all subsidiary legislations published in the Federal Government gazette within two weeks. He was also summoned to appear before the House.

    This followed the adoption of a motion on “Urgent Need to Investigate the Constitutional Compliance of All Subsidiary Legislation and Executive Orders by the Executive Arm of Government,” sponsored by Nicholas Ossai and 25 others, under matters of urgent public importance. However, immediately the motion, which generated a heated debate, with lawmakers shouting at one another, was adopted, some All Progressives Congress (APC) lawmakers staged a walkout to protest the decision.

    Speaking against the motion, Mojeed Alabi (APC-Osun), who argued that Buhari had earlier passed similar Executive Orders and the question of legality of Executive Order 006 need not arise. While noting that the motion was ‘hasty and premature’, the Osun lawmaker urged the House to approach the Supreme Court for interpretation of the Executive Order with a view to clarify the ambiguity.

    What’s in the Order?

    PEO No. 6 of 2018 comprises a preamble, seven sections, two schedules and five essential features. It opens with an acknowledgement that corruption constitutes an unusual and extraordinary threat to the well-being, national security and stability of the country’s political and economic systems.  Specifically, without prejudice to any laws or existing suits, the Order seek to protect from dissipation, the assets of any Nigerian citizen within the territory of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, known to be a current or former government official or a politically exposed person, who is or has been complicit in or has engaged in corrupt practices.

    The first schedule to the Order has a list of specific cases and persons to whom it applies. Some pending court cases listed are that of former Inspector General of Police, Sunday Ehindero; ex-Abia State Governor, Orji Uzor Kalu; ex-Adamawa State Governor, Murtala Nyako; ex-Benue State Governor, Gabriel Suswam; ex-Zamfara State Governor, Sani Yerima and ex-Katsina State Governor, Ibrahim Shema.

    Others are ex-Sokoto State Governor, Attahiru Bafarawa; ex-Jigawa States Governors, Saminu Turaki and Sule Lamido; ex-Niger State Governor, Babangida Aliyu; ex-Oyo State Governors, Rasheed Ladoja and Adebayo Alao-Akala; ex-Ogun State Governor, Gbenga Daniel; ex-Enugu State Governor, Chimaroke Nnamani as well as ex-Kebbi State Governor, Usman Dakingari.

    Also listed in the first schedule of the new presidential Executive Order are cases involving some dead people such as former Nassarawa State Governor, Aliyu Akwe Doma and the recently deceased former Chief Judge of Enugu State, Innocent Umezulike, among others. The case involving the former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, also made the list.

    The Order confers on the Attorney General of the Federation, the power to co-ordinate its implementation. Consequently, enforcement agencies named in the Order are required to communicate the outcomes of their investigations to the Attorney-General for him to immediately commence or direct the commencement of appropriate process (es) either administratively or judicially as the case may be.

    Buhari’s controversial Executive Order also extends the scope of corruption to cover other relevant offences, including “terrorism, financing of terrorism, kidnapping, sponsorship of ethnic or religious violence, economic sabotage, cases of economic and financial crimes”, and all acts contributing to the economic adversity of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    The arguments

    Expectedly, the opposition of the National Assembly to the Order has generated mixed reactions among Nigerians. The issue is now one of the most debated topics across the country with each side of the two divides coming up with reasons to justify their stand. Reacting to the Order via his Twitter handle on Monday morning, the senator representing Kaduna Central Senatorial District in the National Assembly, Sen. Shehu Sani, attacked the Executive Order, saying for it to be acceptable, it must conform to the laws of the country.

    He argued that if not checked, there is a possibility for such Orders to become autocratic tools. The outspoken legislator and human rights activist said, “Executive Order is an instrument that should conform to the law, comply with the law and concur with the law or else it becomes an autocratic and ruthless device for the inauguration of savagery, undermining democratic values, circumventing the rule of law and creating a Gestapo state.”

    Former chairman of the National Human Rights Commission, Prof. Chidi Odinkalu, in his critique of the new Executive Order, argued that there are “those things in it which are needless or are manifestly outside the powers of the President. At best, it’s an own goal. At worst, it’s an awful advertisement of presidential hubris and overreach.”

    He added, “When he ran to be Nigeria’s president for the fourth time in 2014, Muhammadu Buhari pleaded that he was a converted democrat. Since Nigerians granted him his wish in 2015, he appears to have found it difficult either to show off the new life of a converted democrat or to shake off his old habits as a humourless dictator. In his Presidential Executive Order (PEO), No. 6 of 2018, President Buhari buries any illusions as to his preference.

     

    “This is a rather pompous and prolix way of saying that corruption threatens national security. This point is both self-evident and well acknowledged in policy and scientific literature. In policy terms, such re-statement by a president is of little or no value. The best that can be said of this is that in linking corruption to national security in the way that the preamble to PEO No. 6 does, President Buhari arguably contributes to Nigeria’s national security doctrine,” Odinkalu argued.

    However, Chairman, Presidential Advisory Committee on Anti-Corruption, Prof Itse Sagay, has faulted those calling the new Order unconstitutional, saying the Order is in line with Section 5 of the Constitution. He urged Nigerians to dismiss the complaints of the National Assembly and other critics of the new Order which he said is in the interest of the country.

    “This conveniently falls within the president’s executive powers under Section 5 of the Constitution. The Order gives the president the power to freeze any asset of anyone who is being tried or being interrogated or suspected of corruption or any fund, which is illicitly acquired pending the decision of the High Court or pending the inability of the person to establish ownership. In other words, he doesn’t actually seize them permanently; it simply creates a temporary seizure pending the final outcome of the judicial procedures.

    “Very many negative things can be done with such illegal and illicit assets available to people who are suspected of frauds. They can use them to intimidate or influence prosecution. President Buhari has just added additional ammunition in the fight against corruption, having concluded that the weapons we have now need to be fortified. We should all support him in this.

    “It is not a blanket Order on all assets as it only applies to assets that are suspected to have been illicitly or fraudulently acquired. People with clean hands will not be afraid of it. But those who have illegally accumulated state assets for themselves will be afraid of this directive. The order is to make sure that the assets are not reduced in value while prosecution is going on,” he explained.

    But the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) condemned the executive order as illegal, unconstitutional, reprehensible and a dangerous step towards a descent to fascism. The opposition party accused the President of being undemocratic, saying Buhari signed the Executive Order “in total disregard to the provisions of 1999 constitution.”

    In a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Kola Ologbondiyan, the party noted that the Constitution did not, under any section, confer such fascist powers on the President under our democracy and there could be no legitimate latitude of interpretation placed on sections 5 and 15 (5) of the 1999 Constitution cited as justifications for this draconian Executive Order, that can excuse it.

    “Therefore, President Buhari’s unilateral Executive Order is a travesty of justice and rule of law, as it vehemently seeks to hijack and usurp the powers of both the legislature and the courts and vest it on himself so that he can use same at will, as a political instrument, to haunt, traumatise, harass and victimise perceived political opponents.

    “In other words, Mr. President wants to change our democratic governance to a military regime, in line with his lamentation, two days ago, that the fight against corruption will be better under a military regime than under a democracy. It is instructive to emphasise that the PDP is not in any way opposed to the fight against corruption. Rather, the party holds that the imposition of this Executive Order, which is radically at variance with the provisions of the constitution, is totally unacceptable,” the party said.

    Garba Shehu, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on media and publicity, disagrees with the PDP and others criticizing the President for signing the Order. According to him, “corruption has become a big problem because investigation, prosecution and trial in courts are made harder by persons accused of crimes relating to it. They are using the enormous resources in their possession to thwart the system. The President’s view is that, it is only a clean Nigeria that can attract foreign investment, free money for more of the capital projects the administration is executing and creating jobs for our teeming population of young men and women.”

    He added, “The President says in the interest of justice and the welfare of the Nigerian state, persons accused of crimes relating to corruption must be prevented from utilizing the proceeds and dissipating such assets suspected to be proceeds of corruption (or associated with corruption) pending final determination of any investigation or legal actions related to such assets or owners thereof.

    “In signing the new Executive Order, he said: “I’m bound to restrict dealings in suspicious assets…to preserve same in accordance with the rule of law and with guarantee and safeguard of fundamental human rights.” A person who feels that his rights are infringed is free to go to a high court. To understand the threat posed to our democracy and economy by unchecked access to stolen or illicit funds, the President cited the large volume of cash government is fighting to retrieve through the legal system.

    “The purpose of the Executive Order is not to forfeit people’s properties but rather temporarily deny access which can be used to corrupt or interfere with the investigative and judicial processes. Equally, it is not intended to, and cannot take over the powers and functions of statutory agencies with prosecutorial powers or create new ones. Rather, this is designed to activate existing provisions of the law on freezing of assets and to establish a system of coordination under the office of the Attorney-General, who has constitutional powers over all prosecutions.

    “Henceforth, it will be a criminal offence to violate the Executive Order. Prosecution authorities will, in all future prosecutions, file application to freeze the assets implicated before, or alongside the charge information sheet. For cases that are on-going, such application shall be filed within seven days of this Executive Order. As provided by the law and the constitution, the President is empowered to “abolish all corrupt practices and abuse of power”. It is in his determination to fully execute this function that he declared a national emergency to deal with the threat posed by corruption,” Shehu said.

    History of Executive Orders

    The controversial PEO No 6 is not the first Executive Order a Nigerian leader would be signing going by available records. President Muhammadu Buhari in February 2018, had signed Executive Order 5 to improve local content in public procurement with science, engineering and technology components. The Executive Order was expected to promote the application of science, technology and innovation towards achieving the nation’s development goals across all sectors of the economy.

    The President, pursuant to the authority vested in him by the Constitution, ordered that all ”procuring authorities shall give preference to Nigerian companies and firms in the award of contracts, in line with the Public Procurement Act 2007.” The Executive Order also prohibits the Ministry of Interior from giving visas to foreign workers whose skills are readily available in Nigeria.

    It, however, notes that where expertise is lacking, procuring entities will give preference to foreign companies and firms with a demonstrable and verifiable plan for indigenous development, prior to the award of such contracts. It adds that ”consideration shall only be given to a foreign professional, where it is certified by the appropriate authority that such expertise is not available in Nigeria.”

    Prior to the above, Executive Order No 4, meant to promote and support the Voluntary Assets and Income Declaration Scheme (VAIDS) of the federal government, was signed by Vice President Yemi Osibajo in July 2017, in his capacity as the Acting President when President Muhammadu was abroad on vacation at the time the need for it arose.

    “Aware that the Federal and State Governments owe citizens the duty of providing security, welfare and development in all its parameters; and consequent upon the determination of the Federal and State Governments to provide an opportunity for taxpayers who are in default under all relevant Statutes to voluntarily declare their Assets and Income and pay taxes due on them and in return obtain some benefits.

    “This Executive Order is valid only for the period in which the Scheme shall subsist, and relates to only persons who have voluntarily declared their assets and income within and outside Nigeria for the purpose of ascertaining their outstanding tax liability. Provided however that any rights and status properly acquired by any participating taxpayer pursuant to the Scheme shall vest to the benefit of the taxpayer to the extent provided for by law,” the Order reads in part.

    Earlier in May 2017, while also acting as President, Osinbajo had signed three Executive Orders targeted to significantly change some of the ways government business and operations are conducted in the country. Specifically, he signed giving specific instructions on a number of policy issues.

    The issues include the promotion of transparency and efficiency in the business environment designed to facilitate the ease of doing business in the country, timely submission of annual budgetary estimates by all statutory and non-statutory agencies, including companies owned by the Federal Government and support for local contents in public procurement by the Federal Government.

    In July 2002, following protests by state governors over disparity in federal allocations, the then President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, signed an Executive Order which reduced the federal government’s shares from the Federation Account to 54.68 percent and nullified some special allocations which the federal government was enjoying before then.

    A President’s dilemma

    While many people agree with the assertion that corruption is a very serious threat to Nigeria’s development and the realisation of the human rights and fundamental freedoms of the majority of the population, especially in matters of economic, social and cultural rights, it is also widely believed that PEO No 6, as assented to by President Buhari, raises serious issues of constitutionalism, legality and due process of law.

    To further complicate the issue, in Nigeria, the expression, Executive Order, is neither defined in the 1999 Constitution nor is it interpreted in any legislation of the National Assembly or House of Assembly of any State but, like in the USA, it is widely used. Consequently, while, as Sagay argued, it may be easy for Buhari to find a defence for his action in the constitution, it will in the same vein be difficult for him to prove that he has stayed strictly within the confines of that provision.

    Jerry Agoda, pro-democracy activist and constitutional lawyer says as laudable and needed as the new executive order is at this crucial stage of the nation’s fight against corruption and corrupt people, President Buhari’s good motive may end up being sacrificed on the altar of “our age-long constitutional inadequacies.”

    He insisted that majority of those opposing the bill, especially members of the National Assembly and opposition politicians, are doing so, not because they care about the country or the citizens, but because they are afraid of the consequences of the continued existence of such Executive Order on their illicit wealth and shady deals, expressed fear over the fate of the new Order.

    “Our constitution is so faulty that many good things have been prevented from happening while many evil things have found ways of thriving, all by the provisions of our law books. This new development is another sad example of how we will continue to hurt ourselves as a people until we embrace total restructuring of the country. We need to review not just the constitution, but our entire polity.

    “I am afraid that the Executive Order No 6, as laudable and needed as it is at this very crucial time of our fight against corruption and corrupt people, this good motive may end up being sacrificed on the altar of our age-long constitutional inadequacies. We are lucky to have President Buhari at the saddle at this time. He means well and he has been doing well. But with corruption vigorously fighting back, will our constitution allow this order to stay?

    “My fear is derived from my understanding of Section1 (3) of the Constitution, which declares that if any other law is inconsistent with the provisions of the constitution, the constitution prevails and such law shall to the extent of its inconsistency be voided.  The same constitution assigns legislative powers to the legislature while giving executive and judicial powers to the executive and judiciary respectively.

    “With the National Assembly determined to stop President Buhari’s march against corruption so as to protect its members from the long arm of the law in the coming days, and the opposition eager to shout ‘persecution’ at the slightest opportunity in support of some of its thieving chieftains, will the judiciary be willing and able to bend over backward and save the Executive Order from those determined to end its life,” he asked, while explaining what many have described as President Buhari’s current dilemma.

    The question is: where is the wind blowing; against or for corruption to continue to thrive. Why the hullaballoo over this Executive Order?

  • Ekiti poll: Controversy as police disperse PDP’s rally

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose sparked a huge controversy yesterday when he claimed that the police attacked him.

    The governor claimed that the police shot at him and fired teargas that blinded him in Ado Ekiti, the state capital.

    But the Police said the governor was not attacked.

    They said policemen fired teargas to disperse a crowd of people after they had been advised not to hold a rally.

    Reporters who were at the Police Headquarters rushed down to the Fajuyi Pavilion, venue of the planned rally when the news broke that the crowd was being dispersed.

    A Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) source  claimed that Fayose was attending to complaints from members who had been denied access to the pavilion when a teargas canister fired from outside the Government House landed very close to him. The governor inhaled the teargas and went down, he said.

    Asked if other people with the governor did not inhale the teargas, the source did not reply. He said Fayose was taken to the Government House Clinic.

    The governor later emerged from the clinic with neck brace to address the crowd that gathered at the Government House.

    Fayose alleged that he was slapped and kicked by a police officer. He also alleged that he had been ordered to be killed.

    Another source said the police did not enter the Government House, adding that “nobody beat His Excellency” who had his security details with him.

    Deputy Governor and PDP candidate in Saturday’s election, Prof. Kolapo Olusola, also alleged that he was beaten by policemen.

    The police said they stopped the PDP rally for security reasons and to maintain law and order.

    Deputy Inspector General of of Police (Operations) Habila Joshak said the PDP neither sought for nor got permit for any rally.

    Joshak said no unauthorised rally would be allowed in the state before Election Day on Saturday because of the prevailing security situation.

    It was leant that the APC leadership wanted to organise a road show which the police declined to approve. It was promptly cancelled.

    The Police Headquarters said “In furtherance to the presence of police officers around the Prof. Olusola Eleka pavilion at Fajuyi today (yesterday), two political parties intend to have their rally at the same date and in Ado-Ekiti metropolis but the commissioner of police advised the political parties in writing on the need to have theirn political activities at diferent time and because of the security implication.”

    Prince Dayo Adeyeye, who defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) after the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) primaries, described Fayose’s claim  as the latest “stunt” from “a clownish dramatist.”

    It was not clear yesterday why it was only the governor who inhaled the teargas and how he got his neck injured as he addressed the crowd at the Government House wearing a neck collar.

    The Yoruba Council of Elders (YCE) called for peace in the state.

    Interim Chairman  Adeleye Agbede said: “Ekiti are a peace loving people with unrivalled passion for education and development.

    He called on Fayose and Ex-Governor Kayode Fayemi “to caution their teeming supporters against violence.”

    Speaking later, Fayose said: “My people, the Lord will fight this battle; the MOPOL of Nigeria Police, IGP and AIG ordered that the governor should be killed.

    “I was slapped by a policeman. I was kicked and I was shot at. Be of great courage, be not dismayed, this battle will be won.

    “This is an army of occupation. This is not the democracy we fought for. My people, don’t be afraid. I pray they will not cause the 1983 problem in Ekiti State.

    “Ekiti is under siege. How can I be governor of Ekiti State and they treated me like this? My people, stand and keep standing. I will go back to the hospital and remain there. I want you to stand by Eleka (Olusola).

    “I plead with the international community: Nigeria is in trouble, please arise and stand for justice. They have arrested so many teachers, okada riders and PDP members.

    “Come and save PDP. We are in majority. We are a party to beat. Come and save us. They said they are under instruction to kill me and PDP candidate.”

    Fayose wept while being interviewed by journalists.

    He said: “I am in severe pain, I am in severe pain. Should anything evil happen to me, the Inspector General of Police should be held responsible.”

    Olusola said: “They shot sporadically into the air and one of them beat me. I told him that I am the deputy governor, he said deputy governor my foot.

    “We had not moved out to the streets at all; we were walking to our campaign office. The COMPOL (Commissioner of Police) MOPOL (Mobile Police) said to my hearing that it was an instruction from the Presidency.

    “They manhandled my governor and slapped him with the butt of the gun in the back. It was an attempt to assassinate the governor but they will never succeed.

    “Who then is safe in Nigeria? We should tell Buhari that enough is enough; the Presidency should be warned that enough is enough.

    “God is with us. The army that is with us is greater than the army that is with them. God is with us.”

    Ekiti PDP Chairman Gboyega Oguntuase accused the Inspector General of planning to rig the election for the APC.

    Oguntuase said: “When the IGP was CP in Kano State, democracy was bastardised; votes in Kano were rigged.

    “This election shall hold and be won by people who are behind PDP.

    Presently, the police are laying siege to the Government House.”

    Senate Deputy Minority Whip Mrs. Biodun Olujimi said PDP members still have the right to hold rallies because the time frame allowed by the Electoral Law had not lapsed.

    Soldiers and policemen had taken over the Fajuyi Pavilion.

    They parked their vehicles inside the arena and kept guard over the facility. An Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) was stationed there.

    The security men said they were under instruction not to allow any rally because of the tense situation in the state.

    PDP members, who arrived the place in their white apparel as instructed by the governor, were turned back.

    A close aide to Fayose, Abiola, was arrested. He is being detained at the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) Section at the Police Headquarters in Ado-Ekiti.

  • A budget of controversy

    Yesterday, President Muhammadu Buhari finally signed the 2018 Appropriation Bill into Law. That this is coming mid-way into what is supposed to be a January – December budget cycle is certainly not surprising: from Nov ember 7, 2017 when the President submitted the budget estimates to the joint session of the National Assembly, what we saw on full display were the same old turf wars – of blame game and mutual recriminations, needles grandstanding and bad faith between the executive and the legislative branch all of which threatened to reduce the process to a farce.

    Is the war then over?  It is doubtful. In the first place, the subtle disclaimer placed on the Appropriation Act, just signed, can hardly be lost on a careful observer of the executive-legislative relations. To the extent that the President left no one in doubt that he would not have signed given the level of distortions by the lawmakers save for the public anxiety and the possible implications of further delay on the overall health of the economy, it goes without saying that the war has merely shifted to another theatre – that of implementation.

    Let’s look at what ails the executive. In the original bill, it had proposed to spend N8.612 trillion, only to have the lawmakers jack it up to N9.12 trillion unilaterally.  Interestingly, this was one of the sore points in last year’s budget when projects not planned for were smuggled into the final document. To resolve the impasse, a gentleman’s agreement was reached for the executive to seek authorisation for virement. The lawmakers would later renege on this.

    As it is, the nation is back in full cycle. Yet again, the National Assembly insists it has the power to do as it pleased with the budget.  This time, it simply increased the vote where it suited it, putting the knife to others where it felt the need.  Among the hefty slash is the N347 billion in the allocations to 4,700 projects submitted to the lawmakers for consideration. By contrast, the parliament introduced 6,403 projects of its own amounting to N578 billion. In the president view, the projects which his administration considers as critical and whose votes were slashed by the lawmakers will be difficult to implement. In the same vein, he argues that the projects inserted by the lawmakers were not properly conceptualised, designed and costed and will therefore be difficult to execute.

    Worse is that many of these new projects introduced by the National Assembly were added to the budgets of most MDAs with no consideration for institutional capacity to execute them or the incremental recurrent expenditure that may be required. Among these are 70 new road projects inserted into the budget of the Federal Ministry of Power, Works and Housing while cutting the allocation for some strategic roads, like the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway and East-West Road.

    The most contentious one of course is the budget of the National Assembly raised from N125 billion to N139.5 billion (by N14.5 billion), without any discussion with the executive.

    Between the lawmakers and their insistence on the absolute power over the purse, and the executive which claims that the lawmakers have no business foisting their dubious projects on it, the stage appears set for another round of battle. Wither the ordinary man in all of this?

  • Adewole and Buhari’s health status controversy

    IN two separate interviews, Health minister, Isaac Adewole, a professor of medicine, insisted that President Muhammadu Buhari had the right both to seek medical care abroad and to decline to disclose the nature of his ailment. The minister argued that if the president sought help abroad, it was probably because Nigeria had unfortunately been unable to manage information with the discreteness and circumspection that would not further jeopardise a patient’s health. He added that seeking medical care abroad did not imply that the president had lost faith in Nigeria’s healthcare system.

    Of course, in the face of death or severe incapacitation, a man would demonstrate excessive fortitude not to seek help wherever it can be found. But, contrary to what the minister said, President Buhari is not just a man, any man. He is president, elected into office, and sustained by tax payers’ money. As a public officer, he owes those who elected him into office, and the rest of the country as a whole, full disclosure concerning the ailment afflicting and probably debilitating him. No matter the severity or mildness of the affliction, the president ought to commonsensically disclose the nature of the health crisis he is contending with.

    Prof Adewole is wrong to dismiss Nigerians as incompetent in managing information. On the contrary, it is the government that has proved spectacularly incompetent in managing information. Had the government fully and timeously disclosed the nature of the president’s health problem, there would be no reason to mismanage the information or engage in wild speculation about it. Furthermore, contrary to what the minister said, the president’s foreign medical trip is undoubtedly an indication that he thinks Nigerian hospitals are incapable of handling his ailment, whether it has to do with personnel or equipment.

    The president is about to embark on another round of political campaigns. Regardless of the arduousness of the campaigns, he is now even more unlikely to want to disclose his ailment. This attitude is an indication of his own and his aides’ understanding of democracy. As far as he is concerned, he is recuperating very well, and that is all that matters. That is all the information he believes Nigerians should be entitled to, sadly.

  • Controversy as Oluwo adopts Emir title

    THE Oluwo of Iwo, Oba Abdul-Rasheed Akanbi, Telu I, stoked the fire of controversy yesterday by adopting the title of an Emir.

    He officially declared himself the Emir of Yorubaland.

    Speaking at the installation and the turbaning ceremony of the first Waziri of Yorubaland, Fadhilaru Sheikh Yahquub Abdul-Baaqi Mohammed, the Oluwo, who adorned an Islamic regalia, said whoever calls him an Emir of Yoruba was in order.

    The monarch said Iwo is using the title of Waziri to announce to the world it is truly a citadel of Islamic knowledge.

    According to him, Iwo has a distinctive traditional history among the Yoruba race, adding that “these peculiarities have made Iwo to be at the forefront in Yoruba land.”

    He condemned those enagaing in cult activities, saying that any traditional submitting his authorities to any cult does not know his worth.

    He charged the leaders of the cult groups to expel kings and clerics from their midst because they don’t deserve to be called representatives of God.

    The monarch said: “The blood of Oduduwa is running in my veins. I am the Emir of the Yorubaland.

    “So far the Alaafin of Oyo has power to install Are Ona Kankafo and Iyalode of Yoruba land. I also have the power to install the Waziri of Yorubaland in accordance with the history which proves that the first monarch in Yorubaland to accept and establish Islam is Oluwo Muhammadu Lamuye.

    “Iwo Ilu Aafa is not just a saying. There is a deep history connected to it.

    “The first monarch in the entire Yoruba land that accepted and established Islam among the people was the Oluwo Mohammadu Lamuye. The first mosque in Iwo was built in 1655 and that is the first indigenous mosque in Yorubaland.”

    Continuing, he said: “Today is historic because I want to give Islam a very good structure in Yoruba land.

    “I want to use this title to announce to the world that truly Iwo is the citadel of Islamic knowledge. Iwo has a unique and distinctive traditional history among the entire Yoruba race.

    “When I came on the throne, I met a lot of problems of disunity among the Yoruba monarchs but in the North you can’t see the Emirs fighting one another.

    “The Waziri didn’t come from the Hausas nor the Fulanis but from the Islamic structure.

    “So, anybody that wants to criticise me doesn’t know the history. My action is not just taken from the surface at all but from the history.

    “We all believe that Oduduwa is the father of Yoruba. He came from Mecca and he did not come with any form of god. How will anybody believe the report that Oduduwa came from the sky through chains? Even Jesus Christ the son of God according to the Christian faith, was born by a woman.

    “Nobody is a King but God. We are only representing him. So, how will you be a king and be at the mercy of the small gods?

    “The institution of the King doesn’t allow me to bow for any other gods. As a king is in the Europe so also the Emir is the head in Mecca where Oduduwa came from.

    “In this regard I am in order. The only abomination is that there should not be any god in the palace. I have demonstrated this in the past.”

    The Oluwo, who expressed disappointment at how traditional rulers in  Yoruba race always disagree among themselves over issues that could be resolved amicably, charged them to embrace harmony and work in unison for the progress of Yoruba race.

    The monarch maintained remarkable achievements could only be recorded in the atmosphere of peace.

  • INEC registration: Bello stirs fresh controversy, picks TVC at his Okene ward

    INEC registration: Bello stirs fresh controversy, picks TVC at his Okene ward

    Governor  Yahaya Bello of Kogi  State, yesterday  triggered a fresh controversy about his status as a registered voter when he obtained a Temporary Voter Card (TVC) at his Okene Ward.

    Mr. Kingsley Fanwo, the Director-General, Media and Publicity to the governor, confirmed this in a statement he issued and circulated among media houses in Lokoja.

    Fanwo said that the issuance of the TVC to Bello was sequel to a form he filled, seeking the transfer of his Permanent Voter Card (PVC) to Okene.

    “The governor had been on the issue of the transfer for long. He is excited it has finally been done by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    “Yes, his card has been transferred to his polling unit at Okene. The governor is a law-abiding leader who will continue to follow due process,” Fanwo said in the statement.

    The issue of Bello as a registered voter before the 2015 general elections has been a subject of public interest and currently in court for decision.

    Bello had registered afresh in Lokoja, Kogi State, on May 23, 2017, but INEC swiftly described the governor’s action as illegal and unconstitutional.

    The commission  alleged that Bello was involved in double registration, claiming that the governor had earlier registered at Wuse, Zone II, on Jan. 30, 2011.

    For their involvement in the governor’s alleged illegal registration in 2017, a senior official of INEC was retired compulsorily from service while two other personnel were summarily dismissed.

    Attempts to get the State INEC office to comment on the governor’s latest action proved abortive as many calls to the mobile phone of the state Resident Electoral Commissioner, Prof James Akpa, did not connect.

    However, The Director of Publicity and Voter Education, Mr Ahmed Biambo, when contacted, promised to call back but failed to do so.

    Meanwhile, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has urged INEC to  explain the mystery surrounding the collection of a TVC by Bello.

    Mr Dickson Achadu, the PDP Director of Research and Documentation in the state, in a statement, insisted that the governor was culpable having registered twice in Abuja in 2011 and in Lokoja in 2017.

    “INEC must come clear with what is happening and the circumstances surrounding the governor’s double registration, most especially that the governor has been dragged to court, having allegedly registered twice as even being alleged by INEC.

    “INEC must reassure citizens of its readiness to conduct a free, fair and credible poll in 2019 as the governor’s action is making it lose public confidence.

    ” It is unimaginable that having confessed to not being able to transfer his permanent voter card before 2015 and the governor’s second registration held in Kogi Government House, Lokoja, INEC can still participate in the drama that took place at INEC office in Okene today,” the statement said.

  • Controversy in Edo over ‘missing’ rice

    Controversy in Edo over ‘missing’ rice

    FOUR thousand, seven hundred and twenty one bags of rice are allegedly missing from the 6,822 donated by the Customs to Internally Displaced Persons’ (IDPs’) camp in Edo State.

    They were allegedly taken from the warehouse.

    The state’s Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) accused officials of diverting over 4,000 bags.

    Over two thousand bags were given to IDPs at Ohogua in Ovia North East Local Government.

    The Customs also donated 76 cartons of vegetable oil,  and 20 pairs of used shoes, among others.

    A November 10 letter signed by the Customs Assistant Comptroller-General, Mr. A. Azarema, showed that the items were from Imo, Cross River and Rivers commands.

    PDP Chairman Chief Dan Orbih, who spoke when over 300 members of All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) defected to the party, said Governor Godwin Obaseki must account for the missing bags of rice.

    He said documents showed that the governor had a case to answer.

    Orbih alleged: “I have the vouchers to show I am telling the truth. PDP will be in the forefront in liberating Edo State. Last December, the director-general of NCS gave 6,822 bags of rice to IDPs. Obaseki only gave 2,101 to the camp.

    “The balance of 4,721 bags was taken by the governor for All Progressives Congress’ (APC’s) members. This is a serious matter. The bags were seized from those who imported rice illegally into the country.

    “The governor pretended that they used their money to buy the rice and give to IDPs. I have been hearing of scandal, but none is as sensational as these missing bags of rice. Obaseki must account for the missing bags. He has a case to answer. They must return the bags of rice to the IDPs’ camp.”

    Camp Coordinator Mr. Solomon Folorunsho said he only received 2,101 bags of rice  as donation from NCS.

    He said he was shocked when government officials brought the rice after the Customs notified him about the items.

    Folorunsho said: “We received 2,101 bags of rice. We are still waiting for the rest. This place depends on people’s goodwill. Whoever is holding what belongs to the IDPs should release it.”

    Special Adviser to Governor Obaseki on Media and Communication Strategy Mr. Crusoe Osagie described PDP’s allegations as lies.

    He said all items donated by the Customs, besides those damaged in storage, were distributed to IDPs and orphanages.

    “The allegation is laughable and false. It is a design by detractors to smear the image of a performing government. Edo PDP has a rich history of diverting items meant for the less privileged. Its members think other people are like them,” Osagie said.

    He said the government had made donations to people in distress “and it is irreconcilable that a known donor to humanitarian causes will divert items meant for IDPs.

    “PDP’s allegation that of the 6,822 bags of rice meant for IDPs, over 4,000 bags were diverted, as only 2,101 bags were given to the IDPs, is a figment of the imagination of its members.”

  • Controversy trails Funke Akindele’s supposed Hollywood film role

    Controversy trails Funke Akindele’s supposed Hollywood film role

    •As Genevieve Nnaji makes sudden replacement

    After a week of enjoying the frenzy of being cast in a Hollywood film, ‘Avengers: Infinity War’, Funke Akindele has been yanked from a cast list that many believe was a fluke in the first place.

    On January 10, news filtered in that Akindele would play a role in Dora Milaje’s army in the series, with the source credited to www.imdb.com. And while her fans – home and abroad – were congratulating her on the supposed achievement, the ‘Jenifa’ star did not make any comments regarding her starring in the acclaimed Hollywood movie. Now, her fans know better, as sources close to the actress and producer said they were not aware of Akindele acting in the movie.

    However, at the weekend, the website changed the credits and replaced Akindele’s name and picture with that of Genevieve Nnaji. This aroused curiosity as some commenters believe that Akindele’s inclusion might have been the work of mischief makers, therefore, putting a snag on the believability of Nnaji’s enlisting.

    While talks on the controversial Hollywood film role continues on the social media, many decry Akindele and her management team for keeping quiet, and tagging along with the fake news.

     

  • Davido in another controversy as aide beats up airport security officials

    Davido in another controversy as aide beats up airport security officials

    Security agencies at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos have impounded 17 check-in luggage belonging to  musician David Adeleke, popularly known as Davido in the Nigerian entertainment industry.

    The seizure  followed  an alleged  attack  by one of the musician’s aides on Aviation Security (AVSEC), Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) and Checkport personnel at the airport upon his arrival from a foreign trip on Thursday evening.

    The Nation gathered that trouble started when Checkport staff at the baggage reclaim area attempted to verify whether  the tags on Davido’s luggage  corresponded with the reclaimed luggage.

    But, the enquiry of the personnel did not go down well with one of Davido’s aides who refused to tender the tags and resorted to abusive words against the staff.

    What followed,according to sources,was a punch in the face on a Checkport staff by the aide.

    A Customs personnel who rushed to the scene also got punched in the face by the aide.

    The situation soon degenerated and the security personnel called for reinforcement.

    The aide was overpowered and was then taken to ‘Tango City’ a secluded at the airport where unruly passengers and touts are kept  by security agencies.

    At ‘Tango City’ the aide reportedly continued his attack on two AVSEC personnel, one of them a female lady who was writing her  report, and the other,a  Customs official who was injured on his wrist.

    It was at this point that the attention of Davido who was already outside the terminal awaiting the collection of his luggage from his aide was called to the terminal incident.

    Attempt by Davido to get his luggage  released  was rebuffed  by security agents who  insisted on taking the detained aide to Criminal Investigation Department (CID), Panti , Lagos.

    The 17 seized luggage were still at the airport yesterday while effort  was being made to transfer the aide to CID, Panti.

    The source close to the scene of the incident said: “Davido had arrived Lagos Airport as usual with about 17 luggage in all. The rule is that whenever you arrive, you are expected to release your tags to the Checkport staff for confirmation and verification, but rather than comply with the simple rule, one of his aides insisted he won’t allow them to check the tags.

    “But, unfortunately, this aide refused to be checked and rather than obey the simple civil aviation rule, he resorted to attacks on everybody. He attacked no  fewer than four officials with at least two of them soaked in blood.”

    General Manager, Public Affairs , Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) Mrs Henrietta Yakubu confirmed the incident yesterday.