Tag: David Mark

  • Mark urges China to document sales of military hardwares

    Mark urges China to document sales of military hardwares

    As part of efforts to curb the activities of the Boko Haram, Senate President David Mark yesterday urged the Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Chinese National People’s Congress (NPC), Mr. Zhang Dejiang, to initiate laws that would ensure the documentation of all buyers and sellers of military  hardwares and uniforms from China.

    Mark spoke during an interactive meeting with Dejiang at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, according to a statement by his Special Adviser on Media, Kola Ologbondiyan, in Abuja.

    The statement quoted the Senate President to have said that “because of our country’s (Nigeria) current challenges, every interface between our countries’ parliaments should centre on military training and strategy, technology transfer, poverty reduction and job creation.

    “We also ask that to further assist our fight against terrorism, buyers and sellers of military uniforms and hardwares from your country should be properly documented. This will enable us trace the sources of military uniforms and hardwares available to these terrorists.

    “We want to reassure you that we are doing everything possible to rescue the over 230 girls abducted by the terrorists.

    “We also appreciate the assistance that has been promised and made available by the international community including China.

    “We believe that the terrorists and insurgents in our country have connections with other terrorists and possibly with some international terrorists groups.

    “We also believe that China with her experience in strategies and tactics can help in intelligence gathering to enable us halt the murderous acts of the Boko Haram.”

    Dejiang described terrorism “as a common enemy,” stressing that “China is a victim. We will stand firmly with Nigeria.”

    He added that “China has been following the abduction of the girls and we will help to the best of our abilities and we hope the girls will return home as soon as possible.

    “We condemn the abduction of these girls in the strongest terms. China will also give active support in ensuring that the girls are brought back home.”

     

     

  • Otedola lived an exemplary life, says Mark

    Otedola lived an exemplary life, says Mark

    Senate President David Mark extolled yesterday the virtues of the former Lagos State governor, the late Sir Michael Otedola.

    The Senate President said the late governor lived his life in the service of humanity.

    Mark, in a condolence message to the family of the deceased, the government and people of Lagos State, said Otedola was a model for Nigeria’s democracy.

    In a statement in Abuja by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Kola Ologbondiyan, the Senate President said: “His (Otedola’s) lifestyle was exemplary. He devoted himself to humanity, particularly to Lagos State and its people.”

    The statement added: “Mark consoled with the immediate family of late Sir Otedola for the huge loss. He urged the family to uphold the sanctity of selfless service the deceased lived for.

    “The Senate President recalled the diligence displayed by the late Sir Otedola as a teacher, reporter, even as an Editor and tasked every Nigerian to emulate his virtues.”

     

    “Mark noted that the good works of Sir Otedola would serve as a solace for the family. He urged the Lagos State Government to immortalise him.

    “He prayed God to grant the deceased an eternal rest in the bosom of the Almighty and the family the fortitude to bear the loss.”

     

  • Be more proactive: Mark,  Senate urge security agencies 

    Be more proactive: Mark, Senate urge security agencies 

    President of the Senate, David Mark, yesterday condemned the bombing that left scores of citizens dead. He urged the perpetrators to rethink “because this is a needless war,” adding that “It is hard to believe that this is happening to us. No matter the anger or grievances in anybody’s mind, this war on defenceless citizens is uncalled for. This is inhuman and unarguably ungodly.” In a statement, the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the Senate President, Kola Ologbondiyan, noted that Mark who was already at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, enroute Ibadan, Oyo State, made a  u-turn in honor  of the victims on hearing of the sordid incident. It was gathered that Mark was on his way to attend the birthday of the Olubadan of Ibadan Oba Samuel Odulana  Odugade I  on his 100 years and receive a Chieftaincy from the revered monarch. The President of the Senate sympathised with the victims and reminded Nigerians of the need to be their brothers’ keeper at all times. He also called on security operatives to collaborate with others, even as he counseled them to be more proactive in order to end the menace.

    Also, the Senate decried the latest bomb blast, describing it as callous and wicked. Its spokesman, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, said the bomb blast, which claimed scores of lives, is one incident by the evil minds that should prick Nigeria’s collective consciousness. The Senate, he said, is worried at the dimension the orgy of terrorists attacks and its devilish activities is assuming. Abaribe said: “The Senate bleeds also on the very harrowing fact that innocent lives of Nigerians, whose only sin is to go out to look for their daily bread, would be so slaughtered in this manner. The Senate is still bemoaning the unending massacre of our people in some states in the Northeast, the latest being the killings in Borno state on Sunday and now this one,” he said.

    The Senate also called on the security agencies to step up their game and be more proactive. He said: “The blame game should be over, the security agencies must step up their game and be more proactive. The country is indeed bleeding of the blood of her innocent ones who are daily being cut down by the evil minds. The Senate therefore consoles with the families of the dead and wishes the wounded quick recovery, while also urging Nigerians to remain steadfast as the Government intensifies effort to tackle the ugly menace.”

  • I asked God to allow me reach 40, says Mark

    I asked God to allow me reach 40, says Mark

    •Jonathan, Senate hail Mark at 66

    Senate President David Mark yesterday said he used to ask God to allow him attain the age of 40.

    The senator representing Benue South spoke yesterday at the National Assembly in Abuja during the celebration of his 66th birthday.

    He said: “As a young man, I asked God to allow me attain the age of 40. There was no reason for 40; I just chose the figure of 40. But by the time I was 40, I had already been chairman of abandoned properties, a military governor, a minister and a member of Armed Forces Ruling Council (AFRC).

    “When I attained the age of 40, I asked for five more years. I wanted another five years to attain the age of 45, and by the time I was 45, He sent me on exile.

    “Maybe if I had not asked for more five years, I would not have been sent on exile. But God has done so well for me that all I can do at this stage is to do the things that please him.”

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday hailed the Senate President for his role in stabilising the nation’s democracy.

    Jonathan’s wishes were contained in a birthday letter read by Mark at plenary.

    Also yesterday, the Senate eulogised the Senate President as he attained the age of 66.

    This followed a motion by Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, who said Mark’s 66th birthday was beyond the number of years he has lived.

    He said: “Rather, it is about the life of productive service to God, the nation and humanity. His life has benefited the nation greatly.

    “He is one of the few Nigerians who have played very active roles in the nation’s political life under the military and democracy. I have often likened him to the Biblical Paul.

    “You recall that Paul was on the other side of faith but once he got converted on his way to Damascus, he became not just one of the greatest defenders of the faith but the most fervent, prolific and travel preachers of the gospel.

    “The distinguished Senate President has made his mark as a soldier of democracy, even suffering persecution and going into exile at a time, in defence of democracy. Today, he is a preacher and ardent promoter of democratic values. He is a practising democrat per excellence.

    “Far from the rambunctiousness and swagger that would ordinarily be associated with an accomplished general who has seen it all, Senator Mark turns out to be highly unassuming, quiet but very sociable and outspoken. He is like the proverbial Amanlize, that Igbo folklore hero who has mastered the art of riding the storm and achieving great things quietly.

    “Unlike Chinua Achebe’s Amalinze the cat (who was eventually floored by Okonkwo after seven years winning streak) in his classic novel, titled: Things Fall Apart, this fabled Amanlize wrestled both malevolent spirit and men and always emerged victorious.

    “I want to thank the distinguished Senate President for his team spirit, conviviality, legislative due process, independence and the decorum he has cultivated in the Senate.

    “He has built a Senate that neither fears to legislate nor legislate in fear. He has not only led the Senate and the National Assembly on the path of stability but has also earned the Senate the reputation as a stabiliser of the polity.

    “He has helped to groom the Senate into a truly distinguished and respected body of statesmen and women where all sides are heard and where party lines, individual and all other interests ultimately thin out in favour of national peace, stability and democratic growth. His leadership is indeed defined by courage, fairness, and unwavering defence of that which he understands to be true and just.

    “I am also sure that looking at his exploits in the Legislature, Nigerians would understand better why the Legislature should not be turned into a turn-by-turn business.

    “They would understand better that nothing beats legislative experience, especially for an emerging democracy like ours.”

    Senators Abdul Ningi, Zainab Kure, Ganiyu Solomon, Edobor Uzamere, Esther Nenadi Usman and Aisha Alhassan, among others, also extolled the virtues of the Senate President.

    Mark thanked his colleagues for their support and cooperation.

    The Senate President said the only birthday gift he desired was to “end the senseless killings in some parts of the country”.

    He said: “I appreciate your comments. First, let me say that I do not take your support and cooperation for granted. I appreciate it, I value it and I am extremely grateful that you have given me the support.

    “That I have achieved any success as the President of the Senate is because you have given me maximum support and corporation. Whatever I have earned in politics today in terms of leadership is because you have given all the encouragement and support to me and I value and appreciate these.

    “Sometimes, when we gather in the chamber here, the public expects that we will leave here in pieces, that we would be torn apart, that there would be hype and media publication that the Senate is divided over an issue or that we are going to be torn apart.

    “But what happens at the end of the day, because you have all agreed to work for Nigeria with one single objective: Nigeria, Nigeria and Nigeria.

    “We leave here and people get disappointed because we leave more united and stronger than the speculations that we heard before we come here and I think that is because you have all sworn to uphold the unity and integrity of this country.

    “Somebody asked me this morning what I would like for my birthday gift and I told him a complete end to these needless and senseless deaths that we experience in the country today.

    “If there is any birthday gift that I would want, it is for us to end these needless and senseless deaths that we have in the country today.

    “We wake every day and we hear of people being killed. First it was single unit, two, three people died, then tens, now hundreds and we don’t want it to go beyond this and I hope and pray that all Nigerians will ensure that we bring this needless deaths to an end.”

    He added: “I want to assure all of you that we will remain one united Senate working for the unity and development of this country and working to ensure that Nigeria attains the goals that it deserves and that together, we will enact laws that will take us to the Promised land.

    “On my part, I promise that our work here will be such that though tribe and tongues may differ, in brotherhood we shall stand and remain.

    “I also promise this morning that I am going to devote more of my time and life to God because at the age of 66, there is nothing more to do than to thank God for all He has done for me.

    “For me, God has been merciful; He has been gracious and He has been understanding. Above all, He has showered me with so many blessings in life.”

     

     

     

     

  • National Assembly won’t compromise Nigeria’s interest, says Mark

    National Assembly won’t compromise Nigeria’s interest, says Mark

    Senate President David Mark yesterday said the National Assembly will defend issues that engender peace and unity in Nigeria.

    A statement yesterday in Abuja by the Senate President’s Chief Press Secretary Paul Mumeh said Mark spoke at the Senator Nurudeen Abatemi-Usman Initiative Empowerment programme in Okene, Kogi State.

    Mark said the Legislature had no conflicting roles with the Executive.

    The Senate President said dividends of democracy would be faster delivered if the Legislature and the Executive worked together for the benefit of the citizenry.

    He stressed the need to avoid frictions among government functionaries so that the electorate could benefit from government programmes and policies.

    Apparently referring to the recent security challenges in which scores of Nigerians were killed, Mark called for peaceful coexistence among Nigerians.

    He said: “There has to be peace for us to talk about development at any point. The government alone cannot guarantee peace; it is the cooperation of all us, irrespective of our political parties, that can bring peaceful coexistence.”

    The Senate President noted that there was need for elected public officers to work together by de-emphasising political affiliations “because political parties are mere vehicles to be elected for service to the people”.

    Kogi State Governor Idris Wada hailed Abatemi-Usman for the initiative.

    He said the senator’s efforts had complimented his administration’s programmes in alleviating the plight of the ordinary citizens.

    Wada said Abatemi-Usman had kept his electioneering campaign promises to the electorate, adding: “The action is fulfilling and reassuring.”

    Abatemi-Usman said he was committed to the welfare of the people of his district.

    The senator said the empowerment scheme included human capital development, especially for the youths.

    About 1,207 persons and groups got cars, buses, motorcycles, sewing machines, video cameras, generators, among others, at the ceremony.

     

  • Mark, Akeredolu, Oyebode, others eulogise Ajayi

    Mark, Akeredolu, Oyebode, others eulogise Ajayi

    Eminent Nigerians have continued to pay tributes to Chief G.O.K. Ajayi (SAN), who died at the weekend in Lagos.

    They described him as an embodiment of “discipline and finesse”.

    Senate President David Mark yesterday sent his condolences to the Ogun State government.

    In a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Paul Mumeh, Mark said the late Ajayi was not just a legal giant but one of those at the forefront of the struggle for the enthronement of democracy and emancipation of Nigerians.

    All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu described the late Ajayi as “an inspiration” and “one of the leading lights of the judiciary”.

    In his condolence message, Tinubu said: “He stood for justice and had a sterling professional career. He enriched our judiciary and served Nigeria well.”

    He said Nigeria has, once again, been robbed by death of the knowledge of a great mind, adding that the late Aj

    He praised his brilliance and said he belonged to the tribe of courageous jurists who upheld the law and used the law to help secure democracy.

    Former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) President Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN) and Professor of law Akin Oyebode said the late Ajayi, fondly called “gentleman G.O.K.”, was a quintessential lawyer of impeccable pedigree.

    They described his demise as a monumental loss.

    Oyebode said the late Ajayi exuded a methodical advocacy, superb intellect and dogged commitment to excellence, “the like of which is uncommon in our environment”.

    Akeredolu said since Ajayi’s death, many people have talked about his dogged, principled and unwavering commitment to the fight for an egalitarian society, where no man is oppressed.

    He said: “G.O.K., as he was fondly called by his admirers and those who knew him, was an advocate indeed. He was debonair, unobtrusive, resilient, principled, courageous and decent. He was a man in whose presence one felt a sense of overwhelming and outstanding knowledge of law.

    “He understood human nature as venal, vile and wicked. He quietly, but resolutely, pitched his tent with the oppressed. From the First Republic when politics became an instrument of repression to the Second Republic when being in the opposition translated to losing everything, including one’s rights to citizenship and the very breath that sustained life, this man chose to defend the truth and justice.

    “He was not the type who courted the limelight. He believed in anonymity in the course of defending the downtrodden.”

    Highlighting the deceased’s unwavering support for the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo and other progressives, Akeredolu said the nation’s politics has suffered retrogression from self-appointed representatives of the people.

    He accused the deceased’s contemporaries of offering themselves to highest bidding politicians, adding: “Unfortunately, some of his peers are busy seeking to rubbish the age-long principled stance of the progressive order. They are, regrettably, available to the highest bidders while masking their predilection for material acquisition, pretending that altruistic politics is possible in a society where ethno-religious bickering holds sway.

    “G.O.K. was a major advocate in the defense team of the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) under the leadership of the late Awolowo until the end of the Second Republic.

    “The defense of the late Abiola, winner of the 1993 presidential election that was annulled by the military government of General Ibrahim Babangida, was another index of his unwavering commitment to the progressives.

    “He was unshaken in his belief that in spite of the hostile environment, the military under the late General Sani Abacha, must be made to adhere to the rule of law. He participated, actively, through the courts, in the activities that culminated into civil rule in 1999.

    “The case of Alhaji Abdulrahaman Shugaba, the majority leader in the Borno State House of Assembly, who was deported to Chad by the ruling National Party of Nigeria (NPN) government under the leadership of Shagari is instructive. The learned SAN defended the man who was wrongly deported and got him back to Nigeria.

    “Our country faces serious challenges of nationhood. The departure of a man of sterling qualities, such as G.O.K., should be considered a monumental loss. He chose a critical time in our itinerary towards nationhood to depart.

    “We pray that his family would have the fortitude to bear the loss. This occasion should also call for sober reflection on the part of those who have, disappointingly, lend themselves to the destructive scheming of the current holders of ephemeral power. May G.O.K.’s resourceful soul rest in perfect peace.”

    The Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), Ijebu-Ode branch in Ogun State, described Ajayi’s death as “a great loss to the legal profession”.

    The late Ajayi hailed from Itan-Ntebo Quarters in Ijebu-Ode.

    NBA Chairman, Ijebu-Ode chapter, Chief Biyi Odugbesan, in an interview with The Nation, said many lawyers passed through the late Ajayi, adding: “His death is a great loss to the bar and legal profession. We are going to miss him. He is a revered lawyer and has contributed to the growth of the legal profession in Nigeria.”

    Former Ijebu-Ode Local Government Chairman Giwa Mufutau Oseni said the late Ajayi was “a courageous legal practitioner who used his professional calling to advance the cause of justice and defend the oppressed”.

    Oseni said the late Ajayi handled many landmark cases that helped to shape the “bar and bench” and would be missed by the country.

     

  • No sacred cows, says Mark

    No sacred cows, says Mark

    Senate President David Mark said yesterday that there would be no sacred cow nor a cover-up in the tragic Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) recruitment.

    Mark spoke at the inauguration of a two-day public hearing on the ill-fated NIS recruitment in Abuja.

    Represented by Senate Leader Victor Ndoma-Egba, Mark described the death of the applicants as an “unfortunate and embarrassing incident.”

    He told the Senator Atiku Bagudu-led Interior Committee to do its all to unravel what happened and who was responsible for what.

  • How Mark sustains his influence on power

    How Mark sustains his influence on power

    The role played by Senate President David Mark in maintaining the stranglehold of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on power in recent times suggests that he is one of the pillars that sustain the ruling party. Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI examines how the Benue State-born politician has succeeded in steering the Senate above trouble waters, where others failed.

    He is a smooth operator, but the growing influence of Senate President David Alechenu Bonaventure Mark has been very much evident in recent times, following the crisis that rocked the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at the centre. Mark stood out like a rock in a surging sea throughout the crisis, making him one of President Goodluck Jonathan’s most reliable allies. For this reason, he is one man the President cannot afford to disappoint and he uses his influence on the President once in a while. For instance, following the tragic aptitude and fitness test conducted by the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), which claimed the lives of about 17 applicants, Interior Minister Abba Moro would have been relived of his job, but for the intervention of Mark. Moro, who hails from Benue State just like the Senate President, had quickly reached out to the well-respected man who nominated him for the ministerial position, to plead with President Jonathan who was said to be livid with the minister over the tardiness in conducting the ill-fated test. Mark’s influence within the Senate and in the polity generally, it is said, has grown over the years, marking him out from his predecessors.

    Before his emerged on the scene as President of the Nigerian Senate, on June 6, 2007, that office was widely seen as a minefield of banana peels. This is owing to the fact that previous occupants of that office since the advent of the Fourth Republic were not able to meander through without stepping on the peels. But Mark, retired army general, former governor, former minister of communications and one of the Babangida boys at the height of military rule in the country, has had an unassailable run since he came into the scene. Somehow he commands a lot of respect from his fellow senators. After his first term in 2007, he returned in 2011, and does not look like somebody whose job is threatened in any way.

    Against this background, the question that has been on the lips of many Nigerians for a long time is: what is Mark’s staying power? The consensus of respondents is that Mark has a good understanding of Nigerian politics. He displays a good political sagacity in the way he handles the affairs of the upper chamber of the National Assembly. In the view of Monday Ubani, a Lagos-based legal practitioner and chairman of Nigeria Bar Association, NBA, Ikeja Chapter, Mark adopts a populist political method in his dealings with fellow Senators particularly and politicians generally. His words: “He reaches out to them, by making sure that they do not have reasons to grumble. In other words, he carries them along and makes that everyone is properly settled, including financial inducements. Political leaders have problems within the Nigerian set up, when they eat alone. As long as he shares whatever accrues to the upper chamber equitably among all the members, there would be no complains from any angle.” In the absence of any reason for agitation, his position has never been threatened.

    Another respondent who does not want to be named puts it this way: “David Mark’s reputation as a man of the people is well known in the National Assembly. I think he is a better mixer, compared to previous occupants of that position. He is a guy who understands the importance of human relations in dealing with people.” He is of the view that Mark humbles himself, by not allowing his exalted position to get to his head. “Let’s not forget that he was a good student while he was at the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA), he was a good soldier and an accomplished administrator,” he added.

    The overriding factor, according to observers, is that Mark appears to understand the mindset of his colleagues. He is believed to be wealthy. Being a former governor, minister and one of Babangida’s close associates during the military era, money is not his problem this time around. In this regard, he ensures a constant flow of Ghana-must-go bags. Besides, he does not deny or delay the privileges meant for his colleagues. These include constituency allowance, furniture allowance, choice houses, contracts and overseas trips and estacodes. He knows that many of them are hardly interested in the business of lawmaking, which explains why the chamber is always near empty at every session. As a result, he does not pay attention to absentee members. After all, better an empty house than a house full of traitors.

    Besides, the incumbent Senate President knows that a cordial relationship with the Presidency is critical and crucial for his survival. In Ubani’s opinion, Mark has protected the president very well. “In doing this, he has been very careful not to be seen as being neither subservient nor belligerent. He has been playing a role you could describe as very reconciliatory; he panders to the Presidency when it is necessary and to the house when this is called for,” he explained. In that regard, the legal practitioner believes the Senate President has been able to strike a balance between the two sides and this has helped in no small way in protecting his political party, the PDP.

    Indeed, the way he handled the recent face-off on the floor of the upper chamber over the recent defection from the PDP to the APC has also earned him respect from both sides. Everyone expected the issue to cause a big uproar in the Senate, but somehow he doused the tension, without ruffling feathers. Ubani noted that the fourth term legislator refused to pander to the whims of former PDP Senators who say they have decamped to APC, and wanted him to announce that development on the floor of the Senate, by telling them that the matter is in court. He added: “He also refused to pander to the interest of some members of his political party who wanted the defectors to be sanctioned. At the end of the day, no one could accuse him of being used to further the interest of any of the two major political parties. But, overall, he succeeded in protecting the interest of the PDP, through the matured way he handled the matter.”

    He also portrays himself as a statesman, by ensuring that he is seen to be vocal on all national and international issues. For instance, condemns the insecurity in the land when Boko Haram insurgents strike. On the other hand, he calls the bluff of foreign powers when they become overbearing, as they sometimes do when it comes to issues like gay marriage.

    A brief recap of the tenure of his predecessors is imperative, to better appreciate what Mark has achieved in that regard. At the inception of the Fourth Republic in 1999, Senator Evans (or is it Evan?) Enwerem set the tone for other occupants of that coveted office under the Olusegun Obasanjo era, when he stepped on the infamous banana peels and his reign was short-lived. His albatross was the allegation of falsification of his name. But there was more to his fall. He was investigated for the crime of corruption. But the controversy as to whether the senator’s real name was Evan or Evans soon became the subject of intense media attention. He was removed from office on November 18, 1999. He survived for just eight months.

    After him, the cerebral and bombastic Dr. Chuba Okadigbo, came on board. His tempestuous reign as Senate President also did not last long. Okadigbo, who was usually hailed with his traditional title, the Oyi of Oyi, was known for his opposition to his own political party, the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at the time. But it was his cat and mouse relationship with the former President Olusegun Obasanjo that became his greatest undoing. He was charged with corruption and removed from office in August 2000. He spent less than a year as Senate President. Incidentally, Okadigbo was actively involved in the removal of Enwerem.

    There was also Anyim Pius Anyim, the Ebonyi State-born politician who occupies the office of Secretary to the Government of the federation at present. He became the Senate President in August 2000 after the removal of Okadigbo. As Senate President, his attempt to impeach Obasanjo failed. He, however, did not seek re-election in the 2003, knowing that his opposition to Obasanjo would cost him a re-election. The reign of Adolphus Wabara, who became the Senate President in 2003, also ended in acrimony. Like those before him, allegations of corruption brought about his downfall. In April 2005, he resigned following allegations that he collected a bribe from the then Minister of Education, Prof. Fabian Osuji, to facilitate the passage of his annual budget. Although Wabara’s charges were eventually dropped, the damage had been done. It was all part of the game plan. He had to go. Senator Ken Nnamani completed the vicious cycle of banana peels the Senate presidency had become until Mark made a grand entry in 2007.

     

  • Mark decries terrorism

    Mark decries terrorism

    Senate President David Mark yesterday decried crimes, which have claimed life and property.

    He said terrorists had degenerated to the level of beasts, and become insane.

    Mark, who was reacting to the latest attacks in Benue State, in which hundreds died, according to a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Paul Mumeh, wondered how some Nigerians had become wicked and cruel.

    He was quoted to have said: “I cannot understand why people have resorted to killing one another at will without the slightest provocation. This is not part of us. This is highly inhuman and unacceptable.”

    Mark reminded Nigerians of the time-tested philosophy of Africans being their brother’s keeper.

    Said he: “We are still one people created by the same God. Neither religion, nor politics, nor ethnicity should put asunder our cherished peace and unity.”

    The Senate president urged security operatives to collaborate for a result-oriented approach towards ending the killings.

    He sympathised with the government and people of Benue State for the attacks and called for a proactive approach to avoid a recurrence.

    Mark enjoined the National Emergency Management Agency (NAMA) to provide relief materials to the victims in camps.

  • Mark mourns Senator Oduoye

    Mark mourns Senator Oduoye

    Senate President David Mark yesterday described the sudden death of Senator Simeon Olasunkanmi Oduoye, after a brief illness, as sad and a huge loss.

    Mark, in his condolence message to the immediate family, the Government and people of Osun State, according to a statement by his Special Adviser, Media and Publicity, Kola Ologbondiyan, in Abuja, noted that the late lawmaker was a distinguished officer and a gentleman of very high standing.

    He recalled the contributions of the deceased during his days at the Senate, saying: “Senator Oduoye was a fine parliamentarian, an astute administrator and a God-fearing Nigerian.”

     

    Senator Oduoye, a retired Assistant Inspector-General of Police (AIG), was Military Administrator of Niger and Ebonyi states.

    Mark was quoted to have said: “He lived his life for the services of our country. As the Military Administrator of Niger and Ebonyi states, Senator Oduoye was a disciplinarian, a responsible and trustworthy gentleman.

    “We will surely miss his calm disposition and patriotism. We in the Senate are proud to have associated with him and we will continue to remember him.”

    The Senate President, calling on the family to seek solace in the fact that the late Oduoye lived an exemplary life worthy of emulation, urged them to sustain his legacy of hard work, dedication and selfless service to the society.