Tag: Dino Melaye

  • A tale of two senators

    The two senators implied in the title of this piece are Senators Shehu Sani, representing the Kano Central senatorial district and Dino Melaye, representing the Kogi West senatorial district. And yes, in the title of this piece, I do intend an allusion to the celebrated novel of Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities. But only ironically, as imaginatively counterfactual to the historical and political resonances of Dickens’ novel. As is well-known, the novel is set just before and during the earth-shaking social convulsions of the French Revolution. In the novel, Dickens is both fascinated and horrified by the revolutionary upheaval, as can be seen in the very first few sentences of the novel, incidentally perhaps the most famous opening words of any novel in world literature: “It was the best of times; it was the worst of times. It was the age of wisdom; it was the age of foolishness. It was the epoch of belief; it was the epoch of incredulity. It was the season of light; it was the season of darkness. It was the spring of hope; it was the winter of despair.”

    Yes, we have two senators in the “tale” in this essay, but who can describe life in Buhari’s Nigeria as both the “best and the worst of times”? Who can say of the whole period of the PDP/APC era that it gave Nigerians both the “spring of hope” and “the winter of despair”? Has it all not been one-sidedly the worst of times, the age of foolishness and the season of darkness? To respond productively to these queries, let us now bring into the discussion our two senators and the current travails they are both receiving from the ruling party – to which, incidentally, both Senators belong.

    Briefly stated, Senators Sani and Melaye are outright personae non grata to the establishment of both the APC and the Buhari administration. As I write these words, Melaye has just gone through what will perhaps count as the most traumatizing two weeks of his life during which he encountered the following things one after the other in quick succession: he was arrested, released, and then rearrested; while being transported from Abuja to Lokoja in a police van, he allegedly escaped from his captors by leaping from the speeding vehicle, in the event sustaining serious injuries even though he did manage to escape again from the police. But not for too long as he was fished out of his hiding place in Abuja and rearrested for the second time. At the present moment, Melaye languishes in police jail in Lokoja and he will be there until the first week of June as his bail application was denied at his arraignment. Meanwhile, please note that it was from the hospital and on a stretcher that Melaye was brought for the arraignment. We shall presently get to the reason for his arrest in the first place as this is remarkably, perhaps even uncannily similar for the reason why Senator Sani has become a target of both the police command of Kano State and the Governor of the State, Nasir Ahmad el Rufai.

    Admittedly, the travails of Sani have been considerably less dramatic and traumatic than those of his colleague, Melaye. But then, he is wanted for questioning on a murder case that is already under trial in Kano. Please note that the invitation for him to report to the Police Command of Kano State was made very public, the letter sent to him having been made easily accessible to the press. But what was not made public, what became common knowledge only after Sani himself released pertinent documents to the press, was a letter from Governor Rufai to the Judge trying the relevant murder case informing the judge that he, the Governor, had an interest in this murder case before him. For this reason, Sani has loudly and credibly claimed that he is being carefully and deliberately framed for a murder charge, the purpose being of course to get rid of him judicially through capital punishment. And if that does not work, then politically through the ripple effects of a long trial for murder allegedly committed by thugs and hoodlums said to have been hired by Sani. It is worthy of note that although Melaye’s arraignment did not mention murder, he faces basically the same charge for which Sani is being hounded by the police – that of hiring thugs to cause mayhem and insecurity to political opponents in his home state.

    This last point leads us directly to the remarkable similarities between the confrontation of these two senators with the powers that be in their respective states, Kano and Kogi; the powers that be in their political party, the APC; and the powers that be in the National Police Command that normatively acts under the behest of the Buhari administration. Permit me to be as specific as possible on this point, this chain of cause and effect.

    Sani and Melaye have each been embroiled in a long, bitter and fractious feud with the Governor of their respective state, Nasir el Rufai of Kano and Yahaya Bello of Kogi. Since each of these Governors sees himself as the President’s point man in his state, this means that the feud between Governor and Senator in each state is more or less a feud between the Senator and the President. And indeed, Sani has been remarkably outspoken in his criticisms, his outright condemnation of the vision and the political will of Buhari. More on this point later in this piece, especially in the Epilogue.

    Melaye has not been as frontal as Sani in his opposition to Buhari, but everyone knows that he is a point man for the current Senate President, Bukola Saraki, whose ambition for the presidency is the most poorly kept political secret in the country. For this reason, Melaye cannot be said to be exactly in Buhari’s corner now, if indeed he ever was at any point in the past. At any rate, this is the essential point being advanced here: Sani and Melaye are, at the present time, the foremost dissenters from the status quo in their party, the APC, as this is represented by both the state governor and the president. Moreover, both senators are, in their own right and in the existing scheme of things, the ultimate mavericks in their party in particular and more generally, among the country’s political elite. But that is about all that can be said to be a common or shared trait between the two politicians. This is the point of departure for this essay.

    Even with the greatest charitableness in the world, it is difficult to take Melaye seriously on almost any count private or public, personal or political, objective or subjective. This is compounded by the fact that he appears not to take himself seriously – even when he seems to be serious. The impression he never fails to give is that he is forever trying to be as entertaining as possible a parody of himself – which is already a parody. How else can you explain the motivations of a man who claims and boasts of achievements and accomplishments that can very easily be shown to be fake? The degrees he claims to have bagged from prestigious universities at home and abroad, most of them shown to be non-existent? The number of awards, prizes, accolades, honours and citations that he touts? The large fleet of very expensive and very exotic cars whose ownership he flaunts and boasts on Instagram and Twitter? The bizarre acts of insulting political opponents in his own party through sexist insults directed at their wives, juxtaposed with his publicized arrest for physically battering his own former wife while pointing a gun to her head? The Trump-like propensity to lie easily and shamelessly? The list goes on and on and on. That Melaye stands out among all our politicians is an understatement. But he stands out as a refutation, not a realization, of his claims to being motivated by the interests of the poor and the downtrodden of our society.

    Like Melaye, the roots of Sani’s career as a politician lie in proven records of student union activism in his youth. But there ends any and all further comparisons between them. Sani, it seems, has never really departed from the idealism and the “recklessness” of his youth. In the period of the long struggle against military dictatorship in the country, he distinguished himself by the constancy and the courage of his campaign against the dictatorships. These came to a head when Sani Abacha had him condemned for execution which sentence was later commuted to 15 years of imprisonment, his release from prison coming only on the heels of a general amnesty to all political prisoners after Abacha’s sudden death. Indeed, Sani was a loud and clear voice in the call for the actualization of the electoral victory of M.K.O. Abiola and the SDP in the fateful elections of 1993. And his antecedents, his comradeship with radicals of the North and South is as rare as it is extensive and highly pedigreed. When he became a Senator in 2015, he startled the Nigerian public by the nature of the voluntary declaration of assets that he made to the Code of Conduct Bureau that included among his “assets” his wives and children! Perhaps most notable and pertinent of all to the present discussion, from his election to the Senate in 2015 to yesterday, Sani has been very scathing, very unrestrained in his critique of Buhari himself, his party and the political order in general. Even as I write these words, he faces the threat of “discipline” from the top brass of the National Assembly for spilling the beans on just how lavish and obscene are the salaries, allowances and remunerations that our parliamentarians collect monthly and annually.

    To bring this “tale” of our two senators to its conclusion, permit me to make it clear that I do not see in the differences and divergences in the personalities and careers of Sani and Melaye the two contrastive faces of the “best and the worst” of the Buhari ascendancy. Definitely, Melaye unambiguously presents us with the decadence and the darkness of these times, especially as sedimented above all else in the political class. But more than that, to the extent that he promotes himself as a champion of the downtrodden, especially in his state, Melaye is an accurate reflection of the absurdity and the self-deception of the claim of the Buhari ascendancy as a change agent. From the likes of Dino Melaye, change will never come. Ditto from the likes of Mohammadu Buhari. How deeply ironic then that Buhari and his servitors are hellbent in writing the obituary on the political career of the Senator.

    Shehu Sani presents us with a more complex scenario. Although he is both a published poet and playwright, he is far from being an incarnation of the Dickensian “spring of hope” and “season of light” as expressed and explored in A Tale of Two Cities. But I think Sani and those around him provide the best case that we have of a genuinely reformist formation within the APC in particular and the political class in general. However, it is clear that Sani’s days in the APC are numbered. I said in the APC. For it is certain now that men and women like him have no place in the APC precisely because APC has no place for them. Here, I have in mind Sani’s recent observation that leaving the PDP for the APC is like moving from Syria to Afghanistan!  In this respect, if he can sustain his political relevance beyond and outside the APC, it might just be the sort of indication we need that the present winter of discontent might lead to a future spring of hope.

     

     

    Epilogue: A small sample of tweets from Senator Sani

    he roots of Herdsmen Murder and kidnappings in other parts of Nigeria is in the policy of paying “Fulani Herdsmen” by some Governors. They appeased a monster with public funds and now the monster is going from door to door: Sahel, Savanah, Mangrove Forests.

    5:22 AM – Apr 12, 2008

    The mass killings & kidnappings going on in parts of Kaduna state is systematically suppressed in order not to embarrass the state govt. and the FG. Poor people burying their dead with tears and others paying ransom to Herdsmen. The victims are expected to praise Govt. for ‘trying’

    8:02 AM – Apr 12, 2018

    Those who abuse power by thinking that they can use security forces to silence us or tarnish our reputation have taken on the wrong person. They will always fail as they usually do.

    5:22 AM – Apr 13, 2018

    When a government fears the truth, it can strike a shadow with a sword.

    3:07 AM – Apr 14, 2018

     

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

     

  • Falana, Okutepa condemn his arraignment on stretcher

    Activist lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) yesterday berated the police for arraigning Senator Dino Melaye in court on a stretcher.

    In a statement, Falana said: “The arraignment of Senator Dino Melaye on a stretcher in Abuja on Wednesday and Lokoja on Thursday morning is unacceptable in a civilised society.

    “It is particularly degrading and humiliating as it violates the fundamental right to the dignity of his person guaranteed by Section 34 of the constitution and Section 7 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, 2015.”

    The SAN described Melaye’s ordeal as a reflection of the suffering of ordinary Nigerians in the hands of security agents on a daily basis.

    Another senior advocate, Mr. Jibrin Okutepa, also faulted the senator’s arraignment on a stretcher, describing it as bad for Nigeria’s image.

    He said the police should have waited for the senator to recover before arraigning him.

    To Okutepa, the manner Melaye was treated was humiliating and suggested that he was being persecuted.

    He said: “I watched with keen interest the manner in which Senator Melaye is being arraigned on stretcher in courts. I’m not too sure this drama is not damaging our image as a nation. “

  • Nothing must happen to Melaye, Dogara warns security agencies

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara has warned the heads of security agencies involved in the case of Senator Dino Melaye (Kogi), saying that nothing untowards must happen to the lawmaker.

    He said if anything happened to the senator, heads of security agencies involved would be held responsible.

    The Speaker, who was short of naming the security agency he was referring to on Thursrday at plenary said the health of persons should supercede their arraignment in court.

    He said: “All I can say is that nothing can happen to the senator. If anyone in this country commits an offence, the law is there for the person to be prosecuted or arraigned in court within the ambit of the law.

    “I don’t think the law supports a situation whereby someone is in a dire health situation and is being arraigned most especially that that person is a senator.

    “It is unthinkable that a distinguished senator or an honorable member of this house would run away from trial.

    “So, my admonition to the security agencies is to do everything possible to ensure that his life is secured first before prosecution.

    “Prosecution cannot come at the expense of death and that is very important because if anything happened to him, the responsibility will lie on the security agencies.

    “That is without mincing of words; because I have not seen a country where someone will be arraigned in a stretcher; where he is not even in the right frame of mind to even take a plea.

    “What use is it if you’re taken someone to court and he cannot plead guilty or not guilty. So, the emphasis should be on his health first”.

    Dogara’s warning followed a point of order by Sunday Karimi ( PDP, Kogi), who said Melaye was being transported in an ambulance to Lokoja to face trail despite the state of his health.

    Karimi said Melaye’s predicament was as a result of his resolve to fight for his belief.

    “I visited him in the hospital and counted up to 38 policemen. On Saturday, INEC went to conduct his recall.

    “Only yesterday, he was arraigned in court in Abuja. Today, Dino was carried in an ambulance to Lokoja.

    “What is happening to Dino can happen to anyone, what he is facing is persecution for his belief and there’s a need for us to act so that rule of law doesn’t  suffer”.

    However when attempts were made to throw the point of order into a debate, the Speaker declined saying due process was not followed.

    The Speaker said he will not allow the order to be debated because the same issue was being handled by the Senate.

    Besides, he was not previously conducted for it to be listed as a motion where it can be debated on the floor  as required by the rule book.

    “Karimi is talking about rule of law and due process, and we have our own rules in this house. So, we will abide by that.

    “The issue is handled by the Senate, so we cannot commit it to debate.

    “I don’t think there’s anything worth to comment on here, I think it is a matter of personal explanation and I’ve not been consulted,” he added.

  • Dino Melaye, Nigeria’s drama king

    Senator Dino Melaye is Nigeria’s drama king. He’s a master of din and theatrics. Sometimes, he steps out like a Hollywood gangster all dressed for a Lagos owambe party that never ends.

    Chains hanging over his neck, bangles on his wrist, baggy trousers, plus-size polo shirt and a big glittering footwear often defines him when he’s outside the Red Chamber.

    Melaye, tall, huge and ebony of complexion, represents Kogi West Senatorial District in the National Assembly. Many see him as one that courts trouble. Others say he’s the kind of character Nigeria needs in a hallowed chamber peopled by some unrepentant taciturn fellows.

    Say what you wish of him, Melaye does not give a damn even when damned. When he wins any of the several battles that often come his way by design or stroke of ill fate, he weighs in with a musical skit – posts it on social media with all the flourish, style and candour of a wannabe songster.

    In Kogi, he’s at loggerheads with his governor, Yahaya Bello. Bello, the man who grabbed the governor’s seat like a champions league trophy from the late Abubakar Audu has sworn to deal with Dino. They were like siamese twins when the governor faced many obstacles to mount the seat in those heady days. At every fora, Dino leapt to his defense like a presidential spokesman. He stood by him through thick and thin. To him, Bello was the best thing to happen to Kogi since noodles.

    But that glowing union would soon crumble. Both men, from friends, turned foes. One desired and pushed for the downfall of the other. They could no longer agree nor see eye to eye. It became a classic case of the proverbial cat and mouse relationship. Kogi became too hot for Melaye courtesy of the opportunistic Governor Bello. In Abuja and social media, Melaye made it a point of duty to censure every policy of Bello. When Dino attended Senator Godswill Akpabio’s Constituency Briefing/Empowerment Programme in Ikot Ekpene sometime last year, fascinated by the way Governor Udom was consistent with payment of workers’ salaries, an enraged Dino took a swipe at his governor for failing woefully in this regard. As a way of turning a new leaf, he advised that his state governor, Yahaya Bello, should take a trip to Akwa Ibom and get some useful tips from Gov. Udom.

    At the Red Chamber, though of APC, his loyalty, like that of many others is doubtful. He fraternises with members of the opposition PDP more than his broom brothers. Little wonder he’s always present at any function organized by a PDP man even when most of his own party men are absent for fear of sanction or backlash.

    When Buhari oversteps his bounds or scores an own goal, Melaye takes no prisoners. With characteristic rage and deployment of dashing boldness, he hits the president where it pains without batting an eyelid. When APC took power at the centre, Dino was one of the persons that fought the powers that be to install Saraki as Senate president and Ekweremadu as deputy. Since then, his relationship with Aso Rock has been frosty.

    They see him as one that joined forces with the opposition to disobey and betray his party by handing the levers of the nation’s top legislative house to a wily Bukola Saraki and longest serving deputy Senate president, Ike Ekweremadu. But the Kogi man does not care a hoot so long as he remains in the good books and graces of Saraki.

    Dino has always been a controversial man. Time was when he was accused of not having a school certificate. To proof his detractors wrong, he told a keen public that he graduated from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria and that, in fact, he has seven degrees one of which he claimed was from Harvard. Not done, he stormed plenary with his ceremonial graduation gown to drive home his claim. Senators were stunned. Nigerians watched in awe. But Dino relished the melodrama as he pranced into the Red Chamber with magisterial swagger.

    He had an ugly spat with Senator Remi Tinubu and former President Goodluck Jonathan was not spared of Dino’s acidic tongue. He accused the then Otu Oke shoeless chap of scoring an A1 in corruption and several other putdowns he made on that administration.

    Dino’s tongue spares no one. Longest serving acting EFCC boss, Ibrahim Magu has heard from the senator. Melaye also hit out at British trained ‘phonetic’ Finance Minister, Kemi Adeosun whom he accused of being incompetent. He once described Minister of Budget and National Planning, Sen. Udo Udoma as a round peg in a square hole. Dino, again, accused CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele of incompetence owing to the fall in the value of Naira. When Abdulrahman Maina was reinstated to the Civil Service, Melaye described those working for Buhari as”caterpillars and cankerworms”.

    Dino’s troubles doesn’t start and end in public circles. At home, his first wife, Tokunbo with whom he has three children are said to have separated. She accused Melaye of beating and pointing a gun to her head during a domestic squabble. He reportedly picked a new wife, Alero Falope. The romance, it was learnt, lasted for six months. Dino is currently without a known woman as wife hence a huge vacancy exist there!

    His recent travails with security operatives is another sore point in Dino’s troubled political odyssey where he reportedly jumped off a moving police van on hearing that it was headed for Lokoja, the Kogi State capital (instead of Abuja) where he claims his life is under threat. He reportedly sustained injuries from that ‘unsenatorial’ histrionic and ended up in the hospital.

    At the hospital, while in pains, his hands were still handcuffed (as we all saw in a picture) by the police who are insisting he must submit himself for interrogation over allegations of gunrunning. While there, INEC announced that his recall process from the Senate has revved into life. But the signature verification exercise of his constituents which took place last Saturday fell short of the 51 percent required to take the process to the next level. Victory for Melaye? So it seems; Dino rarely loses a battle.

    From his days in the Lower Chamber, he always almost came out unruffled by his several ‘katakata’. Now that he has seemingly secured his senatorial seat from those he claims are enemies of progress, is it safe to say that we have seen and heard the last of Dino Melaye’s unending controversies?

    The answer, certainly, is in the womb of time!

     

    • Kenneth Jude is a Public Affairs Analyst, and writes from Uyo, Akwa Ibom State.
  • Why we arraigned, re-arrested Melaye – Police

    The Nigeria Police Force have explained why Senator Dino Melaye was arraigned and later arrested at the Chief Magistrate Court in Abuja.

    The police explained that the senator was arraigned for criminal conspiracy, causing damage to government property, attempted suicide and escape from lawful custody.

    The Police also said his trial proceeded after he was confirmed fit for trail and discharged by the National hospital management.

    The statement stated that the Senator representing Kogi West senatorial district was also rearrested after his arraignment for offences of Criminal Conspiracy and Unlawful Possession of Prohibited Firearms which was already filed in a Court in Lokoja.

    The police said Melaye will be arraigned for the alleged offences without delay.

    This is contained in a statement in Abuja Tuesday evening by the Force Spokesman,  ACP Jimoh Moshood.

    The statement reads: “Senator Dino Melaye was arraigned in court by the Police today, 2nd May, 2018 at Chief Magistrate Court, Wuse, Abuja for Criminal conspiracy, causing damage to Government property, attempted suicide and escape from lawful custody.

    “His arraignment in Court today was subsequent to his discharge from the National Hospital after he was confirmed fit for trial.

    “It will be recalled that, on the 24th April, 2018, at about 1200Hrs, Sen. Dino Melaye while in lawful custody of the Nigeria Police Force and being taken for arraignment for Conspiracy and Unlawful Possession of Prohibited Firearms in Court in Lokoja, from Abuja, escaped from lawful custody when hoodlums and miscreants in Two (2) Toyota Hilux Vehicles blocked the Police vehicle conveying Senator Dino Melaye around Area 1 Round About, Abuja.

    “In the process, the Senator broke the side glass of the vehicle and jumped out of the Police bus through the window and was rescued from the Police men by hoodlums and miscreants to an unknown destination before he was rearrested at Zankli Hospital in Abuja later in the day on same date.

    “This case was investigated and that is why the Senator was arraigned in court today.”

    The statement further reads: “Meanwhile, the Police Investigation Team re-arrested Senator Dino Melaye today, 2nd May, 2018 after his arraignment at Chief Magistrate Court, Wuse for the pending offences of Criminal Conspiracy and Unlawful Possession of Prohibited Firearms already filed in a Court of competent jurisdiction in Lokoja for which he will be arraigned without further delay.”

  • Police arraigns Dino Melaye for allegedly attempting escape, destroying vehicle

    *Gets N90m bail

     

    The police on Wednesday arraigned Senator Dino Melaye before a Magistrate Court in Wuse Zone 2, Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

    He was accused, in a First Information Report (FIR), of destroying the side glass of a police vehicle, attempting to kill himself by allegedly jumping off a moving vehicle and allegedly resisting arrest.

    He is said to have committed offences punishable under Sections 148, 153, 172, 173, 231 and 326 of the Penal Code Act.

    The FIR reads: “On the 24th of April 2018, about 1330hrs at Area One roundabout Abuja, within the jurisdiction of the court, you Senator Dino Melaye of the Federal Republic of Nigeria while being conveyed in a Police White Hilux Bus with Registration number NPF 3354 D to Lokoja,  Kogi State, to be arraigned in court for conspiracy and unlawful possession of prohibited firearms in charge Number CMCL/14SC/2018 filed at the Chief Magistrate Court Lokoja, you Senator Dino Melaye intentionally broke the side windscreen of the bus and jumped out of the bus after it was blocked by a Hilux Vehicle with registration number Kaduna MKA 603 GY occupied by your younger brother Samuel Melaye and one Barrister Amefula David Emeka and driven by yet to be unidentified person who escaped from the scene after the blockade.

    “You Senator Dino Melaye after breaking the side windscreen attempted to kill yourself by jumping out of the bus and fell on the ground and thereafter started shouting that you want to kill yourself and implicate the Police for your death.

    “That Police Officers who were escorting you in the bus tried to re-arrest you back to the bus, but you resisted further arrest with the help of your brother Samuel Melaye and some lawyers in your company and further threatened to injure the Police officers if they try to further arrest you and you finally escaped from the scene in another Hilux vehicle.”

    When the FIR was read to him, Melaye, representing Kogi West Senatorial District on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC), pleaded not guilty.

    Melaye, dressed in native attire, was brought to court in a Police ambulance, and on a stretcher. The ambulance was marked: NPF2214D. He lay on the stretcher throughout the about an hour proceedings.

    He was brought to court under heavy security. Entry and exit into the court premises was unusually restrained by the heavily armed riot policemen, numbering about 200, drafted to the court.

    Shortly after Melaye pleaded to the information, lead prosecuting lawyer, Alex Izinyon (SAN) sought date for trial.

    Defence lawyer, Nkem Okoro prayed the court to hear the bail application he filed for his client.

    Okoro, while moving the application, argued that since his client is not charged with capital offence, he is entitled to bail.

    He cited Section 162 of Administration of Criminal Justice (ACJ) Act, which sets out conditions to be considered before a bail application is granted or refused.

    Iziyon objected to the bail application and urged the court to reject it.

    Ruling, Magistrate Mabel Segun-Bello noted that bail is now liberalised under ACJA.

    The magistrate said:”taking a look at provision of Section 162 of ACJA, the prosecution counsel has not proven any reasonable apprehension that would warrant the court from denying the defendant bail.

    “The prosecution counsel has placed nothing before the court to show why the defendant should not be granted bail.

    “There is no evidence tendered before this court to substantiate the prosecution counsel’s claim that the defendant will jump bail.”

    The magistrate said the prosecuting lawyer has not convinced the court as to how the defendant was likely to influence prosecution witnesses in the cause of his trial, if released on bail.

    Mrs. Segun-Bello proceeded to grant Melaye bail at N90million with two sureties in like sum.

    The magistrate said one of the sureties must be a civil servant not lower than Great Level 14, and that the other must have easily identifiable residence in Abuja.

    Mrs. Segun-Bello ordered that Melaye must deposit his international passport with the FCT Police Command.

    She further ordered the defendant to report at the Wuse police command every working day of the week until same is altered by the court.

    The magistrate adjourned to June 6.

    After the court’s proceedings, Melaye and his supporters remained in the courtroom for some hours, while his lawyer and others made frantic efforts to meet the bail condition.

    Notable faces at the court with Melaye were Senators Ben Bruce (PDP, Bayelsa) and Abiodun Olujimi (PDP, Ekitit). The entrance to the courtroom was secured by about 10 riot policemen armed with AK47 rifles.

    At about 4:20pm, Melaye was moved out of the courtroom, accompanied by the armed policemen, into the waiting ambulance packed within the court premises.

    The vehicle was immediately driven away by a policeman, followed by a long convoy of police vehicles, with siren blaring.

     

  • Melaye botched recall, good lessons for democracy – activist

    Mr Idris Miliki, a Lokoja based Human Rights activist, has described the botched attempt to recall Sen. Dino Melaye, (APC-Kogi West) from the National Assembly as a “good development for democracy.’’

    Miliki, who is the Executive Director, Centre for Human Rights and Conflict Resolution ( CHRCR ), disclosed this in a statement made available to newsmen on Tuesday in Lokoja.

    He said that the recall process itself and the stage it got before the eventual failure also brought some lessons for democracy, rule of law and good governance in the country.

    The activist said that the exercise brought high level enlightenment as it brought awareness to the electorate that they had the power to withdraw their mandate and recall their elected legislators if found wanting.

    The exercise, according to him, also enlightened the citizenry in the procedures and processes to ensure such recall should the need arises rather than fall into the pitfalls of the failed attempt.

    Miliki also cautioned the Independent National Electoral Commission ( INEC ), Security Agencies and Civil Society Organisations, to always conduct mapping of electoral violence flashpoints before going into such exercises.

    Read Also:  Melaye’s recall fails as INEC releases result

    He said that when such mappings were done and adequate measures taken, the kind of violence witnessed in Mopa-Muro LGA during the verification exercise would be avoided.

    Miliki urged INEC to ensure that all party agents in their future events wore their name tags and possibly, with pictures.

    The activist also admonished the Civil Society groups to take such exercises seriously and make themselves available.

    He regretted that for an exercise that cut across seven local government areas of the state, not up to 50 civil society observers participated.

    NAN

     

  • Ghosts behind Melaye’s recall – APC

    The Chairman of the All Progressives Congress ( APC ) in Kogi, Alhaji Haddy Ametuo, says  “some ghosts “ initiated the  recall process against Sen. Dino Melaye.

    Ametuo,  who stated this in a statement issued in Lokoja on Sunday on the botched recall process,  expressed delight that the efforts had come to a premature end through the collective will of the people of Kogi West Senatorial District.

    “Melaye , the only senator our party has in Kogi State,  won with 94.66 per cent  leaving the remaining 5.34 per cent to the petitioners.

    “The messages are very clear; that Sen. Melaye is the most popular senator ever produced by Kogi West,” the statement said.

    According to the chairman, this is a sign of what to expect in the 2019 general elections.

    “No amount of financial inducement and coercion will change the will of the people of Kogi State in future elections,” he said.

    The APC Chairman commended the high level of neutrality and transparency displayed by the Independent National Electoral Commission ( INEC ) and other stakeholders throughout the exercise.

    “It gives us high optimism that future elections will be very free and fair. INEC therefore deserves commendations for the job well done,” he said.

    Ametuo called on the petitioners and Melaye as well as his followers  to embrace peace and heed the voice of God “ because the voice of the people is the voice of God.”

    He insisted that the APC still remains the most viable alternative for good governance in the state.

    “I call on all members of our party to conduct themselves in a manner  that will boost the image of our great party and not things that will further cause disrepute in our party,” he said.

    NAN

  • Recall: Melaye thanks constituents for shunning exercise

    Sen. Dino Melaye has thanked the people of his constituency for “rising to his defence” by shunning the verification exercise held on April 28 to recall him from the Senate.

    Melaye, in a statement issued in Lokoja on Sunday, also thanked the political leaders, elders and traditional rulers in Kogi West for “rescuing him from his political enemies.”

    He also expressed gratitude to the media , observers, civil society groups, security agents and other stakeholders “for resisting to be used against the wishes of the people of his constituency”.

    The statement was signed by Mr Gideon Ayodele, Special Assistant on Media to Melaye.

    “We thank all democratic partners who have resisted the attempted external political robbery and brazen impunity from raising its most ugly head.

    “We commend the resolve of our people who have by their popular wish and wisdom and political independence rejected the selfish and satanic recall.

    “The verification exercise has come and gone and the people of Kogi west have willingly exercised their franchise by re-validating the election of Sen Dino Melaye,” the lawmaker said.

    According to him, the exercise no doubt, has shown that, power truly belongs to the people.

    “We wish to equally, commend INEC for resisting forgery in some parts while the exercise was going on, and for finally allowing the wish of the people to prevail as expressed,” it said.

    He urged the proponents of his recall to accept the results in good faith and face the task of providing the elusive democratic dividends to the people.

    The senator, however, advised his supporters to remain calm and humble in the face of victory and avoid hot arguments or action that may lead to the breakdown of law and order.

    NAN

  • Full results: Dino Melaye survives recall from Senate

    The attempt to recall the Senator Dino Melaye of Kogi West flopped on Saturday following a low turn-out for the signature the verification.

    Results announced by INEC at the end of the exercise showed that only 18,742 signatories to the recall petition were verified out of the 189,870 signatories on the petition.

    The verified signatories fell well below the requirement of the law that 50 per cent and one of the signatories must be verified before the recall process can continue.

    Consequently, the embattled Senator Melaye who is in the hospital owing to the drama that followed his arrest has survived the recall attempt.

    Here is how the verification exercise turned out in the seven local government areas in the senatorial district, which has 351,146 registered voters.

    KOTON KARFE LGA
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF REGISTERED VOTERS – 46,727.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES ON THE PETITIONS – 24,459.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES AT VERIFICATION – 2,566.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES VERIFIED – 2, 335.

    KABBA BUNU LGA
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF REGISTERED VOTERS – 59,319
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES ON THE PETITIONS – 27,910
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATORIES AT VERIFICATION – 2,151
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNAT7S VERIFIED – 2,085.

    IJUMU
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF REGISTERED VOTERS – 46,810.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURE ON THE PETITION – 24,389.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES AT VERIFICATION – 2,811.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES VERIFIED – 2,664.

    YAGBA EAST
    TOTAL NUMBER OF REGISTERED VOTERS – 35,329.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURE ON THE PETITION – 18,229.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES AT VERIFICATION – 3,580.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES VERIFIED – 3,506.

    MOPA AMURO
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF REGISTERED VOTERS – 18, 350
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES ON THE PETITION – 9,173.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES AT VERIFICATION – 729.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATARIES VERIFIED – 710.

    There was violence in Mopa Amuro towards the end of the exercise. Six polling units were reportedly affected. As a result, the exercise in six out of the 10 wards in the LGA were cancelled.

    YAGBA WEST LGA
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF REGISTERED VOTERS – 35,506
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES ON THE PETITION – 19,444
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES AT VERIFICATION – 4,221
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATORIES VERIFIED – 3,729.

    LOKOJA LGA
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF REGISTERED VOTERS – 109,105
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES ON THE PETITION – 66,266.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATURES AT VERIFICATION – 4,810.
    TOTAL NUMBERS OF SIGNATARIES VERIFIED – 3,763.

    Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had earlier assured the people that it was only concerned with transparency in the exercise and could not be held responsible for the poor turnout of petitioners.

    The INEC Federal Commissioner in-charge of Kogi, Kwara and Nasarawa states, Alhaji Mohammed Haruna, made the statement in Lokoja shortly after the end of the exercise.

    Haruna said that the main concern of INEC was to ensure transparency in the process, insisting that the organisation was neutral in the bid to recall Melaye from the Senate.

    “Turnout is not our problem; turnout is the problem of parties concerned, ours is to ensure transparency,” Haruna said.

    Commenting on insinuations that INEC might tamper with the wish of the people, the commissioner said that nothing like that would happen, stressing that the agency had no interest in who won or lost in the matter.

    “Nothing untoward will happen, I assure you . Whatever happened at the polling units is what INEC will announce,” he stated.

    Commenting on the mix up in the list of petitioners, Haruna said that mistakes in such exercise was normal but gave an assurance that the mistakes would be corrected.

    He lauded the peaceful conduct of the people before and during the exercise.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that in Koton Karfe and Lokoja, the people conducted themselves well, although the turnout was poor.

    During the exercise, there was no case of malfunctioning of card reader machines while security personnel adequately manned the polling centres.