Tag: el-Rufai

  • Death toll hits 130 in Kaduna killings

    The death toll in the Kajuru killings in Kaduna State has hit 130, Governor Nasir El-Rufai has disclosed.

    El-Rufai, who spoke to State House Correspondents in Abuja after a security meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday, said he has evidence to back his claims.

    He spoke just as the Supreme Council for Shari’ah in Nigeria (SCSN) asked him to implement reports of inquiry into the previous killings.

    The council argued killings have only continued unabated because of failure of government to implement recommendations of the several investigation committees and commissions of inquiry into the previous killings.

    In a statement signed by its Secretary General, Nafi’u Baba Ahmad, the council called on government to bring the perpetrators of the killings to justice to serve as deterrent to others.

    It also asked the government to compensate the victims and rebuild their destroyed properties.

    It said: “The Council has been for the past days, observing with deep concern and keen attention the development so far regarding the recent bloodshed perpetrated by suspected Adara militia on Fulani hamlets in Maro Gida and Iri axis of Kajuru Local Government.

    “Since the story broke out we conducted our private investigation on the sad event and arrived at the followings:

    “Although this is not the first mayhem on Muslims Fulani communities in northern Nigeria, but we are in serious shock and disturbed with the style, sophistication, timing, and the manner in which the large scale cold-blooded massacre of innocent souls was executed.

    “With a profound voice we vehemently condemn this genocidal and dastardly act perpetrated by the enemies of our dear state and country.

    Read Also: PDP plans to disrupt elections – El-Rufai

    “And with deep sorrow we commiserate and condole the “remaining” families of the deceased.

    “Based on our investigation, the killings happened on Monday and 66 people were hacked to death, but the story was attempted to be buried until when it becomes unbearable to the handlers.

    “The attackers killed everything with life including women, children, and animals.

    “This form of mayhem is only confirming the evidence of genocide and monumental hatred of Fulani Muslims in these communities.

    “We are deeply worried and skeptical with the manner and attitude the media and the government for keeping silent about the story for days, they took time before officially breaking it.

    “The delay by both the government and the media is not encouraging. A quick response from both would have gone a long way, in calming the situation.”

    The council berated CAN and SOKAPU for the “brazen and shameless attempt of trying to cover the perpetrators because of ethno-religious sentiment is more dangerous than the act itself.”

    It said: “As Muslims, we can’t watch, in callous indifference to the thousands of Muslims killed as such, once again, we are calling on the Federal and State Government to examine the recommendations made by different reports on previous crises for immediate implementation.

    “We will not for a single moment forget the horrendous atrocities perpetrated by some Christians militia on various Muslim communities at different occasions in this country, such as in Mambila Plateau, Numan, Wase, Jos, Kuru Jenta, Zangon Kataf, Kafanchan, Zonkwa, Kaduna, and Tafawa Balewa.”

  • Miyetti Allah calls for calms over Kaduna killings

    · Fish out killers, PDP gov candidate tells El-Rufai’s

    The Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) has called on all affected Fulanis to remain calm and resist all forms of provocation to consider reprisal attacks over the killings in Kajuru local government of Kaduna State last week.

    Also, Kaduna State PDP gubernatorial candidate, Isa Mohammed Ashiru, called on relevant security agencies to prosecute criminals who carried out the killings.

    MACBAN and Ashiru, in their separate reactions on Monday, commended Governor Malam Nasir el-Rufai for being proactive in ensuring the situation was brought under control and prevent any form of reprisal attack in the troubled area.

    The Assistant Women Leader MACBAN, Hajiya Khadijah Ardido, told reporters it was unfortunate and most painful that people were killed with reckless abandon, including women and children.

    She lamented the killings were being denied by people who have no human feelings.

    “As I speak to you now, some of the injured victims are still in the hospital. It is painful that Fulanis are being killed not only in Kaduna state but in several other parts of the country and little or nothing is being done about it.

    “The government must rise to this challenge and stop all forms of unwarranted killings, there must be respect for human lives,” she stressed.

    She went on: “Our people have always been very patient and tolerant and I am still encouraging them to remain patient, disciplined and tolerant in the face of any provocation.

    “As a mother, I am calling on my people not to revolt. Those killing should know that they are doing the wrong thing, particularly killing innocent women and children.

    “The government should ensure that proper investigation is carried out and whoever is found guilty should be made to face the full wrath of the law, at least to serve as deterrent to others now and in the future.

    “Justice must be done to the affected in the killings and the step taken by Governor Nasir el-Rufai towards bringing to justice all those who have hands in the killing is a commendable one”

    Ashiru said the incident was not only an unwanted addition to the list of the past similar ones but clear indication that insecurity still remains a huge challenge in some parts of Kaduna State.

    According to him: “It is with an absolute shock that I received the news broken by the Kaduna State Governor, of the murder of many people in some settlements in Kajuru Local Government Area of our dear Kaduna State.

    “The fact that the loss of human lives has been confirmed makes the whole issue terribly shocking. The act clearly smacks of callousness and a descent into barbarism.

    “I, therefore, wish to express my heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims, people of Kajuru Local Government Area as well as the Government and the entire people of Kaduna State over this unfortunate incident.

    “It is my fervent prayer that almighty who God created those souls will expose the perpetrators of the heinous act.”

    He added: “Let me quickly remind my dear good people of Kaduna State of the need to embrace peace and eschew violence so that the diversity with which Almighty God has endowed us can be harnessed for the good of all of us.

    “Our State is big, bountiful and rich enough to accommodate all of us; all we need to do is to continuously remind ourselves of the fact that resort to violence has never benefitted us as a people. In fact, such an act which results in the loss of human lives diminishes us as a people.

    “We should therefore endeavour to come together, regardless of political, religious or ethnic differences, to let the world know that we are committed to ridding our state of violence and at the same time willing to live as the true brothers and sisters that we have always been.

    “While I once again condole with the bereaved families, I also wish to re-assure everyone again that my bid to clinch the governorship of Kaduna State is driven by both an immense concern for our people and a total determination to rescue the State from misrule.

  • Kaduna killings: El-Rufai begs Fulani against reprisals

    Governor Nasiru El-Rufai of Kaduna State yesterday pleaded with the Fulani community to shun the temptation of engaging in reprisal attacks following the killing of 66 of their population   in Kajuru Local Government Area of the state.

    The governor, at a meeting with stakeholders in Kajuru, wondered why killing had become incessant in Iri axis, including Kuturo, Unguwar Barde, Maro gida among other areas in the local government.

    “I know it’s the Fulanis that are most affected in this crisis as over a hundred people have been killed, but as Muslims, we have been advised to forgive, to be patient as God avenges every evil,” he said.

    “You must not take the law into your hands by killing anybody as you are likely to harm innocent people. Allow the security to do their work please.”

    The governor alleged that some elders in the communities were responsible for the killings having provided weapons to the youths who carried out the attacks.

    ” I am always disheartened each time I visit Kajuru and sincerely am tired of this situation, because the elders know those involved in the killings and have refused to fish them out.

    “Maybe when government and the security agencies withdraw support from your communities, you will know our worth and do the needful.

    “I have also asked the Council Chairman not to bail any leader who will be arrested in connection with the menace. Nobody is above the law, hence, culprits must be prosecuted, if guilty”, El-Rufa’i stressed.

    The governor warned youths to stop the unnecessary killings in the area, and declared that anyone of them caught would also face the death penalty.

    El-Rufa’i said the recurring killings in the local government has stunted its growth, noting that” no community develops without peace; all developmental projects are meant for the youths as they are beneficiaries in the long run.”

    He condoled with families whose relatives were killed during the attack and promised to render help to victims whose houses were burnt.

    Earlier, the Council Chairman, Mr. Cafra Caino, said miscreants in the communities have refused to allow peace to reign, adding that all peace loving people must work to expose the perpetrators and bring them to justice.

    “We have given bikes to village heads to help us manage the security issues. We must not allow them divide us along religious and ethnic sentiments. We therefore urge all leaders to pinpoint the culprits”.

    Also speaking, the Chief Imam of Adara kingdom, Nuhu Sha’aban who is also a Fulani leader said majority of those killed were women and children less than one year old.

    “We the Fulani have lived in this forest for over 41 years but the youths keep ambushing and killing us. Some of us were slaughtered and others burnt and thrown into ditches”, Sha’aban said.

    The Imam asked the Commissioner of Police to transfer most of the policemen in the area, whom he claimed were mostly indigenes of the communities who have been at their duty posts for over 10 years.

    He however appreciated the new Divisional Police Officer recently deployed to the area and the military authorities for their efforts at ensuring security in the area.

     

  • El-Rufai meets foreign observers

    Governor  Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna State yesterday met with observers from the International Republican Institute, United States of America, ahead of today’s presidential and national assembly elections and assured them of adequate security during and after the polls.

    El-Rufai whose recent warning to foreign observers against interfering in the elections sparked controversy told his guests   to “feel free while moving in the state.”

    Speaking to reporters yesterday at the end of the meeting at Government House, Kaduna, the governor said: “ We invited them to feel free and if they need additional security, we will provide for them. We told the foreign observers to feel free while moving in the state.

    ”They asked me about my comment on the NTA live programme, the security situation in the state and I explained to them.

    Read alsoINEC chairman speaks on postponement of polls

    “The last security review we did was yesterday with all security agencies. All the paramilitary like the Immigration Service, Prisons, Civil Defence and the Nigeria Customs, will all go out to provide security. The security agencies are ready for the task to assist the police.

    ”As you observed we have a  history of violence during elections in Kaduna State. We have made it very clear that vigilance groups will not be allowed to provide security tomorrow.

    ”I call on all voters to come out and vote.We are confident that everything will go well. No one should be involved in taking another person’s life. So we are confident that the elections will go smoothly.”

  • 66 dead in fresh Kaduna crisis

    No fewer than 66 persons have been confirmed killed in Kajuru Local Government Area of Kaduna State on Friday.

    Kaduna state government confirmed the incident and warned all communities against instigating attacks or reprisals.

    A government statement by Samuel Aruwan, media aide to Gov. Nasiru El-Rufa’i on Friday in Kaduna, said that security agencies have been deployed to the area, while arrests have been made.

    “Security agencies today reported the recovery of 66 bodies that were killed in attacks by criminal elements on various dispersed hamlets in the Maro Gida and Iri axis of Kajuru LGA.

    “The settlements affected include Ruga Bahago, Ruga Daku, Ruga Ori, Ruga Haruna, Ruga Yukka Abubakar, Ruga Duni Kadiri, Ruga Shewuka and Ruga Shuaibu Yau.

    Read Also: Police deploy 12,500 personnel for election in Kaduna

    “Among the victims were 22 children and 12 women. Four wounded persons rescued by the security agencies are now receiving medical attention.

    “Government condemns the attacks and commiserates with the families of the victims. Security agencies have been deployed to the area and arrests have been made.

    “Government urges community, traditional and religious leaders in the area to encourage residents to avoid any reprisal attacks and to leave the matter in the hands of the security and law enforcement agencies.

    “The killings are being investigated and residents are assured that indicted persons will be prosecuted.

    “Residents of Kaduna State are enjoined to uphold peace and harmony, shun violence and allow the elections to be held in an atmosphere of calm.”

    According to the statement, any suspicious activity should be reported to the security agencies in person or through the following lines: 09034000060 and 08170189999.

  • El-Rufai meets foreign Observers, assures them of security

    *’They asked about my previous comment’

     

    Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna State on Friday met with observers from the International Republican Institute, United States of America, ahead of Saturday’s presidential and national assembly elections and assured them of adequate security during and after the polls.

    El-Rufai whose recent warning to foreign observers against interfering in the elections sparked controversy told his guests to “feel free while moving in the state.”

    Speaking to reporters yesterday at the end of the meeting at Government House, Kaduna,the governor said: ” We invited them to feel free and if they need additional security,we will provide for them. We told the foreign observers to feel free while moving in the state.

    “They asked me about my comment on the NTA live programme, the security situation in the state and I explained to them.

    “The last security review we did was on Friday with all security agencies. All the paramilitary like the Immigration Service, Prisons, Civil Defence and the Nigeria Customs, will all go out to provide security. The security agencies are ready for the task to assist the police.

    “As you observed we have a history of violence during elections in Kaduna State. We have made it very clear that vigilance groups will not be allowed to provide security tomorrow.

    “I call on all voters to come out and vote.We are confident that everything will go well. No one should be involved in taking another person’s life. So we are confident that the elections will go smoothly.

  • Alleged N90bn assets: Defendants seek recall of El-Rufai to witness stand

    A Kaduna State High Court has adjourned till May 2, for motion on notice seeking the recall of Gov. Nasiru El-Rufai for further cross-examination in the suit he instituted against the Union Newspapers.

    The court is also expected to receive the assets declaration documents of El-Rifa’i on the same date.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Gov. El-Rufai had in 2017 opened and closed his case challenging the report by the newspaper in which it said he had declared N90 billion in his assets declaration form to the Code of Conduct Bureau.

    The adjournment on Wednesday followed the oral application made by the defence counsel, Mr H. A Abuul.

    Also, Counsel to the CCB, Mr Temitope Adeyemi had requested for another date to enable the bureau carry on the process of producing the assets declaration document of the governor.

    The Judge, Justice Mairo Mohammed, said the court would consider the motion on the next adjourned date.

    During Wednesday’s sitting, Chairman of the CCB, who was ordered to be arrested by the court for failing to honour its summons, was represented by Adeyemi.

    Adeyemi informed the court that the chairman is new in office, as he only assumed duty in late November 2018, and had no prior knowledge of the subpoena, as such requested for new date to produce the assets documents.

     

     

    NAN

  • el-Rufai’s cant, and Michelle’s canticles

    Kaduna State Governor Nasir el-Rufai is never one to be fazed by controversy and has never cowered before even the fiercest gale. Besides, he has over the years built some reputation for brutal rhetoric in putting his views across. And he apparently enjoys the heat that gets generated.

    Only last month, he said some 67 percent of Southern Kaduna indigenes had already determined not to vote for him in the impending general election, adding that would not change were he to name the very Pontiff of Rome as his running mate in the poll. He was speaking in defence of his choice of Hadiza Balarabe, a fellow Moslem, for that office in a state so sensitive to ethno-religious fault line as Kaduna.

    Among other controversies, the Kaduna governor ignited a row way back in April 2017 over public office financials when he confronted the National Assembly with the popular notion that its funding procedures lack transparency. The row that resulted from his comment at that time snowballed into being famously headlined with rare public disclosure of the official (emphasis intended) remuneration of the governor, and that for House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara who had picked up the gauntlet. Thus, that controversy afforded many Nigerians the closest peek they ever got into monthly pay slips of public officials, who are widely perceived to be among the most highly remunerated in the world.

    But the latest controversy involving the Kaduna governor isn’t by any modicum nearly as edifying. el-Rufai’s last week threatened that foreign powers planning to interfere in Nigeria’s imminent general election will “go back in body bags.”

    While on a Nigerian Television Authority prime programme, Tuesday Night Live, the Kaduna governor apparently intended a rejoinder to an advocacy by opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for greater involvement of the international community in Nigeria’s electoral process, when he said: “Those that are calling for anyone to come and intervene in Nigeria, we are waiting for the person that would come and intervene, they would go back in body bags…Nobody will come to Nigeria and tell us how to run our country…”

    el-Rufai spoke against the backdrop of a concert of statements issued by the United States, the United Kingdom and the European Union on the heels of the recent suspension of Hon. Justice Walter Onnoghen as Chief Justice of Nigeria by President Muhammadu Buhari. Those powers, in their statements, had argued that the crisis in the judiciary undermined the tenets of democracy and the principle of separation of powers, and in some way threatened the credibility of the forthcoming general election.

    The Presidency and ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) took strong exception to those statements and butted back against perceived meddling in Nigeria’s internal affairs. The PDP, however, applauded and canvassed wider involvement. It should be obvious it is a sad commentary on our nationhood profile that we so distrust internal competencies in managing our affairs that we eagerly invite other nations to intervene, as opposition PDP has lately been doing. But this tendency isn’t peculiar to the PDP, because All Progressives Congress (APC) members did as much when they were in opposition prior to the 2015 general election.

    Even then, you can’t diminish the relevance of foreign attention to our electoral process because Nigeria is a reputed member of the international community, and democracy is a global code of practice regarding which no country can credibly claim peculiar exemptions. Besides, it is difficult to see how the threat that anyone could end up in body bags, for whatever reason, could be anything other than the lowest of all lows in hate speech. Not that the media platform on which the governor spoke could have done much to screen his comment in line with the broadcast code, as it was a live programme.

    Following the firestorm his comment generated, el-Rufai offered a makeover. He explained in another interview, Wednesday on Channels Television, that he made the ‘body bag’ comment because he had intelligence report that the PDP was trying to instigate the international community to give Nigeria the ‘Venezuelan’ treatment. “What I said is based on intelligence that is available to us that the opposition is preparing grounds to cause a crisis in Nigeria by inviting foreign participation…They know that they are likely to lose the elections…We welcome international observers. We invited them, and we want them to be part of the process and we will protect them. But they are here to observe and not to intervene or to provide the foundation for crises in Nigeria, which is what the PDP is preparing for.” he explained inter alia.

    For a governor who once pursued a $350million infrastructural development loan for his state from the World Bank, the intensity of insular hostility to foreign role in Nigerian electoral process as implied in the ‘body bag’ comment was quite shocking. And it isn’t as if these foreign interests do not have any material stake in the process. Besides that their observation helps the international credibility of our elections as well as put our political actors in a glass bowl, the EU, among the others, reported having contributed €26.5million as at early last year to initiatives aimed at ensuring that Nigeria’s 2019 general election is successful.

    We must also acknowledge, though, that it is only a few days away from the 2019 elections and partisan brinksmanship in the political class has hit feverish pitch. Foreign powers must thus be keenly wary of being drawn into the fray by their voiced opinions or actions in regard of the elections. Still, we must hold our power actors, especially principal actors by virtue of the public offices they hold, strictly accountable for the political culture they model. The ‘body bag’ comment by Mr. el-Rufai was hate speech in the extreme, and the makeover after-the-fact fell below par as damage control. That comment does not reflect who we are as a people in the global community and should by no means be used to benchmark the perception of our political culture, or indeed the 2019 elections, by the world.

     

    Counsel from Michelle Obama

    A video of Michelle Obama went viral recently on the social media. In that video, the former United States First Lady gave a stump speech to a youthful audience on the importance of participating in the electoral process. Her message has uncanny relevance for us as we go into the 2019 poll in a few days, hence my running an excerpt as follows for our instruction:

    I am sick of all the chaos and the nastiness of our politics. It’s exhausting. And frankly, it’s depressing.  So I understand your wanting to shut it all out, and just go on and try to live your life, to take care of your family in peace. But here’s the problem: while some folks are frustrated and tuned out and staying at home on election day, trust me other folks are showing up. Democracy continues with or without you. They’re voting in every election: from city council, to governor, to president. Because the folks who are voting know the impact that the leaders they pick can have on every single part of our lives.

    When you don’t vote, you’re letting other people make some really key decisions about the life you gonna live, the place you’re gonna live, how it’s gonna work out for you. You’re just saying: ‘you do it.’ And you may not like what they decide. You might not like living with the consequences of other people’s choices.  But that’s what happens when you stay home.  You’re essentially putting your future in the hands of others. And the truth is, that’s exactly what some folks are hoping that you’ll do…

    “The only way to make change in this country is to get out and vote for the change you’re looking for…I don’t care who you vote for…Presidential elections in districts are decided by 50 people who decided not to vote. It is that small of a margin. It is not about the leader. The power of our democracy is in us. The person that you’re looking for is standing in your shoes. You are the person that can save yourself from this. We are our heroes, we are our leaders. That doesn’t change. And it doesn’t matter who runs, it’s on us.”

     

    • Please join me on kayodeidowu.blogspot.be for conversation.
  • Grandiloquent el-Rufai still true to type

    KADUNA State governor Nasir el-Rufai is undoubtedly one of the most pompous governors in Nigeria today. He seldom speaks without putting his foot in his mouth. Fumbling from one gaffe to another, he is not deterred by verbal mishaps and policy miscarriages from endlessly coveting publicity and dubious acclaim. Few were, therefore, surprised on Tuesday that the petit governor blew it once again during a live interview on Nigeria Television Authority (NTA). Speaking on the warnings and statements by the United States, United Kingdom and the European Union indicating their reservations about the suspension of the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Walter Onnoghen, close to the 2019 elections, the governor told them off in a language that was neither edifying nor diplomatic. The words he used were shockingly direct and deeply troubling.

    Said Mallam el-Rufai: “We are waiting for the person that will come and intervene. They will go back in body bags, because nobody will come to Nigeria and tell us how to run our country. We got that independence and we are trying to run our country as decently as possible and we know the history of those countries that are trying to teach us these things. We have read their history. We also know that at their own stages of development, they went through these challenges. So please, let’s work together, let’s advise one anotherbut don’t lecture us.” Did Mallam el-Rufai mean interfere instead of intervene? It was, however, clear that the governor read the misgivings of the Western powers as an indication of their preparedness to intervene in Nigerian affairs. The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had asked the Western powers to begin considering travel ban and other sanctions against top Nigerians who might be tempted to fiddle with the elections, a position Mallam el-Rufai and some others probably construe as hostile and partisan.

    A general uproar, however, followed the governor’s warnings to the Western powers, particularly his incendiary statement that interveners would end in body bags. Few were amused by the governor’s statement, except of course his aides and the Nigerian presidency. Insisting that the governor’s statement was misinterpreted, his media aide, Samuel Aruwan, explained that the alarmist who suggested that Mallam el-Rufai had threatened Western powers with violence actually spoke poor English. Said he: “When Malam Nasir El-Rufai appeared on NTA’s Tuesday Night Live, he stood up for Nigeria’s dignity in the wake of those who would traduce their country and reduce it to the status of a colony in their vain quest for power. The video of his comments does not contain any call for violence. Affirming that a country will defend itself against needless intervention is the kind of statement you expect to hear from a patriot. It is not a call for violence. Warning about the consequences of meddling in another country’s affairs is legitimate. Malam Nasir El-Rufai has issued a powerful call for vigilance and a clear notice that other countries should not mistake the supine posture of the opposition for national weakness.” Mr Aruwan of course glossed over the connotative and denotative meanings of the term “body bags”.

    But surprise of all surprises, the presidency needlessly waded into the fray with an implausible defence of the fumbling governor. Rehashing the Goodluck Jonathan presidency style, when the former president also undiplomatically took umbrage at the many strident remarks made by Western powers shortly before the 2015 elections, the presidency argued that Mallam el-Rufai’s warning was expected of a patriot. According to the presidency: “We have taken note of the clarification to a reported earlier statement by the Governor of Kaduna State, Nasir El-Rufa’i, concerning the opposition’s call for foreign interference in our domestic affairs and to say that latest statement by him should rest the issue for good. There is nothing more to sneeze at. The Governor spoke strongly in defence of national interest.”

    The presidency is obviously not gifted with public relations talents who know when and how to craft responses to controversial issues and provocations. Mallam el-Rufai may be voluble and often indiscrete, even sometimes hyperbolic, but he is just a state governor promoted to an office far beyond his ken, an office that needs diplomatic skills, large-heartedness and foresight which he is unable to give. But to hear a presidency that represents some 190 million people embrace the el-Rufai doctrine of exceptionalism and bigotry, and then declaim insensitively on a subject that did not call for its reaction, indicates very badly how low it had sunk under the weight of its own levity. The Kaduna governor should have been left to stew in his juice. In any case, he is both so unforgiving and intransigent that he is quite able to defend himself. He talks himself glibly into trouble, but he is adept at waltzing his way out of trouble, regardless of the multiple scars and blemishes that proudly serve as indelible mementoes of his superfluous struggles.

    This time, however, it is hard to see him waltzing his way out of the black books of indignant Western powers, most of whom have very long memory and exhibit patrician airs. They know how vulnerable Nigerian leaders are. They know where the Nigerian elite send their children to school, having crippled and forsaken their own educational system, and where they receive medical care, also after abandoning their hospitals to poorly paid doctors and broken and dilapidated equipment. They also know where the elite squirrel their wealth, and how grand their tastes have become, tastes that only Western luxuries can sate. Because they own the English language, and knowing full well that they cannot by bamboozled by its nuances, whether syntax or semantics, they know and will remember that the talk of body bags indicate violence, and that that violence puts the lives of foreign election observers in jeopardy.

    There is no other way to look at Mallam el-Rufai’s fiery statement than to see it as a call to arms against a group he calls foreign interveners. Under Dr Jonathan, no such “body bags” threats against the so-called interveners were issued. Compared with the current government, the past administration could therefore be described as saintly, modest and restrained. And for a government that benefited immensely from foreign powers’ close monitoring of the election process in 2015, it is baffling that this government has suddenly become uptight about electoral standards and fidelity.

    The Kaduna governor is not alien to controversy and incendiary statements. He revelled in scores of such statements in the past and got away with murder as it were. Now, he has stuck to his guns, and is attempting to redefine the rules of English grammar by suggesting that there are many ways to look at what he said. Yet, everyone knows him, not least his long-suffering Kaduna people. They know how he has consistently talked down to them, and how he has berated them when they take exceptions to his newfangled policies. They know how intolerant he is to critics, and how grossly his dictatorial instincts offend the people. They see how pompously he carries himself and his words, despite his government’s lack of ingenuity and lasting achievements. Now, they see him, after misspeaking badly, trying loudly and indecently to curry their votes for a second term.

    Foreign powers can handle themselves well in tackling the governor’s “patriotic” threats. What is left to see in March when the people go to the polls for the governorship is whether Kaduna can tell the difference between a radical government and a discourteous government, or whether they deserve Mallam el-Rufai or he deserves them; whether they are a match for the governor or whether they take the precedence over him in order of importance. Sadly, the presidency has fallen for his antics and excesses; it remains to be seen whether Kaduna will also swallow his rodomontades.

  • ‘Body bag’: PDP calls for El-Rufai’s arrest

    The National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP ), Prince Uche Secondus, has called on the International Criminal Court (ICC) to arrest the Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna State.

    The call was made in response to the governor’s threat to foreign election observers and members of the international community that they would be sent back to their countries in body bags if they get involved in the upcoming general elections.

    The governor had, during a live programme on the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) on Tuesday, threatened that foreign election observers planning to interfere with the polls will leave in Nigeria in body bags.

    But speaking at the party’s presidential campaign ally in Makurdi, the Benue State capital on Friday, the PDP chairman, said that an Atiku Abubakar presidency would put an end to mindless killings in Benue and other states.

    Secondus said, “Yesterday, we went to Katsina, they were killing in eight local governments. That is the President’s home state. The killing is so much in Nigeria.  Poverty and hunger is too much in the land. We will shift the headquarters of poverty to another country. Atiku Abubakar will create jobs for our teeming youths. He has done it before, he will do it again”.

    “We were told that Senator George Akume was inviting military. This is not a military regime, this is democracy. Anyone that sends soldiers to Akume is against democracy. And we will reject such rigged results either in Benue or at the national level. We will never accept any rigged results.

    “You are aware that the Governor of Kaduna State has said that people will be killed and carried in body bags. And we must stand because they cannot kill us. The international community is aware.

    “We call on the Federal Government, headed by President Muhammadu Buhari to set up an inquiry. If he refuses, then the International Criminal Court should arrest El-Rufai immediately for saying that the international community and PDP will be carried in body bags. They are not ready for election. They know that Atiku is winning”.

    The PDP presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, assured the people that he would end the security challenges in the state.