Tag: goes

  • What goes around comes around

    When a democratically elected legislator says he lost his leadership position in the legislature as a result of a coup against him, his choice of words deserves attention.

    Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume of the All Progressives Congress (APC) who represents Borno South Senatorial District was removed as the Senate Leader and replaced by Senator Ahmed Lawan (Yobe North) in dramatic circumstances on January 10. His removal was plotted and perfected by the APC’s Senate Caucus which communicated the development to Senate President Abubakar Bukola Saraki in a two-paragraph letter entitled “Notice of change of leadership.”

    Ndume’s reaction: “This is a parliamentary coup because many of my colleagues said they were not aware of any Caucus meeting. But so be it. God gave me that position and if that is His wish that I should leave, I have left everything to God. Had it been that I was found wanting of any allegation, I will not be surprised. All I know is that God will fight back for me.”

    Ndume added: “I did no wrong, except the issue of the confirmation of the Acting EFCC chairman, Mr. Ibrahim Magu, which brought up some issues. There was a disagreement on Magu beginning with my fight with Sen. Dino Melaye. Based on legislative procedure, I said Magu had not been rejected by the Senate. Shortly after that, there were rumours of collection of signatures to remove me. Even at that, we met at the Senate leadership level on Monday; there was no complaint against me. I was not aware that the leadership was not happy with me. There was no allegation against me at all. Certainly, it is a coup.”

    When did legislators in a democracy begin to plan and carry out coups? Certainly, it did not begin with Ndume’s ouster. Indeed, Ndume himself benefited from what may be called a coup when he was installed as Senate Leader in a move that defied the directive of his party leadership.

    A June 23, 2015 letter to Saraki by the APC National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, had named Lawan for the position of Majority Leader among the “names of principal officers approved by the party” for the 8th Senate.

    At the time Ndume emerged as Senate Leader contrary to his party’s position, he did not see it as a coup against the party. It is said that what goes around comes around.

  • Kate Henshaw goes into politics

    Kate Henshaw goes into politics

    Nollywood actress Kate Henshaw is currently aspiring to represent Calabar Munical/Odukpani Federal Constituency at the House of Representatives under the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The actress, who turned 43 on Saturday, July 19, officially unveiled her campaign website on the same day. To qualify to run for the office under the PDP, the actress has to win the primaries scheduled for October this year.

    On what she plans to achieve as a candidate, the actress said: “I have a strong interest and desire to serve my people and show that there is a better, more humane way to do things when you are in a position of leadership. It is also about putting the people first, being accountable to them as well as being accessible. I am also very keen on promoting and championing the provision of clean water, good roads and sanitation in my constituency. One of my key areas of focus will be provision of affordable education and quality healthcare, especially for expecting and young mothers, the less privileged and the physically challenged.”

     

  • Keshi goes to FIFA’s school

    Keshi goes to FIFA’s school

    • Team hails President Jonathan’s CHAN largesse

    Super Eagles officials led by Head Coach, Stephen Okechukwu Keshi will literarily return to school this week as they will take part in a FIFA organised World Cup seminar strictly for the Brazil 2014 World Cup, holding in June this year.

    Apart from Keshi, other officials who departed Nigeria for Brazil on Sunday night are team Administrator, Dayo Enebi Achor, team doctor; Ibrahim Gyaran, Media Officer of the team; Ben Alaiya, Chief Security Officer, ACP Abubakar Baba, Scribe of the NFF Security Committee, Christian Emeruwa and Chuks Alizor of the NFF Marketing Department.

    FIFA is organising the course to prepare officials of the qualified nations for Mundial 2014 for high level of professionalism and service delivery during the summer World Cup. Coaches of all 32 qualified nations and other relevant officials will be in the Brazilian city of Florianopolis for the weeklong seminar.

    Meanwhile, the national team has hailed President Goodluck Jonathan for the wonderful reception he granted the team last Thursday in Abuja, for coming third at the recently held CHAN African Nations tournament in South Africa.

    Team Captain, Chigozie Agbim and Administrator, Dayo Enebi Achor, said the team was humbled by the reception given to the team adding that nobody expected it, which goes to show that President Jonathan holds the team not only in high esteem but has a passion for sport, particularly football and the Super Eagles. “We are very delighted and on the part of the players we hope to bring more joy to Mr President and the nation because he has always showed us love”, Agbim said.

    Achor said apart from NFF President, Aminu Maigari’s love for the team, President Jonathan ranks equal with his fatherly love for the team.

    “He visits the team when we are preparing for major competitions and he always rewards us even when we don’t meet his expectation. We must say thank you to Mr. President”, he said.

  • Minister goes tough

    Minister goes tough

    Sports Minister, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi has set the machinery in motion to investigate the major reasons behind the Super Eagles’ bonus crisis that ensued in Windhoek, Namibia shortly after the 2014 World Cup qualifying match between the Eagles and the Namibia senior national team that ended 1-1 score draw on Wednesday, June 13, 2013.

    The NFF had offered to pay $5000 for a win and $2500 for a draw, but the players insisted on getting $10,000 for a win and $5000 for a draw. The stalemate was broken by the intervention of the Minister who got additional funds to make up for the shortfall proposed by the NFF.

    The Panel is chaired by Segun Adeniyi. Chairman of Thisday Editorial Board n who was He was also a member of the Presidential Task Force, which was set up to ensure Nigeria’s qualification for the 2010 World Cup.

    Other members of the panel are: Onoche Anibeze (Group Sports Editor, Vanguard), Female football stakeholder, Aisha Falode, Shehu Dikko who is also a Member of the League Management Company will serve as the Panel’s Secretary, Akin Oshuntokun, a Former MD of the News Agency of Nigeria, former Super Eagles midfielder, Garba Lawal and Hon. Abdulkadri Maman Nasir.

    The Minister gave the Committee terms of reference which include:

    (a) Determine the immediate and remote causes of the crisis over the match bonus that happened recently in Namibia and make appropriate recommendations in that regard.

    (b) This Panel will also be expected to develop a code of conduct for players on national assignments

    (c) And thirdly given the background and the concern that this has generated the Panel is expected to give any other recommendations that may be deemed necessary towards finding a lasting solution to the problems that we have identified.

    The Minister also gave the Panel two weeks to submit its report to him. He said “the task would be difficult since it has to do with a contentious issue like sports or football. But we believe that all the members in this Panel are capable of discharging this duty effectively and efficiently because of their pedigree.

    In his reaction, the Chairman of the Panel Adeniyi thanked the Minister and assured him of doing a good job at the end of the two week time frame given to the Panel.

    “I just want to thank the Minister for the confidence repose in us for this important assignment. I think the day of talking will come on the day we present our report. I believe in the caliber of the people we have here (in the Panel) to come up with recommendations that will help our football”, he assured.

  • WAY FORWARD FOR NPFL: Ladipo goes spiritual

    WAY FORWARD FOR NPFL: Ladipo goes spiritual

    President General Nigeria Football Supporters club Rafiu Ladipo, Tuesday in Lagos revealed his prayer skills in the hope that embattled Nigeria Professional Football League can find its feet and begin to live up to expectation.

    Ladipo, who took half of the time alloted him at the media round table held over the league to pray for the success of Nduka Irabor led League Management Company, called on all stakeholders to close ranks as that is the only way success can be achieved.

    “This is not a job for one person or just a section of people, it is one in which all hands must be on deck to move the league forward. We must criticise constructively so as to build not to destroy. The LMC needs everybody just like we need them to chart the way forward,” he said

    Ladipo whose daughter is bidding goodbye to spinster-hood Saturday in Lagos described football as an important part of an average Nigerian which must be given all the support it deserves.

    Some have however queried the contribution of the supporters club to the development of the local league. A cross section of fans who spoke with SportingLife Tuesday, opined that the Ladipo led supporters club only concern itself with the Super Eagles and national teams on international assignment, noting that they ought to put up appearace once in a while at local match venues to further attract fans and add glamour to the league.

  • Nigeria goes to war in Mali

    Nigeria goes to war in Mali

    Nigeria is deploying 1,200 troops in Mali, where a war is raging to flush out insurgents from the North.

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday got the Senate’s nod for the deployment, which is to stave off the incursion of terrorists, who are already troubling some northern states through the Boko Haram.

    The President will today attend an extra-ordinary session of the ECOWAS Heads of State and Government in Abidjan, Cote D’Ivoire, where the regional block’s full troops deployment will be approved.

    Dr. Jonathan will be accompanied by Defence Minister of State Mrs. Olusola Obada and Chief of Defence Staff Admiral Ola Sa’ad Ibrahim.

    Nigerian troops are to serve in the African-led International Support Mission to Mali (AFISMA) for “limited combat duties”.

    Jonathan’s request for the Senate’s approval was contained in a nine-paragraph letter entitled “Notification to the Senate on the deployment of members of the Armed Forces on a limited combat duty to Mali and request for consent”.

    The January 16 letter was read by Senate President David Mark and debated by the lawmakers who gave their consent unanimously.

    Jonathan said: “Having satisfied myself that our national security is under imminent threat or danger as a result of the crises in northern Mali, I, in consultation with the National Defence Council, approved the deployment of a contingent of 1,200 members of the Armed Forces to serve in the African-led force (AFISMA) in Mali for limited combat duties.

    “Nigeria is currently facing daunting security challenges and given its proximity to the Sahel region, the crisis in Mali, if not brought under control, may spill over to Nigeria and other West African countries with negative consequences on our collective security, political stability and development efforts.

    “As a responsible member of the international community and given our recent experiences with insurgency and terrorist activities, especially in the northern parts of the country, I felt compelled to urgently approve the deployment of Nigerian troops.

    “The deployment of Nigerian troops is in line with Security Council Resolution 2085(2012) and is necessitated by the need to combat armed and terrorist groups, including Al-Qaida in the Islamic Magreb (AQIM) and their activities, as well as proliferation of weapons from within and outside the region with grave consequences on the security and stability in the northern parts of Mali and beyond, including Nigeria.

    “In view of the foregoing, the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is respectfully invited to exercise its powers under Section 4(5) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 as (amended) and to consent to the deployment of a contingent of 1,200 members of the Armed Forces to serve in the African-led force (AFISM)in Mali on limited combat duties.”

    Jonathan invited the Senate to note the United Nation’s Security Council’s concerns on the continuing deteriorating humanitarian and security situation in the north of Mali, which is further complicated by the presence and entrenchment of armed and terrorist groups, including Al-Qaida in the Islamic Magreb (AQIM) and their activities; the proliferation of weapons from within and outside the region; the consequences of instability in the northern parts of Mali on the region and beyond; and the need to respond swiftly to preserve stability across the Sahel region.

    He drew the attention of the Senate to the resolutions of the Security Council on the crisis in Mali, particularly Resolution 2071 (2012), which declared its readiness to respond to Mali’s request for an international military force; Mali’s request to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) for military assistance, and ECOWAS letter of 28th September 2012 to the UN Secretary General, requesting a Security Council resolution authorising the deployment of a stabilisation force in Mali under Chapter VII mandate of the United Nations Charter.

    He recalled that while unanimously adopting Resolution 2071 and Resolution 2085, the Security Council called on member-states as well as regional and international organisations to provide co-ordinated support to the request of the Transitional Authorities of Mali regarding an international military force assisting the Malian Armed Forces in recovering the occupied regions in the north of Mali, including thorough military training, provision of equipment and other forms of assistance in efforts to combat terrorist and affiliated extremist groups.

    He noted that ECOWAS had constituted a Working Group with the responsibility of fashioning out the best way to implement Resolution 2085 of December 20, 2012, which endorsed the deployment of African-led force (AFISMA), under the Chapter VII for the resolution of the political and security crises in Mali .

    Mark, who summed up contributions by senators on the request, said Nigeria is not just a big brother in ECOWAS but a big brother in Africa.

    He noted that this country should be concerned about what happens in Africa, particularly if it will have ripple effects in Nigeria.

    The Senate President said: “The situation in Mali is such that if we don’t get involved, we will not be able to cope with the consequence of it and I think it is on that basis we should act and act fast.

    “I believe that the request is in order and our troops have performed extremely well any time they have gone outside this country and I think they are well equipped to move as quickly or to be deployed as quickly as it is possible.

    “One important thing is that because of the nature of the crises in Mail and because of the characters involved, I strongly believe that if we do not intervene, even on our own, the rest of the African countries and a lot of the European countries will request that we intervene – for obvious reasons.

    “It is not just that the rebels want to take over in Bamako, I think they also have a grand design to spread their tentacles well beyond the boundaries of Mali and that is the more reason we should try and join the other forces to nip it in the bud.”

    He mandated the Committees on Defence and National Security to monitor Mali to ensure that Nigerian troops there are well equipped, well prepared and in a position to carry out the roles they have been sent there to undertake.

    Senator Olufemi Lanlehin, who supported the deployment of troops to Mali, noted that the measure is in Nigeria ’s self interest.

    The lawmaker added that apart from deployment of troops to Mali , Nigerians should work to contain the activities of Boko Haram.

    For Lanlehin, whatever it takes to contain and rout Boka Haram from the country should be done and done urgently.

    He noted that the manifestation in northern Mali is that terrorist groups are pushing to engulf Nigeria.

    “It is in our self interest to arrest the situation” he said.

    Other Senators who contributed included Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, Senators Magnus Abe, Victor Ndome-Egba, Abdul Ningi, Ayogu Eze and Chris Anyanwu.

    Also yesterday, Dr. Jonathan called for a more robust global response to terrorism.

    He spoke after reviewing events in Algeria and Northern Mali with the British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Mr. Andrew John Pocock.

    President Jonathan, according to a statement by his spokesman, Dr. Reuben Abati, said the world clearly needed to unite and do much more than is presently being done to contain terrorism with its very negative impact on global peace and security.

    Jonathan also condemned Wednesday’s kidnapping of British, French and other foreign workers at a gas facility in Eastern Algeria by terrorists who claimed to be responding to France’s intervention in Mali.

    The President said Nigeria will continue to work hard with its partners in the international community to ensure that terrorism is vigorously rolled back across the world.

    The President told Mr. Pocock that in furtherance of Nigeria’s commitment to the war against terrorism in West Africa, Nigerian troops had been deployed in Mali to join up with the multinational force assembling there to restore Northern Mali to the control of the Malian Government.

    President Jonathan also received the Letters of Credence of the first Ambassador of South Sudan to Nigeria, Mr. Parmena Mankuet Mangar.

  • Tussle on Olofa stool goes to Appeal Court

    THE tussle over the Olofa of Offa stool has shifted to the Appeal Court sitting in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital.

    A High Court sitting in Offa had, in July, dismissed a suit filed by Alhaji Sheu Oyeniyi, the Magaji of the Olugbense ruling house, seeking to invalidate the kingship of the current Olofa of Offa, Alhaji Mufutau Gbadamosi, the Esuwoye II of Anilelerin ruling house.

    In the appeal filed on December 20, counsel to the appellants/claimants, John Olusola Baiyeshea (SAN), prayed the court to set aside the judgment of the High Court, which was in favour of Oba Gbadamosi.

    Baiyeshea averred that “the trial judge wrongly rejected Exhibit ‘G’ in evidence”.

    He added: “It is the original copy of the Kwara State Government press statement of 1969 informing the public and the world that the chieftaincy crisis in Offa was resolved by the government which recognised two ruling houses in Offa: the Olugbense and the Anilelerin ruling houses and established rotational chieftaincy in Offa between the two ruling houses.

    “A combination of credible, cogent, concrete and strong oral and documentary evidence and exhibits presented by the claimants/appellants are strong enough to be relied upon to give judgment in favour of the claimants. The purported appointment of Alhaji Gbadamosi (fifth respondent) is liable to be nullified, and the second claimant/appellant, Prince Abdulrauf Adegboyega Keji, is entitled to be declared and installed as the Olofa of Offa.

    “The principle, notion and doctrine of fairness, justice, equity and estoppel are applicable in favour of the appellants in this case in determining the right of the ruling house to present the candidate (Prince Keji) and not the current Olofa to fill the vacancy in the stool of Olofa created by the death of the immediate past Olofa of Offa in 2010 from the same Anilelerin ruling house as the fifth respondent.

    “Your lordships are urged to give judgment in favour of the appellants accordingly and order that the second appellant be installed by the state government as the Olofa of Offa forthwith. Alhaji Gbadamosi’s appointment/installation ought to be nullified and an order of perpetual injunction be made to restrain him from further parading himself as the Olofa of Offa.”

    The senior lawyer propped up some issues for their lordships’ determination.

    They include: “Whether the learned trial judge was/is right in holding that Exhibit ‘G’, though an original copy of a public document, must be certified to be admissible in evidence, thereby refusing to attach any weight thereto;

    “Whether the learned trial judge was/is right in holding that the newspapers (which contain evidence of rotational chieftaincy in Offa) were wrongly admitted in evidence and that the exhibits are not worthy of being accorded any weight and expunging them from record;

    “Whether there is evidence on record to show or prove that the Olofa stool is rotational between the Olugbense and Anilelerin ruling houses and that it was/is the turn of the claimants/appellants, the Olugbense ruling house, in 2010 to present the candidate to fill the vacancy created in the stool by the death of the immediate past Olofa of Offa from the Anilelerin ruling house; and

    “Whether the learned trial judge rightly rejected the notion, principle and doctrine of fairness, justice, equity and estoppel in determining the right of the appellants to present the candidate to fill the vacancy in the stool created by the death of the immediate past Olofa of Offa in 2010 from the rival Anilelerin ruling house.”

  • Turkish language class: Yobo goes to school

    Turkish language class: Yobo goes to school

    For fear violating an obligatory term in his contract with Fenerbahce, Super Eagles skipper Joseph Yobo on Thursday began attending Turkish classes at his club’s Can Bartu Facility.

    The Nigerian, who started learning the basics of Turkish with tutorial aids, is expected to spend a total of 100 hours with the club’s language tutors.

    Yobo, and seven of his non-Turkish mates, after the Turkish course programme, is expected to be self-sufficient in communicating with Fenerbahce’s technical staff and teammates on a daily basis during training.

    Manager Aykut Kocaman recently complained about a lack of understanding and team cohesion due to the communication barrier.

    Kocaman was recently quoted as saying, “Hiring translators for our foreign players make their lives easier in the short-term, however, it ends up preventing their adaptation to the club and country.

    “Nobody is above the club; neither the players nor myself.”

    Kocaman believes that if all the members of his squad can understand footballing terms and basic commands in Turkish it will benefit the team as a whole and help foreign players settle in.