Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • ‘Why I can’t be removed from office’

    ‘Why I can’t be removed from office’

    People’s Democratic Party (PDP) Chairman Bamanga Tukur has told President Goodluck Jonathan why he cannot be removed from office now.

    His explanation is informed by speculations about plans by the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) to sack him.

    Tukur, in a January 13 letter by his lawyer, Ajibola Oluyede, addressed to President Jonathan, said he cannot be removed because there was a valid subsisting order of a Federal High Court, Abuja, issued on April 25, last year asking the party to maintain the status quo.

    In the suit he filed for PDP against the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Justice Adamu Bello ordered parties to maintain status quo by not taking actions that would lead to the removal of the then national officers.

    PDP, in the suit, sought, among others, a declaration that the tenure of the National Officers elected at the 2012 National Convention could not be truncated.

    This was after the INEC alleged irregularity in the election, saying that the nominations of the officers who were unopposed at the 2012 convention were invalid because they were affirmed by voice votes instead of “open secret ballot”.

    Tukur said he wrote Jonathan because he is the constitutional leader of the PDP and that it was reported that he (Jonathan) attended the BOT meeting where the plan to remove Tukur was hatched.

    The letter reads: “My attention has been drawn to reported proceedings of the Board of Trustees (BoT) of the Peoples Democratic Party, which culminated in the decision to remove Dr. Bamanga Tukur from the position of Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party.

    “This removal is to be achieved either by pressurising him to resign or by some vote of lack of confidence to be procured against him at a planned National Working Committee meeting of the Peoples Democratic Party.

    “This letter is addressed to you because you are the constitutional leader of the PDP and it was reported that you were in attendance at the BOT meeting.

    “That order is still subsisting, valid and binding on the PDP and INEC till date and especially as at the time the BOT meeting decided to procure the removal of Dr. Bamanga Tukur.

    “The position of Nigerian Law is that anyone, though not directly bound by an order of court, who aids or abets the negation of such an order is liable for criminal contempt and all contemptuous actions taken by contemnors are null and void and liable to be set aside by the court.”

    Oluyede said he decided to write the president to forestall a breakdown of order and to prevent the PDP from falling into a booby trap.

    “In the circumstance, we find that the deliberation by the BOT on a plan to remove the National Chairman of the PDP and the decisions and resolutions reached at that meeting are null and void and anything built on it will be equally null and void.

    “More importantly, we must point out that INEC, which is a party to the proceedings in which the order was made, cannot recognise any new appointment or installation of a replacement for Dr. Tukur arising from the decision taken at the said BOT meeting or that of any other organ of the Party during the subsistence of the order for status quo.

    “This would mean that any nomination forms submitted or signed by such a replacement would be equally null and void. The ramifications of this chain of illegalities are easy to imagine.”

    The letter went on: “We have written, inter alia, to draw your attention to the taint this illegal process could be on an otherwise legitimate nomination process for the candidates of the PDP at the forthcoming general elections.

    “This can be avoided now by mere attention to detail and compliance with due process.

    “Due process in the circumstances dictates that any legitimate demand for the termination of Dr. Tukur’s tenure as National Chairman of the PDP be subjected to the procedure and processes prescribed by the Constitution of the Party for removal, only after the court has determined the pending action or otherwise vacated the subsisting order aforementioned.”

    Also yesterday, Tukur insisted that he could only be removed through a properly conducted national convention of the party and that until that takes place, he remains the legally-recognised national chairman.

    He dismissed reports that President Jonathan had asked him to resign, saying that the party’s constitution did not vest the President with such powers. According to him, the report was the handiwork of the opposition.

    Tukur said: “I am an elected national chairman. I have my certificate of return. I cannot resign. The convention brought me, so it has to take the convention that brought me for me to resign.

    “So, not even the President can ask me to resign. Remember that some members of the National Woking Committee (NWC) were asked to go recently because the election that brought them was flawed. So Mr. President can not tread that route again.”

  • Jonathan promises to complete priority projects

    Jonathan promises to complete priority projects

    •President greets Muslims on Eid-el-Mawlud celebration

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday promised to complete priority projects and overlook distractions ahead of next year’s elections.

    Dr Jonathan made the promises in his Eid-el-Mawlud message to Nigerians on today’s public holiday on the birth of Prophet Mohammed (SAW).

    Jonathan said his administration would support the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to conduct free, fair and credible elections.

    The statement by the President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, reads: “Against the background of the increasing tempo of political activities in the country, as individuals, groups and parties jostle for vantage positions in the countdown to next year’s general elections, President Jonathan assures all Nigerians that his administration will not be distracted from working diligently to bring all of its priority developmental programmes and projects to a successful conclusion.

    “The President also assures the nation that his administration will continue to act on its belief that only free, fair and credible elections can make democracy in Nigeria truly meaningful and useful as a vehicle for development and progress by working with the INEC and all stakeholders to make the best possible preparations for the next elections.”

    The President urged Muslims to celebrate the Prophet’s birth with special prayers for greater peace, unity and progress in Nigeria.

    “Also, as this year’s Eid-el-Mawlud fortuitously comes just a day before the nation’s Armed Forces Remembrance Day, President Jonathan urges all Nigerians, Muslims and non-Muslims alike, to seize the opportunity of the eid to offer special prayers as well for officers and men of the Nigerian Armed Forces who continue to do their best to protect the nation’s territorial integrity and achieve greater security in all parts of the country.”

    Dr Jonathan said his administration would always count on the support and prayers of patriotic Nigerians for the success of his administration’s efforts to move the nation faster on the path to greater peace, unity, progress and prosperity.

    He said: “The President believes that a greater internalisation of the virtues of honesty, selflessness, charity, tolerance, good neighbourliness, justice, equity and fairness which the Prophet preached and exemplified will be of immense benefit to the nation in this regard.”

    He urged Nigerians to imbibe these virtues and values as they celebrate the Prophet’s birth.

    The President wished Nigerians a happy Eid-el-Mawlud.

  • 32 aspirants bid for Ekiti PDP ticket

    32 aspirants bid for Ekiti PDP ticket

    Thirty-two aspirants are jostling for the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) governorship ticket in Ekiti State.

    The party’s primary election is slated for early March.

    It was learnt that the aspirants were scheming to outdo one another.

    Sources said some were associating with the Presidency to garner support in the primary.

    Recently, some members accused the State PDP Chairman, Chief Makanjuola Ogundipe, of planning to raise “a fictitious Consensus Template Drafting Committee”, which they described as “a grand scheme to skew some aspirants into advantages”.

    The party’s Secretary, Dr. Tope Aluko, and Pastor Oluwawole, in a statement last Wednesday, said Ogundipe had been avoiding members of the State Working Committee (SWC) since he returned from Abuja, after a meeting of the aspirants with President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Ogundipe denied the allegation, saying he was waiting for yesterday’s meeting before briefing them.

    Members of the SWC met at Ogundipe’s home yesterday to discuss the mobilisation of the people for the forthcoming voter registration.

    A former Acting Governor, Biodun Ayeni, has joined the governorship race.

    Speaking with reporters in Ado-Ekiti, Ayeni said politics is not a do-or-die affair.

    He said: “I have no reason to see the election as a war because I am not fighting for myself but the interest of the party.”

  • U.S. expresses concern with same sex  marriage prohibition Act

    U.S. expresses concern with same sex marriage prohibition Act

    United States Secretary of State John Kerry has expressed concern over President Goodluck Jonathan’s signing of the Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Act.

    The Department of State, in a statement, said: “The United States is deeply concerned by Nigeria’s enactment of the Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Act.

    “Beyond even prohibiting same sex marriage, this law dangerously restricts freedom of assembly, association, and expression for all Nigerians.

    “Moreover, it is inconsistent with Nigeria’s international legal obligations and undermines the democratic reforms and human rights protections enshrined in its 1999 Constitution.

    “People everywhere deserve to live in freedom and equality. No one should face violence or discrimination for who they are or who they love.

    “We join with those in Nigeria who appeal for the protection of their fellow citizens’ fundamental freedoms and universal human rights.”

     

  • ‘Nigeria seeking US’ help to fight insurgency’

    ‘Nigeria seeking US’ help to fight insurgency’

    President Goodluck Jonathan is still seeking assistance from the government of the United States of America to capture leaders of the Boko Haram sect, it was learnt yesterday.

    Minister of Interior Abba Moro said further assistance from the US would lead to the arrest of the Boko Haram kingpins and pave the way for peace in the country.

    Moro said this when the new US Ambassador to Nigeria, James Entwistle, visited him.

    He said Nigeria would always remain indebted to the United States for showing concern and intervening to resolve some of the nation’s security problems.

    Moro said the US helped build and upgrade about 227 fire stations and training of firemen in modern fire fighting technologies.

    He praised President Barack Obama’s recent declaration of Boko Haram as an international terror group.

    Said he: “At the moment we are working in collaboration with the state department to ensure the security of our borders. At the moment we have also gladly accepted the US offer of assistance in intelligent gathering and sharing.

    “We face a very serious challenge of building consensus around our democratic development. Yet I assure you that this present administration is committed to revolving a democracy that satisfies all. We will continue to learn from the American experience of building a very strong US in Nigeria.”

    Entwistle said: “I want you to know that US, your friend is standing by you, I want you to know USA will always partner you.”

  • Jonathan gets support from coalition

    Jonathan gets support from coalition

    Acoalition of Northern Civil Society Organisations and Non-Governmental Organisations yesterday defended President Goodluck Jonathan’s development efforts in the North.

    The group noted that the electorate should be allowed to determine the fate of the President in 2015.

    According to the coalition, the Jonathan administration has done more for the region compared to previous administrations.

    Speaking for the coalition, Gildado Ibrahim (Sarkin Yaman Pitiskum) said the broader North appreciates the President, despite insecurity in the region.

    Ibrahim, who spoke to reporters in Abuja, listed some projects executed in the region by the President as roads, dams, five new universities, railway, power, and 100 almajiri schools.

    The group decried the attacks on the President by Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso.

    He said: “Jonathan must continue in 2015. Southsouth has done much for us in the North. The President’s kinsmen have been so supportive whenever a northerner is in power. We are worried by the increasing politics of hatred, ethnic and religious bigotry by some elements in the North, who hate President Jonathan because they want power.”

  • Doctors strike

    Doctors strike

    •The two sides must move fast to resolve the issues before February 7

    In what appears a New Year’s gesture of goodwill, doctors under the aegis of their union, the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), and the Federal Government have struck a deal to keep negotiations alive to resolve whatever issues between them. The NMA would reappraise the situation on February 7 and decide whether or not to end the suspended strike. For this gesture, both sides have earned Nigerians’ plaudits.

    The Goodluck Jonathan presidency deserves praise for rising to the occasion. That it promptly engaged the NMA, during the warning strike that lasted from December 18-22, 2013, is uncharacteristically refreshing. The Federal Government should keep up this new spirit. It is a welcome departure from the usual practice of allowing things to get out of hand before being roused into action.

    The NMA, on the other hand, is praise-worthy for its patience, its patriotism and its compassion, given that the December 2013 warning strike came at the expiration of its fourth extended 21-day ultimatum to the Federal Government.

    “This [suspension of strike] to us is a very great sacrifice that has been made by our members,” Dr. Osahon Enabulele, NMA president, declared. “In taking this decision, … we had to take into cognisance certain items in the MOU [memorandum of understanding]. By February 7, we would be able to address the public.”

    By February 7, therefore, it is incumbent on both parties to have substantially resolved all of the issues. Nigerians don’t want to hear of any further strike. Rather, they want to be told the strike is off. Not only that: with the newfound entente, they want to be told that strikes, by all medical staff, would happen less and less.

    But this ideal can be worked towards only if the two sides are open, frank and understanding. The NMA claims President Goodluck Jonathan has committed his government to appointing a Surgeon-General of the Federation, the professional to take direct charge, solve glaring health sector problems and make the sector internationally competitive such that less Nigerians would go abroad on health tourism. The NMA also insisted health funding must improve, citing the training of resident doctors which budgetary allocation for 2014, it states, is less than 0.6 per cent in the 2013 federal budget.

    Both sides should, within the framework of the MOU, do their best to tackle these challenges, such that the Nigerian health sector could command the respect of Nigerians. But while NMA negotiates with the Federal Government, it must factor in the federal principle. That way, it should also engage the states, and ensure the health sector gets the maximum it could possibly get from federal and state budgets. That way, programmes would be synergised and gains maximised.

    But while calling on the Federal Government to be dutiful in the negotiations, we must also appeal to the doctors to realise that a tree does not make a forest. There is no doubt about doctors’ vital role in the country’s health sector. But it is also clear that doctors are only part of a whole. If the sector must be efficient and effective therefore, every part of the chain must work together and must be given its professional respect.

    So, as doctors negotiate their own welfare, they should be sensitive to other professionals — and even supporting non-professionals — in the health sector. If the chain is as strong as its weakest link, then doctors and others must be carried along in a harmonious and efficient health sector.

    That is the health sector of Nigerians’ dream. The government and health sector practitioners have a bounden duty to actualise that dream.

  • A presidency in decline, a president in denial

    A presidency in decline, a president in denial

    A Lot a few Nigerians would want to be in President Goodluck Jonathan’s position as leader of Africa’s most populous and may be richest country, but very few would want his kind of presidency.

    Two years and eight months into a four-year tenure and with the option of another four years as second term likely, Nigerians it does seem cant wait to dump the man from Otuoke at the next available opportunity for a leader with a firm grasp of our problems and challenges and the best solution to take us to the next level.

    Dr Ebele Jonathan, who many thought few years ago could be the messiah the country needed because of his youth, education and a pan-Nigerian mandate at the polls, is such a big let down that even his main supporters are beginning to regret putting him forward to lead this nation of over a hundred and fifty million people with vast human and material resources.

    The man is fast becoming a lame duck do nothing president whose words nobody can go to bank with. Such is the weakness of the man and his presidency that many would rather turn to his wife or some of his other women in government to get things done than rely on his orders.

    Jokes apart, the women in his government get things done quickly and easily than even the Commander-In-Chief. It sounds unbelievable, but it is true. Madam Patience Jonathan, the First Lady, is more effective than her husband. Sometime ago underground news sources said she told the wife of a state governor; “tell your Oga not to rely on my Oga or be his friend, tell him to be my friend, my Oga is not reliable”.

    She surely knows what she’s talking about. Those who are very powerful in Jonathan’s administration today owe their loyalty to her. Nyesom Wike, the Minister of State for Education worships her, Deziani Madueke, the Petroleum Minister had to ‘settle’ her with oil subsidy contract before she could be appointed a Minister and has been ‘oiling’ the First Lady constantly ever since to remain in office, Stella Oduah has had to squeeze water out of the stones in the Aviation parastatals to be able to satisfy Madam’s insatiable appetite for money.

    Today, thanks to Madam First Lady’s support and Jonathan’s weakness, these three Ministers of the Federal Republic can not be removed except they leave or Madam Patience wanted them out. And these Ministers and the Chief of Staff are so arrogantly going about with this air of untouchability that even some other people close to the president are getting worried. In the Ministry of Aviation Stella Oduah does her things with impunity. Ask the parastatals, the managements are just waiting for her time to be up, hoping and praying that before then nothing untoward would happen and something would still be left in their coffers.

    The case of the armoured limousines are still there and even in the face of overwhelming public condemnation of the role of Oduah Jonathan seems helpless to punish her. What kind of a presidency is that? Even if for the sake of credibility?

    The other day we were told that several billions of dollars of our oil revenue have not been remitted to the federation account by the NNPC. The CBN governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi alerted us about this and he was called names for that. He had an argument over this with the Finance Minister and at the end of the day the figure had to be revised down to about 10 billion USD the whereabout of which had not been satisfactorily explained.

    While Nigerians as usual were still trying to get over this and continue with their lives, the President threw in bomb shell; he asked the CBN governor to resign over the NNPC issue. Grapevine had it that the Petroleum Minister had who supervises the NNPC had for some time been putting pressure on Dr Jonathan to sack Sanusi over his letter on the ‘missing’ billions, but the president had resisted citing the provisions of the law. On this particular day, Deziani reportedly went to the president demanding that Sanusi be removed immediately because she heard he was planning another letter. It was a noisy atmosphere at the president’s office and the Commander-In-Chief had to give in. Sanusi was summoned and told to go, the Kano prince refused and dared the president to do whatever he wants. You know the rest of the story.

    The issue here is not the decision to sack Sanusi or not but that Dr Jonathan had to drag the office of the president of Nigeria into this and at the end of the that office was disgraced. Did Jonathan not know that he does not have that power to fire the CBN governor alone or force him to go? And why should he even ask the man to go without addressing the issue of alleged corruption in the remittance of our oil earnings by the NNPC that he raised in the letter?

    Why did Jonathan found it easier to ask Sanusi to go and but difficult to deal with the issue of the limousine purchase by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority for the use of the Aviation Minister? This is double standard.

    The power and authority wielded by the president of Nigeria are such that should not be invoked frivolously lest they become less effective and Dr Jonatan has shown that by his handling of the Sanusi incident. If the president had been fair in the exercise of his power and authority I am sure the CBN governor would think twice before daring him, even if he knows he doesn’t possess the power to fire him. The fear and respect he should normally have for that office would have told him that if the president says he doesn’t want you, then you have to go. But this president is belittling that office, hence the little respect he now commands. Such is always the case with lame duck presidencies.

    And our man is in denial over this. The other day he was at the Shagamu inter change to launch with fanfare the reconstruction and rehabilitation of the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway which his government had just repossessed from a concessionaire and promised to fund the project. After a few initial grading and excavation here and there the project is as good as abandoned and we are being told now that the government is considering giving it out again to another concessionaire because the money is not just there in the public purse to prosecute it. There is nothing wrong with involving the private sector in the funding of such a big project, but for the government to change course mid way after the whole world had been told that all is well with funding of the project shows that something is wrong somewhere. And the fact that it was the president that came and flagged off the project shows that somebody somewhere had deceived or is deceiving him about the availability of public fund for the project. Forget about government’s denial about another concession for the expressway, the fact is that some people are playing politics with us over this road and the presidency is either part of them or is the driving force behind the deceit. A serious presidency doesn’t behave this way. A serious and strong presidency would fish out those behind this and punish them for ridiculing the president and his office. But can we say this about Jonathan’s presidency?

    For six months or thereabout university teachers went on strike over unfulfilled promises by government. The Minister of Education Nyesom Wike was going about for much of this period playing politics trying to destabilize Rivers State while our children were idling away at home. And when Wike finally woke up to his responsibility he bungled the whole effort to resolve the crisis when he announced the sack of the lecturers for not going back to work as ordered. ASUU defied the order and made a laughing stock of government. A serious presidency would have fired the Minister for this embarrassment, but not Jonathan. Another sign of weakness, a waning presidency. The success of ASUU has now emboldened other similar bodies to challenge the government knowing fully that sooner rather than later the presidency would give in. Lame duck presidency!

    The security situation in the north east is a cause for concern for all and the government naturally is worried that in spite of all what it has been doing Boko Haram insurgency is not abating. While it would be wrong to entirely lay the blame for the seeming lack of a headway in the fight against terror in the region at the doorsteps of the federal government, could a perceived weakness in the authority of this president be the motivation for the insurgents to soldier on in spite of the superiority of the armed forces in terms of combat weapons and human resources? If this presidency is perceived and even seen to be a no nonsense leadership and is acting as such, would it be a signal to Boko Haram et al that this government means business and nothing is ruled out in the fight against terror? But if government policy is flip flop on this issue even those prosecuting the war would do it halfhearted.

    If the truth must be told, this presidency is not getting a lot of things done because Nigerians see it as weak, lame duck, but our president is in denial over this. It is unfortunate. Until President Jonathan sits up and face governance seriously and forget his re-election for now, things will continue to go bad and the country would continue to suffer. Enough of politics, Jonathan please govern. If you are the Comander-In-Chief, please chiefly command well. Apologies to Professor Jerry Gana.

     

  • Governance by blackmail

    Governance by blackmail

    SIR: “We should be constructive in our criticisms so that we do not inadvertently encumber the rebuilding of our nation. The President of Nigeria must be transported safely at all times. The cost may seem exorbitant now, but it would be impossible to put a price tag on good governance and an efficiently run country”.

    This statement was made in 2010 by President Goodluck Jonathan in a bid to replenish the ever-increasing fleet of the Presidential aircraft. Three planes were subsequently added to the PAF that same year, and another two in 2011 and 2012, totalling 10!

    Now this. The 2014 budget before the National Assembly has a slush provision of N1.6 billion as deposit for the purchase of a new aircraft for the presidential fleet that already boasts a record 10 planes and is ranked among the most luxurious across the globe.

    President Jonathan has established that corruption is the air his government breaths. The sum of N2.58 trillion paid out in the oil subsidy mega-scam of 2011 is the greatest act of looting of the national treasury since independence. As part of the squander mania, the US$21 billion in the Excess Crude Account (ECA), which was the balance in the account when Jonathan became acting President in 2010, has since been drawn down to less that US$2 billion presently.

    In the last 14 years, PDP has proved to be a colossal disaster. Shortly before the party took over in 1999, the price of oil was eight dollars a barrel. The military built universities, seaports, the highways, airports, hospitals and all the visible edifices you can find anywhere in the country. In the last 14 years, with oil price between $100 and $170 a barrel, the PDP cannot maintain what they inherited. Instead, they sold the nation’s commonwealth to themselves and their cronies.

    President Jonathan’s Transformation Agenda is nothing more than empty sloganeering solely meant to transform personal friends of the administration. No pretences should be made about this.  Aso Rock mole hints that if it were possible for the President to open the vault of heaven to woo back the millions of defecting PDP members against his ineffectual government, the President would been readily open for it. This cast of governance is the sort that takes a nation to the abyss. We hope that the Presidency and its minders take note.

     

    • Erasmus Ikhide,

    Lagos.

     

  • Training for northern youths

    Training for northern youths

    The Federal Government is to train some northern youths in entrepreneurial skills.

    The organiser of the training, tagged: Goodluck Jonathan Empowerment Scheme (GoJES) said the training would stop youths’ idleness.

    Chairman and National Coordinator of GoJES Sylvester Odion said yesterday in Abuja that the training would also help civil society groups reduce youth joblessness.

    He said: “GoJES will produce many young Nigerian entrepreneurs in testimony to the effectiveness of our adopted mode of youth empowerment; and in so doing help give the younger generation a robust sense of acceptance.”