Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • Ijaw youths, group clash over Jonathan’s reelection

    Ijaw youths, group clash over Jonathan’s reelection

    Ijaw youths on Tuesday attacked a South-South group for advising President Goodluck Jonathan to shelve his reelection ambition in 2015.

    A group under the aegis of the Forum of Past Youth Leaders of Ethnic Nationalities in the South-South (FPYLENS) had reportedly asked Jonathan to abandon his ambition to return to Aso Rock in 2015.

    The forum was said to have given the admonition in a statement signed by Alhaji Mumakai Unagha and Ekpo Okon.

    But the forum’s position has drawn the ire of Jonathan’s kinsmen under the aegis of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC).

    The youths dismissed the forum saying the group and persons who signed “the provocative” statement were fictitious and unknown to major stakeholders of the region.

    The youths in a statement signed by their Spokesman, Mr. Eric Omare, said the report was the handiwork of some inconsequential elements looking for recognition ahead of the 2015 general elections.

    “There is no organisation known as Forum of Past Ethnic Nationalities Youth Leaders in the South-South and the signatories are unknown persons as far as youth leadership in the South-South region is concern”, he said.

    He said after perusing the report, the leadership of the IYC consulted with its past leaders and presidents such as Dr. Felix Tuodolor, Alhaji Asari Dokubo, Mr. Jonjon Oyefia, Dr. Chris Ekiyor, Mr. Abiye, T. K. Ogoriba, and others to determine the veracity of the report.

    He said all the prominent leaders in the region said they were not part of the said meeting and that there was no such gathering.

    He reinstated the commitment of the South-South towards the reelection project of the President in 2015.

    He said: “The IYC is in total support of the Jonathan administration and states that the Jonathan 2015 Presidency is a project of the South-South people and the youths of the South-South are irrevocably committed to this project.

    “South-South youths are already mobilising towards the re-election of Dr. Jonathan in 2015 in synergy with other ethnic nationalities in Nigeria.

    “The IYC call on members of the public to disregard the statement purported to have been made by the inconsequential Past South-South Youth Leaders Forum as they do not have the support to organise any anti-Jonathan campaign in any part of the South-South Region”.

  • Chibok girls: North’s elders give October ultimatum

    Chibok girls: North’s elders give October ultimatum

    ‘Jonathan should bring back girls or forget 2015’

    ‘Probe attacks on Buhari, killings of Shi’ite men’

    President Goodluck Jonathan got yesterday an ultimatum  from the North – bring back the Chibok girls and stop Boko Haram or forget 2015.

    The Northern Elders Forum (NEF) issued a deadline – October- for the conditions to be met.

    For over three months, more than 200 girls abducted by the fundamentalist Boko Haram sect have been in captivity. Eleven of their parents have died, following the trauma. The government says it knows where the girls are, but it is being careful not to   do anything that will put their lives at risk.

    The thinking of the elders is that the military can defeat the Boko Haram terrorists – if, indeed, the government wants to subdue to sect.

    “We are convinced that most of these conflicts are being engineered to weaken the North politically and economically by interests which intend to exploit such weaknesses for electoral benefits,” the NEF said yesterday.

    The forum spoke in Kaduna through two of the members, Solomon Dalung, a lawyer and Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed.

    THE NEF said it had just concluded a major review of the state of the nation. It resolved to speak to help resolve current political, economic and security challenges facing the nation, and facilitate the emergence of a more united, secure and prosperous nation out of its present limitations.

    Said the elders: “The security situation in our nation today represents the most serious threat to our individual and collective lives in our entire history. The reality is that the threats posed by what appears to be an insurgency that has many manifestations and defies a clear and consistent identity is growing due to the absence of a clear national consensus over its nature, and it solutions.

    “The lack of a strong will at the level of the Presidency to fight it, as well as deep-seated corruption and incompetence in governments and in the management of our security challenges, has allowed a band of terrorists to take and hold vast parts of our land and populations hostage while every citizen lives in fear that they will be its next victim.

    “We also reject the notion that multiple internal security challenges such as attacks on villages, ethno-religions conflicts

    and banditry springing up by the day in many parts of the North are all a coincidence. Indeed, we are convinced that most of these conflicts are being engineered to weaken the North politically and economically by interests which intend to exploit such weaknesses for electoral benefits.

    “In the light of our firm conviction that the insurgency and related security challenges pose threats to the 2015 elections and the survival of our nation, we strongly advise President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan to bring an end to the insurgency in all its manifestations and produce the Chibok girls before the end of October, 2014.

    “The circumstances under which our fellow citizens in and around Gwoza in Borno State in particular live and die will not be tolerated by  any people who have a government and a leader sworn to defend them, and they must be reversed immediately.”

    If President Jonathan fails to end the insurgency, Nigerians will be left with the only conclusion that he has forfeited his right to ask for their mandate beyond 2015.

    Said the NEF: “The Forum notes that the state of security and economic challenges of the North are deteriorating, in spite of its wealth of leaders and elders who should use their God-given privileges, power and influence to affect a reversal of these dangerous trends. It is no secret that the vast majority of Northerners lament their marginalisation, insecurity and poverty, and blame it in large part on the inability or unwillingness of its past and present leaders to utilise all access to power which they enjoy, to bring us redress and relief. General Yakubu Gowon, Alhaji Shehu Shagari, General Muhammadu Buhari, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, General Abdussalami Abubakar, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, Architect Namadi Sambo, General T.Y Danjuma and all retired Chief Justices of Nigeria from the North represent grossly under-utilised assets of the North.

    “The NEF joins millions of Northerners in appealing to these leaders to raise their levels of involvement in the fortunes of our region in every endeavour or fora they are involved. In these difficult days when every hand must be on deck, if these leaders cannot visibly help to transform the fortunes of the North in the next few months, they will leave northerners with the damaging impression that they have abandoned the region and the people to its seemingly irreversible decline and ultimate destruction.”

    The forum also called on all leaders and political parties to demonstrate highest levels of commitment to the rule of law and the demands of the electoral process. “At all cost, the 2015 elections must be free and fair. This means that any threat which may provide a cover for militarising the electoral process must be eliminated before the elections. Every part of Nigeria must participate in these elections, and no citizen should be deprived of his right to vote under any excuse,” the forum said.

    On the alleged clash between soldiers and Shite members in Zaria, Kaduna State, the NEF called on President Jonathan to set up a Judicial Panel to investigate the incident where over 30 members of the group, including three sons of its leader, were allegedly killed.

    The forum said: “The internal investigations by the military in an event in which soldiers are involved will not meet the minimum standards of fairness and acceptability. The Forum reminds the nation that it was the murder of Muhammad Yusuf by the Nigeria Police in 2009 that formed the major point of escalation in the activities of the group(s) known today under the generic term of Boko Haram.

    “We also call for a thorough investigation into the attempted assassination of General Muhammadu Buhari and Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi, and the publication of the outcome of these investigations.”

  • Polls: Jonathan insists on heavy security

    Polls: Jonathan insists on heavy security

    President Goodluck Jonathan insisted yesterday on continuous heavy deployment of soldiers for elections, despite the heavy criticism of the strategy, which is widely believed to be in favour of the opposition.

    The President also promised that the 2015 elections would not divide the country, saying it will remain stronger.

    He spoke yesterday during Inter-faith Conference in Abuja theme: “The imperative of interfaith understanding and cooperation for responsible politics.”

    At the event, House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Tambuwal,  Sultan of Sokoto Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar III, Catholic Archbishop of Abuja and John Cardinal Onaiyekan.

    Others are former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Mohammed Uwais, Shehu of Borno, Alhaji Mustapha El-Kanemi, Inspector General of Police Suleiman Abba and National Security Adviser (NSA) Col. Sambo Dasuki.

    The President urged Nigerians to disregard the reports in many quarters that there will be trouble next year and that Nigerians cannot live together.

    He said: “Our challenges in the present must not be allowed to inhibit our progress. Despite the fact that we have survived the civil war and continued to evolve as one nation with one destiny, we have among ourselves those who continue to define us and put it that we as Nigerians cannot live together.

    “As the  2015 elections draw near, the doomday sayers are out and predicting how Nigeria is going to catch fire next year. In the opinion of some so-called experts, our ethnic and religious differences are bound to boil over. They portray us doomed to fail.

    “But I can say categorically that Nigeria will not disintegrate; we will not fail. We will surely get over our challenges and become even a stronger nation.”

    Jonathan blamed the Internet and the social media for aggravating the fear of many Nigerians towards 2015, saying: “You will be attempted to think along the same line. In a country of over 170 million people, the opinion of  very few is now being elevated above that of over 100 million Nigerians.

    “I once again assure Nigerians and the international community that the 2015 elections will come and go and Nigeria will stand stronger. The Nigerians I know and interact with every day are only asking for one thing in the election, transparency, free and fair elections – and I have promised them.”

    He added: “They want to vote and want their vote to count; they don’t want to be molested, they don’t want ballot boxes to be hijacked by criminals. If they are convinced that the process is free, fair and credible, they have no reason to be angry. Nobody can fight against one man one vote, one woman one vote and one youth one vote.

    “And government will make sure that Nigerians are not killed during and after elections. I’m surprised that some political parties are agitating  that government should withdraw security during and after elections. What surprise me most is that even some labour leaders are agitating that government should not secure people during elections. And I wonder how short human memories are.

    “We’ve just finished 2011 elections and we are talking about three years ago or quite close to four years ago and we know what happened in Bauchi, about 10 youth corpers were slaughtered in that election. We know what happened in Kano; properties worth millions of naira were destroyed, some of the people have not gotten back their houses.”

    Jonathan went on: “We know what happened in Akwa Ibom where some criminals even had to severe the genitals of some men in the name of politics. Demons who want to hold political office. In that kind of situation, how would a person who called himself a labour leader come out publicly to say government should not secure people. I don’t agree with them. My promise of free and fair elections is clear.

    “All governorship elections that had been conducted so far, you will agree with me have been free and fair. I am from the PDP, the ruling party but I don’t use that strength to make sure that PDP must win always. The PDP has lost election in Edo State, we lost election in Anambra State, we lost election in Ondo State and, of course, only two days back, we have lost election in Osun State.”

    Jonathan added: “But we have said that this country must change. The kind of elections that we had in the 60s that led to the crisis in the West that threatened the sovereignty of this country cannot come up again. The kind of elections we had during the Second Republic that some people won elections as governors and ran away from the state that they claimed elected them, cannot come up again. Nigerians must vote and our vote must count.”

    He said if he was interested in manipulating elections, his party, the PDP would not lose governorship election in any state.

    He said: “All what we want is credible election. I always tell politicians that none our own ambition is worth the blood of any one Nigerian. If anybody wants to be a president, governor, a senator or anything, know that your ambition is not worth the blood of any Nigerian.”

    “How many of us can line up our children and kill them just because we want to be president. Can we use our children for sacrifice because we want to be governors? Why do we want other people’s children to die? Do we politicians think that we are created differently by the Almighty God? “

    “I think we are just privileged to hold the offices we are holding and we must know that, we must make sure that this incessant killings must stop.

    “Responsible politics is the politics of service. Anything short of these attributes makes politics a bad thing and destructive. We must continue to preach this message for people. Politics is all about serving people and if people don’t want you to serve go and stay in your house.

    “Our states are not our private estates. This country is not owned by any individual. If you are called to serve, you serve. If it is not your turn, you leave; whenever it is your time, people will say come and serve at all levels.”

    On the conference, he said: “It is heartwarming that there are people of diverse religious in this conference today. This is for our good; it is a clear demonstration of deep religious tolerance and understanding that have permeated minds of Nigerians out to embrace one another, having realised the need for mutual  tolerance and understanding.”

    “The interfaith initiative, as I understand it, is conceived to be a unifier, it is an avenue for all and sundry to engage with one another constructively, to understand one another, to respect one another and to care for one another.”

    The President praised the organisers for the foresight in convening such a conference on a topical issue that seems to encourage political understanding among religious adherents.

    He pointed out that there are many countries with one religion and still at war with one another.

    “We have seen countries with one single cultural heritage go to war because of minor reason. We are a people created by God and we enjoy the creation. Our country was also possible by Him the Almighty and I am confident that working together we can make our country even a better place for ourselves and our children,” Jonathan said.

    “I will rather that we focus on the mechanism that we have developed by ourselves as we evolved into a viral nation.”

    “Having said this, I do not run away from the fact that we have challenges, just like any other country. I do not deny the fact that there is a reason for people to express fears about our future.

    “Some politicians have been making reckless and irresponsible statements that are capable of stoking tention and inciting people to take laws into their hands and destablise the country. But we have to understand that these statements are not borne out of the genuine reason of mood and temperament of Nigerians. Rather, these enemies of peace are only trying to spoil the mood and create tempetous temperature, but they will fail.”

    “Unfortunately these statement are coming from very senior people. Our elders are making the whole country to boil. From my interactions with so many young Nigerians, just a few days back, I addressed a group of young professionals, the young generation want to live together. They want a better country where they will have the infrastructure – power, good health services, good educational facilities, roads etc. They are not interested in breaking the nation. But those of us who are old mainly from my age and above will continue to breach peace in this country. We are not helping our children at all.”

     

  • President to meet governors, commissioners

    President to meet governors, commissioners

    •‘60 per cent of spread from burials’ 

    President Goodluck Jonathan summoned governors and their health commissioners yesterday for a meeting tomorrow in Abuja on the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

    The President spoke at the second interfaith dialogue in Abuja, organised by the Interfaith Initiative for Peace.

    He cautioned Nigerians against celebrating burials, adding that 60 per cent of Ebola virus is spread during such ceremonies.

    The Federal Government, he said, would continue to secure its borders and airports against the disease.

    Jonathan promised to support state governments that do not have the financial capacity to fight the scourge.

    He said: “Let me appreciate our children who have performed wonderfully well in their presentations and have also raised the issue of Ebola, calling on our religious leaders to stop the Ebola problem. They called on the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar III and John Cardinal Onaiyekan to stop the problem. So, the Sultan and Cardinal Onaiyekan now have challenges. But we will help you.

    “As a government we promise we will do everything possible to contain Ebola. We are doing our best.

    “On Wednesday, I am going to meet with all the governors. They will come with their commissioners of health. We must make sure that every state is prepared. Where they lack (the finance), the Federal Government will support the state to make sure that they have what it takes to contain the Ebola virus.”

    “It is unfortunate that one man brought the Ebola to us. But we have to contain it. This is a good forum that we will use to also plead with our religious leaders because people listen to you more than they listen to politicians.

    “In our various preaching in the mosques and churches, we should communicate clearly. I have been having discussions with people outside and within the country since this incident happened. My conversation with the Director-General of the World Health Organisation (WHO) was quite instructive.

    “She said the spread of Ebola, from analysis so far, 60 per cent of the spread is during burials. That’s you will recall that in our announcement we pleaded that we must be mindful of burials. We are pleading that our people, who believe in some kind of ceremonies and so on, that this is not the best period for those ceremonies.”

    He added: “If somebody dies now, that person should be buried where he died. When we get over this, you can exhume the body, if you want. The government will provide the medical examiner that will help you to exhume the body for you to go and bury the way you want.

    “I am saying so because I have personal experience. In 1971 – I was still in secondary school then – when cholera broke out in my mother’s community.”

     

    Of course, those of us from Southern Nigeria celebrate death. The person who died of cholera happened to be an elderly man. So, they started celebrating him. For days, there was lying-in-state and all that. The whole village was almost wiped out.

    “So, when the Director-General of WHO told me 60 per cent of the spread of Ebola is through burials, we must advise our people not to over-celebrate burials now. The dead should be allowed to bury the dead.”

    Recounting the genesis of the deadly virus in Nigeria, Jonathan said: “Sawyer (a Liberian-American), who brought this Ebola to Nigeria, also contracted it because his sister died of Ebola. He went for the burial and he participated in a way that he became a suspect. The country asked him not to leave so that he would be observed. But the crazy man decided to smuggle himself out and now we are suffering because of it.

    “We are pleading with religious leaders that most of the religious things we do, the traditional things we do, such as the sharing of food and sharing of drinks, unnecessary body contacts and so forth, the spiritual healing homes within this period, let us manage them professionally. Let us listen to the suggestions by professional health workers to save our people.

    If properly managed, the President said, the country will get over the Ebola challenge within two months and Nigerians will return to their normal lives.

    Jonathan said: “Immediately people stop dying, we can go back to our normal lives. Now, if a Nigerian is travelling out of this country and you have ordinary fever, you will be quarantined. The first thing they do is to check the temperature in your ear. Immediately the temperature is high, they will suspect and quarantine you and test you for Ebola before they can release you to join normal people.

    “So, we must work together. We have to sacrifice certain privileges so that we can get out of the Ebola problem as early as possible. Even some of these social media send out all kinds of instructions for people that they should drink salt. Please, don’t drink salt.

    “Taking excess salt is extremely dangerous. If you bath with it, it might not hurt you much. That is why you can bath with salt water in the ocean. But drinking it is extremely dangerous.”

  • Jonathan, Fayemi mourn Ade Ajayi

    Jonathan, Fayemi mourn Ade Ajayi

    •President mourns ex-minister Chike Offodile

    President Goodluck Jonathan and Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi have commiserated with the family of former University of Lagos (UNILAG) Vice Chancellor, Prof Jacob Festus Adeniyi Ajayi, who died on Sunday.

    The President urged “students, friends, associates and colleagues in the field of Nigerian and African history to take solace in the knowledge that in passing on, he leaves behind a body of significant works that will stand to his eternal credit and assure him of a lasting place of honour among Africa’s greatest historians”.

    In a statement yesterday by his Special Adviser to the President

    (Media and Publicity), Dr Reuben Abati, the President reaffirmed “the nation’s enduring gratitude for Prof. Ajayi’s notable contributions over many years to the development of education and educational institutions in Nigeria as a lecturer, professor, Dean, Deputy Vice Chancellor and Vice Chancellor at Federal universities”.

    Jonathan assured the late Prof. Ajayi’s family, relatives, friends and colleagues of the Federal Government’s full solidarity and sympathy “as they mourn the very eminent historian and 1993 winner of the Distinguished Africanist Award”.

    He prayed God Almighty to receive Prof. Ajayi’s gentle soul and grant him eternal rest.

    Jonathan also mourned a former Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Chief Chike Offodile (SAN).

    The President commiserated with the late Offodile’s family, the Obi and people of Onitsha, friends and professional colleagues of the former minister, who also served his community as the Onowu Iyasele of Onitsha.

    He thanked God for the late minister’s “long and fulfilled life in the course of which he distinguished himself in the legal profession and service to his community and fatherland”.

    The nation, Jonathan said, would remain grateful for the late Offodile for his commendable service as a former member of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) and his contributions to the development of the legal profession.

    The President prayed God to grant the late Offodile peaceful eternal rest.

    Dr Fayemi expressed sadness on the death of Emeritus Professor Ade Ajayi.

    In a statement yesterday in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Olayinka Oyebode, the governor described the native of Ikole-Ekiti, Ekiti State, as an intellectual giant whose legacies would continue to benefit many generations to come.

    Fayemi described the late Prof Ade Ajayi as a man of integrity who built a reputation of hard work, honesty and represented the core values of Ekiti State.

    He said the deceased was a great Ekiti ambassador who positively projected the image of the state and Nigeria across the world.

    Fayemi said the renowned historian showed tremendous concern for the growth and development of Ekiti State.

    The governor recalled that his last engagement with the Emeritus Professor of History after the June 21 governorship election in the state showed him as a man of immense wisdom who was always willing to encourage and mentor the younger ones.

    He said the late Prof Ade-Ajayi mentored numerous scholars who have contributed to teaching, learning and research all over the world.

    Fayemi added: “The works of this great scholar in the field of History have become reference points to scholars, researchers, students and the reading public.”

    The governor said the late Prof Ade Ajayi’s tenure as UNILAG vice chancellor recorded unprecedented successes and “remains a reference point in the history of the institution”.

    “On behalf of the government and people of Ekiti State, I send my condolences to the family of this great man and we pray God to grant them the fortitude to bear the loss,” the statement added.

     

  • Jonathan to meet governors, health commissioners

    Jonathan to meet governors, health commissioners

    •‘60% of spread from burials’ 

    President Goodluck Jonathan summoned governors and their health commissioners yesterday for a meeting scheduled for tomorrow in Abuja on the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

    The President spoke at the second interfaith dialogue held in Abuja, organised by the Interfaith Initiative for Peace.

    He cautioned Nigerians against celebrating burials, adding that 60 per cent of Ebola virus is spread during such ceremonies.

    The Federal Government, he said, would continue to secure its borders and airports against the disease.

    Jonathan promised to support state governments that do not have the financial capacity to fight the scourge.

    He said: “Let me appreciate our children who have performed wonderfully well in their presentations and have also raised the issue of Ebola, calling on our religious leaders to stop the Ebola problem. They called on the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar III and John Cardinal Onaiyekan to stop the problem. So, the Sultan and Cardinal Onaiyekan now have challenges. But we will help you.

    “As a government we promise we will do everything possible to contain Ebola. We are doing our best.

    “On Wednesday, I am going to meet with all the governors. They will come with their commissioners of health. We must make sure that every state is prepared. Where they lack (the finance), the Federal Government will support the state to make sure that they have what it takes to contain Ebola virus.”

    “It is unfortunate that one mad man brought the Ebola to us. But we have to contain it. This is a good forum that we will use to also plead with our religious leaders because people listen to you more than they listen to politicians.

    “In our various preaching in the mosques and churches, we should communicate clearly. I have been having discussions with people outside and within the country since this incident happened. My conversation with the Director-General of the World Health Organisation (WHO) was quite instructive.

    “She said the spread of Ebola, from analysis so far, 60 per cent of the spread is during burials. That’s you will recall that in our announcement we pleaded that we must be mindful of burials. We are pleading that our people, who believe in some kind of ceremonies and so on, that this is not the best period for those ceremonies.”

    He added: “If somebody dies now, that person should be buried where he died. When we get over this, you can exhume the body, if you want. The government will provide the medical examiner that will help you to exhume the body for you to go and bury the way you want.

    “I am saying so because I have personal experience. In 1971 – I was still in secondary school then – when cholera broke out in my mother’s community. Of course, those of us from Southern Nigeria celebrate death. The person who died of cholera happened to be an elderly man. So, they started celebrating him. For days, there was lying-in-state and all that. The whole village was almost wiped out.

    “So, when the Director-General of WHO told me 60 per cent of the spread of Ebola is through burials, we must advise our people not to over-celebrate burials now. The dead should be allowed to bury the dead.”

    Recounting the genesis of the deadly virus in Nigeria, Jonathan said: “Sawyer (a Liberian-American), who brought this Ebola to Nigeria, also contracted it because his sister died of Ebola. He went for the burial and he participated in a way that he became a suspect. The country asked him not to leave so that he would be observed. But the crazy man decided to smuggle himself out and now we are suffering because of it.

    “We are pleading with religious leaders that most of the religious things we do, the traditional things we do, such as the sharing of food and sharing of drinks, unnecessary body contacts and so forth, the spiritual healing homes within this period, let us manage them professionally. Let us listen to the suggestions by professional health workers to save our people.

    If properly managed, the President said, the country will get over the Ebola challenge within two months and Nigerians will return to their normal lives.

    Jonathan said: “Immediately people stop dying, we can go back to our normal lives. Now, if a Nigerian is travelling out of this country and you have ordinary fever, you will be quarantined. The first thing they do is to check the temperature in your ear. Immediately the temperature is high, they will suspect and quarantine you and test you for Ebola before they can release you to join normal people.

    “So, we must work together. We have to sacrifice certain privileges so that we can get out of the Ebola problem as early as possible. Even some of these social media send out all kinds of instructions for people that they should drink salt. Please, don’t drink salt.

    “Taking excess salt is extremely dangerous. If you bath with it, it might not hurt you much. That is why you can bath with salt water in the ocean. But drinking it is extremely dangerous.”

  • APC spokesman, Lai Mohammed released from detention

    APC spokesman, Lai Mohammed released from detention

    •Narrates ordeal in the hands of security agents

    National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Alhaji Lai Mohammed, declared  yesterday that his arrest in Osogbo on Friday in  Gestapo Style by hooded security agents was  for no reason than that  he belongs to the opposition.

    He said his harassment demonstrates the level of illegality, lawlessness, anarchy and intolerance to which Nigeria has descended under the watch of President Goodluck Jonathan.  In a statement in Osogbo shortly after he was released, Alhaji Mohammed said he was arrested along with Mr. Sunday Dare, Media Aide to APC National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, and Mr. Afolabi Salisu, Deputy Chief of Staff to Gov. Ibikunle Amosun of Ogun State.

    ‘’We were being driven to the Government House when we were stopped at a military check point by men in military and DSS uniforms, all hooded and armed to the teeth with AK-47 assault rifles, pistols and other weapons. Since there was no curfew in Osun State and people were moving around freely, we felt it was a routine check.

    ‘’Suddenly, the men, some of them apparently drunk, ordered us out of the car, took our phones, pointed their assault rifles at our heads and said ‘you are under arrest’. They herded us into their bus like animals and drove away. There is no doubt that they knew who we are because I introduced myself!

    ‘’From our encounter with our tormentors, there is also no doubt that these were not just soldiers and DSS officials, there were also ex-militants and thugs, all clad in military and DSS uniforms but apparently lacking in any training. We also witnessed how men in military and DSS uniform fired their guns at the gate leading to the residence of Senator Isiaka Adeleke to force it open!

    ‘’We asked them why we were being arrested, but they ignored our question as they drove for close to one hour before veering into a compound that turned out to be the offices of the DSS. There, we met people who had been previously arrested and stripped of their clothing, many of them bloodied from the beatings to which they must have been subjected.

    ‘’We were herded to one side as our tormentors marched around triumphantly, in what could well have been a scene from Ukraine.  We were waiting for our turn to be stripped of our apparels and taken along with those who were arrested earlier to the DSS cells when a man who is apparently a senior DSS official intervened and ordered our release. The men who arrested us, apparently unhappy at the order to set us free, rejected the order, until the man asserted his authority and even accompanied us to where we were arrested.

    ‘’Back there, we discovered that our driver has been badly beaten and even robbed of his personal belongings by the same security agents being paid by the taxpayers to protect the citizens, whose ranks have now been swelled, willingly, by thugs and ex-militants, armed and dressed in official uniforms by the PDP and sanctioned by the Jonathan-led Federal Government!

    ‘’This arrest is not about Lai Mohammed, Sunday Dare or Afolabi Salisu, whoever we may be, but about the constitutionally-guaranteed rights of Nigerians, ordinary Nigerians, to move around freely, associate with any party of their choice and express their opinions without being molested or arrested.

    ‘’The way and manner we were harassed, arrested and dehumanised on Friday night show that Nigerian citizens can no longer be sure that the security agents they encounter on the roads or anywhere else are well-trained and highly-disciplined men and women in the military, police, DSS and others that we used to know. What we have now are Jonathan’s soldiers, policemen and DSS officials who have since stopped working for the nation but are now the enforcement arm of the PDP.”

    Alhaji Mohammed said  that even as he was putting down his own ordeal in writing  scores of other APC leaders and supporters were still being  harassed and arrested across Osun State especially in Ifelodun Local Government Ward 10, Atakumosa East Local Government and Ife East Local Government, Okerewe Wards 2 and 3.

    ‘’Our party, the APC, has no doubt whatsoever that the depravity being exhibited under President Jonathan’s watch, in the name of politics, has his imprimatur. We have no doubt that elections, which should be a celebration of democracy, have now been turned to war because of the desperation of President Jonathan to win re-election at all costs. We have no doubt that the anarchic Minister of State for Defence and Minister of Police Affairs, who are leading the ‘’troops’’ in Osun as they did in Ekiti, are taking their cue from President Jonathan,” he said.

     

     

    He wondered why those Ministers could move around freely in Osun and elsewhere, while other Nigerians, irrespective of the party they belong to are denied the same right.

  • Jonathan advocates removal of age limit for youths

    Jonathan advocates removal of age limit for youths

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan has advocated for the removal of the constitutional age limit of 40 years for a Nigerian to become president.

    Jonathan described the provision as discriminatory against young Nigerians with the energy, ideas and other qualities to lead the country to greatness.

    Jonathan spoke at an International Youth Conference organised by the Nigerian Young Professionals Forum (NYPF) with the theme, “Capacity for change for a new Nigeria’’ yesterday in Abuja.

    He challenged the youths to forward a constitution amendment bill to the National Assembly for the removal of all discriminatory provisions in terms of age and promised to support them.

    The president said the call by the Chairman and Founder of NYPF, Mr. Moses Siasia, for 35 per cent affirmative action for youths in governance also limited the aspiration of the group.

    He noted that asking for a percentage amounted to self-limitation, considering that youths had all that is required to govern, especially the numerical strength to get to the highest office in the land.

    “The youths have no limit in terms of number and capacity to lead this country to greatness.

    “The only limit is that for youths to contest as president, they need to be 40.

    “If Gen. Yakubu Gowon was able to rule this country at 32, there is no reason why the youths should not be given the chance.

    “So, don’t ask for percent because by that request you are limiting yourselves.

    “I think what the youth should do now is to come together and I will support you, and take a bill to the National Assembly to amend some discriminatory provisions of the constitution in terms of age,’’ Jonathan stated.

    He pledged the continued support of his administration to youths through policies and programmes that would continue to harness their huge potential for national development.

    He said through schemes such as YouWin, SURE-P, Graduate Internship Scheme and the Community Service Programme, his administration would continue to create opportunities for young people.

    He stated that youths deserve encouragement because they were the ones winning laurels and making the country proud in sports and other international competitions.

    “These programmes and many more we are doing to make sure we give opportunities to our young people because we appreciate the young people; they have made this country proud.

    “I always say that whenever you read newspapers, watch television or listen to the radio, those who preach hate, quarrel and try to divide us on the basis of ethnicity and religion are not the young people but grandfathers.

    “The youths live with whomever they are comfortable with regardless of ethnic or religious affiliation; they want to marry whomever they love.

    “They are not like those old people who are disturbing us, who want to divide us based on religion and all kinds of sentiments.

    “But listening to you here gives me hope that this country is beginning to change, and it is changing for the better,’’ Jonathan said.

  • History and moral of  constitution making in Nigeria

    History and moral of constitution making in Nigeria

    Next Monday, the National Conference will reconvene for the final consideration and signing of its report. The prospect that the conference will have a happy ending looks rather bleak. And the reason is the same old one that has marred virtually every constitutional conference in the country since 1966; a dubious hidden agenda of self-service by the conveners.

    When President Goodluck Jonathan made a U-turn from his long-held rejection of a constitutional conference and suddenly announced early this year that he would convene one, there were widespread scepticisms, even cynicism, about his decision. Many, including this reporter, concluded it was to divert public attention away from his dismal performance and, at the same time, execute a Machiavellian sectional and self-succession agenda against the foreground of next year’s presidential election.

    Once again, it seemed the lesson that no such hidden agenda has succeeded since 1966 when the country’s first military regime sought to perpetuate itself, has been lost on those in power.

    Back in 1966, the first military Head of State, Maj.-Gen. JTU Aguiyi-Ironsi, set up a Constitutional Study Group under the late Chief Rotimi “The Law” Williams barely a month after he came to power in January. However, even before the panel could settle down to study anything, the general took the unwise advice of a power-hungry cabal he had surrounded himself with and promulgated the Unification Decree in May, which turned the country into a unitary state under his jackboots. This led to his overthrow and assassination in July.

    Col. Yakubu Gowon, who took over, set up an Ad Hoc Conference on Constitutional Proposals, essentially to manage the crisis of his succession in the face of strong objections from Col. Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, the military governor of Eastern Nigeria, who was nominally his senior. The conference ended in a fiasco in Aburi, Ghana, with each side accusing the other of bad faith in implementing its decisions.

    The disagreement eventually led to a three-year civil war that ended in 1970. After that Gowon announced he would end military rule in 1976. He changed his mind in 1974 when he not only said in the year’s Independence Day broadcast on October 1 that 1976 was “unrealistic”. He also failed to give a new date that was realistic.

    This led to his overthrow in July 1975. In his first Independence Day broadcast on October 1, the new Head of State, Brig. Murtala Mohammed, announced a five-item, four-year transition programme, the central pillar of which was a new constitution for the country. In February 1976, some disgruntled elements in the Army tried to overthrow his regime but failed. However, they succeeded in assassinating him.

    Despite this assassination, the new regime headed by Lt.-Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo kept faith with Gen. Mohammed’s transition programme and ended 13 years of military rule by handing over power to civilians on October 1, 1979. However, this was not before it had executed its own agenda of changing the country’s constitution from the parliamentary model bequeathed to it by its British colonial masters to an American-type presidential model in which the centre became all-powerful.

    The wisdom of this change, intended to check the country’s old centrifugal tendencies, has since become debatable. As Prof. Ben Nwabueze, SAN, the country’s foremost constitutional lawyer, who also played  a central role in drafting the 1979 Constitution said in a recent interview in Sunday Vanguard (March 20), this change seems to have led to the exact opposite of the framers’ good intentions.

    “We took 50 per cent of the concurrent list of matters (in the old constitution) and merged them to the exclusive list,” he said. “We also went to the residual matters, took almost 50 per cent and put it in the exclusive list. We took so many other things…It turned out that putting so much power at the centre was an invitation to disunity…The struggle for control of the centre with all that power led to disunity.”

    Whether the change was wise or not, the new presidential system under President Shehu Shagari lasted only 51 months. His ruling National Party of Nigeria (NPN) boasted that there were only two parties in the country; NPN and the military. Meaning, it could never lose any election to its civilian opposition. It went on to gratuitously rig the 1983 election – chances then were that it could still have won fair and square – so massively the military felt compelled to pick up its gauntlet as the only opposition party and threw it out on December 31, 1983, barely three months into its second term.

    The regime of Maj.-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, which took over from Shagari, said initially that a return to civil rule was not its priority. Less than two years after he came to power, he was overthrown by his army chief, Maj.-Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, in a bloodless palace coup in August 1985.

    Babangida, in turn, ran the longest transition programme in the country’s history and in the end was forced to “step aside” in August 1993, leaving behind his army chief, Gen. Sani Abacha, ostensibly to back up the interim government of Chief Ernest Shonekan he had cobbled together to remedy the huge constitutional crisis his inexplicable cancellation of the June 12, 1993 presidential election, apparently won by Chief MKO Abiola, had created.

    Instead of backing up Shonekan, Abacha obliged very convenient calls from several so-called progressives for the overthrow of what they dubbed Babangida’s “contraption”, and sent the former UAC mogul packing in November 1993. But rather than hand over power to Abiola, as the “progressives” foolishly believed he would, the man predictably kept the power to himself.

    Five years after he overthrew Shonekan, the man tried to perpetuate himself by swapping his khaki for mufti through a political sleight of hand in which all the five parties his electoral commission had registered in the course of his transition programme, nominated him as their presidential candidate. However, before any election could hold, the man died a mysterious death.

    He was succeeded by his Chief of Defence Staff, Lt.-Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar, who, ironically, he had pencilled down for sack on the day he (Abubakar) became the head of state. Wisely, the new head of state refrained from stretching his luck and ran the shortest transition programme in the country’s history, lasting only 11 months; dutifully he handed over power on May 29, 1999 to a civilianised Gen. Obasanjo after he was pardoned for his conviction over a coup attempt against Abacha for which he served several years of a life sentence commuted from death sentence, and after he had won the presidential ticket of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which was essentially a two-horse race against Shagari’s deputy, Dr. Alex Ekwueme.

    Obasanjo served out his two terms of four years each, but soon forgot the lesson of his regime’s good faith during his first outing as the military head of state in 1976; he sought a third term half way through his second. Not only that, reminiscent of  NPN’s boast during the Second Republic, his party said it would rule Nigeria for the next 50 years, if not forever.

    Obasanjo’s third term agenda failed so miserably that today virtually all those who aided and abetted him have been denouncing him. Surprisingly (?) the loudest denunciation has come from his one-time Minister of Information and Political Adviser, Prof. Jerry Gana, a permanent resident in the country’s corridors of power.

    His former principal’s Constitutional Conference of 2005 came to grief, Gana said in an interview in Daily Sun (April 16), because the man was “greedy”! “I was,” he said, “the political adviser at the time and I happened to be one of the conveners…But just because of the issue of third term, which was not part of what we recommended, Obasanjo abandoned the whole thing. It was irresponsible, it was not proper, it was unfair…It was painful; it was an act of greed.”

    This, Gana said in the interview, which I am not aware he has repudiated, was something President Jonathan has assured Nigerians he would not contemplate with his own National Conference. “This president,” he said, “has said no Nigerian must come back and do this again. He told us…by the Grace of God this time round your recommendations will be implemented.”

    Gana is not alone among President Jonathan’s men who say they believe in his good faith. Senator Femi Okurounmu, hitherto a champion of Sovereign National Conference and chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee which recommended the shape and circumscribed terms of reference of the current National Conference, is another.

    “I think,” he said in an interview in the New Telegraph (March 17), “this administration, in all fairness, has tried to show it has no hidden agenda and I can say that as the chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee on National Conference that if the government has a hidden agenda, I would be privy to it.”

    As we all now know, the newspapers have since given the lie, a big, big lie, to repeated denials by the president’s men that he had no hidden agenda in convening his own National Conference.  A 102-page document with presidential imprimatur written all over it, has since surfaced at the conference purporting to be the “Terms of Agreement of the Six Geo-political Zones in Nigeria.” This was reminiscent of the document Obasanjo’s men tried unsuccessfully to sneak into his 2005 conference in order to give him a third term.

    As with Obasanjo’s document, this one too has come with malicious intent towards one section of the country. It also contained the six-year, single-term tenure we all know is so very dear to our president.

    If I have bored you with this longish recap of the history of constitution making in the country since 1966, I am terribly sorry. But I thought the recap was necessary to make its moral apparent; virtually every constitutional conference in this country has come with a hidden agenda by its convener and virtually all of them have come to grief.

    I have no doubt in my mind that as members of the current one reconvene next Monday, this too shall come to pass because it too was never convened in good faith.

     

  • Era of elections’ manipulation gone forever, says Jonathan

    Era of elections’ manipulation gone forever, says Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday declared that the days when a few politicians can hijack voters cards and other electoral materials and manipulate the outcome of elections to their personal advantage are gone forever in Nigeria.

    He made the remark, according to a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, while speaking at a meeting with Nigerian professionals in Washington DC in the United States of America.

    Jonathan stressed that he remained fully committed to keeping the promise he made in 2011 that he will do everything possible to ensure that the elections in Nigeria become very free, fair and credible.

    The President assured the gathering that in keeping with that pledge which has been fulfilled in recent elections in Edo, Ondo and Ekiti States, the Federal Government will take all necessary steps to ensure that no individual, group or political party is able to thwart the legitimate choice of genuine voters in Saturday’s governorship election in Osun State.

    He saiud: “The issue of credible elections must be institutionalised in Nigeria. Our electoral processes were not very good or credible when we came into office, but as I promised, we have been working very hard to change things and ensure that our elections are more credible, that every legitimate vote counts and that results are acceptable to the electorate.”

    “I promise you that the Osun governorship elections will be very free, fair and credible,” he added

    Responding to other concerns raised by the Nigerian professionals, the President said that the Federal Government will continue to give the highest possible priority to policies and programmes that will lead to the creation of enough jobs for Nigerian youth.

    “Job creation is a challenge to every government in the world. We are doing all that we can to tackle the problem in Nigeria because we know that we have a very youthful population and if we do not create enough jobs to meet their needs, the country will be in trouble,” he said.

    He also spoke of his administration’s efforts to improve standards and access to educational institutions in Nigeria, address the national housing deficit and further empower women.

    The President thanked Nigerian professionals abroad for the patriotic support for his government and urged them to continue to show love and concern for the well-being of their fatherland.

    He said: “We expect you continue to add more value to what we are doing and we will continue to engage your services and expertise when we can, because if we do not, the valuable education and skills you have acquired will be of no benefit to the development of our country,”

    The President later received and commended young Nigerians who are participating in the Washington Fellowship for Young African Leaders, a leadership programme sponsored by the United States government to train young African professionals in American universities, government departments and private sector.

    Out of the 500 places on the programme, 45 were won by young Nigerians in a competitive selection process.