Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • For Osun, for democracy, for Nigeria

    For Osun, for democracy, for Nigeria

    At was interesting how President Goodluck Jonathan and his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) flexed their muscles on the hustings at Osogbo, on August 2: the  sheriff is in town; opposition, dive for cover!

    Sure, the president was all sanctimonious about security agencies enforcing free and fair elections.  But if the Ekiti model is anything to go by, hardly anyone is fooled.

    Still, it is instructive: the eerie parallel between the build-up to August 9 and the 14 April 2007 Osun governorship election; which the PDP stole and was only retrieved after three long years of fierce legal battle.

    A few days to that 2007 election, under President Olusegun Obasanjo’s do-or-die electoral charter, soldiers staged an intimidating drill, on Gbongan road in Osogbo.  Viewed from the then Action Congress (AC) Candidate Rauf Aregbesola’s four-storey Oranmiyan House campaign headquarters, the drill snaked for no less than one mile, a swash-buckling manoeuvre clearly designed to shock and awe.

    A few days to August 9, under President Goodluck Jonathan’s electoral militarisation diktat, men of the Department of State Security (DSS) have staged a similar drill, some of them hooded, firing into the air to scare people.

    Are men bearing legal arms allowed under the law to wear hoods?  Then, the wanton shooting — is it allowed, and under what circumstances?

    Just as well, even with cracking gunshots, some partisans still trooped out, shouting party slogans and waving party symbols — in clear defiance of a perceived federal pacification force.

    Back in 2007, no less than 12 lost their lives in election-related violence, in perhaps the most egregiously rigged election in Nigerian history.  Back then, the federal fist of mail could not stop — but merely looked away from — the vote robbers, in their widespread criminality on election day.

    Still, the PDP lost the election.  It would take three long years to prove it: and in those years, mandate thieves unleashed a reign of terror: the hideous rape of an Ilesa secondary school girl; the murder, at an Ilesa fuel station, of a local industrialist; the military occupation and pacification of Ilesa and Osogbo, for daring to protest brazen electoral robbery; and the routine trotting, into the Ilesa gaol house, of opposition leaders on trumped up charges, for the simple reason they were the teeth of the legal challenge to the electoral steal.

    Another parallel: after that electoral heist, Ebenezer Babatope, the famed Ebino Topsy and PDP chieftain, claimed that while AC won in urban centres, PDP won in rural areas, in a crass revisionism of the electoral trend of the Obafemi Awolowo days.  The snag was: Osun is a state of big towns, the largest conglomeration of urban centres in the whole of Yorubaland.

    Of course, the same Ebino is already talking of Mr. Omisore “surprising” Governor Aregbesola on August 9.

    But on what basis might he do that: superior articulation of electoral manifesto?  Superior record of meritorious public service than the governor’s?  A PDP superior record of performance, both in Osun or at the federal level?  Or just a hoped-for federal might’s guarantee to fiddle the vote?

    Still, no crime: everyone has a democratic licence to choose their heroes!

    Mr. Omisore, the PDP candidate allegedly boasted to rural folks during his campaign that non-Yoruba but uniformed goons would flood Osun during the election to aid his cause, suggesting such goons would be part of his federal armada.

    For all you know, that could well be empty bluff and  bluster.  Still, it is worrisome that the DSS shooting ensemble involved some hooded folks.  Is this a sinister confirmation of Mr. Omisore’s alleged boast?

    Besides, DSS raided TSN/RSM office in Lagos.  A few days later, the marketing research firm released figures of a study that suggests Governor Aregbesola would win by 73% and Mr. Omisore would trail with 19% of the votes.

    Between these two events, the Omisore camp had, through text messages and other means, circulated a claim that a USAID poll had given Mr. Omisore the lead with 58%, with Governor Aregbe credited with 30%.

    This claim, however, is a bare-faced lie, as USAID has disowned the purported poll.  “No USAID poll was taken in Osun,” Premium Times quoted Rhonda Watson, acting public affairs officer of the US Consulate in Lagos, as saying.  Brainless lying, yet again, from the Omisore camp!

    Now, why would DSS invade the premises of a private marketing research firm doing legitimate business?  Some intelligence suggesting subversion?  Conducting polls is now a crime? Or just part of the Omisore-threatened federal bully tactics?

    The federal authorities should provide answers and fast.  Otherwise, they face legitimate charge of trying to rig the election.

    Still, mum is it from the camp of Prof. Attahiru Jega, the INEC chairman.  Prof. Jega had defended the security over-kill in Ekiti, blissfully forgetting soldiers’ harassment of Rivers Governor Rotimi Amaechi and other APC partisans, while other PDP partisans had unimpeded passage, even if two, Jelili Adesiyan, Police Affairs minister and Musiliu Obanikoro, Defence minister of state, had clear motives to put the state organs under their charge to partisan uses.

    Even if voting appears “free” on election day, it couldn’t pass as fair — and ultimately free — if the process leading to it was crooked.  That is the point INEC should address, and make itself heard in the run-up to August 9, instead of clinging to the sophistry of soldiers not impeding physical voting, even if they were complicit in mass arrest of opposing leaders, as they did in Ekiti; and as Mr. Omisore is allegedly threatening they would do in Osun.

    Between Aregbesola and Omisore, the choice for Ripples is very simple.  Every politician claims popularity; but right-thinking members of society know, between the two, who is popular and who is well and truly notorious.

    But if the Omisore camp can lie that USAID conducted a poll that never was, have a straight face to insist on that blatant lie even after USAID had dismissed that claim, and thereafter go ahead to try, sour-grape wise, to discredit the TNS/RMS poll which suggested Mr. Omisore would be guillotined, you could clearly see the manifest villainy of the Omisore ticket.  But that is left for the Osun voters to decide.

    Still, it is well and truly tragic that post-Awolowo Yorubaland would suffer gladly the foolery of an Omisore candidature, even as a local government councillor!  Yet, Ayo Fayose (Ekiti) and Iyiola Omisore (Osun) are Goodluck Jonathan’s model Yoruba leaders!  Indeed, only the deep can call to the deep!

    Beyond candidate preferences, however, a free and fair Osun poll, both on the day as well as regarding processes leading to it, is a vote for Osun, a vote for democracy and a vote for Nigeria.

    Nigeria badly miscarried when its earliest rulers killed democracy; and the succeeding soldier-politicians also slaughtered, on the altar of political poison, the military as a credible and respected national institution.

    A further smashing of democracy, ala a brazen steal at Osun, may well complete Nigeria’s unravelling process.  That would be tragic, indeed.

  • APC chieftain slams Jonathan

    APC chieftain slams Jonathan

    Former Edo State All Progressives Congress (APC) Legal Adviser Semwengie Osaro has slammed President Goodluck Jonathan for the militarisation of Osun State.

    Osaro was reacting to the President’s comments last Saturday that Osun will be militarised before, during and after Saturday’s governorship election.

    He said: “When the President spoke at the mega rally of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Osogbo, I was not bordered by the PDP’s threats to win or rig the governorship election because I know the APC is fully on ground and any attempt to rig the election will lead to political anarchy.

    “I urge Osun people to refuse to be intimidated, come out in large numbers to vote and stay behind to monitor the results to the points of announcement. They must defend their votes because the people’s power will speak clearly come Saturday. Jonathan boasted last Saturday, but we are warning him not to create a war he can win.”

     

  • Jonathan for US-African leaders Summit in Washington

    Jonathan for US-African leaders Summit in Washington

    President Goodluck Jonathan is scheduled to depart Abuja today for Washington, DC, to participate in a three-day United States-African Leaders Summit to be hosted by President Barack Obama.

    About 49 other African leaders have been invited to the summit which the President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, said will lead to greater progress in key areas such as expanding trade and investment ties, promoting inclusive sustainable development and expanding cooperation on peace and security.

    Besides three special sessions on “Investing in Africa’s Future”, “Peace and Regional Stability” and “Governing the Next Generation”, the summit will also feature side-events such as the United States-Africa Business Forum which has the objectives of boosting efforts to strengthen trade and financial ties between the United States and Africa, creating partnerships that will  accelerate job creation, and encouraging even more  American investments in Nigeria and other African countries, Abati said.

    Jonathan is also scheduled to hold meetings in Washington with key United States political, security and business leaders on the sidelines of the summit to discuss the further expansion of bilateral cooperation between Nigeria and the United States in other areas including the war against terrorism.

    The President will be accompanied on the visit by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Aminu Wali, the Coordinating Minster of the Economy and Minister of Finance, Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the Minister of Trade and Investment, Dr. Olusegun Aganga, the Minister of Power, Prof. Chinedu Nebo, and the National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd.)

    He will return home at the conclusion of the summit on Wednesday.

  • Danagogo assures athletes on presidential reward

    Danagogo assures athletes on presidential reward

    The minister of sports and  chairman of the National Sports Commission, Tammy Danagogo, has assured Nigerian athletes to the 2014 Commonwealth Games of a glorious reception and reward by President Goodluck Jonathan for their achievements in Glasgow.

    Speaking with journalists before the closing of the games, Danagogo described Nigeria’s participation as an “excellent experience” and hailed the athletes for their efforts.

    “It has been an excellent experience. We entered just about seven sports and we have gotten a respectable haul of medals. We have discovered new talents, especially in Ese Brume, in athletics, and other young persons in other sports like weightlifting and wrestling. Our elite athletes like Blessing Okagbare have also distinguished themselves as world class. We have broken and set new records. Boxing which has not won medals for quite some time has now recovered and won medals in this games. We have seen a number of local athletes that we can work with and rely on to emerge world class, going forward. Nigeria is standing tall in the games and other African countries which have not done so well here have taken pride in us. Apart from the unfortunate weight reduction mistake by the young weightlifter,  we have represented our country and Africa well and I am very positive that Mr. President, Goodluck Jonathan, will be well pleased to receive the the athletes with more rewards and honour for all the medalists. We have paid the athletes their allowances and winning bonuses but that is not all. That is only from the point of the sports ministry. It is common knowledge that Mr. President loves sports and has established a tradition of rewarding and honouring athletes that bring glory to Nigeria. Not only for the Commonwealth medalists. As a matter of fact, Mr. President has asked after the handball team and other national teams that won laurels in various major international competitions during the year. So, we are re-submitting a memo to this effect, proposing an event for the president to receive and honour them.”

    According to the minister, the performance of Nigerian athletes at the games indicate that the sports transformation agenda as articulated in the development programmes of the ministry is on course.

    “The Glasgow Games shows that our sports development programme is working. The road map is to develop our grassroots sports to provide us a steady stream of new athletes and maintain established ones. We also have to develop and constantly improve on our mechanisms and strategies to raise the required funds for the training and welfare of athletes, retraining of coaches and development and maintenance of facilities. Deriving from our experience and the lessons we have learnt in this competition here, we may also be bid to host one of these major events but we will immediately bring this experience to bear in the organisation of the coming National Sports Festival in Calabar.”

     

    ON CHIKA AMALAHA DRUG CASE

    Danagogo described the weight reduction drug used incident by Chika Amalaha as an unfortunate mistake borne out of naivity but insists that the matter must be investigated and culprits brought to book.

    “The Chika Amalaha issue gives me mixed feelings because I saw her perform at the Africa Youth Games in Botswana. She lifted the same weight and they also tested her and the result was negative. I asked her a few questions and she said she was sixteen and in the first year in the university. So, we resolved at the ministry level that we will sponsor her to Europe to develop her game. It is unfortunate that she dabbled into what she did. She looks innocent but must have made a mistake. I understand that she was slightly overweight two weeks before the games. She admitted to me that she used the drug to shed some weight. She was naive, innocent and apparently ignorant but the coaches and officials did not do the right thing. Thankfully, the sanctioning body did not say anything about punishment. They withdrew the gold medal and suspended her from the games. They saw that she is a minor and may not have set out on her own to do what she did. So, who gave her the drugs?  We will investigate further back in Nigeria.  The coaching crew and anti-doping officials must be probed. We have an anti-doping unit in the sports ministry and if the coach is saying she is not aware the anti-doping unit should be.  It is disappointing and embarrassing that the anti-doping unit didn’t know. We will investigate and mete severe punishment to those who may be involved or who didn’t do their job to serve as a deterrent and for the embarrassment. If we go to competition and we don’t win, so be it, but when we win, it must be fair and clean. We have suffered damages to our national image and we cannot afford further battering of our reputation. If we don’t investigate we will not be doing our country any good.”

     

    ON ALLEGED IMPORTED ATHLETES

    On the controversy that trailed the inclusion of Mark Jelks, Edwards Mazavous and other hitherto unknown athletes in the Nigerian contingent, the minister revealed that he has engaged the AFN president, Solomon Ogba, on the issue but  pointed out that it is a fifty-fifty call between the explanations of the athletics officials and the claims of the protesters but he did not stop them becsuse he did not want to unduly disrupt the arrangements that were on ground for the games before he came in as minister.

    “I have told the leadership of the federations about my preference for local coaches and athletes. They can be trained to match their foreign counterparts and become world beaters. I first met the athletes at the offshore camp and I have engaged the president of the AFN on the suspected foreign athletes and he told me they are Nigerians resident abroad and that the arrangement to bring them had been concluded before I came in as minister in March. I do not react to an issue until I have studied it and known the facts and I did not stop them because I didn’t have the complete facts to stop them, more so, I didn’t want to disrupt their the programmes and plans of the federations. But, what this has shown is that our salvation does not lie in these imports. If these imports were the best, America will not allow them to leave. America has the money to pay them to stay and the environment to keep them. We as a ministry have learnt our lessons. Athletics did well in the games and with other sports, all the athletes who gave us medals are local breeds and those who went from local for foreign exposure. It emphasises the need for us to invest more on our local talents.”

     

  • Jonathan’s problematic  Chibok cash gift

    Jonathan’s problematic Chibok cash gift

    NO, it has not been proved beyond a shadow of doubt that the Goodluck Jonathan presidency gave cash gifts to parents of abducted Chibok schoolgirls and over 50 of the girls who escaped from Boko Haram captivity last April. But there are indications, contrary to presidential aides’ denial, that over N20m was given to the recipients after they met with the president in Abuja recently. The gift has become unfortunately controversial, just like the visit itself which came both after one embarrassing false start and the refusal of the president to visit the afflicted town of Chibok to commiserate with parents of more than 200 schoolgirls abducted by Boko Haram militants since April 15. Chibok, it is apparent, has become a jinx to the Jonathan presidency, and an emblem to the president’s impotence.

    The initial report was that a whopping N100m was actually given to President Jonathan’s Chibok guests. But presidential aides, for reasons known only to them, vehemently denied any cash gift was given to anyone, warning that the visit should neither be trivialised nor politicised. A few days later, there was a rebuttal of the president’s denial. One such rebuttal sounded quite credible. According to Dauda Iliya, spokesperson of the Kibaku Area Development Association (KADA), the group representing the Chibok people in Abuja, the delegation that visited the President Jonathan actually received some money, not as a group, but as individuals. And the distribution of the money, he pointed out, was done by a presidential aide.

    Mr Iliya, who when he addressed the press looked greatly mortified by the turn of events, recounted: “On the night of the 22nd July, 2014 at about midnight, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Special Duties who had been coordinating the visit on the side of the presidency, visited the hotel and told the 51 escaped girls who came that the President sent them a token of N100,000 each and accordingly gave them the said sum without prior discussion with any KADA official or any other person in the community.

    “He equally gave the sum of N200,000 each to 61 parents out of the 122 parents that came on the visit. 51 parents were given N100,000 each on the basis that the money given to him was not enough to go round at N200,000. The remaining 10 parents were not given any amount of money. As for the money given to some parents back home in Chibok, it was the sum of N1,000,000 given to them by the Hon member of the House of Reps representing Chibok/Damboa/Gwoza Federal Constituency, which is the source of the alleged N7,000 given to parents in Chibok who were not part of the visit.”

    Now that Mr Iliya has spoken in specifics, unlike the waffly account that issued from the presidency, it is hoped presidential aides will find the good grace and honour to revise their own side of the story and come clean. Right from the start of the abductions, the presidency, which is unused to complex challenges and is often chastened by tasking assignments, has behaved most desultorily, unprofessionally and unstatesmanlike. President Jonathan wouldn’t visit Chibok to meet with grieving parents whose children have now spent more than 100 days in captivity, can’t make up his mind whether to storm the abductors’ hideout or to negotiate with Boko Haram, and suffers from the most hideous and numbing paralysis ever.

    Had the electorate in these parts not been as ignorant and inoculated against reason as they obviously are, they would require very little push to unhorse President Jonathan in 2015 and rid the country of an enervated and misdirected presidency far worse than what the country witnessed under the hedonistic Gen Sani Abacha of infamous memory.

  • Boko Haram embarrassment will soon end, says Jonathan

    Boko Haram embarrassment will soon end, says Jonathan

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan yesterday said that the embarrassment the Boko Haram’s deadly attacks is causing the nation will soon come to an end in the next few months.

    He made the remark when he paid homage to the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade at Ile-Ife in Osun State.

    Jonathan was in the state for the mega rally of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, Senator Iyiola Omisore for the August 9 governorship election in the State.

    Stressing that the insurgency would soon be rooted out of the country, he described members of the Boko Haram sect as rascals.

    According to him, his government was committed to building very strong security agencies to deal with the current security challenges.

    He said: “There are certain things we should have done as a government but because of the situation in the country, we have not been able to do much of them.

    “The kind of embarrassment we are receiving now will never continue in this country.

    “We want to build a very strong army, the Nigeria Police and the Navy and the Air Force so that these rascals called Boko Haram will never stop us because we will surely rout Boko Haram.

    “We are very committed. In the next few months, no criminals will ever embarrass us again in this country”.

    He was optimistic that Omisore will work with the federal government to bring development to the state if he becomes governor of Osun State.

    The Ooni said the people in the South West and Osun State in particular needed a better feel of federal government’s presence in the key areas of Jonathan’s transformation agenda.

    “For instance, in the area of agricultural sector, cocoa farming which is the main stay of the economy of southwest deserves better attention.

    “In the aviation sector, it would be appreciated if the ongoing upgrading of the Ibadan airport is completed.

    “In the transportation sector, it is high time our railway system was expanded to link the southwest with the southeast through Akire, Owo and Benin,” he stated.

    Jonathan also paid homage to the Ataoja of Osogbo, Oba Jimoh Olanipekun.

  • National Conference loses another delegate

    National Conference loses another delegate

    DELEGATES at the National Conference have lost another member.

    Professor Muhammad Nur Alkali, who was one of the six delegates on the platform of the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (SCIA), died in Maiduguri, Borno last Friday at 68.

    His demise brings to four the number of delegates that passed on in the course of the almost five- month Conference expected to be concluded on August 11.

    The Conference that was initially planned for three months has been on break since July 14 having concluded considerations and adoption of its 20 Committee reports.

    The Conference was inaugurated on 17th March 2014 by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    A statement by the Assistant Secretary, Media and Communications, Akpandem James, said the Conference Chairman, Justice Idris Kutigi was devastated by the sad news.

    It reads: ‘The Secretariat of the National Conference on Saturday morning received with great grief the sad news of the demise of Professor Muhammad Nur Alkali, who was one of the six delegates representing the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (SCIA) at the 2014 National Conference in Abuja.

    “Professor Alkali died in his residence in Maiduguri on the night of Friday, August 1, 2014. He was 68 years old.

    A Professor of History and two-term Vice Chancellor of the University of Maiduguri (1985 – 1992), the late Alkali was Director General of the Nigeria Institute of Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS) and Chairman, Presidential Advisory Committee under the administration of General Sani Abacha.

    “More recently, he was a member of the Committee on Insecurity in the North East (The Boko Haram Committee)

    “Justice Kutigi prays the Almighty receives his spirit and grants his soul sweet repose.”

  • Adamawa: PDP woos Ribadu

    Adamawa: PDP woos Ribadu

    There is pressure on former Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Chairman Nuhu Ribadu to join the Adamawa governorship race on the ticket of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The pressure on Ribadu is coming from PDP Muazu and party chief.

    Besides some presidential aides, including a top official close to President Goodluck Jonathan, and some businessmen who have the President’s ears, have been pleading with Ribadu to accept PDP’s ticket.

    A peaceful march has been fixed for tomorrow in Yola by some PDP leaders and stakeholders to demand Ribadu as the party’s next governorship candidate.

    But the ex-EFCC chairman, a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), has not accepted the PDP’s overtures.

    The PDP is desperate to give him a waiver and make him its candidate.

    It was gathered that the PDP is after Ribadu to “pull the carpet off the feet of APC” which may benefit from sympathy votes to compensate for Nyako’s impeachment.

    Ribadu “credibility” is said to have attracted the PDP.

    It was learnt that one of the permutations of the PDP is to use the “snatching of Ribadu” to checkmate the influence of a former Vice-President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, who is still keen on contesting the presidential race in 2015.

    In line with the agenda to whittle down the influence of APC in Adamawa State, the Acting Governor, Umaru Fintiri, has forced all local government chairmen to rejoin PDP and all APC chairmen and secretaries in most local governments are being lured back to the ruling party.

    Muazu, some principal aides to the President, some businessmen, who are friends of the President, and some respected stakeholders from Adamawa have met with Ribadu in the last two weeks.

    A source in the PDP said: “Muazu, some presidential aides and some businessmen close to the seat of power have had audience with Ribadu in Abuja on the need to join PDP.

    “We are begging Ribadu to join us to be our governorship candidate to prove to the people of Adamawa State that the removal of Nyako was well-intended and not directed at APC per se.

    “Security reports confirmed the need to re-fix the state and we decided to use our majority in the House of Assembly to remove Nyako.

    “Having tried many candidates in Adamawa State, PDP leaders and stakeholders within and outside the state have concluded that only Ribadu has the integrity to save the state.

    “If Nyako is gone and another APC chieftain is coming under the cloak of PDP, the people will not see anything wrong.”

    Asked if the PDP move was not a way of decimating APC, the source replied: “That is part of the game. After all some PDP governors have also defected to APC.

    “Adamawa is strategic to the PDP as far as its plans for 2015 poll is concerned. It is one of the targeted states by this party.

    “The way the PDP is zeroing in on Ribadu has local content. We want the best for Adamawa State.

    “Even some forces in the presidency have agreed on the need to redirect the state.”

    But some stakeholders have kicked against plans by PDP to “give Ribadu a waiver and readmit him into the party”.

    Another source said: “There is no way PDP members can accept Ribadu as their candidate; he cannot come and reap where he did not sow.

    “They are making some of us to regret Nyako’s removal. Are they saying the Acting Governor, Umaru Fintiri is not good enough to lead PDP to victory? What of ex-Governor Buba Marwa, ex-Minister Aliyu Idi Hong, Principal Secretary Hassan Tukur, ex-UBEC Executive Secretary Dr. Ahmed Mohammed Modibbo, Dr. Umar Ardo and many others?”

    “So, what will be the outcome of ex-PDP National Chairman’s investment in the ouster of Nyako? Are they saying they are not giving Bamanga Tukur’s son also the ticket.

    “Some of us will resist the granting of waiver to Ribadu. In fact, the waiver cannot work because it cannot be backdated. Ribadu is expected to spend at least one year in the PDP as a returnee before he can contest for any post,” the source added.

    Ribadu, The Nation learnt, is said to be scared of joining PDP. But we want to hold a peaceful march on Thursday to prove to him that we are serious this time around in poaching him.

    “Already Ribadu’s posters have flooded Yola without any party symbol. Some stakeholders were behind these,” another source said.

    A top source in Ribadu’s camp said: “Since the day Nyako was removed, there have been overtures from PDP leaders and some bigwigs but he has not given them any response.

    “They are just begging him to come and save the state but he has not make any commitment at all.

    “You know Ribadu is not the ambitious type at all. He believes whatever is going to be will be. He is also a man of the people and he will allow their will to prevail.”

     

  • Jonathan, Tinubu, governors condole with el-Rufai over son’s death

    Jonathan, Tinubu, governors condole with el-Rufai over son’s death

    President Goodluck Jonathan, All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and some governors yesterday commiserated with former Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, on the death of his son, Hamza, in an accident.

    Hamza, a graduate of the University of Virginia and United World College of the Atlantic in the United States, died in an auto crash in the FCT.

    The President, Tinubu, Governors Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun), Abiola Ajimobi (Oyo), Ramalan Yero (Kaduna) and Rauf Aregbesola (Osun) expressed shock over the death of the young El-Rufai.

    They noted that no amount of consolation could fill the gap that Hamza’s death has created.

    In a statement yesterday by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, the President commiserated with El-Rufai and members of his family.

    He hoped the outpouring of support by friends and associates would comfort the former minister.

    Jonathan prayed for the peaceful repose of the soul of the departed and God’s blessings, comfort and protection on Mallam El-Rufai and the rest of his family.

    A statement in Lagos said Asiwaju Tinubu called Mallam El-Rufai to commiserate with him on the death of his son.

    The frontline politician offered soothing words from the Holy Qur’an and prayed Allah to grant El-Rufai the strength to bear the very painful loss.

    Tinubu said: “The news of your son’s death came to me as a shock. It must have been most wrenching for you.  I feel your pain as a parent myself. I can only offer you words of consolation from Allah. He is the one who gives and takes away.

    “Be assured that my family and I and the APC family are with you in prayers during this very sad and painful period. God will keep you all that are left behind in His full protection and prevent further danger and deaths in your family.

    “You must never let this put you down. Please accept my heartfelt condolences.”

    Amosun expressed deep shock and sent heartfelt condolences to the family of Mallam El-Rufai.

    In a statement yesterday in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, by his Senior Special Assistant on Media, Mrs Olufunmilayo Wakama, the governor described the demise of Hamzat as “most regrettable and unfortunate”.

    Amosun added: “It is so sad that his life was cut short in a fatal accident at a time he would have been contributing his quota to the development of his fatherland after acquiring a good education.”

    The governor prayed Allah to grant the soul of the departed Al-Janah Fridaus and his family the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss.

    Ajimobi commiserated with El-Rufai through a statement yesterday in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, by his Special Adviser on Media, Dr. Festus Adedayo.

    The governor described the death of the son of the All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain as unfortunate and disheartening.

    Ajimobi said: “It is with deep shock that I received the death of Hamza, a promising young man, in a ghastly motor accident that occurred in Abuja on Tuesday.

    “It is even more painful considering the fact that he was snatched by the cold hands of death at the prime of his life.”

    The governor described the deceased as a rising star and potential leader of tomorrow.

    He urged the former minister to accept the incident as an act of God, adding that nothing could happen to any human being without the knowledge of God.

    Ajimobi prayed for the repose of the soul of the deceased. He beseeched God to grant El-Rufai and his family the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss.

    Yero expressed deep sadness over Hamza’s death.

    In a condolence message by his Director-General, Media and Publicity, Malam Ahmed Maiyaki, the governor said he received news of Hamza’s death with shock and grief.

    He said: “The demise of Hamza, a young, intelligent young man with bright prospects, is a huge loss to the country, especially to us in Kaduna State.”

    Yero urged El-Rufai’s family to take the irreparable loss as an act of Allah, who knows best.

    He said: “I urge the entire El-Rufai family, their friends and associates to take solace in the fact that the late Hamza lived a short but eventful lifetime full of positive narrations.”

    Yero prayed Allah to grant the soul of the late Hamza eternal rest.

    The governor also prayed Almighty Allah to grant the El-Rufai family the fortitude to bear the loss.

    Aregbesola also condoled with El-Rufai over his son’s death.

    In a statement in Osogbo, the Osun State capital, by the Director, Bureau of Communications and Strategy, Office of the Governor, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon, the governor said death, though the end of everything, came too early for Hamza.

    He stressed that whatever comes a man’s way should be seen as an act of God, which every mortal has little or no control over.

    Aregbesola said: “We are indeed saddened by the untimely demise of our dear son, Hamza. In as much as we have lost a gem in this young man, we, however, take solace in the fact that only Allah knows what is best for his creatures.

    “We, the government and people of Osun, express our heart-felt condolences to the immediate and extended families of El-Rufai.

    “We pray that Allah will grant the departed Al-Janah Firdaus.

     

     

  • Row over alleged N100m presidential gift to Chibok girls’ parents

    Row over alleged N100m presidential gift to Chibok girls’ parents

    An alleged N100million cash gift given to parents of abducted Chibok girls by President Goodluck Jonathan after a meeting at the Presidential villa on July 22 has sparked disagreement between some of the parents and leaders of the Chibok community in Abuja, a BBC Hausa service report was quoted yesterday by Premium Times, an online medium.

    The presidency, the report said, allegedly released the funds to leaders of the Chibok community in Abuja for onward passage to parents of the kidnapped schoolgirls.

    But the presidency, last night, denied giving any money.

    But some of the parents are now alleging they were shortchanged by the community leaders. One parent, who was among those who visited the president, told BBC’s Abdu Halilu that he got only N200,000. “I got only N200,000 out of the said N100million allegedly received by our leaders in Abuja. Some of us got N300,000 and some less than that,” he said. He also said that he was not comfortable with the way the money was shared among the parents of the kidnapped girls and that he was shortchanged.

    “Our leaders in Abuja are using the girls to enrich themselves. In fact, some of the parents were screened out of the entourage by the Chibok leaders in Abuja. Many of them are residents of Abuja, not parents of the kidnapped girls,” he said. Another parent, who was screened out of the delegation that visited the president, said he got only N7,000 out of the money shared. “I was at the farm when they brought the N7, 000 to my house and I collected it. Some of us got even less, N300 and below,” he said. The parents said they were not selling their daughters and that the money from the President just came to them without their asking for or expecting it. One of the community leaders, Pobu Bitrus, who is also a member of the House of Representatives, was at the meeting with the president. He explained to the BBC that after meeting with the president, monies were distributed to the parents in envelopes. “After we met with the presidency, the parents were given monies in envelopes and that’s all. All other things they are saying about N100million, I don’t know about that,” Mr. Bitrus said.

    Reacting last night, Leader of Bringbackthe girls campaigns in Abuja, Dr Oby Ezekwesili twitted.

    “I wish Chibok parents resisted the filthy lucre. Really wish they did. How more can divise the agory of a missing child? We shall stand”.

    Presidency denies giving monetary gift to Chibok parents

    The Presidency yesterday denied parting with monetary gifts to some parents of the over 200 secondary school girls abducted in Chibok, Borno State by the Islamic sect, Boko Haram.

    The parents met with President Goodluck Jonathan at the Presidential Villa last week Tuesday.

    Reacting to the report that money was given to Chibok parents, the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati said: “The allegation is completely untrue. Nobody distributed any envelope after the meeting.”

    “The meeting was held in the Villa, a public place. After the meeting, the President left and the parents as well as the children went into their buses in the presence of the media.”

    “There was no time after the meeting when envelopes were distributed or money was given.”

    Stressing that the President will never do anything to bribe anybody, he said: “This issue is not about money. We are talking about human lives here.”

    “The allegation is completely wild. What they are claiming is unknown to the President. Whoever is claiming it should prove it because no such thing happened.”

    The commitment of the President, he said, is to get the girls back safely and not about bribing anybody.

    “This is a very serious matter and we will like to appeal to those who want to play politics with it, using all kinds of tricks to ridicule the efforts of the administration, to always appeal to their individual conscience and realize that what we are dealing with here is a very serious matter and not a matter of mischief.” He stated