Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • Saraki blasts Jonathan over sack of Sports Minister

    Saraki blasts Jonathan over sack of Sports Minister

    •10 governors, other stakeholders to attend grand reception to celebrate Abdullahi

    THE immediate past Governor of Kwara State, Dr. Bukola Saraki, yesterday faulted President Goodluck Jonathan for sacking Mr. Bolaji Abdullahi as sports minister.

    He was sad that the presidency could sacrifice competence for sheer politics.

    Abdullahi was dropped last Wednesday for what the presidency sources described as his refusal to openly identify with President Goodluck Jonathan ahead of the 2015 elections, and for his closeness to Senator Saraki.

    He had reportedly told the chairman of the PDP Caretaker Committee in the state that he” is not a politician.”

    He was, at the time of his sack, outside the country on official assignment.

    Notwithstanding, a grand reception awaits the ex-minister in Ilorin, his home town with no fewer than 10 state governors and eminent Kwarans expected to attend.

    The date and scope of the reception were being worked out at press time.

    But Saraki, who broke his silence on Abdulahi’s sack in response to an enquiry from our correspondent, said the ex-minister had always been a professional right from his time as a commissioner under his administration between 2003 and 2011.

    He said: “It is shameful that Bolaji Abdullahi was relieved of his duty as minister mainly because of politics and certainly not for non performance.

    “It is disappointing that in the interest of politics we have compromised competence, and invariably denied our nation the progress it deserves.

    “I do wish Mallam Abdullahi the best of luck in his future endeavours and I am sure wherever he finds himself he will put in his very best as always with the interest of the nation at heart.”

    Speaking on Abdulahi’s character, Saraki said: “I can testify that he has always been professional since he was commissioner under my tenure as Governor in Kwara State. Monumental achievements made under him are still being built upon today.

    “As a fellow Kwaran, I am proud of him for showing Nigerians and the world at large what Kwarans are made of.”

    He said in spite of the sack, it was difficult to write off the incredible performance of Abdullahi.

    He said: “Abdullahi is a great son of Kwara with several milestones at state and national levels. His laudable achievements as Minister of Sports, which include Nigeria’s victory at the last Africa Nations Cup, performance at the Olympics, FIFA World Cup has endeared him to sport lovers and Nigerians in all works of life.”

    Meanwhile, about 10 serving governors have indicated interest in the proposed grand reception for Abdullahi in Ilorin to celebrate his meritorious service to the nation.

    A reliable source, who spoke in confidence, said most stakeholders in the state have also signified interest in the rally.

    “We are working out a grand reception/ rally for Abdullahi to only mark his excellent performance in office and to send a message that we should not sacrifice merit for partisan politics,” the source said.

    “About 10 governors have indicated interest in the rally. If the PDP can organise unity rally, we also have the right to host merit rally.

    “Contrary to the permutations of the presidency, the sack of Abdullahi will backfire for the president in 2015 in the state. Already, public opinion nationwide does not support the action of the president.”

     

  • Aviation professionals petition Jonathan over mystery aircraft

    Aviation professionals petition Jonathan over mystery aircraft

    •Accuse unnamed minister of blowing N10bn maintaining plane

    Aviation experts under the aegis of the Concerned Aviation Professionals (CAP) have sent a petition to President Goodluck Jonathan over what they described as the worrisome spate of plundering the nation’s resources by an unnamed Minister.

    They accused the minister of spending not less than N10 billion of public fund on maintaining a private aircraft in the past two years.

    The aviation professionals in a recent letter to President Goodluck Jonathan, titled “Re:Mindless waste of Nigeria’s resources: Who owns this Challenger 850 Aircraft marked OE-ILA?” signed by Chairman, Abdul Malik Masaya, and Secretary , John Obande Anihinru, asked the presidency to immediately institute a probe into the ownership, maintenance and usage of the aircraft marked OE-ILA, domiciled at one of the private hangers in a Nigerian airport in the last two years.

    The group, which said it is worried that the “Super Minister, who is one of the celebrated members of the Federal Executive Council, parades fluke, erroneous and complete misrepresentation of the reality in the concerned ministry as successes of the past years.”

    They accused the said minister of committing 500,000 Euros, about N130 million, monthly to maintaining the aircraft since it surfaced under mysterious circumstances at the airport in 2012.

    They prayed: “Sir, we have details and impeccable records which confirm that the “Super Minister” has been frittering away the scarce resources of Nigeria in maintaining the Challenger 850 aircraft in the last two years. The incontrovertible evidence we have is that the Minister has been committing 500,000 Euros (N130 million) monthly to maintain the aircraft in the last two years. Thus, in two years, the Minister has committed the sum of N3.120 billion to keep the jet which is used for personal use and that of the Minister’s family alone.”

    The aviation professionals added, “We make bold to say that the amount above is just a tip on the iceberg. Several other billions have been wasted flying the jet around the world obviously for leisure by the Minister and solely members of the immediate family. Our records showed that the amount already wasted by this Minister and members of the family on trips that are in no way beneficial to Nigeria runs into not less than N10 billion. The worst of all Sir, is the fact that an agency of government is paying all the billions used to maintain this jet.”

    The group revealed that a subtle crisis is currently brewing in a notable government agency following the recent discovery of the several billions allegedly spent on the mystery jet by some directors of the parastatal. The professionals urged the federal government to establish the real owner of the mystery aircraft and demand explanation on why government fund is spent on maintaining it.

    They observed, “We are aware of a war that is now brewing in the lucrative government agency when some directors got wind of the huge funds being channeled into maintaining the Minister’s private jet. We want you to investigate sir, who entered into the contract for maintaining the Challenger Jet on behalf of Nigeria. Is it a formal or informal contract? Why is Nigeria paying for the jet?

    “We cannot comprehend the sense in keeping a plane solely for the use of a Minister, especially when the plane is not part of the Presidential fleet. We also know that Mr. President will promptly and readily oblige the Minister the use of any of the Presidential jets if it becomes imperative for the minister to embark on official trips on behalf of the government. Details at our possession include the series of flights the Minister had engaged in with the said plane in the last two years. The details include the different locations, time and date of the flights as well as the dates the plane returned to Nigeria at each instance. In fact we can confirm to you that the plane has been in use since July 2012.”

    The aviation professionals are asking whether the unnamed minister was above the law and asked that “a thorough probe of this allegation should start from the FAAN, NCAA and NAMA. The agencies have records of all the trips the Challenger 850 jet made on the payroll of one of the nation’s top revenue earning agencies.”

     

  • 2015: We must avoid bloodshed, Sultan tells Jonathan

    2015: We must avoid bloodshed, Sultan tells Jonathan

    THE Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar, is worried by the bloodshed in parts of the north, especially with the 2015 elections approaching.

    He wants President Goodluck Jonathan to urgently take steps to stop the killings.

    “Let’s not make 2015 a year of taking innocent lives away,” he cautioned yesterday in his palace, while receiving the president who was on a private visit, his second in as many weeks.

    “This is one of the things bothering Nigerians. There should a be level play filed and politicians should ensure that there is no waste of blood for the quest for power.”

    The Sultan cited the intermittent clashes in Benue State between Fulani herdsmen and Tiv farmers and asked the president to meet with the governors of the affected areas with a view to finding a lasting solution to the problem.

    “You have to do everything possible to bring politicians, all ethnic nationalities and religious interest groups together for talks on the way out against the trend of insurgency and clashes especially in the North east,” he said.

    “Human life is important and sacred and we should not play politics with security. You should endeavour to take objective suggestions from people to bring the madness to an end.

    “We are full of sadness with heavy hearts about what is happening. We are worried by the number of lives of our young children lost recently in Yobe.”

    He acknowledged that though the task of overcoming the insurgency is huge, Nigerians owe it a duty to be committed to the course.

    The Sultan also reiterated the need for the leadership to be transparent and God fearing in governance.

    “Although, we have heard Mr. President’s words of commitment on that, and we want other politicians to do the same, we will do our best to ensure peace and unity prevail in the country,” he stated.

    He presented the president with a publication on the principles leadership.

    President Jonathan said he was in Sokoto to pay his respect.

    He hailed the Sultan’s efforts at fostering unity and peace in the country.

    “We are committed to the peace and unity of Nigeria,” he maintained.

    Also speaking, Governor Aliyu Wamakko decried the killings in the Northeast, saying, “these acts must be tackled and stopped.

    “Government must do something urgently to stop the loss of lives particularly in the north east,” he urged.

    Wamakko told the president that Sokoto was founded on the path of honesty, good governance, rule of law and respect for human value.

    Meanwhile, the governor at a brief meeting shortly after the departure of the president reiterated his support and resilience of the All Progressives Change (APC) to win the 2015 elections in the state.

    He said:” We are committed in spirit and soul to ensure victory of the APC. We are for change and stand for the course. No retreat, no surrender for what our people desire.”

     

  • PDP chieftains launch re-election campaign for Jonathan

    PDP chieftains launch re-election campaign for Jonathan

    •National chair mounts pressure on Amaechi, Kwankwaso, others to return

    Chieftains of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) yesterday in Minna expressed support for President Goodluck Jonathan in his re-election bid ,in what appeared to be a flagrant violation of the ban on campaign by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Speakers after speakers at the North Central Solidarity and Unity rally of the PDP led by the Senate President David Mark and the party’s national vice chairman, Yusuf Ayetogun, assured the President, of maximum support in the 2015 election.

    The national Chairman of the PDP, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, made a fresh appeal to Governors Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers), Rabiu Kwankwaso (Kano), Murtala Nyako (Adamawa), Ahmed Abdulfatah (Kwara) and Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto), who dumped the party for the All Progressives Congress (APC) to return to the ruling party.

    “We are willing to welcome them back home and I can assure them that they will be treated equally. Please come back home,” the PDP chairman said.

    He saddled the Chairman of the Northern States Governors Forum and Niger State governor, Dr. Babangida Aliyu with the responsibility of bringing back the ex-PDP governors.

    He said: “if the Niger State governor, as the leader of the G7 and Jigawa State governor, can remain in the party, I call on Gov. Aliyu to ensure the return of the other five PDP governors who went to APC.

    “Gov. Aliyu saw the light at the end of the tunnel and stayed. Your job has not finished: go back and make sure your people (G5) see the light and get them to come back home to PDP.”

    But President Goodluck Jonathan saw the defectors as retrogressive politicians.

    He described the PDP as the only stable and democratic political party in Africa. He said: “PDP is the only party that has not changed its name, logos, slogan or colour. Some parties change colours at will, they are chameleons and cannot be trusted. PDP can be trusted, we have vision and mission. If you have a vision, you will not be changing slogans, logos and colour everyday. PDP is still the dominant party in Nigeria.

    “We still remain PDP, not like some parties that today, they are red party, tomorrow, they are green party, next time, they are blue party, they are chameleons and they cannot be trusted. PDP has its vision and mission, if you have a vision, you will not be changing name, slogan, logo and colour everyday.”

    He said that those who defected from the PDP were a problem when they were in the party.

    “Some people were founding members of PDP; they were in PDP for 14 years. They had been Ministers, Commissioners, Speakers, Governors and held various positions under the party, now they say they are decamping (sic) to another party because they say they need progress, that PDP is not good enough.

    “This means that when they were in PDP, they were retrogressive elements, it means they were a problem to us in the party. Now that they have left, we will progress more, now, PDP will move faster and bigger. It is a party that will take Nigeria to development.”

    Though the president said he was not in Minna to campaign, he predicted that come 2015, “PDP will regain, recover and reconstruct the states it had lost in 2011. For us in PDP, there is no shaking, in the North Central, there is no shaking; we will recover Kwara and Nasarawa States. We will regain, recover and reconstruct these states that we have lost in 2015.”

  • Boko Haram: Gowon tasks Jonathan on ending killings

    Boko Haram: Gowon tasks Jonathan on ending killings

    •Challenges terrorists to come out to defend their actions

    •First Lady warns youths against election thuggery

    •Begs terrorists to stop killing students

    Former military Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon, yesterday asked President Goodluck Jonathan to put an immediate end to the killing of innocent Nigerians by terrorists.

    Gowon, speaking at the National Youth Peace Concert in Abuja, also challenged the terrorists to come out to defend their actions.

    He urged Nigerians to come to the aid of the government by providing useful information about the terrorists.

    The concert was organized by the Office of the First Lady and office of the Special Adviser to the President on Youth and Students Matters.

    He said: “I call on the Federal Government, using the various security agencies to vigorously work at ending the orgy of mindless killings and mayhem across the country. But the people can also help by making sure that they give intelligence of information of where these people are coming from.”

    “Are they Nigerians that are doing these? If they are Nigerians, I challenge them to come out and defend their acts against their motherland.”

    General Gowon also asked other African leaders to “exercise the critical responsibility of leadership and rise up to the challenge of providing solution to these problems through education, employment, youth development and empowerment.”

    These actions, he stressed, “will help to stem the tendency towards violent conflicts in some parts of the country.”

    Gowon, who was the special guest of honour at the event, expressed sympathy to the families of the dead and wounded students in the recent terrorists attacks in the school in Yobe State as he condemned other similar attacks.

    “You must reject acts of violence of any sort. But you must embrace and build trust and confidence among one another for the eternal good of your respective countries and your continent,” he told the youths at the occasion.

    The First Lady and President of African First Ladies Peace Mission, Dame Patience Jonathan, advised Nigerian youths to shun thuggery among other crimes as the 2015 general elections approach.

    Urging Nigerians to forgive one another and work together, she charged them to be peace ambassadors in their homes, community, states and Nigeria and the continent as a whole.

    She said: “I want you to go out there to preach peace for me. Why are our brothers killing one another? Let us not allow outsiders to come and cause confusion for us. We need everyone to be alive to build a strong nation.

    “I am really pained; I don’t know how to say enough is enough. I have prayed in my bedroom. I want God to hear and answer me. We are killing one another. Let God, Allah touch our hearts. Let us stop killing one another.”

    “I am deeply pained and I wish you can help me today. The youths, you are my hope. I have called on my fellow women and yet help is still not coming, the men have tried and yet no help. So, I am calling on you the youth. I want you to be alive for me. I want Nigeria to be as it was before.”

    She went on: “No matter the religion we have, we pray to one God. Allah is the same as God. Everything we do, God is seeing us. Let them cease from torching schools and killing students. I want you to be my ambassadors as you leave here. Carry my message along with you. From today, don’t call me First Lady Dame Patience, call me ‘Mama Peace’.”

    On the 2015 election, she said: “I am crying and begging you, don’t be used. Election is coming, they will come to you. Why are they not using their children? Their children are in schools abroad. They don’t have money to feed you, but they have money to buy grenades for you. Please don’t take it again. I want you to stay alive for me.”

    After releasing100 white doves as symbols of peace in Nigeria and the continent at the occasion, she was presented with two awards for her role in promoting peace in the continent.

    The First Lady of South Africa, Mrs. N. Zuma, who spoke on behalf of the African First Ladies Peace Mission, maintained that no meaningful development can be achieved in any society except peace is first achieved.

    She urged the youths in the continent to continue to stand for love and peace in order to end the crises across the continent.

    Among the dignitaries at the occasion were the First Lady of Sudan and other Regional Vice Presidents of the African First Ladies Peace Mission, the Wife of the Senate President, Helen Mark, First Ladies from various states of the Federation.

    Various Christian and Muslim leaders in the country also spoke at the occasion preaching love and peace in the country.

    TuFace Idibia, Onyeka Onwenu, and artiste from Cote’d Ivoire, Katara were among the artists that performed at the occasion.

    The concert was attended by thousands of youths that stormed the city from various states of the Federation.

  • If Jonathan cannot overlook  insults, then God help us all

    If Jonathan cannot overlook insults, then God help us all

    IF President Goodluck Jonathan is never tired of provoking us with his preoccupation with minutiae, we must never be tired of responding to him, even if we appear repetitive. To fail to respond when he remains unflagging in his misplaced zeal is to succumb to misrule and tyranny. The president has long been recognized as an eager anti-federalist, an instinctive monarchist, and a terribly divisive figure, ethnically and religiously. Now, he adds the unflattering reputation of being fixated with what people say of him, particularly abuse. No slight escapes him, and anyone who questions or criticizes him is regarded by the president as rude and deserving of being denounced and punished with federal might.

    Nothing exemplifies this disturbing trend as Presidential Jonathan’s startling remarks when he recently played host to a delegation from Anambra State which came to appreciate him for lending a strong helping hand to their outgoing governor, Peter Obi. The visit was probably instigated by Mr Obi himself, a man so adept at picking thanks in the facile manner of a suckling that nature itself found it inescapable to endow him with the permanent facility of a child’s voice. After a few ingratiating remarks by the Anambra delegation, the president launched into a frenzy of embarrassing denunciations against governors whom he described stiffly as loving to abuse the president, and whom he concluded could not gain anything thereby.

    In the words of the president: “Peter Obi worked very hard as a governor, very friendly to the government. He is a member of our Economic Management Team and an honorary adviser to the President on Finance and Commerce and he worked very hard, attended all the meetings and made very meaningful contributions. Even the day we announced that he might be leaving, the suggestion was that we should still keep him even if he is no longer the governor of Anambra State. That is the relationship we had. I have to thank Governor Peter Obi for that good relationship.”

    He continues: “A number of politicians feel that the best thing to do is to be abusing Mr. President, abusing the federal government and so on. You are elected to develop your state, I think the best thing is to have good relationship with the centre, whether you have a pin or you don’t have, but one day it will come. Wearing boxing gloves, jumping into the boxing ring to face Mr. President does not help the development of any state.”

    President Jonathan did not say whom he had in mind. But Barometer can hazard a guess that he probably thought of a few All Progressives Congress (APC) politicians, chiefly governors and legislators, and in particular, perhaps, Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State. The president’s undignified observations elicit two disturbing questions. First, just when has it become an issue worth the president losing sleep that individuals and politicians abuse him; and second, where on earth did the president find the sense and logic to tie justice to partisan ‘good behavior?’ Such appalling fixation with the mundane, not to talk of his absurd attachment to small things, do grave injustice to the concept of leadership and to the person of Jonathan himself.

    If anyone seeks explanation for the Jonathan presidency’s seeming inability to get its priorities right and why it misjudges issues, the reason can be located squarely in what President Jonathan told the Anambra delegation last week. Indeed, the president’s statement accurately reflects both his worldview and persona, indicating how these two things have being corrupted and weakened by the undue attention he pays to trivia, and showing how that trivia all but constricts any possibility of his doing good even by mistake. In effect, President Jonathan’s statement summarises the hopelessness of his presidency and how quite impossible it is for his government to be inspired and inspiring.

  • Jonathan’s cousin still in kidnappers’ den

    President Goodluck Jonathan’s septuagenarian cousin, Inengite Nitabai, is still languishing in kidnappers’ den 10 days after he was whisked away by his assailants.

    Nitabai, a compound chief in Jonathan’s Ebele Family, was abducted by 10 gunmen on February 23 at his residence in Otuoke, Ogbia Local Government Area, Bayelsa State.

    He was driven out of his compound in his Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) by the bandits who harassed his inlaw and collected N400,000 from his wife.

    His car was later recovered at Onuebum waterside, a development that fueled speculations that his abductors escaped with him through the creeks.

    But 10 days after the incident, Nitabai’s whereabouts had remained unknown.

    Security operatives seemed clueless about the location of the 70-year-old man and his kidnappers.

    Though security operatives flooded Otuoke and surrounding creeks in search of Nitabai, their efforts had yielded no positive results.

    The kidnappers had called the family of their victim three days after the incident demanding N500m and threatening to kill him if the money was not provided.

    It has not been confirmed whether the captors of Nitabai had brought down their demands.

    Family members, though in dire straits,  were said to have been instructed not to speak to members of the press.

    But a member of the family said issues surrounding Nitabai’s abduction were complicated.

    The source who pleaded anonymity said central to the issue was a land dispute between Nitabai and some members of his family.

    “We are praying that they should release our father. We hope to see him come out alive. The police are investigating the land dispute to know whether it has anything to do with the kidnapping. Some people have been arrested. But is is complex”, he said.

    The Commissioner of Police, Mr. Hilary Opara, said security agencies were making huge progress.

  • Fayose, Olubolade disagree on consensus

    Fayose, Olubolade disagree on consensus

    FORMER Minister of Police Affairs and governorship aspirant on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the Ekiti State, Navy Captain Caleb Omoniyi Olubolade (rtd) and former Speaker of the House of Assembly, Femi Bamisile are backing the adoption of consensus option in picking the party’s candidate for the June 21 governorship election.

    Olubolade and Bamisile are of the view that if the PDP candidate is selected through a consensus arrangement, such would help to avoid the rancour, bickering and ill- feelings that usually characterise the process of primaries in any election.

    But former Governor Ayo Fayose and Chief Bosede Dada have kicked against the option, saying it is undemocratic.

    Both the former minister and Bamisile spoke at separate interviews in Abuja, the nation’s capital.

    Olubolade said he is ready and willing to abide by President Goodluck Jonathan’s earlier advice that the PDP in Ekiti State should look at the option of choosing its candidate through consensus rather than primaries.

    The former minister said: “I believe in consensus because any organisation that wants to make progress, any political party that wants to make progress must listen to the voice of reasoning from the leadership of such party. Once the party’s leadership brings an issue on the way forward, as a good party man, it would be nice for you to work in that line so that all things will work for the good of the party.

    “Having heard from the President on the way forward, I will strictly want to abide by that position and do exactly what will move our party forward. What is important is for us to ensure that internal democracy prevails within the party.

    “When the party (PDP) reveals its position on the way forward, we also have to key into that position. So, that will bring orderliness in the party. Followers will know what to do and we will, in togetherness, work to ensure that the party is victorious. That is why I believe in consensus”, he said.

    Bamisile, who is also the state’s Deputy Chairman agreed that the consensus arrangement would help to avoid disagreements and divisions among members.

    According to him, there is a clear mandate from the party’s national leadership that anybody who wants to run for the governorship election or be considered an aspirant, should first take the bold step of going to pay N11million to the party at Abuja. I can tell you that the party paraded 26 aspirants including myself and 14 of us came together and had a meeting with the President on January 4.

    “During our deliberations, the President informed us that he would prefer that the party should go the way of consensus in choosing its candidates. He advised that we should avoid the over-kill of spending so much money in primaries and the rancour that comes out of primaries.

    “Sincerely, most of us strongly believe in that process. I have done about four elections in the state and all of them were through primaries but in circumstances like this- you are in opposition in your state; you should look for every means to make sure that the processes of selecting your candidates are fair and not too financially engulfing. We should make sure that the processes are suitable to all those involved and that is why I concur with the President on this issue of consensus.

    Fayose and Mrs Dada reminded those canvassing consensus arrangement of the promise of the National Chairman, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, that internal democracy would not be compromised.

    Chief Dada objected to the plans to anoint a candidate through consensus, saying that it is undemocratic. She added: “I do not want consensus. I have paid for my form and I am ready for the primaries. The Chairman, Mr. Makanjuola Ogundipe, has assured me that there will be primaries in Ado-Ekiti. Also, when I visited the national chairman, he promised that there will be internal democracy in the PDP. Therefore, I will not support consensus”.

    Fayose said the idea of a consensus candidate is laughable, stressing that it underscores the limitations of those behind the option.

    The former governor said that he will face the primaries with courage and boldness, based on Mu’azu’s assurance that internal democracy would be restored in the party.

    Fayose wondered why certain elements were agitating for consensus option, instead of going to the field to mobilise support for their ambition to rule the state. He said while some people have the right to canvass for consensus candidacy, other people also have the right to oppose the option based on reason. Stressing that consensus option is not feasible, he urged the aspirants to exhibit the capacity for popularity test at the shadow poll.

    The former governor stressed: “What we need to do is to go for tender. When you pay the tender fee, you have indicated interest to participate in the deal. The nomination fee is the tender fee. The consensus means that all the aspirants have the collective agreement. But, once some people say they are not for consensus, it is not consensus again.

    “Would they do consensus again at the general election? A man who is not sure of winning the primaries cannot win the general election. I am confident that any body who can win the primary election will win the general election”.

     

  • Army, community bicker over land

    Army, community bicker over land

    There is tension in Uvwie following a land dispute between the community and the 3 Battalion in Effurun, Delta State.

    The 3 Battalion in Effurun has threatened to demolish houses and graves on the land it alleged belongs to the Army.

    Counsel to the communty Victor E. Otomiewo alleged that soldiers from the Effurun Barracks were harassing indigenes of Ohorhe 1, Ohorhe 11 and Oku-Irero communities.

    Otomiewo called for the withdrawal of the Army from lands belonging to Uvwie.

    He said: “ We draw the attention of President Goodluck Jonathan, Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan and others to the illegality and reckless impunity by men and officers of the 3 Battalion in Effurun.”

    But the Operations Officer, 3 Battalion, Capt Mohammed Abdulahi, said the land belongs to the Army.

    He advised the people of Ohorhe to comply with the ultimatum given to them by quitting.

     

     

  • Jonathan cautions governors against ‘fighting President’

    Jonathan cautions governors against ‘fighting President’

    •President to kick-start second Niger Bridge on Monday

    President Goodluck Jonathan will on Monday perform the ground breaking of the Second Niger Bridge.

    Dr Jonathan stated this when he received a delegation of Anambra State leaders at the Villa in Abuja.

    The single bridge which connects the west with the southeast is considered small and hence the need for a second bridge to stop the suffering of road users.

    The President also cautioned governors and politicians who abuse the President to desist from it.

    The Obi of Onitsha, Alfred Achebe led the delegation which included outgoing Governor Peter Obi, who will step down on March 17.

    Jonathan said: “A number of politicians feel that the best thing to do is to be abusing Mr. President, abusing the Federal Government and so on, if you are elected to develop your state, I think the best thing is to have good relationship with the centre, whether you have a pin or you don’t have but one day it will come.

    “Wearing boxing gloves, jumping into the boxing ring to face Mr. President does not help the development of any state”, he added

    Praising Obi, Jonathan said: “He is a person, very distinct and he was able to manage the House of Assembly, that was predominantly controlled by another political party and we never had any crisis. He has shown very clearly that he is a politician that believes in the people not for himself.”

    “We thank you for all these and on our own part, we promise that this relationship we have with Peter Obi, the same relationship we will also have with the incoming governor and deputy”, he assured

    He said: “Really you don’t need to thank me, we are the people to thank you because we know the role you played for us during the election, not just delivering Anambra State, am not even talking about votes given to us but the role you played for us, you galvanize people across the country, just like the Principal Secretary said, there is no state you will not see an Anambra person playing key role in the industry or commerce of that state. We owe you appreciation.”

    Explaining why the ground breaking ceremony had been delayed, he said: “until we are fully ready, until the finances have been worked out, I would not want to go for a breaking ceremony and another two years, four years, another President would go there for another ground breaking ceremony. “.

    According to him, whatever challenges being faced by the country “is transient, very temporary, we will soon get over it by God’s grace”.

    The Anambra State delegation urged the President to extend the same hand of support and friendship to incoming Governor Willie Obiano.

    Speaking on behalf of the delegation Professor A.B. C Nwosu said: “We humbly ask that you embrace him (Obiano)  partner with him and assist and guide him as you have done with Governor Peter Obi. For that, Sir we the people of Anambra State shall be eternally grateful”

    Nwosu noted that stakeholders in the state had mixed feelings about Obi’s “imminent departure because we know that in spite of all the political odds which he encountered while in office, his leadership and service to our people and indeed to Nigeria has been visionary, courageous, credible, exemplary and purposeful.”

    With all Obi has done in office, he said that there was “no doubt in our minds that history will judge him very well”.

    Governor-elect Obiano told reporters: “Governor Peter Obi has done very well, by the grace of God I am going to be on the foundation he has laid. So, we expect a lot of things to happen under my watch.

    “He has done well in what the economics call the enablers, road, health, education, security, women development, youth about 13 items. But we want to be a little different and move Anambra to the next level on four pillars.

    “The first is agriculture. I believe that will create a lot of food and of course agro-based industries will begin to spring up and there will be a lot of job employment for the youths.

    “The second pillar is oil and gas. As you are aware we have oil in Anambra State and our first effort is to make sure that we are included in the NDDC. Our people in the House of Representatives will make that move very soon and we will be properly acknowledged as oil an producing state.

    “The third is trade and commerce, because all the things we are going to be producing will be sold one way or the other and therefore we need a modern market to be able to do so and of course improve the facilities in the existing market. “And of course industrialisation. And so these are the four pillars that will transform Anambra State.

    On kidnapping, he said “that is very critical for us, under my watch kidnapping will be a thing of the past for the following reasons: first, as soon as I am sworn in there is going to be a security conference where all the stakeholders in Anambra will come and beyond that we are going to do a lot of things that the present administration has stated, in the area of equipping the vigilante and training them appropriately. In the area of equipping the police, in the area of youth employment because where most of the youths are employed then the rascal few will be easily policable. So we going to ensure that crime in particular kidnapping is a thing of the past.”

    All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) Chairman Victor Umeh said: “I can tell you that Governor Obi succeeded in Anambra State because of the support President Jonathan gave to the government and to our people.”

    Notable among the delegates were :Deputy Governor Emeka Sibeudu, Deputy Governor-elect Dr. Nkem Okeke, former Governors Chukwuemeka Ezeife and Chinwoke Mbadinuju. Others are: Mrs. Chinyere Asika, Chief Olisah Metuh, Senator Ben Obi, Hon. Chinwe Nwaebili, Prof. Ben Nwabueze, Iyom Josephine Anenih, Bishop Hilary Okeke, Rev. William Okoye, Chief Cletus Ibeto, Sir. Chika Okafor and Chief Innocent Chukwuma, among others.