Tag: Jonathan

  • Court clears Jonathan for 2015 presidential poll

    Court clears Jonathan for 2015 presidential poll

    President Goodluck Jonathan is eligible to contest the presidential election in 2015, a Federal Capital Territory High Court declared on Friday.

    Justice Mudashiru Oniyangi held that his tenure started on May 29, 2011 when he was sworn in after winning the presidential election and not earlier.

    A card carrying member of Peoples Democratic Party from Zuba Ward in Abuja, Cyriacus Njoku, had approached the court following a statement credited to the President that he is serving his first term in office.

    According to him, Jonathan cannot be a candidate in 2015 because he is running a second term in office.

    The respondents in the suit are Jonathan, the PDP and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    The plaintiff also sought for a perpetual order of injunction to stop PDP from nominating Jonathan for the election, and INEC from accepting his name as a presidential candidate.

    Delivering judgment in the suit, Justice Oniyangi observed that Jonathan only ascended to power in May 6, 2010 by the doctrine of necessity pronounced by the National Assembly following the death of the then President, late Umaru Musa Yar’adua.

    He said this could not be misconstrued as his first term in office.

    Describing the suit as speculative, the court held that the plaintiff failed to establish the fact that the Jonathan had declared for the 2015 presidential election.

     

  • 2015: PDP hails ruling on Jonathan

    2015: PDP hails ruling on Jonathan

    The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has described the ruling by the Federal Capital Territory High Court that President Goodluck Jonathan is constitutionally free to contest the 2015 Presidential election as yet another victory for the nation’s democracy.

    In a statement shortly after the ruling on Friday, the National Publicity Secretary of the PDP, Chief Olisa Metuh said the judgment has laid to rest debates on whether or not the President is constitutionally eligible to contest the 2015 election, adding that it now depends on the party and Nigerians to decide when the time comes.

    Stating that the court ruling has “freed the nation from the shackles of intimidation and harassment by some desperate elements seeking to impose themselves on Nigerians”, the party said the judiciary has also restated the freedom and right of every Nigerian to seek any office under the constitution.

    The statement reads: “The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) applauds the ruling by the Federal Capital Territory High Court that President Goodluck Jonathan, as a Nigerian, has the constitutionally guaranteed right to seek re-election in 2015.

    “This landmark ruling is yet another victory for the nation’s democracy. It has laid to rest the unnecessary debate on whether or not the President is constitutionally eligible to seek re-election in 2015.

    “The court held that President Jonathan is in his first term, which commenced on May 29, 2011 and thus is free to seek a second term in office in the 2015 general election under the platform of the PDP or any other political party.

    “The import of this judgment is that it is now left for the PDP as a party and Nigerians to decide, through legitimate processes, whether or not to return President Jonathan to the Presidency in 2015 if he indicates interest.

    “With the ruling, it is now left for the President, the PDP and the people to decide and not for some people to try to stop others from exercising their constitutionally guaranteed rights through intimidation and harassment.”

    The party appealed to Nigerians to continue to be law abiding and resist all attempts by “desperate politicians” to truncate the system through the distortion of the facts of the law.

    Metuh assured that the party will continue to focus on the welfare of Nigerians in line with the transformation agenda of the administration.

     

  • 2013 budget: It’s time for action – Emodi

    2013 budget: It’s time for action – Emodi

    Special Adviser to the President on National Assembly Matters, Senator Joy Emodi, on Wednesday said that signing of the 2013 budget by President Gooluck Jonathan has paved the way for its implementation.

    The Presidential aide also said that signing of the budget has not only put paid to the alleged budget row between the Presidency and the National Assembly but further crystallized the virtue and benefits of teamwork and dialogue between the two arms of government.

    Emodi, who said this in a statement, noted that now that the historic early passage of the 2013 budget has been effectively consummated, it is time for action.

    She noted that there is no doubt that Mr. President, ministries, departments and agencies and the National Assembly will continue to work together to ensure that the budget is effectively implemented for the benefit of all Nigerians.

    She said that instructively, Mr. President had before now strengthened the MDAs for better and more efficient budget implementation through the instrument of the Performance Contract.

    “I most sincerely commend the leadership and members of the National Assembly most profoundly for their cooperation with the Executive and for having the interest of Nigerians at heart.

    “I have no doubt that they would continue to avail the Executive all necessary and subsequent legislative support in line with the harmonious relationship between the two arms and to translate this document to better life for the people of Nigeria in line with the Transformation Agenda of Mr. President,” she said.

     

  • Revealed: How Jonathan threatened PDP governors

    Revealed: How Jonathan threatened PDP governors

    President insists Amaechi must go

    Akpabio: we’ll kick out ‘Judases’

    Fresh facts emerged yesterday on the President’s stormy meeting with Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governors at the Villa.

    President Goodluck Jonathan, who pointedly told the governors to ensure Rivers State Governor Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi’s removal as the Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) chairman, threatened to deploy the machinery of government against governors who did not align with him in his Amaechi-must-go quest.

    This was a prelude to the formation of the PDP Governor’s Forum and the subsequent election of its chairman.

    Amaechi and Akwa Ibom Governor Godswill Akpabio were asked to leave the room at the Presidential Villa, according to sources close to the meeting, which took place Monday night, before the proceedings.

    The sources, who pleaded not to be named because of what they described as the sensitivity of the matter, said besides treating the governors to video clips of Amaechi’s verbal attacks on him, President Jonathan listed three points of threat, which some of the governors saw as “blackmail”.

    The President threatened to deprive the governors of their:

    •security details;

    •access to funds from the excess crude account; and

    •refrain from appending his signature to the benchmark for the budget, which he signed yesterday.

    His words, which some of the governors saw as dictatorial, did not elicit an open response. The governors were mute.

    In spite of the threat, however, the governors did not all fall in line as the anti-Amaechi camp mustered only 16 governors, falling short of the 19 required for a simple majority to remove the chairman.

    “The opposition governors lined up behind Amaechi but Governor Tanko Al-Makura of Nasarawa state supported the president.

    He was taken to a private bedroom, where he was persuaded to abandon Amaechi,” another source said.

    Also yesterday, Akpabio spoke of a looming implosion, treachery and emergence of Judases within the PDP necessitated the formation of the PDP Governors’ Forum.

    Akpabio, who was at the party’s national secretariat in Abuja, accompanied by his Bayelsa State counterpart, Seriake Dickson, said the party was in a house cleansing mission.

    According to him, the challenges confronting the ruling party forced the leadership to look inwards and put its house in order, stressing that the party never envisaged such challenges in the 14 years of its existence.

    He said: “Today we are facing challenges. There is implosion in the party; there is treachery and we now have more Judases than disciples. What the PDP is doing is to cleanse its house. It is a moving train that will crush anyone that stands in the way.

    “We will put our heads together in the PDP Governors’ Forum to promote the unity and progress of the party. We will not be fighting the government because we will be working in solidarity of the party.

    “The formation of the Forum is to look inwards and project the party and the government. We are doing self cleansing. We can assure everyone that the Forum is not above the National Working Committee of the party. The Forum is subordinate to the party.”

    Akpabio declared that the PDP was not in a hurry to vacate governance at the national level, stressing that the new Forum would present a formidable bloc within the larger Nigeria Governors’ Forum.

    He dismissed insinuations that the PDP Governors’ Forum was meant to weaken the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, saying that it would rather strengthen and hasten its activities.

    PDP National Chairman Bamanga Tukur said with Akpanio’s emergence as the chairman of the new Forum, he could now sleep peacefully at night and even serve his siesta.

    Apparently reliving his ordeal in the hands of the Governors’ Forum, Tukur described the latest development as a repackaging of the PDP for the 2015 elections.

    “With a repackaged PDP as you can now see, the implication is that it will enable us mobilise our members ahead of the 2015 general elections and face elections and win.

    “No doubt, with Chief Tony Anenih as the chairman of our party’s Board of Trustees (BoT), Governor Godswill Akpabio as the chairman of the PDP Governors’ Forum and I as the national chairman, definitely the sky is our limit,” Tukur stated.

    The PDP chairman predicted a two-party system with the emergence of the All Progressives Congress (APC) ahead of the 2015 elections, saying the elections will be a straight fight between the APC and the PDP.

  • Jonathan signs Budget 2013 bill into law

    Jonathan signs Budget 2013 bill into law

    Sixty eight days after the National Assembly passed the 2013 Appropriation Bill, President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday signed the bill into law, in a major twist to the controversy over the financial plan.

    Before the Presidential action, there was tension as the House of Representatives. The lawmakers went into a two-hour closed-session where they decided to go tough by today should the President fail to sign the bill.

    President Jonathan on October 10, last year presented the bill which the National Assembly passed on December 20.

    Presidential spokesman Reuben Abati in confirmed that Dr. Jonathan had signed the bill.

    The statement titled: “President Jonathan assents to the 2013 Appropriation Bill”, hesaid:

    “Following consultations and an agreement between the Executive and the Legislature on the 2013 Appropriation Bill, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan today signed the bill into law.

    “President Jonathan wishes to reassure all Nigerians that the consultations have been in the best interest of the country, and in pursuit of understanding and mutual cooperation between both arms of government.

    “A part of the understanding reached with its leadership, the observations of the executive arm of government about the Appropriation Bill as passed by the National Assembly will be further considered by the National Assembly through legislative action, to ensure effective and smooth implementation of the 2013 Appropriation Act in all aspects.

    “Te administration remains fully committed to the positive transformation of the country, and effective and efficient service delivery for the benefit of all citizens.

    “Al Ministries, Departments and Agencies of the Federal Government have therefore been directed to work very hard to ensure that all the services, projects and programmes contained in the budget are successfully delivered on schedule in spite of the slight delay in its enactment.”

    The President had withheld his assent due to what was described as ‘grey areas’ in the budget. The budget as passed by the National Assembly was said to be unrealistic, unimplementable and out of tune with the present economic realities.

    Present at the signing ceremony were Vice President Namadi Sambo, Senate President, David Mark, House Speaker Aminu Tambuwal, Petroleum Minister, Diezani Allison-Madueke, National Assembly Presidential Liason Officer, Mrs Joy Emodi, the Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Director-General of the budget office, Dr. Bright Okogu and Minister of National Planning Commission, Dr. Shamsudeen Usman.

    Journalists were not allowed into the venue of the signing ceremony. Those who attended declined to speak to reporters.

    The budget was based on an assumption of a $79-per-barrel oil benchmark, higher than the $75-per-barrel proposed by Jonathan and up from $72 for last year’s budget.

    The global oil price is at almost the same level as a year ago.

    The budget assumes oil production of 2.53 million barrels per day, up slightly from 2.48 million bpd in the 2012 budget and at the top end of actual output this year.

    It also assumes that economic growth this year will be 6.5 per cent, inflation 9.5 per cent, and an exchange rate of N160 to the dollar.

    House Spokesman Zakari Mohammed told reporters after the closed-session that having passed the budget since December, the country could no longer wait for the President to assent to the bill.

    President Jonathan sent a budget of N4.9.24 trillion to the National Assembly but the lawmakers passed N4.987 trillion leaving a difference of N63b.

    Some of the areas of disagreement on the bill are the carry over of the Capital component of the 2012 budget to April this year, quarterly briefing for the National Assembly by the Minister of Finance, and zero allocation forthe Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) among others.

    The senate also explained the controversy over constituency projects. Senate spokesman Enyinnaya Abaribe said: “All issues have been resolved.

    “There is nothing like the National Assembly padding projects, that doesn’t happen and can never happen.

    “For those who are aware, there is always a specific amount of money and that does not equate to padding.

    “What we do in constituency project is that there is a specific fund kept aside so that members of National Assembly can also bring things to their various constituencies.

    “When there is announcement that people should bring their projects, it is also within a particular volume of fund and it is expended by various ministries.

    “So, I don’t think that whatever problem they had with the budget had anything to do with constituency projects,” he said.

    Abaribe said there is the tendency for Nigerians to think that when constituency projects are mentioned, that Senators or members of House of Representatives are given funds to spend.

    “What happens is that Senators are given a list of projects by the Executive and these projects are in specific areas.

    “It is either in education or in terms of health or water and when they put the particular area they want, the different ministries, departments or agencies go ahead to award their contracts,” he said.

     

  • Jonathan urged to sack COAS

    A  group, the Masses’ United Against Rights Violation and Crimes Against Humanity (MASURVCAH), has decried the alleged killing of four Nasarawa State University, Keffi students by soldiers.

    The group, in a statement signed by its Secretary-General, Comrade Mark Adebayo, said: “In another dastardly, cold-blooded murder spree, it was reported in all the media today (yesterday) that four students of the Nasarawa State University were shot dead yesterday (February 25) by rampaging soldiers. The students were embarking on a legitimate protest against the inhuman conditions of their campus when soldiers swooped on them, opened fire and shot dead four students. Many of them were injured with fears that the casualty figure may rise.

    “Security operatives in this country have remained unprofessional, uncivilised and trigger-happy. While they are incompetent in handling security challenges in the land – they are incapable of tackling armed robbers and terrorist insurgents – they unleash terror on the innocent and harmless members of the society. They are ruled by a kill-and-go crude mentality that poses danger to the development of civilised culture and democratic values.

    “If truly it was the governor that called in soldiers to kill unarmed students, then he is no longer fit to be governor in a democratic setting. We hereby call for his immediate resignation or impeachment by the House of Assembly. We urge President Goodluck Jonathan to remove the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt-Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika, with immediate effect and order the arrest and prosecution of the killer- soldiers and their superior officers, who ordered the shooting. This is the time President Jonathan must prove to Nigerians that he can defend our fundamental human rights and protect us.

    “The Vice-Chancellor must be dismissed from service because it is his incompetence and criminal insensitivity to students’ welfare that caused this tragedy. We call on Nigerian students, the activist community, parents, religious leaders, opinion moulders and leaders of conscience to rise up in a united voice, condemn this crime against humanity and take actions to ensure that it does not go unpunished. We call for four-day mass protests in all campuses and streets of Nigeria to expose to the world the atrocities committed by the soldiers we pay to protect us.

    “We have often said security agencies in Nigeria require total overhauling in terms of training and professionalism, especially with regard to respect for human rights. Rights violations in this country, including extra-judicial killings, have moved from incessant to pandemic. Any individual, who cannot guarantee our rights as Nigerians within our own country is not fit to rule us.

    “We commiserate with Nigerian students, the parents of the slain students and their friends on this avoidable tragedy. May their souls never rest until they have avenged their premature death.”

     

  • Jonathan and 2015: Okupe’s pure wind

    Jonathan and 2015: Okupe’s pure wind

    Last Wednesday, the bellicose Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr Doyin Okupe, dismissed as “diversionary,” a declaration by the Niger State Governor, Dr Muazu Babangida Aliyu, that in the run up to the 2011 elections President Goodluck Jonathan “signed” an agreement with Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governors to serve for only one term.

    Governor Aliyu made the declaration the weekend before in a phone-in programme, ‘Guest of the Week’, on Liberty Radio, a Kaduna based private FM radio station. It is apparent that the governor made the declaration against the background of clear indications so far that the President will re-contest for his job in 2015, come rain or shine.

    “I recall that at the time he was going to declare for the 2011 election,” the governor said, “all the PDP governors were brought together to ensure that we were all in the same frame of mind. And I recall that some of us said given the circumstance of the death of President Umaru Yar’Adua and given the PDP zoning arrangement, it was expected that the North was to produce the president for a number of years.

    “I recall that at that discussion it was agreed that Jonathan would only serve for one term of four years and we all SIGNED the agreement…I think we are all gentlemen enough so when the time comes, we will all come together and see what is the right thing to do.” (Emphasis mine).

    These were the remarks Okupe has since dismissed as diversionary – and a diversion which he said his principal is determined to resist with every ounce of his strength. The president, he said, is simply too pre-occupied with his commitment to transform Nigeria into a land flowing with milk and honey to allow himself to be dragged into the campaigns for the next presidential election.

    “We,” Okupe said, “wish to state categorically that this is neither the time nor the season to begin electioneering campaign…and so President Goodluck Jonathan will not jump the gun. Mr President will stoutly resist any disguised or open attempt to drag him into any debates, arguments or political discussions relating to a presidential election in 2015. The President considers this an invidious attempt to sway him from his chosen pursuit of the set out constituents of the transformation agenda which form the basis upon which Nigerians overwhelmingly elected him to steer the ship of the nation in 2011.”

    When the celebrated journalist and novelist, George Orwell, said in his famous essay, ‘Politics and the English Language’, published in 1946, that “Political speech and writing are largely the defence of the indefensible,” he could not, of course, have had your typical Nigerian politician in mind, much less a 21st century Nigerian presidential spokesman. But if he did, he couldn’t have been more spot-on in his dismissal of political speech as a lot of bull. “Political language,” he said in the essay, “is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.”

    Anyone living in Nigerian in recent times, even if he were half blind – except, of course, if he is Okupe and his likes – can see that the presidential spokesman’s attempt to rebut Governor Aliyu couldn’t have been more disingenuous. Few statements, if any, could have been worded to make barefaced lies sound truthful, murder respectable and pure wind appear solid.

    To begin with, most disinterested Nigerians and close foreign observers of Nigeria know that President Jonathan was never “overwhelmingly elected” in April 2011. On the contrary, it is pretty obvious he was overwhelmingly rigged into office, beginning with the dubious PDP primaries, all the way through the manipulation of religion and ethnicity and the abuse of state’s fiscal power and its instruments of violence to square or squash dissent, to finally getting the courts to dismiss opposition rejection of the results on legal technicalities.

    Second, even Okupe knows that his principal has been anything but single-minded in his pursuit of his Transformation Agenda, which, in any case, was an unaffordable shopping list rather than a set of coherent and achievable objectives. If the President has been single-minded in the pursuit of his campaign promises, incoherent and unrealistic as they were, the country would have been a lot better today than it was in April 2011.

    The truth, assuming the likes of Okupe care for one, is that if anyone is guilty of diverting the president’s attention from his job, it is the man himself, certainly more than anyone else. This much is obvious from his single-minded determination last year to replace the “recalcitrant” Timipre Sylva with the loyal Seriake Dickson as the governor of his home state, Bayelsa, and hunt Sylva down into oblivion. It was also obvious from his single-minded determination to impose the loyal Alhaji Bamanga Tukur as chairman of the PDP, even after the gentleman had been roundly rejected by his immediate North-Eastern constituency to which the job had been zoned.

    No less diversionary is his self-inflicted current face-off with Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State whose crime, it seems, is that, like not a few two-term governors, he is suspected of harbouring presidential ambition. At least twice last week the President tried, but failed, to remove Amaechi as the chairman of the Nigerian Governors Forum. Before then his self-appointed godfather, Chief Edwin Clark, had taken out a two-part full page adverts in several newspapers to rant and rave at the Forum for its imagined antipathy towards his godson. Chances are those adverts did not cost the old man one kobo.

    What all this suggests is that the President is single-mindedly determined not to let anything or anyone whatsoever to get in the way of his second-term, some would say third-term, presidential ambition, having been sworn into the office twice already. If anything has been diverting his attention from doing his job, it is this single-minded focus on 2015.

    So it is really disingenuous for Okupe to accuse Governor Aliyu, or for that matter anyone else, of trying to divert the President from carrying out his transformation agenda. The governor apparently did not lie when he said the President signed a deal with the PDP governors to serve for only one term on his own steam. The proof that Aliyu spoke the truth, at least for once, given his reputation as a public officer who talks and equivocates too much, is crystal clear from the egregious response to his claim by friends of the president which in effect says, “So what if the President signed a deal?”

    Politicians everywhere do deals often with no intention to keep them. But only in Nigeria do they sign and seal deals with no intention whatsoever to honour them. Worse still, it is only in Nigeria that a politician can look you straight in the eyes and accuse you of diverting his attention from doing his job for simply reminding him that he has not kept his word.

    The surprise in all this, therefore, is not that the President signed a deal apparently with no intention to honour it. It is not even that his spokesman will attempt to make a lie look truthful or make murder look respectable or give pure wind the appearance of solidity.

    The surprise is that even after the President and his estranged benefactor, former president, Olusegun Obasanjo, categorically denied the zoning and power rotation deal in PDP, Governor Aliyu would still talk about the President’s word as a gentleman being his honour in spite of all the indications so far that the man would rather Nigeria breaks up than honour his word not to contest the next presidential election.

     

  • Group: Jonathan can run

    Ahead 2014 Presidential poll, Izon Ikemi, the grassroots of the Ijaw nation made up of Nigerian citizens of Ijaw extraction, within and beyond the Niger Delta States met in Lagos and deliberated on state of the nation issues especially as it affects the strategic interest of the Ijaw Nation and her sister ethnic nationalities nationwide and unanimously agreed that President Goodluck Jonathan can contest the forthcoming presidential election.

    In a statement signed by its President, Mr. Tony Uranta, the group reiterates President Jonathan’s right to contest for a second term in office as guaranteed by the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, should he desire to exercise that constitutional rights.

    The group urges the Federal Government to critically look into the claims of marginalisation by some ethnic nationalities, reaffirming support for calls for the creation of an additional state in the South East to correct the glaring imbalance that currently exists vis-à-vis the other geopolitical zones.

    It urges Jonathan to expedite the jettisoning of all deadweight in his cabinet and other FGN MDAs, that are not serving the common good of Nigerians efficiently, transparently, accountably and patriotically.

    To realise these objectives, the group said it will immediately begin extensive consultations with all other Nigerian and foreign stakeholders in the Nigeria Project, including all other ethnic nationalities such as the Oodua Peoples’ Congress, the Afenifere, the Ohaneze Ndigbo, the Arewa Consultative Forum, the Middle Belt Union, the Urhobo Progressive Union, the Ijaw National Congress, the MOSOP, distinguished Nigerians such as elder statesmen, captains of industry, key public functionaries, and our brethren in the Diaspora], plus, leaders of faith based organisations, multinational organisations, transnational bodies, and the diplomatic corps.

  • NASS meet to override Jonathan on 2013 budget

    NASS meet to override Jonathan on 2013 budget

    The National Assembly has perfected its next line of action by harmonizing the position of the Senate and the House of Representatives on how to override President Goodluck Jonathan’s veto of the 2013 budget.

    The lawmakers have also declared their intention not to bow to the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party on the budget row, stating that it was not a party affair.

    The House of Representatives on Tuesday rose from a two-hour closed session to announce its resolve to make the move, irrespective of the decision taken by President Jonathan on the matter.

    The Speaker, Aminu Tambuwal led the House leadership which included the Chairman of the House Committee on Appropriation into a meeting with the leadership of the Senate led by the Senate President, David Mark.

    The resolve of the two chambers would be made known on Wednesday morning.

    House Spokesman, Zakari Mohammed, who briefed reporters after the closed session said having passed the budget since December last year, the country cannot afford to wait “for eternity” for the President to assent to the document.

    President Jonathan had sent a budget of N4.9.24 trillion to the National Assembly last year, while the lawmakers jerked it up to N4.987 trillion.

     

  • Jonathan greets Shagari at 88

    Jonathan greets Shagari at 88

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Tuesday congratulated former President Shehu Shagari on his 88th birthday.

    Jonathan, in a statement signed by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Reuben Abati, recalled the ex-president’s leadership during Nigeria’s Second Republic and his contributions to the growth of democracy in the country.

    The President thanked the Alhaji Shagari for remaining steadfast in supporting the efforts of all governments to improve the lives of Nigerians.

    He wished the former Nigerian leader good health and more years of service to the country and humanity.