Tag: Jonathan

  • Presidency cancels FEC meeting

    Presidency cancels FEC meeting

    The weekly meeting of the Federal Executive Council did not hold at the Presidential Villa, Abuja on Wednesday, the News Agency of Nigeria reports.

    FEC is the highest Federal Executive decision-making body presided over by the President with the Vice-President, Secretary to the Government of the Federation and all the ministers in attendance.

    The Head of Service of the Federation and some presidential aides are also members of the Council.

    NAN reports that there is no official reason given by the presidency on why Wednesday’s meeting did not hold.

    Some ministers who were not aware of the development arrived at the villa before 10am, the usual commencement time of the meeting, but were turned back by protocol officials.

    With the absence of President Goodluck Jonathan, Vice-President Namadi Sambo would have presided over the meeting.

    Jonathan left Abuja on Tuesday night for London and Paris to confer with the British Prime Minister, David Cameron and the President of France, Francois Hollande on matters of vital interests to Nigeria, Britain and France.

    The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr Reuben Abati, had said in a statement on Tuesday that the president would, on his way to London, stop over in Cairo, Egypt.

    He said the President would participate in the conference of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) scheduled to open there on Wednesday.

    According to Abati, the President would also attend the launch of former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s Foundation in London on Friday.

    He said the president would be back in Abuja on Monday.

     

  • Terrorism: Jonathan to meet Cameron, Hollande

    Terrorism: Jonathan to meet Cameron, Hollande

    President Goodluck Jonathan is expected to jet out of Abuja on Tuesday night to meet with the British Prime Minister, Mr. David Cameron and French President, Mr. Francois Hollande over terrorism in West Africa.

    A statement issued by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, said that the President, who will be accompanied by the First Lady and other government officials, will also discuss trade and economic relations with the British prime minister.

    The President is also expected to stop over in Egypt to attend the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).

    The statement reads: “President Goodluck Jonathan will leave Abuja tonight for London and Paris to confer with the British Prime Minister, Mr. David Cameron and the President of France, Mr. Francois Hollande on matters of vital interest to Nigeria, Britain and France.

    “The President’s talks with the British Prime Minister in London are expected to focus on the expansion of trade and economic relations between Nigeria and Britain as well as the enhancement of cooperation between both countries on the war against terrorism.

    “In Paris, President Jonathan will confer with President Hollande and French Government officials on the ongoing deployment of Nigerian and ECOWAS troops to Mali to support the current military action against insurgents and terrorists in Northern Mali.

    “On his way to London, President Jonathan will stop over in Cairo, Egypt to participate in the conference of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) scheduled to open there tomorrow. He is also scheduled to attend the launching of the Olusegun Obasanjo Foundation in London on Friday.

    “The President who will be accompanied by the First Lady and relevant government officials is due back in Abuja on Monday.”

     

  • AFCON: Jonathan charges Eagles to beat Mali

    AFCON: Jonathan charges Eagles to beat Mali

    President Goodluck Jonathan has charged the Super Eagles to beat Mali and qualify for the final of this year’s African Nations Cup in South Africa.

    Nigeria battle Mali in Wednesday’s semi-final in Durban.

    President Jonathan has promised to be at the final this weekend if Nigeria qualifies.

    President of the Nigeria Football Federation, Aminu Maigari, said the Super Eagles are ready to fulfill President Jonathan’s desire to travel to South Africa for the championship game.

    “I have just spoken to the head coach (Stephen Keshi) and the captain (Joseph Yobo), and they have assured me that they will fulfill Mr. President’s desire. It is rare to have this kind of support from a Head of State,” MTNFootball.com quoted Maigari as saying on Tuesday.

    “On our part, the NFF has motivated the team enough to do Mr. President and the nation proud by not only winning on Wednesday, but lifting the trophy on Sunday.”

    The team arrived in Durban, venue of Wednesday’s semi final against Mali, to a glorious welcome by the people of Durban (Nigerian residents and other nationals) who desire to be compensated for the disappointment of Super Eagles’ group stage elimination from the FIFA World Cup finals 32 months ago.

    Needing only a win to reach the knock-out phase of Africa’s first FIFA World Cup, and backed by a vociferous full house at the Moses Mabhida Stadium, the Eagles played a 2-2 draw with Korea Republic and exit the tournament.

     

  • Jonathan, Gowon, Buhari, others inaugurate centenary celebration

    Jonathan, Gowon, Buhari, others inaugurate centenary celebration

    President Goodluck Jonathan led five former Presidents and Heads of State on Monday evening to inaugurate the nation’s centenary anniversary celebration.

    The anniversary will hold on January 1, 2014.

    The British colonial administration amalgamated the Southern and Northern Protectorates which make up the Nigerian nation on January 1, 1914.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that former military Heads of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon (rtd), Gen. Mohammadu Buhari, Gen. Abdusalami Abubakar, former Presidents Shehu Shagari and Olusegun Obasanjo also graced the occasion held at the Banquet Hall of the Presidential Villa.

    The Senate President, Sen. David Mark, his Deputy Sen. Ike Ekweremadu, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Alhaji Aminu Tambuwal, his Deputy, Chief Emeka Ihedioha and the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Aloma Mukhtar also attended the event.

    State Governors, Ministers, Presidential aides, captains of Industry, members of Diplomatic Corps also were present at the occasion.

    Speaking at the occasion, Jonathan said the amalgamation of 1914 was not a mistake but an act of God.

    He said the amalgamation created “a unique entity of the globe called Nigeria; a beautiful country richly blessed and which had turned out innovative people across the world.’’

    The president said that beyond the endowed natural resources, “Nigeria is blessed with unique collection of people specially created by God.’’

    “The one Nigeria consciousness which has kept the nation together must be safeguarded.’’

    The president said that it was a unique act of God that the country had survived a civil war and several other daunting challenges.

    “The unity of Nigeria is indivisible and non-negotiable, we must remain the forward looking people that we are.

    “I see a united, powerful and prosperous nation that will make the generation yet unborn very proud.

    “Arise, we shall and prosper we will,’’ he said.

  • 2014 budget will encourage manufacturing sector – Jonathan

    2014 budget will encourage manufacturing sector – Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan said on Monday in Abuja that the 2014 budget and beyond would be designed to encourage the manufacturing sector for employment generation.

    Jonathan said this at the inauguration of the Board of the National Competitive Council of Nigeria (NCCN) in the Council Chamber of the Presidential Villa.

    The council, which is chaired by the Minister of Trade and Investment, Dr. Olusegun Aganga, is charged with the responsibility of, among other things, proposing policies and recommendations that will enhance Nigeria’s global competitiveness ranking and revitalise the economy.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the 18-member board is also expected to generate policies and programmes that will attract domestic and foreign investment particularly in the manufacturing sector, create sales for local businesses and more markets for products made in Nigeria.

    The president said, “Government will continue to support private initiatives and encourage private bodies to key into our transformation agenda. We have to commend the private sector for their commitment in setting up this body that will help government and the private sector.

    “I wish the pioneer NNCC board every success in this assignment and I have every confidence that you will not let our nation down. We believe that without encouraging the private sector, especially the manufacturing sector, we cannot get out of the current economic position no matter how we struggle to produce primary produce, they will not create enough jobs for this country.

    “That is why for the next two years and may be beyond 2015, Nigerian budget will be geared towards encouraging manufacturing sector in this country.”

     

  • Jonathan tasks Super Eagles against Elephants

    Jonathan tasks Super Eagles against Elephants

    … Reiterates desire to watch final match

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan has again reiterated his desire to be in South Africa for the final match of the 29th Africa Cup of Nations, provided that the Super Eagles make it that far.

    This message was passed to the Super Eagles on Friday by the Honourable Minister and Chairman of the National Sports Commission, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, through the President of NFF, Alhaji Aminu Maigari.

    Nigeria’s sports-loving number one citizen will be among heads of state expected at the closing ceremony inside the National Stadium (known until recently as Soccer city) in Soweto on Sunday, February 10.

    This is also contingent on the Eagles overcoming the Ivorian Elephants on Sunday, and then winning their semi final clash against the winner of Saturday’s clash between host South Africa and Mali in Durban.

    “President Jonathan has told me that he wants to be at the final match, and that is only on condition that you are in the final. That is why you have to go all out, first against the Ivoirians on Sunday. Let us take it one match at a time,” said Abdullahi.

    President Jonathan was a surprise guest at the Super Eagles’ training session at the National Stadium, Abuja, days before the team’s first leg, final qualifying-match against Liberia in Monrovia in September 2012.

    He is the first head of government of Nigeria to personally attend the national team’s training since Alhaji Shehu Shagari visited the team camp on the eve of the 1980 Africa Cup of Nations finals.

    The President spoke with each member of the team prior to the Group C clash with Zambia in Nelspruit on January 25.

    It can also be recalled that President Jonathan was at the Super Eagles’ camp at Protea Hotel Wanderers in Johannesburg on the eve of their opening 2010 FIFA World Cup match against Argentina.

    The Sports Minister will speak with each member of the squad before Sunday’s battle.

  • Jonathan promises money to clean up lead poisoning

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan promised this week to release $4 million to clean up villages where hundreds of children have died in the world’s worst outbreak of lead poisoning.

    Health activists applauded the move, saying it could save thousands of lives. More than 400 children have died from lead released by wildcat gold-mining in seven villages in Zamfara State, according to Doctors Without Borders, one of several agencies working there. An additional 1,500 children have high lead levels, which can cause brain damage and other problems.

    Local gold-bearing rock is also high in lead, which gets into the air, soil and water when villagers grind it and melt it. Many villagers took up mining as the price of gold soared to $1,800 an ounce last year, although the government has banned home mining.

    The cleanup money has been blocked since 2011; the decision to release it “could be lifesaving for countless children,” Jane Cohen, a researcher from Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.

  • If Yar’Adua was ‘Baba go slow’, Jonathan is ‘Baba slumber’

    If Yar’Adua was ‘Baba go slow’, Jonathan is ‘Baba slumber’

    Senator Rufai Hanga was pioneer National Chairman of the Congress for Progress Change (CPC). He represented Kano Central Senatorial Zone from 2003 to 2007. A businessman and administrator with over 25 years in the corporate world, Hanga talks of the commitment and determination of his party to ensure that the proposed merger plan with the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), among other parties, becomes a reality ahead of 2015. In this interview with Assistant Editor, LINUS OBOGO, he also faults President Goodluck Jonathan’s performance, describing him as ‘Baba Slumber’.

    The Sultan of Sokoto, Muhammed Sa’ad Abubakar III, has blamed the Boko Haram and other security challenges ravaging the North on the region itself. What do you make of this open indictment of the region by the Islamic leader?

    The Sultan was absolutely right about what has become a source of embarrassment to the region. It is the result of long years of bad leadership and injustice in the region and at the centre. The region has not done enough to bring the scourge to an end. It is a result of long years of deprivations and exploitation by the leadership.

    The Boko Haram sect proposed a dialogue with the Federal Government and it has yet remained unrelenting in its attacks on both the security agencies and Christian institutions. Do you think the militant sect is desirous of peace to warrant the Federal Government to take their dialogue overtures seriously?

    I recall that the sect had proposed a dialogue with the Federal Government, but surprisingly, it was rejected. The position of the government then was that the dialogue option by the Boko Haram was in bad faith.

    On the other hand, the sect was equally suspicious of the government. But whether the sect was sincere or not, I cannot say because I do not even know them. I do not have much knowledge about the character and composition of the militant group. The only thing I know of them is what I read in the papers like any other Nigerian. I cannot lay claim to have sufficient knowledge of the Boko Haram and their motives as to arrive at a judgment on their insincerity or otherwise.

    We are being taken along the path similar to what we witnessed during the late President Umaru Yar’Adua’s era when he disappeared from governance radar for months without transferring power to his vice-president. Some governors have been out of office for months on the ground of ill health, yet without their deputies functioning in an acting capacity. What does this say about our brand of democracy?

    Today, the governors have become part of Nigeria’s problems. They are selfish and wicked. They are no longer in office for their people but for themselves. That explains why they seem to be afraid of the unknown. They do not trust anybody, not even their deputies who are supposed to be their closest allies. They are self-centered and selfish. They are more concerned about themselves and their families alone. That is why they would rather guard their office so jealously.

    With that being said, I want to say that what is happening to them is not of their own making, but an act of God. They did not swear an oath to fall sick. Illness is something that comes naturally.

    However, the culture of not wanting to delegate or transfer power under a situation of ill health is undemocratic and unfair.

    When this similar scenario played out during the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, some of us made our position known that it was not the best practice in a democracy. So, it will not make a difference if I maintain the same position now because I had said it before and I am saying it now that it is wrong and unfair for not wanting deputy governors to hold the fort when they are sick.

    When you say that the governors are Nigerian’s problem, how exactly do you mean?

    I say it with all sense of responsibility that the governors are our problem because they always want things their own way. It is rather unfortunate and unfair. Whenever there is an issue that should agitate their minds, that is when you will hear of the Governors’ Forum. I have not seen or heard of this anywhere in the world where governors have a forum and constitute themselves into a cabal. They constitute themselves into a forum in order to manipulate the system and serve their selfish interest. There are so many issues like unemployment, insecurity and corruption confronting the country which the governors ought to concentrate their energies on tackling. They are not doing that, but rather, forming a forum to protect their interest. They are busy fighting for the control and pillaging of local government fund. That is why I said the governors are our problem.

    Could this be the reason why they are alleged to be working hard to frustrate the aspect of the autonomy of the local councils in the ongoing Constitution Review exercise?

    This is one of the ills that the governors have become, which is why I said they are part of the problems of the country. They control the local governments and House of Assemblies of their states. The governors know that they are part of the two-third requirement for any constitution review or amendment to be effected, that is why they will have a forum to arm-twist any process that will bring about the autonomy of the local governments. They will want to see that this does not happen.

    The local governments should be autonomous. If the federal government is not controlling the resources of the sates after the sharing exercise, why should the states control that of the councils? Are they doing it simply because they are the senior partners in the state/local government relationship? Why should the state control the joint account of the councils?

    The constitution provides for the autonomy of the federal, state and council tiers of government. They are supposed to be independent of one another. Today, as we speak, there are states that have not held local government election in the country. What happens is that they will constitute a caretaker arrangement for six months as allowed by the constitution and dissolve them and reconstitute them after two months. This is part of the manipulation that goes on at the state level, which is why no election has been conducted in some of the states. It is in bad faith and it is rather unfortunate.

    How can the governors’ overbearing control of the councils be checkmated?

    The only way is to ensure that there is an intense pressure from concerned stakeholders and civil society groups on the governors to give in to the demand for the autonomy of the local councils in the ongoing constitution review by the National Assembly. We must stand up as a people and ensure that there is a provision in the reviewed or amended constitution for the autonomy of the local councils in Nigeria.

    Governors, including those who are serving their second term, must be told in clear terms that they cannot aspire to be the next president or senators when it is not in their interest to allow local government councils to be autonomous of the state governors. We must fight the governors and wrest the independence of the councils from their vice grip.

     

    After your first term in the Senate on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), you could not make it back for obvious reasons. Was it that you were edged out or the excitement was no longer there?

    I did not attempt to go back to the Senate this time around because I am the National Chairman of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC). I may still go back to the Senate. After all, I am still in politics. It is not the end of me yet, so, anything can happen. I will never be tired of lending my voice to issues of national concern. Tomorrow is still pregnant and we cannot tell what it will bring.

    Your party, the Congress for Progressive Change, is about going into a merger discussion with some political parties, how optimistic are you?

    I am highly optimistic because all the parties to the merger are ready to surrender their certificates to INEC and fuse into one party. The ANPP is willing to surrender its certificate, same as the ACN, the CPC.

    It is just a matter of time and we will all surrender our certificates and come out on one platform and as a new party. The last time the alliance did not work because we were in the eve of an election, but it is not going to be like that again as we are going to collapse into one big party.

    Nothing is going to stop me from surrendering the certificate of CPC to INEC in a bid to forge a successful merger. As I speak, the certificate is deposited in a bank and I have written a Will stating that if I die, my children should collect it and hand it over to INEC for the purpose of a merger.

    In Nigeria today, we know that the strongest opposition party is the ACN, which is why I told my son that if I die any moment, he should give the certificate to Asiwaju Bola Tinubu to surrender to INEC for the purpose of forming a merger. The merger is already a reality and nobody can stop it now, not even the PDP.

    Do you think that with parties merely surrendering their certificates of registration, it guarantees the presidency or ensure a defeat of the PDP in 2015?

    We are going to have a single candidate as soon as we fuse into one party. And what that means is that all the supporters of the three or four political parties will yield their votes and support to a single candidate to emerge from the merger exercise. There will be a strong synergy as all the different candidates that hitherto contested on their individual platform will pool their followers for a single and strong candidate.

    The whole North will never vote for the PDP this time around. When the entire South West, South East, vote for a single candidate, you can only imagine the kind of landslide that will be witnessed. Come 2015, the PDP will become the smallest minority party in Nigeria, you just wait and see. From their claim of being the biggest party in Africa, they will become the smallest party in Nigeria.

    With most of the parties being deregistered, PDP will crash from being the biggest to the smallest party in Nigeria.

    Some section of the North and particularly their leaders, have in recent times, been in virulent opposition to certain issues that affect some other regions in the country, like state creation, derivation formula, the Petroleum Industry Bill, among others. What do you think is often at the heart of such leaders like Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso of Kano State and his ilk?

    On state creation, the argument of the likes of Governor Kwankwaso has been that you just do not create states for the sake of it or on the basis of regions or zones simply because you want to satisfy some people.

    There must be criteria for creating these states such as population and land mass. Let me give you an instance, while you can traverse the entire South East and South South in just one day, you cannot traverse one state in the North West in one day.

    Secondly, a state like Akwa Ibom has 31 council areas, yet the entire population of the state is not more than two million people. And if you put the population of the entire South South zone together, it is not up to that of Kano State. Again, the entire land mass is not up to Kano State. That is just the simple argument and so, you cannot go about creating states on the basis of regions, ethnicity or zones.

    You will also agree with me that it is grossly unfair to have one senator representing just two local governments, while one senator will represent about 16 local governments in the North. The same also holds for one senator representing one million people while elsewhere, five million people have one senator representing them. That is the argument Kwankwaso seems to be making. Sincerely, I think there is a sense in it.

    You cited land mass as one of the criteria for creating either state or council area. Would you or Kwankwaso be comfortable to have desert with no human beings mapped out as states and council areas, when the so called land mass is just a vast stretch of sand dunes with no human habitation? And have you forgotten that the so called population you touted has for years been manipulated in favour of the North by Northern officials in charge of census?

    Well, I am not arguing in support of his position, but that is what I perceive him to be saying. However, I agree with you on the issues contained in your questions and the fact that nobody is living in the desert and it is a vast stretch of sand dunes. But let me remind you of some of the censuses conducted from 1960 to date. I am from Kano and I will speak from that perspective. 80 per cent of people from Kano have three or four wives and their wives bear a lot of children for them. Each wife is capable of bearing ten or more children. So, if one woman has ten children, multiply ten by four wives. That gives you 40 children.

    Meanwhile, my university mates from the south of Nigeria, who got married to one wife, would end up with either three or four children. Yet he is a husband of one wife. Will his practice of one wife and three or four children help in increasing the population of his zone? The answer is capital NO! We met after about 30 years of graduation as ‘Old boys’ and I asked them how about their families? Some of them told me they were married with three kids and others with two.

    For some of us from the North, we have four wives with each of the wives have eight to ten children. This is very logical to me as a sound argument. However, I do not intend this argument to generate bad blood. I remember telling a senator colleague of mine back then when argument like this came up.

    So, you are correct on the issue of desert with no human being but when you come to Kano, you will understand what I am talking about.

    Well, having said this, I want to make it clear that that is just the governor’s argument and not mine. What I am interested in is the unity of this country and the common good of Nigerians as a whole. I believe in justice, equality and equity for all.

    How would you rate the performance of the PDP government in Kano and at the centre?

    As a matter of fact, there is no PDP government in Kano. He does not believe in PDP. He merely contested on the platform of the PDP, but he is not of the PDP. What we have is ‘Kwankwasiya’ government. Even the PDP members in the state know that as much. ‘Kwankwasiya’ is a philosophy or a movement and he acts as the group head. He runs the state as ‘Kwankwasiya’ and he does not believe in the PDP anymore.

    He is executing a lot of projects for the people and at the same time stepping on toes. He is taking on the ‘big men’ in the state, the aristocrat and the rich. But he is doing a lot for the masses.

    As for President Goodluck Jonathan’s government, while people said Yar’Adua was ‘Baba go slow’, I will describe Jonathan as an abysmal failure. It is true that Yar’Adua was ‘Baba go slow’, Jonathan is ‘Baba slumber’. For me, Jonathan’s scorecard will definitely read as ‘poverty, unemployment, hunger and insecurity’. That is Jonathan’s performance index in his three years as President.

     

  • ‘Jonathan should keep to  his one term promise’

    ‘Jonathan should keep to his one term promise’

    President Goodluck Jonathan has been advised not to seek re-election for another term in office in 2015. A social critic, Mr Fidel Anujuo, who spoke with reporters in Lagos, urged the to resist pressures from individuals, ethnic groups and organizations, who are bent on drafting him into the race.

    He said the President should stick to his promise to spend only one term in office.

    Anujuo said:“The President should be a man of his words. He was publicly quoted and reported on several occasions, while mounting the soap box in 2011, that he would only serve for one term, having completed the remaining two and half years left of Umaru Musa Yar’Adua’s term.

    “The events of recent days are really disturbing, with the pasting of Jonathan’s posters in some places in Abuja where the promoters of the posters were urging him to seek re-election in 2015.”

    The social critic acknowleged that the Presidency has denied involvement in the pasting of the posters. But he said President Jonathan should renounce any presidential ambition to convince Nigerians.

    He added: “I believe President Jonathan should come out and let Nigerians know where he stands on the issue. He has been evasive on the matter, and this has brought about tension and anxiety.

    “I believe a man should be bound by his own words. Although, constitutionally, Jonathan has every right to contest or seek re-election, but he should try to be a man of his words. Why should somebody of his caliber, holding the highest position in theland, not keep to his words? Moreover, after spending six years in office as President, what does Jonathan want again?

    “He should act like a true patriot, and statesman. He should resist pressure from political jobbers and hangers-on who will not tell him the truth, but will continue to urge him to run. Jonathan should know that the people asking him to run are only out to feather their personal interests.

    “From the intense debates 2015 issue have been generating among different ethnic groups, one doesn’t need to be a seer to know that trouble is looming”.

     

     

     

     

  • Why boards’ appointments are delayed – Jonathan

    Why boards’ appointments are delayed – Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday attributed marginalisation complaints by geo-political zones for the delay in the appointment of board members into some government agencies and parastatals.

    He spoke while swearing-in seven new members of the Federal Character Commission, one member of the Federal Civil Service Commission and two permanent secretaries shortly before the commencement of the Federal Executive Council meeting in Abuja

    To ensure that no geo-political zone is shortchanged, President Jonathan said his administration is set to correct all the wrongs in federal appointments.

    To this end, the president said he had directed the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Senator Anyim Pius Anyim, to do a proper analysis of the complaints received from all the zones, towards redressing them in the pending federal appointments.

    While he has been severally accused of favouring people from his home state, Bayelsa and the South- South geo-political zone in his appointments, President Jonathan said his impression before assumption of office was that complaints of marginalisation were limited to some parts of the country.

    He said his experience in office had shown that all geo-political zones complain of marginalisation and it is not limited to any zone.

    He said: “The Federal Character Commission is very critical. We are in an era where every geo-political zone complains about marginalisation. Initially, I thought that only some parts of the country are marginalised, but when I got here, all the geo-political zones complain that they are marginalised.

    “All the geo-political zones are complaining that they are not given appointments. In fact, we have some pending appointments because of that (the claims of marginalisation), I have told the Secretary to the Government of the Federation to do proper analysis and probably to wait and accumulate the number, probably if we accumulate them (pending appointments) up to 12, when we want to make the appointments, we will make sure that all the geo-political zones get two each.

    “In that case, one’s conscience will be clear. That is why some appointments are pending which I hope we will deal with this week. I think they are about 12 or so. We will make sure that all the geo-political zones are accommodated,” he stated.