Tag: Kashamu

  • Threat to life: Court orders Kashamu to submit self for investigation

    Threat to life: Court orders Kashamu to submit self for investigation

    A Federal High Court in Abuja ‎on Thursday ordered the Senator representing Ogun East Senatorial District, Buruji Kashamu, to submit himself for investigation over life threatening allegation filed against him.

    A member of the House of Representatives from Ikenne, Sagamu and Remo North Federal Constituency in Ogun State, Oladipupo Adebutu, in a petition to the police, dated August 16, 2016, accused Kashamu of threatening his life.

    Justice Nnamdi Dimgba gave the order while ruling on a fundamental rights enforcement filed suit by Kashamu, in which he claimed that the police invitation was a ploy to extradite him to United States for drug related offences.

    Justice Dimgba said Kashamu’s apprehension that he could be arrested, detained and extradited to the U.S was understandable.

    The judge said though he has ordered Kashamu to submit himself to the police for investigation, that should not provide the police with a cover to arrest, detain or extradite him to the U.S.

    Justice Dimgba said it would be unlawful for any other agency to assist the police in repatriating him to the U.S in view of the subsisting judgment given in his favour by court.

     

  • Kashamu mourns Osotimehin

    Kashamu mourns Osotimehin

    THE senator representing Ogun East in the National Assembly, Prince Buruji Kashamu, has expressed sadness over the death of Nigeria’s former Minister of Health and Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNPF), Prof. Babatunde Osotimehin.

    In a statement yesterday, Kashamu described Osotimehin as a thoroughbred professional, a gentleman and a great physician who was passionate about child and maternal mortality issues.

    Recalling the late minister’s days in the Ministry of Health, Kashamu said: “He demonstrated an uncommon commitment to his job by working assiduously towards raising the bar and ensuring qualitative health care services to Nigerians in both the private and public hospitals.”

    He added that: “Ijebu-Igbo, Ogun East Senatorial District, Ogun State, Nigeria, Africa and indeed the world have lost a role model and an exemplary medic. Prof. Osotimehin shall forever live in our hearts.

    “On behalf of our community in Ijebu-Igbo (Prof. Osotimehin and Kashamu hail from the same town), the good people of Ogun East Senatorial District, I hereby express my heartfelt condolences to members of his immediate family, the management and staff of  UNFPA, and the Government and people of Nigeria, on this great loss.”

    Prof. Osotimehin, the former Director-General of the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA), passed on in his home in New York on June 4.

    He was 68.

  • Kashamu faults Fayose over  call for Buhari’s resignation

    Kashamu faults Fayose over call for Buhari’s resignation

    The senator representing Ogun East, Buruji Kashamu, has condemned Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose for calling for President Muhammadu Buhari’s resignation.

    Kashamu, in a an advertorial in The Nation, said the governor’s call was unfortunate, coming at a time eminent Nigerians were praying for the president’s recovery.

    He said: “It is most unfortunate that while eminent and responsible Nigerians are praying for the quick recovery of our dear President, all a misguided state governor could do, apart from chasing the shadows of an illusionary elongation of his tenure, is to call for the resignation of the President. Is there any vacuum in governance? No!

    “We are all living witnesses to the marvelous work that the structure that has been put in place by this government is doing seamlessly. Anybody can be sick. Fayose himself is the one acting like a sick person; his erratic and unpredictable nature gives the impression of someone who lives on anti-depressant drugs.

    “This is confirmed by his irrational call for the president’s resignation and compulsive rhetoric in the guise of opposition. Fayose should concentrate on the task of governing Ekiti State; per chance he might end up accomplishing something meaningful.”

    He said unfortunately, the governor “burns his energy on unimportant things instead of using it to serve his people and fight for the interest of the Yoruba race”.

    Kashamu added: “He cannot leave the reins of power for anyone because he is power drunk. He cannot also trust anyone with power. The cloak of seeking to complete the seven months that he was denied in 2006, when he was impeached is a tall dream – an impossibility!”

    The senator faulted a news report about the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice and the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) saying they would halt extradition moves against him until all the court cases are disposed of.

    Kashamu said: “It is all mischief and over sensationalism by some reporters. As judicial reporters, they should know that there is no extradition case anywhere against me.”

  • Kashamu @ 59

    His birth was providential and profound; so were the events leading to his christening, growth and his entire life. Although his father was doing well as a farmer and businessman, things took a turn for the worse shortly before Buruji Kashamu was born. However, before his christening on the eighth day, there was a turnaround that surprised members of the Kashamu family. The miraculous turn of events informed his being christened “Buruji” which literally means one who came into wealth early in life.  This was in line with the Yoruba tradition of taking cognizance of happenings around a family when christening a child.

    Born on May 19, 1958, Senator Buruji Kashamu is the second son and the third child of his mother’s four children for Pa Kashamu Sodipe. Like most men of his time, Pa Kashamu was a polygamist. He had five wives who bore him 13 children.

    For those who saw the young Buruji through infancy, his first faltering steps and the events afterwards, they would readily surmise that the name was divinely inspired.

    After his early education at the Ansarudeen Primary School in Ijebu Igbo, Ijebu North Local Government Area of Ogun State, he was taken to Lagos where he began to live with an uncle in Surulere, Lagos. The uncle had a hotel known as Lolas Lodge near Tejuosho, Yaba, where he worked as an attendant during the day and then attended evening classes at Igbobi College, Lagos.

    Although his early exposure to the work life could be said to have momentarily distracted him from his educational pursuits, his strong desire for knowledge and self-improvement made him to later sit for the Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE). Thereafter, he took a correspondence course in Business Studies at the Pitman College, London and much later a Diploma in English Language at the University of Lagos.

    But, suffice it to say that his early exposure to the work life set him on a path of industry and self-dependence from which he never looked back while many of his peers were still tied to their mother’s apron strings. When he was barely 20 years old in 1978, he found his way into Yaba Local Government Area of Lagos State where he was engaged as an agent for motor vehicle registration and documentation, licenses and the like.

    After working for about a year, he made enough savings from which he began his automobile business. Yes, automobile business! How he did it? Here is how: he worked Monday through Friday at the local council. But, on Friday evening, after the close of work, he would leave Lagos for Kaduna where he would arrive the next day. From the park or train station, he would go straight to Peugeot Automobile Nigeria (PAN) in Kaduna where he made his purchases and then return to Lagos on Sunday so as to resume work the next day. Whenever he got to Kaduna late, he would make contact with his the sales personnel, make all the necessary arrangements and return to work. He began with one 504 Peugeot car, and then progressed to two, three…

    Kashamu later veered into the real estate business. His first was a plot of land he bought in Ikotun Egbe, a Lagos suburb on which he built his first house – a block of four flats. His immediate elder sister lived in one of the flats until recently when she relocated to Lagos Island.

    His adventure soon took him to the buying and selling of various goods such as soap, textile materials and cement. This made him to begin to shuttle between Nigeria and the Republic of Benin where he established a cotton ginnery factory that is still in operation till date. He also became the first, if not the sole agent of Sanyong and Daewoo motors in West Africa.

    Expectedly, Kashamu became the toast of the powers-that-be and the envy of many in most of the neighbouring French speaking West African countries, especially in the Republic of Benin. He was to become a victim of the internal politics in the Republic of Benin. He was roped into an indictment he knew nothing about which has metaphorically become his cross despite several judicial pronouncements by the effervescent and impregnable British courts and their Nigerian counterparts to the effect that it was a case of mistaken identity. The details are already in the public domain. There is no need to bore anyone; lest we digress.

    Many may know him as a philanthropist; some see him as a strong man and yet others say he is just one of the politicians. But there is more to the Kashamu persona. Beyond his gusto and gait is a heart of gold, full of empathy and flowing with the milk of human kindness. Nothing is too much for him to give. No amount of money or possession is too much for him to part with. He does not hold on tightly to anything; be it money, vehicles, clothing or accessories.

    Despite knowing his generous nature, he gives so much that even those that are close to him are stunned at the level of his generosity. His estranged friend and Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo Fayose had once publicly declared that even as a governor and politician, he had yet to see a politician as generous as Kashamu.

    When you try to caution him, he rebuffs such entreaties. He is quick to remind you that he is not a rich man but only spends like a rich man. His other refrain is that he has committed his life to sharing his resources with the needy and the less privileged because, according to him, the more he gives, the more he receives from the Almighty God. He is down-to-earth. It is a common sight for him to wine and dine with the crowd who visit his Ijebu-Igbo country home for one issue or the other.

    Kashamu also possesses an unbelievable amount of strength and energy. He hardly gets up to six hours of sleep every day; not because of insomnia or anything of that sort but because he is a workaholic who likes to be on top of his game. An idea could just drop on his mind anytime of the night; he would call you up and begin a discussion. He would joke with you in-between and then bare his mind. If you think with the passage of time, he would have forgotten some of the things he said, you would be shocked to realise how wrong you were! He would recap everything word-for-word.

    Kashamu is endowed with a high degree of native intelligence, a sharp mind and an eye for detail.

    Perhaps, as a result of his past experience, he is also a fighter for justice and equity. Instead of resorting to self-help and violence, he believes so much in the use of the law to fight and correct social and personal injustice. It is this belief that has always set him on collision course with some political heavyweights within his political party – the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and beyond. Hopefully, when the story of the rebirth of the PDP will be written, his contributions will be properly documented.

    Beneath the huge and strong persona is a man who fears and acknowledges God in his dealings.  A good example was when people came to tell him that some powerful forces in the politics of Ogun State, including the immediate past governor had said they would ensure he did not win his election into the Senate. His standard response was: “Are they God? Whatever God has decreed, no man can change it”.

    Although he is now a Senator by the grace of God and the benevolence of the good people of Ogun East Senatorial District, his major preoccupation has been how to use the position to impact on the lives of people, irrespective of their creed, colour or ethnic background. He is a detribalized Nigerian who is always looking for ways to put smile on people’s faces.

    Kashamu speaks French fluently, just as he updates himself with technology, trends and current affairs.

    No doubt, he is several things to many people. Yet, many – even his most ardent critics – would agree that Kashamu has proven his mettle as a leader, philanthropist, an entrepreneur, an employer of labour, an empowerer and an unusual politician.

    As he marks his 59th birthday, there is no better way to appreciate and encourage him to continue to live a life of selfless service than to chronicle some of his rare attributes and activities for humanity and posterity.

     

    • Oniyokor is media aide to Senator Kashamu.
  • Senators to NDLEA, AGF: allow court to decide Kashamu’s case

    Senators to NDLEA, AGF: allow court to decide Kashamu’s case

    Senate yesterday asked the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Attorney General of the Federation and other security agencies to allow the court to decide before attempting to extradite Senator Buruji Kashamu to the United States of America (U.S.) to answer questions on alleged drug trafficking.
    It said the NDLEA and others should allow all court processes concerning the matter of allegation of involvement in drug related offence levelled against Kashamu to be concluded in line with the rule of law.
    The resolution followed the adoption of the report of the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions, which considered the matter of alleged attempts to extradite the senator to the U.S. for allegation of drug offence.
    The report of the committee was in respect of a petition from TRLP Law on behalf of Kashamu against the NDLEA, former Chairman of the NDLEA, Mr. Ahmed Giade and Attorney General for the alleged intention to abduct Kashamu and forcibly transport him to the U.S. without recourse to due process.
    The respondents in the petition were NDLEA, Attorney General and Giade.
    Chairman of the committee, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, who presented the report, said Kashamu’s travail was being masterminded by some people.
    The committee said Kashamu should be allowed a free man until the cases in court on the allegations against him were concluded.
    Anyanwu said the NDLEA and the office of the Attorney General of the Federation had been orchestrating plans to arrest and take Kashamu to the U.S. on alleged drug trafficking offences.
    He noted that Kashamu should be left alone until cases in court are resolved.
    The Senate added that those behind the plot to extradite Kashamu to the U.S. should stay action pending the outcome of court processes.
    The committee said it discovered Kashamu had been acquitted of all charges against him by courts.
    The recommendations were adopted.

  • ‘Ekiti governor’s utterances on PDP’ve exposed him’

    ‘Ekiti governor’s utterances on PDP’ve exposed him’

    The Senator representing Ogun East, Buruji Kashamu, has faulted Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose’s position on the crisis rocking the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Kashamu, in an advertorial in this newspaper, said the Ekiti State governor was plotting to kill the party before defecting.

    The senator said: “I had always known that Fayose has an agenda and alerted our leaders and elders to his agenda of either having his way or destroying the PDP before he leaves for God knows where.

    “Now that he is letting the cat out of the bag, I can only say that Fayose has exposed himself. He has shown that he is the real agent of destabilisation. He is one of those who want to kill the PDP before he defects.

    “However, it should be clearly pointed out that PDP was not founded because of Fayose or any of us. Whether anyone leaves or not, the party will remain. It will not die. The party is like a barracks, where soldiers come and go, and the barracks remains.

    “The truth of the matter is that the leadership crisis in the PDP was designed and orchestrated because of the inordinate ambition of some people, especially those who are exiting office next year.”

    Kashamu picked holes in the reconciliation move of former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    “I am honestly shocked and surprised that the former President could preside over a meeting, where the judgment of the Court of Appeal was being disregarded as irrelevant. This cannot be the face of a party that is desirous of seeking a break with the past.

    “Going by the accounts of what I have heard happened at the meeting, I think it was a needless gathering that has reopened healing wounds and further exacerbated the crisis. I say this because any PDP meeting that fails to recognise what our laws and the courts have said about the leadership crisis is on a wrong footing and premise, and it will breed more chaos and confusion such as we have seen.

    “Senator Ali Modu Sheriff is the National Chairman of the PDP as of today based on the Court of Appeal judgment and everybody is bound to abide by that whether we like it or not.

    “You cannot call a shareholders or Board of Directors meeting and say the chairman of the board cannot participate or preside over the meeting. Worst still, some persons said Senator Sheriff must not be recognised as such even when an appellate court has established that Senator Sheriff is the party’s national chairman,” he said.

    He said Sheriff did not disrespect Jonathan by walking out of the meeting.

    “Senator Sheriff was out of the country when he was called by the former President and told of the meeting and he had to cut short his trip to attend the meeting.

    “That is a sign of respect. Even when he arrived in the country, I understand that he went straight to the former President and they met over the modalities for the meeting, and it was agreed that four of them will address the meeting. That is, former President Jonathan, Senator Sheriff, the BoT Chairman and then Senator Makarfi.

    “However, when he got there, he was not recognised as the party’s national chairman whereas others were recognised with their titles, including those who were no longer in office.”

  • PDP youth leaders decry attack on Kashamu

    PDP youth leaders decry attack on Kashamu

    Southwest Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) youth leaders have vowed to resist what they described as a campaign of calmuny against Senator Buruji Kashamu, who represents Ogun East District in the Senate.

    They decried the alleged witch– hunting of the senator by some political detractors, who are pushing for his extradition to the United States over alleged drug related offences without following international set practices.

    They called on the Federal Government to discourage its agencies from collaborating with the mischief makers.

    In their view, the previous investigations by agencies of government and court pronouncements since 2003 had exornorated Kashamu of  the allegations against him.

    In a statement in Lagos, the youth leaders urged the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) to insist on the due process, instead of the media trial.

    According to them, “if any of this faceless political bigots and their cohorts within the system feel very strongly about extraditing Senator Kashamu, they should understand that there are international set practices and standards for filing such; except those standards are met, government should discourage its agencies from collaborating with this mischief makers’’.

    The statement was signed by Yinka Sotade (Lagos), Bamidele Seyi (Osun), Segun Aboko (Ekiti), Hon. Femi Alao (Ogun), Obafemi Olajide (Ondo) and Hon. Idowu Taiwo (Oyo).

    They described Kashamu as a kind politician and philanthropist who has assisted many youths in the zone.

    The statement added: “The truth is that this explemplary legislator has heightened the expectation of followers from their leaders thereby running the current generation of greedy leaders out of relevance and possible extinction.

    “We wish to call on the Federal Government as a matter of urgency and safeguard of our national integrityand image to look into the sinister agenda of this faceless politicians who have used the media of this nation to raise a false alarm; with particular mention of the negative dimension and adverse ramifications such false alarm could deal on the foreign image of our dear fatherland, not leaving out the capacity of such untamed news to discourage international investors whose investment capacity could help our local economic growth and development.

    “We wish to make specific mention of the repeated nullification and dismissal of the allegation against Senator Kashamu by several courts of competent Jurisdiction both in the UK and Nigeria: This runs amid some worrisome political attempts to use the NDLEA National Drug law Enforcement Agency,” the PDP faithful said.

    “The hullaballoo about Senator Buruji Kashamu is a lie, unfair and lacks any essence or merit.

    ‘’Nigeria is a sovereign state and can’t be boxed to a corner by any American court at the expense of our local legal system,” they declared.

  • Kashamu: self-centred leaders killing PDP

    Kashamu: self-centred leaders killing PDP

    THE Senator representing Ogun East, Buruji Kashamu, yesterday advised those he described as “some self-centred leaders of our party” against killing the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
    Kashamu, in an advertorial in The Nation, described the move to stop Ali Modu Sheriff as the party’s national chairman as “another wild goose chase”.
    The senator said: “Given my deep knowledge of the issues, I do know, like I stated in the past without many of our leaders and elders taking heed, that this may yet be another wild goose chase. Asking for a stay of execution of a declaratory judgment or going to the Supreme Court to pursue an appeal that is not an election issue or matter between a state and the Federal Government may not be the better part of valour or discretion. It will prolong the issues unduly and further distract us as a party.
    “First, it is almost impracticable to ask a court of competent jurisdiction to either arrest or suspend its own judgment. That is tantamount to asking a court to stop a judgment creditor from enjoying the fruits of his labour. There is hardly a court worth the name that grants such an application.
    “Secondly and realistically, it is only after the Court of Appeal has heard and determined the motion for a stay of execution of the judgment that an appeal can be formally lodged at the Supreme Court. Not being an election petition or a constitutional matter, the appeal will take its normal course in the docket.
    “Why the insistence on appealing to the Supreme Court after the gentleman’s agreement between the two leaders to abide by the verdict of the Court of Appeal? Why the intransigence of members of the Caretaker Committee? Why do they want to hold on to office without end? I know that Prince Dayo Adeyeye wants to succeed Fayose as governor of Ekiti State and he feels he can’t have his way with the present realities. But what does our revered national leader, Senator Ahmed Makarfi want that he cannot overlook whatever grievances he may have with Senator Sheriff and join hands with him to organise an all-embracing National Convention in the interest of peace and our party?”
    Kashamu went on: “If not for ego and selfish ambition, there is no reason why anyone should insist on appealing an incurably bad case. The same Fayose who is on record as having urged party faithful to await the verdict of the Court of Appeal before any meaningful reconciliation could take place is now saying  a court cannot choose a leader for the party. Yet, he is one of the arrowheads of “we must go to the Supreme Court” campaign. The question is: since, according to him, a court cannot choose a leader for the party, what does he want the Supreme Court to do?
    “I am also aware that being a dogged fighter and a consummate politician, Senator Sheriff will not fold his hands and allow his rights to be trampled upon. Information at my disposal indicates that he has assembled a team of top and some of the best in the legal profession to take up the appeal in case it goes on. Since some of our leaders have remained recalcitrant and almost ridiculing the judgment of the Court of Appeal, I have also read in the media that criminal contempt proceedings have been filed at the Court of Appeal in Port Harcourt against some of them. That seems to me like a reaction to their defiance of the judgment of the Court of Appeal. According to lawyers, the practice is that contempt proceedings will first be heard and determined one way or the other before any other application – be it the motion for stay of execution or the appeal itself – can be entertained. Only God knows how long all of these would take.
    “It is granted that everyone has his own interest to protect and pursue. But, such interest must be measured and accommodated within the interest of the majority. You cannot be pursuing your own interest and then seek to stop the other person from pursuing his. You do not say because you want to build a mansion, all the other buildings in your neighbourhood must be demolished. Live and let live. That is the essence of party politics and life itself.”
    He warned the leaders of the party against allowing Governor Ayo Fayose to lead the party to its ruin.
    “Surprisingly, it beats my imagination how our leaders and elders cannot see through the fact that it is only one man’s vaunting ambition that is tearing our party apart. Ekiti State Governor, Mr. Ayodele Fayose’s interest is to first become the Vice-Presidential candidate of the PDP in 2019 and then from there the Presidential candidate! He had thought that Senator Ali Modu Sheriff would be a pliable tool towards achieving his ambition. It was when he saw that Senator Sheriff was a man of his own who would not succumb to being pushed around.

  • Kashamu gets new special adviser

    Senator Buruji Kashamu (Ogun East) has appointed Otunba Leke Adekoya as his special adviser for special duties.

    Adekoya, a journalist, chartered administrator and financial analyst, was South West co-ordinator of Omo Ilu Foundation since 2013.

    The new adviser was Lagos State Secretary of Yoruba socio cultural and political organisation, Afenifere.

    He later served as secretary of the Alliance for Democracy (AD) under the chairmanship of the late Alh Ganiu Dawodu.

    He was also the chief legislative aide to Senator Adeseye Ogunlewe from 1999-2003 and later Special Assistant for Special Duties to Ogunlewe when he was the Minister for Works.

  • Kashamu: Litmus test for rule of law

    Kashamu: Litmus test for rule of law

    have never been an admirer of Senator Buruji Kashamu. His long-drawn travails over drug trafficking allegations cum extradition war waged against him by the government of the United States of America have somewhat made an unjust judge out of me; a judge who, at the mere sight of headlines relating to the case, instantly passes a silent verdict of guilt on the Ijebu-born business guru.
    But, the current round of altercations over the culpability or otherwise of the controversial multi-millionaire seems to have purged me of the error of subjectivity, which, I am convinced, multitudes of my compatriots are wont to commit purely as a function of socio-economic and political ideological differences.
    What endeared me to a painstaking reading of the lengthy press statement of the senator, titled US Court Ruling: I have no case to answer, published in The Punch (pp.32-33) edition of January 31 was, perhaps, a deeply-rooted instinct to garner further damaging facts against the man. But, the narratives of the statement actually turned out a chronology of facts or, at least, acclaimed historical facts about the transcontinental case which only imposes the task of simple verification on the Nigerian authorities and every other corporate or individual stakeholder for final resolution. In other words, Kashamu’s pictorial account is an open challenge to the federal government, particularly the Nigeria Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and other law enforcement agencies. It necessitates the simple responsibility of contacting the British judiciary to enquire whether it is indeed true that previous attempts to get Kashamu extradited to the US were judicially knocked out, by an English High Court, on the ground of mistaken identity.
    Even an outright request by the US authorities for the extradition of the senator, under the present circumstance, cannot logically warrant steps aimed at automatic enforcement by the Nigerian authorities.
    In the first place, the existence of legal cooperation partnership between Nigeria and the US does not and can never erase the fact that our country is a sovereign nation and equal partner under such agreements. It is noteworthy that the UK judicial proceedings, occasioned by the US extradition request, were a manifestation of the due process that fundamentally protected more of that nation’s sanctity than the interests of a foreigner on its soil. Obviously, the request would not have emanated if legal partnership, reminiscent of the US-Nigeria relations, never existed between the US and UK.
    In effect, overzealous actions by Nigerian agencies would come with far-reaching damaging effects, more on the nation and its sovereign status as well as its socio-economic and political interests than on her citizen targeted by such actions. What would be overzealous in this instance will be a similitude of the last attempt by the NDLEA to comply, hook, line and sinker, with a supposed extradition directive from the US, probably better referred to as Big Brother US, without attempting to subject it to any internal due process of the law, unlike in the British case.
    Still, the direction of due process, at this stage of the matter, has been initiated by the senator himself. Having claimed that the English High Court of Justice, Queens Bench Division, in year 2000, has nullified the extradition request on the ground that it emanated from an identity error, logical reasoning demands that NDLEA, on the strength of the strong affinity between the Nigerian legal system and that of the UK, proceed, through the Office of the Attorney General, to relate with the UK authorities on the case. Such a procedure would simply align with the strategy adopted by Abuja in trashing the Halliburton allegation leveled against Hajia Aisha Buhari, the wife of the President, by Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State. Co-incidentally, Fayose’s accusation turned out a case of mistaken identity heralded by name similarity, as a result of a well publicized formal confirmation request by the Nigerian authorities, from their US counterparts.
    Meanwhile, the latest US court ruling that re-incarnated the Kashamu brouhaha is never an explicit extradition request, rather it is mere nullification of the claim of the plaintiff, Senator Kashamu himself, that the 2015 attempt to arrest and transfer him to the US by the NDLEA, in collaboration with some US agents, was an abduction attempt. In other words, the court held it was indeed an extradition attempt, not abduction. Nevertheless, it never proceeded to issue a fresh order.
    Even if it did, the question remains whether Nigeria, a supposedly independent nation is bound to unquestionably obey without initially sifting the chaffs from the grains.
    Let me now relate the case to our cherished national interest. At this crucial stage of our international relations history, particularly in relation to the entirely new Donald Trump’s US, the imperatives of relating with the supposed God’s own Country from the position of strength have, within the short period of Trump’s ascension into the most exalted office in the world, become a loud music, blaring forth the mouths of globally respected foreign affairs experts into the ears of Nigerian authorities. If anything is sure, judging by the globally understood psychology and predilections of the current xenophobic leader of the US, an unquestioning compliance in respect of any US extradition order, regarding any Nigerian, not just Kashamu, would earn Nigeria nothing but a White House comical laughter and scorn. For a new President whose initial utmost priority lies in replacing inter-racial bridges with divisive fences, extradition compliance, at this point, would be scorned as a desperate action by Nigeria to curry his favour.
    The recently published England experience of our Vice President, Professor Yemi Osibajo depicts some great depth of extant negative international perception of Nigeria, which manifested in an open insult heaped on our nation, particularly our judicial system, by an English judge in an open UK court. Surely, to firmly respect, uphold and implement our own laws without sacrificing the welfare and interests of the least significant citizen would go a long way in strengthening our worth in the international circle.
    Interestingly, one cannot but find the simultaneous refusal of the US authorities to appeal the UK judgment on Kashamu and their insistence, so far, on his extradition baffling. Is it then not plausible to infer that the supposed fountain of rule of law is trying to get what they failed to achieve legally through the backdoor, probably taking advantage of our seemingly porous willpower and system as a country?
    On the whole, the ultimate position taken by the current Nigerian administration of Muhammadu Buhari in the whole Kashamu saga that actually predated its inauguration would tell the world how objective is its rule of law pretensions.

    •Olonade is a Lagos-based public affairs analyst.