Tag: Kogi West

  • Ministers, SGF shun Senate invitation

    Ministers, SGF shun Senate invitation

    The frosty relationship existing between the Presidency and the Senate further deepen Thursday.

    Three ministers and Secretary to Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr. Babachir David Lawal, summoned by the Senate to appear before its separate committees failed to honour the invitation.

    The development emerged as Senate Thursday adjourned plenary for three weeks to observe its end of session.

    The Senate, Thursday, got messier, as the Secretary to Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr. Babachir Lawal and four Ministers, shunned summons extended to them by the Upper Legislative Chamber.

    Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), Mallam Ababakar Malami, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Geoffrey Onyeama; and Minister of Communications, Mr. Adebayo Shittu, were invited to face various Senate committees to clear certain grey areas.

    Specially, the Senate summoned the AGF on Tuesday to appear before its committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters to explain why the suit against Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki and Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, over alleged forgery of the Senate Standing Rules of 2015 became necessary.

    This resolution to invite the AGF followed the adoption of a motion of national urgent importance raised by Senator Dino Melaye (APC, Kogi West).

    On the other hand, the SGF, Mr. Lawal and Foreign Affairs Minister, Onyeama did not also turn up to clarify in honour of their invitation.

    Lawal and Onyeama were invited to explain the criteria adopted in the selection of ambassadorial nominees recently forwarded to the Senate for consideration and confirmation by President Buhari.

    While Minister of Communications, Mr. Shittu who was invited by the Senate committee on Communications to explain the reduction of the fine imposed on MTN for alleged operational misconduct by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC)

    Shittu did not also show up.

    The MTN sanction was originally N1.04 trillion, later reduced to N780 billion and again reduced to N330 billion by the Federal Government.

    The non-appearance of the Minister of Communications may have prompted a motion by the Chairman, Senate Committee on Communication, Senator Gilbert Nnaji which got Senate nod to summon the Minister and some other stakeholders once again.

    The two prayers of the motion asked Senate to “Direct the Committee on Communication to invite all the relevant stakeholders including the Minister of Justice, Accountant General of the Federation, Minister of Communication, executive vice chairman of NCC, Governor of Central Bank, managing director MTN Nigeria Limited and all other parties involved in all negotiations of the MTN deal to shed light on the matter especially whether the reduction was in accordance with the regulation of the NCC governing fines and penalties.

    To “Urge the Federal Government to move the initial amount of N50 billion from the CBN recovery account to the CBN/NCC treasury single account.”

    The prayers were unanimously adopted.

    Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki directed the committee chairman report back in two weeks by the time the Senate resumes from its break.

    Nnaji noted in his lead debate that Senate is aware that the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) enabled by the Nigerian Communications Act, 2003 is the statutory regulator for the telecommunications industry in Nigeria.

    He said that as the regulator, the commission has been imposing fines on erring telecom operators over the years and proceeds from the redemption of such fines have been lodged in the commission’s designated account.

    The Enugu East lawmaker recalled that in October 2015, in line with the Nigerian Communications Commission Registration of Telephone Subscribers) Regulation, 2011, the Nigerian Communications Commission imposed a fine of N1.04 trillion on MTN Communications Nigeria Limited for failing to deactivate 5.2 million unregistered subscribers on its network.

    He prayed the Senate to note that Section 19 and 20 of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) registration of telephone subscribers’ regulation 2011 does not empower the commission or another entity or government officials to reduce any fine so imposed.

    Nnaji regretted that the MTN fine was unilaterally reduced from N780 billion without the input of the Ministry of Communications and the NCC which “constitutes a flagrant breach of this regulation and an attempt to whittle down the authority of the commission.”

    He added that through some negotiation process excluding the ministry and the commission but championed by the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation; MTN was requested to pay the sum of N50 billion as a gesture of good faith towards the settlement of the fine.

    “Mr President, the Senate recalls that the attendant confusion created by the claim and counter claim over the veracity of the payment of the said N50 billion by MTN and the domiciliation of the money in a CBN recovery account, as if the money in question was a stolen fund, prompted the committee on communications to embark on a fact finding meeting of all stakeholders involved on March 10, 2016.

    “These included the Attorney General of the Federation, Accountant General of the Federation, Minister for Communications, Governor of Central bank of Nigeria, executive vice chairman of NCC, and the managing director MTN Nigeria Limited.

    “The senate regrets to discover by the admission of the accountant general of the federation at the meeting that the said N50 billion was actually lost in a CBN recovery account on the instruction of the accountant general of the federation.

     

    “Further regret to discover through a document available to the committee that MTN had already made a proposal of final payment of N300 billion as at the time of the meeting of the meeting in March which led the committee to conclude that there was a secret agreement between MTN, the Attorney General of the Federation, the Accountant General of the Federation to admit the N50 billion as the commencement of the execution of a final agreement of N300 billion.

     

    “The senate alarmed to observe that the reduced fine of N780 billion was further slashed to N330 billion through a settlement payment plan that smacks of unpatrotism and insensitivity of the parties that agreed to the new amount in spite of the economic plight currently facing the country.

     

    “The senate laments that Nigeria has been shortchanged in this whole process of account of the ridiculous settlement payment plan coupled with the disparity in the exchange rate regime when the fine was imposed abinitio compared with the current prevailing exchange rate where the value of naira is taking a downward slide.

    “The senate notes therefore as the representatives of the Nigerian people we are saddened about this development coming at a time when the Nigerian economy needs all the available capital infusion to bolster it,” Nnaji said.

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  • Kogi West: Adeyemi urges tribunal to nullify Melaye’s election

    Kogi West: Adeyemi urges tribunal to nullify Melaye’s election

    •’His petition is baseless’

    A former Chairman of the Senate Committee on the Federal Capital Territory, Senator Smart Adeyemi, has urged the National Assembly Election Petition Tribunal to nullify the election of Senator Dino Melaye.

    But Melaye asked the tribunal to dismiss Adeyemi’s petition for gross incompetence, a regrettable waste of time, incurably bad and unmeritorious.

    Adeyemi made the submission in the final address presented to the tribunal by his lawyers, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), Prince Lateef Fagbemi (SAN), Dr. Kayode Olatoke(SAN), A.O. Otitoju and T.O. Adeboye.

    A copy of the address was obtained by our correspondent from the tribunal.

    Citing 53 authorities, Adeyemi said he polled the majority of the lawful votes of 36,100, compared with Melaye’s votes of 33, 146.

    He said Melaye was not qualified to contest the March 28 election because he was not a product of valid primaries in the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Adeyemi said: “Melaye is not a product of any valid primary election of the second respondent (APC). A careful perusal of Exhibit 32(3), which is the purported report of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to evidence the conduct of APC primaries, is not even on the letterhead of INEC or that of APC and a careful reading of its heading will show its dubious status.

    “The document, therefore, constitutes documentary hearsay and has no probative or evidential value.”

    Referring to the Supreme Court’s decision in Ojukwu v. Yar’Adua (2009), Adeyemi urged the court to discountenance Melaye’s attempt to adduce fresh facts.

    He added: “Having said this, it is respectfully submitted that any evidence adduced, contrary to the pleading, goes to no issue.”

    Adeyemi sought the following reliefs: “We urge your lordship to grant all the reliefs sought by the petitioners, based on the following settled points:

    “The petitioners have proved their case, based on unchallenged oral and documentary evidence adduced by them.

    “On the state of the pleadings, the respondents did not join issues with the petitioners on the key and crucial aspects of the petitioners’ case.

    “The oral and documentary evidence of the petitioners was not challenged by the respondents. In fact, the respondents did not produce counter oral or documentary evidence against same.

    “When the unlawful votes are deducted from the votes of the parties, the first petitioner will have the majority of lawful votes as shown in the address.

    “Alternatively, to disqualify the first respondent (Senator Melaye), nullify the election and order a fresh election.”

    But in his submission, Senator Melaye, through his lead counsel, Mr. Rickey Tarfa (SAN), said he was validly elected by the people of Kogi West.

    He said: “Finally on this issue, evidence of the recount of the ballot papers in the 21 polling units as given by the petitioners has been shattered and destroyed by the evidence of Mr. Victor Garba and Exhibits 30(1) to 30(5), which he tendered in evidence.

    “Mr. Garba was not lightly shaken under cross- examination in his evidence that the ballot papers from the 21 polling units were illegally thumb-printed after the elections with a view to void the votes of the first and second respondents.

    “It is quite shameful and preposterous that the petitioners have led evidence and sought to reply on the ballot papers to show that void votes were counted for the first and second respondents.

    “We urge your lordship to give due weight to and to fully believe Melaye’s election the evidence of Mr. Garba, as he is a witness of truth with no interest to serve.

    “We urge your lordship to resolve this issue in favour of the first respondent (Melaye) and proceed to dismiss this petition in its entirety.

    “We urge your lordship to resolve the issues for the determination raised and argued in this address in favour of the first respondent and against the petitioners.

    “We urge your lordship to hold that the petitioners have failed to discharge the onus of proof on them of the allegations and ground of their petition.

    “We finally urge your lordship to dismiss this petition for being grossly incompetent, a regrettable waste of time, incurably bad and unmeritorious.”

     

     

     

  • Kogi West, Central meeting with Audu deadlocked

    Kogi West, Central meeting with Audu deadlocked

    A meeting convened by the Kogi West and Central Forum For Equity and Justice, with ex-Governor Abubakar Audu, to discuss power rotation among the three senatorial zones, has ended in a deadlock.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) scheduled the governorship primaries for the last weekend in August and the election for late November.

    The forum was established to push for power shift from Kogi East Senatorial District, which has dominated the political scene since the state was created on August 27, 1991.

    Kogi West has seven local governments and Kogi Central, five. Both senatorial zones account for 12 of the 21 councils. Kogi East has nine.

    The pattern of voting, following the introduction of the permanent voter cards (PVCs) and card readers, showed  that Kogi West and Central accounted for 55 per cent of the total votes cast during the recent elections, while Kogi East had 45 per cent.

    The forum, which is co-steered by the triumvirate of former Health Minister, Prof Eyitayo Lambo, ex-don at the Ahmadu Bello University, Prof. Yusuf Aliyu and elder statesman, Alhaji Idris Yusuf Tawari, aims to ensure that justice is done to Kogi West and Kogi Central, which have allegedly suffered neglect in the last two and a half decades.

    Held at Audu’s Asokoro home in Abuja, the meeting had a 10-man delegation of five delegates each from Kogi West and Central. They included former General Officer Commanding Third Armoured Division, Maj.-Gen. Julius Olakunle Oshanupin, President of the Okun Development Association, Babatunde Paul Fadumiyo and ex-governorship aspirant on the platform of the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) in the old Kwara State, Dr. David Atte.

    Also on the delegation were Alhaji Yusuf Tawari and Alhaji A.G. Usman, who served as commissioner under Audu in 1992, all from Kogi West.

    The delegates from Kogi Central included Audu’s deputy during his stint as governor from 1999 to 2003, Chief Patrick Adaba, former Special Adviser on Education to Audu in 1992, Prof. Angela Okatahi and Prof. Yusuf Aliyu.

  • ‘Yagbaland should produce next Kogi West senator’

    WHAT is your position on zoning in Kogi State?

    I imagine that the early campaigns for the National Assembly offices in Kogi West, especially that of the Senate, cannot be divorced from the political undercurrents at the federal level where the national discourse has been focused on the issue of the Presidency, come 2015.

    There are those clamouring for the position to return to a particular section of the country, while there are also apostles of the retention of the status quo, in 2015. And both sides do have their convincing and compelling arguments.

    If the noise from the Kogi West is the loudest, compared to the other two senatorial zones, Kogi East and Central, it is because the present occupant of the senatorial seat in Kogi West is serving his second term and that should be his concluding term. The senators representing the East and Central zones are serving their first terms. The general expectation among the people of Kogi West therefore, is that 2015 offers an opportunity for a change in the occupant of the seat, by which time he would have served two full terms of four years each, totaling eight years.

    The former occupant of the senatorial seat in Kogi West, under the post-1999 democratic dispensation, Senator Tunde Ogbeha, served for eight years before the incumbent. It stands to reason therefore, that the people of Kogi West deserve a change in 2015.

    Can you give a brief insight into the mutual understanding on the rotation arrangement in Kogi West? Why do you think it should be respected?

    Like I was saying before, there was an understanding between the three federal constituencies, which make up Kogi West senatorial zone that the position should rotate between the three constituencies, after each occupant would have served two terms. The first federal constituency to produce a senator for Kogi West, with the advent of democracy in 1999, is the Lokoja/Kotonkarfe federal constituency. In 2007, it shifted to Kabba/Bunu-Ijumu federal constituency where the incumbent comes from.

    Some of us who took a shot at the position from the Yagba Federal Constituency in the run-up to the 2011 general elections, heeded the advice of our political leaders and elders and stepped aside from the race, on their admonition and advice. They felt we should allow the rotational agreement take proper root, so that Kabba-Bunu/Ijumu will serve its two senatorial terms, and we reasoned with them, all in the process of developing a sustainable political culture.

    Indeed, we paid so much obeisance to the pleas of our elders that we resolved to work for the return of the incumbent and to frustrate what we considered the meddlesomeness of the former Kogi State Governor, Alhaji Ibrahim Idris, in Kogi West politics, because it was obvious he favoured a particular candidate from Yagba federal constituency who served his administration for over five years.

    That was just how committed we were to the rotational arrangement and which we believe should be respected in the spirit of political fairness, justices, and equity, even morality come 2015.

    Some have argued that, since zoning is undemocratic, the best candidate should be considered on merit and performance. Do you subscribe to this thinking?

    Don’t forget that the zoning of political offices didn’t also pass the test of the recent constitutional amendment effort undertaken by the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Federal House of Representatives.

    At the same time, don’t forget that, if we have not made sacrifices as a people and a nation and reached an understanding to zone particular offices at various levels of government and administration, the fragile peace and national unity, which we enjoy, will be precipitously endangered.

    Why are PDP chieftain not respecting presidential zoning?

    And don’t forget that zoning at the senatorial level is not peculiar to us in Kogi West alone. It is everywhere. It engenders peaceful co-existence and political harmony. The Rivers East Senatorial Zone in Rivers State, for instance, is the home of the Ikwerres, the Okirikas and the Etches. Senator Azuta Mbata, who represented Rivers East Senatorial Zone from 1999 to 2007, is Ikwerre. The incumbent who has been in office since 2007, Senator George Sekibo, is Okirika. There is an understanding between these three groups – the Ikwerres, the Okirikas and the Etches, that an Etche senator will take over in 2015.

    Then, when you talk about performance and merit, you cannot assess a man who has not occupied an office to be a performer or a non-performer. You have to give him an opportunity to serve before you draw up a marking scheme for him. And just like the Yoruba proverb popularized by the late Chief MKO Abiola goes, “You cannot shave a man’s head in his absence”.

    You can only attempt an objective, dispassionate appraisal of performance and merit, when all parties concerned have been given a fair chance on a level playing ground.

    Are you saying that Senator Smart Adeyemi does not deserve a third term, despite his performance in the Senate?

    The people of Yagba Federal Constituency will consider it a gratuitous insult, the insinuation that they are in short supply, of credible, competent, enlightened and experienced human resources to fly Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria come 2015, or to hold any position at whatever level for that matter.

    You seem to forget that from Nigeria ’s immediate post-independence to the present, some of the most reputable actors on the national socio-political stage form Northcentral Nigeria, are Yagba people from our three local government areas of Yagba East, Yagba West and Mopamuro. I am talking about the likes of Chief Sunday Bolunrunduro Awoniyi, CON; Chief Silas Bamidele Daniyan, CON; Chief S. Ade-John; Chief Moody Olorunmonu; Chief Olayinka Simonyan; Prof. Eyitayo Lambo; Chief Kola Jamodu, OFR; Ashiwaju Jide Omokore; Otunba Funso Owoyemi; Dr Joseph Eyitayo Adetoro (Federal Commissioner for Agriculture, Health and Industries, respectively from 1967 to 1974 during General Yakubu Gowon administration, respected activist, Chief Seth Abel Mayekogbon, who is listed in the first edition of the 5000 intellectuals of the world; sixth edition of Who’s Who in the World and Who’s Who in the Commonwealth; Pioneer Military Administrator of Taraba State, Col Joseph Awoniyi, immediate Director of Petroleum Resources, Mr. Osten Olorunnisola; Chief Duro Adeyele, (SAN); Brig-Gen. Samuel Teidi; Brig-Gen. Paul Okuntimo, etc all prominent Yagba people for crying out loud..

    To the best of my knowledge, two out of the three Vice-Chancellors of Nigerian universities we have so far produced from the Okun country in Kogi State , are Yagba. I’m talking specifically about the venerated Prof. Adeoye Adeniyi (University of Ilorin – 1985 to 1989) and Prof. Felix Anjorin ( Bingham University ). Indeed, the joke is often cracked that, like in Ekiti State , the preponderance of seasoned technocrats and intellectuals in Yagbaland is per square kilometer.

    These front liners definitely bred a successor generation who are holding their own creditably and flying the flag of our people in all the places and positions they have found themselves.

    It is important to espouse the infinite human resource capacity of the Yagba people to debunk the fallacy about who can be put forward for any form of political office in the state or elsewhere.

    And the last time I checked, Yagba land had not been ravaged by any holocaust of any kind which has been so impactful as to engender a holistic extirpation of our people! We are not deficient in high quality human capacity at all.

    Again, I think it may be too early in the day to begin to narrow down to specific individuals. Yagba land is blessed with an abundance of such individuals and they will take their own decisions when the time is ripe.

    And when you talk about resources, the people of Kogi West, of Okun land and indeed, Yagba and are not subscribers to the politics of mercantilism. Our people are traditionally republican by nature. They tell you off if you try to flaunt your pseudo-affluence in their face by our famous expression: “Me je la be re”, (translated as “You don’t feed me, anyway).

    The Kogi West Senatorial seat is not for sale. It is not for the highest bidder.