Tag: Mark

  • Jonathan, Mark and their whiz kid Ministers

    Absence of governance in an election year is not unique to Nigeria. It is a feature of all participatory liberal democracies where elections are held periodically to determine the fate of political office holders, legitimise or delegitimize their authority. Our own Problem is that there has hardly been any form of governance since the coming of President Jonathan in 2011. This is largely due to Jonathan’s leadership style which can at best be described as ‘delegation by abdication’ which was not helped by the intra party feuds which threw his ruling PDP into disarray. This has led to a situation where when the president is not setting up committees to escape taking difficult decisions, he allows his ministers to operate without restraint.

    Thus we have a Ministry of Petroleum where an estimated 400,000 barrels of fuel are stolen daily in spite of amnesty programme and the empowerment of the leadership of the militant groups through multibillion dollar contracts and where unilateral action of its minister led to the nation’s loss of about N1.6 trillion. In the office of the Minister of Finance there has been evidence of gross abuse of government policy on import duty wavers. While the customs records for instance showed N1.4 trillion as the value of wavers granted over a period of three years the figure posted by the minister’s office was a paltry N171 billion. Similarly the minister of power insists power generation has improved despite the fact that we today generate 3,479.55MW after an injection of $8.26b. Four years on, the figure falls below the 4,747MW President Jonathan promised he would achieve by December 2011.

    And because ministers are on their own, it took the return of long queues of motorists searching for fuel to power their homes and run their cars for the minister of finance to remember her ministry needed to pay fuel importers some N260b  following the devaluation of naira. The minister of works who also operates on his own claims 25,000 kilometer of roads have been constructed in the last four years, a wild claim that prompted the  governor of Lagos to remind PDP that the distance between Nigeria and London is 5000 kilometres. It is for the same reason the president and his wife were embarrassed by ministry of Internal Affairs government that was unable to confirm whether indeed close to 300 girls were abducted from their dormitories by insurgents. Ten months on, they still don’t know where the girls are.

    Tragically the president instead of addressing the absence of governance, an issue raised even by the international community, he has often chosen to play on the intelligence of Nigerians by trying to equate the pursuit of his interest with the well being of Nigerians. Just some four weeks back, some elders statesmen and ethnic irredentist, behaving like Motor Park touts (apology to President Jonathan) at the behest of government facing a possible defeat at the poles threatened violence if the dates for the elections were not shifted forward. No sooner that was achieved than the president’s men erected new road blocks aimed at buying time for the president. Last week, precisely on the 16 February, the president, a master of political subterfuge, rushed the names of Patricia Akwashiki (Nasarawa), Nicholas Akise Ada (Benue), Augustine Okwudiri Akobundu, Fidelis Nwankwo (Ebonyi), Hauwa’u Lawan (Jigawa), Kenneth Kobani (Rivers) and Joel Danlami Ikenya (Taraba).and Musliu Obanikoro, a former junior minister in the ministry of defence.to the senate for confirmation as ministers.

    Suddenly a government that was not in a hurry to fill the then vacant defence  portfolio for several months  despite the raging Boko Haram insurgency war, a Jonathan government that failed to appoint a substantive minister for the all important ministry of education despite the crisis that kept universities and polytechnics closed for about a year while the supervising junior minister Nyeson Wike  spent his time  fighting the president was back in Port Harcourt, the Rivers state capital where he swore to ensure governor Rotimi Amaechi, the presidents political rival did not sleep with his two eyes closed, now wants the senate to confirm 8 ministers  when the life of this administration technically ends in two weeks time. Many are bound to agree that the whole exercise is driven by the desire to serve self rather than Nigerians.

    Obanikoro’s nomination  in fact tends to validate the thesis of critics who argue President Jonathan will hardly ‘invite anyone to come and chop’{ apology to late Sunday Afolabi, Obasanjo’s minister of internal affairs} if such a person will not enhance his hold on power. Obanikoro during his first tour of duty as a junior minister of defence served President Jonathan instead of serving Nigeria. He never for once visited the war ravaged north eastern Nigeria. He instead deployed all his talents towards the pacification of Yoruba land.  In Lagos state, Governor Fashola, a governor not known for frivolities publicly accused Musiliu Obanikoro of bringing soldiers to physically stop ongoing public housing projects.  In Ilaje ESE odo of Ondo state, he was similarly accused of bringing soldiers to intimidate his party’s opponents during a bi-election to fill a vacant house of assembly seat. His outing in Ekiti was no less scandalous. He was in the company of Jelli Adesiyan the police affairs minister, Iyiola Omisore, a controversial politician from Oshun, Ayo fayose, an impeached former governor who was then a PDP candidate and Andy Uba a self confessed election master rigger from Anambra {He had at the onset of the forth republic, kidnapped governor Ngige in a broad day light, locked him up like a common criminal, and demanded his resignation claiming it was he who rigged Ngide into office.}They jointly discussed how to rig the election before proceeding to arrest and detain leading opposition leaders on the eve of the election.

    He played a similar despicable role during the Oshun election. Puffing and huffing, he told Journalist during a press conference organized by PDP that he was in Oshogbo to reenact the Ekiti experiment. He is perhaps now desperately needed in government to complete his unfinished work of pacification of Yoruba land. He will now be in good company of pa Olanihun Ajayis, the Okunrounmus, Ayo Adebanjos, Olu Falaes and their newly crowned “Yoruba Leaders”, Ayo Fayose and Olusegun Mimiko who now say there is no alternative to a president Jonathan, who has nothing but contempt for the Yoruba on whose back he rode to power in 2011

    The response of the Senate which many Nigerians consider an extension of the executive and an ‘upper house of deals’ is no less scandalous. In spite of Obanikoro’s controversial past, a pending case against him the courts and two different petitions against his appointment, David Mark wanted him confirmed without questioning. But then what does one expects from a David Mark’s Senate whose members are said to be the highest paid in the world. In a nation where the minimum wage is N18,000 per month, our senators are said to earn about $2m compared to an annual senators pay of $174,000 in the US, $105,000 of Japan, $149,700 of Germany$74,000 of Kenya and $46,000 of Ghana. Although the senators have not been forthcoming on what they earn but the proposed budget for the next senate has finally settled that. It for instance makes provision for each senator to collect. N4, 052,800m for accommodation, N6, 079,200 for furniture, N8, 105,600 as car loan.etc. As The Nation Newspaper editorial put it last Sunday “In all, the 107 senators would get N433,649,600 for accommodation, N650,474,400 for furniture allowance and N867,299,200 as vehicle loans. It is annoying that the lawmakers’ proclivity for extravagance has continued unabated since the beginning of this dispensation”

    Sadly Nigerians derive little joy from their world most expensive senators who draw wardrobe allowance from tax payers sweat while police men buy their own uniforms. A senate that is truly serving Nigeria would have asked president Jonathan to reserve his newly discovered whiz kid ministers until after the election that comes up in about two weeks.

  • Mark, IBB, Abdulsalami mourn ex-ANA president Gimba

    Mark, IBB, Abdulsalami mourn ex-ANA president Gimba

    Senate President David Mark, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida and Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar were among the dignitaries, who  witnessed the interment of a former President of  the Association of Nigeria Authors (ANA), Alhaji Abubakar Gimba.

     He was said to have died on Wednesday and was buried according to Islamic rites in Minna, Niger State, yesterday.

    A statement by the Chief Press Secretary to the Senate President, Paul Mumeh, said residents in  Minna paid their last respects, as thousands of people trooped to the prayer ground before the interment.

    It said Imam Ibrahim Fari conducted the prayer session to bid Gimba farewell.

    The statement said at the family compound of the late Gimba, Senator Mark described him as an intellectual of high repute, whose works cut across ethnic, religious and political boundaries.

    It said Mark noted that Gimba was a pan-Nigerian, who  believed and worked hard for the unity of the nation.

    The Senate president was said to have added that Gimba, who served as his special adviser on Economic and Public Policy Matters between 2007 and 2011, was a patriot, a prolific writer and a fighter for the enthronement of  human rights and freedom of the press.

    Mark was also said to have recalled that the late Gimba , then permanent secretary, Ministry of Planning and later Finance ministry when he was military governor of Niger State in the 80s, was one of his pillars, who helped him to succeed in the state.

     He noted that Gimba was a courageous and honest man, whose works would stand the test of time “because I know his works will outlive generations.”

     Senator Mark used the occasion to appreciate his former bosses, Babangida and Abdulsalami, whom he described as great mentors to him in his profession and in other areas.

     He recalled with nostalgia the mentorship he received from the duo, although he was not from their ethnic or religious background, saying:” This is what we need to forge unity across the length and breadth of Nigeria.”

    Mumeh quoted Mark to have said,”this is how we should live. Nigerians must inculcate and emulate these attributes. We must see ourselves as one people with one destiny. We must work for our peace and unity. We must all work for the common good of all Nigerians”.

    Niger State government planned to immortalise the literary giant by naming its newly-established University of Education after him.

    Gimba was born on March 10, 1952. He hailed from Nassawa town in Lapai Local Government.

  • Mark: polls shift necessary to avoid anarchy

    Mark: polls shift necessary to avoid anarchy

    The Senate President, David Mark, has urged Nigerians to put the country first before any partisan consideration.

    Mark said this in a statement in Abuja following the postponement of the elections.

    He noted that no matter the political divide, “we all must take the path of caution in order not to jeopardise the process towards a successful exercise in the Nigerian project.”

    The Senate president cautioned against the noise trailing the shift in the conduct of the polls, saying: “It is a necessary step to avoid anarchy and chaos because of some shortcomings and insecurity fuelling the already charged atmosphere.”

    Mark, in the statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Paul Mumeh, said: “To conduct a peaceful, free, fair and credible election that meets international best practices, unarguably demands that all stakeholders and participants be on the same wave length.

    “It is a process that must of necessity be followed religiously. Any of the steps not taken or subverted could produce a questionable result.

    “That is why, we must all be careful in what we do or say.”

     

  • Elections ‘ll be free and fair, says Mark

    Elections ‘ll be free and fair, says Mark

    President of the Senate, David Mark, has said the forthcoming elections will be free, fair and credible.

    He said the polls would be  violence-free because “the government has put in place measures to ensure fairness.”

    Mark, who spoke while addressing youths from 102 wards across the nine local government areas comprising Benue South Senatorial District of Benue State, appealed to the youths across the country to be agents of peace, instead of taking to violence during the polls.

  • Mark craves for violent-free elections

    Mark craves for violent-free elections

    Senate President David Mark urged the citizens yesterday not to despair, saying “there will be light at the end of the tunnel”.

    He was confident that the nation’s socio-political and economic problems in the last one year would give way to better days in the new year.

    Mark spoke in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Paul Mumeh.

    The Senate President said: “There is no doubt that the situation, especially insecurity, is challenging. We cannot pretend that all is well with us. But we are a nation of good faith in one God. When it seems impossible, God will make it possible.

    “This trying time is only, but a phase in our match to greatness. With cooperation, dedication, honesty and patriotism on the part of all of us, we shall surely triumph.”

    “All that is required,” Mark insisted, “is for all citizens; both the government and the governed to see our challenges as a collective problem facing all of us and not only to a part.”

    He noted that there was no problem too difficult for the nation to surmount, “if we come together in one accord to confront the menace.”

  • Mark seeks peace, religious harmony

    Mark seeks peace, religious harmony

    THE Senate President, David Mark, has sued for peace and religious tolerance among the country’s different faiths.

    This, he said, was the needed elixir for Nigerians to think and act like “one people, under one God, where peace and love for one another reigns.”

    Mark spoke in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Paul Mumeh, in Abuja to felicitate with Nigerians at the Yuletide season.

    The Senate President insisted that only peace, respect for one another and harmonious co-existence would guarantee the needed development.

    He bemoaned the insecurity, terrorism and insurgency ravaging Nigeria and pleaded with religious leaders as well as traditional rulers to collaborate with government at all levels to end the menace.

    The statement reads: “We have come to an inescapable conclusion that only Nigerians and Nigerians alone can collectively address our problems.

    “We should be able to restore the time tested belief in African brotherhood of being our brothers’ keeper.

    “We have no reason to resort to these unnecessary wars, bitterness and hate. God Almighty did not make mistake in putting us – different tribes and tongues together.

    “We must, as civilised beings, learn to put our differences aside in a manner that gives us respect and dignity.

    “All efforts should ordinarily be channelled towards development like the rest of the developed nations.

    “Regrettably, the reverse is the case today, where a lion share of the nation’s resources are being deployed to fighting terrorism and insurgency.

  • Yuletide: Mark urges renewed prayer

    Yuletide: Mark urges renewed prayer

    Senate President David Mark has urged Nigerians not to despair over the myriads of challenges facing the country.

    Mark said the citizens should instead renew faith in God with the firm believe that with prayers and cooperation with one another, the country would surmount its problems.

    The Senate President added that the situation at the moment did not call for blame games, but a unity of purpose and support to authorities to overcome the challenges.

    This was part of the message Mark sent to his Benue South constituents in Agatu, Apa and Ohimini local government areas, when he distributed foodstuffs through his wife, Helen Mark, under his “End of year reach-out to the people programme”.

  • Our case against Mark, others, by angry senators

    Our case against Mark, others, by angry senators

    Lawmakers return today amidst uncertainty

    We’re united, says Abaribe

    Ahead of plenary today, some Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) senators who lost their primary elections met yesterday in Abuja to strengthen their resolve for leadership change.

    One of the aggrieved senators, who was part of the meeting, told our correspondent that it was “a continuation of a series of strategic meetings we have been holding before and after our primary elections”.

    The senators are angry for the following reasons:
    •the primaries “in most instances were hugely flawed”;

    •“the fact that our interest was not protected even after we were made to believe that there was automatic ticket for most of us”; and

    •“Senate leadership failed to do the needful at the Presidency and the PDP headquarters to create a level playing field for us.”

    But Senate Committee on Information, Media and Public Affairs Chairman Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe dismissed the speculation of a plot to remove Senate President David Mark as unfounded and misleading.

    The meeting was held in a hotel in Apo, Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

    The source noted that the meeting became necessary “for us to articulate and formulate some critical issues bothering on the primary elections”.

    “We cannot pretend that all is well. We cannot also pretend that we are happy the way and manner most of us have been left in the cold to fend for ourselves,” the source said.

    Vowing that “we will not just leave things the way they are going”, he said: “We needed to meet to talk to ourselves ahead of our resumption.”

    Asked whether the alleged plot to remove the Senate leadership was also discussed at the meeting, the lawmaker was a bit evasive, saying “nothing is ruled out; everything is on the table, but we’ll wait and see as things unfold.”

    Asked how serious the aggrieved senators are in their bid to ruffle some feathers, he retorted “You know it is a group affair but some of us are ready to speak out, no matter the cost.”

    But a source close to the Senate President, said that Mark should not be blamed for the loss of some PDP senators.

    The source noted that “it is on record that Mark made necessary contacts with the party leadership and governors of the party to plead the case of the senators”.

    Abaribe, who refuted the plot to impeach President Goodluck Jonathan, until Senator Alkali Jajare put a face to the plot, issued a statement that “senators are united behind Mark .”

    Abaribe described as “false, media reports purporting a plot by some aggrieved senators to remove Mark.”

    He noted that “such unfounded story only exists in the imagination of its authors.”

    The Senate, Abaribe said, has a tested internal mechanism to tackle any difficult issue that arises within and outside the chamber.

    Such mechanisms and channels, according to Abaribe, are inexhaustible and shall always be deployed by the leadership of the Senate.

    Although most of the senators are said to be in Abuja for the plenary, the list of activities normally contained in the Order Paper and released ahead of resumption by the Senate Committee on Business and Rules, was unavailable yesterday.

    No official reason was given for the non-availability of the Order Paper, but a source said that the failure of the Chairman, Senate Committee on Business and Rules, Senator Ita Enang, to secure his return ticket to the red chamber in 2015 might have affected his zeal to work.

    Besides, the uncertainty about the fate of the Medium Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper (MTEF) and the 2015 Appropriation Bill does not help matter.

    The MTEF has been presented to the National Assembly by the Presidency and withdrawn twice due largely to the fluctuating oil price in the international market.

    The consideration and passage of the MTEF by the National Assembly is one of the prerequisites for the consideration and passage of the Appropriation Bill.

    The Oil benchmark which was initially fixed at $78pb by the Presidency has been reduced to $65pb.

    The Senate will take at least one week to consider and approve the new oil benchmark to pave the way for the presentation of the budget by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Besides, the Senate, which is likely to adjourn plenary on December 18 for the Christmas break, may not have enough time to conclude discussions on the MTEF.

    Observers say the delay in presentation of the 2015 budget would, no doubt, affect its passage with a corresponding adverse effect on the implementation of the fiscal estimates.

    Other salient issues waiting for the attention of the Senate as the lawmaker approach the zero hour is the all-important Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), which has been in the National Assembly since 2007.

    Some Senators are reported to have vowed to ensure that the PIB does not see the light of the day.

    The National Assembly is also said to be waiting to receive the conference report of the recently concluded National Conference.

  • Primaries: Mark must go, angry PDP senators vow

    Primaries: Mark must go, angry PDP senators vow

    After its rancorous primaries,  the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) seems set for another major crisis.

    The party’s senators  and some of their All Progressives Congress (APC) counterparts who lost return tickets  have decided to revolt against the Senate leadership.

    Many PDP lawmakers are said to be angry with the Senator David Mark-led leadership for not doing enough to protect them against their party’s leadership in the run-up to the December 8 primaries.

    Besides, shortly before the Senate adjourned plenary two weeks ago, some lawmakers had started compiling impeachable offences against President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The plot then, which was championed mainly by the opposition senators, was to table the president’s alleged impeachable offences as soon as the chamber resumes plenary tomorrow.

    In a major shift, it was gathered that the aggrieved senators, with some PDP senators now joining their ranks, have decided to kick-start the removal of the Senate leadership – starting with Mark.

    A senator, who is privy to the plot, told our correspondent in Abuja that “the plan has changed.”

    He added:  “We never expected the party to treat us this way. We stood by the party when there was turbulence occasioned by the emergence of the New PDP.

    “There was a plot then to impeach the same leadership but we stepped in and stopped it with our sheer number. In fact, we used our personal contacts to talk to the organisers and they backed down. We prevailed on them not to rock the boat, moreso as the Seventh Senate had just a few months to go.

    “We thought the party would take note of what we did and also note our loyalty and reward us. Rather, we were not even protected in these primaries. Can you imagine the party leaving us at the mercy of governors?”

    The senators, it was learnt, are considering either Minority Leader George Akume or Committee on Environment and Ecology Chairman Bukola Saraki as replacements for Mark.

    The reason to go for either Akume or Saraki, one of them said, is that “we do not want the Senate Presidency to leave the North Central”.

    In a similar development, the lawmakers have vowed to back Speaker Aminu Tambuwal to retain his seat.

    “Last week’s court pronouncement that PDP governors don’t have to lose their seats because they moved to a new party will be fully applied here…”, said another source.

    Although the Senate resumes plenary tmorrow, the aggrieved lawmakers have not put a timeline to their plan to remove Mark.

    Also, the senators did not confirm whether the plot against Jonathan was still on the front burner or whether it would be tabled in the chamber this week. Senator Alkali Jajere told reporters two weeks ago that the Preident’s impeachment plan will be unveiled on return of plenary.

    Mark’s Media Adviser, Kola Ologbondiyan, dismissed the alleged plot to remove his boss. “There’s no such plot,” he said.

    Almost half of the 73 PDP senators lost their bid to return to the Senate. The majority of the APC Senators picked their tickets to stage a comeback.

    Although some of the PDP Senators have gone to court to challenge the conduct of the primary elections in their states, others have vowed to vent their anger on the Senate leadership.

    In Akwa Ibom State, for instance, two PDP Senators – Ita Enang and Aloysius Etok lost their bid to return to the Senate. Senator Hellen Esuene lost her attempt to pick the gubernatorial ticket of the PDP in the state.

    In Abia State, Senator Uche Chukwumerije lost his bid to stage a comeback, Senator Nkechi Nwaogu’s ambition to govern the state is hanging in the balance after she was reported to have defected to another party.

    The only Senator who survived the onslaught of the governor is Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe.

    In Cross River State, Senate Leader Victor Ndoma-Egba is contesting the result of the primary election after he was defeated by a member of the House of Representatives, John Enoh.

    Another senator from the state, Bassey Otu, lost to Gershom Bassey in the primary.

    In Bayelsa State, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri is up in arms against those who conducted the election for declaring that he lost the primary.

  • National Assembly primaries: Mark, Ndoma-Egba, Tukur, Nenadi, Adeyemi battle for survival

    National Assembly primaries: Mark, Ndoma-Egba, Tukur, Nenadi, Adeyemi battle for survival

    The much talked about automatic return ticket arrangement for PDP senators and members of the House of Representatives has collapsed, forcing top-ranking members of the National Assembly into the battle of their political career.

    Many of them are now to slug it out with aspirants who are either sponsored by sitting governors or other vested interests.

    Primaries for the House of Reps election are scheduled for today, while those of the Senate will come up tomorrow.

    The last few weeks have witnessed intense horse-trading by President Goodluck Jonathan, the PDP and Senators for the purpose of giving automatic tickets to some sitting federal legislators.

    All these have now come to nought after some governors tried to renege on the agreement reached by the President, the PDP and Senators.

    The last of such agreement was the invocation of a “Doctrine of irreducible minimum” of at least automatic ticket for one senator per state.

    Governors Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom), Liyel Imoke (Cross River), Gabriel Suswam (Benue) and Martin Elechi (Ebonyi) have refused to forgo their aspirations to go to the Senate or relax their grip on the politics of their state.

    Governors Emmanuel Uduaghan (Delta) and Sullivan Chime (Enugu) yesterday withdrew from the Senatorial race.

    The roll call of Senators fighting for survival are the President of the Senate, Chief David Mark; the Senate Leader, Victor Ndoma-Egba; the Chairman of the Rules and Business Committee, Ita Enang; the Chairman of the FCT Committee, Smart Adeyemi; Tukur Bello, Aloy Etuk, and others.

    The only survivor at press time was the Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, whose victory at the court has forced Governor Sullivan Chime to forego his aspiration for Enugu West.

    Investigation by our correspondent revealed that the pact on automatic ticket reached at the Villa with President Goodluck Jonathan for PDP senators failed as some governors and party members are not doing enough to respect it.

    The development forced a former National Chairman of PDP, Senator Barnabas Gemade (Benue North-West), to withdraw from Sunday primaries with a December 2 letter to the National Chairman of the party, Alhaji Adamu Muazu.

    It was gathered that having been left to their fate, senators have decided to take their destinies in their hands.

    In Benue State, a former Federal Permanent Secretary, Chief Mike Onoja, has refused to step down for the President of the Senate, Chief David Mark for Benue South District.

    According to findings, Onoja was one of the financiers of Governor Gabriel Suswam’s election during his first term and it has been difficult for the governor to look him in the face to prevail on his sponsor to sacrifice for Mark.

    A source said: “Onoja, who is from Ado Local Government Area, is insisting on power shift. He has vowed to stop Mark’s fifth attempt at the senatorial slot.”

    For Benue North East, Suswam has virtually intimidated Gemade out of the race with incumbency factor.

    A sullen Gemade merely told Muazu: “There is in fact, no room for an honest and law-abiding member of this party in having a fair chance in any contest in the forthcoming primary elections as anyone who is capable of manipulating the process, albeit illegally, is free to do so and will be protected.”

    In Cross River Central, Governor Liyel Imoke has remained committed to his plan to snatch the ticket from the Senate Leader, Victor Ndoma-Egba (SAN) for his loyal associate, John Ewa Eno.

    Ndoma-Egba, one of the hitherto beneficiaries of auto ticket, will now face Imoke and Eno in a fierce contest on Sunday which might be laced with incumbency might.

    In Akwa Ibom State, Governor Godswill Akpabio is unrelenting in taking over Akwa Ibom North West Senatorial ticket from the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Service, Senator Aloy Etuk.

    Although the governor visited Etuk at home during the week, the visit failed as the Senator merely added a clincher, “we will meet at the primaries.”

    For Akwa Ibom North East, the governor is backing his former Commissioner for Finance, Albert Akpan, to displace Ita Enang, who is the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Rules and Business.

    But there has been pressure on Akpabio to allow Enang to have a ‘second term’.

    Findings also confirmed that it might be a fight to the finish between Senator Bello Tukur and the only female member of the House of Representatives from Yola North/Yola South/ Girei Federal Constituency, Hon. Aishatu Ahmed Dahiru (Binani) for Adamawa Central Senatorial District.

    Armed with intimidating achievements, Binani’s influence has overshadowed any agreement at the Villa.

    “Binani has touched many lives such that anyone trying to vie for a senatorial slot with her will be committing political suicide. She is a political hurricane,” said a source.

    It was however learnt that a stakeholders’ session was convened last night in Yola on Adamawa primaries.

    Despite his withdrawal from the race for the Deputy Senate President (DSP), Ike Ekweremadu, Governor Sullivan Chime is locked in a cold war with the DSP over Enugu East Senatorial ticket.

    Chime’s former Chief of Staff, Ifeoma Nwobodo, is seeking to secure the ticket from the incumbent, Senator Gilbert Nnaji and a former Minister of Information, Mr. Frank Nweke, who are loyalists of Ekweremadu.

    A source said: “Mrs. Ifeoma Nwobodo is from the North West Senatorial District, although she is married to someone from the North East District. If you know Enugu politics, she cannot deny the people of the North East District of their legitimate slot.”

    Despite his visible and outstanding achievements, Senator Smart Adeyemi (Kogi West Senatorial District) is being challenged by the immediate past Chairman of Kogi State Security Trust Fund, Mr. T. J. Faniyi, and a former member of the House of Representatives, Hon. Sam Aro, who was one of those named in the oil subsidy scam but trying to prove his innocence.

    A source said: “With his sterling qualities and outstanding performance, it is likely to be an easy ride for Senator Adeyemi who has been endorsed by the seven chairmen of the local governments in the district.

    “Going by Adeyemi’s adoption by Governor Idris Wada and with campaign war chest coming from his benefactor, Oil Mogul Jide Omokore, the incumbent senator has about 90 per cent edge over his opponents.”

    In Kogi Central, Senator Nurudeen Abatemi-Usman was schemed out of the automatic ticket arrangement at a recent session at the Presidential Villa. Instead, three new aspirants are jostling to replace the youngest Senator in the Upper Chamber. They are the Chairman of Okene Local Government, Salihu Ogembe, Alh. Deda Attah, and M. I. Onimisi.

    The emergence of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Anyim Pius Anyim as the new godfather of Ebonyi State politics has sealed the hope of second term ticket for the three Senators from the state who are loyalists of Governor Martin Elechi. In a surprising political realignment, Anyim and former Governor Sam Egwu have made a mince meat of Elechi, who is now politically stranded with all his anointed candidates for the National Assembly. The affected Senators from Ebonyi are Paulinus Igwe Nwagu (Ebonyi Central District); Christopher Nwankwo(Ebonyi North District) and Sunday Ogbuoji (Ebonyi South). In Taraba State, two of the three senators who were instrumental to bringing the Acting Governor, Danladi Abubakar to power are still having to cope with automatic ticket for them. Senator Emmanuel Bwacha is expected to contest for PDP ticket in Taraba South District with Gen. Ishaya Bauka and Bitrus Rimande. For Taraba Central, Senator Umar Abubakar Tutare has an opponent in Kabiru Marafa. Those seeking Taraba North District’s ticket are new comers, including ex-Governor Jolly Nyame and Ali Kona. There were indications last night that the odds are in favour Bwacha and Nyame for their loyalty to the ailing Governor Danbaba Suntai and roles in the ouster of the former Acting Governor, Garba Umar. In Kaduna State, ex-Governor Ahmed Makarfi is sure of a second term ticket after his opponent failed to obtain the nomination form because of the towering political influence of the senator. It was a tactical move by the PDP following rumours that Makarfi’s camp was disenchanted and might defect to the All Progressives Congress (APC). But a former Minister of Finance, Mrs. Nenadi Usman, is being challenged by three aspirants. These are Barrister Mark Jacob (a former Commissioner for Justice under Makarfi), a former Commissioner under late Governor Patrick Yakowa, Dr. John Ayuba, and ex-military administrator of Taraba State, Col. Yohanna Dickson. In Oyo State, Senator Hosea Agboola from Oyo North is under fire at the home front from Hon. Kareem Abiodun Tajudeen, who is a member of the House of Representatives from Saki. In Sokoto State, the battle for the Central Senatorial ticket is between the incumbent PDP Senator Ahmed Muhammadu Maccido and Alh. Ibrahim Magaji Gusau. APC is just waiting in the wing for the PDP candidate. In Delta State, Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan voluntarily shelved his senatorial ambition for Delta South District for the incumbent James Manager after a session with President Goodluck Jonathan and the PDP National Chairman in Abuja. He said he dropped his bid to avoid bloodshed in the state. He said: “As a manager of the process in the state level I have always appealed to other contestants that election must not be a do-or die affair. In this state, there has been political tension. Unfortunately in this state, there has been ethnic tension that seems to be threatening the peace and security. This has been noticed at the national level . “Mr. President and the national hierarchy are concerned and a lot of discussion has gone on. My main agenda is the peace and security and anything that will threaten the peace and security of the state I will do everything to stop it. Having said that, some of the things that lead to insecurity in the Niger-Delta are economic issues and political and this political era. “The state has been more peaceful than I met it seven years ago. And I am determined to leave Delta peaceful. Anything that will cause insecurity I will do everything to stop. “Anybody who believes he must get to a position through the loss of life is inhuman, I will not want to have anything that will lead to the loss of life. Now that I am out of the race, it gives me more leverage to manage the transition and more time to be involved in national issues. Nobody has forced me to step down, I owe it to Deltans for the peace and security of the state.” The Presidency, it was learnt, had directed Senator Manager to work with Governor Uduaghan to ensure the emergence of Sir Anthony Obuh as the PDP governorship candidate tomorrow and also work for the continued sucess of the party in the state. Ahead of the National Assembly primaries, automatic ticket-seeking senators had given President Jonathan and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) a fresh condition. The senators came up with a “Doctrine of irreducible minimum” of auto-ticket for at least one returnee Senator from states controlled by the PDP. Although it was initially agreed that 40 Senators should be given automatic tickets, PDP governors rejected the proposal leading to the pruning down of the list to 20. The embattled senators however felt short-changed by the decision of the President and PDP leadership to renege on the “unwritten agreement” reached some few weeks ago at the Presidential Villa. The development led to fresh talks on the fate of the PDP senators, which had not been concluded at press time. The automatic ticket bug was not extended to all members of the House of Representatives whose number was described as wieldy by the PDP. The spate of defections in the House also made the PDP to be more circumspect in giving a blanket automatic ticket to its members in the lower chamber. A party source said: “The PDP has never had it rough in the House like in the 7th House of Representatives. Some of our members have virtually become rebels. This is why we are being extra-careful in this automatic concession thing.” It was learnt that the gesture was limited to only ‘loyal’ principal officers. These are the Deputy Speaker Emeka Ihedioha (Imo). Majority Leader, Mulikat Adeola-Akande (Oyo); Majority Whip, Ishaka Mohammed Bawa (Taraba); Deputy House Leader, Hon. Leo Ogor (Delta) and Deputy Chief Whip, Ahmed Mukhtar (Niger). But the auto-ticket concession is being resisted in the affected constituencies. For instance, the Majority Leader, in the House of Representatives, Hon. Mulikat Adeola-Akande is not spared the rigours of primaries following resistance from some of her constituents, who are opposed to automatic ticket for her. She is going to battle for the Ogbomoso North/ South/ Orire Federal Constituency with Hon. Segun Ogunwuyi( a serving member of the Oyo State House of Assembly) and Hon. Ezekiel Ajani Oyedepo. The only political pillar of Adeola-Akande in the constituency is ex-Governor Adebayo Alao-Akala who is unhappy with the situation in PDP and may defect to another party if the Presidency does not intervene. Adeola-Akande has however chosen to remain in PDP, a decision which might make her a political orphan.