Tag: Nasir el-Rufai

  • CUPP rejects Kaduna guber results

    ….as Progressive Governorship Candidates congratulate El-Rufai

    Governorship Candidates in Kaduna state under the auspices of Progressive Governorship Candidates Forum have congratulated Governor Nasir El-Rufai over his victory in the Saturday governorship election.

    But, Coalition of United Political Parties (CUPP), an umbrella of 41 political parties and 18 governorship candidates has rejected the outcome of the gubernatorial election.

    The progressive governorship candidate who had few days before the election endorsed El-Rufai said, the Governor’s re-election was an indication that he has delivered good governance to the people of Kaduna state.

    READ ALSO: El Rufai sets to be declared winner in Kaduna

    Briefing newsmen shortly after the declaration of the governorship results at the INEC collation centre, chairman of the progressive candidate forum, Awwal Abdullahi, however asked other candidates to concede defeat and work with El-Rufai to move Kaduna state to the ‘Next Level’.

    The forum which consists of 49 political parties and 32 governorship candidates therefore asked aggrieved political parties or candidates to follow the right channels in challenging the outcome of the polls.

    But, CUPP, Chairman Hon. Umar Farouk Mairaqumi at their own press conference said their rejection of the elections results was because elections in some local government areas were marred with lot of irregularities.

    According to him, “the Smart Card Readers (SCR) was not used in some parts of the state namely: Igabi, Kaduna South, Kaduna North. Giwa, Lere, Birnin Gwari and Soba local government areas respectively.

    “Over 650 polling units with over 400,000 votes were cancelled and our agents reported at various collation centres but INEC decided to ignore our complains and went ahead to announce the results.

    “It is in the light of the above that we the 37 political parties and 18 governorship candidates that participated in the gubernatorial election in Kaduna State hereby reject the result in its totality and we shall pursue all lawful means to ensure  justice is done to the people of Kaduna State and their stolen mandate restored,” Mairaqumi explained.

  • Guber poll: MPN candidate steps down for el-Rufai

    Barely 36 hours to the gubernatorial election, the governorship candidate of Mega Party of Nigeria (MPN) in Kaduna state, Hon. Mohammed Kabir Usman has stepped down from the race and endorsed Governor Nasir El-Rufai

    He therefore urged his supporters to throw their weights behind the APC candidate.

    The guber candidate, told journalists in Kaduna on Thursday that, his decision stemmed from the fact that the incumbent governor is already implementing his party’s plan to develop Kaduna state, adding that if they support him he will continue with it.

    “After a wide consultation with my family and my political associates, I, Muhammad Kabir Usman have resolved to step down and throw my weight behind the reelection of Malam Ahmed el-Rufai to consolidate on the gains of transforming our dear state to the path of sustainable development as well as youth participation.

    “I have decided to step down because the Governor is doing some things which are good for our people and we want him to do more to enable our people enjoy more dividends of democracy.

    “I called on all my supporters to key into the process of making Kaduna state great again and join hands to make Kaduna state great again regardless of our political differences.  I wish to appeal to our party members and teeming supporters to come out enmass and vote Malam Nasir el-Rufai this Saturday.

    “I assure you of my resolve to continue with the struggle of liberating my people and I look forward to a mutually beneficial political engagement with you all in the future.

    “I also wish to commend the effort of Governor Nasir el-Rufai for giving youth the opportunity to serve the state in various capacities and urge him to relent in this regard,” he added.

  • 49 parties, 32 candidates step down for El-Rufai

    32 gubernatorial candidates in Kaduna State under the auspices of Kaduna State Progressive Governorship Candidates Forum have unanimously stepped down for Governor Nasir El-Rufai of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    They adopted the governor as their candidate in Saturday’s governorship poll.

    They made their decision public on Monday where the 32 candidates and 49 political parties endorsed El-Rufai, affirming him as their consensus candidate.

    Chairman of the United Democratic Party (UDP), Comrade Auwal Abdullahi Aliyu said they came out to support the governor towards ensuring he continues with his good works, stressing that he has done well to deserve the endorsement.

    According to him: “We have been consulting and have finally taken a decision. Because of the love for Kaduna State, because we can’t win, what we intend to do is what he is already doing, so we decided to join forces with him.

    “We are not looking at ourselves, we are looking at Kaduna and its people.”

    Read Also: PDP plans to disrupt elections – El-Rufai

    He said that even though they have their own programmes and manifestos, they are supporting him to deliver Kaduna.

    The governoship candidates include: Auwal Aliyu UDP; Matoh Yakubu AGA; Umar Uba NIP; Fatima Uba RP; Kabiru Idris MPN; Ahmed Zagi GPN; Mansur Suleiman AA; Alhaji Yahaya Marafa UPN; Abdulfatai Yusuf WTPN and Umar Suleiman Abubakar DA, Jubril Muhammed ID

    Others are Mustapha Bakano APA; Haliru Tafida MRDD; Abubakar Aliyu CAP; Abubakar Abdullahi ZLP; Aminu Sabo ANNP; Hajiya Rabiatu Suleiman Shula NAC; Kabiru Jibril PPA; Adamu Idris Chado DPC; Suleiman Abdulrasheed MMN; Sani Abdulkadir; Mohammed Jamilu Accord Party and Yahaya Solomon NPC among others.

  • 100 houses razed, many feared killed in Kaduna

    •El-Rufai condemns attack, visits President

    Barely two weeks after a violent crisis that claimed lives of many citizens in Kajuru Local Government area of Kaduna State, there were reports of fresh attacks in some villages in the Kajuru and Kachia local government areas.

    Kaduna State Governor Nasir El Rufai was at the State House yesterday. He held talks with President Muhammadu Buhari.

    El-Rufai declined to state his mission at the Presidential Villa but it was believed that the governor may have used the opportunity to brief the president on the fresh violent attacks in his domain.

    The attacks, The Nation learnt, occurred in the early hours of yesterday. Bandits were said to have stormed Karamai village in Maro District of the council area, leaving in their trail more than 100 houses and vehicles razed.

    An eye witness said: “The renewed attacks on the villages came as armed bandits, numbering about 100, stormed our village, Karamai community with dangerous weapons, including guns and machetes. As at now, we have counted many dead bodies.

    “As I am speaking with you now, many people have fled the villages, many people have entered bush, running for their lives. There are no security agents in sight to stop the attackers.”

    The military said that troops have already been deployed to restore peace to the affected communities.

    Deputy Director, Army Public Relations, Colonel Muhammed Dole, told reporter that, security agents, have been dispatched Kasuwan Magani to restore peace.

    The Army spokesman, however, warned communities to desist from giving wrong statistics to avoid misconception and distortion of facts and figure before investigation.

    The Kaduna State government condemned the renewed attacks, urging residents to support the security agencies in their efforts to protect the communities.

    In a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Samuel Aruwan, Governor Nasir El-Rufai expressed sadness over the renewed attacks at a time efforts were being intensified to restore security in areas where scores reportedly killed a few days ago.

    The statement reads: “Kaduna State Government has today received the sad news of renewed attacks in Kajuru and Kachia local government areas. The government condemns this recourse to violence, and calls on all communities to support the efforts to restore calm in the area.

    “Today, the Kaduna State Government was briefed by security agencies of renewed attacks in Kajuru local government area, and in parts of neighboring Kachia Local Government Area.

    “The Kaduna State government has been assured that the security agencies are working assiduously to contain the situation.

    “The government is saddened by these attacks, condemns the perpetrators and urges all residents of the area to support the security agencies in their efforts to protect communities.”

  • My victory not accidental – Uba Sani

    Kaduna Central zone Senator-elect and Political Adviser to Governor Nasir El-Rufai, Mal. Uba Sani, has said his victory at the last Saturday poll was not a surprise to him.

    He also assured Governor El-Rufai will win the March 9th governorship election with a landslide.

    The Senator-elect, who defeated incumbent Senator Shehu Sani of the People’s Redemption Party (PRP) and Lawal Usman of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) said, he never saw Senator Sani as a strong contender in the poll because he had failed the people who elected him.

    Uba Sani, in his appreciation message to the people of Kaduna Central Senatorial zone, however promised to be everybody’s Senator in the National Assembly.

    He said, on assumption of office, he will close ranks with his colleagues from the state, including the opposition Senator from Kaduna South Senator Danjuma La’ah to work for the people of Kaduna State.

    He disclosed his priorities would be to get Federal Government’s attention to addressing the security challenges bedeviling Birnin Gwari and Kajuru local government areas of the states.

    Sani also promised to facilitate the $350 million World Bank loan, the 8th Senate denied Kaduna State, saying the loan if gotten will enable the state build hundreds of schools, hospitals and other infrastructures.

    He however expressed appreciation to the people of Kaduna Central, especially those who came out to vote him, and promised not to let them down.

     

  • Breaking: Buhari, el-Rufai meet in Aso Rock

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday met behind closed doors with Kaduna State Governor, Nasir el-Rufai.

    The meeting was held at the President’s office.

    But the governor didn’t speak with State House correspondents at the end of the meeting.

    Details shortly…

     

  • El-Rufai votes after four hours on queue

    It took Governor Nasir el-Rufai of Kaduna State four hours on the queue to vote yesterday at Polling Unit 24, Anguwan Sarki, Runfa Ward, Kaduna.

    But the governor said he was relieved to vote at all.

    “When I arrived at the polling unit, the card reader was malfunctioning, so until after two hours before it was fixed and voting commenced,” he told reporters.

    The governor expressed gratitude to the people of the state for their patience and coming out in large numbers to cast their vote at the rescheduled date.

    Read Also: El-Rufai meets foreign observers

    “The people here have been patient even when the card reader was faulty; they didn’t leave, they kept trooping in. This is very encouraging. I, therefore, commend our people for their resilience and commitment to exercise their civic rights.”

  • El-Rufai’s political gambit and Kajuru killings

    GOING by his generalised views and shifting positions on key national and state issues, particularly the controversial ones, it is doubtful whether Kaduna State governor Nasir el-Rufai has any friends left in the state he has governed since 2015, friends he could invite for heart-to-heart discussions, those who could tell him he is wrong on certain issues dear to his heart. With each passing day, his enemies multiply while his friends get depleted. This of course is speaking hyperbolically. But increasingly, the governor makes it difficult for even his friends to rush to his defence. His principles are too elastic, his views too fluid, and his style too abrasive for anyone to rush to his defence or to stick with him for a long time. Those who have sympathies for him step gingerly around him lest they get the full measure of his waspish tongue.

    His latest position on the Kajuru killings both underscores and illustrates how insensitive his government has become, and how inconsistent and unwise he also has become as a person. The Kajuru killings refer to the murderous spree that recently inundated some communities in Kajuru local government area of Kaduna State where essentially the ethnic Adara people live in proximity to some Fulani settlements. Last October, Maiwada Galadima, the traditional ruler of Adara Chiefdom, was abducted and murdered, provoking violent unrest in the state. For decades, Kaduna State itself has been ill at ease, prompting indigenes to desire governors and leaders gifted at consensus building, compromise and reconciliation. They have not always got their preferences, but Kaduna people have never given up on that seemingly forlorn hope, particularly the people of Southern Kaduna, among which are the Adara, who feel increasingly beleaguered as a result of the unequal struggle between them and Fulani pastoralists.

    On February 15, Mallam el-Rufai had broken the news to the media that some 66 Fulani were murdered in some communities in Adara Chiefdom. It was portentous, said critics, that he broke the news on the eve of the February 16, 2019 presidential election before that election was postponed to yesterday. It was even more ominous, they said, that he chose to identify the ethnicity of the supposed victims in a way that was insensitive and provocative. He defended himself, but few were persuaded by his logic or sense of history. Worse, the indigenes of the communities in question wondered why the governor made the announcement of the killings almost a week after they took place, but failed to indicate that they happened much earlier, specifically on February 10 and 11. In addition, the indigenes asserted that they were aware only of the killing of 11 people, not 66, and that the victims were all Adara, not Fulani. They challenged the governor to show proof of the killings, since the Adara did not embark on reprisal attacks. Furthermore, they insisted that the governor even visited some of the hospitalised victims of the February 10 killings, though he refused to mention that fact in any of his statements.

    Instead of shedding light on these grey areas and dispelling the assertions of the Adara people, the governor, on Thursday, indicated that the death toll had risen to 130, all Fulani. He also visited the troubled communities in company with police and military officers, commiserated with the people, and spoken to the media near where he said a mass grave was located. But responding to the controversy over casualty figures and the ethnic make-up of victims, the police have studiously and boldly said that they were not willing to commit themselves to any figure because investigations were still in progress. Clearly, there is something wrong with governance in Kaduna, and the governor seems quite unable to discharge his responsibilities with the fairness and temperament required of his exalted office. If, as some observers have said, the governor visited some injured victims of the killings in hospital before he visited the troubled communities in Adara and before he announced the disputed casualty figures, why did he not mention his hospital visits? Who confirmed to him that casualty figures had doubled when the police did not have a figure to work with? In a clash of such magnitude between two ethnic groups, where, according to him, about 130 people lost their lives, could there be no casualty on the other side? And for a governor who had accused critics and the media of ethnic profiling, why did he readily identify the victims of the Adara killings as Fulani on February 15?

    The Adara argue that the casualty figures are overblown, and that in any case, even the Fulani leaders of some of the communities visited by the governor paid a reconciliation visit to them after the February 10 and 11 attacks. To settle the controversy, the governor may have to authorise exhumation of the corpses, for after all, fresh corpses are not hard to identify, and they are in any case allegedly interred in one or two mass graves. Settling the controversy over casualty figures will of course not bring peace to the troubled and hardly accessible villages, but they will probably shed light on the nature and course of the killings that took place in Adara Chiefdom days ago. More importantly, they will indicate to some extent whether the governor has been fair to both sides in the conflict. He has had a difficult relationship with Southern Kaduna where the Adara come from, and he has even acknowledged that that relationship cannot be salvaged, prompting him to defy the delicate political equilibrium that has sustained the state for decades.

    But nothing excuses Mallam el-Rufai’s strident remarks about the killings, his seeming lack of empathy and neutrality, his abundant self-conceit, and his self-righteousness. He is not infallible, yet he seldom acknowledges his mistakes, not to talk of applying wisdom, despite his fabled intelligence, to issues of governance and interpersonal relationships. More, as a politician who craves a following, regardless of his own inconsistencies and failings as a follower of his mentors, it is shocking to hear him advocate for votes he has done little to attract and said so much to repel. Kaduna needs a conciliator, a true progressive, a humanist. Mallam el-Rufai is none of these. If he is returned to office on March 9, Kaduna State will have indicated beyond a shadow of doubt that they are inspired by values that leave a majority of Nigerians befuddled.

     

    Malami and the threats to democracy

    IGERIANS may already have taken note that most appointees of the Muhammadu Buhari presidency, like their principal, have said and done nothing inspiring about democracy. They have neither promoted nor defended democratic principles. Those among them who have not kept quiet about democracy have in fact taken deliberate steps to undermine it. The Justice minister, who is also the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Abubakar Malami, leads the pack among those sworn to discomfiting democracy and the rule of law, contrary to his claims and pretensions.

    He played active part in 2015 of subverting democracy and electoral fidelity in Kogi State when he offered an unsolicited interpretation of the electoral law to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in that year’s governorship poll won by Abubakar Audu shortly before he died. The electoral body had its own legal department, and had not indicated that the country’s electoral law had become incomprehensible. Yet, Mr Malami wrote a letter to INEC drawing attention to constitutional provisions and electoral law he said justified candidate substitution in the Kogi poll. The letter was used to justify aspirant Yahaya Bello’s participation in an election he was neither registered to vote in or be voted for, especially considering that he did not even possess a valid permanent voter card (PVC), and also enabled an unscrupulous manipulation of the constitution regarding when an election was won and lost.

    Once again, Mr Malami is needlessly meddling in a forthcoming election, this time in Zamfara State, by writing a letter to INEC to restore the barred All Progressives Congress (APC) candidates in the 2019 elections. Citing the Appeal Court judgement dated February 13, 2019 in the case between Hon. Aminu Sani Jaji versus 182 others, the Justice minister, on the same day the judgement was given, virtually instructed INEC to “comply with judgment of the Court of Appeal by admitting the results of the APC Zamfara state primaries, and to also comply with the provisions of Section 38 of the Electoral Act which empowers INEC to postpone the election of the governorship, National Assembly and House of Assembly elections.” He suggested that by so doing, INEC would be fair to all the contestants in the Zamfara polls. He neither indicated why he should pick interest in the Zamfara polls nor did he show why he was interested in the Court of Appeal judgement to the shocking point of writing a letter to INEC on the same day the judgement was delivered.

    Initially, last week, while still battling with other electoral demons of their own, INEC failed to respond positively to the Justice minister’s demands. The APC candidates in the Zamfara polls were not reinstated on the ballot nor given hope they would be. A lot of pressure was expected to be brought to bear on INEC, especially considering that the APC chairman, Adams Oshiomhole, had also written to INEC on the same February 13, 2019 demanding the same reliefs as Mr Malami. By mid-week, it was unclear whether INEC would succumb to the pressures, for the Zamfara polls were at the time still many days away. But on February 21, 2019, the Court of Appeal, going by the interpretation of its judgement accepted by INEC, surprised everyone by ordering the reinstatement of APC candidates on the ballot. Indeed, a day later, the INEC chairman announced that the electoral body would abide by the judgement and accept the result of the disputed primaries allegedly conducted by the APC in Zamfara. In Kogi State in November 2015, INEC had also bowed, just as the election tribunal, Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court had all meekly acquiesced. There is already the suspicion that, going by the latest judgement of the Court of Appeal in the Zamfara case, the appellate court may not be applying itself strictly to the juridical elements of the election cases the Justice minister happened to be interested in.

    Put inelegantly but very clearly, the Justice minister may be unwittingly threatening democracy rather than working to uphold the rule of law and the sanctity of the courts. Anchoring his position on a ruling made by the acting chief justice, Ibrahim Muhammad, years ago, Mr Malami in July 2018 argued that the rule of law should be subordinated to national security. He deployed that argument to justify the Buhari presidency’s abhorrent and selective flouting of court orders, relying on the connivance of a grieving but indulgent populace sickened by rampant corruption in the country. The Justice minister was also virtually responsible for inspiring the Kogi tragedy that led to the installation of the misfit Mr Bello as governor. And now, working in synchrony with the APC chairman, he hopes to corral INEC into embracing the disputed judgement of the Court of Appeal in the case decided on February 13, three days before the general election was originally scheduled to start. He cared little that fretting Nigerians could read his letter to INEC as justification for a supposed government-inspired postponement of the polls and a call for staggered election, such as he advocated for Zamfara.

    Nigerians have an obligation to guard their democracy. But to fulfil that obligation, they must watch the propagandists in government, put a leash on INEC, eye the Court of Appeal in particular warily, and give the fecund and inventive Mr Malami little elbow room. These persons and institutions do not appear to be finicky about public opinion or democracy. They will continue to pile pressure on institutions, defy public perceptions of their errant ways, and do everything in their power to subvert, contort and constrict the system in furtherance of their antidemocratic goals. Fortunately for their schemes but unfortunate for the country, these schemers have sympathisers in the presidency whose icy detachment enables them to prosper in their illicit ways.

  • El-Rufai votes after four hours on queue

    It took Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna State four hours on the queue to  vote on Saturday at Polling Unit 24, Anguwan Sarki, Runfa Ward, Kaduna.

    But the governor said he was relieved to vote at all.

    “When I arrived at the polling unit, the card reader was malfunctioning, so until after two hours before it was fixed and voting commenced,” he told reporters.

    The governor expressed gratitude to the people of the state for their patience and coming out in large numbers to cast their vote at the rescheduled date.

    Read Also: El-Rufai clarifies his comments

    “The people here have been patient even when the card reader was faulty; they didn’t leave, they kept trooping in. This is very encouraging, I therefore, commended our people for their resilience and commitment to exercise their civic right.”

    El-Rufai urged INEC to extend the voting time since the exercise started late generally across the state.

    “I have made a case for that already; the time should be extended so that people will not be disenfranchised due to INEC’s logistical failings.”

  • Kaduna killings: Fulani demand probe panel

    Put casualty figure at 131

     

    A coalition of Fulani groups is demanding the setting up of a panel by the Federal and Kaduna State governments to investigate the recent alleged killings in Kajuru local government area of Kaduna State.

    Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore Fulani Socio-cultural Association, Mobgal Fulbe Development Association (MOFDA), Gan Allah Fulani Development Association (GAFDAN) and Fulbe Global Development and Right Initiative at a joint press conference in Kaduna on Friday also asked the security agencies to  commence “the process of detailed documentation of the violence, including collection of exhibits and all relevant information to isolate the perpetrators of the violence, arrest and prosecute them for genocide.”

    They said their verification showed that 131 Fulani were killed during the mayhem,one more than the 130 figure given by Governor Nasir El-Rufai.

    The groups claimed that while 66 bodies were recovered, many other bodies could not be found apparently because they have been burnt by the perpetrators of the killings.

    Their spokesman, Engr. Saleh Alhassan of Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore said: “In terms of human loss, 131 persons have so far been killed.

    “The bodies of 66 persons were recovered as earlier stated, where mass burials were performed, with the highest being 37 persons buried in a single, shallow grave in a valley.

    “The dead bodies of 65 pastoralists are yet to be recovered. It is important to state here that, survivors had seen when the members of their families were captured by the Adara youths and moved in the directions of the forest for cold-blooded execution in the most brutal of ways.”

    Read Also: Death toll hits 130 in Kaduna killings

    Alhassan condemned what he called attempts by some people and organizations to deny the killings.

    His words: “Since the news of the carnage first broke, some people without any iota of evidence began discrediting the reports from the security authorities.

    “Furthermore, many others began to politicise this gruesome crime, where innocent lives were lost.

    “Our organisations had taken time to interact with the victims and ascertain the level of death, killing of animals, loss of properties.

    “It is established that the attackers applied maximum violence, adopting total annihilation where all members of families attacked were killed irrespective of age and gender. For this reason, nobody was spared, except those who survived through the miracles of the Almighty God.

    “This is the third time that these forms of crimes are committed by the Adara communities against the pastoralists, now becoming a recurring phenomenon since 2017.

    “I believe every Nigerian will recall the brutal murder of about 100 innocent pastoralists, mostly children, women and the elderly by the Adara militia youths at Angwan Aku and environs in June 2017.

    “That episode is yet to be investigated, and to date, nobody is held accountable.”

    “We recognize the effort of the security agencies in rescuing some of the victims, but hasten to add that, there intervene came too late after the brutal murder of many.”

    The coalition released a list purportedly containing the names of the victims of the mayhem.

    The casualties include 70 children under the age of 10 and 16 others between the ages of 11 and  20 years.

    Sixty-six of the victims were females.