Tag: PDP crisis

  • PDP crisis won’t stop Ondo governorship election, says Lalong

    PDP crisis won’t stop Ondo governorship election, says Lalong

    •Says only INEC can stop election

    Plateau State Governor, Simon Lalong on Tuesday said that the crisis hitting the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ondo State will not halt the forthcoming governorship election in the state.

    According to him, only the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) can stop the election from holding based on security issues.

    He therefore advised PDP in the state to put its house in order.

    The governor spoke with State House correspondents after meeting Vice President Yemi Osinbajo at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    On the threats by Ondo State Governor Olusegun Mimiko that elections can’t go on in a situation where the state is in crisis, Lalong said: “Well I don’t like joining issues with the incumbent because he is not contesting election, he is not the candidate for Ondo. I have said here that if they have issues within their party they should go and resolve that issue within PDP. This is not a PDP matter. In that election its not only PDP that is contesting election, other political parties are engaged in contesting the election and the chief electoral officer is the INEC.

    “If INEC comes and says we are not going to conduct election because of some security issues, we will accept. But as far as we are concerned, we are not worried about what other political parties would say. For APC we are ready to contest the election we have a candidate and we are going into the elections in November.

    “For us, our party is ready for election in Ondo state, infact we are flagging off our campaigns on Thursday so we are very ready.” He added

    On the purpose of his visit to the Vice President, he said that he came to discuss issues concerning his state.

    “My meeting with the vice president is not about election. I just came in to see the VP on other state engagements like issues on agriculture, school feeding programme because the Vice President is the chairman on the school feeding programme.” He stated

  • How to resolve PDP crisis, by Filani

    How to resolve PDP crisis, by Filani

    Former National Vice Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) (Southwest) Chief Ishola Filani recently celebrated his 70th birthday in Lagos. He spoke with Group Political Editor Emmanual OLadesu and Musa Odoshimokhe about his political journey, the PDP crisis, why the party lost last year’s presidential election and other partisan issues.

    How do you feel at 70?

    I feel very happy and great at 70. I praise God that He is gracious enough to let me be 70 years of age. There is no way to describe it because a lot has happened; my primary school to secondary school, university and call to bar days. I also thank Him for my practice of the law, political activities. I thank God that He has been generous to me and I have not had cause to stop glorifying Him. I am really fulfilled because it is an attitude of the mind; some people feel fulfilled, some don’t feel fulfilled. but, I have cause to thank God because I think I am fulfilled. Everything that I want to be, I am contended with it. I think I have made my impact and I thank God I am in good health. He has given me good children and I thank Him for everything I have been able to do within this 70 years. I am not going judge myself. it is left for the people to judge me.

    Why did you study law?

    It was a thing that just happened to me when I was in the primary school. I remember when I was in primary six, our teacher asked from us what we wanted to become in life. I said I wanted to become a lawyer and he continued to remind me. He monitored my life and after secondary school, he reminded me of my ambition. My inspiration did not come from the example of anybody. Although we have many educated persons in my family, I happened to be the first lawyer. It was not as if it was my family that gave me the inspiration. It was my own decision.

    What circumstances made you to join politics?

    If there is anything that I regret, it is joining politics when I did. As a good lawyer, I should have waited for another two or three years or maximum of five years, to be called into the inner bar before venturing to politics. That one aspect of my life is what I regret that I have not achieved. I still hope that now at this age, I should be able to devote more time to law practice, to be able to achieve that goal, to become what you people call Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN). We call it the inner bar.

    Why did you join the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and not the National Republican Convention (NRC)?

    I have a very big brother then, very intelligent, a professor of Chemistry from the University of Lagos. The late Professor Ade Adegbite, was my big brother and we were very close. He and Babagana Kingibe went to the same university in England. And when Kingibe came back to Nigeria, it was through him that I met Kingibe. Kingibe and I became friends and Adegbite was our big brother. When General Shehu Yar’Adua was now looking for intellectuals for the Peoples Front of Nigeria (PFN), Kingibe was one of the people he invited first and, in turn, Kingibe introduced us to him. That was how we started. We were like consultants, but because I was free, I was now seeing him more frequently than Prof. Adegbite. That was how I went into politics and we drafted all the papers. And of course, the late President Umaru Yar’Adua was part of us. The PFN could not be registered. Some of us had to move to form the Social Democratic Party (SDP). The position zoned to us in my state was the position of ex-official. I contested it and won. That was how it started.

    The leadership of the SDP abandoned M.K.O Abiola…   

    The party did not subvert Abiola’s mandate. all that I know as an active participant during Hope ’93, which was what we called the Abiola Campaign Organisation. Dr. Jonathan Zwingina was the chairman of the campaign committee, I was the director of publicity of the campaign committee. Some of the people that we were in the publicity team were Dele Alake, Tunji Bello and Dr. Doyin Abiola, who was always at home receiving materials from us for publication. With this background, I had insight into what happened. We won the election and it was annulled and lot of protest ensued. At the end of the day, people had accused even Kingibe of betraying Chief Abiola. I want to say with all sense of responsibility that it was not so. What happened was that after the election was annulled, there was this move by General Sani Abacha. Members of the defunct parties were to nominate people to serve in his government. The feeling of people then and strongly too, was that he was not going to be there more than a year. Abiola called us and briefed us about it. He told us that this was what he got from Abacha. The consensus of opinion then was that we should join. The reason given was that, if we do not join, the NRC will join. And if NRC joined, it would be a disadvantage to us. If in a year’s time, Abacha now decided to supervise the conduct of election, it would be like we were not cooperating with him and we would not be favoured. That was a good reason and Abiola submitted the names with the consent Kingibe. Being a democrat, he called all the leaders; it was as if taking permission from them. So, you can’t blame anybody for the circumstance of the time. The insinuation that Kingibe betrayed Abiola by going to join Abacha is not true and if there was anybody that gave Abiola the needed support during his trying period, it was Kingibe, particularly when he became the Minister of Internal Affairs. When he was in charge of prison, he was able to do a lot to assist him. That was what happened. Until Abiola died, I know that the relationship between Abiola and Kingibe was very cordial.

    Why did you leave Alliance for the Democracy (AD) for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)?

    When Bola Ige died, the cohesion in the AD was no longer there. Some people took over the party, running it as if it was a personal affair. The kind of leadership Ige offered was no longer there. The party was now taking the form of a sectional party; it was almost taking the dimension of a Yoruba party, whereas one had a broader view of the party, in terms of ideology. The ideology was no longer strongly pursued like when Ige was there. In term of administration, it was no longer democratic.

    Why did you not contest for elective office throughout your political career?

    I was more devoted to party administration; the only time I decided to contest for elective office was in 2007.  The contest for the Ekiti State governorship election was in top gear. I and other people were disqualified during the screening to contest the primary. I appealed and at the appeal committee, it was there we learnt that it was because I did not submit my primary school leaving certificate. It was also discovered that certain influences that worked against some of us. Even where the argument was accepted, that I was qualified in view of all certificates presented, but when we went to the headquarters to collect clearance letter, the primary had ended. That was the first and last I contest for elective position. Apart from that, I was more interested in party administration, which got me into an ex-officio member of the SDP. There, I became the National Publicity Secretary and member Board of Trustees (BoT) of the party. In the AD, I did not hold any position, but I was a very good point of contact. In the PDP, I was elected into the national executive Committee and later, I became the National Vice Chairman. I served in so many committees to regulate the party. There was a time I was the Sole Administrator of the SDP in Delta, Edo, Imo and Abia states. During campaigns, I was chairman of one committee or the other. I have been seriously involved in party administration. I think I even prefer that because I am challenged by the responsibilities.

    Why was the PDP defeated during the Presidential election?

    The PDP lost the election because we did not field a northerner. It can be explained that as at then, the PDP had been in power for 16 years. Out of the 16 years, the South held power for 14 years; Chief Olusegun Obasanjo eight years, Goodluck Jonathan who took over from Umaru Yar’ Adua spent six years. And by the unwritten convention of the party, it was that south and north would have eight years each. And if during the period, the north had only two out for the 16 years and we still gave it to the south, if Jonathan had won, it means South would have spent 18 years as against the two years held by the north. Many of us who could think deeply advised against Jonathan coming up and that was the result.

    What is your position on the PDP crisis?

    When people talk of PDP crisis, I laugh because the crisis in our party is better than the one in the All Progressives Congress (APC). One thing that is happening is this, if it is not true that Ali Modu Sheriff is being sponsored by external forces, then, he should see reason to cooperate with the man stream of the party. If all the governors, the National Assembly caucus, state chairmen, other executives, past ministers, the board of trustees and everybody is on one side, all we are doing in the PDP, is like the biblical Jesus Christ who said if you have 100 sheep and one is lost, you abandon the 99 and go about searching for the lost one.  The PDP asking Sheriff not to do this or that is just a fulfillment of that biblical injunction. That is to say nobody is useless; the more the merrier. It has become a parlance that when people in the party lost primary, they will say they are contesting under Sherriff faction. Our prayer is that Sherriff should see reason so that we can carry on with the party affairs.

    Why was the Southwest PDP unable to agree on a candidate for the national chairman?

    There was an agreement, but people breached the agreement. I was at the meeting held by the Southwest caucus in Akure, where we zoned the positions that were zoned to the Southwest. The position of National Chairman, National Treasurer and Deputy National Publicity Secretary, were those that were zoned to the Southwest. Again, we have our own internal zoning arrangement in the Southwest, we gave National Chairman to Lagos and Ogun, We gave the Deputy Publicity Secretary to Oyo and Osun and we gave the National Treasurer to Ekiti and Ondo. We now said that, going by what is happening in Nigeria, we needed an experience politician. We need somebody who can go all the way through whatever difficulties, we are passing through, we need experience person to lead the party. We believed that because of the experience of that Chief Olabode George has in party administration; he was the National Vice Chairman and Deputy National Vice Chairman. He was the coordinator of Yar’Adua Campaign Organisation. We believe that such a person has the experience to lead the party, so that what is zoned to us, we will put the best of men to occupy the position. We nominated him. but, some people insisted that they would contest against him. Even, some people from the Southsouth, despite that they were not favoured to do so, contested. It was a pity that the convention did hold; maybe we would have been able to see what the result would be. So, we presented a consensus candidate in zones for the Southwest, but, two people came from Lagos.

  • PDP crisis, APC gains, Nigeria’s woes

    SIR; Many have confined the role of the opposition parties to a group of people opposing everything and anything done or suggested by an incumbent government. But opposition parties in a democratic system have proved themselves to be a powerful tool in the area of policy making, assessing the performance of the incumbent government, fighting corruption, conducting civic education and ensuring that those governed are getting the best and not just handouts.

    The current state of PDP should be a cause for concern to all well-meaning Nigerians. I am no fan of any political party but studies have shown that a country with no functional opposition party cannot be said to practice true democracy and the citizens of that nation bears the brunt.

    I do not doubt the government of the APC but we need a strong opposition to oversee the affairs of this present government, to checkmate them, to make them give us their best and nothing less; only a strong and organised opposition party can do this.

    The source of the woes befalling PDP no one knows; but they need to put their house in order so as to carry out their functions as opposition. As the saying goes, ‘’A man whose house is on fire doesn’t chase rats’’. PDP should get their acts right and together with other political parties POLICE the affairs of this present administration to ensure that Nigerian masses get the dividends of democracy. Nigerians should be careful and at alert as there may be a well-orchestrated plans and intention to ensure that no worthy opposition ever raises its head in the polity; the danger if this happens is very great as this would take us back to authoritarian kind of government, a state of anarchy, press suppression, loss of personal freedom and leaving us at the mercy of those in power.

    The opposition should be a viable alternative, to take away the issue of monopoly of power. Consider what it would have been today in the telecom sector if there were no healthy competition. A SIM card would still have been sold for more than N40,000 but today anyone can afford to own even 100 SIMS with just a thousand naira.

    The work of the opposition starts immediately the results of the polls are announced but it seems PDP does not realise the elections are long over and that the business of governance almost midway into the term. This internal bickering, strife and disorganisation show they (PDP) are not ready yet to take up their responsibility of leadership in the event of transition of power; they and other political parties in this country should assume their role to hold this government accountable for its commissions or omissions and to ensure transparency in governance of this nation called Nigeria.

    • Collins Nwanma,

    nwanmacollins@yahoo.com

  • PDP crisis: Sheriff, Makarfi to nominate reconciliation committee members Monday

    PDP crisis: Sheriff, Makarfi to nominate reconciliation committee members Monday

    •Leaders weigh options as governors beg Sheriff

    There were indications yesterday that the warring factions in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) may on Monday nominate those who will represent them on the reconciliation committee.

    Consultations were ongoing last night on the composition of the reconciliation team.

    The factions include a group led by the sacked National Chairman of the party, Sen. Ali Modu Sheriff and the Interim National Caretaker Committee headed by Senator Ahmed Makarfi.

    Also, more governors are begging Sheriff to “sacrifice all” to restore PDP back to a vibrant party.

    But a top party source said the outcome of the agreement would determine whether or not the reconciliation will work.

    One of the proposals on the card is to allow Sheriff and members of the National Working Committee (NWC) to remain in office till 2017.

    According to a top source who spoke in confidence with our correspondent, the founding fathers of the PDP, including ex-President Ibrahim Babangida and a former National Security Adviser, Gen. Aliyu Gusau, have played a vital role in bringing Sheriff and Makarfi together.

    The source said: “Actually, Gusau has been playing a pivotal role. He facilitated the preliminary talks and understanding between Sheriff and Makarfi.

    “The two warring factions have set a template bordering only on the resolution of the crisis in PDP. The intervention of the founding fathers has led to the building of a consensus to put the crisis behind us.

    “Besides the Sheriff factor, we have discovered that some PDP governors are not on the same page with Makarfi’s Caretaker Committee.

    “If there was no intervention by these elders, the crisis would have taken a deeper dimension.

    “We are just lucky that wise counsel has prevailed with Sheriff and Makarfi agreeing to end the feud.

    “But how to resolve the crisis will lead to the inauguration of a reconciliation committee.  All the warring groups are expected to nominate members of the committee. We may do so by Monday.

    “The nature of the agreement at this committee’s level will determine the shape of the reconciliation.”

    Ahead of the inauguration of the reconciliation committee,  it was learnt that some leaders of the party and PDP governors are already weighing options including having a harmonized National Working Committee or allowing Sheriff and his NWC team to run the party till 2017.

    Another source said: “Most party leaders and some governors are already buying the idea of leaving Sheriff and his NWC to be in charge till April or May 2017 when a new National Convention will hold.

    “Some members of the NWC of the Sheriff Camp arrived in Abuja on Thursday in line with the new thinking.

    “If this proposal is ac

  • Makarfi, Sheriff factions close to reconciliation

    Makarfi, Sheriff factions close to reconciliation

    The two feuding factions of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on Tuesday met to discuss ways of resolving the lingering leadership crisis rocking the party.

    At a joint briefing in Abuja, the factions led by Senators Ahmed Makarfi and Ali Modu Sheriff said they have resolved to put an end to the crisis.

    The Deputy National Chairman of the Sheriff faction, Dr. Cairo Ojougboh and the Secretary of the Makarfi led Caretaker Committee, Senator Ben Obi, represented the two factions at the briefing.

    A statement jointly signed by Makarfi and Sheriff was read by Ojougboh and corroborated by Obi at the briefing.

    The statement said, “At a meeting held this morning between Senator Ahmed Makarfi and Ali Modu Sheriff, a holistic review of the state of affairs of our great party, the PDP was deliberated upon.

    “The meeting was held in a most convivial atmosphere of brotherhood and understanding in the best interest of our great country, Nigeria and the sustenance of multi-party democracy.

    “In reviewing the crisis that has engulfed our party since the loss of the 2015 general elections, after 16 years of uninterrupted leadership at the centre, it became obvious to both of us as principal actors that it is time to heal the wounds and bring about a united, focused and constructive opposition party that can bring sanity to our democratic process, bringing relief to the teeming supporters of our great party, the PDP and to the benefit of our country.”

    The statement added that the two factions would consult widely with all relevant organs of the party and also set up a joint committee to carry out a holistic reconciliation of all aggrieved segments of the party across the nation.

  • PDP crisis: Sheriff camp rejects BoT’s recommendations

    PDP crisis: Sheriff camp rejects BoT’s recommendations

    The Ali Modu Sheriff camp of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has rejected the peace recipe offered by the party’s Board of Trustees (BoT) to stem the festering leader ship crisis in the party.

    The BoT had on Monday directed the removal of the Rivers state Governor, Nyesom Wike as chairman of the convention planning committee and the immediate disbandment of the panel.

    The trustees had similarly ordered that a repeat convention by held in Abuja, instead of Port Harcourt, favoured by the Wike and the Ahmed Makarfi led caretaker committee of the PDP.

    A statement on Tuesday by Dr. Cairo Ojougbo on behalf of the Sheriff camp, said the resolutions of the BoT fell short of the decisions reached with another reconciliation committee headed by the Bayelsa state Governor, Henry Seriake Dickson.

    The camp has insisted on having Sheriff chair the next National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting “where Makarfi will attend as a member of the BOT”.

    “At the meeting, a chairman of the convention committee will be agreed upon, a new convention committee setup, including all other sub-committees like Zoning, Finance, Accreditation etc”, the statement added.

    The faction demanded an enlarged meeting of stakeholders and members, where everybody will be given the to air their views as prelude to genuine reconciliation.

    The faction also rejected the vote of confidence passed on the caretaker committee by the BoT, on the ground that the committee had failed to organise a successful convention on two occasions.

    The statement continued, “Consequently, we can now confidently inform the general public that well meaning Nigerians have been urging Senator Makarfi to resign to save democracy.

    “We therefore call on his friends and associates and family to advise him to do the needful and resign now to save multiparty democracy in Nigeria and stop impunity that has been the bane of internal democracy.

    “That the BOT Chairman, Senator Walid Jubril, has brought crisis to the party. In any case his tenure has expired as he has spent more than 10 years as Secretary and Chairman of BOT which runs contrary to the party constitution.

    “A party where we have imminently qualified persons like Senator David Mark, Babangida Aliyu and others cannot be led by unstable individuals controlled by the love for money.

    “That the source of irritation in the party is the still-born illegal caretaker committee and the Board of Trustees should have advised that the illegality be addressed”.

    The Sheriff camp also demanded the immediate reconstitution of the BoT, stressing that “until we get it right and check impunity, the Nigerian opposition party won’t perform as required”.

    “As we move towards reconciliation, PDP should prevent any person or group from hijacking the party. Be rest assured that the PDP will emerge stronger as we note that impunity marred the party’s success in the 2015 general elections”, the statement added.

  • INEC conducts 137 elections in nine months – Yakubu

    ….IPAC promises to intervene in PDP crisis

    Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmoud Yakubu Monday revealed that the commission has conducted 137 rerun elections in the last nine months.

    The Commission has scheduled five more elections, which includes the two governorship elections, Edo and Ondo states and also two other rerun elections scheduled for this weekend in Sokoto and Oyo states.

    Prof. Yakubu spoke when he received an audience led by the outgoing factional leader of Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC), Bashir, accompanied by the newly elected chairman, Mohammed Lawal Naldo of the Accord Party and other executive members.

    Yakubu noted that the commission under his watch has conducted the highest number of rerun elections in the history of the commission outside election calendar.

    He said, “Since the new commission was sworn-in, November last year, we have so far conducted nothing less than 137 elections, ranging from bye elections.”

    He therefore said for the commission to succeed in its mandate, it will continue to rely on the cooperation and support of IPAC.

    INEC boss also commended the group for closing up its gap, especially when the commission waded into the leadership crisis, which led to the fractionalization of the group.

    He described a unified IPAC as an effective medium to communicate with all the political parties in the country.
    Yakubu also sort the support of the group in the amendment process of the electoral law.

    Meanwhile, the newly elected Chairman of IPAC, Naldo has said that the group was going to wade into the ongoing crisis in People’s Democratic Party, (PDP).

    Naldo who will effectively take over on 25th August 2016 said since all the political parties are members of IPAC, it was the responsibility of the group to ensure peace and harmony in the political parties, including PDP.

    Consequently, he said once he assume office, he was going to set a committee that will look into the crisis rocking the one time ruling party in the country with the aim of ensuring that all the rancour in the party comes to an end.

    He also assured INEC that the group under his watch will continue to give support to INEC, who he described as a strong stakeholder in the democratic process.

  • PDP crisis: Dankwambo urges leaders to sacrifice personal interest

    PDP crisis: Dankwambo urges leaders to sacrifice personal interest

    Gov. Ibrahim Dankwambo of Gombe State, has urged national leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to sacrifice their personal interest in order for peace to reign in the party.

    Dankwambo who spoke on Friday in Abuja at the PDP North-East Zonal Caucus meeting, said that this was the best time to sacrifice personal interest in order for the party to move forward.

    “In the past, so many things have remained issues of great concern.

    “Now is the time to make sacrifice for all of us on old or new things that come our ways as a duty to the party.

    “Everybody is weeping and crying at the same time.

    “If anybody expects any other person to call him to his wing, we may not get to our destination, because the wing may not be too strong.

    “It is the wing of sacrifice that is strong enough to take us to the right destination,” Dankwambo said.

    The governor, however, urged PDP leaders from the North-East Zone to be careful in reaching a decision on national offices of the party zoned to the zone.

    “We must avoid decisions that will further divide our members or bring more problems to our party.

    “We should respect the views of our stakeholders and take decisions that will unite us,” Dankwambo said.

    Gov. Darius Ishaku of Taraba, in his remarks, expressed the North-East Zone interest in the office of the National Secretary of the party.

    This, according to him, is one of the ways to easily resolved the party’s crisis.

    Ishaku also expressed optimism that the leadership crisis rocking the party would soon be resolved.

  • I won’t sacrifice my political interests for reconciliation – Sheriff

    I won’t sacrifice my political interests for reconciliation – Sheriff

    The disputed National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Ali Modu Sheriff, vowed on Friday that he will not  sacrifice his integrity,  political interest and followers on the altar of reconciliation with the Ahmed Makarfi-led Caretaker Committee.

    He also blamed former President Goodluck Jonathan for causing the party to lose the last elections in Yobe and Borno States to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The former Borno State governor insisted on the postponement of Wednesday’s national convention slated for Port Harcourt and the removal of Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike, as chairman of the convention committee.

    However, the chairman of the PDP Board of Trustees (BoT), Senator Walid Jibrin, told The Nation that the BoT was still awaiting the report of the reconciliation committee.

    “The committee members have been working day and night and they have met with the various stakeholders, including Ali Modu Sheriff. I cannot say much on this matter until I receive the committee’s report,” Jibrin said on phone.

    Sheriff confirmed meeting with the Prof. Jerry Gana-led reconciliation committee but said their talks are still ongoing.

    He was adamant on the postponement of the convention  and the removal of Wike as chairman of the committee.

    Besides, he asked for a definite role for himself in the planning of the convention at an appropriate time.

  • PDP’s BoT moves to reconcile Sheriff, Makarfi camps

    PDP’s BoT moves to reconcile Sheriff, Makarfi camps

    In a last minute effort of save the upcoming national convention of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the party’s Board of Trustees (BoT) has put set up a reconciliatory committee.

    The 18-member committee, chaired by a former Minister of Information, Prof. Jerry Gana, is to reconcile the Ali Modu Sheriff camp with the Ahmed Makarfi led Caretaker Committee.

    Inaugurating the committee in Abuja on Monday, chairman of the BoT, Senator Walid Jibrin, said the trustees would not sit by and watch the party destroyed by the lingering leadership crisis.

    He expressed dismay that there are about 15 different court cases instituted by the various contending groups within the party.

    According to him, there was an urgent need for a politician solution to the crisis, stressing that allowing the cases to go on might leave the party in a permanent state of crisis.

    He appealed to the litigants to withdraw their court cases and allow the reconciliation committee to resolve the differences so that the August 17 convention could hold.

    Speaking shortly after the inauguration, Prof. Gana assured that the committee would discharge its functions with every sense of responsibility, justice and fairness.

    He pleaded with the Sheriff camp to allow the committee resolve the crisis by making himself available for discussions, saying that the party should go into the convention united.

    Other members of the committee are Alhaji Shuaibu Oyedokun, Senator Ibrahim Ida, Hajia Inna Ciroma, Senator Biodun Olujimi and Air Commodore Dan Suleiman (rtd), among others.