Tag: PRESIDENCY

  • Cracks in Presidency over amnesty for Boko Haram

    Cracks in Presidency over amnesty for Boko Haram

    Despite President Goodluck Jonathan’s disposition to amnesty for Boko Haram, not all members of his cabinet believe in the option, it was learnt yesterday.

    Also, it was learnt that the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) and the National Security Adviser, Mr. Aliyu Sambo, on Saturday fine-tuned the list of members of the Technical Committee who will work out the modalities for the amnesty.

    The work of the Technical Committee will pave the way for the inauguration of the Main Committee in two weeks time.

    Besides, the NSA is said to have met with ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo for his suggestion on the security challenges facing the nation.

    Following a session of the National Security Council, the President decided to raise a panel to weigh options on amnesty for Boko Haram members.

    But investigation by our correspondent revealed that not all members of the cabinet supported the amnesty solution.

    It was learnt that some military chiefs, cabinet members and top aides prefer a military solution to the security threats posed by Boko Haram as the case in Turkey and Algeria.

    Apart from the gains recorded by the Joint Task Force in repelling Boko Haram, those opposed to amnesty indicated that security agencies had reached a stage of unmasking those behind the challenges the country is facing.

    They claimed that some of the detained Boko Haram members were already set to disclose their sponsors.

    According to sources, those opposed to amnesty are of the opinion that the political forces behind Boko Haram are just using the agitation for amnesty to secure a soft landing.

    A highly-placed source, who pleaded not to be named, said: “Some cabinet ministers do not see any reason why the government should grant amnesty to Boko Haram, in view of the casualty figures from the attacks by the sect.

    “They are also of the opinion that the amnesty bait might prove fatal for the government if Boko Haram continues with its attacks.

    “They prefer military option instead of the political solution which some people in the North are canvassing.”

    Responding to a question, the source said some of the affected cabinet members and top aides have fears that those sponsoring Boko Haram are hiding under amnesty to get a soft landing.”

    The source added: “Well, the cabinet members are suspecting that Boko Haram sponsors are looking for soft-landing.

    “In spite of the reservations of some cabinet ministers and presidential aides, Jonathan has raised a committee to weigh all options.

    “The President decided to opt for amnesty to prove that he is a listening leader and he wants to carry all the geopolitical zones along in his administration.”

    As at press time, it was gathered that the NSA and the AGF met on Saturday to fine-tune the list of members of the Technical Committee, which will work out modalities for amnesty for Boko Haram.

    Although the list of the members of the Technical Committee was kept under wraps, it was gathered that it comprises both military officers and strategic cabinet members.

    Another source in government said: “When the Technical Committee completes its assignment in two weeks, the Presidency will then constitute the main panel, which would handle the amnesty programme for Boko Haram.”

    The NSA met with Obasanjo on the security challenges facing the country.

    According to a source, Mr. Sambo Dasuki had talks with Obasanjo on the way forward for the nation.

    “I think Dasuki, acting on the instructions of the President, went to discuss with Obasanjo on government’s plans. It is likely that the NSA put Obasanjo in the picture of the amnesty plan before Jonathan conceded to it.”

  • Presidency: No plans to frustrate merging opposition parties

    Presidency: No plans to frustrate merging opposition parties

    THE Presidency has distanced itself from the reports linking it with plots to frustrate the merger of progressive parties.

    It said there was no iota of truth in the allegation that it was frustrating the bid of the parties to register under the banner of All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Three political groups are laying claim to the APC acronym.

    Presidential spokesman Dr. Reuben Abati said in his twitwer account that there was no such directive or executive order from the Presidency as claimed by a report.

    Another aide, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe debunked the purported directive from President Goodluck Jonathan to governors under the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) the registration of the All Progressives Congress.

    In a statement, Okupe said the claim was false, mischievous and ran against common sense.

    The statement reads: “President Goodluck Jonathan is a democrat who has refused to interfere in the activities of other political parties and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    “The President does not give unlawful directives and has nothing to fear about the proposed merger that will necessitate him planning anything against the business interest of opposition figures as claimed by the Leadership Newspaper.”

    He likened the report to what he described as a false alarm, recently raised by certain elements that the President was planning to increase the pump price of petroleum products through the removal of fuel subsidy.

     

  • First Lady on vacation, says Presidency

    The Presidency yesterday again denied that First Lady Patience Jonathan is ill.

    It said Mrs. Jonathan is in Europe, vacationing with her children and visiting her ailing mother.

    The Presidency said the First Lady travelled to Dubai, the United Arab Emirates, and left for Paris to attend a conference.

    A statement by her Special Assistant (Media), Ayo Osinlu, said: “It is unfortunate that some media houses have allowed themselves to be used by dedicated mischief makers against the basic tenet of professional journalism.

    “It is notable that Her Excellency has a history of visiting the hospital in Germany even before she became the First Lady, thus making her medical trips routine.

    “It is also instructive to state that medical experts have recommended that every human being should undergo medical check-ups every six months, even if not suffering ill-health.

    “Therefore, hospital visitations by our leaders should not become leading media issues or attract disrespectful comments, just as the current circumstances of former South African President Nelson Mandela and other African leaders in similar situations, and even those who died, have not attracted negative comments from their people.

    “We urge a more charitable disposition towards one another as our brother’s keepers. The First Lady is expected back next week.”

     

  • Boko Haram: Disquiet in Presidency as North backs Sultan over amnesty

    Boko Haram: Disquiet in Presidency as North backs Sultan over amnesty

    • South-South leaders oppose proposal
    • NSA opens talks with Algeria, Mauritania, others

     

    In spite of the position of the Presidency, Northern leaders are supporting the recommendation of the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Abubakar Sa’ad for granting amnesty to leaders of Islamist Boko Haram sect.

    The support is causing anxiety in government following fears that Northern leaders might not be keen in collaborating with the administration in tackling the insurgent menace.

    It was also gathered that the National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd) had just returned from Algeria as part of steps to seek the support of neighbouring countries where Boko Haram leaders have purportedly relocated to.

    But a former Governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji Balarabe Musa, yesterday raised it alarm that the insurgency was is getting out of hand.

    Musa said the insurgency has reached a level that it would amount to a waste of time for President Goodluck Jonathan to be waiting for the leaders of the group to come out before he grants them amnesty.

    Investigations show that Northern governors, Emirs, opinion and political leaders are backing the Sultan’s call for amnesty.

    It was gathered that the Northern leaders were unhappy that the government did not take time to debrief the Sultan on the evidence at his disposal before rejecting his suggestion.

    There were indications that the Sultan might have privileged information on the way out of the Boko Haram menace.

    A top source who is in support of the Sultan’s call said: “The truth is that since the Sultan demanded amnesty for Boko Haram leaders, many Northern governors, leaders and Emirs have been backing him.

    “Already, some Northern leaders have been angry that Sultan’s recommendation was just dismissed with a wave of hand by the President.

    “They think the government needs to take a second look at Sultan’s suggestion or else it might end up not enjoying the support of the North in addressing the menace.

    “Yet, there is no way the government can solve the Boko Haram challenge without the involvement of Northerners.”

    But it was learnt that the National Security Adviser had been trying to persuade Northern leaders to appreciate that the President is not opposed to dialogue with the sect leaders.

    Another source said: “The NSA has been making them to realize that the President is only after a well-tailored amnesty programme not just mere mouthing of such option.

    “Dasuki said these Northern leaders should take cognizance of the fact that the government opted for dialogue option when he came on board and that was why he embarked on shuttles to all the troubled spots in the North and key opinion leaders.”

    As at press time, it was gathered that Dasuki had just returned from a trip to Algeria to plead for collaboration against Boko Haram following intelligence report that most of the wanted leaders of the sect are holed up in the desert nation.

    A reliable security chief added: “In the last few weeks, Nigeria has been trying to open up talks with strategic neighbours. Besides leading a team to France, the NSA had collaborative talks with Algeria, Mauritania, Chad and Niger Republic.

    “The exchange with neighbouring countries was necessitated by intelligence reports that both Boko Haram and Ansaru leaders are now operating outside Nigeria.”

    But speaking with our correspondent yesterday, Musa, a former Kaduna State governor, asked Jonathan to have a rethink and declare amnesty for Boko Haram leaders.

    He said: “The security situation is getting out of hand; it seems to be slipping off the control of security agencies. The Sultan is talking for Nigeria, not the North. President Goodluck Jonathan should give amnesty a deep thought.

    “ If this Boko Haram crisis is not solved, it will spread to all parts of the country. Let me remind you of the Nigerian civil war in the late 60s. At a point, the late Biafran leader, Col. Chukwuemeka Odumegwu took control of the South-East and the South-South. When he was almost seizing the Mid-West in order to march to the South-West, all Nigerians knew that there was a major challenge at hand.

    “The situation has reached such a level that asking the Boko Haram leaders to come out as the President had done is a waste of time.”

    He asked, “How can he (president) say that these sect leaders are faceless when he is the chief security officer of the country, when he has so many of them in detention, and when the nation spends a quarter of its budget on security and defence?

    “Secondly, Boko Haram leaders are already in detention. By now they should know those behind the sect. The President is not a market leader and he has to be in charge. He said in his own words that Boko Haram members are in his government. If he is unable to dialogue with them, then it is his fault.

    “Those who are calling for dialogue are actually saving his government. Let him use those in detention to identify the leaders of Boko Haram and open dialogue with them. When Yar’Adua realized the Niger Delta crisis was getting out of hand he did not wait for a long time to declare amnesty. And more militants came out to embrace amnesty than it was initially imagined. Why can’t he do the same thing unless some forces in government are behind Boko Haram.”

    Despite what appears to be growing Northern consensus, leading Niger-Delta leaders are rising against the amnesty calls.

    President of Conference of Ethnic Nationalities of the Niger Delta, Prof Kimse Okoko, has kicked against it.

    According to him, the sect had wasted too many lives and shown no remorse or commitment to dialogue.

    “Boko Haram is an insurgency that I find difficult to reconcile with the calls for amnesty. It is an ongoing insurgency and these people have not laid down their arms so how can we even consider dialogue, let alone amnesty?’’

    He argued that advocates of amnesty should remember members of the sect have not embraced dialogue or negotiation under any guise.

    The former President of Ijaw National Congress (INC) also punctured claims by Northerners that the Niger Delta region is deriving too much from the federation.

    He stated that compared with the environmental degradation and massive fund contributions to the federation account, what the Niger Delta region receives as allocations is grossly inadequate.

    Okoko said: “People should not be making these unscientific statements. If you look at the deprivations in our region and what we contribute to the nation, you discover we really do not get much.

    “The only road linking the region, the East-West road has not been constructed after several decades. We have not been compensated for all that we are suffering and there is no commensurable returns for what we contribute.’’

    He said such arguments would have been needless if Nigeria were practising true federalism.

    “These people talking are politicians who do not have a clear idea of what is at stake. We are talking development while they are politicking. Let’s control our resources and then we see who is really who.’’

    Other prominent leaders from the Niger Delta region have faulted Kano State Governor, Alhaji Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, over his perceived justification of Boko Haram violence and his call for amnesty for members of the Islamic sect.

    Ms. Ann Kio Briggs of the Ijaw Republican Assembly, former MEND leader, Chief Government Ekpemupolo, the Izon-Ebe Oil Producing Communities Forum (IOPCF) and pioneer Chairman of Traditional Rulers of Oil Mineral Producing Communities of Nigeria, (TROMPCON) Pere Charles Ayemi Botu, yesterday reacted angrily to statements credited to the governor.

    IOPCF President, Mr. Edougha Moses, accused the governor and other prominent northern politicians of hiding under the violence of Boko Haram to unleash mayhem on hapless Nigerians in order to score cheap political points.

    He said, “The North should also know that using religion as a cover up to cause destruction of lives and properties with the ill motive of distracting President Goodluck Jonathan can no longer be acceptable to the oil and gas producing communities. The insecurity in the nation is hatched by evil machinations of those who wish (for) Nigeria’s disintegration.”

    Ayemi-Botu said Kwankwaso’s statement is in tandem with his “anti-Niger Delta antecedents.” While noting that the Kano State Governor has a history of being against the people of the oil bearing communities, said the statement was also an eye-opener on the sponsors of the violence bedevilling the country.

    He said northern politicians are behind the plot to make the country ungovernable having lost power.

    “Kwankwaso could be one those sponsoring Boko Haram. It is an irony of fate that somebody of his status could open his mouth to incite a section of the country against the other. Is it because they think Niger Delta is getting too much that they want to use Boko Haram to tear the country apart?”

    He cautioned that the magnanimity of the Niger Delta people should not be taking for granted.

    Media aide to Ekpemupolo (aka Tompolo), Paul Bebenimibo, decried the statement by the governor, describing it as careless and capable of plunging the country into another civil war.

    He said: “It is unfortunate that Kwankwaso has a history of making very careless statement. It was he who recently advised Ibos to leave Kano State because government could no longer protect them.”

    Ms Ann KioBriggs also lambasted Kwankwaso for making statements unbecoming of his position and status, stressing that his utterance seems to justify violence as a means of objecting to perceived injustice.

    She noted “Is he (Kwankwaso) saying that it is also not unjust that we suffer environmental degradation from oil exploration, that it is unfair that Bayelsa, which produce oil, has only eight local government areas while Kano has 44?

    “I want to tell him it is not fair that Kano has 44 local government areas while Bayelsa which produces the money he is using to develop Kano and running of the 44 LGAs, has only eight. I want to tell him that that is not fair.”

    She said the position of Kwankwaso suggests that that Igbo, Yoruba and other ethnic groups should take up arms and hack hapless Nigerians to untimely death whenever they are displeased with government’s policies.

  • IBB: Obasanjo’s 1999 presidency saved Nigeria from break-up

    IBB: Obasanjo’s 1999 presidency saved Nigeria from break-up

    Former military ruler, General Ibrahim Babangida, yesterday claimed that only the emergence of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo as President in 1999 saved the country from possible disintegration.

    Babangida, a key figure in the drafting of Obasanjo into the race, said on the Kaduna-based Liberty Radio that the events in the country in the build up to that year’s election demanded a leader who was conversant with the country and ready to work hard to keep the country one.

    “We have to simplify a lot of things without going back to what happened before. The emergence of Obasanjo came about as a result of what happened in the country. The country was in a very serious crisis and we had to find solution to these problems. Therefore, we needed a leader, that leader who is known in the country,” he said.

    “We did not believe in foisting somebody who was not known. So we looked for a man who had been involved in the affairs of this country; who held positions either in the military or in the cabinet; who had certain belief in Nigeria.

    “For all of us that were trained in the armed forces, there is one belief that you cannot take away from us and that is the fact that we believe in this country. It is part of our training and we fought for this country.

    “So, when you have a situation like that, you need a leader that has all these attributes and quite frankly, Obasanjo quickly came to mind. Remember those days the fight was against the North’s perpetuation. But here, we had one who knows the North, knows the South and who fought a war, who believes and says it.

    “People with that type of connection, the people recognised you, and this is what we did in the case of Obasanjo. What he did is between him and the Nigerian people; but his emergence solved a lot of problems in Nigeria. At least, we did not disintegrate because we believed he could go to war again, to keep this country together.”

    He hailed the formation of the All Progressive Congress (APC) and said of its coming: “I am a firm believer in a two party system and I also studied the emergence of political parties in this country since independence and it shows that this country will be heading for a two party system. You heard about national alliances, parties coming from the North and aligning with those from the South, NEPU aligning with NCNC.

    “So when we came, we introduced the two-party system and democratically, you have to have a choice and you can vote without belonging to a political party. You vote for the quality of the man you want to represent you. So, it is nothing new because I believe in two parties and I see signs of the possible emergence of two party systems. So, I welcome it because it is good for the polity as well as the unity of this country.

    “When we were doing it in 1989, some of you in the media said no, it was going to be one Christian party, one Muslim party. It did not work out that way then and then you said it is going to be one northern and one southern party and it also did not work like that because everybody blended.

    “The chairman of NRC was Chief Tom Ikimi, while the chairman of SDP was Ambassador Babagana Kingibe and everybody was in one party or the other. You just have to have an accommodation. I am a founding father of the PDP; one of the founding fathers of the party and I cannot disown what I founded.”

    On the 2015 elections, he said “first of all we have a new party in formative stage; Nigerians have a new party in-formation. They are trying to get their act together and sell a programme to the public and use that programme to take power.

    “As an ordinary citizen, I have the right to look at what they are offering this country. Based on my knowledge of what I believe is good for this country, whoever offers something similar to that or near that, I have the right, the constitution allows me just to go to the polling station and drop my ballot and say I like this.

    “I will belong to those who will choose a credible candidate, a candidate that can lead this country and it is not difficult to find one out of 170 million people. There must be a candidate because that is what the constitution provides. If the party is silly and chooses the wrong candidate, the ordinary person will not be silly. He knows this man cannot lead me so he doesn’t vote for him. So if he chooses a wrong candidate you stand the chance of losing.”

     

  • Profile in courage

    Profile in courage

    • Some governors recently stole the thunder from the Presidency and visited crisis-torn Borno State

    What would the president do now? That is the loaded question many would be asking as nine governors seem to have taken the wind off his sail by sallying into the crisis-ridden city of Maiduguri with such fanfare, accomplishing what Nigeria’s commander-in-chief has shied away from for over two years.

    Borno, the northeast state of Nigeria, has been the epicentre of Boko Haram’s deadly insurgency since 2009. It would not be an exaggeration to say that in the last three years, a daily carnage of suicide bombings, grenade attacks and gun duels have been the fare in the city of Maiduguri. Not even the drafting of a Joint Task Force (JTF) of Nigeria’s military and security agencies quelled the rage of the Hoko Haram terrorists. With unrelenting fury, they continue to attack federal and state government establishments, especially military and security-related ones.

    Numerous police stations have been sacked, if not razed; State Security Service facilities have been breached and the JTF camps have been particular targets, not exempting banks, schools, markets and of course, churches and mosques. The JTF on its part has weighed in with all the federal might it can muster so far. In fact, it has been accused of using excessive and unbridled force against a non-military opponent. In other words, an undeclared war has been raging in Borno State for a while.

    But Borno, adjoining and equally troubled Yobe State and indeed, several other states in the north of Nigeria, remain a part of the Federal Republic. This swathe of land remains under one flag and under the authority of the president and commander-in-chief. And the question is: why has the president ducked from visiting this troubled part of his ‘kingdom’? We have seen American presidents, British and French prime ministers visit the soldiers in war-torn zones of Iraq, Afghanistan and Africa even in a time of fighting. Such visits are usually huge morale boosters for the troops and a rekindling of hope for the civilians.

    It is often a simple re-affirmation that all is not lost; that even though we are in the thick of strife and grieving, the government is still in control and that shortly, wrongs would be righted and the pieces picked. These are the reasons leaders endeavour, against all odds and indeed at the risk of their personal safety, they seek opportunities to show up in crisis zones as many times as possible.

    Though Vice-President Namadi Sambo visited Maiduguri for the first time since the crisis started early this year, it is not the same as a presidential visit. It must be this gap that informed the storming of Maiduguri last week by nine governors. The governors under the aegis of the fledgling All Progressives Congress (APC) had landed the city to the utter joy of the long-suffering people.

    The roll call includes Governors Adams Oshiomhole (Edo), Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti), Rochas Okorocha (Imo), Babatunde Fashola (Lagos), Tanko Almakura (Nasarawa) and Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun). Others are Rauf Argbesola (Osun) and Ibrahim Gaidam (Yobe), who was represented by his deputy, Abubakar Danlami Ali. The host governor is Kashim Shettima.

    These gallant governors visited the city’s major market, they walked the violence- weary streets of Maiduguri and announced a donation of N200 million as relief for the victims of Boko Haram in Borno and Yobe states. To drive home the point of their visit, they said in a statement that there should never be a ‘no-go’ area for any leader that means well for his people.

    Sadly, the presidency tried to stop these gallant men of courage using state’s security apparatus, but they would not be deterred. They are statesmen one and all. They have not only shown President Jonathan the way, they have also shown him how it can be done with style and so much valour. We hope that when Jonathan eventually finds the courage to venture into Maiduguri and indeed other troubled northern cities, he would deploy equal aplomb and panache.

  • Presidency: Why N4b African First Ladies’ Peace Mission Building can’t be stopped

    Presidency: Why N4b African First Ladies’ Peace Mission Building can’t be stopped

    Stopping the proposed N4 billion African First Ladies’ Peace Mission building in Abuja would amount to abdication of responsibility, the First Lady office said yesterday.

    Many Nigerians have described the proposal as illegal and a misplaced priority.

    The Special Assistant to the First Lady, Mr. Ayo Osinlu said such “diplomatic somersault” will be incongruent with the country’s status and leadership role in Africa.

    He said the peace mission building was not a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) of the First Lady, adding that despite the pressure on the National Assembly to turn down its endorsement , the First Lady’s office would expect objective attention to be given to it by both the public and the legislature.

    Noting that it was not the duty of the First Lady to defend the budget as it was the proposal of the FCT Ministry, he said the coming together of a group of wives of Africa presidents to undertake the moral duty of stopping violent conflict on the continent or provide relief to victims shouldn’t become an issue.

    Osinlu said: “It offends the original African culture of charity to obstruct any effort to promote peace and development such as the decision of all African First Ladies to rise up to the social responsibility as mothers and wives of leaders on the continent to save the women, children and the aged on the continent from the traumatic consequences of violent conflicts and wars”.

    “I can assure you, without any doubt that it is far from the desire of the First Lady to have the project turned down. One, it will amount to an abdication of responsibility by Nigeria and that level of disappointment will be injurious for the leadership status of Nigeria in Africa.”

    He went on: “Certainly, the First Lady will not expect Nigeria to behave in such a manner. Two, the First Lady would not also want the project abandoned because it is an undertaking that the country has made to the continent.”

    “It means therefore that the credibility of Nigeria will drop significantly if it goes back on its deliberate and willing commitment to host such an organ for the continent and at the request of the continent.

    ‘’Africa First Ladies Mission said, give us a secretariat and you agreed that you will do it and then five years after, you wake up and say you don’t want to do it again. I don’t think that level of irresponsibility would be expected of Nigeria and the First Lady won’t encourage that at all.”

    On the gains of the peace mission to Nigeria, Osinlu said: “There are other several advantages that the peace mission will attract to the country. For as long as that peace mission secretariat which is going to be a huge complex of international status is sited in Nigeria, it will continue to attract different kinds of international meetings and conferences, some continental and some global to the country. And then, of course, it promotes Nigeria’s strive to open up job opportunities for its citizens.

    “Apart from the prestige that this building brings to the country, we could also see that there will also be social and economic advantages accruing to Nigeria from that. Look at the United Nations Building before it was attacked in Abuja. You can imagine the large number of young Nigerians that were engaged there as cleaners; security personnel and as maintenance workers around the structure. So, for this and many other reasons of course, it is the First Lady’s interest that the project should continue as proposed”

  • 2015: Presidency can’t gag me, says Aliyu

    2015: Presidency can’t gag me, says Aliyu

    Northern States Governors’ Forum (NSGF) Chairman Babangida Aliyu yesterday alleged that agents of the Presidency were attempting to gag him.

    He spoke while hosting the National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE), led by its leader, Comrade Ibrahim Aliyu in Minna.

    The Niger State governor said: ‘’One cannot make a statement on national issue without people reading meaning to it. They blackmail and accuse you that such statements were made because of one’s presidential ambition.’’

    Aliyu had, in a radio interview, said President Goodluck Jonathan signed an agreement with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) goevrnors that he would serve one term in office and lacked the moral right to vie for the seat in 2015.

    Aliyu said the move to gag him was too late, adding that politics “is about talking”.

    He added: ‘’In politics, you must keep talking, especially when you have ideas on how to improve the lots of the people. It is only those who lack ideas that will not not.’’

    Aliyu advised all elected leaders to be open to constructive and meaningful criticism.

    The governor said: “Anybody who subjected himself or herself to election process must be willing to listen to the complain of his people. Nobody is so autonomus that he or she will not have dealings with others.’’

    The NULGE National President blamed the insecurity and increased social vices in the country on the crippling of local government administration by some state governors.

    The NULGE leader said: ‘’All the crises and insecurity being experienced in the country today are results of bad goverance by some state governors who have hijacked the local government administration, rendering it ineffective and incapacitated to discharge its satutory responsibility, which led to breakdown of law and order in some states in particular and the country in general.’’

    He vowed that the union would save the local government system from the “hands of corrupt and inept leaders”, adding that the local governments were handicapped by some governors.

     

  • 2015: Jonathan agreed to serve only one term – Niger Gov

    2015: Jonathan agreed to serve only one term – Niger Gov

    Governor Babangida Aliyu of Niger State yesterday ruffled some feathers in the camp of President Goodluck Jonathan after going public in Kaduna that the President reached an agreement with PDP governors in 2011 to serve for one term only.

    But he was quick to add that talks about President Jonathan seeking renewal of his mandate in 2015 should be regarded as mere speculation for now.

    The President himself has not declared his interest in contesting although the Ijaw leader, Chief Edwin Clark, who is widely acclaimed as his political godfather has said there is nothing wrong in him seeking a second term more so when the constitution allows it.

    Aliyu, featuring on Guest of the Week on Liberty Radio (91.7), Kaduna monitored in Abuja, said: “I recall that at the time he was going to declare for the 2011 election, all the PDP Governors were brought together to ensure that we were all in the same frame of mind.

    “And I recall that some of us said given the circumstances of the death of President Umaru Yar’Adua and given the PDP zoning arrangement, it was expected that the North was to produce the President for a given number of years.

    “I recall that at that discussion, it was agreed that Jonathan would serve only one term of four years and we all signed the agreement. Even when Jonathan went to Kampala, in Uganda, he also said he was going to serve a single term.”

    “For now, President Jonathan has not declared a second term ambition and we must not be speculating based on those who are benefiting from the campaign.

    “I think we are all gentlemen enough; so when the time comes, we will all come together and see what is the right thing to do.”

    On his own much speculated presidential ambition, he said if it is the will of God for him to contest, God himself will create the proper avenue for him to do so.

    “But I have not said to anybody that this or that is what I want to do in 2015. We will cross the bridge when we get to it,” he said.

    Aliyu reiterated his support for the merger of ACN,CPC,ANPP and APGA to form All Progress Congress (APC), saying it will engender healthy rivalry.

    “I pray for the success of the merger because I want a situation where we will have parties that will challenge one another properly so that we don’t take it for granted that because you have been winning elections you can do as you wish,” he said, adding:”There is a purpose for elections. There is a purpose for setting up government. You set up government for the competence and efficiency of running an administration.

    “You don’t set up government so that a group of people can enjoy to the detriment of the majority of the people. So for me, the success of the merger will look like what is happening in developed countries where one party does it for a period of time and another party does it for another period of time.

    “We should encourage a situation where our party becomes rational and very organised and where our party has democracy within because that is the foundation of a democracy of a nation.

    “A situation where a party is allowed to handpick candidates and put them up for elections should not be encouraged”.

    The governor described fears that Nigeria will break up in 2015 as a result of normal intellectual research after looking at the variables and concluding that if our situation continues to degenerate, there is the likelihood of a breakup.

    He told proponents of Nigeria’s break-up that : “ a break up is not going to be as neat as some people think because I recall that when we had the civil war, there were some people who said if you allow that group to go, we would also go.

    “Majority of Nigerians don’t want a break up. Only a few individuals are calling for a break up. And you don’t call for a break up simply because you have something today.

    “We have gone to Mali to help them fight off what is becoming a civil war. So if it starts in Nigeria, I don’t think the world will stand by and watch. We will ensure that we stay as one nation to enjoy the benefits of what we have been fighting for.”

    Last night, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe, told The Nation on Sunday he had only become aware of Governor Aliyu’s remarks within the hour, and needed more time to consult before commenting.

  • NASS, Presidency and 2013 budget delay

    NASS, Presidency and 2013 budget delay

    SIR: When on October 10, 2012, President Goodluck Jonathan presented the 2013 budget proposal to the joint session of both chambers of the National Assembly (NASS), Nigerians had thought that we have moved from the era, where the passage and signing of annual budgets were being delayed due to late presentation by the Presidency.

    In fact, the President received accolades from the entire people of Nigeria, as it was believed to be a good development that will greatly aid the budget implementation process. They (Nigerians) had expected the federal lawmakers to follow suit in ensuring quick passage, without prejudice to their constitutional powers to carry out proper scrutiny of the content of the budget proposal and make amends where necessary.

    Interestingly, the legislators did not disappoint Nigerians as they worked round the clock to ensure that the 2013 appropriation bill was passed on December 20, 2012, with an addition of about N63 billion to the N4.924 trillion originally proposed by the Presidency.

    However, almost two months after the passage of the 2013 budget by the parliamentarians, it is still awaiting the assent of the President. This delay in the signing of the 2013 appropriation bill into law, according to reports, may be due to disagreements between the Presidency and NASS on the oil benchmark, constituency projects and zero allocation for the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Another reason that may have been holding back the President from signing the budget is said to be the additional N63 billion added to it by NASS. The President appears not to be comfortable with the increase made by the lawmakers.

    What is truly important at this point is for the two parties to come to terms as fast as possible. Continuous delay in the signing of the 2013 budget will not augur well for us. The Presidency must not allow this to get to a level where lawmakers will have to take the option of overriding the President’s veto as some members are already threatening and looking towards that direction.

    Come to think of it, of what use would it be that despite commendable efforts made by the executive to present the 2013 budget early October, 2012 as against previous years where it was presented in December, the signing of the appropriation bill is delayed till March or April? This would mean that the essence of the early presentation would have been defeated.

    • Michael Jegede

    Abuja