Tag: President

  • President Buhari, beasts of ‘Naija’ etc…

    Another year gone; let us begin to intuit its truths. Are we different from what we signified and who we were? We have President Muhammadu Buhari. He is the shining beacon of our hope. With Buhari, we hope to cross our threshold of tragedy, death and plunder, come 2016.

    Until then, our roads will remain cratered and ditched with death. Our youths will remain unemployable and bereft of hope. Our hospitals will remain corridors of death. Are our schools functioning yet? Are our lawmakers mature now? Has the executive grown in wisdom, the judiciary too? Have we wizened with age and grief as a people?

    Change is here, and at its dawn we encounter truth as we hardly knew it. What really is the tenor of the truth? Our truths? Shall we continue to weep like the fanatic, over our dying dreams and the faded fantasies we struggle to forget? Shall we begin to rejoice despite all odds, in spite of misery and death; our lives’ constant staple?

    There is not yet a Nigeria of defined, stable boundaries, and economies. There is not yet a sense of shared destiny save our unity of the downtrodden and the damned. The most prescient portrait of the Nigerian character and our ultimate fate as a nation shamefully played out over the last few months and in the last few days. It plays out even as you read; the persistent fuel scarcity and outrageous hike in pump price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), reveals our murderous obsessions, violent impulses, moral bankruptcy, our hubris and inevitable self-destruction.

    The tiresome avarice and predatory lust that drove proprietorships of filling stations nationwide to hike fuel price from N87 to N500 per litre at the twilight of former President Goodluck Jonathan’s regime recalls very sadly to mind, that violence of the wild that holds motionless for endless hours, the kidnapper in his lair, the assassin in his ambuscade and the public officer in his plunderous perch – this violence belongs primarily to the predator while it hunts its prey.

    In the last few days, of his administration, it manifested in uncontrollable spasms that saw us brutalise the helpless and enable our worst. As the fuel scarcity persisted, Nigeria gradually sputtered to a standstill, businesses shut down, banks cut short their work hours to midday, families starved – particularly those whose livelihoods depended on daily use of PMS- and the queues got longer like photographs of civil death in our homegrown dystopia.

    It became clearer at some level that Nigeria was gradually hitting rock bottom, many of us groaned that we were damned—just as some of us know that our citizenship culture founded on a national enterprise that survives on  corporate greed, limitless exploitation and the continued extraction of crude oil is doomed.

    The most frightening facets of the horror story unfolded in our filling stations and spilled over to our streets and neighbourhood mini-marts, utility service providers and  grocery stores. As fuel station managers hoarded fuel and closed shop in desperate bid to make a killing by selling it at outrageous prices to helpless motorists and folk whose survival depended on it, the neighbour next door on whom several families and businesses depended for supply of certain crucial products like cooking gas, kerosene, engine oil and so on, joyously inflated prices of the essential products, to the chagrin and discomfort of patrons in need.

    Consider for instance, the case of a notable pastor and gas dealer in Agege; the family promptly closed shop and hoarded gas for two days even as neighbours and friends thronged their doorstep pleading with them to resume business and sell gas to them. Of course, they did after effecting a hike in price of the product. The ‘godly’ family dispassionately sold gas to friends and neighbours at N6, 000 per gas bottle. That was an astonishing hike from the product’s initial N3, 000 price before the fuel scarcity.

    Friends and neighbours of the family grumbled under their breath as they paid for the product; those that couldn’t recoiled to seek kerosene, accusing the pastor and his family for their ‘lack of sensitivity,’ ‘amorality’ and fraudulent claims to godliness. Of course, pastor and wife responded in kind, claiming that they were duty bound to separate business from holiness. “Na holiness we go chop?” said the pastor. The latter, a Lagos State civil servant erstwhile paraded himself as a noble businessman and compassionate ‘man of God.’

    There is little difference between the family’s bestiality and the savagery of the ruling class and fuel station managers who accentuated the scarcity by hoarding fuel in order to sell it at N500 a litre. While their variously savage peers may advance arguments to support their monstrosity citing certain dreadful norms of commerce and industry, it need be told and understood that it is desperate, savage acts like theirs that ruins nations and enable the perpetual dominance of the haves over the have-nots.

    A similar malady manifests even as you read as fuel station managers persistently hoard fuel to sell at higher pump prices despite President Buhari’s directive that PMS pump price remain at N87 per litre.

    What is happening in Nigeria is a precursor to a dreadful war between the country’s elites and the impoverished, a war caused by diminishing resources, chronic unemployment and underemployment, overpopulation, declining crop yields caused by climate change, and rising food prices; capital and operating costs belie hope and prosperity for industry. The unfolding doom has nuances, put precisely, it has a thousand meanings.

    A recent Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) report generated ripples over its summations on Nigeria. No thanks to the Economist magazine’s sister publication, the Nigerian newborn may arrive knowing he has come where the sun dies everlastingly for the bliss of the fig. The EIU report ranks Nigeria 80th out of 80 countries assessed in its ‘Where-to-be-born’ index.

    The 2014 Human Development Index (HDI) report ranked Nigeria amongst countries with low development index at 153 out of 186 countries that were ranked. Life expectancy in the country is placed at 52 years old while other health indicators reveal that only 1.9 per cent of the nation’s budget is expended on health; 68.0 per cent of Nigerians are stated to be living below $1.25 daily while adult illiteracy rate for adult (both sexes) is 61.3 per cent.

    ”As the population is growing, the resources that we all depend on, the food, energy, water, is declining. The demand for these resources will rise exponentially by the year 2030, with the world needing about 50 per cent more food, 45 per cent more energy and 30 per cent more water,” noted Dr. Aisha Mahmood of the Central Bank of Nigeria.

    She said: “In Nigeria, there is the issue of youth and employment; 70 per cent of the 80 million youths in Nigeria are either unemployed or underemployed. We are all witness to what happened recently during the immigration recruitment exercise and this is simply because 80 per cent of the Nigerian youth are unemployed.”

    This will inevitably lead to a class war as the deprivation of the working class will eventually morph into violence. In the background, a severe and scarier grotesqueness emerges; it is the acquiescence of presumably humane folk to the bemusement of prosperity. This blunts the sense, inflates the ego and inspires disdain for the less privileged. It is the affliction of the ruling class, fuel station managers and the gas-dealing pastor and his family.

  • Can President Buhari be for everybody, really?

    I am for everybody; I am not for anybody, so rang out what became the defining words of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari at his inauguration as Nigeria’s president on May 29. It was a quotable quote, an emotive sound bite that stood out in the inaugural address and got everybody’s attention. It apparently sought to sell a populist myth of a president beholden to no one. However, there is also the interpretation that it is a targeted statement aimed at a political financier and aspirant godfather. An extension of the President’s I am for all and for no one is the populism of non interference with the two other arms of government – legislature and the judiciary – as demonstrated by his laissez faire attitude to the National Assembly leadership crisis that saw Senator Bukola Saraki and Honourable Yakubu Dogara romping to Senate Presidency and House Speaker-ship respectively against the position of their party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). But separation of powers is in theory, just a myth of democracy as the President must assent to legislative bills to become law while he also appoints judicial officers, including judges of the Supreme Court. Where, then, is the separation, in practical terms? However, it would seem that President Buhari is striving to live down his image of the draconian military strongman of yesterday and swinging to the other extreme of being the idealist democrat, the evangelist of separation of powers in a democratic polity.

    But, really, can President Buhari, a presumed reformist president and change agent, be for all and sundry?  Can the all include those beneficiaries of the rotten past, the avowed opponents of change scheming to truncate it? Can President Buhari, in a real world situation, play the utopian democrat when needed legislation would have to drive change and yet hope to succeed with the Change Agenda?  And the change mantra – what is the operational definition of CHANGE by the APC, the party that runs the federal government?  What are the articulated strategies to achieve that defined change? Posers.

    Seven months into his tenure, President Buhari and the APC are manifesting a failure of intellectual and philosophical rationalization of the change they sold to the Nigerian electorate. It would seem that there was no intellectual vanguard to articulate the specifics of the desired change and a reasoned pathway to achieving same. The outcome is that both the Presidency and the APC are getting hobbled by the enormity of the problems they inherited and groping, apparently without anticipated and coordinated plan to tackle such emerging challenges. Taking advantage of the situation, various pressure groups, including violent criminal gangs, cult groups, religious extremists as well as militant ethnic irredentists are having a field, having taken a measure of the federal government’s resolve at maintaining public order and concluded it is tepid. It is a perception, but is reality to its holders. So, before the CHANGE mantra becomes a joke, the Presidency must articulate the CHANGE VISION and offer a roadmap to that destination. As public governance, what people see today is more of the same – No substantive change, so far. Even the President’s flagship crusade, the war against corruption, is being prosecuted  by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)  in its usual format of old as a titillating drama of extra-judicial disclosures about mind boggling multi-billion naira bazaar of graft with journalists providing support as drummer boys!!  The EFCC seem to relish its posturing in the court of public opinion better than the court of law.

    Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, captured the essence of President Buhari’s challenge and what could be articulated as his vision for Nigeria with his piece on a New Sheriff in Town. The sheriff was a folksy American frontier hero, the tough guy, who rode into lawless frontier towns in America’s Wild, Wild West, guns blazing, to restore order in a showdown with outlaws.  So, President Buhari’s main challenge is to restore public order in what is turning out a lawless, violent, anything goes Nigeria. It is a modern version of an uncompromising Showdown with Outlaws. A sole focus on anti-corruption campaign, with emphasis on theft of public funds, may therefore be misplaced because corruption is simply a symptom of a much, deep-rooted general decadence and collapse of values in the society that demands more than the mechanistic anti-corruption police method. The architecture on which corruption is built – the family, church, institutions of learning, civil society – need to be comprehensively re-oriented and revalued and its deviants sanctioned, without let up. The civil service and the Nigeria Police are two key institutions of state one had expected would be given a drastic shake up, early in the administration, under the CHANGE DOCTRINE, given their collaboration and connivance in the rotten state of affairs the Presidency is seeking to redress.  But what fundamental change can we expect in these institutions when even the President seem to give kudos to civil servants while deriding ministerial positions and where a Mike Okiro remains as chairman of Police Service Commission, Okiro under whose tenure as Inspector General of Police, a principal suspect in the killing of the Apo Six, in Abuja, escaped right at Police Headquarters in Abuja! It took the intervention of then President Olusegun Obasanjo for the killing of the Igbo traders to be investigated because, as is usual with Police cover up, the victims had been labelled armed robbery suspects! The case is still unresolved. That is the state of Nigeria today and why President Buhari cannot belong to all, but to only those ready to join the Save Nigeria Brigade.

    So, as we enter the year 2016, we expectantly wait for the SHERIFF to ride into town, blazing.

     

    • Dr. Olawunmi, a Senior Lecturer, Department of Mass Communication, Bowen University, Iwo, is former Washington Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria.
  • …President will step on big toes — Garba Shehu

    …President will step on big toes — Garba Shehu

    Senior Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on Media and Publicity,Malam  Garba Shehu, said yesterday that his principal will be stepping on “big toes” in the war  against corruption.

    But he will not be surprised if those affected fight back.

    Shehu spoke in Kaduna at the opening of a three-day  retreat    for State House Correspondents in Kaduna State.

    The retreat has the  theme: ‘Journalism and the Change Mantra, State House in Focus’.

    He said:”President Buhari has embarked on an anti-corruption campaign that is bound to offend many. Big toes will be stepped on, personal interests will be cast aside.

    “As the popular saying goes, when you fight corruption, corruption fights back. Yes, anti-corruption is a war.”

    He thanked the press for the role it played in igniting the CHANGE agenda that brought the President into power in the March 2015 election, but said  the CHANGE agenda was just the  beginning.

    He solicited even more support from the press in waging the anti-graft war.

    “The press can help President Muhammadu Buhari to win that war ,” he said,adding”you are one of the government’s most lethal weapons in this battle against the forces that aim to pull down Nigeria.

    “The power of the media, if they have any power at all, lies in their ability to expose wrong-doing. This power of exposure is a far more effective deterrent in many countries, including our own, than the court systems that deliver judgement and not necessarily justice.

    “If they know that that they will be exposed, many crimes will not happen and herein lies the challenge of the media under the Buhari administration. Use your power to expose wrong doing, the days of impunity are gone. This is the best way to help the CHANGE, now that we have a government with the will and capacity to right all wrongs.

    “The government needs you, the press, to keep the public informed on its many activities and policies that are geared towards improving the lives of the Nigerian people, according to the CHANGE agenda.”

    He reviewed the activities o the  Presidential media team so far and  said it had spent much of the last  six months countering what he called falsehood by government’s opponents.

    Also speaking, Governor Nasir  el-Rufai said that it was up to the media to make the CHANGE agenda succeed or fail.

    He said: “The job is not done. It is just the  beginning. If you fight corruption, it will fight back. And you are the tools the government will use to fight corruption.”

    He accused  the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of running  the country aground, explaining that  the Buhari administration is trying to pick up the pieces and needs all the support it can get.

    The chairman of the State House Press Corps, Kehinde Amodu, noted that the retreat was to build the journalists’ capacity as they cover the Presidency.

  • Ralph Nwadike takes over as AMP president

    Ralph Nwadike takes over as AMP president

    Notable filmmaker, Ralph Nwadike is the new president of the Association of Movie Producers, AMP.

    Nwadike, noted for films such as Contractors, Body of Vengeance and Armageddon King, among others defeated Lilian Amah-Aluko in an election that held on Monday, December 7.

    The newly elected AMP President will succeed two-term leader of the association, Zik Zulu Okafor.

    Other officers elected alongside Nwadike are Chinasa Joy Onyechere (Vice president), Forster Ojehonmon (Secretary), Remi IbinolaOlatunji (PRO), Grace Edwin Okon (Financial Secretary), Blessing EffiongEgbe (Treasurer), Wisdom Nwankwo (Publicity Secretary) and Sam Obeakahnme (Provost).

    The elections, as conducted by AMP Electoral Committee (AMPEC) and headed by notable film producer/marketer, Nobert Ajaegbu, ended on a peaceful note, with the Lilian Amah-Aluko team accepteing the outcome of the elections, and congratulating the winners.

    Some of the filmmakers at the event included Zeb Ejiro, Eddie Ugboma, Lancelot Imasuen, Franca Brown, Femi Ogedengbe, Steph Nora Okere, Monalisa Chinda, Okey Bakassi, Paul Obazele, Fidelis Duker, Obi Madubuogu, and Frank Dallas.

  • Buhari ‘won’t assent inconsistent Social Media Bill’

    Buhari ‘won’t assent inconsistent Social Media Bill’

    •Guild of Editors, NUJ seek suspension of proceedings

    President Muhammadu Buhari has reiterated the commitment of his administration to protect free speech in keeping with democratic tradition.

    He promised that he won’t assent to any legislation that might be inconsistent with the constitution.

    This followed public hostility towards the Social Media Bill being debated by the Senate.

    Reacting to the public outcry against the bill, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu, said Buhari has sworn to defend the constitution and would not lend his hand to anything that was inconsistent with the document.

    “But he is not averse to lawful regulation, so long as that is done within the ambit of the constitution, which he swore to uphold,” he said.

    Shehu added that the President said free speech was central to democratic societies anywhere in the world.

    Without free speech, the president explained that elected representatives won’t be able to gauge public feelings and moods about governance issues.

    “As a key component of democratic principles,” the president acknowledged that people in democratic societies “are so emotionally attached to free speech that they would defend it with all their might”.

    Noting that Buhari was aware of the public reservations about the proposed legislation, he said the President has assured that there was no cause for alarm.

    “Because the Senate is a democratic Senate, the President won’t assent to any legislation that may be inconsistent with the constitution of Nigeria,” he stated.

    But the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) and Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) have urged the Senate to unconditionally suspend proceedings on the bill.

    President of NGE GarbaDeen Muhammad, in a statement yesterday, said the broad objective of the bill was to outlaw the freedom of expression of the citizens and freedom of speech of media organisations operating in print, electronic and on-line platforms.

    The statement further reads: “Appallingly, the bill has also included as its target very personal and private means of communication such as SMS or text messages and WhatsApp, among others.

    “The freedom of speech and expression is guaranteed in section 22 and 39(1) of the 1999 Nigerian Constitution respectively. Therefore, to enact any kind of law under any guise that will contradict these fundamental provisions is to deliberately seek to undermine the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “We are, therefore, concerned that a group of persons elected by Nigerians to ensure that their rights, privileges and interests are protected, should gleefully misuse the mandate given to them to the detriment of the same people that elected them.

    “As other concerned individuals and groups have pointed out, the Senate should note that there are already existing laws in our constitution that can accommodate all the concerns, real or imagined, that the proposed Bill is expected to address. These laws include the Cyber Crime (Prohibition, Prevention, etc.) Act 2015, the Libel law etc.

    “In view of this and the glaring danger posed by the proposed bill, the NGE is strongly advising the Senate to drop all proceedings on the proposed Bill and turn its attention instead to critical areas in need of urgent intervention.

    “While believing that members of the Senate have a right both individually and collectively to express their concerns about the abuse of the cyberspace by unscrupulous people and organisations, we advise them to consolidate or strengthen the existing laws and enforce implementation.”

    National President of NUJ Waheed Odusile yesterday vowed that the media would not allow the bill to see the light of the day.

    He said this at a lecture titled: “Nigeria Beyond Oil”, which was part of activities marking the 2015 Press Week of NUJ, Oyo State Council in Ibadan.

    Odusile said what the proponents of the controversial bill were trying to do was to bring back the  Decree 4 of 1983 to satisfy their selfish interests, adding that “it is a law targetted at restricting freedom of expression”.

    Imploring NUJ state councils to submit petitions at their respective state assemblies, he    said the union would mobilise its members to the National Assembly to stop the bill whenever it is presented for public hearing.

  • LCCI elects Akande president

    LCCI elects Akande president

    The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), has elected Dr. Nike Akande, CON its President. She would steer the ship of the foremost Chamber and take charge of its affairs for the next two years. Her election followed the expiration of Alhaji Remi Bello’s tenure.

    LCCI Director General, Mr. Muda Yusuf said Akande emerged as President after a duly conducted election at the Chamber’s 127th Annual General Meeting held on Thursday 3rd December, 2015 at the Commerce House, 1 Idowu Taylor Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.

  • The President should talk to us

    The President should talk to us

    SIR: The metamorphosis of our democracy has come with different faces.  There was President Obasanjo who bullied us to submission with his brashness.  There was President Yar’Adua who despite administrative paralysis re-engineered our relationship with the Niger Delta.  There was President Jonathan who in his sleep-walking manner watered the ground for our politics to grow.  Today we face President Buhari, who like an oracle, listens to our supplications and ushers godlike directives.  We must appreciate the realization that our country is better with our growing democracy.  Otherwise, consider the dictatorship of military regime.

    It is beginning to dawn that we have a president who does not talk back to us.  This is not to fail his leadership so far but adopting a Buddha-like persona does not inspire the best politics in a democratic setting.  The power of democracy is inherent in its propensity to openly allow issues to be critically analyzed.  We can respect the personality of the president to be solemn.  Perhaps, that could be his leadership style.  We cannot be psychics, and unless he addresses us, we are lost looking at a stoic statue.

    The president has to lead the frontline on healthy policy debate.  It is the approach for good governance to thrive.  Introspection is logical in one’s personal life but a leader in a democracy must bring his vision in the open for discourse.  On many issues, he has kept mum.  The citizenry has to assume that he has the solutions ready.  The recent case of money owed to oil marketers is a disappointing example.  He has to run to National Assembly for approval of payment after the matter has escalated and with its undue consequences.

    It can be shown that the president is not adept at debates. His admirers argue that he believes that action speaks louder than words.  There could be no better time for him to put his demigod image to relevance than on the nation’s fight against corruption.  As if true to character as his campaign mantra, change, manifests, he is pacing hastily to bring back integrity to the polity.

    Drilling deep into the notion of the president being mute on public discourse, it becomes puzzling.  The irony is that Nigerians have watched him on television stations abroad give convincing interviews.  This indicates that he respects the power of democracy.  He knows that these Western countries will not welcome him if he does not abide by the dictates of their system.  We will take it to be a lack of trust in his leadership ability if he continues to deny our news media the opportunity of a political dialogue.

    Hope is slowly being restored to our system.  Thanks in great measure to the quiet sensibility of the president.  He should go further to unmask the façade and assure us that he is conversant with the tenets of democracy.  Doors to robust exchange of ideas should be opened by him.  He should outline his policy decisions to the public to encourage a more enlightened government.  Democracy is too big to be a one man’s affair.

    • Pius Okaneme,

    Umuoji, Anambra State.

     

  • Looters returning cash, says President

    Looters returning cash, says President

    Some former public officials who looted public funds are returning them to the government’s coffers, President Muhammadu Buhari said yesterday.

    He told Nigerians living  in Teheran, the Iranian capital, during a question-and-answer session with them at the Nigerian House that his administration had intesified efforts at recovering public funds in private pockets.

    The President was in Iran to attend a summit of gas producing nations. The meeting was attended by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro and host President Hassan Riouhani, among others.

    President Buhari said he was not satisfied with the partial return of the “looted funds”.

    “On corruption, yes, they are still innocent.

    “But, we are collecting documents and some of them have started voluntarily returning something. But we want all. We want to have everything back-all that they took by force in 16 years.

    “When we get those documents, then we will formally charge them to court and then we will tell Nigerians to know those, who abused trust when they were entrusted with public funds or when they took it by force for 16 years.

    “So, the day of reckoning is gradually approaching.’’

    President Buhari explained that those accused of corruption would have been prosecuted by now but for the need to thoroughly investigate them with a view to gathering enough evidence for their eventual trial.

    He said it was easy for him, during his tenure as a military Head of State in 1984, to arrest and put suspected corrupt individuals “in protective custody’’ for them to prove their innocence.

    He, however, said that now the dictates of the Rule of Law and due process had slowed him down in the prosecution of corruption cases.

    The President attributed the epileptic power supply in the country to “power saboteurs who go and blow up installations’.

    “I believe if you are in touch back at home you would have been told that already there is some improvement in power.

    “We haven’t said anything to them yet. I think they only find it sensible or appropriate for them to try and improve power supply.

    “I’m sure you know about the privatisation of the power sector. Your old friends NEPA or Power Holding Company of Nigeria have been sold to a number of interest groups.

    “But, the fundamental thing about us is that we remain potentially in everything except performance.

    “We have a lot of gas, we have a lot of qualified people, but again we have a lot of saboteurs who go and blow installations.

    “Those, who normally steal Nigerian crude (oil) and those who blow up installations, whether they call themselves militants or whatever, they are still there.’’

    He pledged to deal with such saboteurs to restore sanity in the power sector and improve service delivery to Nigerians.

    He said the military task-forces with representation from Army, Navy, Air Force, Police and the secret services will be reconstituted to secure the pipelines.

    “Supplies will become steady; there will be less sabotage as we secure the pipelines.”

    On security, the President reassured the Nigerians of the government’s resolve to eliminate the Boko Haram insurgency and restore peace in the Northeast.

    The President also restated the government’s determination to address the rot in education,  beginning from the primary to the tertiary level.

    He praised the Nigerian community for its good conduct, saying the government would continue to encourage more Nigerians to study in that country because of the level of discipline and orderliness there.

    On healthcare delivery, President Buhari said that efforts had been intensified towards ridding the country of fake drugs and fake doctors, and also what he called “the disgraceful aspects” manifested by “baby factories”.

    On creation of jobs, he placed the prevailing joblessness in the country at the door-step of the last administration, which he blamed for giving “ a devastating blow to the economy through corruption and incompetence”.

    The President said something urgent would be done about the bad condition of roads, citing the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway as one to be addressed from next week by the Minister of  Works, Power and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, who sat next to him at the meeting.

    The Nigerian Charge de Affairs in Iran, Dr Ali Magashi, attested to the zero crime rate among Nigerians living in Iran.

    He, however, said that a few Nigerians based in Afghanistan had been arrested by the Iranian authorities for alleged drug trafficking.

     

  • President will always have his way

    President will always have his way

    Till date, of all ministerial screening by the Senate, the most controversial has been that of the former President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Chief Richard Osuolale Abimbola Akinjide SAN (84). And that was as far back as 1979 – about 36 years ago. Chief Akinjide contested the gubernatorial election of Oyo State on NPN platform in 1979 but lost to Chief Bola Ige of the UPN. In the 1979 Presidential election tribunal instituted by Chief Obafemi Awolowo of the then UPN, Chief Akinjide was a counsel to the eventual winner in the tribunal, Alhaji Shehu Usman Shagari (91).

    On Thursday October 18, 1979, President Shagari included the name of Chief Akinjide along with the 33 ministerial nominees to be screened by the Senate. The President of the then Senate was Dr. Joseph Wayas from Ogoja. Twenty- four hours later, the Senate rejected the nomination of Chief Akinjide along with that of Chief Paul Unongo from Benue State. On November 17, 1979, the then Monday caucus of the NPN which was then the most powerful body in the country met at Dodan Barracks residence of the President and decided to fight back so as to ensure that Akinjide’s candidacy was approved by the Senate. It was agreed at the meeting that for President Shagari to lose so early in a battle while his Presidency was still young would send a wrong signal.

    The Monday caucus was made up of the President, Vice-President Dr. Alex Ekwueme, the chairman of the ruling NPN, Chief August Meredith Adisa Akinloye, the Secretary of the party, Alhaji Suleiman Takuma, the Senate President Dr. Joseph Wayas and the Deputy speaker of the then House of Representatives, Alhaji Idris Ibrahim from Minna, (since the speaker Chief Edwin Umeh-Ezeoke was from NPP). The NPN had no Board of Trustees.The Monday caucus was designed by President Shagari to carry his party along on national issues so as not to appear as if he was a sole administrator.

    On November 28, President Shagari, wrote a letter to Dr. Wayas re-presenting Chief Akinjide and Mr. Paul Unongo. For over 15 days, the Senate slept on the letter from President Shagari. At 4.10 p.m. on December 13, 1979, the Senate constituted itself into a committee to decide on the fate of Chief Akinjide. The then Senate leader, Dr. Abubakar Olusola Saraki, moved two motions that afternoon.

    The first was for the Senate to rescind its decision of October 19, 1979 in rejecting Chief Akinjide as a Minister of the government of the federation. After much heated debate, the first motion was approved when Senator Victor Akan from Eket pressed for a division with 48 Senators approving the first motion and 39 Senators rejecting the motion. It was the second motion moved by Senator Saraki requesting the Senate to approve the nomination of Chief Akinjide as a Minister that brought the firestorm. The then leader of the UPN in the Senate, Senator Jonathan Akinremi Olawale Odebiyi, opposed the motion as well as the leader of the NPP in the Senate, Senator Jaja Anucha Wachukwu from Aba, even though there was an existing NPN/NPP accord. Senator Wachukwu and Chief Akinjide had been political rivals under the then Prime Minister Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa-Balewa when they were both Ministers between 1960 and 1966. Senator Odebiyi argued that Chief Akinjide was not fit to be a minister with reference to his past misdeeds. He stated that it was against the rules of the Senate to reconsider a decision that has been taken earlier by the Senate. He was both joined by senators Cornelius Adebayo, Sikiru Ayodeji Shitta-Bey, Stephen Adebanji Akintoye, F.O.M. Atake, Emmanuel Kayode Ogunleye, Abrahim Aderibigbe Adesanya and Christopher Laogun Adeoye.

    Senators Uba Ahmed, Cyrus Nwidonane Nunieh, Bitrus Bzigu Kajal, Andrew Abogede, Victor Akan, Jalo Waziri – all of them NPN, pleaded on behalf of Chief Akinjide.

    In moving the motion for Chief Akinjide, Senator Saraki said that Chief Akinjide was well known throughout the country and that he is one of the best Nigerians that could be a minister. He said “We should not allow any political vendetta. Chief Richard Akinjide should not be a victim of circumstances. I would like to appeal to each and every one of us in this Senate this afternoon that the right course for us to take is to rescind the decision and confirm the nomination of Chief Richard Akinjide to be a Member of Cabinet of the Federal Republic of Nigeria”.

    In his reply Senator Odebiyi argued that Chief Akinjide was not being persecuted because of his role in both the campaign and the election of 1978 and 1979. He declared,” Now, it has been said by some people that Chief Richard Akinjide was being victimized because of the part he played in the question of the election petition of Chief Awolowo. You know, we have heard it said in the Holy Writ: They shall have eyes and not see, they shall think they understand when they do not understand. The facts are quite clear Sir. Chief Richard Akinjide is not the author of 13 states. The author of 13 states and of twelve two-thirds, is the Ministry of Justice, to whom a request was made by the Federal Electoral Commission for a proper interpretation of the meaning of two-thirds of 19 states”. He was only used as a ploy to sound public opinion by announcing it. We know the facts, because we have pieces of evidence in support”.

    In his contribution, Senator Joseph Sarwuan Tarka said “May I say, Sir, when we look round this Senate, we see distinguished Senators as strange, people will take it upon themselves to make true or wild allegations to destroy the character of their old friends, friends of today or even brothers. I know that my Yoruba is not perfect. If it were, I would have referred to a Yoruba saying which is very common. However, I hope you will forgive my poor intonation. It reads: Gambari pa Fulani kolejoninu. The meaning is this. When an Hausa man kills a Fulani man, there is no case. If Akinjide’s brothers want to destroy him, that is their own business. But then it has become a national issue so we are all concerned with it. If we go by the Jewish law which is being propounded today, a pound of flesh for a pound of flesh, I would ask you to let no blood. An eye for an eye, I would say a tooth for a tooth. I would like to say, Sir, that as far as we are concerned, Akinjide has not been prosecuted, he has not fallen within the new period of dispensation which we are now discussing. Therefore, any destructive argument adduced against him should be regarded by all Senators as a nullity”.

    After Tarka’s speech, the Senate became rowdy for more than 15 minutes with senators shouting at each other. The Senate President, Dr. Joseph Wayas kept on shouting order, order, order, order which fell on deaf hears. It was at this stage that the senators from UPN led by Odebiyi walked out of the Senate Chambers. Senator Mahmud Waziri led the GNPP senators to walk out too while Senator Barkin-Zuwo also staged a walk out with the PRP Senators.Only one UPN Senator, Ademola Adegoke stayed behind.

    The Senate President ordered the clerk of the Senate, Mr. A.A. Coker to take a roll call of the senators that stayed behind to ensure whether a quorum was formed. Chief Akinjide was eventually confirmed as a minister by 48 votes all from NPN senators and only one dissenting voice, Senator Adegoke. Those who abstained were senators Isaiah N. Ani, B.C. Okwu, U.L. Barma, L.Z. Zing, E.P. Echueruo, Jaja Wachukwu, Garba Matta and Obi Wali- all of the NPP.

    As for Chief Paul Unongo, he too was confirmed by 28 votes with six abstentions.

    The simple lesson to be learnt since 1979 is that as long that you have a President who carries his party along with him and with a majority so united in the National Assembly, so long will such a President have his way no matter what. The opposition can have their say but the President will have his way.

     

    • Teniola, a former director at the presidency, writes from Lagos.

     

  • President to swear in ministers on Wednesday

    President to swear in ministers on Wednesday

    President Muhammadu Buhari will inaugurate a new Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Wednesday.

    Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, said that the ministers-designate will take their oaths of office in the Council Chambers of the Presidential Villa before the commencement of the inaugural session of the council.

    The swearing-in will begin at 10:00 hours and the ministers-designate are expected to be seated in the Council Chambers by 09:30 hours at the latest.

    “Each minister-designate can only be accompanied to the swearing-in ceremony by a maximum of two guests.” It stated

    The statement also said President Buhari will preside over the swearing-in of Prof. Mahmood Yakubu as Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and five others as National Commissioners of INEC today at the Presidential Villa.

    “The swearing-in of Prof. Yakubu, Mrs. Amina Zakari, Mr. Solomon Adedeji Soyebi, Prof. Antonia Taiye Okoosi-Simbine, Dr. Muhammed Mustafa Lecky and Alhaji Baba Shettima Arfo is scheduled for 11:00 hours in the Council Chambers of the Presidential Villa,” it said.