Tag: Rabiu Kwankwaso

  • Jonathan blasts Kwankwaso at Kano rally

    Jonathan blasts Kwankwaso at Kano rally

    •He didn’t vote for me, says President

    President Goodluck Jonathan took a swipe at Kano State Governor Rabi’u Kwankwaso yesterday, when he declared that Kwankwaso didn’t vote for him in 2011.

    Jonathan’s stance followed a statement by Kwankwaso that Kano people will not welcome the President.

    The governor said: “I regret voting for President Goodluck Jonathan in 2011. He has done nothing to move the nation forward. Only a few people are enjoying at the expense of other citizens.”

    At the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) unity rally to receive former Governor Ibrahim Shekarau to the party, Jonathan said: “PDP must recapture Kano.”

    Jonathan also challenged Kwankwaso to account for the over N225 billion local government funds he received from the Federal Allocation within two years.

    “We read in some of the newspapers that Governor Kwankwaso said he regretted voting for me. Let me tell my good people of Kano that Kwankwaso did not vote for me or Vice President Namadi Sambo, whether in the primaries or in the main election.

    “We have accommodated a lot, but we talk less. Some of you know what happened when we entered the Eagle Square then. By the time the counting got half-way—when it was clear that I was to emerge the candidate –Kwankwaso left the venue.

    “The little money my campaign office provided for refreshment and transportation for Kano delegates, Kwankwaso refused to give them that money. He did that so that the delegates will be angry and not vote for me.

    “Even in the main election, the little money my campaign office sent to Kano, Kwankwaso refused to release that money to anybody. How can Kwankwaso tell me that he voted for me?”

    The President also expressed surprise at the insinuations that the Federal Government abandoned Kano people.

    He said: “Some of you will ask that why is it that today, your President is not wearing the PDP attire; I decided to appear this way because there is somebody here in Kano who has been campaigning that the person wearing this bowler hat is a devil.

    “I am here to tell you briefly what the Federal Government has done for Kano people and I want you to ask yourself whether such a person who has been able to do all these things for you is a devil.

    “The Federal Government has taken Kano as a major focus of its agricultural transformation agenda. Kano farmers are benefiting from the Federal Government Growth Enhancement Scheme.

    “In the last two years, 760,000 farmers have benefited from the Federal Government’s subsidised fertiliser programme and free improved seeds for maize and rice.”

    Jonathan condoled with the families of the victims of Monday’s bomb blast in Abuja.

    He said: “Let me at this point express my deepest condolence again to the family members of those who lost their lives in the bomb blast in Abuja on Monday.

    “ I was at the scene of the incident, I visited the hospitals, I was so shocked that I couldn’t even talk.

    “Again, I express my condolence to the family members of the victims and, indeed, the whole country; and I want to re-emphasise that terror will not stop Nigeria from moving forward.

    “We will continue to move from strength to strength. We will also continue to encourage security agencies. We are looking at different options and we promise Nigerians that we will do our best and we will continue to work to make sure that we live peacefully in this country.”

    The President thanked Kano people for the warm reception, saying “let me thank the good people of Kano for the reception. From the airport to this venue, people lined up to welcome us.”

    Formally welcoming Shekarau, the President described him as a man of the people.

    “You all know Shekarau very well. He is the man of the people. When he was a governor, he was a member of the ANPP, I visited him two or three times as a Vice President of the PDP; but because Shekarau is a Nigerian, a well-learned man, an intelligent man, he received me on all the occasions I came here.

    “This is the kind of person that Kano needs to project and follow. We thank Shekarau for joining the PDP today. He is fully welcomed and integrated into the party.”

    Shekarau described the day as memorable and promised to protect and promote the interest of the Kano masses

    He said: “As long as I remain in politics, I will be dedicated and do all within my ability and capability to remain loyal to the party so as to show our solidarity and support to the party.”

    At the rally were Vice President Sambo, Senate President David Mark, Deputy Speaker, House of Representatives, Emeka Ihedioha, Governors Godwill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom), Ibrahim Shema (Katsina), Seidu Dakingari (Kebbi), PDP National Chairman Adamu Muazu, Minister of Information Labaran Maku, among others.

  • Kwankwaso: we won’t welcome Jonathan to Kano

    Kwankwaso: we won’t welcome Jonathan to Kano

    Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso said yesterday that residents will not welcome President Goodluck Jonathan today.

    The governor, who spoke in Kano, said the President has done nothing to improve the standard of living, since he assumed office.

    Kwankwaso said: “I regret voting for Jonathan in 2011. He has not done anything to move the nation forward.

    “Only a few people are enjoying in Nigeria and this is at the expense of other citizens.

    “We are still waiting to hear the truth about the alleged missing funds, which led to the suspension of former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.

    “If someone alleges that N20 million is missing in one of our ministries, I will investigate the matter and if I find the allegation to be true, I must praise the person for a job well done and then take appropriate action.”

    He urged the electorate to vote for the All Progressives Congress (APC) in 2015, saying the APC is the most powerful party in Africa.

    Kwankwaso accused the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of buying members over, saying the APC has taken measures to tackle the issue.

    The governor appealed to APC supporters to be patient as the party has set up necessary machinery, which would ensure its victory in 2015.

    He said those calling on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) not to conduct elections in the Northeast have lost focus.

  • Kano increases polio campaign

    Kano increases polio campaign

    Kano State Government has recorded an increase in polio immunisation campaign coverage from 30 per cent in 2012 to 92 per cent last December.

    Governor Rabi’u Kwankwaso said this during the distribution of 200 tricycles to polio victims and empowerment/welfare packages to physically challenged people at the Government House.

    He pledged that the administration will achieve 100 percent coverage by the end of the year.

    “Polio is a very serious social and health problem and we are determined to flush it out of our state,” the governor said.

    Kwankwaso said his administration has empowered over 3,000 people with disabilities.

    He said 100 beneficiaries got facilities to start the sale of recharge cards, 45 got offers of employment into the civil service, 81 were given capital to set up provision stores, 53 were placed on a monthly social security allowance and 40 got capital and computer sets to set up business centers.

    Five vehicles were given out to leaders of the physically challenges groups.

  • APC registers  two million in  Kano

    APC registers two million in Kano

    Two million people in Kano State have registered with the All Progressives Congress (APC), Governor Rabi’u Kwankwaso has said.

    Kwankwaso said this during a meeting with National and State Assembly members at the Government House.

    The governor said with this development, APC was taking the lead in the state. He alleged that the Federal Government was bribing APC members from the states and national assemblies to leave the party for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), noting that no sincere legislator would do so in view of the implications of such action.

    On the interaction with the legislators, the governor said that meetings would be organised from time to time to ensure closer cooperation and understanding between the legislature and the executive.

    The member representing Fagge in the National Assembly, Aminu Sulaiman Goro, said the meeting would bring unity among the members.

  • Iran scholarship for Kano indigenes

    Iran scholarship for Kano indigenes

    The Iranian government is to offer full scholarships to Kano State indigenes to study engineering and medicine in Iranian universities.

    The country’s ambassador to Nigeria, Sa’eed Koozechi, announced this when he visited Governor Rabi’u Kwankwaso at the Aminu Kano Lodge, Asokoro, Abuja, saying Iran was encouraged to make the offer because of the governor’s disposition to education.

    Koozechi, who was accompanied by his deputy, Abbas Faraji and the embassy’s First Secretary, Hossein Joze Nazemian, said his country is interested in cooperating with the state and Nigeria.

    He said: “Iran wishes to cooperate with Kano in education and agriculture because you have natural and human resources and we have the expertise to support you to fully exploit the potentials for economic prosperity.”

    Kwankwaso said: “This scholarship will not only strengthen bilateral relationship between our countries but will consolidate our own little effort in promoting education.”

     

  • Maku and the defections from PDP

    Maku and the defections from PDP

    Last Wednesday, Information Minister, Labaran Makun, launched a blistering attack on members of his ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) who defected recently to the new opposition All Progressives Congress (APC), an amalgam of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and a faction of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

    The defectors, the minister said, were “like the Fulani nomads; they move from one party to another without shame. It shouldn’t be something we should cherish.”

    The minister launched his rather gratuitous offensive during a news briefing in Abuja, the federal capital, on the outcome of the day’s Federal Executive Council meeting.

    In launching his attack on the defectors he singled out the governors of Kano State, Dr Rabi’u Kwankwaso, and his Sokoto counterpart, Alhaji Aliyu Wamakko. They were, he said, undemocratic desperados who parachuted themselves into the APC and hijacked it from its founders.

    Their defections, he said, were however good for the party; akin to an obese person shedding undesirable fat to live a healthier and more robust life. (I am not so sure it would be wise for PDP to be so smug as the youthful minister; between Kano and Sokoto states there are relatively nearly as many voters – over seven million – as the entire Southsouth put together, with their nearly nine million).

    Maku’s unflattering comparison of the defections with the nomadic lifestyle of Fulanis has been rightly condemned by many as ethnicist. However, I agree completely with the underlying assumption of his diatribe which is that any defection based on ego or personal ambition rather than on a sublime principle is a thing to be condemned.

    The trouble with Maku’s angry words, however, was that they were not based on any principle. Rather they were simply meant to please his political godfathers. Otherwise, it would have occurred to him before he spoke that his harsh words would be truer of former governor of Kano State, Malam Ibrahim Shekarau, and his Sokoto State counterpart, Alhaji Attahiru Dalhatu Bafarawa, who subsequently traded places with their successors by defecting to the PDP. This realisation would have advised him to have been more careful in his choice of words against Kwankwaso and Wamakko.

    Take Bafarawa first. Nearly twelve years ago, on March 28, 2002 to be precise, the former Sokoto governor, as guest speaker at the second anniversary of the founding of the Arewa Consultative Forum, had only harsh words to describe what he said was the marginalisation of the North by the PDP under former president, General Olusegun Obasanjo. “Ogun and Oyo alone,” he said, in the course of his lecture to the applause of his large audience, “have benefitted from over N30 billion worth of road projects, more than what 12 states that make up Northwest and Northeast together enjoyed.”

    His answer to this marginalisation, he said, was Northern unity, pointing out that “While the West is AD 100%, the South-south and the South-east are PDP 100% … the North is 50% APP and 50% PDP.”

    He concluded that it was therefore “imperative that, at least for the sake of future presidential elections, we must all go one direction…United we stand, divided we fall.”

    Without prejudice to the merit or otherwise of his preference for the politics of regional monolithism, a preference which lacks any basis in our political history because opposition forces had always thrived in the old regions, one must ask what has changed between now and when Obasanjo left office seven years ago to justify Bafarawa’s defection to the PDP. The truth, as Bafarawa knows all too well, is that the North has been marginalised even more under President Goodluck Jonathan’s PDP than under Obasanjo’s.

    Exactly eight years to the day he was guest speaker at the ACF’s second anniversary, he said in a lengthy interview in The Nation (March 28, 2010) that he would never join PDP because being in opposition was the only way to deepen democracy in Nigeria. This was after he left ANPP in frustration, following his accusation that PDP had planted Chief Donald Etiebet as ANPP’s chairman to serve as a fifth columnist.

    Instead of joining PDP, he said, he decided to form his own Democratic Peoples Party (DPP) on whose platform he eventually contested the 2011 presidential election. Naming then PDP chair, Dr. Ahmadu Ali, and then acting president, Goodluck Jonathan, as his witnesses, he claimed Obasanjo offered him the control of Sokoto, Kebbi and Zamfara states by ceding the nomination of their governorship candidates to him, if he would join PDP. He said he rejected the offer.

    The Nation: What is in PDP that is making you run away from it?

    Bafarawa: I don’t believe in joining PDP because I want to help democracy grow…When there is challenge in democracy, then the government will move but if there is no opposition, there is no democracy.”

    Makes you wonder, doesn’t it, what has changed about the PDP’s proverbial “garrison democracy” four years after the former Sokoto governor’s encounter with editors of The Nation that it has now suddenly become a beacon of democracy without the threat of a viable opposition party.

    Obviously, Bafarawa needs a better excuse than the ones he’s been giving us for his defection to a party that before now he had regarded as simply incapable of fostering democracy. And what is true of Bafarawa is even truer of the former Kano State governor, Malam Ibrahim Shekarau.

    Only late last year at a conference organised by the Movement for Better Future and Democratic Emancipation in Kaduna on September 7, 2013, he dismissed President Jonathan as a “total failure.”

    “My assessment,” he said then, “is that the government is a total failure… The only answer to this failure is to get the right people to do it.”

    Makes you wonder, doesn’t it, how within a short spell of five months the president has, in the former governor’s eyes, become the only right person to take Nigeria to now “do it.”

    For this intelligent and highly eloquent former teacher-turned-politician who, most Nigerians agreed, emerged the clear winner of the 2011 Presidential debate – what with, in the words of BBC News (April 5, 2011) “his eloquence, a calm disposition and an apparent grasp of policy issues” – to now sing praises of a president he thought unworthy of his office not too long ago, it speaks volumes about the courage and integrity of the self-declared convictions of our politicians.

    Of course, real elections are won not by debating skills alone. In free and fair elections that have defied this country, politicians win on the strength of their character and performance. The long history of carpet crossing between parties in this country and the manner in which our youthful minister of Information, Labaran Maku, heaped scorn on those who defected to the opposition party is proof positive that it would be a great miracle if next year’s election is, for once, won, not on the basis of propaganda, but on the basis of character and performance.

     

    Re: Babangida’s triumph of hope over reality

    Sir,

    So IBB does not as a Nigerian, a former president, war veteran, leader, elder statesman, etc, etc, have the right to say his mind and air his views on any national issue, without you attacking him.

    So Gen IBB is wrong and you are right. How selfish, self-centered and confused you are.

    Are you attacking IBB to please your pay masters or you have nothing to write or you want to be heard loud and clear because you attacked IBB?

    You (have) many issues to write about so why wait for IBB to speak, you then attack him? He has been very kind to you and your family. He does not deserve any attack from you on pages of newspapers, more so when you have direct access to him and can see him at any time you so wish.

    Who is sponsoring you against IBB? Who is afraid of IBB?

    Please have a re-think and kindly desist. IBB only said his mind, simple and clear and he has the right to.

    Hassan Muhammad Jallo.

     

    Sir,

    Does it matter if there are hitches in a society? And despite General Babangida’s optimism, yours was “pessimism” all through! Remember, you have benefitted from this same wobbled system and you are still benefitting. Give encouragement and support to our leaders rather than sanctions and ridicule!

    Lanre Oseni.

     

     

     

     

  • Iran scholarship for Kano indigenes

    The Iranian government is to offer full scholarships to Kano State indigenes to study engineering and medicine in Iranian universities.

    The country’s ambassador to Nigeria, Sa’eed Koozechi, announced this when he visited Governor Rabi’u Kwankwaso at the Aminu Kano Lodge, Asokoro, Abuja, saying Iran was encouraged to make the offer because of the governor’s disposition to education.

    Koozechi, who was accompanied by his deputy, Abbas Faraji and the embassy’s First Secretary, Hossein Joze Nazemian, said his country is interested in cooperating with the state and Nigeria.

    He said: “Iran wishes to cooperate with Kano in education and agriculture because you have natural and human resources and we have the expertise to support you to fully exploit the potentials for economic prosperity.”

    Kwankwaso said: “This scholarship will not only strengthen bilateral relationship between our countries but will consolidate our own little effort in promoting education.”

     

  • INEC  timetable

    INEC timetable

    THERE have been some acute bellyaching and trepidations over the recently released Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) timetable for the 2015 elections. The most notable criticism comes from the bold and ebullient governor of Kano State, Rabiu Kwankwaso. The leitmotif of the criticisms is of course the fear that it could engender a bandwagon effect once a president is elected, in addition to constituting a coercive effect to compel governors to support the president’s re-election. Bandwagon, however, works both ways. If the APC presidential candidate is elected, and there is no reason he cannot be, should we not also expect a bandwagon?

  • Kano distributes 98,000 free breast cancer kits

    Kano distributes 98,000 free breast cancer kits

    The Kano State government in collaboration with the 44 local councils has distributed 98,000 breast cancer self-examination kits for early detection of the disease among women.

    Women will be trained on the use of the kits and the advantages associated with the practice, Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso disclosed.

    Kwankwaso spoke yesterday during the World Cancer day celebration and commissioning of innovative interventions at the State House.

    He noted that cancer is a serious public health problem affecting people all over the world, lamenting that it is among the leading causes of death in developing countries, like Nigeria.

    This, he said, is largely due to lack of medical counselling, professional attention and facilities among others.

    “Our administration has considered the health of its citizens as very important,” Kwankwaso emphasised stressing this informed the decision to embrace innovative health interventions to make health readily available and affordable to all the people of the state.

     

    The Commissioner of Health, Dr Abubakar Yusuf, disclosed that cancer is now assuming epidemic proportion in Nigeria, explaining that early detection of the disease will help in better management and even subsequent cure.

     

    On safe child delivery, he asserted that rural people in the state still prefer TBAs than attending hospitals, noting that the TBAs could help the government in campaigning against common illness, as well as birth certificate registration.

     

    The Commissioner said that the state government has received a lot of medical consumables and equipment from heath donor organisations to strengthen its health delivery systems.

    Representative of USAID, Dr. Mizan Siddiqui commended the state government for cooperating with health donor agencies in addressing health issues bedeviling the society.

     

  • PDP’s defected governors: Court orders fresh  service of processes

    PDP’s defected governors: Court orders fresh service of processes

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered fresh service of court processes on five former governors of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The processes are on a case filed by the PDP seeking the governors’ sack following their defection to the opposition party.

    The governors are: Murtala Nyako (Adamawa), Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers), Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto), Rabiu Kwankwaso (Kano) and Abdulfatai Ahmed (Kwara).

    Justice Gabriel Kolawole gave the order yesterday following the complaint by the plaintiff’s lawyer, Alex Iziyon (SAN), that despite being served, the defendants were not only absent in court but also failed to file any response to the processes served on them.

    The judge ordered that the governors be served through the national office of the APC in Abuja.

    Justice Kolawole also granted the plaintiff the permission to publish the court processes in two specified newspapers.

    He adjourned till February 6 for hearing of the plaintiff’s originating summons.

    Sued with the governors is the Independent National Electoral Commission (first defendant).

    The PDP argued that the governors should be sacked from office because, by their defection, they had forfeited their offices which the party said should revert to it.

    Should the five governors be sacked from office, the PDP urged the court to order their deputies or speakers of the Houses of Assembly of the affected states, or any officer next in rank, who is still its member, to assume their positions.

    The PDP urged the court to declare that by the combined provisions of Sections 177 (c), 221 and 222 (c) of the 1999 Constitution, the five governors, who were elected on its platform, cannot continue to enjoy the mandate given to them by the people/electorate of the affected states as they (governors) have defected to another party.

    It prayed for a declaration that in the absence of any division in the PDP, the five governors have vacated or forfeited their seats following their defection to the APC.

    The party sought a declaration that by the combined provisions of Sections 87 of the Electoral Act 2011 (as amended), and sections 177 (c), 221 and 222 (c) of the 1999 Constitution, the offices of the defected governors have reverted to the PDP.

    The PDP also urged the court to declare that by the combined provisions of Sections 177 (c), 221 and 222 (c) of the 1999 Constitution, following the defection of the five governors, their mandate has reverted to the deputy governors or Speakers of the Houses of Assembly or any other officer next in rank who is still a member of the PDP.