Tag: Saraki

  • Saraki, Melaye, Bruce ordered to report at HQ on Monday

    For allegedly leading a violent protest and attacking policemen on Friday, Senate President, Bukola Saraki, Senator Dino Melaye and Senator Ben Bruce have been summoned to report at the Louis Edet House police headquarters on Monday.

    This was contained in a statement issued on Friday night and titled “Dispersal Of Unruly And Violent Protesters Who Attacked Police Personnel On Duty In Front Of The Force Headquarters, Abuja”

    According to the police, the trio need to report to the IGP Monitoring Unit at the Force Headquarters on Monday because they were  captured on camera, leading “the disturbance of public peace and public safety, unlawful blockade of Shehu Shagari way for several hours preventing motorists, road users and other members of the public from having access and passage on the highway,”

    “They were  thereby disturbing public peace and public safety and causing innocent people to scamper for safety and violent attack on Policemen posted to ensure security of the Force Headquarters, pushing and hitting the Policemen to forcefully enter the Force Headquarters to cause damage to Police equipment and Government properties,” the police alleged.

    The police  further alleged that with the assistance of miscreants, the trio were “causing innocent people to scamper for safety”..

     “Today (Friday) at about 1330Hrs, unruly and violent protesters who are members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in their hundreds with thugs and miscreants inside several trucks and vehicles blocked the Shehu Shagari way in front of the Nigeria Police Force, Headquarters creating a gridlock of traffic on the highway and preventing motorists, road users and other members of the public from having access and passage on Shehu Shagari Way…

    “The Police team headed by a very Senior Police Officer despite the provocation, after issuing words of proclamation, warning this unruly PDP protesters who were chanting war songs of ”we no go gree o , we no go gree , we no go gree ”, charged the Police personnel who used minimum force and dispersed them.

    “The Inspector General of Police has directed immediate investigation into this unprovoked and unwarranted attack on the personnel of the Nigeria Police Force and the Force Headquarters premises which is against the law and condemnable .

    “The Force will do everything within the law to bring all perpetrators of this crime to justice, no matter how highly placed.

    “Consequently, Senator Bukola Saraki, Senator Dino Melaye and Senator Ben Bruce who were captured on camera to have been involved in the disturbance of public peace and public safety… are hereby invited to report themselves to the IGP Monitoring Unit at the Force Headquarters on Monday, 8th October, 2018 for investigation,” the police stated.

  • Saraki urges PDP delegates not to vote on sentiment

    Senate President and presidential hopeful, Senator Abubakar Bukola Saraki has said that religious and ethnic considerations should not determine who gets the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential ticket.

    Saraki, therefore urged delegates of the party going for presidential convention not to vote on the basis of sentiments but should elect a candidate that would give Nigeria good leadership.

    He spoke on Wednesday during consultation visit to delegates and supporters of PDP at the party Secretariat in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom state capital.

    “This country needs a president that all of us will look at him and say I will have a fair hearing, a president that will represent everybody, a president that will represent me no matter any religion.

    “It is time as a country that we do not vote on sentiment. We should not vote because we come from this part of the country. Let us vote for a man or woman that we believe will move the country forward,” Saraki said.

    Read Also: Shekarau, Gaya, Jibril win Kano senatorial seats

    The Senate President noted that in line with the new world order, countries are electing visionary leaders who have the capacity to develop potentials for sustainable development and all inclusive governance.

    Saraki said that if voted into power, the Petroleum Industry Bill would his priority to bring development to oil sector.

    “Definitely, if voted into power that is the first thing I am going to do. Unfortunately the issues that are being raised are none issues.

    “The PIB is too important for us to be buck down by issues, that either by legislative law making.

    “If I emerge as the candidate of party and president, I can assure you that law will be one of the few things to do and sign it into law.

    “We need it in order to provide jobs for millions of youths that are looking for job we need it to improve on our oil and gas sector”, he said.

    Saraki said that his government would develop infrastructure and provide enabling environment to attract private investors, stressing that private investors would create job opportunities for the teeming youth.

    “Most important thing is to create enabling environment that will bring investors, investors can only operate where they have confidence in the leadership, confidence in your policies that will drive the business.

     

     

  • Saraki, Dogara absent at independence Day parade

    The Senate President, Bukola Saraki and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara were conspicuously absent at the Eagle Square , venue the 58th independence anniversary parade.
    Saraki and Dogara have recently dumped the All Progressives Congress (APC), the ruling party for the Peoples Democratic Party( PDP).
    President, Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo and other prominent personalities attended the ceremony.
    Also at the event were the former Head of State, Yakubu Gowon, Abdulsalami Abubakar.
    Other cabinet members also attended the ceremony.
  • Saraki eulogises dead Air Force officer

    Senate President Bukola Saraki has commiserated with the Nigerian Air Force and the family of the Air Force pilot who lost his life during a crash in Abuja on Friday.

    Saraki, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, YusuphOlaniyonu, described the dead pilot and his colleagues who partook in the flying rehearsal ahead of the nation’s 58th Independence anniversary on Monday as “true heroes dedicated to their professional calling.”

    He lamented the crash incident and called for special recognition for the officers – both dead and alive – who partook in the unfortunate national assignment.

    Saraki said: “I am shocked over the tragic crash of two Nigerian Air Force fighter jets in Abuja that led to the loss of an officer and injuries on others.

    “The affected officers are true heroes among countless other military personnel who continue to put their lives on the line to defend and make the country proud.

    “Nigeria has lost a truly dedicated and patriotic officer. The departed officer and his colleagues who survived the unfortunate crash deserve special recognition and place in annals of the nation’s military history.”

    He lauded the Nigerian Air Force and other security agencies for the prompt and successful rescue mission, which has helped to preserve the lives of other personnel on the rehearsal mission.

  • ‘I did not come to Jigawa for campaign’, Saraki tells PDP supporters

    Senate President, Bukola Saraki told supporters of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) in Dutse on Thursday ahead of the Presidential Primaries that he did not come to Jigawa for any campaign.

    Saraki, also a presidential aspirant under the platform of the PDP said that he came to the state to greet the people of his party to say “Thank You.”

    The Senate Preident was accompanied on the visit by Sen. Dino Meleye (Kogi), Ubale Shitu (Jigawa) and many PDP chieftains across the country.

    Saraki later drove on a convoy to Bamaina, country home of former Jigawa Gov., Alhaji Sule Lamido who is also a presidential aspirant for a closed door meeting.

    Earlier in an address in Jigawa, PDP Chairman, Alhaji Salisu Kuit welcomed Saraki to the state and called on all the PDP Presidential aspirants to cooperate with one another to ensure the success of the party in the upcoming polls. (NAN)

  • ‘Saraki’s struggle against Buhari is futile’

    The Buhari/Osinbajo Campaign Organisation has faulted Senate President Bukola Saraki’s attacks on the President.

    A statement by Steve Bayode, director of Communication, reads:  “The statement credited to the Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki, that “Nigerians need competent leaders to lead them and they cannot afford to have mediocres at the helm of their affairs in the country” is laughable.

    “On a good day, this statement and others of its kind could refer to no one else than the Senate President, himself and others like him who came to power by accident.

    “On the contrary, President Muhammadu Buhari, with an uncommon leadership qualities is a blessing to Nigeria.

    “President Muhammadu Buhari has, among other qualities, the track record of restoring our pride by taking our country out of recession and sustaining its growth in the recent times.

    “In the inferences of the Senate President, “leaders must have the energy and vision to entrench justice and egalitarianism for all citizens, irrespective of ethnicity and religion”. Doesn’t this looks out of place coming from a man yet basking in the gory lighting of the Offa robbery?

    “If the Senate President has underrated the long arm of the law, he is in for a long walk to the prisons.

    “The Senate president has declared his intention to contest the 2019 presidential election. The question Nigerians should ask him is what has he done with the office of the Senate President he has occupied for three and a half years?

    “Bukola, should be told he’s being pushed by self greed and inordinate ambition. He knows he could not realize his ambition in a formidable Party like the APC, so, good riddance he jetted out in time to seek his luck under the decrepit umbrella.

    “As said, Nigerians should ask their potential president to explain where lies the depositors fund that disappeared from the vault of his bank, the Societe Generale?”

    The group went on: “Bukola Saraki boasted of his long political career spanning a decade to have equipped him with the requisite experience and exposure to hold the exalted office of the President. Wait. Nigerians can recollect quite vividly these 10 years of which eight, as the governor of Kwara State, was simply entrusted on his hands by his father, who he later disgraced out of politics and sent to his grave in shame.

    “This is a testament that Bukola Saraki cannot and must not be trusted. If he could disgrace his father and mentor in public, he can simply deny and denounce his promises to the electorate at the appointed time.

  • Saraki, Kwara guber aspirants meet in Ilorin

    Governorship aspirants on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Kwara state have held a crucial meeting with Senate President Bukola Saraki.

    Details of the meeting, which took place on Monday night, are still sketchy.

    It was learnt that the national leader of the PDP enjoined the aspirants to conduct their campaigns in the builds up to the primary election in orderly manner.

    The meeting, held behind closed doors at Saraki’s private residence in Ilorin, the state capital, started about 10.20pm.

    It lasted till about 11.02pm with nine aspirants present.

    Former Deputy Governor of the state Chief Joel Ogundeji ,the party’s state chairman, Alhaji Kola Shittu as well as Secretary, Alhaji Rasaq Lawal joined few minutes to the close of the meeting.

    The aspirants who attended the meeting include Dr Ali Ahmad, Honestly Razak Atunwa, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi,Senator Mohammed Sha’aba Lafiagi, Alhaji Ladi Hassan, Hon. Ahman Pategi, Alhaji Saka Isau (SAN), Prof Sulaiman Abubakar and Alhaji Mohammed Ibrahim Ajia. The only aspirant absent at the meeting was Hon. Zakari Mohammed.

    Addressing reporters at the end of the meeting, Senator Sha’aba Lafiagi said it was convened to ensure peace as a family group, adding that contestants agreed to ensure a transparent race during the primaries.

    The former governor said there was no discussion on consensus but that there was no written undertaking among them since it is all within the same political family.

    Read Also: Fayemi ‘ll do well for Ekiti, says Ogboni Chief

    “The meeting was all about bringing the family together. It is only normal that at a time like this the leader of the family meets with us to keep peace and ensure that all went well.

    “We agree to respect the outcome of the primaries, to ensure that we remain friends after and ensure peace. We will surely accept whoever emerges. The intention is that the contest should be free, fair as much as possible. Whoever emerges we will all line up behind him and we will remain members of the family.

    “I don’t know about consensus, time will tell but for now everyone is preparing to enter the contest but I don’t rule out possibilities of consensus arrangement. Along the line we may consider that as a family. We don’t need to sign an undertaking because as I told you we are members of the same family.”

  • PDP screens Atiku, Turaki, Tambuwal, Saraki, Lamido, Bafarawa, others

    •Aspirants uncomfortable with Port Harcourt
    •Two aspirants present no educational certificates

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) yesterday screened most of its presidential aspirants. There was drama over the fate of two.

    The two could not present evidence of their educational certificates before the panel.

    The development led to a little disagreement between the screening committee chairman, former Vice President Namadi Sambo and other members.

    Some members wanted instant disqualification of the two (who are from the Northwest), Sambo exercised caution with a caveat that the party will know how best to handle those without educational certificates.

    Also yesterday, most of the aspirants were uncomfortable with the choice of Port Harcourt for the National Convention, following alleged undue interest of Governor Nyesom Wike in one of them.

    Those who appeared before the committee are: ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar; a former National Chairman of PDP, Sen. Ahmed Makarfi; former Minister Kabiru Tanimu Turaki; Sokoto State Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal; Senate President Bukola Saraki; former Jigawa State Governor Sule Lamido and former Sokoto State Governor Attahiru Bafarawa.

    Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso and Gombe State Governor Ibrahim Dakwambo were yet to be screened as at press time.

    A top source, who spoke in confidence, said: “The screening committee headed by Sambo, with the Governor of Akwa Ibom, Udom Emmanuel as Secretary, interacted with most of the aspirants.

    “They were basically asked questions on their educational qualifications, background, their professional callings, party membership, records of conviction by a court of law, and why they are in the presidential race.

    “All these questions border on the requirements for the Office of the President as enshrined in 1999 Constitution.

    “It was indeed revealing sessions with some of the aspirants who are more than qualified for the Office of the President.”

    But the source admitted that two of the aspirants did not measure up to expectations.

    The source added: “These two aspirants could not present their educational certificates to the Sambo panel.

    “Their deficiencies caused a little disagreement at the committee level. Some members of the screening committee wanted the affected aspirants from the Northwest disqualified, but Sambo called for caution and wanted their fate left to the PDP to decide.

    “At the end of the day, the committee will submit a comprehensive report to the National Secretariat of PDP to consider.”

    A spokesman of one of the aspirants, who spoke in confidence, confirmed the screening of some of the aspirants.

    The spokesman said: “Yes, our candidate appeared before the screening committee. It is part of the due process being followed by the party. It is only those who are no longer interested in the race that might not show up for the screening.”

    Some of the aspirants protested over the choice of Port Harcourt as the venue of the National Convention of PDP.

    One of the aspirants had barely arrived for the screening when he told his colleagues as follows: “I have been warning all of you, the choice of Port Harcourt is not ideal. Governor Nyesom Wike will take total control and he will crown whoever he likes. It is becoming obvious now.”

    Another presidential aspirant said: “The truth is that many of us are uncomfortable with Port Harcourt at all. The ticket would have been decided and conceded to Wike’s favourite before we get to the venue.

    “Some of us have protested to PDP leaders against the venue which will not guarantee a level-playing field.”

     

  • National Assembly: Ndume attacks Saraki, Dogara

    FORMER Senate Leader Mohammed Ali Ndume yesterday scored Senate President Bukola Saraki’s leadership of the upper chamber below average.

    Ndume, who represents Borno South Senatorial District, said it was stating the obvious that the Senate under Dr. Saraki, has failed Nigerians.

    Speaking at the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Forum in Abuja, the Borno senator noted that Saraki and House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara, had privatised and personalised the legislative arm of government.

    Ndume said Saraki has no justification to retain his seat as Senate President after defecting to the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    He also lauded the military for the concerted effort at eliminating insurgency in some parts of the country.

    On the Senate leadership, Ndume said: “I really want to admit that we have failed in our responsibility to the people somehow but we the members are not responsible for that.

    ”It is more of the responsibility of the leadership that shut down the Senate abruptly because of personal issues.

    ”It is very unfortunate. The Senate is the Nigerian Senate, it is not the senator’s Senate; it is not Saraki’s Senate.

    “It is very unfortunate that the National Assembly has been reduced to Saraki and Dogara.”

    According to him, Saraki and Dogara have privatised and personalised the legislative arm of government, a development he called an aberration.

    Ndume said: “They (Saraki and Dogara) have privatised and personalised the institution, and the reason we were elected to be there has been relegated to the background.

    “This is very unfortunate, but I want Nigerians to know that the Senate has not been shut down by the Senators or members of House of Representatives.

    ”The Senate was shut down by Saraki and Dogara and they should be held responsible for that.”

    He noted that the Senate, which is yet to reconvene, must move on without Saraki.

    The former Senate Leader added that he had made concerted efforts to see how the Senate could reconvene, especially to consider about five matters of national importance.

    His efforts, he said, have been without success, adding that the the matters he wanted considered were abandoned by the National Assembly before it proceeded on the long recess.

    His words: “We tried everything to get the Senate President or the leadership to reconvene the Senate, but that have not been successful.”

    On why the Senate President should quit, Ndume noted that  Saraki should know that he was not supposed to retain the position of President of the Senate, because he could not “eat his cake and have it”.

    Saraki, he said, lost all rights to retain the seat when he defected to the PDP.

    Ndume posited that the only thing that could save Saraki from being impeached remained a vote of confidence from his colleagues.

    ”I think that is the only thing he can do; may be he did that before, let him try it; let him call for vote of confidence from us, his colleagues.

    ”I assure you that he will not get the majority.”

    Ndume described the statement credited to some politicians that Saraki could only be impeached by two-third of members of the house as not only wrong, but also a total misconception.

    To him, since Saraki decided to leave the APC for PDP, he should have left the position as he could not be in a minority party and be President of the Senate.

    He recalled that as minority leader in the House of Representatives, he defected to PDP from the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) and resigned from the position without being asked to do so.

    The senator said it was natural that he left the position because he could not move from the minority to the majority and still be a minority leader.

    Ndume noted that there should only be one Senate President who is supposed to come from the majority political party.

    “I am still thinking and hoping that Saraki will do the right thing and the right thing is for him to relinquish that position for the majority to preside,” Ndume said.

    On the fight against Boko Haram, he said the move by the Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, in ensuring collaboration with the Nigerian Air Force and other agencies had helped a great deal.

    He said that the relocation of the operational headquarters of the military was a major factor in the defeat of Boko Haram.

    However, he called on them to concentrate on three black spots of “the deep Sambisa Forest, the Lake Chad fringes and the Mandara Mountains.

    He said the sect, which was still active in those areas for obvious reasons, must be brought to its knees.

    Ndume said: “The resurfacing of the sect is more in Northern Borno. These are the fringes of Lake Chad. I am suspecting that because of the money they got from the ransome allegedly paid, their proximity to international terrorist organisation, Nigeria bordering Mali and Niger and the open, vast and porous borders, they are buying and transporting light arms.

    ”Also, they are getting money from the businesses around Lake Chad that they have taken over. They are now the ones involved in the cattle business and all that.

    “Those are the areas they get money from. With this money they are able to fund their operations.”

    On concerns that the sect had not been completely eliminated, the lawmaker said fighting insurgency was different from fighting conventional war.

    He said: “We have been fighting insurgency in the North East which is different from the conventional war where you know you have soldiers belonging to a particular group that you can identify.

    “Besides, insurgency is not happening only in Nigeria. It is happening in Afghanistan, Syria and all that. Like the case of Afghanistan, the case has been going on for some years now.”

  • Buhari, Saraki and caustic electioneering

    President Muhammadu Buhari, the presumptive All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate for the 2019 election is lucky to have to eventually face only one of the more than half a dozen presidential aspirants of the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). More than three years in the presidential saddle and three times as presidential candidate during very bitter and unrelenting campaigns have quite curiously not toughened him enough to make him develop thick skin to criticisms, especially from boisterous and flippant presidential aspirants. His aides’ reply to Senate President Bukola Saraki’s damning speech a few days ago gave no indication at all that the Buhari presidency had developed the temper and sophistication needed to checkmate unfavourable or even hostile views of his government and person.

    Dr Saraki had during his sensitisation trip to Bayelsa State, when he apprised the state government and PDP members and leaders of his presidential ambition, suggested that the country needed a man with the capacity and vision to lead Nigeria. It was a frontal and direct allusion to the opinion in certain key quarters that President Buhari was too archaic and divisive to preside over the affairs of Nigeria. Said the senate president: “Wherever you go, people ask questions: where do you belong? We need to address the issue of unity in this country; it is time for everybody to have a seat on the table, a time for everyone to have a sense of belonging in this country. It is not about me. There is a new order in the world today, wherever we go, we see leaders that have vision, that are ready to develop their countries. A lot of us talked about the Asian Tigers, but they did not come by chance, or trial and error; they became tigers because they have visionary leaders. They are leaders that are ready to defend their countries that have an idea of what they want to do.  As I keep on saying, you cannot give what you don’t have. Where we are now, we have a leadership that has no vision for us. We must bring visionary leadership to the presidential level so we can move this country forward.”

    Cut to the quick, the presidency issued an angry, patrician rebuke suggesting rather curiously that Dr Saraki was rude and offensive in his language. Presidential spokesman, Garba Shehu, whose idiosyncratic inability to moderate his own responses is legendary, signed the response. Hear him: “The Presidency wishes to react to the crude speeches hitting the news from Senator Bukola Saraki who recently joined the Peoples Democratic Party with the sole ambition of running for the president of Nigeria. In response to the condemnable and extremely derogatory speeches by the PDP aspirant, we urge all Buhari supporters to display restraint in language and conduct and to always put across their points of view in a decent language. Throughout his political career, Senator Saraki has shown that he is a very dangerous person who can go any length to promote his personal interests. The language of his campaign is such that cannot be used against a domestic help. Is he just knowing that the President lacked vision? This is someone that the Senator had worked with very closely for more than three years. Amazingly, he never said all that he is now saying against him. Rather, his word for and on the President were always respectful and reassuring. That’s the man he called ‘My Father’. About him, ‘there is no cause for alarm…a President who is healthy, witty and himself.’ What then changed, all of a sudden?”

    It is not clear how Dr Saraki’s admittedly vigorous, perhaps even caustic, view of the president has made him dangerous. He thinks the president lacks capacity and vision. That is harsh and wounding. But it remains his opinion, right or wrong. He says the president cannot give what he does not have. Again, that is lacerating; but it is neither offensive nor derogatory. He suggests that under President Buhari, not everyone feels a sense of belonging. Given that Dr Saraki addressed a Bayelsa State audience, a people whose son, Matthew Seiyefa, was brusquely shoved aside in favour of a retired Department of State Service (DSS) operative from Kano State, Dr Saraki’s hint that the president was dividing the country was understandable, even if it was opportunistically political. How Mr Shehu construes this as making the senate president dangerous is hard to explain. Indeed, none of the views publicly attributed to Dr Saraki in the media portrays the incendiarism Mr Shehu struggled to assign to him. The senate president’s views of President Buhari are undoubtedly unflattering and corrosive, but they are not rude or dangerous. Others, including ex-president Olusegun Obaanjo, have said worse things about the president. As a matter of fact, except to his ardent and uncompromising supporters, most commentators think the president’s style and appointments, not to say his views, are archaic, divisive and mostly inappropriate.

    In responding to Dr Saraki’s harsh dismissal of the president, Mr Shehu may be confusing the senate president’s failings with the so-called disrespectful views he has publicly expressed about the president. The senate president is very ambitious, in fact too ambitious for many of his contemporaries to accommodate within their worldview. They see him as Machiavellian, untruthful, larcenous, and even politically amoral. Yet others see him as really not an exponent of democracy or of the libertarian values the constitution tries to promote and defend. Worse, some others think he is precisely the kind of politician quite eager and capable of plumbing the lowest depths of political wickedness in furtherance of his private and narrow interests. He will of course disagree with these conclusions about his person and politics, but he is unlikely to convince many Nigerians that he unfairly vilified.

    But by conflating the senate president’s attributes — mostly the negative ones — with his politics, and in particular his trenchant conclusions about the president or the APC he had just angrily spurned, Mr Shehu misses the point badly. In the process, the presidential spokesman also seems to give the impression that the moralisation of politics embraced by President Buhari and his aides, to wit, the elevation of the virtues of honesty and incorruptibility, necessarily makes the president, his party, and his aides superior to the urgent need for capacity and vision in leadership. While a honest and incorruptible leader is desperately needed, especially given the country’s disruptive penchant for corruption and all sorts of financial malfeasances, it does not make the need for capacity and vision less valuable or subordinate. By all means, let the country be governed by honest and untainted leaders, if they can be found. But by all greater means, let those leaders possess the capacity and vision without which neither honesty nor integrity would avail much.

    It is unlikely, however, that President Buhari or his spokesmen and aides would find the motivation to redress the president’s political and leadership weaknesses, especially of his alleged divisiveness, policy archaism entwined with both lack of vision and considerable unease with modern ideas and methods, and quaint worldview. Unlike the PDP which boasts of at least six powerful aspirants, each of whom possesses the capacity to dexterously hurl barbs at the president, the APC has only one aspirant, the candidate-president himself. Were the PDP aspirants spread over some six or more parties, with the distinct chance that each would direct his barbs at the president, it is hard to see him surviving the fusillade, especially considering that he has found it tough going weathering the pot shot from Dr Saraki. In a month or two, the battle will be finally and brutally joined. If the president cannot find the shrewdness and tolerance to respond brilliantly to the attacks from one or two quarters of the PDP, how would he fare when the opposition finally chooses one formidable rival to assail the APC at its weakest points, many of which points are open and gangrenous?