Tag: Saraki

  • Saraki, Ambode, others for Western Post launch

    Saraki, Ambode, others for Western Post launch

    Senate President Bukola Saraki and Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode are among the guests of honour expected at the launch of Western Post.

    The event will feature a national conversation on the topic: ‘The dwindling oil revenue: A case for regional integration’.

    It will hold next Tuesday at the Bashorun Hall, Civic Centre, Agodi GRA, Ibadan, by 11am.

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola will be the special guest of honour, while the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi, will be the royal father.

    Other guests are Governors Olusegun Mimiko (Ondo), Ayo Fayose (Ekiti), Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun) and House of Representatives Deputy Speaker Lasun Suleiman Yussuff.

  • Saraki to tribunal: quash petition against me

    Saraki to tribunal: quash petition against me

    Senate President Bukola Saraki has prayed the Legislative Houses Election Petitions Tribunal sitting in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, to dismiss the petition filed by his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) opponent, Alhaji Abdulrahman Abdulrasaq, on the March 28 National Assembly election.

    Saraki’s counsel, Yusuf Ali (SAN), predicated his demand on alleged faulty forensic report presented by the PDP candidate to the tribunal.

    Abdulrasaq challenged the victory of Saraki as the winner of the Kwara Central Senatorial District, claiming he had the majority votes and should be declared winner.

    The tribunal had admitted a forensic report in evidence against Saraki in the petition.

    Four volumes of the report of the forensic analysis carried on electoral materials used in four local governments in Kwara Central were marked as ‘Exhibits P4’.

    Ali averred that the report was dated March 28, 2014, a year before the election poll was conducted.

    He told the Justice Josiah Majebi-led threeman tribunal that “the date shows the document was prepared in anticipation of the election”.

  • Exit of Olu of Warri painful – Saraki

    Exit of Olu of Warri painful – Saraki

    Senate President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, on Sunday lamented the demise of Ogiame Atuwatse II, the Olu of Warri and said the nation has lost a rare gem and an exceptional monarch.

    Saraki in a statement on Sunday by his Chief Press Secretary, Sanni Onogu, in Abuja, said the passage of the Olu of Warri was painful but quick to admit that death is an inevitable end for all mortals.

    He stated that the Ogiame Atuwatse’s passage is coming one month and six days after the death of the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuade, Olubuse II, ((in Osun State on July 28.

    Saraki noted that the late Olu of Warri lived an exemplary life worthy of emulation. “As a learned legal luminary, he served in various capacities before he was enthroned as a traditional ruler. He placed priority on the welfare and well-being of his subjects. He lived a life full of service to God and humanity as a faithful Christian and lover of God. We shall surely miss him,” he said.

    The President of the Senate commiserated with the Royal family of the Ogiame Atuwatse, Warri Traditional Council, government and people of Delta State.

    He urged them to take solace in the fact that late Ogiame Atuwatse II lived a selfless and fulfilled life adding that those he left behind should strive to sustain his worthy legacies.

    Saraki called on the government and the people of Delta State to immortalize the late Olu of Warri as an honour to dignify his noble deeds while on earth just as he prayed God to grant the soul of the departed eternal rest.

  • Saraki to UN Conference: partner with us to defeat Boko Haram

    Saraki to UN Conference: partner with us to defeat Boko Haram

    Senate President Bukola Saraki yesterday urged the international community to partner Nigeria to defeat Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeast.

    Saraki spoke at the United Nations (UN) headquarters in New York, the United States, when he delivered the keynote address at the 4th World Conference of Speakers of Parliaments, organised by the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU).

    He noted that the menace of insurgency and other forms of brutality visited on innocent people by terrorists across the world required international collaboration to curtail.

     The Senate president said they posed great threats to global peace and democracy.

    According to him,  terrorism has become a clog in Nigeria’s wheels to achieve sustainable development.

    Saraki said terrorism could no longer be treated as a local problem, adding that it was time the world joined Nigeria to decisively defeat Boko Haram while urgently rebuilding the Northeast.

    He said: “The time to act is now. For us in Nigeria, with the new leadership at the executive and legislature, we are reacting already. You have a reliable partner to work with.

    “Boko Haram represents the greatest terrorist threat we face. The insurgents’ senseless terror has brought untold destruction and hardship on our people in the Northeast of the country. I, therefore, call on the international community to partner Nigeria to defeat Boko Haram.

    “Thankfully, our military has, in recent times, significantly degraded the morale and capacity of the insurgents to launch attacks in the area, a feat that has since seen many settlements liberated, roads reopened and hope restored. I call on the global community to join hands with Nigeria to rebuild the overwhelming destruction of the NortheEast.”

    The Senate president said the world had become embattled by several challenges without easy answers.

    He listed some of the challenges as climate change, regional conflicts and terrorism.

    Saraki said the conflicts had caused internal destitution, displacement and dislocation of people, adding that democracy and development cannot take place in such conditions.

    The Senate president noted that the challenge the global community faced was how to quickly turn the tide around to achieve sustainable development.

    He said: “Since 2009, we have seen many of our innocent citizens brutally and senselessly murdered and others rendered internally displaced. The idea of a 15-year-old girl suicide bomber, wherever it may be in the world – be it in the Middle East, South America, Asia or in my country Nigeria – is not the world of our dream. It is not reflective of a world where sustainable development is the agenda.

    “Surely, it is not a local problem. Terrorism is evil that we must confront. Its brutality, lack of purpose and cross-border activities make it imperative that we adopt a global approach in tackling it.”

    Saraki bemoaned the plight of internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in the Northeast and other parts of the country, saying the human misery in the various camps he recently visited was horrendous.

    He said: “Nowhere are these challenges more keenly felt than in the plight of displaced persons, migrants and refugees, where due to conflict and natural disasters, citizens are bereft of human rights, even certifiable citizenship identities, such as the ongoing situations in Northeast Nigeria, with the attendant shockwaves being felt in other parts of the world through the rising tides of unsafe and unregulated, emergency migration, to Europe and other regions…”

  • Senate rules: Unity Forum pushes ahead with suit against Saraki, Ekweremadu

    Senate rules: Unity Forum pushes ahead with suit against Saraki, Ekweremadu

    Contrary to insinuations in some quarters, the Senate Unity Forum (SUF) on Wednesday said it is going ahead with its suit on the forgery of the Senate Standing Orders against Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki and his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu.

    Other defendants are the Clerk of the National Assembly, the Clerk of the Senate, the Senate, and the National Assembly.

    Senators Suleiman Hunkuyi, Kabir Garba Marafa, Abu Ibrahim, Robert Ajayi Boroffice and Gbenga Ashafa insisted that they are not going back on their case before the Federal High Court, Abuja.

    The Forum made the clarifications in a statement issued by their counsel, Mamman Mike Osuman (SAN), against the backdrop of reports that the SUF has withdrawn its suit (FHC/ABJ/CS/651/2015) on the forgery of the purported Senate Standing Orders 2015.

    There were reports on Tuesday that Justice Ademola Adeniyi of the Federal High Court struck out the suit by the five Senators on behalf of the Senate Unity Forum (SUF).

    The counsel to the SUF, Mamman Mike Osuman (SAN) said it was “erroneous and mischievous” to claim that the suit by the five Senators had been withdrawn.

    He disclosed that it was the first suit (FHC/ABJ/CS/647/2015) filed by Senator Anthony Adeniyi, who served in the 7th Senate that was withdrawn to avoid abuse of court process.

    He said: “Despite the legal possibility that the suit discontinued by Sen. Anthony Adeniyi could be re-filed, the media should have been more specific about the case withdrawn.

    “Contrary to the misinformation put out there, we hereby confirm the originating summons in suit no: FHC/ABJ/CS/651/2015 filed at the instance of the above-named Senators against Saraki, Ekweremadu and the National Assembly.

    “The above particularized suit differs in contents from that of Sen. Adeniyi as can be distilled from their respective grounds, reliefs sought, affidavit evidence, parties and declarations sought.”

    Osuman insisted that the prayers, sought by the five Senators in the originating summons, were still subsisting.

     

  • ‘Saraki plunged APC into crisis’

    ‘Saraki plunged APC into crisis’

    The National President of Orisun Igbomina, a socio-cultural organisation in Kwara State, Chief Gbenga Awoyale, has said that the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, deliberately plunged the All Progressives Congress (APC) into crisis because of his ambition.

    Speaking with reporters in Lagos recently, Awoyale implored the leadership of the APC to insist on party supremacy in its efforts to resolve the leadership crisis rocking the Senate. He said the lingering crisis could have been averted, if Saraki had complied with the APC’s directive over the issue.

    He said: “Truth as they say is bitter, but no matter what, the truth must be told no matter whose ox is gored. It was Saraki’s inordinate ambition that precipitated the crisis. Why did Saraki disobey the APC leadership on how positions should be shared at the Senate?

    “He deliberately plunged the APC into this needless crisis and he is now shedding crocodile tears. Nobody should take him serious. He should be sanctioned for disobeying his party. He did the same thing while he was in PDP and this was one of the reasons the party lost the presidential election. The APC should be firm in sanctioning Saraki.”

    Awoyale said what Saraki did amounts to an act of treachery. He added: “It is an act of betrayal of trust. How can he ignore the party on which platform he won election to become a Senator? Can he be higher than the party? What Saraki did amounts to indiscipline; he should be punished for that.

    “If he didn’t have a hidden agenda, why did he sneak in and hide in the National Assembly premises at midnight on the eve of the inauguration of the Senate when other senators elected on the platform of the APC were at the International  Conference Centre waiting for President Muhammadu Buhari?”

    The community leader said the best way to end the crisis is for the APC and President Muhammadu Buhari to ask Saraki to step down. He said the people of Kwara State were disappointed by the turn of events at the National Assembly, particularly the way Saraki emerged as the Senate President.

    Awoyale said if the Senate Presidency had been zoned to Kwara State, that the ruling party would have come up with other distinguished lawmakers who can fill the position. “We have men like Senator Shaba Lafiagi who was also a former governor of Kwara State,’’ he added.

    Urging the APC leadership to be firm and decisive in dealing with  Saraki, Awoyale said: “I implore the APC leadership to treat this issue seriously. I’ve known Saraki for a long time. He is a ruthless politician, and an opportunist who will not stop at anything to have his way and in the process, he is also ready to betray anybody.

    Did he not betray his own father, the late Dr. Abubakar Olusola Saraki of blessed memory? Bukola Saraki not only openly campaigned against his father’s choice, but also went ahead to campaign against his father during 2011 general elections in Kwara State.

    “It is only those that have short memory that could have easily forgotten what the Senate President did to his father. It was later that he sent emissaries to pacify the old man. For those who have ears, let them hear, the same scenario is playing itself out today. I urge President Muhammadu Buhari, Chief Odigie-Oyegun, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and other APC leaders to put on their thinking caps. A stitch in time, as they say, saves nine.’’

    He called on the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to beam its searchlight on Kwara State, particularly when Saraki was governor of the state. Awoyale’s words: “We implore the EFCC to look into the financial books of Kwara State between 2001 and 2015. Within that period over N500 billion was received in form of monthly allocation by the state government, but there is nothing on the ground to show for it. Workers and pensioners are being owed. No new projects were undertaken and old ones were even abandoned. Kwara State is bleeding. The EFCC and the ICPC should send their investigators to the state. I have nothing personal against Saraki. I’m only speaking out because of my love for Kwara State. I’m interested in the collective interests of our people. We have to think of the coming generations.”

    Awoyale added: “Saraki is not morally fit to hold the position of Senate President. He is still being investigated by the EFCC. Not only that, his wife, Toyin, is also being investigated by the EFCC. Toyin was a recent guest at the EFCC office where she was interrogated for hours. If we are preaching morality, Saraki is not fit to occupy the highly-exalted seat of the Senate President.”

     

     

  • Saraki, Ekweremadu shun suit seeking their sack

    Saraki, Ekweremadu shun suit seeking their sack

    •Judge deplores Senate leaders’ conduct
    •Returns case file for re-assignment

    Senate President, Bukola Saraki, his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu and three others yesterday in Abuja shunned the resumed hearing of a suit seeking their sack.

    Although it was not mandatory for Saraki, Ekweremadu and the other defendants in the suit to attend proceedings in person, they were required to be represented by their lawyers.

    Yesterday, none of the defendants was represented by lawyers when the case was called before Justice Adeniyi Ademola, to whom the case was transferred from Justice Gabriel Kolawole, who ended his sitting as the vacation judge at the Federal High Court, Abuja.

    Justice Ademola, who was uncomfortable that none of the defendants was represented in court, noted that the choice of Monday was with the consent of lawyers to parties in the suit.

    The judge, following the decision by the plaintiffs’ lawyer, Mamman Osuman (SAN) to withdraw his motion for interlocutory injunction, struck out the motion.

    Justice Ademola agreed with Osuman that the motion, which sought to restrain the Senate leadership from constituting ad hoc committees, had been overtaken by events, and that the prayers contained in the motion were similar to those contained in the plaintiffs’ ex-parte application which Justice Kolawole earlier refused to grant.

    The judge, whose time as the vacation judge, will end soon, said he would return the case file to the chief judge for reassignment at the end of the court’s vacation.

    Other defendants in the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/651/2015, are the National Assembly, the Clerk of the National Assembly and the Clerk of the Senate.

    Senators Abu Ibrahim, Kabir Marafa, Ajayi  Boroffice, Olugbenga Ashafa and Suleiman Hunkuyi are the plaintiffs.

    It is their contention that the election of Saraki and Ekweremadu as president and deputy president was invalid on the grounds that the Senate’s Standing Orders 2015 used for the election was a forged document.

    The plaintiffs argued that since the Senate’s Standing Order 2011, which was the valid Senate Rules as at the proclamation of the Eighth Senate on June 9, was not known to have been validly altered before the election, the 2015 Rules could not be said to be a legitimate document.

    They stated, in a supporting affidavit,  that the Senate’s Standing Orders 2015 was “contrived” from the amendment of the 2011 version of the Orders without following its (the 2011 edition’s) relevant provisions and those of the Constitution.

    The plaintiffs argued that the amendment was in breach of the “prescriptive procedures” stipulated by Section 60 of the constitution (as amended) and Rule 110(1), (2), (3), (4) and (5) of the Senate Standing Orders 2011 (as amended).

    They prayed the court for the following reliefs:

    *A declaration that the Senate’s Standing Order 2011(as amended) is the proper, valid, constitutional and subsisting Rules/Standing Orders of the Eighth Senate.

    *A  declaration that the Senate’s Standing Order 2015(as amended), not being a product of any legitimate amendment pursuant to Rule 110 of the Senate’s Standing Orders 2011 (as amended), is invalid, illegal, unconstitutional.

    *A declaration that the election of the 1st and 2nd defendants as the president and peputy president of the Senate of the Eighth Senate pursuant to the Senate’s Standing Orders 2015 and contrary to Rules 3(3)(e) and (k), Chapter II of the Senate’s Standing Orders 2011, is illegal and unconstitutional.

    *An order setting aside the purported election of the 1st and 2nd defendants as Senate president and deputy Senate president  of the Eighth Senate; an order setting aside the Senate Standing Orders 2015 and an order directing the Eighth Senate to elect its presiding officers in accordance with Section 54 of the Constitution and Rules 3(3)(e) and (k)of the Senate’s Standing Orders 2011.

     

  • Saraki seeks closer economic ties with S/Arabia

    Saraki seeks closer economic ties with S/Arabia

    Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki has sought closer economic ties with Saudi Arabia for the benefit of both countries.

    Saraki spoke yesterday when he received the Ambassador of Saudi Arabia to Nigeria, Fahad Sefyan in his office at the National Assembly.

    A statement by his media office quoted the Senate president to have acknowledged an existing cordial relations between the two countries, which is being strengthened by business and religious trips by Nigerians to Saudi Arabia year in year out.

    “This is based on culture, religion and many things and I think we want to continue building on that relationship. We continue to treasure this beneficial exchange. What remains is for us to have robust, thriving mutually beneficial business and investment-related exchange,” Saraki was said to told the envoy.

    He further stated that the desire to improve on the relationship has become necessary in view of the emergence of President Muhammadu Buhari and the emergence of King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud as leaders of Nigeria and Saudi Arabia respectively.

    According to him, the leaders of the two countries desired improved economic relationship, adding, “I want to assure you on behalf of the Senate and the senators here that Nigeria highly appreciates the relationship with the Kingdom and also to urge you to pass our best wishes to King Salman.

  • Saraki for UN conference

    Saraki for UN conference

    Senate President Bukola Saraki will today lead the Nigerian delegation to participate in the fourth United Nations Conference of Parliamentary Heads holding at the organisation’s headquarters in New York, United States.

    This year’s conference, which will be opened by the Secretary-General, Mr. Ban Ki-moon, will feature presentation of reports and debate on “placing democracy at the service of peace and sustainable development.”

    Other issues billed for debate include ‘Challenges facing Parliaments today’, ‘Parliamentary Oversight: challenges and opportunities ‘, while a bi-lateral meeting with Dr. Saraki is expected to be hosted by the Speaker of the Israeli Parliament (Knesset), Mr. Yuli-Yoel Edelstein.

    The United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR), Inter Parliamentary Union (IPU) and selected Heads of Parliaments (GLOBE International Representation) are also expected to meet on the sidelines of the conference.

    The Senate President is billed to address the session of the world forum on Wednesday September 2 and later hold  a press conference immediately after the speech.

    Saraki is accompanied on the trip by Senators Andy Uba, Shehu Sani and Dino Melaye.

    Others on the entourage include Special Adviser to the Senate President on Economic Matters, Dr. Uchendu Okoye and Special Assistant on Public Partnerships.

    The Senate president and his team departed the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja for New York on Saturday ahead of the conference which begins today and ends on Wednesday.

  • Saraki, Ashafa mourn Adefuye

    Senate President Bukola Saraki has expressed sadness over the death of Nigeria’s Ambassador to the United States, Prof. Adebowale  Adefuye, in Washington DC.

    Saraki described the death as a monumental loss to Nigeria whose international image Adefuye passionately shaped and defended in the U.S until his last breath.

    He commiserated with the federal government,  Ogun State and the immediate family of the deceased over the sudden departure of the Nigerian envoy.

    The Senate President in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Sanni Onogu, in Abuja, said: “It is really sad that Adefuye waved us goodbye at a time his excellent services as a diplomat of repute are in dire need.

    Also, Senator Gbenga Ashafa (Lagos East) commiserated with the family of the late ambassador saying Adefuye was well known to him.

    Ashafa said the late ambassador’s legacy of service in Nigeria’s Diplomatic Corps has earned him a well-deserved spot in Nigerian as a country.

    “During his time as Nigeria’s Ambassador to the United States, he demonstrated that he was a passionate Nigerian both in words and deed.

    “We can’t help but remember his spirited, patriotic defense of our national interest and image every time Nigeria’s reputation was at stake in the United States.”