Tag: Senator representing Kaduna Central

  • Sani backs APC reconciliation, says I remain APC Member

    Senator representing Kaduna Central in the National Assembly, Sen. Shehu Sani on Thursday said he was confident in the ability of the party leadership to resolve all the issues pervading the party.

    The Senator who is one of those widely reported to be planning to dump the party however said he remains a member of the party.

    Read Also:APC will remain focused – Oshiomhole

    Speaking after a meeting with the party national chairman as part of reconciliation efforts, Sani threw his weight behind the ongoing reconciliation efforts undertaken by the Party’s National Executive led by the National Chairman, Adams Oshiomhole.

    “We are confident that the new leadership of the Party has the capacity the ability to address these injustices. In the words of Frantz Fanon, ‘We revolt because we cannot breathe’. So we revolted against the Party was run because it is suffocating us. Now we have a new surgeon who is doing everything possible to put it back on track. That is why we give him the benefit of doubt that the problem can be solved.” Sani said.

    Asked about his Party membership status, Sen. Shehu Sani retorted: “If I am here, I am an APC member. If I am not an APC member, you will not see me at the Party’s National Secretariat”

  • AI accuses Nigerian military of raping thousands of displaced women

    Amnesty International (AI) has accused the Nigerian military and Civilian Joint Task Force (Civilian JTF) of indiscriminately raping thousands of displaced women in camps in the Northeast.

    According to AI, instead of receiving protection from the authorities, women and girls are forced to succumb to rape in order to avoid starvation or hunger.

    Country Director AI Nigeria, Osai Ojigho said that it is shocking that people who had already suffered so much under Boko Haram have been condemned to further horrendous abuse by the Nigerian military.

    Contained in a report that was released Thursday in Abuja titled, ‘they betrayed us: women who survived Boko Haram raped, starved and detained in Nigeria.’

    Ojigho added that scores of women described how soldiers and Civilian JTF members have used force and threats to rape women in satellite camps, including by taking advantage of hunger to coerce women to become their girlfriends.

    He words, “Thousands of women and girls who survived the brutal rule of the Boko Haram armed group have since been further abused by the Nigerian security forces who claim to be rescuing them.

    Read Also: JOHESU strike: Patients complain of intimidation at FMC Makurdi

    ”They betrayed us” reveals how the Nigerian military and Civilian Joint Task Force (Civilian JTF) a militia who work alongside them have separated women from their husbands and confined them in remote “satellite camps” where they have been raped, sometimes in exchange for food. Amnesty International has collected evidence that thousands of people have starved to death in the camps in Borno state, north-east Nigeria, since 2015.

    “It is absolutely shocking that people who had already suffered so much under Boko Haram have been condemned to further horrendous abuse by the Nigerian military.

    “Instead of receiving protection from the authorities, women and girls have been forced to succumb to rape in order to avoid starvation or hunger.

    “In some cases, the abuse appears to be part of a pattern of persecution of anyone perceived to have a connection to Boko Haram. Women reported being beaten and called “Boko Haram wives” by the security officials when they complained about their treatment.

    “As Nigeria’s military recovered territory from the armed group in 2015, it ordered people living in rural villages to the satellite camps, in some cases indiscriminately killing those who remained in their homes. Hundreds of thousands of people have fled or were forced from these areas. The military screened everyone arriving to the satellite camps, and in some locations detained most men and boys aged between 14 and 40 as well as women who travelled unaccompanied by their husbands. The detention of so many men has left women to care for their families alone.

    “Scores of women described how soldiers and Civilian JTF members have used force and threats to rape women in satellite camps, including by taking advantage of hunger to coerce women to become their “girlfriends”, which involved being available for sex on an ongoing basis.

    “Five women told Amnesty International that they were raped in late 2015 and early 2016 in Bama Hospital camp as famine-like conditions prevailed.

    “Ama (not her real name), 20, said: “They will give you food but in the night they will come back around 5pm or 6pm and they will tell you to come with them… One [Civilian JTF] man came and brought food to me. The next day he said i should take water from his place [and I went]. He then closed the tent door behind me and raped me. He said I gave you these things, if you want them we have to be husband and wife”.

    Ten others in the same camp said that they were also coerced into becoming “girlfriends” of security officials to save themselves from starvation. Most of these women had already lost children or other relatives due to lack of food, water and healthcare in the camp. The sexual exploitation continues at an alarming level as women remain desperate to access sufficient food and livelihood opportunities.”

    The Senator representing Kaduna Central, Shehu Sani who was present at the launch assured that he is going to raise the issue at the floor of the Senate and will ensure that all senators are presented with the report.

  • Why cry for restructuring is loudest now – Shehu Sani

    Why cry for restructuring is loudest now – Shehu Sani

    Is the call for restructuring the country being fueled by the vocal segments of the political elite who have lost or are losing out in the political power game?

    This is the thinking of the Senator representing Kaduna Central, Shehu Sani, when he summed that it would appear that more often than not, the call for political restructuring is loudest when the strong, vocal segments of the political elite have lost or are losing out in the political power game.

    The vocal Kaduna senator quickly added that what he said should not in any way be construed to mean that he endorsed the present socio-economic and politico-legal framework underpinnings the management of the public space in the country.

    This is contained in a lecture he delivered at the weekend on the “Imperatives of Sustaining One Nigeria” at the 5th Annual Parliamentary Lecture of the National Association of Oyo Students.

    Sani, who is Chairman, Senate Committee on Local and Foreign Debts and Vice Chairman, Senate committee on Foreign Affairs, traced the clamour from a section of the populace in South East calling for the creation of the sovereign state of Biafra, the call by the South-South, especially the oil producing region of the Niger Delta, for greater resource control, fiscal federalism and a northern group, which, after arrogating to themselves the powers and privileges  of Landlords, issued a quit notice to the Nigerian citizens from another ethnic group.

    He also recalled that from some top political elite, former top brass of the military and others came strident calls for a restructuring of the country and declared that it would appear that the indissolubility as well as the sovereignty of the State over the entity and political contraption called Nigeria is being questioned and challenged by some of its own citizens.

    The development, he said, gives the impression that the state is under siege.

    He recognized that strident calls to tinker with the structure of the country will not be the first time that Nigerians are calling for a review of the basis of togetherness in the country.

    He recalled that after the amalgamation of 1914, Nigerians continued to clamour for improvements in the overarching socio-political and legal framework on the basis of which pre-colonial governance was predicated.

    He listed the 1922 Clifford Constitution, the Arthur Richards Constitution of 1946, the John McPherson Constitution of 1951 and the Lyttelton Constitution of 1954 and the Independence and Republican Constitutions of 1960 and 1963 respectfully.

    Clearly, he said, political independence was not accompanied by political and administrative machineries capable of dealing with the diverse concerns of the over 300 ethnic nationalities in the country.

    The Nigerian Civil War, he added, signposted not just inter-ethnic intransigencies but the structural dysfunctions of the socio-economic system.

    Sani noted that from General Yakubu Gowon’s post-Civil War effort of Reconciliation, Reconstruction and Rehabilitation (the 3 Rs) to President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan’s 2014 National Conference there have been several efforts at addressing the discontents within the Nigerian polity.

    On “Imperatives of Sustaining One Nigeria” he noted that without any doubt the agitations across the country is overheating the polity and threatening the basis of the corporate existence of the country as constituted under the extant laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    He posited that the agitations, particularly the recent calls for restructuring, must be placed in proper context and addressed in a manner that strips the narrative of both primordial sentiments as well as the self-serving interests of the political elite.

    The lawmaker argued that “it would appear that more often than not, the call for political restructuring is loudest when the strong, vocal segments of the political elite have lost or are losing out in the political power game.”

    To underscore his position, Sani added “What I have just said should not in any way be construed to mean that I endorse the present socio-economic and politico-legal framework underpinnings the management of the public space. “

    The hue and cry over marginalization, he maintained, “ is both real and deserving of urgent national attention. “

    But who really are the marginalized, he posed

    “In this auditorium over 90 percent of those here present are the youths. According to the recent census figures this category of our populace is over 70 percent of this nation of over 170 million people. Both economically and politically this massive segment of the population has been marginalised, impoverished and alienated.

    “And rather than a concerted national effort to redress this very debilitating reality, the narrative and contestation over the notion of marginalisation have tended to focus on regional/ethnic preoccupations with power sharing and resource control arrangements.

    The calibre of restructuring that I advocate for shies away from an excessive preoccupation with this arrangement because as our history has shown it has not helped the trickling down of the commonwealth to the masses.

    Sani is not convinced that “the recalibration of the national revenue allocation formula, tinkering with the principle of federal character, etc would necessarily improve the lots of our teaming vibrant, energetic, visionary, industrious young people who are able and ready to take on the critical task of moving our society forward.

    “I advocate for Nigeria’ conspicuous youth bulge to be placed up and centre in our national discuss, and in our pursuit of national growth and development.”

    China, he said, is reputed to graduate over 4 million youths annually from its tertiary institutions and to have in place domestic and foreign policies that backstop these graduates both at home and abroad and across diverse sectors.

    “Today China is an indisputable economic, political, military and industrial power. It is correctly adjudged to be the world’s workshop, pulling millions and millions of its citizens up and above the poverty line every year.

    “I think that we should focus on our youths because the almost 60 year old narrative of the elite is too dysfunctionally fixated on political power and raw material resource sharing. We live in a knowledge driven world where cutting edge Information and Communication Technology is being used to blaze the path to a future that promises to be even more globally competitive than it is now.

    “How can we be talking of a vision 20 2020 (i.e. being among the top 20 economies in the world by the year 2020 – just 3 years away) when all the national energies of our political elites have, in recent years, focused almost solely on amassing rent from raw materials and primary commodities and corruptly gorging themselves with the commonwealth.

    “Again, I submit that youth development and empowerment is the key to resolving Nigeria’s socio-political, economic and legal malaise. Their energies, vision and industry, properly harnessed, is the antidote to the centrifugal forces currently threatening the corporate existence of the country,” he said.

    Following from the above, Sani believed that sustaining a one Nigeria dictates that the mandate of government – at all levels and across all tiers, Executive, Legislative and Judiciary – must be refocused on human capital development and productivity.

    The Executive, he insisted, must declare a National Education Emergency aimed at revamping and repositioning our educational and research institutions.

    “We must, as a matter of critical urgency, deploy the needed human, material and infrastructure support that would help our tertiary institutions make the prestigious list of the league of globally ranked institutions,” he said

    The critical mass of quality manpower that would be produced, he said, must however be complemented by continuous commitment to Research and Development ((R&D) as well as other fiscal and monetary policies to facilitate innovations and entrepreneurship while “the management of almost every facet of our economy is in the hands of the youth. Yet onerous obstacles lie on their paths, effectively excluding their active participation in politics beyond the civic duty to vote.”

    Sani said that all provisions in the annals of our laws and in our body polity must therefore be critically interrogated and progressively revised in favour of youth development and empowerment provisions.

    He highlighted the urgent need for a creative re-engineering of the political space, including an active and progressive de-monetisation of the electoral process through the introduction of such practices as Independent Candidacy in electoral contests.

    He added, ‘Over the past 60 years Nigeria has witnessed a lot of social and cultural integration. Many of our youths are the products of mixed marriages. Many more have been born in metropolitan centres far removed from the states of origin of their parents. It is politically delimiting to make any demand on these youths which borders on the requirements of states of origin. As in the right to vote, the right to contest and be voted for, as well as the right to public resources among other things, should all be predicated on residency requirements only.”

    He called on “all the youths to be actively involved and to resist any attempt at either the balkanization of Nigeria or succumbing to a brand of political restructuring which completely sidelines the critical question of equity, justice and dignity for the Nigerian people irrespective of their ethnic, religious or political affiliations.

    Poverty and marginalization, he postulated is not necessarily a north or south issue.

    “To illustrate this point, may I draw your attention to the fact that people of northern extraction have been in power far more than any other sections of this country. Yet the most debilitating forms of poverty, illiteracy, disease and hopeless continue to stalk millions of the populace. Of what use has the tenacious grip on power by the northern oligarchs and political aristocrats been to the millions of poverty stricken households of the north,” he asked.

    The activist politician challenged the youths here gathered to refuse to be hoodwinked by the political elite. They (the elite) form alliances among themselves and have a common interest in the plundering of the Nigerian commonwealth. You, also, form your own alliances, build bridges and network of friendships from Port Harcourt to Sokoto, Abakaliki to Maiduguri, Lagos to Asaba through to Kano. Believe in One Nigeria!

    “I can see already a very vibrant parliament in this school. So much so that I think you can rightly be called the “Shadow Parliament”. Members of the National Assembly therefore better sit up if they want to keep their jobs come 2019. The government as a whole better begin to think creatively about how to keep Nigeria working well for all Nigerians.”

     

  • Sani to El-Rufai: Forget your presidential ambition

    Sani to El-Rufai: Forget your presidential ambition

    The Senator representing Kaduna Central, Senator Shehu Sani, Wednesday asked Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai to forget his touted presidential ambition in his own interest.

    He said that El-Rufai knew that he was grandstanding as he has nothing to offer Nigerians.

    Sani in a statement by his Adviser on Politics and Ideology, Suleiman Ahmed, accused Kaduna State governor of corruption and nepotism in the governance of the state.

    He said, “I call on El- Rufai to suspend his Presidential or ‘Vice Presidential’ ambitions and concentrate in proper governance of the state.

    “The Kaduna State governor who in his memo accused PMB of running a failed Government, has failed also woefully.

    “He thinks PMB failed but he never invited PMB to even commission a completed toilet in his state.

    “Under El-Rufai Kaduna has become a hub of Kidnappers and a sanctuary for herdsmen.

    “The very Governor who once condemned the National Assembly for lack of transparency has proven to be worse.

    “El-Rufai wants to be seen as an apostle of Buhari’s change but he is actually the Judas of change.

    “It’s hypocritical to promise Nigerians change and end up only ‘putting change in our pockets’.

    “There is nothing progressive about many people who claim to be Buharists; they are reactionaries and career opportunists who can fit into any Government in power.

    “Kaduna State is run like a personal family and friend’s estate without any meaningful physical achievement other than sponsored media propaganda.

    “El-Rufai has no money to pay traditional rulers he recently sacked but has money to dispense as contracts to family, friends and political cronies.

    “El-Rufai has enough money to pay herdsmen but no money to pay district heads. Kaduna is today littered with abandoned drainages to the point that the rainy season has turned Kaduna into a ‘coastal state with creeks.

    “He is auctioning over two thousand Government houses he inherited but he is yet to build a hut.”

    Senator Sani insisted that the allegation of “systemic nepotism, opacity and complete absence of transparency” in the governance of Kaduna State is factual and the reality of the situation in the state.

    He said that journalists in Kaduna State are under siege, blackmailed, arrested, pocketed or threatened with arrest.

    Governor El-Rufai, he said, “is a man with a mouth for criticism but without a stomach for criticism.”

     

  • Northern masses were never with Jonathan – Shehu Sani

    Northern masses were never with Jonathan – Shehu Sani

    The Senator representing Kaduna Central, Senator Shehu Sani, said that only a section of Northern elite betrayed former President Goodluck Jonathan during the 2015 election.

    Senator Sani said that the overwhelming majority of northern masses were never with Jonathan during the election.

    He said that a section of the northern elite who collected huge sums of money from Jonathan gave him the wrong impression that the entire north was with him.

    He noted that although it is true that Jonathan appointed many northerners into his government, those he appointed did not tell him the truth that majority of northern masses were against him.

    Sani said in a telephone interview that the crippling effect of the Boko Haram insurgency in the north, the fact that many northerners felt that it was the turn of the north to produce the president against Jonathan’s insistence to contest the 2015 election made many northerners to vote against him.

    He said that the fact that northern masses were overwhelmingly against the candidature of Jonathan was obvious.

    Sani said that a section of the northern elite failed to tell Jonathan the truth about the mood in the north before the election and could actually be said to have betrayed the former president.

     

  • El-Rufai’s comment on Tinubu is height of ingratitude – Shehu Sani

    El-Rufai’s comment on Tinubu is height of ingratitude – Shehu Sani

    Chairman of Senate Committee on Local and Foreign Debts and Senator representing Kaduna Central, Senator Shehu Sani Wednesday took another swipe at Kaduna state governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai over his comment on APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu saying the comment was the height of ingratitude.

    In a statement made available to The Nation, the Senator said the contribution of the former Lagos state governor and the South West to the victory of the APC in the 2015 election was unparalleled, pointing out that without Tinubu, the victory over the PDP would have remained a mere dream.

    Sani described Tinubu as the lungs of the APC while President Buhari is the heart, adding that it was unfortunate that while el-Rufai smiles with Tinubu during the daylight he stings him at night.

    The statement reads: “The Memo written by Kaduna Governor which tends to belittle the contribution of Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu and the South West is sad and unfortunate. It is perfidious and the height of ingratitude.

    “We must accept the stalk truth that without Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu and the principled position of the south West, dislodging Goodluck Jonathan and the then rulling PDP could have still remain a pipe dream, a hollow hope or a political mirage. Elrufai defecate on a broom that is supposed to clean the littered floor of the nation.

    “President Buhari is the Heart of APC and Asiwaju is the lungs. Tinubu contribution to the success of the Party is unequal. Elrufai smiles with Tinubu on broad daylight and sting him at night.He hugs Tinubu with a chest of hooks and shakes him with toxic palms.

    “Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu is a Man who built a castle for others to live and asked to appreciate the gift of a room in the boys’ quarters. Those who rubbished  a hunter who borrowed them his arrow to disable an antelope, will someday come back for same arrow to disable a lion

    “Tinubu honoured many official invitations to Kaduna unknowingly, he was backstabbed with an acidic memo. Tinubu has a history of been betrayed and has a history of overcoming betrayal.

    “The future of the APC is with Buhari and the South West. Without Buhari and the South West, the change train will derail and end in smithereens like the fate of Yoguslavia or Soviet Union.

    “President Buhari should be watchful of those who prey behind him and pray before him. Tinubu is an indispensable major component of change. My knowledge of Tinubu dates back to the NADECO days when we were in the trenches during the struggle against military dictatorship.

    “El-Rufai should publicly apologise to Tinubu and the South West for degrading their contribution to the liberation of Nigeria. To insult a man publicly and apologise to him privately is eat your cake and have it. Those heavily drinking from the liquor of power should know that they will later or lately have to drive back home.”