Tag: Senator Shehu Sani

  • 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.”

     

  • Tinubu wants more power devolve to states

    Tinubu wants more power devolve to states

    …Says FG taking much power

     

     

    National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has said that for the nation to develop as a federation, the federal government must devolve powers to the states and relieve itself of the numerous burden it has placed on itself, saying there was too much concentration of power at the Centre.

    Tinubu said Nigeria was currently practicing what he called unitary federalism in total violation of the principles of federalism as practiced by other countries.

    Delivering a lecture entitled “Daily Times at 91: Building the future by respecting the past”, the former Lagos state governor also took a swipe at the nation’s budgetary system which is said lay too much emphasis on the intake of dollars, a system which he said had long been abandoned by other nations.

    He said Nigeria need to break away from the self-imposed dollarization of our fiscal space. The intake of dollars determines our budgets. We operate under an implicit dollar standard. However, the global dollar standard was formally abandoned over 40 years ago.

    Represented by the governor of the State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, the APC national leader said: “the Constitution declares Nigeria a federation of 36 states. However, we still grapple with the vestiges of our past under military rule. In many ways, we still function like a unitary state despite the constitution.

    “More powers and resources need to devolve to the states. The Federal Government is taking on too much. We cannot flourish with over concentration of powers at the centre. Some of the 68 items on the Exclusive Federal List should be transferred to the Residual List, as it was in most federal constitutions.

    “A notable feature of even our own 1963 Constitution was the extensive powers granted to the regions which enabled them to carry out their immense responsibilities as they best saw fit. This was because the regions inherently had a better sense and feel for the needs of their populations simply by virtue of the fact that they were closer to the people than was the centre.

    “Some items which ordinarily should be state matters like police, prisons, stamp duties, taxation of incomes, profits and capital gains, regulation of tourist traffic, registration of business names, incorporation of companies, traffic on federal truck roads passing through states, trade, commerce and census among others were transferred from the Concurrent to the Exclusive List.

    “I’m opposed to federalism operated as a unitary monster. As Lagos State governor, I challenged several Federal Government decisions for overreach and for violating the principles of federalism.

    We created additional local governments because the constitution empowers states to regulate local council affairs. Today, those 37 additional councils have helped Lagos significantly as development centres. We took the Federal Government to court on issues like the regulation of the hospitality industry, fiscal planning, and on who had the authority to issue Certificates of Occupancy.

    “Regarding electrical power, we must move beyond limiting states to generate, transmit and distribute electricity to areas not covered by the national grid. Our problem is a lack of power yet, we preclude states from helping to resolve this chronic problem that stabs at the very heart of economic development.

    “It is not right to say states can generate power but cannot sell it where they want. Without yielding any countervailing benefit, this policy suppresses the generation of needed power instead of enhancing.”

    The former Lagos state governor endorses the analysis of Lagos state Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode and others that current interest rate levels in the country bridle growth by making borrowing for long-term investment too costly.

    While saying that Government correctly seeks fiscal stimulus to energize the limping economy, he argued that efforts in this direction are perhaps too modest given the situation that confronts us.

    He said “Our monetary authorities have done better recently but they need to take additional steps to increase the fiscal space available to government and the private sector. I endorse analysis of Governor Ambode and others that current interest rate levels bridle growth by making borrowing for long-term investment too costly.

    “Monetary authorities appear to be more concerned with battling inflation than in sparking growth. However, the nature of our inflation – mainly cost driven – is beyond the purview of interest rate policy to contain. Instead of surrendering growth to curb inflation, current policy sacrifices both.

    “Also, the varying exchange rates distort economic and monetary signals. The vast rate differentials is fertile ground for currency arbitrage and speculation. This means that too much money will chase rentier opportunities in the financial sector instead being plowed into vital investment in the jobs and equipment needed for the production of actual goods.

    “More fundamentally, we need to break from the self-imposed dollarization of our fiscal space. The intake of dollars determines our budgets. We operate under an implicit dollar standard. However, the global dollar standard was formally abandoned over 40 years ago.

    “Instead of this outdated mechanism, we should base our budgetary calculations on the quantity of naira needed to foster the highest growth possible without pushing inflation too high. Such a change in perspective will remove the ideological blinders that thus far have impeded our ability to define our political economy and its path to growth.

    “It also will open the fiscal space so that government can undertake even greater steps to stimulate the real economy in ways that provides jobs and builds the infrastructure needed for sustained economic development.”

    Tinubu argued that no modern nation with a significant urban population has attained prosperity without an industrial base capable of employing larger numbers of people and of manufacturing goods for domestic consumption and export.

    According to him, “to one degree or another, English, American and Chinese governments employed industrial planning to lift their economies during their earlier stages of development. These nations represent the past, present and immediate future of economic achievement. Their success justifies their policies.

    “Yet we depart from what has proven the most effective avenue to prosperity for a large developing nation”, adding that as a nation, “We must press forward with a national industrial policy fostering strategic industries that create jobs and spur growth.  Tax credits, subsidies and the insulation from the negative impact of imports for critical sectors should be integral to this plan. We must remember a national economy cannot grow beyond the capacity of the infrastructural that serves it.

    “Thus, we need a national infrastructure plan closely linked to the industrial plan.  New infrastructure is needed where the new industrial work will take place. We must conquer the political and bureaucratic bottlenecks preventing affordable, reliable electrical power. This impediment places us literally and figuratively in the dark regarding our economic condition.

    “The problems are not technical in nature as reliable electricity is a staple of economic life in nations less endowed than Nigeria. We must persuade and convince those factors that currently impede our national quest for reliable power to move aside so that we can achieve this crucial precursor to economic vitality.

    “Our farmers need a reprieve. We need to increase farm productivity by taking a few critical steps. For example, commodity exchange boards and futures markets to ensure minimum farm incomes and encourage production must become part of our rural economies.”

    He maintained that the Nigeria nation “stand at a moment where history will be made for better or worse.  Other nations have faced tough times. Those which overcame their challenges did so by using creative insight to accurately assess their shortcomings and to identify solutions that would serve them into the future.

    “Nigeria must act in similar fashion. Nothing that any other nation has done is beyond our grasp if we commit ourselves to the task. We have much work to do to create the Nigeria we seek so that the Daily Times may continue to report on the progress of this nation for another 91 years or more.  In doing so, let it chronicle the rebirth of Nigeria as a nation much more prosperous and great than when it was first conceived.”

    The APC leader who went down memory lane to chronicle the contribution of the Daily Times to Nigeria’s political development said “In less than a decade, the Daily Times shall celebrate its centennial.  By God’s grace, we all shall gather again to mark that occasion. But we must ask, what type of Nigeria will Nigeria be ten years hence? If we want to render a good and pleasant answer, we must begin to shape that reply today.

    “Thus, I am here as a Nigerian to speak of what we must do as Nigerians to construct a better land. To some degree or another, our successes and failures belong to all of us. Therefore, this is not the time nor the place to apportion blame or accolade.

    “Instead, I present a vision that I hope can be embraced by all Nigerians regardless of creed, place of birth, social station and political affiliation. Nigeria is at a juncture where it must redefine itself or forever forfeit the right of way to a better future.

    “The primary challenge of our time is our political economy.  The slump in oil prices exposed the weakness of our economy for even the blind to see.  The truth be told, we always knew this weakness existed.

    “Yet we did nothing to cure it when fixing the gap would have been less painful and less urgent. Through indifference, selfishness or ignorance we failed to forge a consensus on how to resolve the collective problem. This failure speaks to a problem of our politics because the decision on how to structure the economy is essentially political in nature.

    “For all the energy invested in politics, the output has been minimal. In short, our politics has been directed at the wrong things. Because of this, Nigeria has too long travelled a self-defeating economic road.

    “Dare not think that we can afford to sit idly and outwait the low oil prices. We cannot fool ourselves into believing that the prices will rebound to prior levels and things will return to normal. That normal many of us pine for was never good enough. It was simply the prelude to the troubles of today and the challenges of tomorrow.

    “To merely wait as if waiting is all we can do is to be like the wishful man who does nothing although he knows a great storm approaches and he has a gaping hole in the roof of the house he just bought.

    “He concludes the rain will not enter his house because such a thing would be unfair since the hole was caused by the mischief of the former owner and not by his own hand. Some might call this man’s belief one of undue optimism. Others might deem it foolhardy. Either way, it is costly, perhaps fatal.

    “The impersonal forces of the economy owe us nothing that we do not doubly owe ourselves. We must break from the inertia that has characterized our approach to major national problems.

    “We need to summon a greater love of our fellow Nigerians.  Such empathy will compel us to embrace ideas to reform the political economy in a manner that lends greater justice and prosperity to all Nigerians.

    “Then we must have the courage not only to envision the beautiful thing, we must have the bravery to embark on the hard work and progressive reforms needed to turn the fine dream into a living and material reality.

    “Our economy has been one where too many people and resources were left idle and thus made poor by virtue of this static predicament. Joblessness or poverty became the byword describing the lives of most people. The industrial base we were developing vanished under a torrent of imported goods.

    “Agricultural production was insufficient to satisfy our needs. Even then, much local produce was allowed to rot on the vine or in transit due to poor farm-to-market physical and financial infrastructure. The harder a farmer worked, the poorer he became. The more a city resident looked for a job, the more frustration overlook him for not finding one.

    “The businessman who wanted to invest in a factory to create jobs and goods found that interest rates and high production costs due to erratic power would turn his balance sheet crimson and were foes too strong for him to overcome. While the productive sectors of the economy floundered, the rentier and financial sector flourished.

    “Those fortunate enough to have access to high finance, made windfall profits merely by virtue of being in the so-called right place at the right time. They did nothing of true economic value. They simply funneled money from one hand to the other. At the expense of the rest of the nation, they profited handsomely from this financial juggling act.

    “The economy became an ungainly and unbalanced albatross. Any growth in the economy only compounded the distorting instead of curing them. The fall in oil prices exposed this economic model for the lie that it was. Now we must fashion a new political economy.

    “In due course, the present recession will end. This should come as some relief. In itself, however, it is not cause for celebration. Far from it. The end of recession does not mean the beginning of prosperity. If we conflate the two, we will shun the labor required to properly reform the political economy. Things will remain as they are. Repeated downdraft and contraction will chase us as surely as night chases day and day chases night.”

    Those in attendance include former Senate President, Adolphus Wabara, senator Bala Ibn Na’allah, Senator John’s Lidani, Senator Sanusi Dagash, Prince Tony Momoh, Sam Amuka, Pete Edochie, senator Moa Ohuabunwa, Senator Enyinaya Abaribe, senator Shehu Sani, Prof. Tunde Adeniran, Hon Ado Doguwa, Senator Gbenga Ashafa, Senator T.A. Orin, Gov. Willie Obiano and his deputy, Gov. Yahaya Bello and his deputy, Ibrahim Shehu Shema, Gov. Ibrahim Hassan Dankwambo, Patrick Dele Cole, Senator John Danboyi, Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu, Gov. Raul Aregbesola, Kabiru Tanumi Turaki who represented former President Goodluck Jonathan, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina and a host of others.

     

  • Chibok Girls: Senator confirms “credible negotiations” preceded release

    Chibok Girls: Senator confirms “credible negotiations” preceded release

    Senator Shehu Sani of Kaduna Central District has confirmed that ‘credible negotiations’ took place ahead of the release of some Chibok girls on Saturday.

    Sani who had earlier on Saturday tweeted on his handle @Shehusani that “Chibok girls shall be free Insha Allah” noted that the only authority to confirm the release of the abducted girls is the federal government.

    Unconfirmed reports indicate that between 62 and 80 Chibok girls were released on Saturday by the Islamic militant group, Boko Haram.

    All government and military officials contacted on the release claimed not to have any information on the development.

  • 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.

     

  • Babachir to appear before Senate panel Thursday

    Babachir to appear before Senate panel Thursday

    The suspended Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr. Babachir David Lawal is expected to appear before the Senate ad hoc committee that investigated the N200 million contract scam that earned him suspension by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He is being invited for questioning over his alleged role in the mismanagement of funds earmarked for the rehabilitation of Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) in the North East.

    He is expected to appear before the panel at 10am.

    The Senate had indicted Lawal in an interim report submitted by the Senator Shehu Sani led committee. He was indicted for breaching relevant provisions of the Public Procurement Act, 2007.

    Lawal, who is currently being investigated by a presidential panel, was fingered to have run foul of the Federal Government Financial Rules and Regulations on the award of contracts under the Presidential Initiative on North-East (PINE).

    After spurning invitation by the senate panel on two occasions, Lawal was invited again in fulfillment of the principle of fair hearing, which he complained was not extended to him by the Senate panel.

    The invitation letter to Babachir which was signed by the clerk to the adhoc committee, Mr.  Barau Bungudu, asked the suspended SGF to appear for fresh hearing.

    The letter inviting Lawal to the investigative hearing read in part, “You may recall that the Ad-hoc Committee had invited you to appear before it for the second time on Wednesday, 15th March, 2017.

    “The Committee has granted your request conveyed in your letter dated 22nd March, 2017, and re-scheduled the meeting.

    “By this letter, I am directed to formally invite you to appear before the Committee on Thursday, 27th April, 2017“.

     

  • 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.”

     

  • Calls for public scrutiny of NASS budget justified, says Shehu Sani

    Calls for public scrutiny of NASS budget justified, says Shehu Sani

    The Chairman of Senate Committee on Local and Foreign debts and Senator representing Kaduna Central, Senator Shehu Sani has said that call by Kaduna state governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai for the National Assembly to open their books for public scrutiny was legitimate and morally right.

    The human right crusader however asked the Kaduna state governor to tell Nigerians where he got the money he allegedly used to pay Fulani herdsmen to stop the carnage in Southern Kaduna.

    In a statement made available to The Nation in Abuja, Senator Sani said it was however unfortunate that apart from President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, none of the Change ambassadors was ready to publicly declare their assets.

    He said Nigerians are living in a period he described as “Felanistic times” where people blame each other for the wrongs of the society, adding that the leadership of the National Assembly was listening to the clamour, believing that the disclosure by Speaker Dogara was timely.

    The statement reads: “The call for National Assembly to open its book is legitimate and morally right. I believe the leadership of the Assembly is listening and the disclosure by speaker Dogara is timely.

    “The general public should not be deceived by Kaduna Governor Stunts and public presentation of his work of fiction he calls security vote. Whoever can believe that a state Governor lives on less than half a million monthly is either hypnotised, dazzed or high on an inebriant.

    “If you are convinced that Kaduna Governor transparently spent his security votes on CCTV camera, visit Kaduna if you will ever see one security camera. If you are convinced that the Kaduna Governor transparently spent his security votes on the police, please ask him from which of the votes does he pay the Herdsmen?

    “We live in a “FELAnistic” times where the Political elites are engaged “you be thief, I no be thief, you be robber, I no be robber, you be armed robber, I no be armed robber situation.”

    “The Nigerian public cannot know who is a saint or a sinner in power. It always has to take men out of power for the public to know what exist beneath the throne.

    “Nigeria’s lost wealth is not just in Swiss banks and dubai real estate; it’s not just hidden in cesspit holes and in dusty ceilings; it’s in the files of conduct bureau well protected by the law of secrecy.

    “Apart from PMB and VP Osinbajo, no other vendor of change is willing to publicly declare his assets. Everyman on the throne of power stands in the dock of history and posterity. If we don’t learn from the travails of men out of power, we will queue behind them in fate.”

     

  • Nobody can stop our investigation, Shehu Sani tells APC

    Nobody can stop our investigation, Shehu Sani tells APC

    Chairman of the Senate adhoc Committee on the humanitarian crisis in the north east Senator Shehu Sani said Tuesday that nobody can stop his committee from completing its investigation of the misappropriation of funds budgeted for internally displaced persons in the region.

    Sani who held a two hours meeting with the leadership of the All progressives Congress (APC) told newsmen at the party national secretariat that the final report of his committee will be ready when the senate resume from break, pointing out the committee will continue to carry on with its investigations.

    The party leaders told the outspoken Senators that they were not comfortable with members of the party washing their dirty linens in public.

    He said the leadership of the party assured him that they were not opposed to the investigations being carried out by his committee, but were not comfortable with his choice of word while speaking on the floor of the senate and asked him to tone down his choice of words.

    He said further that his use of deodorant was just a mere a clear definition of the bipolar nature of the anti-corruption crusade going on in the country, adding that “I believe that there is the need for Nigerians to wake up to these realities.”

    Sani who said that the party was fully in support of the ongoing investigation by his committee said the leadership of the party also told him that what they are against is members of the party washing their dirty lining in public.

    He said: “First, it is good to make clarification. The party did not write to invite me here for a meeting contrary to reports. But with my presence here, we have discussed a number of issues.

    The first is the need for unity in the APC caucus and the need for us to refocus ourselves. Since the two groups, the Like Minds and the Unity Forum have fussed to together.

    “The second is what transpired after the interim report which I submitted on the floor of the senate. First, I wanted clarification from them whether the party is opposed to the looting of the funds of the Presidential Initiative on the humanitarian crisis in the north east.

    “They said the party is not opposed to it. I also ask if the party is opposed to my interim report and they said no and so, I ask what their issues were. They told me that they are worried and concerned each time I fire some grammar in the senate and it shock and rattles them while destroying the solidarity within the party and they want me to slow down on some of these  missiles. I told them that it is either my honour or that of the letter that was sent by the Presidency.
    “I did not in any way attack the President, but I faulted the letter based on three issues. First, my name was omitted in the letter as Chairman of the Senate adhoc committee. Secondly, the SGF said we didn’t invite him, but we did invite him and thirdly, the letter said there was no quorum.

    “I told them that in as much as my comment in deodorant and insecticide was rattling they should have invited the SGF to the senate.

    “They said they don’t want us to wash our dirty linings in the public and I told them, that at the end of the day, even if you wash your dirty linings inside the room, you will still have to dry the, outside.

    “I made clarifications that they are not opposed to corruption investigations, but they are worried by the missiles I used which are causing a lot of discomfort. I told them I was only using literary expression to send my message.

    “I made it clear to them that we are going to do our own report and continue to do it. I am glad that they are not opposed to our investigation and they are also not opposed to the continuation of our investigation.

    “I am an activist and my statement is my statement and it is very clear. I think we owe our loyalty to three things. These are our conscience, our conviction and to our country and any other thing can come secondary.

    “What we should also know is that if you love a person, you tell him the truth and I believe if we as a government and as a party cannot tell ourselves the truth, then we have lost the moral right and authority to tell others the truth.

    “We are investigating the massive misappropriation of funds for IDPs in the north east. Nobody can stop that. We are determined to do our work and have done an interim report and we are going to come out with the full detail after this break and nobody in the party has said he is opposed to it. But I think that their major concern was my grammar.”

    On the resolution of the senate asking for the sacking of the SGF, he said: “Sacking the SGF is not about Shehu Sani, but about the resolution of the senate and what they said is binding on me.

    If the senate says he should go, I share in that position and if they say he should remain, I share in that position too.

    “I didn’t ask to be named chairman of the adhoc committee and did not even know I was going to be in the committee. I was appointed and I have to do my job as it is and once I am done, I am out of it.”

  • Kaduna APC writes national body over Shehu Sani suspension

    Kaduna APC writes national body over Shehu Sani suspension

    The Kaduna state chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has written the national secretariat of the party informing them of the decision. Of the leadership of the party at the various levels in the state to suspend Senator Shehu Sani for what they described as continuous breach of the party rules and constitution.

    In a letter dated December 9, 2016 addressed to the National Secretary and signed by the Acting state Chairman of the party, Alhaji Shuaibu Idris, the party said Senator Shehu Sani was initially suspended for an 11 Months period within which he was expected to week the forgiveness of the party.

    The party said that rather than seek amicable settlement if the issues that led to his suspension in other for the suspension to be lifted, the Senator choose to escalate the problems by causing more division  within the party.

    The letter reads: “the National Secretary may be aware of recent events in our state concerning the Senator representing Kaduna Central zone, Senator Shehu Sani. The Senator was suspended last year for an eleven months period, following continuous breach of party rules and constitution.

    “He was expected to use the period to seem forgiveness and redress with party leaders at state, local government area and ward levels. Unfortunately, rather than seek amicable solution with the party at all levels to quash the allegations against him, he choose to escalate the problems by causing more division within the party and going into verbal set with party leaders at all levels.

    “Accordingly at the lapse of his eleven month suspension and without ah sign of remorse or seeking of resolution from the Senator’s side, the ward executive had no choice but to extend his suspension indefinitely. This was endorsed by the par leadership of Kaduna Central, zone and subsequently he the state executive committee of the party”.

    Senator a Shehu Sani was first suspended by the leadership of the party in the state in 2015, by the decision was upturned by a committee set up by the North West zonal leadership of the party who also ordered all parties to the dispute to maintain status quo ante.

    While section 21 B(i and ii) of the APC constitution empower the leadership of the party to set up a disciplinary committee to investigate allegations against any member, Senator Sani told The Nation that at no time has the party invited him to appear before any committee based on any allegation against him.

  • Senate resolves to begin screening of ambassadorial nominees

    Senate resolves to begin screening of ambassadorial nominees

    —Ebonyi, Ondo, Plateau candidates failed appointment criteria, says Senate report

    The Senate on Wednesday resolved to commence immediate consideration and screening of 47 career ambassadorial nominees sent to it by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The list of the ambassadorial nominees was submitted to the Senate on June 9th, 2016 for consideration and confirmation.

    The resolution of the upper chamber followed the recommendations of its committee on Foreign Affairs which considered as series petitions alleging irregularities and lopsidedness in the appointment of the nominees.

    The Senator Monsurat Sunmonu headed committee which considered the petitions recommended that the screening of the nominees should begin immediately.

    Vice Chairman of the committee, Senator Shehu Sani presented the report of the committee to Senate in plenary.

    The reported stated that from the presentation of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Babachir David Lawal who appeared before the committee to clarify issues surrounding the criteria for the appointment, candidates from states that were not represented in the list of 47 did not meet the requirements for appointment.

    The report also said that some senior officers from the omitted states either did not meet the required minimum of 30 months to their retirement or fell short of other criteria used for the appointment.

    The committee said that from its findings due process appeared to have been followed in the appointment of the nominees.

    The report said that the SGF assured that President Buhari would to address the seeming lopsidedness with the appointment of non-career ambassadors.

    The committee said that its findings informed its recommendation that the Senate should proceed with the screening of the nominees.

    It however urged the Federal Government to quickly submit the list of non-career ambassadors to assuage the feeling of marginisation  by some states.

    It asked the government to sustain the tradition of submitting the list of career and non-career ambassadorial nominees at the same time.

    The upper chamber adopted all the recommendation of the committee and resolved to begin the screening of the nominees.

    Senators from Bayelsa, Benue, Kogi, Ondo, Plateau, Taraba had raised objection to the list because their states were not represented.

    After the resolution, Senator Emmanuel Paulker (Bayelsa State) insisted that “fairness is fairness.”

    Paulker said that he expected that with 47 appointments, at one would go to each state of the federation while the remaining 11 may be used to favour some states.

    He said that Bayelsa has many level 16 officers in the Foreign Affairs Ministry.

    He added that the Federal Character principles should have been adopted.