Tag: ticket

  • Still on same-faith presidential ticket

    The media space has been dominated in recent times by comments from all shades of opinion regarding the desirability or otherwise of having a same-faith ticket by the leading opposition party, All Progressives Congress (APC) at the forthcoming general election.

    Though the leadership of the APC has not formally indicated what the joint ticket would look like, comments that have been generated so far can best be seen as a calculated and orchestrated blackmail strategy of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in its attempt to feed Nigerians with the dangerous religious opium with regards to the deep-seated religious differences that exists in the country.

    Though, differences exist, we live in a clime where an issue that should ordinarily be restricted to the personal preference of the individual is now being elevated to national/official prominence.

    Looking through the comments also, anyone who is conversant with the prevailing political permutations in the country would readily agree that it is self-serving as they (the comments) are borne out more of pure mischief or to serve personal interests of those espousing the need to ensure religious balance the choice of personalities that would be given the ticket.

    It, however, gladdens my heart that the APC has become the viable alternative to the rudderless Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and the voting populace is taking more than a passing interest in what is going on in the APC. The debate actually started with speculations in some quarters suggesting that the APC has made up its mind to field a Muhammadu Buhari/Bola Ahmed Tinubu ticket to challenge the incumbent government of Goodluck Jonathan next year.

    I mean those who have concluded that the ticket would not do the country any good is for reasons best known to them playing down the quality of the pair, just as they have sidetracked successful historical precedence in their warped analysis.

    What they only talk about is the fact that the ticket, if eventually it comes on board, will spell doom for the country owing to the current elite-induced mistrust that is currently being sown between the nation’s dominant faiths of Islam and Christianity.

    To those opposed to the Buhari/Tinubu ticket, the nation will burn as it would have shut out the adherents of Christian faith from the power loop at the centre, a situation they see as injurious to the nation’s fragile security.

    As stated earlier, the antecedents and the calibre of the eminent citizens involved must be considered before jumping onto the bandwagon of opposition to the ‘proposal’.

    Let me start by analyzing the personality of Buhari, who has had the misfortune of being profiled as a religious bigot. The Daura-born retired general is known to be a fair-minded individual who is known to treat non-adherents of Islamic faith compassionately. Most of his domestic aides are said to be Christians whom he had never prevented from practicing their faith despite being a staunch Muslim.

    It was told that Buhari as a general was approached by some Muslim adherents to grant Friday as work-free as did Christians faithful but turned down their request after he asked them to point to a verse in the Quran or the Hadith that enjoins Muslims not to work on Fridays. He told them that the Bible enjoined Christians not to work on Sundays. The vintage Buhari turned down the request when a cogent response was not forthcoming from his fellow Muslims.

    Buhari’s senses of probity and accountability in public service are too well documented for me to do a recall, but one will not fail to see the austere lifestyle of a former head of state, former petroleum minister, former military administrator and former chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF).

    On the part of Tinubu, one will no doubt forget his sense of financial wizardry. In fact, it won’t be out of place to describe him as the architect of modern Lagos who laid the foundation, which his successor and protégé, Babatunde Raji Fashola is building upon.

    It is to Tinubu’s credit that the status of Lagos moved from being a dirty backward mega-slum to that of a thriving metropolis. When Tinubu came on board as the third elected chief executive of the state in 1999, the total internally generated revenue of the state was a meagre N600 million, and it is on record that before he left office, the internally generated revenue had peaked at over N8 billion monthly.

    With the quantum leap in the financial base came massive investment in economic infrastructure that is currently servicing the growth and development of the state, a feat that has been attested to by various international bodies.

    Aside from the personalities of the two, it is on record that the near-impossible task of forging the viable opposition that the APC has eventually turned out to be due largely to the efforts of these two gentlemen.

    For Tinubu, his ability to turn defeat into success is legendary. When the PDP won all but one of the six states in the South-west, he soon ensured that he reversed the trend by regaining the states back except for Ondo.

    For the two, an achievement that was never seen in the history of the country was brought to bear with the coming into being of the APC, a feat many thought was unattainable. To me, whoever works must profit from his labour, so it won’t be out of place for the two to pick the tickets of the party.

    Talking about precedence, it is on record that in the South-west, we have had occasions when the governors and their deputies belong to the same faith without anyone raising eye brow. Two examples readily come to mind. In the Second Republic, both Lateef Jakande and his deputy, Rafiu Jafojo were Muslims, yet the Christians did not pray that heaven should fall.

    Recently in Osun State, the immediate past administration was dominated by Olagunsoye Oyinlola and Erelu Olusola Obada both Christians and to the Muslims, there were no qualms.

    The challenges that confront us all in this country today are acute deficiencies in security, employment, power generation and infrastructure among many others. All of these indices of poverty and underdevelopment recognize neither ethnic nor religious boundaries. There are as much poor, hungry, homeless and hopeless Muslims as there are Christians.

    It is also true that the pockets of developmental efforts that we are seeing in some parts of the country, the roads, schools; the hospitals, etc. did not discriminate among beneficiaries.

    Those that are propagating the divisive schemes are mainly individuals seeking direct individual benefits for playing the religious card. If this is not so, let them come and tell us what good the combination of Jonathan and Sambo – one Christian and the other one Muslim – two uninspiring pretenders, has done us as Christians and Muslims and most importantly as Nigerians over the past years.

    What Nigerians crave for is leaders with proven capability and requisite experience to lead the country out of the morass it had been dragged to by an opportunistic cadre of decadent leadership.

    What should dominate our political conversation should be what the parties and their candidates are bringing to the table in terms of records of achievements and programme of action that would rescue the country from the dangerous precipice that it is currently heading.

     

    • Raji is the Special Adviser to the Governor of Lagos State on Information & Strategy.
  • Obasanjo, Buhari differ on ‘same religion’ ticket

    Obasanjo, Buhari differ on ‘same religion’ ticket

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo disagreed yesterday with the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential aspirant, General Muhammadu Buhari, on the place of religion in determining how a party should pick its presidential and vice presidential candidates for next year’s election.

    Buhari said Nigerians genuinely need a President and a vice-president who would place Nigeria first and pull it out of the brinks, regardless of whether or not both are Muslims or Christian.

    But Obasanjo noted that a Muslim-Muslim or Christian-Christian presidential ticket at this time of the nation’s precarious unity was not only absurd but also out of tune with the present Nigeria.

    The former President, who was apparently reacting to Buhari’s position, said: “It will be insensitive to the point of absurdity for any leader or any party to be toying with a Muslim-Muslim or Christian-Christian ticket at this juncture.”

    Buhari, a former Head of State and three times a presidential candidate, told The Cable, an online media, that he saw nothing wrong with a Muslim-Muslim or Christian-Christian ticket.

    The APC aspirant said his position did not make him a “fundamentalist”.

    He said: “I had demonstrated to Nigerians that I’m not a fundamentalist and there is nothing more I can do. Nigerians will always uncover impossible room for manoeuvre for politicians. I had to face one of the governors during one of our party’s meetings (over the issue of religion).

    “In 2003, I chose (the late Senator) Chuba Okadigbo as my running mate. He was a Roman Catholic. He was an Igbo. In 2007, I picked Edwin Ume-Ezeoke. He was a Roman Catholic. He was an Igbo. And in 2010, I chose even a pastor – Tunde Bakare.

    “Honestly, what do Nigerians want me to do? If they don’t believe I’m not a fundamentalist, what else can I do?

    “How about (the late Bashorun) Moshood Abiola, a Southern Muslim, who picked Babagana Kingibe, a Northern Muslim, as running mate in the 1993 presidential election? The Muslim-Muslim ticket went on to win an election that is still considered by many as the most credible in Nigeria’s history.

    “I have not absolutely closed my mind to picking a Christian or Muslim as running mate, if I get the ticket. This is because I firmly believe that Nigerians, having gone through what they have gone through, realise it is not a matter of religion but a matter of Nigeria.

    “The main religions – Christianity and Islam – know and they believe in Almighty God. The question of stealing and short-changing people in the name of religion should stop.”

    But in a statement yesterday from his Presidential Hill Top Estate in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, Obasanjo explained that because of the current peculiar situation of the country, it is pertinent that any leader or political party should run away from a Muslim-Muslim or Christian-Christian ticket in next year’s presidential election.

    Obasanjo said: “Sensitivity is a necessary ingredient for enhancement of peace, security and stability at this point in the political discourse and arrangement for Nigeria and for encouraging confidence and trust.

    “It will be insensitive to the point of absurdity for any leader or any political party to be toying with a Muslim-Muslim or Christian-Christian ticket at this juncture.

    “Nigeria cannot, at this stage, raise the spectre and fear of Islamisation or Christianisation. The idea of proselytisation in any form is a grave danger that must not be contemplated by any serious-minded politician at this delicate situation in Nigeria. This time is different from any other time.

    “Therefore, disregarding the fact that there are fears that need to be allayed at this point will amount not only to insensitivity of the

    highest order but will also amount to bad politics indeed.”

  • Egwuekwe: Prayers can get Eagles AFCON ticket

    Egwuekwe: Prayers can get Eagles AFCON ticket

    • Says Eagles’ players have resolved to win in Congo

    Super Eagles’ defender Azubuike Egwuekwe has disclosed that the country’s national team players are aware of what is at stake and would ensure that they secure victory in the last two rounds of the 2015 African Cup of Nations  (AFCON) qualifiers against Congo and South Africa next month.

    The Eagles, the defending champions of the AFCON by virtue of the feat recording last year in South Africa are in danger of missing out on the next edition.

    They are third in the qualifiers with four points from four matches and must win their final two matches to stand a chance of defending the crown won at the expense of Burkina Faso in 2013.

    Egwuekwe in a chat with SportingLife revealed that the recent plight of the Eagles in the qualifiers has always been on their mind  and they are resolved to get the maximum points in their last two qualifying matches to pick a ticket to AFCON.

    The Warri Wolves’ captain opined that Nigerians should not fret as the Eagles players have talked to themselves to ensure that the nation is not deprived of the opportunity to watch their stars at the next AFCON,  hence the determination to approach their last two matches with all their might.

    “We know what is at stake and we have promised not to disappoint Nigerians.

    We  don’t need to be told to win. We know winning is a must. We are happy with our recent position on the AFCON qualifiers’ log and we have joined forces to ensure that we get the ticket.

    “We know that we would be setting a bad record for ourselves if we do not qualify because Nigerians still remember vividly those that didn’t manage to take the Eagles to AFCON in the past. We don’t want to be associated with such record,” Egwuekwe said.

    Eagles must score three goals against Congo and hope that the Red Devils do not get more than one, when they play them on November 14th in Brazzaville before another must win tie at Uyo on November 19th.

    But Egwuekwe added that both matches are surmountable adding that what the Eagles need right now is  prayers and that the players would ensure that they complement the prayers with work on the pitch in both games.

  • Sani Kaita backs Amodu to deliver AFCON ticket

    Sani Kaita backs Amodu to deliver AFCON ticket

    Nigeria midfielder Sani Kaita has thrown his weight behind interim Eagles coach Shuaibu Amodu to deliver an AFCON 2015 ticket next month.

    He said Amodu and others on the technical crew that replaced the dismissed Keshi led crew have what it takes to see Nigeria through.

    “I believe Shuaibu Amodu will surely deliver the AFCON 2015 ticket because he had a lot of experience. The other coaches appointed to assist him will help him,” said Kaita.

    “We started the qualifier poorly, but that doesn’t mean we won’t qualify. I truly believe we will be there to defend our title with the quality we have everywhere.”

    He further told AfricanFootball.com: “The game against Congo away will be a World Cup final for Eagles.

    “South Africa are then coming to Nigeria and I am confident we will beat them.”

    Amodu made history when he became the first Nigerian coach to qualify the country to the World Cup in 2002. He repeated this feat for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

     

  • Buhari, Kwankwaso begin battle for APC presidential ticket

    Buhari, Kwankwaso begin battle for APC presidential ticket

    The bid for the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential ticket got on the fast lane at weekend, with Senator Bukola Saraki pulling out of the race.

    The former Kwara State Governor said he would back a candidate that is acceptable to all party members. “I don’t think our party can afford too much internal racour going into the election,” the former Kwara State Governor said.

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has announced his interest in the race.  Gen. Muhammadu Buhari is set to join the race on Wednesday at the Eagle Square in Abuja.

    Gen. Buhari was at the Lagos State House in Marina to seek Governor Babatunde Fashola’s support for his ambition.

    He was accompanied by ex-Bayelsa State Governor Timipre Sylva, ex-Minister Nasir El-Rufai and former Speaker Bello Masari.

    The attempt to get Kano State Governor  Rabiu Kwankwaso to step down for Gen. Buhari has failed.

    Supporters of the governor said he will announce his candidacy on October 28.

    Stakeholders tried to prevail on the governor to step down since both of them are from the Northwest zone, which has the highest voter population.

    According to the APC nomination of candidates time table, presidential aspirants are expected  to have obtained an expression of interest forms by October 19.

    The sale of the forms will open from next Monday till November 6. The aspirants will be screened between November 10 and 12. The candidate will be elected at its national convention on December 2.

    President Goodluck Jonathan has already been endorsed as the consensus candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), although some members of the party are silently grumbling about the close of space for others.

    Gen. Buhari’s supporters said at the weekend that the former leader remained the only Nigerian politician who has the courage and capacity to fight corruption.

    National Secretary of the Buhari Support Group Ibrahim Daud said the Buhari Support Group, an umbrella body of about 49 voluntary youth organisations, have mobilised five million Nigerians to attend Gen. Buhari declaration of interest on Wednesday.

    According to him, Buhari is the only candidate who can defeat the PDP and stop corruption. “That is why the corrupt cabal that has held sway since Nigeria’s return to democracy in 1999 is bent on ensuring that Buhari does not emerge president.

    “They are only trying to protect their ill-gotten wealth to the detriment of the majority of Nigerians.  Hence they cook up all kinds of mendacities and campaigns of calumny to discredit Gen. Buhari and lower his estimation in the eyes of right-thinking members of the society.

    “At first, the antagonists of Nigeria’s national development concocted and fed Nigerians with the lie that Gen. Buhari was a religious bigot, who would convert Nigeria to an Islamic state if elected president.

    “Those that know the General intimately know that though he is a dedicated Muslim, he has no trace of religious or even ethnic bigotry. Gen. Buhari is one of the most munificent politicians of our time!

    “Now that the gambit of religion cannot work anymore, they are trying to use age as a criterion to discredit him. But it has come to public knowledge that all these tales being fabricated by his political opponents are only strategies employed to maintain their stranglehold on the people.

    “The 2015 presidential election shall be a political turning point for Nigeria, as the citizenry have become increasingly aware of the antics of the corrupt ruling class and other detractors and saboteurs of the nation.

    “This time, the gambit of religion, age or any other primordial sentiment will not deter the people from voting for Buhari in 2015. Even though we agree with the idea of generational change in leadership, we believe that only a mature politician like Buhari will be able to wrest power from the PDP, before sanitising the polity.

    “Gen. Buhari is the only presidential aspirant that can make a full declaration of his assets before taking office. He will also declare his assets upon leaving office, to enable the people to make candid evaluations of his stewardship.

    “We should bear in mind that massive unemployment, terrorism/insurgency, disease prevalence are all linked vicariously to high-profile corruption and impunity by the ruling class.

    “For Nigeria to make meaningful and steady progress, a mechanism must be put in place to tackle corruption and indiscipline, and this mechanism can only be driven by an incorruptible leader like Gen. Buhari.

    “This is because we have watched corruption in public places escalate steadily over the last 16 years that the PDP has been in power. We must effect the necessary leadership change now, to move Nigeria and indeed Nigerians out of the doldrums.

    “We can say affirmatively that the epoch-making declaration of General Buhari will witness the unprecedented attendance of not less than five (5) million passionate supporters of the General.”

    One of Kwankwaso’s Campaign Coordinators, Chief Olisaemeka Akamukali, said Kwakwanso planned to declare his presidential ambition on October 23.

    He said after a nationwide consultation with party leaders and other political stakeholders regarding the presidential election, the governor had decided to throw his hat in the ring.

    He hinted that the governor slowed down his campaign due to pressure to yield ground to Gen. Buhari, stressing that rather than ask the governor to step down, it is the former Head of State who should make way for a younger candidate – in line with the need for generational shift.

    He said: “In as much as we agree that Buhari is a man of integrity but you will also agree with me that age is not on his side. He is 73, going to 74 years and Ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar is close to 70 years old. But Kwakwanso will be 58 by October 21.”

    He explained that it was wrong for anybody to regard the governor as a “dark horse” in the contest, adding that Kwakwanso had long years of experience in politics, beginning from 1991 when he emerged as the Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives on the platform of the Social Democratic Party (SDP).

    He said: “Kwakwanso has long years of experience in politics. He has been a parliamentarian, a governor and two-time minister. When he contested the governorship election in Kano state and lost, he congratulated the winner and waited for eight years before staging a come-back.

    “The governor is a grassroots politician and one who tries to carry his followers along in his undertakings

    “Remember he was once a member of the Group of seven governors who protested the goings-on in his former party. I will not be surprised if many of them still in the PDP will want to support his aspiration to become president.”

    Akamukali added: “The issue of anointing candidates for elections has been rejected by the APC and that is why the party is insisting that there shall be transparent primaries. The fears of some of the aspirants may be due to the fact of their previous experience where they never face competitive primaries to emerge as party candidate.

    “That is why such people are pushing for consensus. The generality of the party is saying ‘no, let us do things differently from what the PDP are doing’. We must have a transparent primary.

    He maintained that the national leader of the party, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, party’s national Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun and Atiku were together in the SDP with the Kano State governor adding that Kwakwanso is still retaining the affinity he had with the political network.

  • ‘PDP will lose Taraba, if Umar gets ticket’

    ‘PDP will lose Taraba, if Umar gets ticket’

    Former Secretary to the Taraba State Government (SSG) Ambassador Emmanuel Njiwah, in this interview, says the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will not win the governorship election, if Acting Governor Garba becomes the flag bearer for next year’s poll. Senior Correspondent FANEN IHYONGO met him in Jalingo, the state capital.

    Why were you sacked from the Taraba State Executive Council by Acting Governor Garba Umar?

    You have asked me as a person, but I will speak on behalf of the team that was sacked by the deputy governor. First and foremost, Garba Umar became the deputy governor by appointment; he did not contest the election with Governor Danbaba Suntai. He only came onboard when our former deputy governor, Sani Abubakar Danladi, was impeached by the  House of Assembly. Umar had spent barely three weeks when Suntai had a plane crash with his security aides. The deputy governor did not know anything about governance. He was in the private sector, but he had to take over the mantle of leadership as the acting governor, following the governor’s mishap. But, before the crash, Suntai had set up committees for disbursing the flood funds for the purchase of relief materials for those who were affected by the flood disaster in 2012. The main committee was chaired by the deputy governor, with some of us as members, including the Chief of Staff, the former Head of Service and Commissioners for Justice, Environment, Finance, Health and Information. Most of the job had been done before the governor had the crash. There were two main committees in charge of purchases. The materials bought were determined by the main committee through the logistics committee, which was to do market survey and identify the quantity, quality and price of the items to be purchased. No member of the main committee was involved in purchases, except the wife of the Chief of Staff, now the SSG, who got the contract to purchase the items. So, I don’t know the money Umar said we tampered with. The reports of the two committees are there. There is no missing fund in the report. There is nobody who said he was not giving some money to purchase items. I don’t know how I, as the SSG, who was in the main committee, tampered with the funds. Even the commissioners who were involved in the purchases returned more than nine million naira as discount  from the purchases.

    But, there was a report...

    When the report was submitted, it was supposed to be scrutinised by the executive. But, the deputy governor, who was now in acting capacity, was finding a way to do away with some of us. He was trying without success to lobby some of us to assist him to take over as the substantive governor. He wanted me, particularly, to prepare a memo stating that Suntai was incapacitated so that his deputy can assume his office. He promised to make me the deputy governor, with the sum of N100 million, lobbied through a permanent secretary and two other commissioners, which I will only mention their names, if he (Umar) denies this. This was what happened. So, he decided to link the commissioners who were very loyal to Suntai and I, who refused to write the memo, with the flood funds so as to remove us from office. No one tampered with the flood funds. It was what he planned and executed. The report is there and it was even published in one of the newspapers in the state for the public to see. So, I don’t know how he got us indicted. The truth is that nobody tampered with the flood disaster money. Few minutes before he sacked us, Umar asked his Muslim brother; the former commissioner of health; to resign his appointment. The former Commissioner for Information was not sacked, but he voluntarily left the government when Umar was disloyal to the governor. The truth is that Governor Suntai had warned that nobody should take even transport fare from the funds  and we all complied. So, the deputy governor should explain his source and  how we tampered with the flood funds.

    What did you do when you were sacked?

    We went to court within the first three days, because we knew we were wrongly sacked. We went to court in July last year. The judgment was to be passed on May 11, but the court is yet to rule on the case. I wish to say somebody somewhere is tampering with justice in the state, but I don’t want to talk about the matter, since it is already in the court of law. The deputy governor said he booted us from office because, according to him, we are corrupt. We said we are innocent. We went to court, but the deputy governor is pre-empting the judgment by saying we are corrupt. I don’t know where he got his own judgment or whether he has taken over the duties of the court.

    How much did the committees spend?

    N100 million was set aside to rehabilitate the infrastructure that was affected by the flood. These included infrastructure for schools, dispensaries, mosques, churches and culverts. So, apart from some bank charges, about two hundred million naira was disbursed.

    What happened to the N100 million, at the time you were sacked?

    It was intact in the state’s treasury. All the funds disbursed were from the treasury and the Commissioner for Finance submitted a letter informing us that the N100 million was still intact.

    Umar has always said his relationship with his boss is still very cordial and that he is taking care of the governor and his family. Do you have a different view?

    There is no better word to describe the kind of relationship he presently has with the governor. It is not cordial in any way. Immediately the governor had the plane crash, Umar started plotting on how he could take over. Anybody who has a cordial relationwith his boss would not do that. He also removed all the appointees of the governor to clear the way for him to become the substantive governor. Is that cordiality? He said he is taking care of the governor. It is not true. Suntai is the executive governor of the state and he is entitled to be taken care of by the government and not by Garba Umar. Umar does not have the resources to take care of Suntai. Before his appointment as the deputy governor, Umar was not a rich man. All we knew about him was that he was a trader, selling nuvan (mosquito insecticides) in Gombe State. So, Umar does not have the capacity to take care of Suntai in any regard. It is the government that is supposed to take care of the governor, but the government being run by Umar is not doing that.

    How has the state fared under Umar?

    If there is any time in the life of Taraba State that there was the worst administration, Umar’s time is worse than that worst. Somehow, I have been in the government of Taraba State at various times, since its creation. I was a director in the ministry, commissioner, board chairman and SSG. So, I know that no government, military and civilian, has been as bad as the one steered by Umar. He has not developed anything in the state. All the projects started by Suntai have stopped. The state university, which Suntai established for the education of our children, is not being funded. When I was there, I had to persuade him to fund the university, but he would not. The other time the university wanted to embark on strike, but for the intervention of a third fund and other federal government agencies in the tertiary institutions, the  university would have been closed down. It is  not being funded by the deputy governor, who has declared himself as the acting governor. Taraba State is in its worst period. Under Suntai, even when all the Northeastern states had some crises, Taraba never experienced any. The governor was proactive and he knew how to arrest the crisis and crackdown on suspected insurgents. There is insecurity. As the acting governor, he is the chief security officer. As the chief security officer, he should be able to know where the roof is leaking to mend it. But, he is not doing that. He seems to be taking side. And the reason is simply because he is hell-bent to take over Taraba. So, he cannot hesitate to do anything that can pave the way for him to succeed.

    The acting governor claimed that he has done well. If the people asks him to contest, he said he will contest…

    I don’t know that kind of clarion call. Honestly, the greatest mistake Suntai has made in his life was picking Umar as his deputy. There can be no mistake worse than this. Suntai had relied solely on elders to pick someone for him from the Northern zone. The governor did not know this man. If he had known, he wouldn’t have picked him. The College of Agriculture Governing Board had paid him a courtesy call. The members advanced some demands. I was there as the SSG. He told them, yes, I would do these things; no I would not do those ones. At the end, I summed up the things he said he was going to do and those he turned down. I prepared a memo in that regard for his consideration and approval. But, upon giving him the memo, he asked me what is this SSG? I told him these are the things you approved for the college. He said no, I didn’t mean what I said; it was only a political talk. I asked what do you mean Your Excellency?  I told him he is acting governor, so whatever he promises the people or public institutions, he has to fulfill it and that’s how the government works. Then, I asked him why he gave them fake promise. May be, that is why he is angry at me. I doubt if he has granted those requests.

    Was there any agreement between Umar and Suntai that Umar would not run for office? If there is, was the agreement written or oral?

    On several occasions, Governor Suntai emphasised to him (Umar) that I have brought you to complete my tenure with me. Under no account should you nurse any form of ambition to contest, because the Northern and Central zones have produced governors. So, in 2015, we shall relinquish power to the Southern zone, and the reason why I appointed you as my deputy is because of your age; so that you would not have any ambition to take over. So,  please abide by this and, if at the end of our tenure, you don’t see me advancing you, don’t be annoyed because we must give the governorship slot to where it belongs for justice and equity. Umar said no, I am very okay sir; I am not going to contest. But now, he has forgotten.

     

  • ‘PDP will lose Taraba, if Umar gets ticket’

    ‘PDP will lose Taraba, if Umar gets ticket’

    Former Secretary to the State Government (SSG) of Taraba, Ambassador Emmanuel Njiwah, in this interview, warns the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of ceding the governorship ticket to Acting Governor Garba Umar, as that will make the ruling party lose to the opposition in Taraba. He also speaks on why he and other commissioners were sacked by Umar. Senior Correspondent FANEN IHYONGO was there. Excerpt:

    The Acting Governor of Taraba State, Garba Umar, in a recent interview with Thisday, accused you and other former commissioners of “tampering” with N400 million flood mitigating grant, which is why he booted you out of office. May we hear from you why you were sacked?

    You have asked me as a person but I will speak on behalf of the team that was sacked by the deputy governor. First and foremost, Garba Umar became the deputy governor by appointment; he did not contest the election with Governor Danbaba Suntai. He only came onboard when our former Deputy Governor, Sani Abubakar Danladi was impeached by the State House of Assembly. Umar had spent barely three weeks when Suntai had a plane crash with his security aides. The deputy governor had not known anything about governance. All along he had been in the private sector, but he had to take over the mantle of leadership as acting governor, following the governor’s mishap. But before the crash, Suntai had set up committees in charge of disbursing the flood funds for the purchase of relief materials for those who were affected by the flood disaster in the state in 2012. The main committee was chaired by the deputy governor, with some of us as members, including the Chief of Staff, the then Head of Service and commissioners of Justice, Environment, Finance, Health and Information. Most of the job was done before the governor had the crash. There were two main committees in charge of purchases. The materials bought were determined by the main committee, through the logistics committee which was to do market survey and identify the quantity, quality and price of each of the items to be purchased. No member of the main committee was involved in purchases, except the wife of the Chief of Staff –now SSG, who got the contract to purchase the items. So, I don’t know the money Umar keeps saying we tampered with. The reports of the two committees are there. There is no missing fund in the report. There is nobody who said he was not giving some money meant to purchase an item. I don’t know how I, as the SSG who was in the main committee tampered with the funds. Even the commissioners who were involved in the purchases returned the sum of more than nine million naira as discount gotten from the purchases. When the report was submitted, it was supposed to be scrutinised by the executive. But meanwhile, the deputy governor who was now in acting capacity was finding a way to do away with some of us. He was trying without success to lobby through some of us to take over as substantive governor. He wanted me, particularly, to prepare a memo stating that Suntai was incapacitated so his deputy should assume his office. He promised to make me the deputy governor, with the sum of N100 million, lobbied through a permanent secretary and two other commissioners, which I will only mention their names if he (Umar) denies this. This was what happened. So, he decided to attach the commissioners who were very loyal to Suntai and I who refused to write the memo, to the flood funds so as to remove us from office. No one tampered with the flood funds. It was what he planned and executed. The report is there and was even published in one of the newspapers in the state for the public to see. So, I don’t know how he got us indicted. The truth is that nobody tampered with the flood disaster money. Few minutes before he sacked us, Umar asked his Muslim brother –the former commissioner of health to resign his appointment. The former commissioner of Information was not sacked, but he voluntarily left government when Umar became disloyal to the governor. The truth is that Governor Suntai had warned that nobody should take even transport fare from the funds which we all complied. So, the deputy governor should explain his source, how we tampered with the flood funds.

    What did you do when you were sacked?

    We went to court within the first three days, because we knew we were wrongly sacked. We went to court since July last year. The judgment was to be passed on May 11 this year but the court is yet to rule on the case. I wish to say somebody somewhere is tampering with justice in the state, but I don’t want to talk about the matter since it is already in the court of law. The deputy governor said he booted us from office because, according to him, we are corrupt. We said we are innocent. We went to court, but the deputy governor is preempting judgment by still saying we are corrupt. I don’t know where he got his own judgment or whether he has taken over the duties of the court.

    How much did the committees spend in total?

    N100 million was set aside to rehabilitate the infrastructure that was affected by the flood. This included infrastructure from schools, dispensaries, mosques, churches and culverts. So, apart from some bank charges, about two hundred and something million naira was disbursed.

    What happened to the N100 million, at the time you were sacked?

    It was intact in the state’s treasury. All the funds disbursed were from the treasury and the commissioner of Finance submitted a letter informing us that the N100 million was still intact.

    Umar has always said his relationship with his boss is still very cordial. That he is taking care of the governor and his family. Do you have a different view?

    There is no better word to describe the kind of relationship he presently has with the governor. They are not cordial in any way. Immediately the governor had the plane crash, Umar started plotting on how he could take over. Anybody who is cordial with his boss would not do that. He also moved to remove all the appointees of the governor in order to clear the way for him to become the substantive governor. Is that cordiality? He said he is taking care of the governor. It is not true. Suntai is the executive governor of the state and he is entitled to be taken care of by the government and not by Garba Umar. Umar does not have the resources to take care of Suntai. Before his appointment as deputy governor, Umar had not up to N20 thousand in all his accounts. All we knew about him was that he was a trader, selling nuvan (mosquito insecticides) in Gombe state. So, Umar does not have the capacity to take care of Suntai in any regard. It is the government that is supposed to take care of the governor but the government being run by Umar is not doing that.

    In the same interview, Umar claimed Taraba people are having the best governance now. Don’t you think he has done beyond criticising him, primarily in the area of infrastructural development?

    If there is any time in the life of Taraba state that there was the worst administration, Umar’s time is worse than that worst. Somehow, I have been in the government of Taraba state in different phases, since its creation. I was a director in the ministry, commissioner, board chairman and SSG. So, I know that no government –both military and civilian, has been as bad as the one steered by Umar. He has not developed anything in the state. All the projects started by Suntai have stopped. The state university which Suntai established for the education of our children is not being funded. When I was there, I had to persuade him to fund the university but he would not. The other time the university wanted to embark on strike action, but for the intervention of a third fund and other federal government agencies in the tertiary institutions, the state university would have been closed down. It is terribly not being funded by the deputy governor who has declared himself as acting governor. Taraba state is in its worst period. Under Suntai, even when all the north-eastern states had some crises, Taraba never experienced any. The governor was proactive and knew how timely to arrest such crisis and to crackdown on suspected insurgents. But this man is rather aiding the insurgents by purchasing arms for them. And I am not the one saying it, but the people who know it are reliably saying it and are ready to testify. This is because, as governor in acting capacity, he is the chief security officer of the state. And as chief security officer, he should be able to know where the roof is leaking so as to mend it but he is not doing that. He seems to be taking side. And the reason is simply because he is hell-bent to take over Taraba so he cannot hesitate to do anything that can pave the way for him to succeed.

    He said he has done well, so if the people ask him to contest the governorship –as a clarion call, he will.

    I don’t know that kind of clarion call. Honestly, the greatest mistake Suntai has made in his life was picking Umar as his deputy. There can be no mistake worse than this. Suntai had relied solely on elders to pick someone for him from the northern zone. The governor did not know this man. If he had known how bad he is, he wouldn’t have picked him. I don’t want to speak on his intelligence, otherwise, I worked with him and I know he doesn’t have the moral and intellectual capacity to be governor of the state. For example, the College of Agriculture Governing Board had paid him a courtesy call. The members advanced some demands, which I was there –as the SSG. He told them yes I would do these things; no I would not do those ones. At the end, I summed up the things he said he was going to do and those he turned down. I prepared a memo in that regard for his consideration and approval. But upon giving him the memo, he asked me what is this SSG? I told him these are the things you approved for the college. He said no I didn’t mean what I said; it was only a political talk. I asked what do you mean your Excellency?  I told him he is acting governor, so whatever he promises the people or public institutions he has to fulfill it –that’s how the government works. Then I asked him why he gave them fake promise. So, I know, though not very sure, that was one of the reasons he got angry with me. And I doubt if he has granted those requests.

    Was there any agreement between Umar and Suntai that Umar would not run for office? If there is, was the agreement written or oral?

    On several occasions, Governor Suntai emphasised to him (Umar) that I have brought you to complete my tenure with me. Under no account should you nurse any form of ambition to contest, because the northern and central zones have produced governor. So, in 2015, we shall relinquish power to the southern zone, and the reason why I have appointed you my deputy is because of your age –so that you would not have any ambition to take over, so please abide by this and if at the end of our tenure you don’t see me advancing you, don’t be annoyed because we must give the governorship slot to where it belongs, for justice and equity. Umar said no no no, I am very ok sir; I am not going to contest. But now he has forgotten that the governor picked him from an inconsequential corner.

    Do you think he is bond by that agreement, considering the fact that it is not constitutional? 

    Constitutionally, he is not bond by it. Morally, he is. That is why I said he lacks the moral right to contest. Umar has no moral competence. Recall his promise with the College of Agriculture which he reneged on.

    Do you mean, apart from Umar who is kicking against power shift, stakeholders from the north and central zones are in support of power shift to southern zone?

    You know, before now, when former Governor Jolly Nyame was leaving office, people from all the zones contested to succeed him including those from the northern zone where he comes from. This was because nothing had come up clearly on how power should shift in the state. But after Suntai succeeded Nyame from the central zone, morally, those of us who have been resident in the state, who grew up in Taraba and served in the state, feel the fairest thing to do is to support the southern zone to produce the next governor. Unfortunately, Umar does not share this opinion, because he is a Taraba indigene by extension. He was not born in Taraba; he didn’t grow up in the state; he didn’t school in Taraba and he didn’t reside in the state for a week. He wasn’t known in Taraba state so he does not know the politics of Taraba. In Taraba, we always ensure we have a united front –the north, central and south. Once we get a candidate, we do it together. And so, since the north and central have had it, power has to shift to the south in 2015. What moral right does Umar have that he wants to contest from the northern zone? After 18 years of rule by the north and central zones, he still doesn’t want the southern zone to have it, why? Democratic governance, both at the level of presidency down to governorship and other positions, has to be rotational.

    He (Umar) said if the people ask him to run, he will, irrespective of the zoning arrangement which his people have argued that it is not constitutional.

    Who are the people that will ask him to run? A street beggar has other street beggars that can ask him to do something. We had a man (now late) in my area who was mentally derailed. He said he was contesting the presidency of this country, and anywhere he went the people addressed him as president. Was he the president? Is it such kind of people that will ask him to run? Umar does not have the moral and intellectual capacity to be governor. So, who will ask him to run? Suntai had put to end the system of thuggery in the state but Umar has reintroduced it. Recently he was in Takum to attend the birthday anniversary of the state Minister for Niger Delta Affairs, Arc. Darius Dickson Ishaku, and he went with thugs. So, is it his thugs that are asking him to contest?

    Is there religious division in Taraba?

    The deputy governor has brought a terrible polarisation in the religious front, not only between Christians and Muslims, but even within the Muslim community. He has deeply divided them. He is telling people to support his ambition because he is a Muslim. This is wrong; being a Christian or Muslim is not the yardstick for becoming the president or governor, but what you have to do for the people and country. For Umar, he is simply not qualified, whether he is a Muslim or Christian.

    How would you assess the state’s economic status now, because the acting governor says he has saved some money and is paying monthly salaries before receiving the federal allocation?

    Never in the history of Taraba state that the treasury has been looted by government officials as it is the case today. You will be surprised to note that it is under Umar that salaries of a previous month are paid in the week of the following month. The reason is that he has taken so much bank overdrafts that any money that comes in from the federation account will try to reduce what he has taken, then he would have another overdraft to pay the salaries of the previous month. Is that saving money? Is that paying salaries without the federal subvention? He does not pay salaries as at when due, until the following month. Pensioners used to collect their pension around 25th of every month. Today, we don’t get our pension until a new month comes. The treasury is terribly battered and he is trying to restructure it so that he can siphon more money. If you are in Jalingo, just interview anybody on the street, or the lowest profile civil servant, or a cleaner and they will tell you that this is the first time they are experiencing this kind of situation –where salaries of a previous month are paid in the following month.

    Do you know what he does with the money?

    Since he is not developing Taraba state with the money, since all the roads in the state are not being developed, since the university and other institutions of learning are not being funded, since he is only making political talks, and since the money is not there, we know where the money is going: he has an unsearchable ambition. He is so desperate to forcefully take over as substantive governor of Taraba state and to contest the governorship election. The money is now residing in the corridors of those who buy his idea and keep telling him we shall make you governor. I tell you, just dress in elegant clothes and go to Jalingo. When you see the deputy governor, tell him you have finalised every preparation to remove Danbaba Suntai for him to take over as substantive governor. Begin to quote some names, I bet you will come back with millions of naira. So, the state’s resources have become business funds for Garba Umar to waste on his unsearchable ambition of taking over.

    Some people still find it difficult to believe when people like you accused Umar of disloyalty. Because he always says he is still 100 percent loyal to Suntai and always referred to the governor as his boss. And again, he has not packed into the Government House and the portraits of Suntai still adorn his walls. So, what is this disloyalty that Suntai people keep talking about?

    I don’t really know the best adjective to describe the degree of Umar’s disloyalty to Suntai. First and foremost, when his boss was flown abroad for treatment, he vacated the official quarters assigned to him by his boss. He moved to the Presidential Lodge on his own –without the permission of his boss. Two, Suntai has not put barricades where he stays, but Umar has erected barricades to block both sides of the road where he stays. The street where he stays is not passable now. Residents of the area are finding it difficult as they are not allowed to pass there. Three, Umar dislodged all the political structures of his boss, starting with the leadership of the House of Assembly to pave the way for him to become the substantive governor. Four, he removed the SSG and commissioners who refused, at his request, to raise a memo to the House of Assembly for the lawmakers to confirm him as substantive governor. Five, he has made several attempts, using money, to dislodge the party executives. He sent his allies to go round and collect signatures to dislodge the party structure that was put in place by his principal. Today he is working with Advisers that were not appointed by the governor. The SSG and commissioners working with him today are not Suntai’s appointees. I heard him said he appointed from Suntai’s family. He should name just one person in his cabinet that is from Suntai’s family. Which of the commissioners he has appointed visits Suntai when the governor is in Government House Jalingo? We go there daily to see and discuss with the governor but we don’t see any of them. He has used the state’s funds to buy the House of Assembly members who ceded the running of the state to him. Is that loyalty? Today, the Assembly is split into two factions, some for him and some for his principal. Is that loyalty? Has he forgotten so quickly how he came onboard? Did he contest any election? Or was he part of the team that accompanied Suntai round the state to campaign for the reelection of the governor in 2011? We don’t even know the party he is working for, because he seems not to be working for the growth of the PDP in Taraba state. So, where is the loyalty he has for Suntai? A man who had travelled abroad to see his boss on the sickbed, upon his return, he asked me to prepare a memo so that he could take over as governor of the state while I would be the deputy. Is that loyalty?

    Do you think the plethora of crises affecting Taraba will affect the 2015 elections in the state?

    Yes. Yes. The first to affect the election is the insecurity he has created in the state. He has dislodged Christian villages in Wukari, Gassol, Donga, Ibi and Bali. He tried to dislodge the Wukari town but it wasn’t possible. He has done all these things in a scheme to reduce the Christian population so as to enable him take over the state. It is very unfortunate. Taraba people will not vote on religious sentiments. We shall vote on the basis of competence and the will to serve and deliver democratic dividends. Don’t forget that the state is going to experience hunger by next year. After dislodging the Christian farmers, their farm crops were uprooted. Majority of those displaced are Tiv people. The Jukuns were not displaced much because they live in compact settlements unlike the Tiv farmers who dwell in isolated sparse settlements. No fewer than 700 persons have lost their lives in Taraba, many more were injured and hundreds of thousands displaced within the time that Umar has been in charge. He tried the official way without success and now he is trying to dislodge, maim and suppress the people, but I know he would not succeed. About five local government areas of Taraba state have not received their voter cards because of the insecurity. That tells you that the election is already affected by the crisis. We are aware of how hired insurgents came into the state, and we want the federal government to do something about it. There is no way insurgents could invade a state and the security council/agencies would not know. We are aware that all the local government areas in the state are being besieged by insurgents who are ready to strike. Will the chief security officer of the state and his government claim they are not aware of this development? He should fish out the culprits to prove his innocence, for Taraba to vote next year. But I want to assure you that the campaign for a credible candidate in Taraba state is going to be the easiest because people now know the man who is acting, such that if you give Umar the PDP ticket, the ruling party will lose Taraba. This is because his coming has been a disaster and nobody is willing to have him as governor for four years. It is not possible. The easiest way for PDP to lose Taraba state is to give its governorship ticket to Umar.

     

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