Wednesday 18 March 2015

Mustapha Akanbi
Mustapha Akanbi

Jega’s resignation portends danger, says ex-anti graft chief Akanbi

Pioneer Chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC) Justice Mustapha Akanbi warned yesterday that Prof. Attahiru Jega’s resignation as Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC) chairman portends danger for the nation.
The ex-Appeal Court president, therefore, urged the citizenry to encourage Prof. Jega not to resign, adding that if the INEC chairman resigns few days to the general elections, it might be the beginning of violence.
He spoke in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, at a special public lecture titled: “Towards Peaceful Elections in 2015: The Roles of Stakeholders in Nigeria.”
The lecture was organised by the Centre for Peace and Strategic Studies, University of Ilorin.
Akanbi cautioned Nigerians against doing anything that would make predictions about a possible breakdown of the country after the general elections a reality.

Buhari favoured to win, says Na’abba

defection 3
A former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Umar Ghali Na’abba, formally joined the All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday, barely 48 hours after dumping the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
He said the country needed change, stressing that the momentum favoured the APC presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, to win.
Na’abba added that he decided to join the APC to help to grow the momentum for change.
He spoke while addressing APC leaders at a session at the party’s national secretariat to welcome him into the fold.
His words: “I believe that most of you must have read or heard about my communication to my former party – the PDP. The total sum of my communication was that I have decided to leave the party, having being a member for the past 16 years with a brief interregnum of about one year.
“I believe that more than any time in the history of this country, this country needs a change, particularly at the top. In the last 16 years, there has been misrule in this country. Nigerians are being misruled by successive presidents of the PDP. Some of us fought over these tendencies to no success.
“I believe that the momentum today is in favour of the APC to change this country and we must never allow the momentum to go down. It is in that quest, that I feel that having resigned from the PDP, I must join the APC so that I can help grow that momentum.
“It is quite remarkable that since I left the PDP, I have been receiving calls and messages of encouragement from across Nigeria. This is to show that APC is a national party and not what they use to regard it as a religious and sectional party. People from all corners of this country have called me, including former members of the House of Representatives, who are in the APC.
“My pledge today is to work with you and the presidential candidate of the party while trying to consolidate on the gains made so far.”
Na’abba expressed confidence that the APC presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, will win at the polls on March 28.
He added: I believe that in General Buhari, we have a messiah and I also believe that democracy is about consultations. You must consult, accept and be patient. Patience is the only thing in life that when you do, you will never regret. So, let us be patient; let us be steadfast. Let me thank members of the Working Committee and other elders of the party for arranging to receive me.
“ It is very remarkable that a convention was held and a free and fair election was conducted in which Gen. Buhari emerged as the presidential candidate of the party and I am a witness to how popular Gen. Buhari is, not just in the North, but all over the country.
“I am happy that he is going to be the next president of this country and when he becomes the next president of Nigeria, it is our desire that he continues to be a national leader and not a sectional leader.” Nigerians, Na’abba said, have come a long way, adding that the nation could not continue to be ruled on the basis of divisiveness.
He gave insights into why he decided to join political leaders of like minds in APC.
The former Speaker of the House of Representatives said: “When I and other senior members of the party left the PDP between 2005 and 2007, a lot of things happened that we thought were undemocratic and we had to leave the party. Eventually, some of us returned after the late President Umaru Yar’Adua made certain promises to effect change in the party, which never happened.
“We thought that we could cohabit within the party and it is a sad commentary on that party that today, majority of not only the founding fathers, but founding members have left the party, and many of them are on this high table. Our elder and father, Alhaji Ishiaku Ibrahim, is a founding member of the party, a member of the Board of Trustees and Chief Audu Ogbeh, who was a former chairman of the party. We also have some of my colleagues here and others who we could not invite due to theconstraint of time.
“It is barely two weeks to elections and it is important that I come here and be received so that we will go and continue to work towards the success of the party.” 

Alleged money laundering: Fani-Kayode’s surety withdraws

Femi Fani-Kayode
Femi Fani-Kayode
THE Director of Media and Publicity of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Presidential Campaign Organisation, Chief Femi Fani-Kayode, who is under trial for money laundering, will have to find a surety or risk being re-arrested.
One of his sureties has applied to the Federal High Court in Lagos to withdraw from guaranteeing the defendant’s temporary freedom.
The surety, Wale Ajisebutu, told Justice Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia that he urgently needed to make use of his Certificate of Occupancy (C of O).
He deposited it as one of the conditions for granting Fani-Kayode bail.
The judge was to consider the application yesterday, but the defence, it was learnt, asked for another date.
The matter has been fixed for March 26 for hearing of the surety’s application and continuation of trial.
Fani-Kayode was accused of making a transaction exceeding N500,000 on September 20, 2006, which was not done through a financial institution, by accepting N2.1 million in cash.
The money, said the prosecution, was paid into his personal bank account by his aide, Supo Agbaje, while he served as Minister of Culture and Tourism. He pleaded not guilty.

NPAN: polls must hold

INEC_VOTERSG-599x300
The Newspaper Proprietors Association of Nigeria (NPAN) yesterday asked the Federal Government to ensure that the general elections hold on March 28 and April 11.
It also said the polls must be  free and  fair,  with an outcome which will deepen the nation’s democracy.
It pleaded with Nigerians to eschew any form of violence during and after the polls.
The newspaper proprietors made their position known in a communique  after deliberations at the Extra- Ordinary Meeting of NPAN in Abuja, which was hosted by Media Trust Limited.
The communique, signed by NPAN President, Mr. Nduka Obaigbena, reads: “The Newspaper Proprietors Association of Nigeria( NPAN) on March 17th , 2015 held an Extra-Ordinary Meeting in Abuja. After exhaustive deliberations, and review of the political situation in Nigeria, the NPAN unanimously agreed as follows:
“The general election must hold on March 28th and April 11th as scheduled by the Independent National Electoral Commission ( INEC).

Why I shunned debate with Jonathan, by Buhari

Buhari
PRESS freedom is guranteed, should Gen. Muhammadu Buhari win the March 28 presidential election.
But there will be no debate with President Goodluck Jonathan, the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate said yesterday.
Gen. Buhari said also that change revolution without firing a shot was imminent in the country.
Buhari, who spoke at an interactive session with members of the Newspaper  Proprietors Association of Nigeria( NPAN) and the Nigerian Guild of Editors( NGE) in Abuja, restated his stand against a debate with President Goodluck Jonathan.
He said there was nothing to debate after 16 years of misrule, especially what he described as the six years of bad governance under Jonathan.
He said: “To be fair to me and Mr. President, after 16 years of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and six years of his time, is there anything to debate?
“Very seriously, you know the condition we are in; we are all experiencing it, no matter who you are. So, what should I debate there?”
On the general election, Buhari said the shift on February 14 was unnecessary.
He said INEC made it clear that it was prepared for the elections.
He gave insights into what INEC Chairman Prof. Attahiru Jega told the Council of State meeting and how the military differed.
He said Nigerians were waiting to see whether  or not the military would have rid Adamawa, Borno and Yobe of Boko Haram insurgency.
He said: “I will give you the latest. When INEC submitted a comprehensive document on February 14th election to the Council of State, a number of us made comments. INEC did a good job and they put it on record because after submitting a document, you cannot withdraw it.
“They submitted a document on what they had been doing since 2011, including training of personnel, acquiring election materials and how they were distributing them; and how they secured them.
“They even said they were ready to conduct the election because they had achieved about 60 per cent distribution of the voter cards. In the previous elections, it had never been better than 45 per cent. But they were prepared.
“Somehow, the military told them they cannot guarantee their security. Then six weeks were given and for Nigerians, those six weeks were within the perimeter allowed for the election. So, INEC said they should be allowed to give the military six weeks.”
Gen. Buhari said Nigerians had been watching the military on how it would secure the remaining local government areas before the polls.
He added: “The reasons given have exposed the inefficiency of the leadership because there were only 14 local government areas in the hands of Boko Haram. These were 10 in Borno, two in Yobe and two in Adamawa.
“If Nigerian military cannot secure 14 local government areas in six years, how can they do it in six weeks. We are watching. We have only about 10 days to go in the six weeks. Let us see. In spite of the help of our generous neighbors, let us see whether the remaining LGAs can be secured
“So, those in favour of presidential debate have a lot to do to convince me to do it.”
On press freedom, Gen. Buhari said: “I want to give you my full assurances that in this democratic dispensation, I will ensure that the Nigerian constitution is upheld. This includes respect for the media, respect for the right to free expression and freedom of speech. Many of you are aware of Decree 4 of 1984, which was heavily criticised.
“I have said elsewhere that I cannot change the past. But I can change the present and the future. Dictatorship goes with military rule as do edicts, such as Decree 4.
“ However, I am a former—former, note the emphasis on the word ‘former’—military ruler and now a converted democrat, who is ready to operate under democratic norms.
“I am not only subjecting myself to the rigours of democratic elections for the fourth time, but even after being elected, I will continue to promote the consolidation of democracy in our great country, Nigeria, by guaranteeing that the media’s freedom is not compromised in any way.
“I give you my full assurances that the Nigerian media will be free under our APC government.”
He  urged media owners and editors to shun hate reports and slanderous political rhetorics.
He said: “I also want to use this opportunity to appeal to you to use your media outlets in shaping positive public discourse and eschew hate speech mongering and slanderous political rhetorics which heat up the polity for the sake of peace and stability of our dear nation.
“There are two specific reasons why I have invited you here today. The first is to use the opportunity to say a special thank you to the Nigerian media for the role you have played in advancing our country’s democracy thus far, and especially for being a platform through which Nigerians’ cry for change was articulated all around the world.
“On newspaper pages, TV screens and radio waves, the alarming depth of corruption and impunity in our country, the terrifying level of insecurity, and the grim state of our economy were kept constantly before the world’s eyes, making it impossible for the current government to doctor the truth, despite their meanest efforts.
“I urge you to not relent in your role as watchdogs, to continue to be the voice of the people. The health of Nigeria’s democracy rests partly on you. Without a robust and thriving media, the masses would have no voice.
“The electorate would also not have sufficient information to make sound decisions, such as deciding to vote out a clueless government and vote in change. “
Gen. Buhari added: “Our country is on the verge of something new. The tide has turned and the world can sense the wave of change that is about to flood this nation. In less than two weeks, the Nigerian electorate will head to the polls to make their voices heard. Through the ballot, without a single shot fired, a change revolution will likely take place. “
After his speech, Gen. Buhari responded to questions.
But it was not without drama when NPAN President, Prince Nduka Obaigbena, asked Gen. Buhari if he was ready to apologise to two journalists who were jailed in 1984 under Decree 4.
Immediately after Obaigbena asked the question, the Director-General of APC Presidential Campaign Organisation, Governor Rotimi Amaechi, said: “Gen. Buhari had already answered that question by saying he cannot change the past but he can change present and the future.”
Contrary to rumours of a split in the opposition, ex-Vice-President Atiku Abubakar and top leaders of the party attended the parley.
At the session, Gen. Buhari ruled out any presidential debate with President Goodluck Jonathan.
But the presence of Atiku at the session added flavour as it dispelled rumours of cracks in APC following a meeting between President Goodluck Jonathan and the ex-Vice President.
Clad in a white kaftan, Atiku, who sat on the high table with Gen. Buhari, was all smiles.
An aide of his said: “What happened was that Jonathan in his desperation, visited Atiku at odd hours to seek his assistance to win the poll. There was no way the former VP can snub the nation’s leader. He only listened to him.
“But the ex-VP will not back out of his support for Buhari. His presence at this briefing is a message that the game is up for Jonathan. Has he forgotten how he disgraced Atiku at the Eagle Square to secure the presidential ticket?
“ There was a meeting but there was nothing to it.”

Knocks for Jonathan, PDP over OPC’s Lagos protest

•Dr. Jonathan

Lagosians recovered yesterday from the hangover of Monday’s pro-Goodluck Jonathan protest that crippled parts of the city to condemn the marchers and their sponsors.
Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola led the castigation of the Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC)-led protests.
Members of the outlawed group, acting under security cover, smashed their way through Ikorodu Road while campaigning for President Jonathan’s re-election and calling for the removal of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman Prof. Attahiru Jega.
They roughened up motorists who did not get out of their way quickly and smashed All Progressives Congress (APC) campaign billboards.