Tag: Buhari

  • Buhari mourns niece, says ‘a rare talent is lost’

    Buhari mourns niece, says ‘a rare talent is lost’

    President Muhammadu Buhari has described the death of renowned educationist, Hajiya Amina Dauda, as the “loss of a rare talent in the field of education’’.

    Dauda, a younger sister to his nephew, Mamman Daura, who had been unwell for quite some time, died in Kano where she lived.

    The president made his feelings known in a condolence message, on Tuesday, delivered on his behalf, by a delegation made up of Garba Shehu, Senior Special Assistant, Amb. Lawal Kazaure, Chief of Protocol (SCOP) and Alhaji Musa Haro, Dan’madamin Daura.

    Buhari said he was saddened by the death of the educationist, saying that in her death, the nation had “lost one of its rare talents in the field of education.’’

    He also described her as a veteran school administrator and a popular member of the community.

    “She exemplified simplicity and sublimity, reflecting the virtues of a mother,” he added.

    The president prayed for the peace of her soul, and urged other family members to bear the loss with fortitude.

    One of the sisters of late Amina, Hajiya Hajara Dauda, who received the delegation, thanked the president for the visit.

    She also requested that their condolences be conveyed to the President in turn, praying that Allah guide him to end his tenure well in the same way he began.

  • “Why Buhari should cancel results of presidential election”- Obasanjo

    “Why Buhari should cancel results of presidential election”- Obasanjo

    Former President of Nigeria, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, has called for the cancellation of the results of last Saturday’s presidential election.

    Obasanjo said elections that failed the credibility test on February 25th, 2023 presidential and national assembly elections should be canceled.

    INEC chairman should come clean on allegations that he has collected money from politicians to bypass the use of BVAS

    Obasanjo who was speaking at a press conference in Abeokuta said that tension is currently brewing in the nation as a result of what the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, has done.

    He alleged that the INEC chairman should come clean on allegations that he has collected money from politicians to bypass the use of BVAS.

    Let all election that does not pass credibility test be cancelled and the election be held next Saturday

    According to the former President, based on the electoral act, ” no bvas no results should be acceptable”, adding that where there is no result upload, such result must not be acceptable.

    He said that in the past election have been postponed adding that there is the need for the president to do the needful to save his reputation and character for posterity.

    Mr. President, tension is building up please let all election that does not pass credibility test be cancelled and the election be held next Saturday,” Obasanjo stated.

    "Why Buhari should cancel results of presidential election"- Obasanjo

    He said results have been changed and called on the INEC chairman, the Nigerian Bar Association to look into what must be done for free and fair election next Saturday.

    Adding: “Mr. President please don’t let anybody say to you it does not matter, on no account should you be seen as part of the collusion.”

    The former president stressed that when the die is cast, “it shall be your duty and responsibility”.

    See Obasanjo’s letter to Buhari below

     

  • Buhari hosts National Assembly election winners of Daura constituency

    Buhari hosts National Assembly election winners of Daura constituency

    President Muhammadu Buhari hosted winners of the Senate and House of Representatives elections in Daura Zone of Katsina on Monday.

    His media aide, Malam Garba Shehu, stated that the president hosted the National Assembly members-elect at his country home in Daura and advised them to “respect the voters and make them feel important.

    “If you don’t, they will wait in ambush for you at the next election. Depending on how you deal with them, they will keep you in office, or they will send you packing.’’

    He congratulated the Senator-elect, Malam Nasiru Sani of the All Progressives Congress (APC), who polled 174,062 votes to beat the incumbent, Sen. Ahmed Babba-Kaita, by more than 10,000 votes.

    Babba-Kaita had defected to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) following his defeat at the APC’s primary election.

    Buhari also welcomed the election of Alhaji Aminu Jamo (APC), House of Representatives member-elect for Daura/Sandamu/Mai Adua Federal Constituency who defeated his PDP opponent by more than 10,000 votes.

    The National Legal Adviser of the APC, Ahmed El-Marzuq, who led the elected representatives, told the president that the good showing of the party owed largely to progress recorded in the senatorial zone under the Buhari presidency.

    El-Marzuq cited several projects, which he said had enhanced education, entrepreneurship, social development and the development of human capital in the area.

    He presented copies of the election results to the president.

  • PDP flogs Buhari, loses Kastina in Presidential Election

    PDP flogs Buhari, loses Kastina in Presidential Election

    …Atiku wins with a narrow margin

    President Muhammadu Buhari, has lost his Kastina state to the presidential candidate of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubarkar.

    The candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Ahmed Tinubu, suffered a major setback after his counterpart polled the highest number of votes from the 34 LGAs in the state.

    The SCOPE/Returning Officer for Katsina State Presidential Election, Prof. Ma’azu Abubakar Gusau, announced the result at about 3:00am today, Monday, at the Collation Centre located inside INEC Headquarters, Katsina.

    Atiku polled 489,045 votes to beat his closest contender, Tinubu who scored 482,283.

  • Elections: APC wins Buhari’s Federal Constituency

    Elections: APC wins Buhari’s Federal Constituency

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), has declared Alhaji Aminu Jamo of APC as the winner of Saturday’s election for Daura/Sandamu/Maiadua Federal Constituency seat in Katsina State.

    Prof. Marry Agbo, INEC Returning Officer on Sunday in Daura declared Jamo as the winner of the poll.

    Marry said that Jamo polled 55,964 votes to defeat his main rival, Abdulmumini Dan amanar,, of the PDP, who got 33,398 votes.

    “Having polled the highest number of votes, 55,964 against 33,398, I hereby declare Aminu Jamo as the winner of the election in Daura/Sandamu/Maiadua Federal Constituency.

  • Buhari’s Lonely Days – By Chidi Amuta

    In his final days, Joseph Stalin was adjudged somewhat unhinged by the public and his close lieutenants. But he insisted that he was acting rationally and in the best interests of the nation. The periodic weekend garden party was part of his routine to which he usually invited his close lieutenants, friends and associates. On this occasion towards the end of his turbulent career, he noticed that the attendance was unusually scanty. His usual collection of friends and associates had thinned out to a mere handful.

    When he made his usual grand entrance, he asked aloud: ‘Where have all my friends gone?’ An aide leaned over and whispered into his ears: ‘All gone, all purged…’ Unknown to Stalin, his sweeping purges of anti revolutionary elements had also wiped out majority of his friends and allies. Close to six million had perished on Stalin’s orders. They included party faithful, political allies, secueity king pins and many ordinary folk on whose behalf the revolution was ostensibly launched.

    But for Stalin, mass murder and unparalleled human suffering among the masses meant little. As he famously said: “The death of one man is a tragedy. But the death of many is statistics…”

    The lesson? When a leader unleashes a wild change, it sometimes consumes unintended victims including his acolytes, power devotees and the crowd of hapless citizens. The leader’s curious reward as his career tapers off is usually loneliness, the loneliness of the change maker, the man at the top at the twilight hour between fading incumbency and the exit door of power. The majority of men of power head towards the horizon of powerlessness as lonely miserable figures.

    For Buhari and his Nigerian compatriots, the much anticipated 2023 presidential election has come and gone. As the nation anxiously awaits an outcome, Mr. Buhari must be trying to come to terms with his lonely trek back towards the dusty anonymity of Daura. It does not matter now which way the election turns out. It does not matter who wins or loses. One reality stares Mr. Buhari in the face. It is the imminence of his lonely stretch into the horizon. The preparation came in droves just before the presidential election.

    Though imbued with the habitual quiescence of a Fulani chieftain, Buhari may not find words to describe the stampede among his devotees and party colleagues on the eve of the election. In direct response to the Naira crisis that he deliberately initiated, the reality of political self -interest overwhelmed presidential supremacy. A populace that was eagerly preparing for elections was also caught in the grips of a severe and unanticipated cash scarcity.

    My friend and brother Governor El-Rufai of Kaduna State fired the opening political salvo. El Rufai, long known to support the president in most situations, suggested that the resident power cabal in Aso Villa had taken over the mechanics of Buhari’s power transition. He alleged that the dark knights of the Villa were opposed to the emergence of Bola Tinubu as Buhari’s succe
    Mrs. Aisha Buhari quickly endorsed El Rufai’s contention through a social media share.  The clear and unmistakable message was that Mr. Buhari had lost control not only of his presidency but also the choice of his successor. He had also effectively lost control of his ruling party, the APC.

    Soon afterwards, a chaotic stampede over the raging Central Bank Naira re-coating exercise generated even more discordant voices within the President’s camp.  By choosing to change the higher denominations of the Naira on the eve of yesterday’s presidential election, Buhari had scorched the political rattle snakes in his camp. A cacophony of voices from inside his political household could be heard loudly.

    El-Rufai has accused the Villa of using the Naira crisis to foment trouble in order to scuttle the election that just took place and pave the way for some interim government. Governor Ganduje of Kano joined that toxic narrative. El Rufai had all along been mistaken for an avid Buhari devotee. But he was now an avid Tinubu supporter.

    Overnight, the entire APC governors  in one way or the other joined the legal rebellion against the FG and the CBN over the continuing legal tender of the old N500 and N1000 denominations. A few of the governors insisted publicly that the N500 and N1000 denominations withdrawn by the Central Bank on Presidential orders would remain legal tender in their states. Of course wise people chose to mostly obey the supreme sovereign of the land.

    Festus Keyamo, Buhari’s junior minister for labour insisted in several media interviews that Buhari was ill advised on his  ban on the legal tender of the old N500 and N1000 Naira bills. Typically, Mr. Keyamo tried to spin the Naira controversy in Buhari’s favour while openly revealing that the APC presidential campaign had been injured by the new Naira policy. Hard as he tried, Keyamo ended up with a blistering critique of the president. A spokesman of a ruling party virtually ended up deepening the crisis within the party by dividing the party in power from its leader.

    He did not stop there, he waded into the murky zone of the Supreme Court’s interim order on the Naira crisis by suggesting that the President may have disobeyed the apex court by exempting the N200 bill from the ban on old large denomination notes.
    That contentious intervention attracted an equally weighty counter attack. Mr. Babatunde Fashola, Buhari’s Minister of Works and himself a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, disagreed with Keyamo. Fashola argued that the president did not necessarily undermine or disobeye the Supreme Court. Two senior lawyers in the same cabinet, the same party, the same cabinet with diametrically opposed views.

    But Mr. Keyamo had yanked his pound of flesh. As the spokesperson of the Bola Tinubu campaign, Keyamo knows where the butter of his political future is buttered. He openly chose to defend the APC presidential candidate over the party and the lame duck president. Yet, he remains a minister in Buhari’s rump cabinet! In an earlier maneuver, he had preferred to don his lawyer’s Whig and Gown and rush to court to press charges against Mr. Atiku Abubakar over a purely political propaganda disagreement over political money movements.

    In a similar vein, Buhari’s Information Commissar, Lai Mohammed, deepened the confusion and pandemonium within the president’s political enclave. He saw no reason why the president of a ruling party should initiate a hostile policy such as the Naira swap crisis on the eve of a general election. Worse still, he saw no reason why Bola Tinubu as APC presidential candidate should  be critical of Buhari since he is a candidate of the incumbent party presided over by Mr. Buhari.

    For him, quite rightly, Mr. Tinubu ought to have been running on the performance record of the party under Buhari in the last eight years in power. Lai Mohammed reminded Tinubu that he is not an independent candidate but a ruling party flag bearer.

    Just before the presidential election, injured politicians and political court messengers were up in arms.  A major party man, Adams Oshiomole, did not want to be left out of the fray. Mr. Oshiomole had been Edo State governor on an APC ticket and was later the party’s National chairman. But he is also a known Bola Tinubu acolyte. He added his voice to the political quarrels over the Naira crisis. He sided with Mr. Tinubu and others in criticizing the president and the Central Bnk for a policy which he saw as clearly targeted at Mr. Tinubu and money pot politics.

    Regard for the president’s glorified toga seemed to have evaporated matter little. Party loyalty and solidarity also counted for little. In any case, a ruling party not bound by any common belief is no better than a conclave of thieves. When the common bond of power incumbency becomes shaky, the party degenerates into a free for all. Everyman to himself and the devil to us all! Inside the APC on the eve of the presidential election, support for and opposition to Tinubu’s presidential ambition seemed to have swamped devotion to the lame duck Buhari. Why?

    The flight of APC and other governors towards Tinubu is a natural political migration of convenience. The ongoing desertion of Buhari will accelerate. It is a consequence of his lack of his fading relevance as his tenure wanes. For the avoidance of doubt, Buhari has always been a political merchandise with an expiration date. The date is on hand and is irreversible.

    The political hawks used him and his mythology to come to federal power as APC. He has largely expired. His moment of supremacy is nearly over. A party that stood for nothing tangible other than an evanescent Buhari myth cannot outlast the life span of that mascot. That hour has come. We can see the beginnings in the cacophony of voices  among the APC governors.

    The President’s northern solidarity and cult followership is also about to end as ordinary northerners come to terms with their massive deficits of the last eight years, Violence, massive school shut downs, banditry, deserted farms, unemployment, deepened poverty would seem to summarize the Buhari presidency. From the loud shouts of ‘Sai Baba!’, the youth are now hurling stones at him.

    It has taken the Naira crisis just before the presidential election to bring Mr. Buhari face to face with the clear and present danger of an unraveling party. Perhaps he needed the Naira crisis to come to a full realization of the true nature of political self interest among Nigerian politicians. It is for him a sneak preview of his own imminent loneliness in power.

    Politics and big money travel together. Take away money from political actors at election time and all hell is let loose. The fangs and red teeth of the political jackals is exposed. The Nigerian politician, starved of money to buy votes, bribe enablers and corrupt the political process, the  red claws of the politician cones out.

    Therefore, beneath the rage of leading political actors over the Naira crisis is the outrage of threatened political fortunes.  State governors are destabilized that they cannot deploy their huge cash holdings to influence the outcome of the elections in their domains. Their anger with the Central Bank and the President is principally on this score. Of course, given the widespread hardship and economic dislocation that the Naira re-issue has created all over the country, it is convenient for infuriated state governors to override tdheir own interests with the larger concern for the welfare of the populace. In the run up to a crucial election, the appeal to a ready popular outrage over scarcity of cash becomes a political weapon in the hands of a president that is seen as a serial traducer of the political class irrespective of partisan affiliation.

    But the damage of the Naira crisis to the APC is by far the most consequential. President Buhari remains the major cohesive cforce that was instrumental to the formation of the APC. His leadership, effete as it has been, remained the cohesive force that held the coat of many colours together as a party in power. Power incumbency remained the lifeblood of the party for the last eight years.

    With no substantial idea to hold on to, the APC could only survice as a party for as long as it remains in power. Once the president collaborated with the Central Bank of Nigeria to unleash the Naira ambush at a last critical moment before the election, the president had vicariously parted company politically with his party. The contraption was doomed to unravel unless it produces the next president. That hypothesis should be tested in the next couple of days or hours.

    Yet the gravity of the immediate pre-election stampede in the APC will outlast this transition period. Since the results of the presidential election are still awaited, we can only hazard a guess as to the immensity of Buhari’s looming loneliness on his way home. If Mr. Bola Tinubu of the APC emerges the winner of this election, he would have scored that victory in spite of the clear financial obstacles placed in his way by an incumbent president of his own party. A victorious Tinubu is not likely to assume the most friendly stance towards Mr.Buhari after May 29th. But even at that, Buhri cannot expect to control the party once he is out of the Villa.

    If, on the contrary, Mr. Tinubu loses the election to any of the other contestants, we may have seen the end of APC as a party. A Tinubu loss in this election will also be the end of APC. The factions in the party will seek to take control of whatever remains of the party. There will be nothing seriously at stake to compel a survival of the party.

    Mr. Tinubu will head home to lick his wounds after a predictable period of post election trfouble making. The APC governors who survive politically either in enthroning their own successors or winning elections into the Senate are likely to fly the APC flag for as long as it takes for a new majority party to gain control of power at the center. The gale of decampment will follow as alignmnets and re-alignments among politicians take over the stage.

    Mr. Buhari will go home into a deserved retirement and bear the burden of being the man who torpedoed his own party from power at the moment of succession. But privately, he will have had a definitive say on who ‘ does not succeed him”. If it turns out that the election is adjudged free and fair by local and international observers and opinion drivers, then Mr. Buhari will have scored his definitive legacy. He will go down as the president who presided over a free and fair election to ensure a succession that did not necessarily sustain his party’s hold on power. Privately, whatever personal grievance the president may have had against the conduct and outcome of the APC presidential primaries in May 2022 will have been assuaged.

    Let us hope that in the next couple of hours, the Nigerian electorate will have decided the fate of the contending parties, especially the APC. Interestingly, the APC also confronts us with an answer to an interesting question of political theory and the nature of democracy. Will an electorate reward a political party which has punished the people with every known calamity in the last eight years? That is the crux of the verdict that we are all anxiously waiting for.

  • “Buhari was right on naira redesign policy”- Inibehe Effiong

    “Buhari was right on naira redesign policy”- Inibehe Effiong

    Public Interest and Human Rights Lawyer, Inibehe Effiong, has hailed President Muhammadu Buhari over the naira redesign policy, saying “Buhari was right on this one. But INEC is incompetent”.

    He added: “Everyone can now see the reason for the tears of many against the Naira redesign policy. This is the first time that I witnessed an election in my unit without cash inducement. There’s no money to share.”

    According to him, if the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) wins the forthcoming gubernatorial election in Akwa Ibom, it will be because of vote buying, violence and rigging.

    “What I saw today is a serious revolt against the PDP. People are really angry against the PDP and it is commendable,” he said.

    The human rights lawyer posted on Twitter the results of his polling unit as thus: (Total Accredited Voters – 218) PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION LP – 71, PDP – 35, YPP – 42, APC – 27, NNPP – 13, SDP – 8, ZLP – 7, ADC -3, AAC – 2, APM 1, ADC – 3, NRM – 1, Void – 8 .

    “YPP received many LP votes because of a lack of proper orientation. YPP people are for LP.,” Effiong asserted,

    "Buhari was right on naira redesign policy"- Inibehe Effiong (Videos of thugs on rampage in Lagos during poll)
    Inibehe Effiong

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) recalls that Effiong had filed a lawsuit against the federal government over the suspension of Twitter operations in Nigeria.

    Effiong sued the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, and the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, as well as the federal government, in a suit filed on Tuesday at the Federal High Court in Lagos.

    The lawyer, in his originating motion marked FHC/L/CS/542/2021, asked the court to grant his nine prayers, including an order of perpetual injunction restraining the respondents from further suspending, deactivating or banning the operations and accessibility of Twitter or any other social media service in Nigeria.

    In addition, he asked the court to rule that the federal government’s threat to prosecute citizens who “violate” Twitter’s suspension or ban in the absence of any written law is illegal.

    Meanwhile, a video captured thugs on the rampage in Lagos State during February 25th Presidential and Senatorial election.

    Watch the video below

     

  • Buhari’s promise of conducting 2023 election coming to pass – Malami

    Buhari’s promise of conducting 2023 election coming to pass – Malami

    The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, SAN, says he sees President Muhammadu Buhari’s promise of conducting transparent and peaceful 2023 elections coming to pass.

    Malami made this known while addressing journalists at Shiryar Fada, Garkar Na Gambo polling unit, Nassarawa ward1,  Birnin-Kebbi on Saturday shortly after casting his vote.

    He described the elections as part of the concluding processes associated with the democratic transition.

    Malami said he was satisfied with the conduct of the exercise, adding: ”Everything humanly possible was done to ensure free, fair and credible elections in the country.

    “We are happy that INEC is doing a wonderful job by ensuring fairness, equity and transparency of the process.

    “As you can, see the election is peaceful. People are casting their votes without any extraneous influences.

    “I think the process is establishing the point made by President Muhammadu Buhari, when he promised that the elections will hold on Feb. 25.”

    Malami said the elections were peacefully conducted in line with INEC guidelines and in conformity with the provisions of the electoral Act, the constitution as well as international best practices.

  • Election update: Buhari casts his vote, breaches Electoral Act by displaying his ballot at Daura Polling Unit

    Election update: Buhari casts his vote, breaches Electoral Act by displaying his ballot at Daura Polling Unit

    President Muhammadu Buhari cast his vote in Daura on Saturday, violated Electoral Act, 2022 by publicly displaying showing he voted his party, APC.

    It was a 20-year personal record for Buhari being that it was the first time in the period that Buhari was not standing for a presidential election.

    Speaking after his vote shortly after 10.07 a.m. the president said that he voted for the person that he had been saying that he would vote for.

    The action of President Buhari in displaying his vote in Daura according to pundits is in violation of Section 94 of the Electoral Act which stipulates that no one should do anything to promote a candidate for the election within 24 hours of the poll.

    Details shortly…

  • Naira swap policy: Buhari not in breach of Supreme Court order – Malami

    Naira swap policy: Buhari not in breach of Supreme Court order – Malami

    The Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami says President Muhammadu Buhari has not acted in breach of any law on the Supreme Court order in respect of the naira redesign policy.

    The minister stated this at the Ministerial Media Briefing organised by the Presidential Communications Team at the Presidential Villa, Thursday in Abuja.

    Malami affirmed that the federal government did not act contrary to the law of the federation, saying ”as far as the rule of law is concerned, there are many options available”.

    The minister, who spoke extensively on the benefits of electoral reforms, noted that ”it is only the Buhari’s administration that has exercised the political will to enhance democratic practice through legislative, political, and administrative interventions.”

    Governors Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano State, Dapo Abiodun of Ogun, and Nasir el-Rufai of Kaduna State, had openly condemned and denigrated the implementation of the naira swap policy.

    They asked people in their states to continue to spend the old N500 and N1000 as legal tenders.

    However, the minister said: ”We are not in breach of any order made by the court, inclusive of any order associated with the naira redesign.

    “I’m not a banker, but you have not gone to establish which bank is it that you have gone to present N1000 or N500 notes that have been rejected; so we are not in breached of any ruling.

    “But then, assuming we are in breach, the fact remains that this matter is sub-judice, as you rightly know. It’s being contested before the Supreme Court and when an order is made, you have multiple options within the context of the rule of law.

    ”You are entitled as a matter of right, if the facts and evidence support your position, to apply for setting it aside.

    ”The position of the law, and legal jurisprudence is clear, once you are attacking and you seeking a setting aside of an existing order of the court, cannot be said to be operating in breach when you presented your application for setting aside.

    “If the court is not an apex court, you equally have a right to appeal and support the right of appeal with an application for a Stay of Execution Order.

    ”So, if the matter is sub-judice and within the context of the rule of law, we are doing the needful as a government, in terms of ensuring that the right of the government, within the context of the naira redesign, is being protected.

    ”So we are not in breach.”

    On the fate of the governors allegedly inciting citizens against the currency redesign policy, Malami said all those inciting the public would be investigated for treasonable utterances by the security agencies soon.

    According to him, relevant security agencies will determine if there will be a need for further action after investigation.

    Malami highlighted the importance of the redesign policy, which he said would enable citizens to assume collective ownership of the electoral system rather than allowing a few moneybags to take charge.

    According to the minister,the policy is designed to allow freedom of choice and also fight corruption.