Tag: Mai Mala Buni

  • Buni returns to Nigeria after medical trip abroad, takes over leadership of APC

    Buni returns to Nigeria after medical trip abroad, takes over leadership of APC

    Governor of Yobe State, Mai Mala Buni has returned to Nigeria from his medical trip abroad and taken over the leadership of All Progressives Congress (APC) Caretaker and Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC).

    Upon return to the country, Buni said he duly transmitted power to the Governor of Niger State Governor, Muhammed Sani Bello and that all actions and measures taken by the committee under his leadership as acting chairman of the party remain valid and binding.

    This is contained in a release by his Director General, Press and Media Affairs, Alhaji Mamman Mohammed in Damaturu on Thursday. Mohammed said that Buni appealed to all party members to remain calm and law-abiding.

    “Put the recent events in the party behind you and work towards a successful Convention. The success of the party remain paramount and needs the support of every member. As we head towards the National Convention, the party needs the support of every stakeholder and member to succeed.

    “As democrats and committed party members, we should avoid issues that are capable of diverting our attention from the path of success,” Buni was quoted to have said.

    According to the press release, Buni said it was a waste of time to hold grudges against individuals involved in the recent happenings in the party, saying grudges were detrimental to the success of a party.

    He expressed gratitude to President Muhammadu Buhari for the amicable resolution of the recent misunderstanding in the party.

    “We appreciate the good leadership role played by Mr President in resolving the recent events to keep a united and strong APC,” he said.

    Buni said that all actions taken by the APC CECPC under Gov. Abubakar Bello of Niger, who was the acting chairman, remained valid and binding.

    “I duly transmitted power to His Excellency the Niger State Governor, Muhammed Sani Bello. Therefore, all actions and measures taken by the committee under his leadership as acting chairman, remain valid and binding,” Buni said.

    Convention: Buni endorses actions taken by Bello as acting chairman

    Meanwhile, Buni has endorsed actions taken by Gov. Abubakar Bello of Niger as acting chairman of the APC CECPC.

    Buni confirmed validating those actions while reacting to media reports that he had suspended some of them.

    “This is to bring to the notice of all stakeholders and members of the party that the purported suspension of some activities initiated and executed by the CECPC under the acting chairman and Niger Governor, Muhammed Bello is not true.

    “Therefore, all activities that were done in my absence remain valid and binding. All party stakeholders and members are hereby advised to disregard the previous statement discarding the activities of the committee under the leadership of the acting chairman,’’ Buni said.

    He said he duly transferred leadership of the committee to the Niger governor before travelling outside the country for medical attention.

    “Therefore, all actions and measures taken by the committee under his leadership as Acting Chairman remain effective,’’ Buni who is also the Governor of Yobe said.

    He called for the support and understanding of the party’s members to move it forward to a successful National Convention slated for March 26.

    New national executives are expected to be elected at the party’s national convention to manage its affairs currently being managed by the CECPC.

  • Court fixes date to hear suit seeking to stop APC National Convention

    Court fixes date to hear suit seeking to stop APC National Convention

    An FCT High Court in Kubwa has fixed Friday to hear a suit seeking to stop the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Convention.

    The plaintiff in the matter, Salisu Umoru, dragged APC, the Chairman Caretaker Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee and Gov. Mai Mala Buni and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) before the court to challenge the planned convention.

    Justice Bello Kawu fixed the date for hearing following the plaintiff’s counsel, Mike Enaharo-Ebah’s application for an adjournment.

    Enaharo-Ebah told the court that he needs time to go through some applications due to the clash of representation of defence counsel on March 15.

    He said there were two counsel for APC and Buni and the court adjourned the matter untill Thursday for report of proper representation which has been resolved.

    ” We need to address his processes since issues of representation has been resolved and ask for a short adjournment to enable us file counters and written addresses with some of the pending bail applications, ” Enaharo-Ebah said.

    In response the defence counsel, Shuaibu Aruwa SAN, said he filed a notice of change of counsel duly served to the plaintiff on March 10 with his address endorsed on it.

    Aruwa, however, urged the court to discountenace the claimant’s application for adjournment and hear the pending application.

    Earlier, the defence counsel told the court that he had written two separate letters to the court on representing the defendants on March 16.

    Aruwa said one of the letters was signed on behalf of the APC by Head of Legal Services, Dare Oketabi and the second signed by the second defendant, Buni confirming that Aruwa’s law firm was briefed to represent the defendants in the suit.

    The News Agency of Nigeria recalls that Umoru in his reliefs sought an order directing the APC and its Chairman caretaker/Extraordinary convention Planning Committee, Buni to stop its planned National Convention.

    He also sought an order directing Buni to begin reconciliation process to resolve all the disputes that emanated from the local government congresses before the conduct of APC National Convention.

    The court had on Nov. 18, granted an interim injunction restraining the APC from proceeding with its planned Convention.

  • Is APC Made Up Of Yahoo-Yahoo Governors And Drug Dealing Gang? – By Magnus Onyibe

    Is APC Made Up Of Yahoo-Yahoo Governors And Drug Dealing Gang? – By Magnus Onyibe

    By Magnus Onyibe

    The adjectives used to describe the APC above are actually not mine. They are borrowed from governors in APC family who used the exact same dirty sobriquets to characterize their own party.

    When I read the news reports where the ruling party at the center, APC was labeled with the negative epithets that form the title of this article, I was jarred and astounded.

    That is simply because I never envisaged or anticipated that there would be a period in the annals of our beloved country that political chicanery would degenerate to the extent that the ruling party would be tarred with such a black brush by its leaders — and not the opposition party members.

    That such an esteemed platform as the ruling party, APC of which the first six citizens of our great country –(President, Vice President, President of the Senate and his deputy as well as the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the deputy) not forgetting the platform which at least 23 of the 36 governors in Nigeria belong — is being described and characterized with such expletives, is astonishing to me.

    And I believe that l am not the only one nonplused by the unsavory development as l suspect that the same feeling of embarrassment would apply to a plethora of right-thinking men and women of goodwill in our beloved Nigeria.

    Indeed, I was aghast with displeasure, ( I am of the conviction that perhaps you too, my dear readers would have been) when l read the following in most of the daily newspapers that one of the governors from the North-East geopolitical zone protested that “the cabal formed by our other colleagues has suf­focated the life out of APC. The party has been reduced to the equivalent of a drug-dealing gang where decisions are now based on who can manipulate President (Muhammadu) Bu­hari better.”

    Continuing, the source contended that:

    “Even if APC governors were constituted into a kind of electoral college to make deci­sions for the party, which is not the case, there is no way seven is greater than thirteen. When you have only seven governors forcing their decision on thir­teen governors of equal juris­diction then you know there is a problem.”

    The obviously highly offended governor continued venting his anger by making the following explanation:

    “So, what we are saying is that we are ready for them. We are not saying that Mai Mala Buni should not stop being the chairman of CECPC, but our point is that there must be due process. There is a proper way to go about it, not some charac­ter sneaking to the president to snitch in the dark of the night and then come out throwing the president’s name around”

    He concluded his umbrage by issuing a threat:

    “If they want us to fall out with them as fellow APC gov­ernors then we are ready. But this thing about being dictato­rial must stop. It is a democra­cy, and the APC must run as a democracy. Or else there is no example we are showing any­body as leaders.”

    The forgoing copious reproduction of traditional and online newspapers reports quoting an aggrieved governor who spoke anonymously signposts the turmoil within the ruling party, APC.

    As if being choreographed, Governor Rotimi Akeredolu of Ondo State, who is the chairman of southern governors forum, and elected on APC platform was more frontal and caustic in his outburst about the state of anomie that has engulfed the ruling party at the center commencing soon after its re-election victory at the polls in 2019; and culminating into the dissolution of the Adams Oshiomhole led National Working Committee, NWC, that was replaced with Mai Mala Buni led Caretaker Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC) since June 2020. As if the fiasco is not terrible enough, chairman Buni just got shoved aside on Sunday, March 6, 2022, and replaced with Abubakar Sani-Bello, Niger state Governor. At least that is according to some members of the party who are against the continued leadership of Buni as reported in the mass media. Until the fog is cleared, right now everything about the APC seems to be in flux.

    That is simply because, nearly two years after CEPCC was established to organize a national convention for the ruling party, APC in six months, holding a convention has remained a mirage.

    According to a statement credited to Akeredolu:

    “We, the Governors are for the party except for the few ‘Yahoo, Yahoo’ Governors (apologies to Salihu, former DG of the Progressive Governors’ Forum) who were hand in glove with Buni to circumvent the will of the majority of our Party (APC) members.”

    He then emphasized that:

    “Progressive Governors in the true name, mostly all of us, are determined to see our Party through these patchy parts at all cost. None of the scanty numbers has the guts to carry out their imaginary threats as reported in sponsored stories. We dare them to leave the party.”

    As a senior advocate of Nigeria and former president of the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, Akeredolu’s statement is weighty.

    Kaduna state governor, Nasir El-Rufai, who never shies away from engaging in political cat-fights also joined in the brawl:

    Said he in an interview that he granted Channels televising: “Buni is gone, the Secretary is gone. Governor Bello is in charge and he has the backing of President Muhammadu Buhari and 19 governors. Buni can only return as Governor of Yobe State but never as chairman of our party.

    “President Buhari ordered his removal and this has been implemented. Governor Bello has taken over and things are moving according to plan. The party will be restored and the convention will take place as scheduled. The 19 governors and their deputies are solidly behind this move.

    “Buni and his people got a court order to stop the convention but hid it.”

    The ousted Mai Mala Buni’s camp roiled by El-Rufai’s allegations against their leader had fired their own salvo at the governor of Kaduna state.

    The pro-Buni APC Integrity Group leader, Adams Abel said: “El-Rufai should be sufficiently schooled to accept that the APC is not Kaduna State that he governs by fiat.”

    “APC has organs that have layers of responsibility and at no time was the power to hire and fire a caretaker chairman outsourced to El-Rufai”.

    The claim that Buni failed to swear in state executives was also not valid, according to the APC Integrity Group.

    “El-Rufai claimed that Governors and President (Buhari) directed Governor Buni to swear in state Excos elected months ago and that he never followed the order; that the Progressive Governors’ Forum (PGF) asked him to brief them, but he did not.”

    Going further, the APC Integrity Group, Secretary-General made the following arguement against Governor El-Rufai:

    “He should have explained how Buni is supposed to swear in state excos when as many as 14 state chapters were bogged down by court cases that resulted from the kind of autocratic tendencies of the PGF.”

    “It also showed an absolute disregard for the other arms of government since the Kaduna State Governor was practically expecting his Yobe state counterpart to disregard extant court orders that forbade the swearing-in of some of the state excos he was referring to.”

    Indeed, according to reports gleaned from the Punch newspaper, the APC has about 208 cases filed in the court of law against it.
    Most of them are related to the contentious party congresses held across the country that are being largely disputed as they pitched governors against legislators who are more often than not ex-governors engaged in supremacy battles in a bid to control the party in their respect states.

    Since June 2020 when Adams Oshiomhole led National Working Committee, NWC of the APC was dissolved, and the Mai Mala Buni Special Convention Committee was inaugurated, 23 months after, on March 8, 2022, it was claimed that Abubakar Sani-Bello mounted the leadership saddle of the ruling party at the center, APC.

    This simply means that in a period of less than three years, the leadership of APC has changed hands thrice, if the position of the anti-Buni group prevails.

    But thankfully, it would appear that the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC has helped the APC to save itself by rejecting the purported new chairman on technical grounds. This is underscored by the fact that allowing the perfidy of appointing another chairman without due process happening within the APC fold to stand, there would be a constitutional lacuna similar to the type that was on the verge of ensuing, if President Buhari had not signed the electoral bill into an act to enable the electioneering process to commence according to INEC timetable, hence without further delay, he appended his signature on February 25, 2022.

    Since over seven years ago that the APC became the ruling party at the center after its presidential candidate, General Mohammadu Buhari defeated then incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan of the PDP in the 2015 general elections, the party has been unable to hold a convention to blend the interests and philosophies of the five parties that collapsed into one party to oust PDP .

    Rather, it has on numerous occasions, postponed the organization of a critical convention that should ordinarily have been held after the formation of the party 2013/14 which is pre-2015 general elections won by president Buhari.

    Even after Mr President’s re-election in 2019, and stretching into three years into his second term, the ruling party has postponed holding a convention not less than two (2) times in less than two years.

    Just before the February 26th last scheduled date of the convention , it was shifted to March 26th which may develop ‘K-Leg’ as we like to term things that go awry in our clime.

    With the current change of leadership following Sani-Bello’s hostile take over of affairs from Buni as the helmsman, (as widely reported in the mass media ) the party’s convention may once again be in jeopardy.

    But as things look, the new acting chairman, Abubakar Sanni-Bello, who is the current Niger State Governor and deputizing for Buni (or in his shadows) looks set to deliver where others before him had failed.

    Otherwise, the party would be like a drifter and possibly a house of cards in the dictionary sense of the word-: a structure, situation, or institution that is insubstantial, shaky, or in constant danger of collapse.

    When l started writing this article, early last week, it was titled: APC House of Commotion, and Mai Mala Buni was still holding sway as chairman. It was an apt title. Since l have lots of friends in the ruling party at the center that would accuse me of being uncharitable, l toned down the title to what it is currently and which is simply a question to which I am seeking an answer.

    In response to questions from statehouse reporters before embarking on the trip for a medical check-up in the United Kingdom, UK, president Buhari had assured Nigerians that the APC would not implode as being feared in some quarters. Owing to my assessment based on environmental scanning of the local dynamics , l have been consistent in sounding the alarm about the inevitable and now imminent disastrous end of the ruling party at the center if proper care is not taken by the leaders who need to quickly do some housekeeping to nip the persistent schisms within the party in the pod before they degenerate into catastrophic crisis as signposted by the following nine (9) ominous signs:

    (1) Inability to hold a convention in about eight years since it became the ruling party at the center.

    (2) Hordes of aggrieved participants heading to court after a calamitous congress held recently.

    (3) Frequent change of national working committee, NWC.

    (4) Rebellion against presidency from National Assembly, NASS via refusal to allow Aso Rock villa have its way by not deleting clause 84 (12) in the new Electoral Act as earlier agreed.

    (5) Unable to decide on the zone from which its presidential candidate would emerge.

    (6) Supremacy battle bordering on internal sabotage between governors of the ruling party with 19 supporting the new CECPC chairman, Abubakar Sanni-Bello, Governor of Niger state versus 4 governors in favor of the deposed Mai Mala Buni, Governor of Yobe state as claimed by El Rufai.

    (7) Uncertainty on the presumed breach of party constitution via two serving governors back-to-back acting as chairman of the party at different times and therefore making APC susceptible to litigation and the risk of rendering all actions taken by CEPCC in the past two years as illegitimate and ultra vires.

    (8) On account of the ruling by justice Ekwo of the high court in Abuja that Ebonyi state Governor, Dave Umahi, his deputy, Eric Dike, and 15 members of the house of the assembly who defected from the PDP to APC should vacate their positions because the electorate voted for the party and not the individual, Cross Rivers and Zamfara states governors who similarly defected to APC are running hitter titter around the courts hoping that the same calamity would not befall them.

    (9) The snare of about 208 court cases instituted against the party by its own members, particularly the one stopping the proposed convention date is yet to be discharged and therefore an existential booby trap.

    Fellow Nigerians, you would agree with me that any political party that is fraught with the underlined litany or legion of deformities is certainly in jeopardy.

    So, whatever the parameter that is applied in assessing the crisis riddled APC, the bottom line would be that the ruling party at the center is a Special Purpose Vehicle, SPV, and a contraption of sorts that was leveraged to achieve the objective of booting out ex-president Goodluck Jonathan from Aso Rock villa and replacing him with Mohammadu Buhari in 2015 as president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    Without exception, all SPVs expire.

    And as President Buhari’s term expires on May 29, 2023, willy nilly, the SPV that ushered him into the presidency will be expiring pari-pasu.

    And I would dare to add that if the current commotion continues in the ruling party as it enters the electioneering year, the general election in 2023 is for the main opposition party PDP, to lose.

    Owing to the internal combustion consuming the APC, I suspect that Adams Oshiomhole, the deposed Chairman of the ruling party at the centre, would be laughing in derision at the sordid turn of events in the party which he led to victory in 2019 and which shoved him out thereafter.

    It would appear that having exhausted external battles with opposing political parties, particularly the PDP that it had been blaming for all the calamities that have befallen our beloved country, during which the APC has poached at least three governors from the PDP and a legion of opposition parties legislators under Buni’s leadership,it is now turned the barrels of its guns against itself, hence the raging battle within the party that suggests that there would be a conflagration of immense proportions sooner than later.

    While I would like to take to heart President Buhari’s parting words to Aso Rock villa correspondents while departing for his medical check-up in the United Kingdom, UK that the APC would not implode as being speculated, all pieces of evidence are against such optimism.

    Hence on Saturday, March 12, obviously angry and disappointed president Buhari changed from his earlier optimistic prognosis of the state of inviolability or invincibility of the ruling party to a posture of recognizing the anarchy threatening to engulf the party, which he had earlier discountenanced. Aware of the looming dangers threatening the continued existence of the party if certain precautions were not taken, President Buhari, in a statement released by his media aid, Garba Shehu, read a riot act to the leaders of the APC that are causing the rift within the party.

    Part of it bears repeating:

    “This is a party that has been in existence barely for eight years, becoming the dominant party because it has thrown open its doors to defectors from other parties, big and small.”
    Mr President further argued that:
    “This alone, addition to the fact we didn’t start on the note of arrogance of power, nor see government as a vehicle for self-aggrandizement, to be held at all costs, but a vehicle to bring development to all without discrimination-political, ethnic or regional to our dear country made this success possible”.
    He pointed out that:
    “When precisely the party’s convention is held and who is the party’s chairman is hardly a matter for the average voter: vastly more important is who convention delegates will elect as the party’s flagbearer in the coming weeks to take forward the party’s platform to the people in the general election in February next year.
    He therefore noted that:
    “It is therefore important for the media to put such matters into perspective. No one is debating policy differences here.”

    President Buhari is absolutely correct about the fact that barely a year to the general election, nothing is being said about the policies and programs of those angling to take over from him. This applies particularly to how to save our beloved country from the clutches of the nefarious ambassadors that have made our country a killing field — Boko Haram, IWAP, bandits disguising as violent herdsmen on one hand — and on the other hand, the doldrums that the economy is currently trapped and which has seen the Naira exchange rate inching towards the N600 to $1 mark and diesel price skyrocketing to about N1000 per liter (black market rate) amid a scarcity of petrol or Premium Motor Oil, PMS that has been wracking the polity in the past couple of weeks.

    Remarkably, whereas it took the PDP sixteen (16)years to implode , it has taken the ruling APC only right (8) years to reach a breaking point.
    In my recent comments about the state of the nation politically in the past one month, l have been advising President Buhari to beware of the curved balls that fellow party members may throw at him as he enters his lame-duck period which is the weakest point of a political leader’s time in office as he/she becomes very vulnerable.

    Just as the moment of interchange between night and day period is dangerous spiritually, it is equally so politically and at a time when a leader must yield power. That is basically because in the metaphysical realms before the clock strikes 12 o’clock and the night is transformed into the early morning, all sorts of complex and dangerous activities take place. That event is mirrored in the world of politics hence the current hurly-burly or hullabaloos in APC.

    It is trite restating the fact that Mr. President is currently effectively in his home stretch and at a critical period that he must maintain and sustain his control of the ruling party and the country as it is now barely one year to the termination of his reign. If he losses grip, his word may not be law anymore; and if he fails to bark and bite with the limited political strength that he can muster, he might literarily exit Aso Rock Villa with his tails between his legs.

    That is why l counseled that Mr. President should beware of the proverbial Ides of March (in Shakespeare’s play “Julius Caesar,” a warning given to Caesar about March 15, the day on which he was assassinated)

    To be clear, in this stance in Nigeria and in president Buhari’s case, I am talking figuratively and it means assassination politically as opposed to physical or taking of life.

    Already, President Buhari was surprised when a seemingly harmless nationwide exercise of registration of APC party members that was supposed to be a good thing became the first curved ball thrown at him as it was going to result in his losing control of the party following the introduction of direct primary as the sole process of producing candidates to political parties for general elections as captured in the electoral act reform bill packaged the National Assembly, NASS which he vetoed in the nick of time.

    The rejected bill at Mr. President’s behest had subsequently been reworked by NASS, and the three processes -direct, indirect, and consensus options were retained in the new bill. But this time, it came with a caveat which is a new element introduced via clause 84(12) which ties the hands of the members of the executive arm of government behind their back as their appointees-ministers, Commissioners, Advisers, etc are barred from voting or being voted for and must resign 180 days before an election. The proviso controverts the 30 days provision for public servants interested in contesting for public office to resign from their jobs as enshrined in the 1999 constitution of the federal republic of Nigeria as amended.

    Therein lies the dilemma which the electoral law in president Buhari’s eyes suffers as it is undemocratic simply because it disenfranchises political appointees from exercising their civic rights. The legislators who authored it feel otherwise and civil society advocates are hands in gloves with them. And they have the concurrence of the interpretative community which is the courts, hence justice Inyang Ekwo of Abuja High court, granted the application by the main opposition party, PDP that the newly minted electoral act 2022 can not be altered as requested by president Buhari without due process.
    Apparently, the courts are also now exhaling and exercising some independence.

    Just as President Buhari was trying to absorb the blow, the schism that was about to tear the party apart through sabotage by some aggrieved stakeholders who had reportedly gone to the extreme extent of procuring a court judgment that would stop the convention from holding as planned on the 26th of this month, if it remains not vacated, because it would cause another postponement of the convention. And that would imperil the party and possibly the whole election process if and when the convention is held in contravention of INEC election rule of 21 days notice before a convention is held and also being duly informed about a change of guard in the leadership of a party. All of the above criterion have to be complied with. But if Sani-Bello were to assume leadership of APC after INEC’s election timetable has started running from February this year, compliance with INEC rules as encapsulated in the 1999 constitution of the federal republic of Nigeria, would be impossible.

    Would Zamfara state experience whereby the ruling party APC’s votes were voided for technical reasons and the PDP took over the political leadership of the state from governor to legislators, manifest on a national scale in 2023 against the ruling party if it fails to put its house in order as cautioned by President Buhari in the riot act that he read out to his fellow party leaders last Sunday?

    As a crisis manager, I have been drawing attention to the entity formation processes that a group must pass through as espoused by psychologist Bruce Tuckman.

    These are Forming, Storming, Norming, and Stabilizing. There is also the Mourning stage, assuming the initial four stages do not happen smoothly. That is what is staring the APC in the face right now.

    In my assessment, after Forming the APC in 2013/14, it was afraid to confront its demons, so it kept postponing the Storming stage which is only just happening right now. Put succinctly, the current storm in the ruling party should have happened long ago as opposed to taking place in the 11th hour or injury time as football lovers like to term last-minute actions in the field of play. Were that to be the case, there could have been enough time for the Stabilizing process to kick in. And this would have been the healing period for the wounds that might have been inflicted during the Storming stage as reflected by the APC leaders using expletives on themselves and engaging in vile name-calling which is the underlying reason for the title of this article and a damning situation addressed by president Buhari in his riot act.

    Right now, the APC may be going into a war (2023 elections) with fresh wounds owing to a rebellion within the ranks of its members, which is a recipe for a disastrous outcome.

    These are not cold calculations and they are not made with a view to hurting the APC or promoting any party, nor are they meant to stir up the society in any negative way as those who are averse to the truth may want to present it to authorities with the sinister motive of getting security agencies to start running ‘Kiti-Kata’ chasing shadows and unseen enemies.

    Rather, it is a patriotic effort to call attention to the odds stacked up against the APC which is the ruling party at the center and by implication whose imperilment may torpedo the entire political system in Nigeria. That is in case the leaders of APC that president Buhari recently chided and berated are too blinded by their naked ambitions to the extent that they are not thinking of the sustenance of our fledgling democracy that we all fought hard to attain and which they are jeopardizing by their crass actions.

     

    Magnus Onyibe, an entrepreneur, public policy analyst, author, development strategist, alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, Massachusetts, USA, and a former commissioner in Delta State government, sent this piece from Lagos.

  • The palace coup at APC’s headquarters – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    The palace coup at APC’s headquarters – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    By Ehichioya Ezomon

    It’s reminiscent of a “palace coup” executed in a military fashion when the head of state or government, or the board chairman of a corporation is away from the country or out of sight of the premises.

    Such is the sack of Yobe State Governor, Mai Mala Buni, as acting chairman of the Caretaker/Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC) of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Buni was reportedly overseas when his dismissal was carried out by “students and/or masers” of the game of changing of leaderships by fiat, and without shedding of blood.

    So, a member of the CECPC and Niger State Governor Abubakar Sani Bello, son of a former military administrator of Kano State, retired Col. Sani Bello, took advantage of Buni’s absence to declare himself (so it looked) as the acting chairman of the committee.

    But Bello obviously acted at the behest of the leader of the APC, President Muhammadu Buhari, a retired General and former Head of State, who overthrew the government of President Shehu Shagari in December 1983, and was himself upstaged in August 1985 by the gap-toothed Gen. Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida.

    Literally “stepping aside” from power for good in August 1993, after annulling the June 12, 1993, presidential election won by businessman-turned politician, Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola, Babangida handed over to a boardroom player, Chief Ernest Shonekan, who’s shoved aside, in just 83 days in office, by the dark-goggled Gen. Sani Abacha, then Chief of Army Staff.

    In the running crises in the APC, President Buhari in June 2020, at a meeting of the National Executive Committee (NEC) that he heads, sacked the National Working Committee (NWC) supervised by Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, a former governor of Edo State.

    The NEC enthroned Governor Buni as acting chair of the CECPC that’s to last for six months, with the mandate to reconcile the warring factions in the APC, and orgainise the National Convention.

    The Buni caretaker committee fell short of this assignment within the six-month timeframe, even as it regularly shifted the goalpost, and dug in to entrench itself, while the crises in the APC festered.

    So, Buni’s sack was long overdue, for failure to achieve the committee’s set goals, and the CECPC faulty foundation that became subject of law suits, and protests by aggrieved members.

    There’re specific allegations as to why Buni was removed barely three weeks – precisely 19 days – to the repeatedly-postponed national convention that’s initially to hold in 2020. They include:

    *Delaying the national convention, to coincide with the APC presidential primaries, which he would conduct, to enhance his future political aspiration, principally a shot at the presidency.

    *Helping to feather the 2023 ambitions of some APC governors, and other party chieftains, who connived to sack the Comrade Oshiomhole-led NWC, and installed Buni as chair of the CECPC.

    *Scheming to postpone the convention on the excuse to allow the CECPC time to resolve the APC crises arising from congresses and primaries conducted by Oshiomhole’s NWC for the 2019 polls, and congresses supervised by Buni’s committee for the 2023 elections.

    *Discovering a court injunction, obtained by Buni’s foot soldiers in November 2021, to scuttle the national convention, as confirmed by Kaduna State Governor Nasir el-Rufai on March 10.

    That’s when President Buhari, “uncomfortable with the antics” of the CECPC to disregard his several directives, “and thus portrayed the president as weak,” stepped in to remove Buni and the Secretary of the CECPC, Senator James Akpanudoedehe.

    Resuming at the APC secretariat on March 7, Bello, after a meeting with members of the CECPC and the party’s state chairmen, told reporters that his chairmanship position had Buhari’s blessing.

    Embarking on a medical trip to Dubai, Buni, perhaps unaware that his days as APC’s helmsman were numbered, duly handed over power to Governor Bello, who’s denied receipt of Buni’s letter.

    But the youth representative and spokesperson of the CECPC, Ismaeel Ahmed, confirmed on March 17 that Buni wrote a letter, “requesting a leave of absence, and for Governor Bello to take over as APC’s caretaker committee chairman.”

    Fielding questions from reporters in Abuja, Mr Ahmed said: “These are two emergencies. He (Buni) had a medical emergency that could not wait for the convention. We have a convention that cannot wait for him to be healthy. So, one has to leave for the other.

    “Governor Bello has been acting appropriately, and there is no problem about that. For now, we are doing it with the full authority and backing of the law. So, there is no ambiguity in this.

    “Power by the chairmanship was transmitted to Governor Bello, and he is fully driving it right now and we are moving towards the convention with the speed that is needed.”

    Certainly, Governor Buni’s health played a cruel trick on him, as the perfect setting needed by the APC head-hunters to sack him, and Sen. Akpanudoedehe. (A member and legal adviser to the CECPC, Prof. Tahir Mamman, has been appointed to act as the secretary.)

    The removal of Buni as the chair of the CECPC fits the axiom, “What goes around comes around.” An Esan proverb also says: “The ghoul that kills for meat will also be meat for another ghoul.” Or simply put: “He who rides a tiger will end up in its belly.”

    Buni had conspired with some APC governors to sack the duly-elected Oshiomhole-led NWC at a national convention, to serve a four-year term, but was dethroned in just two years in office.

    Now, the questions: Will the Governor Bello interim management deliver, in barely three weeks, on the mandate that the CECPC under Governor Buni failed to achieve in nearly two years?

    Will the APC backers of Buni’s committee “let bygone be bygone,” as Bello has pleaded, and forge a united front for the national convention, and primaries that will usher in the 2023 polls?

    Will they undermine the APC, by defecting to other platforms, chiefly the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), or sabotage the party in similar eventualities that the PDP suffered in the 2015 elections that brought the APC to power?

    Ahead of the national convention, the auguries look bleak. There’s controversy over choice of the National Chairman, zoned to the North Central (Middle Belt), that President Buhari has endorsed former Governor of Nasarawa State, Senator Abdullahi Adamu.

    Contentious is the zoning of the APC offices, which report, turned in by a committee headed by Kwara State Governor Abdulrazaq Abdulrahman, has been adopted and published by the CECPC, that’s trimmed the membership of the convention committees.

    Besides, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had queried APC’s NEC meeting, called by Governor Bello for March 17, as violating the Electoral Act 2022 that requires political parties to provide 21 days’ notice prior to any convention or meeting.

    But the CECPC youth member, Mr Ahmed, has clarified that the committee’s notice of February 5, for the aborted February 26 national convention, subsists, needing only a letter of reminder to INEC, for the national convention or any meeting preceding it.

    “We served that notice on February 5, and that was the required 21 days. If you are going to make any adjustment to that date, all you need is a letter making an adjustment to the date.” Ahmed said.

    He added: “You don’t need another 21 days, and that letter was written about two weeks ago, when we realised that we couldn’t hold it (national convention) on February 26.

    “The moment the CECPC agreed on March 26, as the date for the national convention, that letter was written to INEC. INEC has accepted that letter. So, that is long gone; it’s not an issue. It has always been the case; that has never changed, and now we have a convention on March 26.”

    As the APC members look forward to a successful national convention, they won’t forget its many unwarranted postponements by Governor Buni, which earned him a palace coup-style removal, to serve as a deterrent to others eying the chairmanship seat!

    *Mr Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria.

  • Gov. Buni remains party’s Acting National Chairman – APC Chieftain

    Gov. Buni remains party’s Acting National Chairman – APC Chieftain

    Yobe’s Gov. Mai Mala Buni remains the Acting Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Caretaker and Extra-ordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC).

    Alhaji Garba Muhammed, a chieftain of the APC., who made the declaration in Abuja on Saturday, said the party’s leadership remained intact contrary to reports in a section of the media.

    Muhammed enjoined party members and the general public to disregard reports making the rounds that President Muhammad Buhari had ordered Buni to resign his position.

    He described the report as a blatant lie, saying that those spreading it were lying with the president’s name because of their selfish and political interests and were trampling on the president’ integrity.

    “It is just name dropping and should not be regarded. Gov. Buni remains the Acting Chairman, APC CECPC until after the party’s National Convention slated for March 26 to elect new national executives for the party.

    “I know the president; he is a democrat; a man of honesty, integrity and fairness and that is why we voted him into power.

    “He will never do such a thing without following due process,’’ Muhammed said.

    Muhammed recalled that when Adams Oshiomhole was APC’s National Chairman, the president called for the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting which he presided over to effect a leadership change when the need arose.

    The APC chieftain added that the situation could not have changed now, adding that the party’s Constitution said there must be a NEC meeting to effect a leadership change in the party, and that had not been done.

    “As an APC stakeholder, I am not happy with the goings on in the party, but I wouldn’t believe any name-dropping by those who said President Buhari had ordered the removal of Buni.

    “I think if there is any directive to that effect, there is a process: the president has spokespersons, and the party has a publicity department from where it speaks to members and the general public,’’ he said.

    Muhammed added that there was the need to critically look at issues within the party to make a correct judgment.

    He advised party leaders to avoid flippant statements and to lead by example in the interest of its members and the general public.

    Corroborating Muhammed’s stand, Mr Ismail Ahmed, National Youth Leader in the APC CECPC had at a recent news conference said that Buni was only on medical leave and would resume soon.

    He wondered why it was difficult for some individuals to believe that.

    He explained that since the inauguration of the CECPC on June 25, 2020, Gov. Abubakar Bello of Niger who now superintends over the party’s affairs had always acted whenever Buni was absent.

    “It has always been the case; that has never changed.

    “We have a convention coming up on March 26; the chairman wrote a letter to go for medical treatment and delegated power to Gov. Bello.

    “These are two emergencies; he has a medical emergency that cannot wait for the convention to hold. We have a convention that cannot wait for him to be healthy, so one has to leave for other,’’ he had said.

    Ahmed said Gov. Bello had been acting appropriately and there was no change of leadership in the party as was being speculated, wondering why people were making an issue out of the development.

    He added that Bello was acting with the full authority of the APC CECPC and the party’s stakeholders and leaders and with the full consent and knowledge of Buni.

    Bello had earlier told newsmen that: “I have been acting for a while since March 7, when the chairman (Buni) travelled”.

  • APC crisis: You’re not qualified to organise emergency NEC – INEC tells Bello

    APC crisis: You’re not qualified to organise emergency NEC – INEC tells Bello

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has turned down an invitation to an emergency meeting of the National Executive Committee(NEC) of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Rejecting the invitation via a letter dated March 9, signed by its Secretary, Rose Anthony, titled, “Re: Invitation to the emergency meeting of the National Executive Committee”, and addressed to the National Chairman, APC Caretaker and Extra-ordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC).

    INEC drew the attention of the APC CECPC to the fact that the letter of invitation was not signed by Gov. Mai Mala Buni, National Chairman APC CECPC and its Secretary, Sen. John Akpanudoedehe.

    This, it said, was contrary to the provision of the Article 1.1.3 of the commission’s Regulations and Guidelines for Political Party Operations (2018).

    INEC also reminded those who wrote and signed the letter of the provision in Section 82(1) of the Electoral Act 2022.

    It said the section required ‘at least 21 days’ notice of any convention, Congress, conference, or meeting convened for the purpose of merger and electing members of its executive committees, other governing bodies or nominating candidates for any elective office.

    It urged the APC to note the key issues raised for compliance.
    INEC’s letter read: “Please refer to your letter Ref.APC/NHDQ/INEC/019/022/32, dated 8th March 2022.

    “The commission draws your attention to the fact that the notice for the meeting was not signed by the national chairman and national secretary of the CECPC.

    “This is contrary to the provision of the Article 1.1.3 of the commission’s Regulations and Guidelines for Political Party Operations (2018).

    “Furthermore, the APC is reminded of the provision in Section 82(1) of the Electoral Act 2022, which requires ‘at least 21 days’ notice of any convention, congress, conference, or meeting convened for the purpose of ‘merger’.

    “And electing members of its executive committees, other governing bodies or nominating candidates for any elective office.

    “While hoping these issues are noted for compliance, please accept the assurance of the commission’s warm regards,” it said.

  • APC Putting Everyone at Risk by Endangering Itself – By Azu Ishiekwene

    APC Putting Everyone at Risk by Endangering Itself – By Azu Ishiekwene

    By Azu Ishiekwene

    The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) looks determined to set itself on fire, even though the story out there is that the match box has been snatched from the hand of its interim chairman and Yobe State Governor, Mai Mala Buni. The danger still looms.

    After toppling the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) government of President Goodluck Jonathan in 2015, the APC turned on itself, feasting on its own entrails. Of course, the winner-takes-all factor in a presidential system can tempt winners to lose their heads. In the case of APC, however, the party lost its head even before it was tempted. That head has been replaced by an echo chamber – and it’s not funny.

    Within days of winning the election, cracks surfaced on the post-sharing agreement among members of the legacy parties in 2015. The Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) was supposed to take possession of the “crown” (the presidency), while the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) was, roughly speaking, supposed to manage the party.

    Positions were also supposed to have been shared on a prorated basis amongst members of the five legacy parties that contributed to APC’s victory to give everyone a sense of belonging and stabilise the government.

    That did not happen. After declaring that he was “for everyone and for no one”, President Muhammadu Buhari went on to appoint a transition committee (headed by Ahmed Joda) which froze out nearly everyone except anyone who contributed little or nothing to bring Buhari to power.

    It wasn’t long before the party began to fall apart. Buhari ruled a divided government for the first four years, with reverse defections that almost turned his majority party into a minority in the Senate. At a point, his wife and First Lady, Aisha, literally camped with the rebels, saying this was not the government the party rank and file worked for.

    The seed of the instability of that early beginning has produced a party that neither resembles a party nor anything remotely close to a collection of people with a shared political interest. It’s more like an assembly of opportunistic strange bedfellows, occasionally worshiping the god of kinetics at a shrine called Aso Rock.

    In seven years, APC has evolved into a party with no board of trustees, no governance structure, no idea of its past, or care about its future. It has now produced three chairmen who left at gunpoint after serious allegations of raiding state governors for money during the party’s primaries. The party has scores of wounded former and current members waiting, with long knives, to take their revenge.

    Of course, the APC has also attracted some big defectors to its fold, a number of them serving governors, who are at once the mainstay and biggest source of instability in the political parties. But by and large, these political refugees have their eyes firmly on one thing: how they can use what is left of the present system to help or perpetuate themselves. They know that the party they’re joining is not better than the one they’re leaving, except that it offers temporary shelter to their hope of grabbing power, entrenching themselves or escaping accountability.

    APC is a party of ironies. The same cane that was used to beat its former chairman, John Oyegun out of office and used again to beat Adams Oshiomhole only two years later, is now being unleashed on Buni, making his predecessors look like saints. Yet, it was not supposed to end this way. After the alleged corruption and inflexibility of the Oyegun years and the alleged multiplication of the sins under Oshiomhole, Buni was supposed to be a breath of fresh air.

    He was supposed to be the prince in shining armour recruited on a temporary basis to combine his day job as governor with that of being the party’s messiah. Two years on, the messiah needs a messiah. His adversaries are painting a picture of him that suggests that Oshiomhole should have been made life chairman. The Comrade must be laughing in Etsako.

    Not only has Buni, a first-term governor, been accused of deliberately stalling the convention even after three postponements, his accusers say he is doing so because he also wants to be nominated Vice President. In other words, he wants to be a player in a game in which he is supposed to be a referee and to secure his ambition, they allege, he has now procured a court injunction to postpone and postpone the convention until it can produce a consensus candidate of his choice.

    A source claimed that it was to avert this coup that Buhari changed his travel plans and returned to Abuja from Kenya first, before continuing to the UK. It would now seem that with Buni’s precipitous removal on Monday, the bomb has been defused and perhaps the worst is over.

    Perhaps. But the signs for the party are not looking good. Buni’s supporters who can’t understand why his enemies won’t let him get back home and out of his sick bed before plunging the long knives, have threatened to challenge his removal in court, as if his appointment and overstay were not a travesty which of course we were told was a necessity at the time.

    As of the time of writing, Buni, prince charming only yesterday, has become penny stock. Out of 21 APC governors he is left with only three – Dapo Abiodun, Yahaya Bello and Hope Uzodinma. Yet, there is a bitter struggle ahead, all of which shouldn’t be the business of bystanders if the ruling party has not only become a danger to itself but also a danger to bystanders.

    The nasty jostling for power among the various blocs in the party involving serving political appointees with disguised interest to run for office and aspirants who have openly declared their interest is matched only by Buhari’s indifference to the outcome of what promises to be a fight to the finish.

    A country that once despised President Olusegun Obasanjo for the sort of meddlesomeness that not only offered couples mat but also insisted on showing them how to lie on it, now has to deal with a president who has zero interest in what conjugal arsenal is deployed in the other room. The president’s aloofness even at moments requiring broadmindedness to define the party’s value and character is even more telling because other power blocs that could have provided a countervailing force have been frustrated out of the fold.

    The APC is now more or less reduced to an echo chamber, with folks engrossed in the kinetic science of decoding the president’s body language or where that fails deploying his name in fraudulent political transactions. It’s a dizzying turn of fate that has left a vacuum for hijackers and also taken a heavy toll on governance which, in the best of times, has been absent.

    While the public is pinning away on long lines outside petrol stations, chafing under shambolic electricity supply, teachers strike and rising prices, all that we hear of these days are politicians telling us why they deserve another shot at office without any need to account for their present record. We also hear incoherent assurances of progress by the president as he waves from the steps of his departing plane on his way to yet another medical trip abroad. It’s hard to ignore the echoes of disarray from the APC tent or to pretend that when the rains fall, it would be APC’s problem alone.

    The Third Force with a promise of political redemption so well-articulated early on, remains, well, a third force.

    And the state of the official opposition compounds our misery. PDP is not better and is not even pretending to be. The fight for the soul of the party will break out into a shooting war sooner than later. The casualties would not be found largely among politicians who have perfected the art of survival by defection, but among voters who wish in vain that after eight years in the limbo the party would become a truly viable option.

    I laugh at those who expect a dramatic outcome from Buni’s current travail. It won’t happen. Buni, like Oyegun and Oshiomhole before him, will survive the current turbulence, even if he does so with a few bruises.

    As for the party’s future, the answer is blowing in the wind.

    Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

  • APC crisis: Buni is gone for good, can only return as Yobe Gov – El-Rufai

    APC crisis: Buni is gone for good, can only return as Yobe Gov – El-Rufai

    Governor of Kaduna State, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai has revealed that Mai Mala Buni can never return as National Chairman of the Caretaker/Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Governor El-Rufai also insisted that President Muhammadu Buhari directed that the caretaker committee chairman should be fired.

    He said that the National Secretary, Sen. John James Akpanudoedehe, was also affected by Buhari’s directive.

    The Kaduna Governor who spoke last night on Channels Television Politics Today said that neither the ousted National Chairman nor the Secretary would return as national officials of the party.

    El-Rufai alleged that the former National Chairman and his team got a court order which they hid to stop the APC National Convention.

    He said: “Buni is gone, the Secretary is gone. Gov. Bello is in charge and he has the backing of President Muhammadu Buhari and 19 governors.

    “ Buni can only return as Governor of Yobe but never as chairman of our Party.

    “President Buhari ordered his removal and this has been implemented.

    “Governor Bello has taken over and things are moving according to plan.

    “Party will be restored, convention will take place as scheduled. 19 governors and their deputies are solidly behind this move.

    “Buni and his people got a court order to stop the convention but hid it.”

  • APC Secretary denies resigning

    APC Secretary denies resigning

    Sen. John Akpankudohede, National Secretary, All Progressives Congress (APC) Caretaker and Extra-ordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC) has denied resigning from the position.

    Akpankudohede said this when he spoke with newsmen on Tuesday in Abuja at the party’s national secretariat, saying that he remained the national secretary of the APC CECPC.

    “I have read in the social media that I have resigned as secretary of the APC CECPC, I want to state that it is not true. I didn’t resign.

    “If I have resigned, you would have seen my letter of resignation written by me. Someone cannot just say somebody is dead when he is alive.

    “I am not bigger than the party, or bigger than the president who is a leader of the country.

    “I am waiting for the chairman, if we have directives from the president that we should resign, we are not bigger than the president, we will do so, if we hear from him,” Akpankudohede said.

    He said that reports indicating that he had resigned his possition as secretary of the APC CECPC were fake news.

    Akpankudohede also faulted reports that he had been asked to resign by President Muhammadu Buhari saying it was untrue.

    “Someone cannot say the president said. I have not receive any letter from anywhere,” he said.

    He said that the CECPC under Gov. Mai Mala Buni had done so much for the APC since it was inaugurated on June 25, 2020.

    This,he said, included registering 41 million party members and paying for the party’s national secretariat in Wuse 11, Abuja.

    “We have done reconciliation of aggrieved party members, ward, local government and state congresses, and we are about to do the National Convention.

    “And you will agree with me that when we came in, this place was like a dead zone, the secretariat was moved to a private house, but we were committed to what we were doing,” he said.

    Also speaking Gov. Sani Bello of Niger said that the party would soon release the zoning list for the March 26 national convention, adding that the report on the zoning formula had been adopted by the party’s leadership.

    Bello who spoke with newsmen after a closed door meeting with members of the APC CECPC, said he would meet with the committee daily, until the party’s natioal convention.

    This, he said, was critical to put things together ahead of the March 26 convention.

    “Basically, today we looked at the convention sub-committee and we collected some of the reports from the committee, hoping that tomorrow we will decide on the next step to take.

    “Nothing much happened today,” he said.

    Gov. Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq of Kwara submitted the zoning formula report to Bello on Monday.

    Bello described the zoning system as a representation of fairness and equity in the party.

    “The report of the zoning formula has been submitted and adopted and it will be released any moment from now. I mean the zoning formula.

    “Hopefully, by next week, the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting will hold,” Bello said.

  • Revealed why Buhari want Gov Buni fired, replaced by Niger Gov, Bello

    Revealed why Buhari want Gov Buni fired, replaced by Niger Gov, Bello

    Finally, TheNewsGuru.com can now reveal that the final straw which angered President Muhammadu Buhari, and led to the replacement Of Gov Mai Buni as interim chair of All Progressives Congress, APC was the court judgment which led to the postponement of the Congress of the party.

    The President was said to be so livid that he summarily sacked the interim executive of the party until he was prevailed upon to soft pedal since he did not have the constitutional powers to summarily dismiss the interim executives.

    It is not not clear how the party settled on Governor of Niger State, Abubakar Bello as Sole Administrator to replace the Buni executives.

    Nevertheless, TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reliably gathered that Niger State Governor Abubakar Sani Bello has taken over the party as ‘sole administrator’ following the replacement of Mai Mala Buni as chairman of the caretaker committee.

    A source privy to this development told TNG that” Buni has left Nigeria on what those loyal to him revealed was a ‘medical trip.’

    But sources within the party said that as at Sunday night that the presidency and the APC governors were perturbed at Buni’s conduct and collusion with a few colleagues to undermine the interest of the APC.

    Buni as the caretaker Committee Chairman had been on a rollercoaster mission piloting the affairs of APC with no proper focus for almost two years after the former Chairman Adams Oshiomhole was fired through the courts.

    The allegedly sacked Buni had without end failed to conduct the party’s convention after several postponements making the party to remain in an oscillating mode till date.

    The positive move he made as caretaker Committee Chairman was the party’s registration of members that almost led to a disaster.