Tag: May 29

  • NSA assures of adequate security ahead of May 29

    NSA assures of adequate security ahead of May 29

    The National Security Adviser(NSA), retired Maj.-Gen. Babagana Monguno has assured Nigerians of adequate security during the Presidential Inauguration ceremony.

    Monguno gave the assurance on Thursday in Abuja at a World Press Conference, organised to mark the commencement of activities for the May 29 presidential inauguration.

    The NSA, who heads the Security, Facilities and Intelligence Committee of the Presidential Transition Council (PTC), said necessary measures had been put in place to provide all-round security.

    He said security would be beefed up at the Eagle Square, venue of the May 29 presidential inauguration and its environs.

    Monguno also said there would be tight security in and around hotels to ensure safety of guests coming into the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) from within and outside Nigeria.

    According to him, membership of the committee, which is drawn from various security agencies have been collaborating to ensure a seamless transition.

    “It is perhaps the most critical of all the committees by virtue of the nature of its own task.

    “That is why membership of the committee comprises of representatives or heads of agencies at the highest level.

    “The Chief of Defence Staff, the Inspector-General of Police, Director-General of the SSS.

    “The Director-General of the National Intelligence Agency(NIA) and the Governor of Kebbi State, who sits in as representative of the incoming government,”he said.

    Monguno further said, “our main function and primary concern is provision of both overt and covert security cover for all the venues where the programmes will take place.

    “As well as hotels in which invited guests and dignitaries will be staying for the period up to the inauguration and immediately after.”

    On restriction of movement, Monguno said there would be restriction of movement at a certain range around Eagle Square.

    He also said there would be traffic diversion and provision of alternative routes for motorists and pedestrians.

    While assuring Nigerians of a peaceful inauguration, he urged them to steer clear of anything that would threaten the peace of the nation.

    “The committee has concluded arrangement for accreditation and issuance of tags, passes and identity documents for all security agents.

    “If you have no business with security you need not be near the vicinity of the programme especially on the inauguration day.

    “We do not envisage anything that will be negative on that day, so, I urge everybody to be calm.

    “The people who use the social media, please understand this till our visitors, especially those who come from other countries disperse,” he said.

    Sub-committees like Transportation Sub-Committee, Venue, Parade and Swearing-in Sub-Committee, Media and Publicity Sub-Committee also assured of adequate preparation.

    Also, the Medical Sub-Committee, said adequate arrangement had been made for over 100 medical doctors, nurses and other medical personnel to be on ground within the period.

  • LP members fight in court: Keyamo mocks Obi, says ‘miracle do de tire Jesus’

    LP members fight in court: Keyamo mocks Obi, says ‘miracle do de tire Jesus’

    Apparently mocking Labour Party’s Lamidi Apapa’s show of shame in court last Wednesday, Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Festus Keyamo, SAN describes the action ‘miracle do dey tire Jesus’.

    Describing it as a miracle, Keyamo claimed it was God that set the confusion amongst those planning to thwart the May 29 swearing-in.

    Taking to his verified tweeter handle, Keyamo said: “God has set confusion in the midst of those who were planning to disrupt the swearing-in of @officialABAT on May 29th. They are now fighting publicly amongst themselves and disrupting their own affairs to the extent that the court did not even recognise any of them. Miracle do dey tire Jesus?.”

  • Sultan of Sokoto lashes out: Whether anybody likes it, May 29 must hold

    Sultan of Sokoto lashes out: Whether anybody likes it, May 29 must hold

    The Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammadu Sa’ad Abubakar has said whether anybody likes it or not, the inauguration of the President-elect, Bola Tinubu on May 29 must hold.

    Abubakar disclosed this while urging Nigerians to pray for Tinubu’s administration to succeed.

    He spoke at a roundtable engagement with traditional and religious rulers which was organized by the World Bank on Wednesday in Abuja.

    He said: “There must be change because in the next few days or weeks there will be a new government; what can we contribute to that government to stabilize?

    “Whether anybody likes it, it must take place, a new government is coming on May 29, so what can we do besides prayers, because we believe in the Almighty, we believe in God that gives and takes.

    “After that so what? What do we do to help the government stabilize and move the country forward?”

    He charged Nigerians to be united and work towards ensuring equity and justice.

  • New administration will take off May 29 whether they like it or not – Sultan

    New administration will take off May 29 whether they like it or not – Sultan

    The Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammadu Sa’ad Abubakar, has said Nigerians should know that a new administration would take over on May 29 “whether they like it or not.”

    The Sultan made this statement during a roundtable engagement with traditional and religious rulers, organized by the World Bank to fashion a way out to increase human capital development in the country.

    According to him, “There must be change because in the next few days or weeks there will be a new government, what can we contribute to that government to stabilize?

    “Whether anybody likes it, it must take place, a new government is coming on 29 May, so what can we do besides prayers because we believe in Almighty, we believe in God that gives and takes.

    “After that so what? What do we do to help the government stabilize and move the country forward?”

    He added that it is an opportunity for religious and traditional leaders to work together for the betterment of the country.

    “Let us continue to work as one big family with different mothers and fathers or whatever it is, but our main father and mother is Nigeria. As religious leaders, there must be equity and justice in whatever is being done and that is what I think we need to talk about the most,” Sultan said.

    While explaining the efforts the leaders undergo for the development of their communities, he said, “We cater for thousands of people to go to schools but we don’t come out to say it.”

    The Sultan also said , “Of course, our health care system, you know what it is, if a big man has a headache, he goes to London to take Panadol and comes back, it is a fact. So many of our governors built so many clinics, nothing is there but littered with rats but in the books, you have built 1,000 clinics in your state, it is a fact. These are things we are seeing.

    “I am not mentioning anybody but giving a general view, so let no governor come and pick me and say Sultan has criticized me. I am not criticizing anybody.

    “I am making a critique which is different from criticizing, so people should know that. You can critique an issue so that people will be better. We don’t criticize anybody because we have access to these people to sit down one on one, that is what we have been doing.”

  • May 29 Handover: Tinubu, Shettima official portrait released

    May 29 Handover: Tinubu, Shettima official portrait released

    Ahead of the May 29 inauguration, the official portraits of the President-elect, Bola Tinubu, and the Vice President-elect, Kashim Shettima has been released to the public.

    The inaugurated committee of the Presidential Transition Council  (PTC) has also approved the portrait.

    Disclosing this, Tinubu’s Director of Media and Publicity, Bayo Onanuga, wrote on Twitter: “Pre-inauguration official photographs approved by the Presidential Transition Council for President-elect Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Vice President elect Senator Kashim Shettima.”

    Both Tinubu and Shettima are expected to be inaugurated at the Eagle Square Abuja on the 29th of May, 2023 to usher in the beginning of a new government in the country.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC)  declared Tinubu the winner of the 2023 presidential election.

    Running on the platform of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Tinubu defeated Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, and Peter Obi of the Labour Party, LP, Peter Obi.

     

  • Unveiling Nigeria’s future: Post-May 29 and the Tinubu legacy

    Unveiling Nigeria’s future: Post-May 29 and the Tinubu legacy

    Nigerians look forward to May 29th when the President-elect Bola Ahmed Tinubu, will be inaugurated to bring hope to more than 133 million people, most of whom live in extreme poverty.

    There are already high expectations that the incoming president must strive to meet in the areas such as the economy, education, health, security, infrastructure and employment creation for the country’s teeming youth population.

    Nigeria’s unemployment rate is projected by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) to reach 40.6 per cent this year, from 37.7 per cent in 2022.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on March 1, pronounced Tinubu, presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), winner of the controversial February 25 presidential election.

    Tinubu reportedly got a total of 8,794,726 votes cast, the most of the 17 candidates who took part in the election.

    Before the election, Tinubu made a number of promises in his official manifesto dubbed “Hope Renewed”, where he unveiled his plans for the country in nine priority areas, including national security, economy, agriculture, energy, oil and gas, transportation and education.

    The President-elect has promised a Nigeria where there would be enough jobs with decent wages, especially for young people and a better life for all.

    He promised to “produce, create and invent” more of the goods and services required in the country so that Nigeria can move from being a consumer to a producer.

    According to the manifesto, Tinubu plans to upgrade and expand public infrastructure so that the rest of the economy can thrive, as well as encourage and empower youths and women to leverage emerging sectors such as digital economy, entertainment and tourism.

    “We seek a Nigeria where no parent is forced to send a hungry child to bed wondering if there will be food tomorrow,” the manifesto read in part.

    Tinubu has also expressed commitment to generating, transmitting and distributing enough affordable electricity to provide Nigerians with the energy they need to light up their lives, their homes and their dreams, and to provide healthcare, education and make basic housing accessible and affordable for all citizens.

    Despite the controversies surrounding the election which has resulted in court cases, some prominent politicians, even of the opposition, have thrown their weights behind the President-elect and have encouraged others to do same.

    For example, the Governor of Rivers state, Nyesome Wike, expressed optimism that the President-elect will live up to the expectations of the Nigerian people and appealed to citizens to lend their support to ensure the success of the Tinubu-led government.

    “The election is over and a victor has been declared, so all Nigerians must unite and give him (Tinubu) the support he needs,” Wike said.

    Similarly, the Governor of Oyo state, Seyi Makinde, also pledged his support for the Tinubu government.

    On the other hand, criticisms have begun to trail Tinubu’s leadership style which a section of the country say is not inclusive, judging by the appointment of a 16-man Presidential Transition Council.

    Leading Igbo socio-cultural organization, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, and the presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar, have pointed out that the absence of an Igbo person on the team and accused the President-elect of being a “tribalist”.

    Vice-President of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Damian Okeke-Ogene, said: “Igbophobia is in his (Tinubu) veins and by not including Igbo people in the handover committee, he is only trying to reopen old wounds.

    “He inherited the hatred (Muhammadu) Buhari has against Igbo, especially when the President-elect has said he will continue from where the incumbent president stopped,” Okeke-Ogene was quoted as saying.

    He stressed that Ohanaeze had not accepted Tinubu’s emergence as the president-elect “because any house built on a faulty foundation is bound to collapse. We believe that the process of the 2023 presidential election is still on”.

    However, the Executive Director of the Voice of Nigeria (VON), Osita Okechukwu, slammed Abubakar for presenting himself as a friend of the Igbo people, saying that the PDP presidential candidate had done the PDP’s Igbo members a disservice by deciding to wrest the presidential candidacy from the party, contrary to his party’s rotation rule.

    “I make bold to state that the former vice president had long lost the moral high ground to parade himself or even pontificate as a friend of Ndigbo. It’s sheer hypocrisy which cannot wipe out the injury inflicted on Igbo members of the PDP by our dear brother-in-law,” Okechukwu said.

  • I will only visit Kaduna after leaving office, if… – El-Rufai

    I will only visit Kaduna after leaving office, if… – El-Rufai

    Kaduna State Governor, Nasir el-Rufai has said he would only visit the state after he leaves office if it becomes necessary.

    El-Rufai stated this while speaking at a policy conversation and book launch in Abuja on Tuesday.

    According to him, he would not return as FCT Minister even if he was offered.

    “I have done my job, I’m done, I don’t look back.

    “In fact when I left FCT, the only time I visited FCT was in 2016 when my secondary school classmate was appointed the minister and he said he wanted to see me, so I went there.

    “Once I leave a job, I don’t look back. If I leave Kaduna in 19 days, I will only visit if it becomes necessary,” el-Rufai said.

  • Tribunal can stop Tinubu’s inauguration, he has a case – Sam Amadi

    Tribunal can stop Tinubu’s inauguration, he has a case – Sam Amadi

    The Director of the Abuja School of Social and Political Thoughts, Sam Amadi has said the President-elect, Bola Tinubu’s inauguration could be stopped before May 29, insisting that he has a serious case in tribunal.

    His statement was contained in a post via his Twitter handle on Thursday.

    The statement followed Wike’s declaration of Wednesday May 3 as a public holiday for the people to receive Tinubu, who was invited by the governor.

    The statement had attracted mixed interpretations.

    However, the public affairs analyst took to his Twitter handle to make further clarifications, saying it is not automatic that Tinubu will form the next government.

    He wrote, “Clarification on Legal Status of President-Elect.

    “@officialABAT is PRESIDENT-ELECT. But he is not yet President.

    2. It isn’t automatic that he will form the next government. He has a serious case in tribunal that can go either way.

    3. The tribunal can stop the inauguration before 29.

    “Like I always say, corruption in language leads to corruption in statecraft. Just as the law gave @inecnigeria power to make a declaration, it gives the judiciary the power to reverse it. There’s no constitutional duty to inaugurate on May 29 if a declaration is legally challenged as here.

    “There is no fait accompli about the situation. Some use of language can create a false narrative where we believe that a declaration by @inecnigeria no matter how wrong constitutes a new government. No. It does not, until the final court says so.”

  • Oborevwori unveils terms of reference for transition committee

    Oborevwori unveils terms of reference for transition committee

    Delta State Governor-elect, Rt. Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori has unveiled the terms of reference for the transition committee he inaugurated today.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Oborevwori inaugurated the transition committee at the Unity Hall of the old Government House, Asaba with the task to submit presentations in key thematic areas, including General Administration and Strategy and Fiscal Policy and Public Finance.

    Other thematic areas the transition committee is expected to make presentation for the new administration to hit the ground and running fast after May 29 are Infrastructure and Utilities and Human Capital Development.

    Others are Social Development & Creative Industry, Entrepreneurship and Job Creation, Peace and Security, Media and Communications, Agriculture and Industries, Environment, Water Resources, and Human Settlements, and Energy, Oil, and Gas.

    Speaking during the inauguration of the committee, Oborevwori said he has absolute confidence in the abilities of the transition committee members, which he described as “a formidable team”.

    The Governor-elect stressed that the formal inauguration of the transition committee heralds the journey to the commencement of a new administration come May 29, 2023 and expressed his profound gratitude to the good people of Delta State for their vote of faith and confidence in him and the Peoples’ Democratic Party.

    “It is incumbent on us to reciprocate this mandate by midwifing a smooth transition process that will enable the next government to hit the ground running. Naturally, the expectations of the people are high given the overwhelming support that we received, winning in 21 out of the 25 Local Government Areas.

    “For emphasis, this is a mandate for consolidation and growth, for investment and economic reform, and for making the youth the centrepiece of our policies and programmes. Clearly, our people believe in our M. O.R.E agenda, which is designed to advance the State in all aspects of infrastructural and human capital development, as well as economic wellbeing”, he said.

    According to the Governor-elect, the men and women appointed into the Transition Committee possess the requisite knowledge, wisdom, capacity, and experience, essential for the assignment, saying that:

    “They have been part of this journey, and understand that the incoming administration needs to start on a sure footing. Their task is to put in place the necessary structures and means that will enable the incoming administration to effectively implement its policies and programmes from day one”.

    Rt Hon Oborevwori said that arising from interactions with the people of the State during electioneering campaigns, and building on the solid foundations that have been laid by the current administration, it was necessary a transition process is put in place that will provide strategic direction for the next administration.

    “Suffice it to say that the Committee is expected to set short, medium and long terms targets for the administration and accommodate any other critical sector that may have been left out as it relates to the M.O.R.E agenda”, the Governor-elect said.

    He expressed appreciation to the State Governor, His Excellency, Senator Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa for his wisdom and counsel and for always pointing “us in the right direction”, describing him as a man with exceptional leadership qualities.

    “To the Committee, I expect you to complete and submit your work within the next 21 days. I eagerly look forward to your recommendations for the successful take-off of the next administration. With God’s grace and enablement, we shall do MORE to ADVANCE Delta State”, he stated.

    TNG reports the transition committee has Prof. Emmanuel Nwanze as chairman and Prof. Hope Eghagha as secretary. In his response, Prof Nwanze promised that they will carry out the assignment diligently, saying: “you have chosen wisely”.

    See full list of the transition committee below:

    1. PROF. EMMANUEL NWANZE – CHAIRMAN
    2. DR. KINGSLEY EMU – MEMBER
    3. DR. BARRY GBE – MEMBER
    4. CHIEF SUNDAY ONORIODE – MEMBER
    5. CHIEF TILIJE FIDELIS – MEMBER
    6. MR. IFEANYI EGWUNYENGA – MEMBER
    7. MR. JOHNBUL EDEMA – MEMBER
    8. HON. SAMUEL MARIERE – MEMBER
    9. DR. KINGSLEY ASHIBUOGU – MEMBER
    10. ENGR GOODNEWS AGBI – MEMBER
    11. MR. ABEL ESIEVO – MEMBER
    12. MR. DARLINGTON IJEH – MEMBER
    13. PRINCE KELLY PENAWOU – MEMBER
    14. MRS. CORDELIA ANYANGU – MEMBER
    15. HON. JOAN ADANIOMA – MEMBER
    16. HON. PALLY EGHOVIE – MEMBER
    17. HON. SHOLA DAIBO – MEMBER
    18. MRS. GEORGINA EVAH – MEMBER
    19. MRS. CHRISTABEL OBIUWEVBI – MEMBER
    20. PHILOMENA EDEDEY – MEMBER
    21. MRS. SHIMITTE BELLO – MEMBER
    22. DR. MRS. EVELYN ALUTA – MEMBER
    23. MRS. ROSELINE AMIOKU – MEMBER
    24. HON. JOHN NANI – MEMBER
    25. MR. MOFE PIRAH – MEMBER
    26. BARR. GEORGE OROGUN – MEMBER
    27. MR. IKECHUKWU MADUEMEZUE, ESQ. – MEMBER
    28. MR. OVIE EMUAKPOR – MEMBER
    29. HON. GODKNOWS ANGELE – MEMBER
    30. HON. PEREZ OMUON – MEMBER
    31. MR. EZEKIEL OKOH – MEMBER
    32. MR. GODSPOWER ENERHO – MEMBER
    33. MR. ISAAC WEYINMI AGBATEYINIRO – MEMBER
    34. MR. DONALD PETERSON – MEMBER
    35. MR. EUGENE UZUM – MEMBER
    36. MR. ISIOMA OKONTA – MEMBER
    37. MR. ODINIGWE DANIEL ODIGIE – MEMBER
    38. MR. EMMANUEL EYAKAGBA – MEMBER
    39. HON. ONORIODE AGOFURE – MEMBER
    40. MR. AUGUSTINE OGEDEGBE – MEMBER
    41. RT. HON. (BARR.) BASIL GANAGANA – MEMBER
    42. HON. JOHNSON ERIJO – MEMBER
    43. CHIEF ALLISON OGIDIGBEN – MEMBER
    44. CHIEF FAVOUR IZOUKUMOR – MEMBER
    45. OLORI ATUWATSE III – MEMBER
    46. MISS ORODE UDUAGHAN – MEMBER
    47. REV. JUSTIN C. OKOROJI – MEMBER
    48. ERARAWEWHO JUNIOR UYERO – MEMBER
    49. OKODOZOR UKUBOKEYE – MEMBER
    50. CHRISTIAN ONOGBA – MEMBER
    51. MR. KENNEDY UZOKA – MEMBER
    52. AUSTINE AYEMIDEJOR – MEMBER
    53. JOHN MUTU – MEMBER
    54. PROF. IKOMI ROBERT – MEMBER
    55. HON. PASCAL ADIGWE – MEMBER
    56. RT. HON. EMMANUEL OKORO – MEMBER
    57. JOHN ASHIMA – MEMBER
    58. APOSTLE DR. OKONYE CYRIL IFECHUKWUDE – MEMBER
    59. REV. GIDEON OGHENERUEMU OYIBO – MEMBER
    60. HON. SOLOMON IGHRAKPATA – MEMBER
    61. HON. (CHIEF) FERGUSON ONWO – MEMBER
    62. HON. ENGR. EMEKA NWAOBI, FNSE – MEMBER
    63. BARR. MRS. LYNA ALIYA OCHOLOR – MEMBER
    64. COMR. GOODLUCK OFOBRUKU – MEMBER
    65. COMR. OSANAKPA AUGUSTINE – MEMBER
    66. AMB. CAROLINE OROBOSA USIKPEDO – MEMBER
    67. SONNY EKEDAYE – MEMBER
    68. BARR. CHRIS IFEANYI OSAKWE – MEMBER
    69. BARR. POSSIBLE SOLOMON AJEDE – MEMBER
    70. EFE TOBOR JOSIAH – MEMBER
    71. EZE HENRY EKENE – MEMBER
    72. EMEKA UMERAH BIDOKWU – MEMBER
    73. PROF. FESTUS ARUNAYE – MEMBER
    74. BARR. STELLA ANETOR – MEMBER
    75. HON. PRINCESS PAT. AJUDUA (Ph.D.) – MEMBER
    76. HON. ANTHONY ELEKEOKWURI – MEMBER
    77. RT. HON. FESTUS AGAS – MEMBER
    78. DR. AKPOVETA ISAAC – MEMBER
    79. HON. EMMANUEL IGHOMENA – MEMBER
    80. HON. BEN IGBAKPA – MEMBER
    81. MIDENO BAYAGBON – MEMBER
    82. BARR. ANDREW ORUGBO – MEMBER
    83. SEN. EMMANUEL AGUARIAVWODO – MEMBER
    84. REV. FR. CHRISTOPHER EKABOR – MEMBER
    85. BARR. VAL ARENYEKA – MEMBER
    86. DR. MICHAEL IFEANYI OSUOZA – MEMBER
    87. CHIEF OWIN ERIRHOMURU – MEMBER
    88. PROF. HOPE EGHAGHA – SECRETARY
  • As plot to stop Tinubu’s inauguration thickens – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    As plot to stop Tinubu’s inauguration thickens – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Since the return of democracy to Nigeria in 1999, May 29 (of every four years) is earmarked for inauguration of a new President and the administration thereof.

    But the May 29, 2023, change of baton between outgoing President Muhammadu Buhari and incoming President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is proving to be an exception.

    The opposition is pulling out all the stops to abort the ceremonies for which the Buhari government has emplaced a transition mapout.

    Dissatisfied with the declaration and return of Tinubu as winner of the February 25 presidential election, the opposition has moved from calls to cancel or annul the poll, or install an inerim civilian government or a Military regime.

    Although the unconstitutional clamour has met with outrage and condemnations even across the political divide, the promoters and purveyors of the scheme to halt a Tinubu presidency aren’t relenting.

    The next stage in their plot is a direct appeal to President Buhari, to adopt any excuse imaginable, to stop the handover to Tinubu.

    If Buhari refuses to breach the amended 1999 Constitution, the Courts should then intervene, by compelling the President and/or National Assembly (NASS), to extend the government tenure by three months – in the first instance – until the filings at the Presidential Election Petitions Court (PEPC) against Tinubu’s declaration as President-elect are dispensed with.

    The first option in the intrigues is  to shift the goalpost in the middle of a game, by abridging the 180 days and 60 days for disposal of petitions and appeals at the PEPC and Supreme Court, respectively.

    The second alternative is the urging of Buhari to unlawfully stop inauguration of Tinubu on account of series of allegations against his qualification for the office of President of Nigeria.

    In this regard, the proponents want Buhari to invoke unknown laws to annul the February 25 poll, and the attendant declaration of Tinubu as President-elect.

    A third option is for Buhari to write to the NASS, to invoke the “Doctrine of Necessity,” and extend his tenure that ends on May 29 by six months – in the first instance – to enable disposal of the petitions at the PEPC, or direct the conduct of a fresh presidential election.

    To the uninformed, the “Doctrine of Necessity” is alien to the 1999 Constitution, as its invocation in 2010 was due to absence of President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua from office for months, without handing over to Vice President Goodluck Jonathan in acting capacity.

    To avoid a total breakdown of law and order – as unelected and non-state actors had seized on the vacuum to want to run the affairs of State – the NASS stepped in and introduced the “Doctrine of Necessity,” to elevate Dr Jonathan to “Acting President.”

    Jonathan later assumed the office of President when Yar’Adua died in 2010; and the NASS next amended the Constitution in 2011, mandating that the President shall handover power to the Vice President – as Acting President – whenever the President is out of the seat of power. (Section 145(1)(2)).

    Going by section 135 of the Constitution, the President can only write to the NASS – to extend the tenure of the administration by six months, in the first instance – if the Federation is at war.

    First, section 135(2) mandates that, “the President shall vacate his office at the expiration of a period of four years commencing from the date when–

    (a) in the case of a person first elected as President under this Constitution, he took the Oath of Allegiance and the Oath of Office…”

    That means May 29, as Buhari’s first inaugurated on May 29, 2015, and again on May 29, 2019, in his two terms – of four years each – that end on May 29, 2023.

    Second, section 135(3) states that, “If the Federation is at war in which the territory of Nigeria is physically involved and the President considers that it is not practicable to hold elections, the National Assembly may by resolution extend the period of four years mentioned in subsection (2) of this section from time to time; but no such extension shall exceed a period of six months at any one time.”

    Currently, the Federation isn’t at war; no insurrection across or in parts of the Nigerian territory; and the elections have been held, and a transition plan in place to handover to the new dispensation.

    On what basis – other than mischiefmakers provoking instability in the country – will President Buhari ask the NASS, to invoke section 135(3) of the Constitution, to extend his government beyond May 29?

    That will amount to institution of a “Third Term” regime – akin to a civilian interim government or a Military junta that most Nigerians have resoundingly rejected lately!

    The same fate awaits the calls for the Appeal Court to extend the period of inauguration of a new government from May 29, which proponents argue isn’t sacrosanct, citing section 135(1)(a) of the Constitution.

    Section 135(1) says that, “Subject to the provisions of this Constitution, a person shall hold the office of President until–

    (a) when his successor in office takes the oath of that office…”

    Hence, agitators of a delayed inauguration of President-elect Tinubu urge the Appeal Court to order President Buhari to remain in office until when his successor takes the oath of that office – after the disposal of the petitions and appeals at the Appeal Court and Supreme Court, in that order.

    If the Appeal Court orders such a “prohibitory injunction” – the likes requested by former candidate of Hope Democratic Party in the 2019 presidential election, Ambrose Albert Owuru – it’ll equate a “coup” in violation of section 1(2) and section 135(3) of the Constitution.

    Owuru, a Lawyer, claims he’s adjudged the winner of the 2019 presidential poll, with his intended first term in office allegedly “usurped” by President Buhari.

    On that score, he prays the Court of Appeal to prohibit President Buhari, Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) from inaugurating the 2023 President-elect on May 29, until his four-year-old petition is disposed of by the Supreme Court.

    In a motion on notice marked CA/CV/259/2023, and filed at the Court of Appeal in Abuja, Owuru applies for “An order of prohibitory injunction compelling Buhari, AGF and INEC, their servants, agents and privies to preserve and give due cognizance and abstain from any further undertaking or engaging in any act of usurpation of (his) adjudged acquired Constitutional rights and mandate as winner of the 2019 presidential election.”

    Will the Appeal Court be disposed to exercising jurisdiction over Owuru’s application – and other similar prayers – to suspend and/or cancel inauguration of President-elect Tinubu on May 29?

    Until the Court affirms those prayers, the opposition members have only one avenue to retrieving their “stolen mandate” of February 25, and that’s to have faith in the Judiciary that they’ve subjected themselves to its arbitration.

    They should pursue their petitions at the PEPC – and possibly at the Supreme Court – to a logical end. Any shortcut to gaining power is a recipe for chaos and anarchy that may spare none of the instigators of the impasse in the polity!

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