Tag: May 29

  • I’m eager to handover to Tinubu on May 29, says Buhari

    I’m eager to handover to Tinubu on May 29, says Buhari

    The Presidency says President Muhammadu Buhari is eager to commence his retirement after handing over the mantle of leadership to President-elect, Sen. Bola Tinubu, on May 29.

    Malam Garba Shehu, the President’s spokesman disclosed this in a statement on Friday,  reacting to a  story published by the Sahara Reporters insinuating that the President might not hand over power to Tinubu  on May 29.

    Shehu, however, denounced the story as outrageous and fake.

    ”The Presidency wishes to denounce as outrageous and fake, and condemns the fake news brigade for attributing a false quote to President Muhammadu Buhari and circulating it.

    ”How can you vigorously campaign for somebody, vote for him and then say you won’t hand over to him? This beggars belief.

    ”The situation of the Sahara Reporters is pretty pathetic since their ownership is politically partisan in today’s politics, in fact a loser in the presidential election.

    ”Instead of talking about issues, they repeatedly sell lies in the hope that people believe them as truth.”

    According to the presidential aide, the government is already in transition phase.

    He revealed that the Transition Committee, made up of representatives of the outgoing administration and the incoming one had been meeting on an almost daily basis, planning the handover to the Tinubu/Shettima administration.

    According to him, 13 committees as offshoots of the main committee, some of which are charged with arranging military drills and pulling out of President Buhari, are either all at work or soon to be.

    ”So far, everything is going very well and there is no indication of any hitches.

    ”As for the President, the Daura community has begun their preparations to receive their son back after the successful administration of the country for two terms of eight years.

    ”He, for his part, is eager to return home to enjoy his retirement,” he added.

  • What I will do before handing over on May 29 – President Buhari

    What I will do before handing over on May 29 – President Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday in Abuja said the gains recorded in security will be further consolidated, and more attention will be given to the economy, before he hands over on May 29, 2023.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports President Buhari disclosed this while receiving Executive members of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) at the State House, President Buhari.

    Buhari said the security situation in the country had improved over the years, particularly in the North East where he said the focus had shifted to rebuilding infrastructure and re-orientation on education.

    “I am very grateful for your visit to the Presidential Villa, and I agree with you on some of the observations you have made. The question of insecurity is most important to us because unless a country or institution is at peace, it will be difficult to manage.

    “I just came back from Adamawa and Yobe States. During the visit to both states, I listened carefully to what the people and officials had to say. And they all said the situation had improved since 2015, especially in Borno State.

    “Boko Haram was just fraudulent and a plot to destroy Nigeria. You can’t say people should not learn; the people need to grow intellectually,’’ he said.

    President Buhari told the Catholic Bishops that the government will continue rebuilding infrastructure in parts of the country affected by terrorist attacks, while underscoring that terrorists had no control over any space in Nigeria.

    “Some people have acknowledged the difference,’’ he added.

    On the economy, the President said creditors had full confidence in Nigeria, with the capacity to utilize resources and repay loans before the approvals were granted.

    “We are credible, that’s why the countries and institutions agreed to support our development with the loans,’’ he stated.

    President Buhari said the destruction of oil facilities slowed the generation of revenues, and the government would be harder on saboteurs.

    “If you look at the economy, we are trying hard to rely more on ourselves. Nigerians rely more on agriculture for livelihood, and we are putting in our best to enable more people, and diversify,’’ the President noted.

    He said some of the challenges faced in the past, which include coups and counter-coups, and civil war, had prepared the nation for survival.

    “We thank God that Nigeria is still one,’’ he said. “We should not forget that more than a million died for the nation to survive.’’

    The President noted that he had been part of Nigeria’s history since 1967, fighting in the civil war, serving as governor, minister, Head of State, Chairman of Petroleum Trust Fund, contesting presidential elections in 2003, 2007 and 2011, before winning in 2015.

    “We should thank God, and we should reflect on these things and thank God more,’’ he added.

    In his remarks, the leader of the delegation and President of the CBCN, Most Rev. Lucius Iwejuru Ugorji, commended the President for reforms in the electoral system, making it more stable and fair, particularly the signing of the Electoral Bill into law.

    “We commend and congratulate you for the efforts the government has put into ensuring real improvement in our electoral system and processes, especially your signing into law the electoral bill.

    “Please do not relent in making sure that INEC and other relevant agencies of government carry out their serious duties to conduct peaceful, free, fair, and credible elections,’’ he said.

    Ugorji urged the President to use the remaining months in office as Commander-in-Chief to tackle insecurity in the country, and improve the economy.

    “The main crux of our message to you today is one of fervent appeal and strong encouragement. Your tenure of two terms as President, Commander-In-Chief of Nigeria, is drawing to an end. But we believe a lot can be done to turn things around for the better in the about four months left of your presidency before you step down in May 2023.

    “We have seen some signs that the government is not entirely incapable of tackling the sad state of insecurity in the land, which has consumed thousands of innocent Nigerians across all religions, creed, and ethnic groups,’’ the cleric noted.

    The Catholic Bishops presented a souvenir to President Buhari, containing a letter of encouragement and prayers for the forthcoming elections.

  • I’ll be far away from Abuja after handing over – Buhari

    I’ll be far away from Abuja after handing over – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari says he will not be hanging around the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), after May 29, 2023, in order not to meddle in the affairs of the office of his successor.

    The president gave this indication when he hosted residents of  FCT, led by the Minister, Malam Mohammed Bello, who paid him the traditional Christmas Day homage on Sunday at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    At the last Christmas Day homage with the FCT community, the president reiterated that he would return to Daura, Katsina State, his hometown, at the end of his tenure.

    According to him, his decision not to make Abuja a permanent abode is to allow his successor a free hand to operate and run the affairs of the government.

    The President also told members of the FCT community that he had not built a new house in Daura or anywhere and hoped to live in his same house, of many years.

    President Buhari also used the occasion to commend the FCT Minister, saying he retained the cabinet position for so long because of his honesty and hardwork.

    According to the president, he is aware that the office of the Minister of the FCT is burdened with requests for land allocation from highly placed Nigerians, who often disposed of their allocations for financial gains and other priorities.

    He shared an anecdote of how someone close to him asked him to speak to the FCT Minster to allocate him a plot of land; quoting the person as saying ”I will sell it and use the money to marry another wife”.

    The president said: ‘‘I was overwhelmed by the priority of some people who need a plot of land not to develop it but to sell it and marry another wife.

    ‘‘I don’t know how the Minister copes with such people who are extremely serious about such things.

    ”And I think about 45 per cent of those who have been given land allocation in the FCT have sold it and didn’t develop it according to the laid down criteria (master plan).’’

    Buhari thanked Nigerians for supporting his administration, recounting that during electioneering campaigns in the build-up to the 2015 and 2019 elections, he had travelled the length and breadth of the country seeking their support.

  • May 29 handover sacrosanct – President Buhari assures

    May 29 handover sacrosanct – President Buhari assures

    President Muhammadu Buhari has restated his commitment to handing over leadership to an elected president on May 29 next year.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports President Buhari stated this on Monday when he received Shakib Ben Musa, the Minister of National Education, Pre-School and Sports of the Kingdom of Morocco at the State House, Abuja.

    Shakib Ben Musa, who is the Minister of National Education, Pre-School and Sports of the Kingdom of Morocco, visited the President as a Special Envoy of the King of Morocco, King Mohammed the VI.

    Buhari in a statement issued by his media aide, Malam Garba Shehu, said his term in office would end on May 29 in line with Nigeria’s constitution.

    He also said his term of office would end with the inauguration of a new president in May next year.

    President Buhari disclosed that he would continue to cherish and strengthen the very warm and cordial relations between the two countries.

    The Special Envoy, who was accompanied by Mr. Moha Ou Ali Tagma, the resident representative of the Kingdom in Nigeria, restated to the President the friendship and solidarity of the King, the government and the people of Morocco with Nigeria.

  • May 29: Buhari, APC pulled Nigeria backwards by 60 years in five years – PDP

    May 29: Buhari, APC pulled Nigeria backwards by 60 years in five years – PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on Friday described the five years of President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as a waste.

    The opposition party said its verdict on the APC-led federal government was that it had taken Nigeria 60 years backward.

    PDP maintained that the Buhari-led APC government has turned Nigeria into a wasteland, had her economy devastated, shattered national dreams and crushed the hope of citizens while setting the nation backward.

    The party, at a press briefing in Abuja yesterday, said that May 29, formerly Democracy Day before it was changed to June 12 by President Buhari, has become synonymous with the enthronement of incompetence, insensitive leadership, endemic corruption in high places and governance by propaganda and false performance claims.

    PDP at the briefing addressed by National Publicity Secretary of the PDP, Kola Ologbondiyan, lamented that the All Progressives Congress administration has reversed all the gains achieved by the PDP for which May 29 was always celebrated and left the country dejected and despondent.

    Kola said under President Buhari, May 29 has become a day of grieving for Nigerians; a day for commemoration of failed promises, reversal of gains achieved by past leaders and retrogression in our body polity as a nation.

    The PDP spokesman said more importantly, the Buhari administration has failed in its three major governance planks of provision of security, economic recovery and fight against corruption and “ruined our productive sector, frustrated our farmers, manufacturers and small scale entrepreneurs, devalued our naira, wrecked employment opportunities for our youth, turned our once prosperous nation into the poverty capital of the world while accumulating huge foreign debts for this generation and the unborn.

    He said: “Under five years, President Buhari has borrowed from every corner of the world. These include external borrowing of $10.72 billion (N4.1 trillion) in 2015, $11.41 billion (N4.4 trillion) in 2016, $18.91 billion (N7.3 trillion) in 2017, $25.27 billion (N9.8 trillion) in 2018, $27.68 billion (N10.7 trillion) in 2019 as well as 2020 loans of $3.4 billion (N1.3 trillion) from IMF, $4.4 million (N1.594 billion) internal borrowing, $22.7 billion (N8.8 trillion) external loan and the recently yet to be approved $5.513 billion (N2.1 trillion) waiting before the National Assembly.

    “Our party had already alerted Nigerians that with the volume of borrowing, President Buhari and the APC have placed our nation on the international auction market.

    “In the last five years, corruption has also worsened in government circle as shown in Transparency International (TI)’s corruption perception index.

    “Federal Government agencies such as the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) among others have been opened up for pillaging by the cabal in the Presidency and the APC.

    “It is distressing that instead of heeding wise counsel to accept failure and avoid making false performance claims, the Buhari Presidency just yesterday released a list of recycled fictitious achievements, including very insensitive claim of having routed out bandits; even as marauders were pillaging communities and killing our compatriots in Sokoto and other states, particularly in the Northwest,” the party submitted.

  • Women’s Bundesliga to restart on May 29

    Women’s Bundesliga to restart on May 29

    The women’s Bundesliga will restart following the coronavirus stoppage on May 29, the German Football Association (DFB) said on Wednesday after a meeting with the clubs.

    The DFB said the competition was among the sports events which had been given the green light to resume by local health authorities who have the final say.

    “I am very happy that the clubs of the women’s Bundesliga have expressed their unity in favour of continuing the season,” said DFB president Fritz Keller.

    “This is exactly what we need in the crisis. The return of the women’s Bundesliga to the pitch is another important step towards a kind of normality in football as well as in society.

    “The women’s Bundesliga is thus taking on a pioneering role in international women’s football.”

    The men’s Bundesliga resumed last Saturday, and it is the first major European league to do so.

  • May 29: Bakare advises Buhari on choice of candidates for ministerial slots, other appointments

    Latter Rain Assembly Serving Overseer Tunde Bakare has a prayer request – it is for President Muhammadu Buhari to appoint the best, brightest and fittest into his administration as he takes oath on May 29 for his second term in office.

    Pastor Bakare, who was Buhari’s running mate in the 2011 presidential election on the platform of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), said Nigeria has enough assets for the development of the nation.

    The fiery cleric, who spoke in a chat on the Channels Television, warned of the consequences of not tackling rising insecurity and unemployment in the land. He also commented on the proliferation of private varsities

    Bakare expressed the hope that with the right men on the drivers’ seats at the various ministries, departments and agencies, the problems would become surmountable.

    He said: “It is in our corporate interest to ensure that there is a future for our young people and for the children, to ensure good healthcare delivery, to ensure transportation system that is flawless; there is so much assets in this country.

    I pray that President Buhari will do his best in the second term to appoint the best, the brightest and the fittest, so that you will see Nigeria turn around as we maximise the potentials of the nation.”

    Bakare said that jobs should be created for the teeming youths to steer them away from crime, noting that the country is facing a scourge of insecurity as a result of unemployment.

    We are being invaded from outside and from within, what do you think will happen to millions of jobless youths who have no way of providing for themselves? Crime would be the next option.

    So, we need to create jobs, and more job, and more jobs, we have neglected the greatest asset of any nation — human capital. Our education sector has gone down the drain; we need to revive all that.

    I heard they are giving 300 licences for universities; I am just amazed, they are glorified secondary schools. Let us solidify the ones we have; it is ok to start university, it is ok to have private universities but let us maintain standards.”

    Bakare pointed out the dangers of prosperity in the midst of poverty, warning that the uneducated youths of today will become a threat to the nation’s development.

    He said: “Your being insecure can become a threat to my security. I don’t want to be a rich man in a secured island of prosperity in the midst of quicksand of poverty, because those children we do not train, and we do not equip will rise to fight.

    Almajiris will rise to fight, area boys will rise to fight; once the Almajiris in the North and the area boys in the South join hands together, we are not safe.”

     

  • We won’t recognise Buhari as president beyond May 29 – Opposition parties

    Opposition political parties under the aegis of the Coalition of United Political Parties have vowed not to recognise President Muhammadu Buhari as Nigeria’s President beyond May 29, 2019.

    They said they would ensure, within civil means, that Buhari did not enjoy what they called a stolen mandate based on his declaration as the winner of last Saturday’s presidential election.

    The coalition’s national spokesman, Imo Ugochinyere, made the political parties’ position known in a statement made available to journalists in Abuja on Wednesday.

    Ugochinyere urged Nigerians to continue to support opposition parties in their quest to retrieve the mandate for the rightful owner.

    He said, “The opposition rejects the cooked and panel beaten figures and will not recognise General Muhammadu Buhari as the carrier of legitimate mandate beyond May 29, 2019.

    Describing Buhari’s victory as pyrrhic, Ugochinyere claimed that there is evidence nationwide that the 2019 presidential election was a clear departure from the electoral gains made in 2015.

    He said it was glaring that the ruling All Progressives Congress massively stole votes and suppressed votes of the opposition to such an extent that the election is the worst since Nigeria’s return to democracy 1999.

  • Democracy Day: FG declares May 29 public holiday

    The Federal Government has declared Tuesday, May 29, as public holiday to celebrate the 2018 Democracy Day in Nigeria.

    The Minister of Interior, retired Lt.-Gen Abdulrahman Dambazau, made the declaration on Friday in Abuja on behalf of the Federal Government in a statement issued by Dr M. Umar the Permanent Secretary.

    Dambazau congratulated Nigerians on the occasion and pledged government’s continued dedication to entrenching democracy in the country.

    He also urged all Nigerians to trust and support the government in its commitment to building an indivisible, peaceful and greater nation based on the tenets of democracy.

    The Minister wished all Nigerians a Happy Democracy Day celebration.

  • June 12, not May 29 should be named Democracy Day – Joe Keshi

    By Sunny Ogefere

    Former permanent secretary in the ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Joe Keshi has urged the Federal Government to name June 12 Democracy Day instead of the May 29 that is currently fixed at.

    Keshi also noted that the President Muhammadu Buhari led All Progressives Congress, APC, is yet to fulfill its promised change to the electorates.

    Keshi said this in an interview with Sunny Ogefere on the sidelines of Democracy Day and what it truly stands for.

    Democracy Day

    I honestly feel that the time has come for us to properly name June 12 as the Democracy Day. What is happening now is that we are confusing two things together – Presently in all the news items nobody is talking about democracy per se. The concentration is on the government’s performance. So it is the government’s performance that is being judged; whether the APC government has performed or not and nobody is talking about Democracy Day in reality

    So if we separate the two, it means that the actual Democracy Day will focus on what is actually democracy and the relevance of democracy to our lives. As it is now our democracy is still very fragile and we are not doing enough to expand the consolidation

    For example, if you name June 12 as Democracy Day it gives us the opportunity to talk about democracy itself; as a system of governance whether it is walking or not walking well. But more interestingly, it gives us the opportunity to do two other things. Firstly, to celebrate the heroes of our democratic struggle; and secondly, to talk to young people about the whole essence of democracy itself and why they should be involved.

    So you do not mix it up with judging government’s performance

    But in terms of democracy, well you could look at it and say we have done 18 years. But the reality is that the political parties are doing badly. There is no internal democracy; they are all riddled with crisis and that is because the managers of the party have stifled the parties; to the extent that it is difficult for new entrants to come in and be useful or even seek for election.

    For instance look at the cost imposed by political parties for you to want to contest. You are going to charge somebody who want to contest for office of the president about $11million, is that what democracy is all about? The political parties are so badly managed that I doubt if they pay annual dues or membership fees. They all depend on government even till date. In the news currently, some party members were complaining that the governors refused to bring money to organize the party, is that not corruption?

    Until we understand that the role of political party is to galvanize people towards a shared vision of policies and issues and we defend them, there is no ideology, there is no philosophy guiding any political party at all. So if election is conducted today, if party A wins everybody decamps to party A. If you look at the APC, more that 70 per cent of the core members of the APC were in PDP.

    So we are moving on but it is worrisome because what we are doing is not really democracy. It’s all about power and power. You just grab power and you are a democrat. If not how will you see a situation where some people have carpet crossed four or five times? Any time a party wins they cross and they keep on. The states are not free still. The party managers manage the states for those they want to remain in power. So it is no free and fair yet at the political level.

    We need to consolidate our democracy or else we will be in trouble in the future”.

    Present Governance

    “The unfortunate thing about the APC administration is that they started by looking at the past and pretending that without dealing with the past, they cannot deal with the future. That is not true. Election is about the future and not the past. Secondly, is the fact that the fundamentals for Nigeria’s greatness is there.

    When you compare 1960 to 2017, you will discover that in 1960 there was hope that Nigeria will be a great nation as compared to some of the Asian countries. But within 30 years, all those Asian countries have grown to become super powers in their own right. We are still struggling; we do not have an industrial base, we do not have a scientific base; you can just name everything that is missing.

    But the fundamental to leap into greatness is already there, we have it now; what we lack is the leadership to drive the process and if we can just get the leadership, under 10 years, we can actually do wonders. And that is why it is so sad that the government that promised change came and has not been able to engineer that change. Instead, it has expanded the contradictions in the Nigerian society by the way it has marginalized and discriminated against a few people, by the way it has pursued the fight against corruption.

    What is wrong with that battle is that it is not being fought with a view to properly eradicate the disease because what fuels corruption is mostly dependent on government. So the first thing to do is how to reduce the influence of government in business; how do you get private sector to take more roles and pull out the government

    Today we are still awarding so many contracts for infrastructure and so on. The question is can we not get the private sector to build these infrastructures? We keep repeating the same thing over and over again, and these are all the avenues that funds get leaked out of the system … We are more or less fighting individuals, we have not blocked the leakages or the circumstances that encourages corruption.

    Our health system is still in the same place; our educational system is still in the same place. So substantially, there has been no change. Of course on the economic front, there are beginning to be a few good things, but if care is not taken and this is not done across the value chain, we might go back.

    Right now the major focus of the political class is on politics and politics of succession.”