Friday, June 18, 2010
Tinubu, Akinrinade, Buhari for Lagos rally on New Voter's Register
The Save Nigeria Group (SNG) has begun a campaign for a new voters’ register as a condition for a free and fair election next year.
On June 23, the group will hold a rally at Onikan Stadium, Lagos, in conjunction with the members of the Coalition of Democrats for Electoral Reforms (CODER).
The group also said it will use the occasion of the 17th anniversary of the annulment of the June 12, 1993 elections to sensitise Nigerians to the principle of "one man, one vote."
The National Publicity Secretary of SNG, Mr Yinka Odumakin, said the group would continue to insist on electoral probity to push its nationwide enlightenment, which kicked off during its rally in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), last month.
Odumakin said: "As Nigerians mark the 17th anniversary of the annulment of June 12, 1993 elections by the Ibrahim Babangida junta on June 23, 2010, the SNG will continue its national mobilisation for free, fair and credible polls as we march towards 2011, which started in Abuja on May 31.
"Collaborating with the Coalition of Democrats for Electoral Reforms (CODER), SNG stages a massive rally in Lagos where concrete demand would be made for a new voters’ register as a prelude to one-man-one-vote."
Speakers at the rally included Gen. Muhamadu Buhari, Dr Tunde Bakare, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Solomon Asemota (SAN), Gen. Alani Akinrinade, Prof. Wole Soyinka, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, Chief Bisi Akande, Prof. Pat Utomi, Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN), and Mallam Nuhu Ribadu.
Others include Mr. Ayo Opadokun, Ammad Sheik Abrahaman, Pastor Sarah Omakwu, Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN), Bashorun Dele Momodu , Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin, Mr. Femi Falana and Mrs. Ayo Obe, among others.
2011: Anxiety in Jonathan’s camp as IBB, others meet
By Yusuf Alli
For the second time in one month, some leaders of the North met yesterday in Abuja to strategise on next year’s elections.
They were led by former military president Gen. Ibrahim Babangida and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar.
The meeting is part of ongoing plans to ensure that the North produces the president next year, based on the People's Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) zoning arrangement.
The contention of the leading lights of the North is that it is entitled to two terms in office, according to an understanding which allowed former President Olusegun Obasanjo to have two terms from 1999 to 2007.
The meeting, which started at about 8.40pm at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, was attended by some former governors, former party chieftains, former senators and former members of the House of Representatives.
Details of the agenda were kept secret to avoid security scrutiny, it was learnt.
The invitation was said to have been restricted to those who believe that zoning must be in the North’s favour next year. There were five leaders from each of the 19 Northern states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).
At the meeting were a former Minister of Finance, Alhaji Adamu Ciroma; former Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Muhammadu Yusufu, former Governors Mohammed Sha’aba Lafiagi (Kwara), Mohammed Goni (Borno), former Senate President Iyorchia Ayu; Second Republic Minister of Commerce Bello Maitama Yusuf; Ibrahim Isa Kaita; former Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister Air Vice Marshal Hamzat Abdullahi; and former PDP National Chairman Audu Ogbeh.
Others are former Minister of Foreign Affairs Jubril Maigari; former National Chairman of the Democratic Party of Nigeria(DPN) Saleh Hassan; Gen. Garba Wushishi; former Minister of Police Affairs Gen. David Jemibewon; and Suleiman Isyaku.
There are: Alhaji Bello Kurfi; former Minister of Internal Affairs Maj.-Gen. Mohammed Magoro; Senator Mohammed Ahmed; Amb. Yahaya Kwande; Senator Zaynab Kure; House of Representatives member Kola Yusuf; Senator Matori; Mai Adamu; Senator Daniel Saror; Ezekiel Ibrahim (Yobe), former Chief of Army Staff Gen. Salihu Ibrahim and Senator Usman Al-bishir.
Babangida arrived at about 8.07pm. Atiku came in at 8.38pm.
The delegates went into a closed door session after clearance at a desk close to the entrance of the centre’s Main Hall.
According to a former governor, who spoke in confidence, the session was aimed at retaining the presidency in the North.
He said: "The North is insisting that power must remain in the region in 2011. While the meeting might not be personal, it is correct that the session was part of a move to stop President Goodluck Jonathan’s re-election bid.
"An agreement must be an agreement – whether it is written or unwritten. Most Northern leaders are not happy that some stalwarts of the PDP are just out to ‘hijack’ the presidency from the North in defiance of the power sharing agreement in the party.
"If the North has its way, it would not mind negotiating a new written power accord with the South-West, the South-East and the South-South to stop Jonathan’s re-election plan.
"I think a new coalition may emerge from the latest meeting as part of Plan B to checkmate moves by the PDP to renege on its existing zoning formula."
But former Plateau State Governor Solomon Lar, who spoke on the telephone from Germany, insisted that PDP’s zoning arrangement was designed as a stop-gap measure.
Lar, the pioneer chair of PDP, said: "Well, I have already stated earlier that the zoning formula was a temporary thing to solve a particular problem or serve a purpose. "I will soon be back and talk to you fully on this and the emerging development."
On May 6, Atiku warned against moves to alter the zoning formula.
PIB: Shell puts $40bn Nigeria investment on hold
By Hamed Shobiye with agency report
Royal Dutch Shell has put $40bn worth of potential investment in deepwater oil projects in Nigeria on hold amid uncertainty over planned reforms of the energy sector, a senior executive told Reuters late on Wednesday.
The Country Chairman for Shell Nigeria, Mr. Mutiu Sunmonu, said it was difficult to make commitments without clarity over the terms of the Petroleum Industry Bill, a legislation that would change the fiscal and regulatory framework in the country.
”Just looking at deepwater alone, we have a portfolio of about $40bn worth of projects, but we will not be able to make a move on these until we have a landing on the PIB,” he said in an interview in Lagos on Wednesday.
“That is potential investment that we are not able to sign off on at this time,” Sunmonu said, adding that the investment covered six or seven deepwater projects, whose timeframe depended on how quickly they could be funded and executed.
Shell, according to Reuters, had said in February that the oil industry as a whole invested around $4bn in Nigerian deepwater projects in 2009, and that it expected offshore production to rise to about 1.5 million barrels per day by 2015, equivalent to half the country‘s current installed capacity.
The Federal Government had said the PIB would make the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation more competitive and transparent, encourage investment, promote local oil companies’ involvement in the industry and increase gas supplies to the power plants.
But international oil companies are worried that the bill will impose higher taxes and royalties, while failing to address key issues of under-funding, corruption and security.
The bill has been repeatedly delayed by revisions and disagreement. It has stalled again in its final stages as President Goodluck Jonathan, who took over last month following the death of late President Umaru Yar’Adua, and new Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, revisit some of the issues.
With elections due next April at the latest, the new administration has little time to push the bill through, but Sunmonu voiced optimism that the differences could be overcome.
He said, “The present government is determined to pass the PIB. I know the minister is planning to have a meeting with captains of industry to further consult with us on how to close the gap.”
Sunmonu also said he had brought to the petroleum ministry‘s attention the need to renew onshore licences, which lapsed under the previous administration, saying government had pledged to ”dispose of all these legacy issues as quickly as possible.”
Sunmonu added that security in the Niger Delta, where three years of militant attacks since early 2006 had prevented Nigeria from pumping much above two thirds of its three million barrels per day capacity, had greatly improved since an amnesty programme was launched last year.
But he said that bunkering; the theft of industrial quantities of crude oil had increased.
”I think there is an increase in the level of bunkering in the last few months, there is an upward swing. I always use an estimate of about 100,000 bpd and I don‘t think that would be too off the mark,” he stressed.
Although only a portion of that stolen oil is spilled, it is around twice the level leaking into the United States, Gulf of Mexico, according to a team of US scientists, who on Tuesday raised their high-end estimate to between 35,000 and 60,000 bpd.
Royal Dutch Shell has put $40bn worth of potential investment in deepwater oil projects in Nigeria on hold amid uncertainty over planned reforms of the energy sector, a senior executive told Reuters late on Wednesday.
The Country Chairman for Shell Nigeria, Mr. Mutiu Sunmonu, said it was difficult to make commitments without clarity over the terms of the Petroleum Industry Bill, a legislation that would change the fiscal and regulatory framework in the country.
”Just looking at deepwater alone, we have a portfolio of about $40bn worth of projects, but we will not be able to make a move on these until we have a landing on the PIB,” he said in an interview in Lagos on Wednesday.
“That is potential investment that we are not able to sign off on at this time,” Sunmonu said, adding that the investment covered six or seven deepwater projects, whose timeframe depended on how quickly they could be funded and executed.
Shell, according to Reuters, had said in February that the oil industry as a whole invested around $4bn in Nigerian deepwater projects in 2009, and that it expected offshore production to rise to about 1.5 million barrels per day by 2015, equivalent to half the country‘s current installed capacity.
The Federal Government had said the PIB would make the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation more competitive and transparent, encourage investment, promote local oil companies’ involvement in the industry and increase gas supplies to the power plants.
But international oil companies are worried that the bill will impose higher taxes and royalties, while failing to address key issues of under-funding, corruption and security.
The bill has been repeatedly delayed by revisions and disagreement. It has stalled again in its final stages as President Goodluck Jonathan, who took over last month following the death of late President Umaru Yar’Adua, and new Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, revisit some of the issues.
With elections due next April at the latest, the new administration has little time to push the bill through, but Sunmonu voiced optimism that the differences could be overcome.
He said, “The present government is determined to pass the PIB. I know the minister is planning to have a meeting with captains of industry to further consult with us on how to close the gap.”
Sunmonu also said he had brought to the petroleum ministry‘s attention the need to renew onshore licences, which lapsed under the previous administration, saying government had pledged to ”dispose of all these legacy issues as quickly as possible.”
Sunmonu added that security in the Niger Delta, where three years of militant attacks since early 2006 had prevented Nigeria from pumping much above two thirds of its three million barrels per day capacity, had greatly improved since an amnesty programme was launched last year.
But he said that bunkering; the theft of industrial quantities of crude oil had increased.
”I think there is an increase in the level of bunkering in the last few months, there is an upward swing. I always use an estimate of about 100,000 bpd and I don‘t think that would be too off the mark,” he stressed.
Although only a portion of that stolen oil is spilled, it is around twice the level leaking into the United States, Gulf of Mexico, according to a team of US scientists, who on Tuesday raised their high-end estimate to between 35,000 and 60,000 bpd.
President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday promised to withdraw the names of people alleged to be members of the Peoples Democratic Party appointed by him as national and state resident electoral commissioners of the Independent National Electoral Commission. Jonathan, at the National Executive Committee meeting of the PDP in Abuja, said he would do so because of the criticisms trailing the appointments. He had told the National Council of State at its recent meeting in Abuja that he would drop any INEC official whose appointment was trailed by controversy. The Action Congress, the National Conscience Part and Human Rights Monitor had, on Tuesday, raised the alarm that the President had appointed four of his party’s members into the board of INEC. They gave the names of the affected persons as Ambassador Z. Anka, who was alleged to have contested the governorship of Zamfara State on the platform of the PDP in 1999; Gen. A.B. Mamman, a member of the BOT; Mr. Eddy Nwatalari from Enugu State; and Alhaji Yakubu Shehu, who contested the senatorial elections in 2003 and 2007 on the platform of the party in Kaduna State. The AC, NCP and HRM had argued that the electoral body would not be able to conduct free and fair elections in the country with PDP members as electoral umpires. At the NEC meeting on Thursday, Jonathan said, “Let me also use the opportunity to brief our party members. Of course, you have read in the newspapers that we have sent the list of INEC nominees to the Senate. “We presented the list of INEC commissioners that will replace the ones, whose tenures have expired, during the last NCS meeting. “And I believe that immediately the Senate convenes, that will be the first document they will look at. “But I did mention to members of the NCS the day I made the presentation to them that from that day till when the list would be screened, if I hear any complaint about a particular person, we are going to withdraw that person. “Immediately the Senate screens the list, I will no longer have powers to withdraw, except there are major challenges. Then, I will go back to the Senate and say that there are so many complaints about Mr. ‘A’ or Mrs. ‘B’, we need to withdraw because I will need to consult them when it gets to that point. “But until the screening, I have the full powers to withdraw somebody that the people raise issues against. If you have followed media publications, you will notice that they come with clear evidence of some people that are clear members of political parties. “The constitution does not say that if you are a member of a political party, you should not be in INEC; no, that is very clear. “You can be a member of a political party. We can (even) decide to make the acting chairman (of the PDP) the chairman of INEC if we chose to do so and we believe that he can conduct elections free and fair. “I am not saying that he is going to rig elections for the PDP. In fact, the law emphasises that to be in INEC you must qualify to contest election into the House of Representatives. “For you to contest election into the House of Representatives you must be a member of a political party. So, if you follow the law to the letter, you can appoint people in political parties to be in INEC. “Active members of political parties will feel, wrongly or rightly, that we will be biased. If today I make the acting chairman as the INEC chairman, they will say PDP has taken over the place. “For that reason, I promise Nigerians and the whole world that come 2011, we are going to conduct free and fair elections. “For that reason, anybody that will be in INEC should be somebody that should be above board, people should have confidence in him because perception is one thing and reality is another. “If they perceive that he will do the wrong thing, even if he does the right thing and somebody fails in the election, they will believe that he was manipulated out. For that reason, those people that have been linked to key roles in political parties, I am withdrawing them.” The President also lamented that the security situation in the country had deteriorated. He revealed that Nigeria lost the chance to host the Commonwealth Games because of kidnapping. He explained that all his efforts to convince members of the international community that Abuja, where the events were to hold, was far from the Niger Delta where kidnapping was rampart was rebuffed. Jonathan added that the rate of kidnapping in the South-East, especially in Abia State, was not acceptable to the government. He said, “The security situation in the country is worrisome; especially kidnapping. I always say that in terms of petty crimes, there are some countries that are worse than Nigeria in petty crimes. “Now, South Africa is hosting the whole world and dignitaries, especially soccer stars, are there and nobody is complaining. “But petty crimes, for those of you who have been to South Africa or who have read about South Africa, are worse there than Nigeria. “But nobody is complaining about South Africa hosting the World Cup. I remember when we were struggling to host the Commonwealth Games, the late President Umaru Yar’Adua asked us to go and appeal to the organisers. “What was used in blackmailing us was kidnapping. And I told them, look, you are talking of kidnapping, I am from the Niger Delta, where we are going to host the Games is Abuja and Niger Delta is far away from Abuja.” He said the country would no longer allow criminals to take charge. The President added, “We can no longer continue to live in a society where even if your wife is going to church, you have to look for APC (Armoured Personnel Carrier) to follow her. “If your children are going to school, you have to look for machine gun- carrying security people to follow them. How many people can afford that?” He listed other challenges facing his government as power and the implementation of the post-amnesty programme in the Niger Delta. On PDP ’s chances in the 2011 general election, the President called on the leadership of the party to make sure that popular candidates emerged at the end of the primaries.
President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday promised to withdraw the names of people alleged to be members of the Peoples Democratic Party appointed by him as national and state resident electoral commissioners of the Independent National Electoral Commission.
Jonathan, at the National Executive Committee meeting of the PDP in Abuja, said he would do so because of the criticisms trailing the appointments.
He had told the National Council of State at its recent meeting in Abuja that he would drop any INEC official whose appointment was trailed by controversy.
The Action Congress, the National Conscience Part and Human Rights Monitor had, on Tuesday, raised the alarm that the President had appointed four of his party’s members into the board of INEC.
They gave the names of the affected persons as Ambassador Z. Anka, who was alleged to have contested the governorship of Zamfara State on the platform of the PDP in 1999; Gen. A.B. Mamman, a member of the BOT; Mr. Eddy Nwatalari from Enugu State; and Alhaji Yakubu Shehu, who contested the senatorial elections in 2003 and 2007 on the platform of the party in Kaduna State.
The AC, NCP and HRM had argued that the electoral body would not be able to conduct free and fair elections in the country with PDP members as electoral umpires.
At the NEC meeting on Thursday, Jonathan said, “Let me also use the opportunity to brief our party members. Of course, you have read in the newspapers that we have sent the list of INEC nominees to the Senate.
“We presented the list of INEC commissioners that will replace the ones, whose tenures have expired, during the last NCS meeting.
“And I believe that immediately the Senate convenes, that will be the first document they will look at.
“But I did mention to members of the NCS the day I made the presentation to them that from that day till when the list would be screened, if I hear any complaint about a particular person, we are going to withdraw that person.
“Immediately the Senate screens the list, I will no longer have powers to withdraw, except there are major challenges. Then, I will go back to the Senate and say that there are so many complaints about Mr. ‘A’ or Mrs. ‘B’, we need to withdraw because I will need to consult them when it gets to that point.
“But until the screening, I have the full powers to withdraw somebody that the people raise issues against. If you have followed media publications, you will notice that they come with clear evidence of some people that are clear members of political parties.
“The constitution does not say that if you are a member of a political party, you should not be in INEC; no, that is very clear.
“You can be a member of a political party. We can (even) decide to make the acting chairman (of the PDP) the chairman of INEC if we chose to do so and we believe that he can conduct elections free and fair.
“I am not saying that he is going to rig elections for the PDP. In fact, the law emphasises that to be in INEC you must qualify to contest election into the House of Representatives.
“For you to contest election into the House of Representatives you must be a member of a political party. So, if you follow the law to the letter, you can appoint people in political parties to be in INEC.
“Active members of political parties will feel, wrongly or rightly, that we will be biased. If today I make the acting chairman as the INEC chairman, they will say PDP has taken over the place.
“For that reason, I promise Nigerians and the whole world that come 2011, we are going to conduct free and fair elections.
“For that reason, anybody that will be in INEC should be somebody that should be above board, people should have confidence in him because perception is one thing and reality is another.
“If they perceive that he will do the wrong thing, even if he does the right thing and somebody fails in the election, they will believe that he was manipulated out. For that reason, those people that have been linked to key roles in political parties, I am withdrawing them.”
The President also lamented that the security situation in the country had deteriorated. He revealed that Nigeria lost the chance to host the Commonwealth Games because of kidnapping.
He explained that all his efforts to convince members of the international community that Abuja, where the events were to hold, was far from the Niger Delta where kidnapping was rampart was rebuffed.
Jonathan added that the rate of kidnapping in the South-East, especially in Abia State, was not acceptable to the government.
He said, “The security situation in the country is worrisome; especially kidnapping. I always say that in terms of petty crimes, there are some countries that are worse than Nigeria in petty crimes.
“Now, South Africa is hosting the whole world and dignitaries, especially soccer stars, are there and nobody is complaining.
“But petty crimes, for those of you who have been to South Africa or who have read about South Africa, are worse there than Nigeria.
“But nobody is complaining about South Africa hosting the World Cup. I remember when we were struggling to host the Commonwealth Games, the late President Umaru Yar’Adua asked us to go and appeal to the organisers.
“What was used in blackmailing us was kidnapping. And I told them, look, you are talking of kidnapping, I am from the Niger Delta, where we are going to host the Games is Abuja and Niger Delta is far away from Abuja.”
He said the country would no longer allow criminals to take charge.
The President added, “We can no longer continue to live in a society where even if your wife is going to church, you have to look for APC (Armoured Personnel Carrier) to follow her.
“If your children are going to school, you have to look for machine gun- carrying security people to follow them. How many people can afford that?”
He listed other challenges facing his government as power and the implementation of the post-amnesty programme in the Niger Delta.
On PDP ’s chances in the 2011 general election, the President called on the leadership of the party to make sure that popular candidates emerged at the end of the primaries.
150 Northern Leaders Insist on 2011 Presidency
In a deft move to counter the alleged ambition of Presi-dent Goodluck Jonathan in 2011, no fewer than 150 top politicians from the North converged on Abuja last night to strategise on how to enforce the contentious zoning of presidency to the North.
The leaders insisted that the North should produce the President in 2011 based on the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) zoning arrangement, which they claimed had ceded power to the region till 2015.
They, however, said the meeting was not targeted against any individual, apparently referring to President Jonathan.
In attendance at the meeting among others were former military President Ibrahim Babangida, former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar, National Security Adviser, General Aliyu Gusau, Mallam Adamu Ciroma, Gen. David Jemibewon, Gen. Mohammed Magoro, Air Cmdr. Hamza Abdullahi and former PDP Chairman Audu Ogbeh.
We gathered that only one agenda was up for deliberation at the meeting, and it centred on how the North will reclaim power and keep it till 2015.
A sub-issue at the meeting was how the North will negotiate with other regions to ensure that the “gentleman's agreement” is respected.
At the end of the meeting, the leaders set up three committees to work on the contact and mobilization of other zones and stakeholders in the country to back their position.
Proponents of zoning claimed that former President Olusegun Obasanjo had done the South’s two terms of eight years based on the agreement and that the North is expected to produce the president for eight years till 2015, notwithstanding the death of President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua on May 6, 2010 after three years on the saddle.
Yesterday’s parley was the first time the pro-zoning forces would make public their meetings. There have been reported cases of similar meetings in some parts of the North to prefect plans on how to stop Jonathan’s aspiration.
The meeting, which held at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, Abuja, started around 8 pm and was attended by five delegates from each of the 19 states of the North.
At the end of the meeting at about 11.20pm, former Senate President Prof. Iyorcha Ayu flanked by Babangida and Atiku addressed the press.
Ayu said yesterday's meeting was not targeted against any individual or zone but that it is an effort at strengthening national cohesion and peace.
He said no fewer than 150 political leaders from the North were at the meeting.
According to him, the aim is to prevail on concerned individuals and groups to respect the agreed template on zoning.
He said three committees were constituted to among other things reach out to the other geopolitical zones for "mobilisation."
The committees will be chaired by Ciroma, Magaji Dambatta and Prof. Ignatius Ayua.
On the issue of consensus candidate, he said "it is too premature to speak on that."
When asked if the agenda of the meeting is to pave the way for the emergence of a Northern candidate, he queried, “what is wrong with that,” adding “after all, the person who was president between 1999 to 2007 was not a Northerner.”
President Jonathan in an interview with CNN’s Christine Amanpour during his visit to the United States in April had refused to categorically rule himself out of the 2011 race.
Since then some politicians in the North have been strategising on how to stop the president’s alleged ambition.
One of the strategies is to impress it on Jonathan that the zoning formula should be respected.
But recently prominent leaders of the South-south had moved to back Jonathan, saying they would mobilise the whole of the South and North for him.
Various groups have also continued to advocate for Jonathan presidency in 2011.
They point to the manner of his emergence and the fact that he enjoys global acceptance as president.
Jonathan has, however, said he is committed to conducting a free and fair election.
His appointment of Professor Attahiru Jega as INEC chairman-designate is seen as a step in this direction.
Others at yesterday’ meeting included Alhaji Lawal Kaita, Alhaji Saleh Hassan, Alhaji Nuhu Aliyu, Mohammed Goni, MD Yusuf, Senator Maitama Bello Yusuf, Jibrin Maigari, Ibrahim Isa Kaita, Sulieman Isyaku, Ezekiel Ibrahim, Yahaya Kwande, Shaba Lafiagi, Patrick Adaba and Bello Kurfi.
Others were Sen. Mohammed Ahmed, Sen. Zainab Kure, Senator Iyorchia Ayu, lliya Gada and Alhaji Salisu Ibrahim.
The leaders insisted that the North should produce the President in 2011 based on the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) zoning arrangement, which they claimed had ceded power to the region till 2015.
They, however, said the meeting was not targeted against any individual, apparently referring to President Jonathan.
In attendance at the meeting among others were former military President Ibrahim Babangida, former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar, National Security Adviser, General Aliyu Gusau, Mallam Adamu Ciroma, Gen. David Jemibewon, Gen. Mohammed Magoro, Air Cmdr. Hamza Abdullahi and former PDP Chairman Audu Ogbeh.
We gathered that only one agenda was up for deliberation at the meeting, and it centred on how the North will reclaim power and keep it till 2015.
A sub-issue at the meeting was how the North will negotiate with other regions to ensure that the “gentleman's agreement” is respected.
At the end of the meeting, the leaders set up three committees to work on the contact and mobilization of other zones and stakeholders in the country to back their position.
Proponents of zoning claimed that former President Olusegun Obasanjo had done the South’s two terms of eight years based on the agreement and that the North is expected to produce the president for eight years till 2015, notwithstanding the death of President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua on May 6, 2010 after three years on the saddle.
Yesterday’s parley was the first time the pro-zoning forces would make public their meetings. There have been reported cases of similar meetings in some parts of the North to prefect plans on how to stop Jonathan’s aspiration.
The meeting, which held at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, Abuja, started around 8 pm and was attended by five delegates from each of the 19 states of the North.
At the end of the meeting at about 11.20pm, former Senate President Prof. Iyorcha Ayu flanked by Babangida and Atiku addressed the press.
Ayu said yesterday's meeting was not targeted against any individual or zone but that it is an effort at strengthening national cohesion and peace.
He said no fewer than 150 political leaders from the North were at the meeting.
According to him, the aim is to prevail on concerned individuals and groups to respect the agreed template on zoning.
He said three committees were constituted to among other things reach out to the other geopolitical zones for "mobilisation."
The committees will be chaired by Ciroma, Magaji Dambatta and Prof. Ignatius Ayua.
On the issue of consensus candidate, he said "it is too premature to speak on that."
When asked if the agenda of the meeting is to pave the way for the emergence of a Northern candidate, he queried, “what is wrong with that,” adding “after all, the person who was president between 1999 to 2007 was not a Northerner.”
President Jonathan in an interview with CNN’s Christine Amanpour during his visit to the United States in April had refused to categorically rule himself out of the 2011 race.
Since then some politicians in the North have been strategising on how to stop the president’s alleged ambition.
One of the strategies is to impress it on Jonathan that the zoning formula should be respected.
But recently prominent leaders of the South-south had moved to back Jonathan, saying they would mobilise the whole of the South and North for him.
Various groups have also continued to advocate for Jonathan presidency in 2011.
They point to the manner of his emergence and the fact that he enjoys global acceptance as president.
Jonathan has, however, said he is committed to conducting a free and fair election.
His appointment of Professor Attahiru Jega as INEC chairman-designate is seen as a step in this direction.
Others at yesterday’ meeting included Alhaji Lawal Kaita, Alhaji Saleh Hassan, Alhaji Nuhu Aliyu, Mohammed Goni, MD Yusuf, Senator Maitama Bello Yusuf, Jibrin Maigari, Ibrahim Isa Kaita, Sulieman Isyaku, Ezekiel Ibrahim, Yahaya Kwande, Shaba Lafiagi, Patrick Adaba and Bello Kurfi.
Others were Sen. Mohammed Ahmed, Sen. Zainab Kure, Senator Iyorchia Ayu, lliya Gada and Alhaji Salisu Ibrahim.
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
‘Finally! Justice for the people of Nigeria’.
One Moment Of “Justice For Nigeria”- A Witnesses’ Account Of The Sentencing Of James Ibori’s Sister And Mistress
Monday, 07 June 2010 22:40
Southwark Crown Court, London, 7 June 2010: 1:23 PM Court clerk advises everyone to vacate court. Doors leading to Court 8 secured. I guess we all have to ‘rush’ for the limited space at 2 PM. 1:28 PM James Ibori associates case T20087009 sentencing moved to Court 9 to make room for more members of public who were arriving in droves.
1:49 PM Relatives of Adebimpe Pogoson, the acquitted Ibori ‘Personal Assistant’ arrive in buoyant mood.
1:55 PM-We all stand in front of Court 9 hoping to get a seat. Now must turn phone off.
1:55 PM Court 9 filled to capacity. Nigerians offer to seat on the floor because the courtroom is filled to capacity. Full British media represented.
2:05 PM Some protest about not having enough seats to go round
2:06 PM Prison service arrive arrives without accused persons
2:10 PM Court clerk informs prison service of potential delay
2:15 PM Increased security and crowd increases
2:20 PM Accused persons arrive. First to arrive was Mrs. Udoamaka Okoronkwo Onuigbo, wearing a brown sweater on a beige camisole, and looking downcast, followed by Christine Ibori-Ibie. Udoamaka makes no attempt at eye contact with Nigerians in the court gallery. When Christine ibie Ibori who wore a black sweater over a purple shirt, sat down she raised her head and scans the gallery as if looking for some her people within the courtroom. She appears confused, a bit nervous and depressed. She later turned to her defence counsel in low inaudible tone. To underscore their situation, they were encased in a glass cubicle surrounded by prison guards. It was obvious that the trial had worn them out completely as they both look pensive and moody.
2:25 PM Clerk informs the media representatives including SaharaReporters that the judge is considering relocating the sentencing hearing to a bigger court room, this would be the second time, we were relocated as more Nigerians arrive in droves.
2:40 PM Clerk informs media ahead of members of the public that the biggest court was Court 1 and all members of the media were to discreetly relocate. The Citizen reporters passed on the information to Nigerians outside and a near stampede took place.
2:43 PM Court 1 is filled to capacity. Both media and members of the public were forced sit wherever they could find space.
2:50 PM Two female prison guards lead the convicted felon to Court 1. First to come in was Udoamaka, followed Christine.
2:52 PM Judge Christopher Hardy arrives. All persons in court rose to their feet to herald his arrival to court. Judge scans the room as everyone seated, including the two felons about to be sentenced to prison. Subsequently, judge informs court that a significant number of the jury indicated unusual request to be present at this sentencing. He granted their request and gives permission for jury to be brought into the courtroom.
2:54 PM Clerk calls out names of convicts and they rise to their feet. They acknowledged each with a nod and sat down. Prosecutor brings in an application relating to trial 2 and also arguments about confiscation of properties earlier frozen by the court. An application was made by the lead prosecutor, Sasha Wass QC for the court to grant that all assets should be confiscated. The Crown prosecutor also submitted that the convicts be compelled to declare all undisclosed assets. Prosecutor suggests August 16th 2010 for confiscation proceedings. Leading defence counsel Andrew Trollope QC makes a surprise submission informing the court that his chambers may not represent either of the accused in subsequent cases or any other case for that matter. A confiscation proceeding was therefore adjourned till a later date.
3:40 PM Andrew Trollope QC, for the defence, rises to give a passionate plea before sentencing. He stated that both Christine and Udoamaka suffered undisclosed illnesses. He brought out documents that appeared like medical records and a character testimonial and passed it to the judge; the contents were not revealed to the open court. However, Trollope stylishly told someone that one of it was a letter from Christine’s pastor describing her as an exemplary woman who was caught up in unfortunate circumstances.
Defence counsel also stated that the likelihood of convicts reoffending was slim and stated “they were caught up in the most unusual circumstance”. He also stated that Christine Ibori’s daughter is suffering from sickle cell anemia.
He further stated that Christine ibori is a victim claiming that she has lived in the UK for 25 years in a north London suburb. Asking rhetorically, “You should ask why such a woman with a good back family background in this crime. The answer is James Ibori and it is he that must bear fullresponsibility.“ He furthered his argued, stressing that James Ibori was a very powerful man with considerable influence within the Nigerian political system and gave a comparison of the impact Ibori’s pressure would bear on his sister bearing in mind that family ties also play a significant role in the Nigerian culture .
In Trollope’s words: ‘He used her. Blame Ibori and not the sister. ‘ He further stated that though Christine may have legal ties to the assets, she does not really have control over them, ‘ Forty million pounds in assets in this case is not up to 10% of Ibori’s assets, so my client is not the principal money launderer. He pleaded with the judge to temper justice with mercy asking the court to consign her to a non- custodial sentence.
Udoamaka’s defence counsel started his plea by stating ‘I will summarize the circumstances leading to my client’s activity with one statement ‘She did it for love. She has a five-year-old daughter for James Ibori. She still loves him and loves her child.’ He further buttressed his argument that before she met James Ibori, Udoamaka was a rich woman and had handled large sums of money. The £4 million that had passed through her account belonged to James Ibori. She did not benefit from it. Because of her big business deals, it was almost impossible to monitor big money transfers. He stated that her gains could not be quantified in financial terms. In her emotional testimony in court where she disclosed her several IVF treatments before having Ibori’s lovechild should be a testament to her loyalty to Ibori. She was blinded by her emotional ties with Ibori.
He added that she had face criminal charges in Nigeria and had been discharged and acquitted. She spent 121 days in a Paris prison, she may be facing fresh charges in Nigeria if she returns to Nigeria and her future is bleak.
The Verdict
Judge Hardy acknowledged all the pleas, made mention of the special circumstances of them being far away from home, the effect of the custodial sentence on Udoamaka’s 5 year old daughter and especially because of her medical conditions. He also acknowledged the effect on Christine Ibori’s three children and he acknowledged the character witness of the pastor and the medical report submitted. He then stated as follows:
“ I am convinced you each indeed knew of these crimes, but refused to plead guilty when the opportunity was made available to you. I want to make it absolutely clear that Nigeria’s judiciary was usurped. Countries who are signatories to fighting corruption and money laundering must live to the full letter of their commitments. I would therefore apply the full weight of the British law to serve as punishment and deterrent. The jury was satisfied that you were connected to the assets that were spread all over the world including safe havens. Each of you benefited massively. You are not simply agents. Who knows how much you are still hiding?“ With these words, Judge Hardy then sentenced Christine Ibori- Ibie and Udoamaka Okoronkwo -Onuigbo to a total of 21 years in prison to be served concurrently; technically each accused person would serve 5 years in prison. There was wild jubilation in the gallery with Nigerian shouting repeatedly ‘Finally! Justice for the people of Nigeria’.
The convicts were led away by three prison guard, made of 2 female and a male- At this point everyone rushed out to catch a glimpse of the prison van that drove the convicts away.
4:00 PM the prison van drove the newest addition from Southwark Crown court 8 to prison to begin a five year prison sentence as pronounce by Judge hardy.
Dangers of North-South dichotomy
By Muhammad Ajah
In as much as every Nigerian citizen who meets the constitutional requirements to
contest for any position of choice is free to employ any reasonable means to
canvass support from fellow compatriots, there is need to respect both inter and
intra-party independence and cooperation to move Nigeria forward. The real
burning issue of recent in the Nigerian politics is neither the appointment of the
Chairman of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) nor that of the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The thing in the whole political quagmire is the
north-south dichotomy which has been smuggled into the system.
From the onset, it must be asserted that the political elite have to work hard to
manage this monster with maturity and handle the dicey implication of hanging on
this for long if we must progress as a nation. What should be paramount to
Nigerians should be how to choose leaders who can practically add value to their
lives and bring development to their homes. Time will come when we must de-
emphasize on where a contestant for a national position hails from.
When we talk of power sharing, it is relevant to note that it is not limited to elective
positions alone. It is more important that it is reflected on appointments especially
in the federal civil service. While one cannot argue the fact that experiences
should matter much in the appointment of Nigerians into offices, there is the other
side of it that once a state is under-employed in a sector of the economy, that state
remains so because there would be no enough personalities to protect the interest
of the state in that sector. We are yet to cross the stage where nepotism,
ethnicism, tribalism and religion play no role in this regard.
Power sharing or power rotation specifically means the movement of the position of
the president between the North and the South. This simply means that when a
president of the northern extraction rules the country for a certain number of years
– constitutionally four years which is renewable for another four years – and an
election is to be held, no northern politician should contest. After the eight years, it
becomes the turn of the South to produce the succeeding president.
Although this has been capitulated in “a gentleman’s agreement” in the ruling
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), it has since been a binding demand that every
citizen should cherish for the time. This is because, going through the list of past
presidents of Nigeria, the north has had the largest number. This was during the
military era. And it was a justification that the north, comprising of nineteen states
of the federation, were dominating the army in the past. The north also was
believed to be more populated than the south which is made up of seventeen
states. With these facts, it has always meant that the north had more advantages
to be president considering the tenets of democracy that majority carries the vote.
When we look at the present partitioning of the country into six geopolitical zones,
we find that the north has three zones with one domineering language which is
Hausa. The South also has three zones but with many struggling tribes claiming
superiority. The Yoruba and the Igbo are the domineering languages of the South,
but it is quite difficult for the people of the South-South geopolitical zone to accept
inferiority under any of the duo. The Ikwerre, the Efik, the Anang, the Bini, the Ijaw,
and a host of other ethnic groups and languages in the six South-South states
seem not to have one traceable ancestral linage. The five South-East states have
Igbo as their language though with dialectical differences. The same is true about
the six South-West Yoruba speaking zone.
This analysis became necessary in order to bring close to memory why the north
can continue to dominate the politics in Nigeria. Further to the earlier yardsticks,
the north is not much divided in pursuing a common goal. True that they have
been in power for a longer time since independence, but the rate of poverty bites
harder in that region more than the south. And it is not hiding the fact that they
sustained the nation’s economy before the advent of the “cursed” crude oil and
gas. On another note, materialism remains stark in the south more than the north.
It was against the background that the north was dominating the politics of Nigeria
that the issue of power sharing or rotational presidency received a nod by most of
the political game masters. And it was much more on that grounds that in 1999,
Chief Olusegun Obasanjo was staged to be the occupant of the Aso Rock Villa. It
was likewise in an effort to consolidate on the unwritten power-sharing mechanism
that Obasanjo was allowed, through pressure on former Vice President Atiku not to
contest against his boss, to re-contest and be rigged into Aso Rock Villa for the
second tenure in 2003.
All Nigerians showing their political prowess at the time of danger, the ploy for a
third tenure for Obasanjo by certain unpatriotic citizens to sabotage the general
interest of the Nigerian people and subvert the provisions of the constitution which
allows for two tenures of four years each for a president, was thwarted. Thanks to
heroes like Chief Ken Nnamani and a host of governors and political juggernauts
who stood firm to salvage the country from a civilian coup. Many Nigerians went to
prayer sessions during that trying moment. And God answered Nigerians and not
Obasanjo. This means that any claim that the former president had respect for the
constitution or wanted a smooth run of this present government was arguable. The
support for zoning was merely for his personal and selfish interest.
Now that it is time to respect the rotational presidency, a lot of people particularly
from the south are opposing it. The reason why this trend came to be in the first
place must not be forgotten so quickly. If it is true that Obasanjo’s exalted plan is to
ensure that power does not return to the north in the next decade or so, then
something is wrong and something must be done quickly to force him to relinquish
any attempt that could cause disharmony and acrimony among the peaceful,
united and still-hoping-for-a-change people of Nigeria.
The risk that this stand posses on the polity is glaring. The implication is that
whenever the power returns to the north, if the system is eventually dismissed or
ignored, they will insist on holding it as the south did and this may cause what
majority of us does not desire. That is more a reason why, though PDP labours to
maintain it, it should remain. PDP, as a self- acclaimed largest party in Africa which
believes in the rule of law and which has been in power since the nation’s return to
democracy, should insist on getting it right if Nigerians must continue to have
sympathy and patronage for it. Is it so difficult to respect the law and the people’s
desire?
The bare truth is that the power rotation has solved the problem of negligence
which the south had cried for. But for the sake of getting it better and involving
every part of the country at the highest level of the leadership, it may be sensible
to consider rotating the position of the president amongst the six geopolitical
zones, instead of the north-south dichotomy. Let it be a one-tenure system of five
years for every zone. In so doing, history will be ready to record the most serious,
most focused, most determined and most liberal region in the country. This means
that when, for instance, the South-West produces the president, the other five
geopolitical zones can form the opposition. This, in no small way, will enhance
development, unity and independence on one hand, and fight sectionalism,
corruption and series of societal evils holding this country to ransom.
With the INEC and PDP chairmen now coming on board, it is the wish of Nigerians
that our political elite should take the constitution so sacrosanct and do the right
thing that will keep us faithful and patriotic to our fatherland beyond 2011.
Muhammad Ajah is a writer, author, advocate of humanity and good governance based in
Abuja. E-mail- mobahawwah@yahoo.co.uk
Jonathan appoints PDP members as INEC commissioners -Falana, AC
The National Chairman of National Conscience Party (NCP) Femi Falana has said
those recently nominated as INEC National Commissioners and the 19 Resident
Electoral Commissioners are card-carrying members of the ruling Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP).
In the same vein the Action Congress (AC) said Ambassador Z. Anka, Mr. Eddy
Nwatalari, Alhaji Yakubu Shehu and Gen. Mamman are members of the ruling PDP.
The party's National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed said in a statement
that ''Gen. Mamman is a member of the Board of Trustees of the PDP, while Alhaji
Shehu contested the senatorial elections in 2003 and 2007 as PDP candidate in
Kaduna State. Shehu is the Chairman of PDP stakeholders in Giwa Local
Government Area of Kaduna State. Yet all these people are on the President‘s list of
appointments into INEC.''
According to the AC, Alhaji Shehu was, at different times, a member of the PDP’s
finance, mobilisation and reconciliation ad hoc committees in Kaduna State.
Mr Falana, on his own part stated that ''In the same vein, majority of them were
involved in the monumental fraud that marred the 2007 general elections and the
rerun elections.''
''After the euphoria that greeted the nomination of Prof. Attahiru Jega to the post of
the Chairman of INEC, it is pertinent to point out that most of the 10 other persons
nominated as INEC national commissioners and 19 resident commissioners are card-
carrying members of the Peoples Democratic Party.'' Falana added.
Recall that the presidency recently announced the nomination of Prof. Attahiru Jega
as INEC chairman-designate and 19 resident electoral commissioners at end of the
meeting of the National Council of State which approved the nomination.
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