The Country of many events including the beating of a Senator in far away Germany because of yam. Funny, not so!
Many more stories coming your way soon. Thanks for your reading patronage, and your earnest patience in waiting while the blogger was engaged.
Sunday, 25 August 2019
Saturday, 22 June 2019
EDO STATE POLITICS OF THE “HE-GOAT AND THE COCOYAM” by SHABA Mafu.
Politicking in Nigeria is
not a profession. It is for those with wits; those who can compromise with ultimate
personal interest in view, even sometimes to the detriment and betrayal of
their political party on which they rode to their positions. Examples of such
politicians are former Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, Alhaji Atiku
Abubakar, and a host of all grand party-hoppers. Those who are regarded as godfathers are
in other words referred to as the King-Makers in the official language of politics.
The 2019 general elections with the preceding campaigns and (exaggerated)
promises of politicians are now over. The battle for ascendancy to different
political positions has been fought, won and lost. It is time for action. It is
time for the electorates to begin to enjoy the dividends of democracy. In Nigeria,
the opposite is usually the case. It is now rather time the electorates are
treated to isolation, deliberate marginalization, pauperization, social
segregation and worst of all shameful embarrassments. The last ‘dividend’ is
our point of consideration in this discourse, as it relates to the political
game currently playing out in the Edo State House of Assembly.
Governor Godwin Obaseki is a core civil
servant and not a politician by calling, at least not the Nigerian type. He may
have crafted his own style of politicking or followed those who are more experienced
politicians and with childlike observation vis-a vis the way the game is
played. It is not out of place for him to sample the game theory of late politician
Tony Anenih, the celebrated and very
subtle politician of Edo State.
Governor Godwin Obaseki
is testing the waters formally in the role he is masterminding in the inauguration
of the current Edo State House of Assembly. How far he can go with his scheming
will be determined on which side he falls by the time the Chairman of his
party, the All Progressives Congress Party, the radical and vibrant Adams Oshiomole
would bare his fangs on the activities of the innocent-looking, but jacobic
Obaseki.
On Monday., 17th
of June, 2019, the Edo state House of Assembly was inaugurated. This was preceded
by the letter of proclamation sent to the Clerk of the House , Alhaji Audu Omogbai,
by the Edo State Governor as required by the law. The Clerk consequently ushered in
members-elect into the chambers for the official legislative business to
commence. The Speaker of the House of Assembly was quickly elected with only 9
members out of the 24 members present during the inauguration and the election
into principal offices. Frank Okiye of Esan North-East constituency, was elected
the new Speaker while Yekini Idiaye of Akoko-Edo Constituency 1 was elected the
Deputy Speaker.
It was reliably gathered
that the 9 legislators who attended the ceremony were those loyal to the
Governor. The process of the inauguration and election was as clandestine as it
was funny. The new speaker was said to be only on his shorts in the hallowed
Chambers for the events, showing he was not prepared for the rapture-like
elections. He is a “short-kneeker Speaker” of the Edo State House of Assembly.
The questions begging for
answers are: why is this kind of garrison approach to electing key officers
into hallowed chambers of the legislature in a democratic society? What
happened to the other 15 lawmakers sidelined? What is Governor Obaseki set to
achieve by dividing a legislature that is exclusively an APC House? Why the
haste typical of political brigandage of the highest order in conducting
nocturnal election in a coven? Governor Obaseki has something very strange up
his sleeves, no doubt.
This game is a similar version
of what played out in the 2015 election of Nigeria Governors Forum where the
former President Goodluck Jonathan was very comfortable with the victory of
Jonah Jang , the then Governor of Plateau State who scored 16 votes against
Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State who
polled 19 votes in same election. Amazingly, both the Governors were from the
then ruling party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). When 16 was favourably greater
than 19 in PDP’s arithmetic, and very
suitable to President Jonathan because of his personal interest on the matter
as represented by Jonah Jang, little did they know that the consequence of
their action was their loss of the presidency to the then opposition party, the
All Progressives Congress. Five of the Governors defected from the ruling PDP
to the APC prior to the 2015 general elections. This was the huge rock that
broke PDP’s back in 2015 elections. They lost the elections
In the case of Edo State,
Governor Obaseki has been openly fraternizing with PDP H
heavyweights in Edo Sate,
amongst whom is the celebrated Igbinedion. The moves Governor Obaseki is making
so far is clear enough that he is preparing his way for defection to the PDP because
his relevance in APC is dwindling fast like the impatient harmattan fire. His days
in APC are numbered as Adams Oshiomole, the APC Chairman, might burst his
testes any moment from now with unequalled vendetta and a turbulent blow.
If Governor Godwin
Obaseki is not checked right now, his romance with the opposition party sets
his relationship with the APC like the friendship between the he-goat and the
cocoyam. While the he-goat was pretending to be friends with the cocoyam, it
was at the same time scheming how the cocoyam will graciously end in his
stomach one day. Obaseki will swallow APC and convert all stalwarts of the
party to the PDP to win his second term easily. If the APC is not fast enough,
it would become a weak opposition very soon, struggling for survival from no
other place but from the belly of the very clever Godwin Obaseki.
Monday, 17 June 2019
A KINGDOM WHERE WILD ANIMALS HAVE BANK ACCOUNTS by SHABA Mafu.
The animal Kingdom has
been birthed among the citizens in Nigeria. It is a new kingdom where strange
things happen. A novel idea of those
neck-deep in corruption has been crafted, such that best exists in fairy tales.
The mysterious attachment to this new-found trade is chilling. In George Orwell’s
ANIMAL FARM which was first published as far back as 17th August,
1945, the main characters of that book were never figured as interacting with
money, not much even as having Bank Accounts. Napoleon and Snowball, and the
ever-compliant hardworking Boxer, with Moses were not as inventive as the
Nigerian animals of the present time. The Russian animals did not have poisoned
brains like those Nigerian animals which swallow money with great ease of taste.
The creation of this
novel Kingdom was first witnessed in the present government of President Buhari
when men must devise every means to cheat on the society to survive. In Benue State, the sum of N36Million was said
to have been swallowed by a snake. The money was the proceeds from the sales of
the Joint Admissions Matriculation Board’s (JAMB) scratch cards. Following the
innovation brought by the Head of that Body, Professor Is-haq Olarewaju Oloyede,
stopping the regime of the use of scratch cards, directed the reconciliation of
Account of JAMB in the previous sales of the cards. But In Makurdi, Benue State
of Nigeria, some employees of JAMB reportedly connived with a snake to defraud
the parastatal of the hitherto said sum. In an enquiry into the whereabouts of
this huge sum of money, a JAMB clerk named Philomina Chieshe could not account
for it. In her watery defence when questioned, the said Chieshe accused her
housemaid of connivance with another
JAMB staff, a colleague of hers, Joan Asen of stealing the money through
spiritual means. It was a mammoth mysterious snake employed to swallow the
money. The Snake must have been told the location of the office where the money
was kept and patiently swallowed the dry papers (currency) to the tune of N36Million.
and conveniently glided away to base, like the ancient serpent that occasioned
Eve’s fall.
When the snake came to
the office, it did not swallow the conspicuous Attendance Register. The office files
were left untouched but in its ancient spiritual wisdom it easily identified
the naira notes and carefully swallowed the neatly arranged piles of notes in a
way they could be vomited for use when prompted.
In a similar angle, few
months after the Snake episode in Benue State, it appeared the news of the
N36Million spread among the Animal Kingdom like harmattan fire. This time it
was the turn of the gorillas, the same family with the monkeys and the chimpanzees.
But in strict comparism, it appeared the snake with its natural subtlety was defter
in stealing higher volumes of notes than the amateurish gorilla. In Kano State
of Nigeria, a gorilla was alleged to have swallowed N6.8Million. This time
around, the animal stole this money in his ‘natural’ habitat, the zoo. So, it
was easier since it must be a familiar terrain. The Kano Zoological Gardens lost
this money to the gorilla during the recent Sallah break. The gorilla
positioned himself strategically to ensure that the gate fees paid by the
tourists to the zoo were quickly swallowed before the humans would restrict
him, after all, he can’t be in the zoo and would not display some traits of the
animals he is cohabiting with, particularly in the lifestyle of grand
corruption.
The gorilla swallowed
N6.8Million, while the snake swallowed N36Million. So these animals in the new.ly
established Animal Kingdom have swallowed a cumulative sum of N42.8Million
within a year. I hope very soon, animals will not take over as Directors of
these government parastatals while the humans become the subordinates – the reign
of penetrative and overwhelming corruption!
I personally urge
the government of Kano State to thoroughly investigate the case of the theft in
the zoo by the gorilla and get the identity of this gorilla. The gorilla must
have been on the payroll of the State government with the common Identity card
of the Staff of the Kano Zoological Gardens. The gorilla must have an accommodation
in the zoo of the corrupt and needs to be fished out. This animal has several huge
Bank Accounts that normal humans may not
boast of. They must all be traced by his Bank Verification Number. Much money
must have been swallowed by this gorilla and its offspring in the office, besides
the one discovered.
As for the N36Million
swallowed by the Snake, JAMB should get the snake arrested and a surgical operation
performed on it by the glittering surgical knife of the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission. It should be taught an eternal lesson that snakes have no
business with humans, not to talk more of swallowing money kept in the offices
of government establishments. When has snakes begun spending money in the Animal
kingdom? Since the clerk, Chieshe and Joan Asen are identifiable by their
names, the snake (their accomplice) can be identifiable as well.. The trio
should be subjected to unhindered investigation. Let the Bank Account of the Snake
be thoroughly scrutinized, while the stolen funds be permanently forfeited and
returned to JAMB. The accomplices of the snake, as well as the snake itself, must
face prosecution. I am very convinced that Chiese should know where the snake
lives. They must have had several meals together as a syndicate.
If this dirty and shameful
trend is not nipped in the bud by a decisive action of the government, in no
time mysterious rabbits, squirrels, antelopes, frogs, hawks, even earthworms will
soon invade federal establishments swallowing millions of Naira. What is
currently in Nigeria could have been best told in fairy tales; and when they
are being told, inquisitive children would even ask with all mustered curiosity
of how animals could cheaply swallow dry papers in volumes of millions. Unfortunately,
this is not a fairy tale. It is the reality in Nigeria. What a shame to a people
who have no dint of conscience remaining in them in the discharge of national
duty!
Thursday, 13 June 2019
JUNE 12 MEMORIAL: THE BUILDING OF A POLITICAL ALTAR IN NIGERIA by SHABA Mafu.
The 1993 Election
Monitoring Body, the National Electoral Commission (NEC) headed by Professor
Humphrey Nwosu had registered many political parties in his wisdom to let loose
the democratic space for the ever bubbling Nigerian populace who were very
active in politics and politicking to freely decide their political future. But
the then Head of State, General Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida who has primed and
prided himself as the ‘Evil Genius’ had another agenda in mind. He collapsed
the political parties into two by fiat. The two parties were obviously divided,
and intended along ethnic lines or regional lines, but his scheming failed in
that wise. The two parties were the Social Democratic Party with Chief Moshood
Kashimawo Olawale Abiola, popularly known as MKO, as the presidential
candidate, while Ambassador Babagana Kingibe was his running mate. The other
party, the National Republican convention (NRC), ordinarily viewed as having a
northern connotation had the hitherto unknown and politically-amateur
Alhaji Bashir Tofa as its presidential
candidate.
The campaigns went on
with all zeal and zest. The enthusiasm to boot out the military rule was
ubiquitous in the minds of most Nigerians at the time. Chief MKO Abiola – a muslim
from the South West Nigeria, a philanthropist, was the presidential candidate
of the Social Democratic Party. Ambassador Kingibe was also a muslim from the
Northern extraction. It was a muslim-muslim ticket for the SDP. Nobody whipped
up religious or ethnic sentiments in the 1993 general elections because of the
common desire to end the military misrule in Nigeria. The electorates voted
massively, enthusiastically and unreservedly. The election was adjudged the
best election ever conducted in Nigeria. The election took place on June 12,
1993. Abiola polled 8,341,309 votes (58.36%), while Tofa polled 5, 952,087 (41.64%)
- that was the result that was never officially declared by NEC.
As Nigerians waited
eagerly for the results to roll out drums for the celebrations, the enemy of
democracy, like the Biblical Haman concocted some evil plot to ensure that the
joy of Nigerians was broken. One Arthur Nzeribe formed a group called the
Association for Better Nigeria (ABN) and
went to Court to obtain an injunction restraining the NEC from continuing the announcements of
the election results. In collaboration with the political murderer, General Babangida,
in his greatest display of hypocrisy complied with the Court injunction as ordered
by late Justice Bassey Ikpeme. Babangida unilaterally stopped further
announcements of results by NEC, and annulled the entire elections on the 23rd
of June, 1993. This evil act sparked spontaneous and unilateral protests all
over the country, until the government began to import ethnic colourations to
the entire phenomenon. To perpetrate the struggle, some eminent Nigerians
formed a political pressure group. This was basically to actualize the June 12
election and to swear-in the winner, Chief MKO Abiola as the elected President
of Nigeria. The pressure group was known as the National Democratic Coaltion
(NADECO). The frontiers of that group was late Chief Anthony Enahoro, late
Abraham Adesanya, late Chief Bola Ige, Ayo Adebanjo, Ayo Opadokun, Admiral Babatunde
Elegbede, Polycap Nwite, Asiwaju Ahmed Tinubu, Chief Odigie Oyegun, Chief Olu
Falae, Toyin Onagoruwa, Kudirat Abiola, among other great Nigerians.
General Babangida did all
within his powers to puncture the intents of NADECO by bringing in Chief Ernest
Shonekan, a man from the same ethnic extraction of Abiola. He came to power as
the leader of an interim government from 26th August 1993 to
November 17, 1993. General Sani Abacha (late ) overthrew the government of
Shonekan on November 17, 1998. The looter and political scoundrel in the person
of Abacha consolidated the annulment of the June 12 elections, by hurling Chief
MKO Abiola into prison and making sure he drove most of the NADECO members into
exile.. Abacha eventually died on the 8th of June, 1998, while Abiola
followed him closely on the 7th July 1998.
General Abdulsalam Abubakar
came up, and in collaboration with other politically exposed people brought
General Olushegun Obasanjo (retd) who was hitherto hurled into prison by Abacha,
for alleged treasonable offence, in 1995 to contest in the 1999 general
elections. Obasanjo contested the presidential elections under the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) and won. From General Obasanjo through Alhaji Yar Adua
(of blessed memory) to Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, the PDP enjoyed sixteen unbroken
years of rulership of Nigeria. Unfortunately, none of these presidents who rode
on Abiola’s back to become what they were, was ever comfortable when Abiola’s
name was mentioned. They all stuck to May 29th, a day that has no
historical value and significance in Nigeria’s political history. They all refused to acknowledge June 12 as the
authentic Democracy Day. A day democracy was buried alive in Nigeria by General
Babangida.
But like the thunderbolt
from the blues, the government of President Muhammadu Buhari, a man from the
Northern extraction, first apologized to the family of late Chief MKO Abiola
for the injustice done to the late man and his family by the State. The apology
was extended to Nigerians who voted overwhelmingly but had their hopes dashed.
General Babangida who annulled the elections is still alive and never showed
any remorse till eternity. General Obasanjo, the primary beneficiary of the
struggles of Chief MKO still hated Abiola’s struggles till now. President Buhari
did not stop at apologizing for the crime he did not commit, he went further to
declare JUNE 12 every year as the DEMOCRACY DAY in Nigeria. This is a very
correct move and must be applauded by all. This is practically bridge-building,
manifest national-healing, and political sagacity from a man unprovokedly hated by some Nigerians.. President Buhari took
a further step to rename the Abuja national Stadium after Abiola. It is to be
known and called as MKO ABIOLA STADIUM, from henceforth. Die-hard critics of
Buhari like Reno Omokri, a very fine gentleman, and Femi-Fani Kayode, a young
brilliant writer hailed this singular move by President Buhari.
I am not surprised to see
people like the self-righteous Chief Obasanjo and the Atiku taking ill by this
great move of President Buhari.
The declaration of June
12 as Democracy Day with particular recognition of Chief MKO Abiola is like erecting
a political altar of eternal memorial in the politics of Nigeria. The recognition
of June 12 is not only for late Chief MKO, but an implied recognition of all lovers
and fighters for democracy especially in the dark days of Generals Babangida
and late General Sani Abacha. People like the erudite Professor Wole Soyika,
all NADECO members (dead, and living) are all by this singular action of the
APC government and Buhari, honoured to the Heavens.
Never again should
Nigerians allow such political profligacy, impunity and greed as exercised by
Babangida, Arthur Nzeribe, Sani Abacha and all traducers to repeat itself in
the political experiment of Nigeria. Nigeria is greater than any individual,
and must so be upheld.
I stand unequivocally
with President Buhari and the APC government in recognizing the June 12. I also
stand with those who were massacred by the Armoured Tanks of IBB as a result of
their protests and struggles for the actualization of the June 12, 1993
elections. Their deaths are not in vain. To me, on June 12 we stand as the
federal government is poised to scrap May 29th as a public holiday and
replaces it with June 12 which shall be observed as a public holiday
henceforth.
Friday, 10 May 2019
THE OSUN STATE GOVERNORSHIP ELECTION ADJUDICATION PROCESSES AND THE ACT OF DANCING IN TURNS by SHABA Mafu
His customized cap hung
firmly on his head with accustomed ease. He moved his strong bones with the flexibility
of a woman in his dancing spree. It was time for jubilation over the electoral
victory at the tribunal. This is the dancing Senator, Ademola Adeleke. He won
the victory of the electoral tussle at the tribunal sitting in Osogbo which
delivered judgment in his favour on the 22nd of March, 2019. But to the utmost
chagrin of the jubilant Senator, he did not know that joy has a slender body
that breaks too soon. This is the present status of his political travail.
The Osun State
gubernatorial election was conducted by the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC) in Osun State on the 22nd of September, 2018. The election
was won by Adegboyega Oyetola of the All Progressives Congress (APC), as declared
by the electoral Umpire, the INEC. The result
was flatly rejected by the governorship candidate, Senator
Ademola Adeleke and his political party, the Peoples Democratic Party. They cited
irregularities and outright connivance of the electoral Body with the governing
APC at the elections. In the elections, Ademola claimed he won the first round
before INEC declared it inconclusive and ordered a supplementary election in
the seventeen Units cancelled polls. This took place on the 27th of September, 2018.
Consequently, the results of the re-run election added to the first round, produced the APC candidate, now the Governor as the winner of the election.
Ademola and the PDP
gravely dissatisfied, headed for the tribunal. The Governorship Election
Petition Tribunal awarded victory to Senator Ademola and the PDP in its ruling.
They cited that there was no need for the re-run elections that held after the
first round of elections, and therefore nullified all the results from the 27
polling units where the re-run was conducted. On the strength of this judgment, Ademola was declared the winner of the election.
Expectedly, he dusted more of his caps in anticipation of resumption of duty as the Governor of the great State of Osun.
Ademola himself, his
supporters and his political party, the PDP rolled out drums on the streets of
the ancient but glorious streets of Osun State. Senator Ademola went berserk as
he temporarily forgot his esteemed status in the society being a distinguished
Senator of a great country called Nigeria. He twisted his heavy trunk with the
ease of a regular drunkard in the village. He laughed and smiled alternately
with the entire mandibles at the mercy of the scorching sun. His hands and legs
moved perfectly to the rhythm of the music as his rotund stomach was not left
out of this magical twist. He exuded joy! Of the truth, Senator Ademola Adeleke
is a very good dancer who knows how to express moments of joy within reasonable
limit.
The newly sworn Governor,
Adetogboyega Oyetola must have withdrawn to his cyst because of the shock of the
tribunal judgment on the election. His eyes must have welled up with tears
as he would soon pack home from the office already adorned with his official pictures
neatly carved with sophisticated artistry. But his party, the APC vowed to
challenge the judgment of the Tribunal at the Appeal court. Off they went. It was
the antidote that punctured his swelling emotions.
On Thursday, 9th
May, 2019, the Appeal Court sitting in Abuja in a 4-1 Panel judgment repealed
the judgment of the Tribunal. They cited
that the absence of Justice Obiora at the Tribunal on the 6th February,
2019, who eventually read the lead judgment of the tribunal, was an aberration
and therefore held that his absence alone nullifies the entire proceeding of
the case. The Appeal Court also held that the nullifying of the 27th
September, 2018 supplementary election was wrong. It also pointed to the tribunal that the absence of the records
of usage of ballot papers and other details on Form EC8A, the result sheets in
17 polling Units where the polls were cancelled by the Tribunal was not an
issue of non-compliance that should warrant the deductions of votes polled by
the APC and the PDP in those Units. The Appeal Court on these grounds declared the judgment of the Tribunal as a nullity while ceding the victory to the
incumbent Governor Oyetola Gboyega.
Oyetola, in the
circumstance rolled out his drums in his area of major influence in the State.
It was the turn of APC, the supporters and the Governor to dance. At the
Tribunal level, PDP and Ademola danced. At the Appeal Court level, the baton of
dancing was handed to APC and Oyetola. It is turn by turn at each stage. Yes! that
is the style of Nigerian judicial system. No uniform outlook on matters like
this. The Electoral Act is probably only to conduct elections. Subsequent issues arising thereafter are left to the power of argument and citations of the lawyers and the
discretion of the Judges at different levels of adjudication.
PDP has danced. APC is
presently dancing. It is a common saying that “he who laughs last, laughs best”. In this
case, who danced last, would dance best. The PDP and Ademola have vowed to challenge
the judgment of the Appeal court at the Supreme court. We would not know who
will dance last. I think PDP would have danced with caution and not acted like
the proverbial antelope who danced himself lame while the main dance was yet to
come. APC should dance with caution. The Supreme court judgment is clearly
unpredictable, just as it is generally in the Nigerian judicial system. The funniest
aspect of all these is that the Supreme Court alone has the supreme wisdom and
knows all things in judicial matters. They are never wrong! So the judgment of
the Supreme court shall be binding on the winner or loser of the
gubernatorial case in Osun State.
The Nigerian judicial system
makes both appellants and defendants dance turn by turn as the case goes higher
and higher, until the final and ultimate dancer emerges.
Friday, 3 May 2019
BAYELSA STATE LEGISLATURE AND THEIR LIFE PENSIONS BILL PROPOSAL by SHABA Mafu
I read with utter
consternation the frivolous demand of the Bayelsa State members of the House of
Assembly advocating for life pensions bill for ex-members as part of the juice
to be placed on the political table in that glorious State of Bayelsa. To
demonstrate their high level of their low-thinking, they went as far as asking
for a compelling amount of Five-hundred thousand Naira monthly pension for ex-Speakers
and some other provocative amounts to the Deputy-speakers and ordinary members
of the House after their retirement from “meritorious service” of the State
spanning a paltry period of eight years of sometimes unproductive and less impactful activities.
This irrational demand is
purely in contrast with the ethos of democratic practice which is representation
of the people purposely for their welfare and security. The essence of
political representation is not for exploitation of the masses from vantage
position as demonstrated by these Bayelsan legislatures. The members of the
Bayelsa State House of Assembly have acted in deliberate aberration; an action
diametrically opposed to common sense in governance and tenets of democracy.
The response and reaction
of the Governor of the State, Seriake Dickson is worth commending. It gives a
spark of hope that we still have reasonable people in the midst of those infested
with moral meningitis. The Governor flatly rejected this anti-people and
disgraceful proposed bill. He would in the final analysis have assented to the
bill if it was passed, but he rejected it with all sense of responsibility and
moral decency. He was actually the medical personnel that aborted the
ill-conceived proposed bill by legislative prostitutes.
Another great Bayelsan of
repute is the ever-bubbling Comrade Eva, an activist of the Niger-Delta
extraction. He lambasted the obnoxious bill of these legislatures. His anger
was so clearly manifested that he recommended public flogging of these greedy
and childish politicians at one of the river fronts in Bayelsa State. He berated
them that those who did not even know how the State was created wanted to use
the opportunity as public officers to reap where they did not sow He further
stated that carrying placards to denounce this disdainful act was not enough to
contain the pettiness of these car-boy
politicians (so Comrade Eva called them) but insisted on an opprobrium
on them. He defended such treatment as a legacy which the upcoming Bayelsan
politicians, and by extension the politicians from the Niger Delta would learn
from and take caution.
The proposed bill of these
greedy politicians calls for complete condemnation by all well-meaning people
of Bayelsa State and Nigeria at large. Some State Governors in Nigeria are shamelessly
owing their workers as much as twelve months salaries, and the pensioners owed
as much as over 30 months pensions, and gratuities. On the contrary, those who
claim to represent the masses are there working out their ill-fated pensions
design with their own selfish template, besides their fat salaries they do not
ordinarily qualify or work for.
There are some states
where the cumulative amount of both the State Bond and the statutory Retirement
Savings Account of the Contributory Pension Scheme is paltry Four Million
Naira. If such a retiree opts for Programmed Withdrawal or Annuity, as the case
may be, being their pension payment option, such pensioner would be placed on
ridiculous pensions with attendant multiplier effect of poverty. The monthly
pension for some of the pensioners who
had served a State for 35 years is nothing but an advanced programmed poverty. A
Speaker who may have cornered himself to be one, is proposing to earn as much as
N500,000 per month as his monthly pension upon his exit as a Speaker. This is daylight robbery and outright exploitation of the
already impoverished tax payers.
The Nigeria Labour
Congress, Trade Union Congress, Civil Society Organizations, Rights activists
should raise their voices against this and similar obnoxious bill
whenever and wherever it surfaces, either at the federal or State levels. Looking
further, even the monthly salaries of the members of the outgoing National Parliament is certainly very outrageous and
disappointing. These are people who hardly form quorum in their plenary. Even when
they managed to attend sessions, half of the period is spent on self-serving
legislative activities, thus producing no reasonable and robust legislation for the country.
The constitution of this
country needs to be reviewed or overhauled so as to address some of these
stinking anomalies perpetrated by these legislatures and other folks in the
same fold.
Monday, 11 March 2019
ATIKU’S SEARCH FOR JUSTICE AT THE ELECTION TRIBUNAL
The unanimous declaration of the three witches in William Shakespeare's play, MACBETH, that “fair is foul and foul is fair”, means anything goes as far as we achieve our aim. Atiku seems to disagree with the assertion of Shakespeare’s witches that foul is not fair. Atiku standing on this premise is seeking justice in election tribunal in what he termed his “stolen mandate” of his presidential ambition. The witches had resolved to meet “upon the heath when the hurlyburly’s done, when the battle is lost and won”. Atiku has pledged to meet the APC in court as the elections have been lost by the Peoples Democratic Party and won by the All Progressives Congress represented by Atiku, and Buhari respectively.
The presidential election, the ultimate battle for the seat of the national government, Aso rock, was conducted on the 23rd of February, 2019, with the results released on the 27th of same month. The incumbent Muhammadu Buhari polled the total votes of 15,131,847, to defeat Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party who polled the total votes of 11,267,978. The latter was squarely defeated with about four Million votes according to the announcement of the Electoral Management Body, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). This bitter pill is evidently too difficult for Atiku to swallow with the water of peace; hence he is headed for the Presidential Elections Petition Tribunal.
The presidential candidate of the PDP, like every Nigerian, has the constitutional right to seek redress in competent courts of jurisdiction. .Atiku who has penchant for peace and obedience to the rule of law has decided to toe this legal path. He has gathered his Legal Team ably led by the experienced Livy Ozoukwu (SAN). Atiku has defied the assertion of the witches that foul can never be fair in this circumstance. He has commenced the preliminaries of the suit by the court granting him access to examine some sensitive materials used in the conduct of the presidential elections. The full blast of the legal tussle will begin in not too many days to come.
With all objectivity and every sense of responsibility, it will be a very tall dream for Atiku to realize his intention. This is based on the antecedence of similar cases that have gone beyond the Tribunals even to Supreme Courts.
Retrospectively, when Late Chief Obafemi Awolowo of the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) approached the supreme court for interpretation of a fraction of two-thirds of 25% of nineteen States, and that late Shehu Shagari won the elections by polling higher votes but could not be returned elected because he did not meet the constitutional requirements, the Court decided otherwise in favour of the declared winner of that election. Awolowo polled 4,906,851 votes, while Shagari polled 5,688,857 votes as announced by the Federal Electoral Commission (FEDECO) on September 26, 1979.. As brilliant and persuasive the arguments of Chief Awolowo were, the court never ordered even a re-run. Shagari won the case and was even contested and re-elected in the 1983 presidential polls.
Similarly, the then presidential candidate of the Congress for Progressive Change (who is incidentally the current president of Nigeria, under the APC) Muhammadu Buhari, dragged the Peoples Democratic Party to court when he contested with late Umaru Yar’adua in 2007. Yar’Adua polled 2,4638,063 votes against Buhari’s 6,603,299 votes. Umaru in his sincerity even confessed that the elections conducted that year was not devoid of obvious flaws. Despite that confession, the Court did not upturn the results in favour of Buhari. Buhari contested against Goodluck Jonathan in 2011. He (Buhari) cited widespread manipulations and electoral violence, and headed for the courts again. His plea was thrown to the dustbin. So in both cases, he lost with bleeding nose.
In one of our classes in Political science, am erudite Scholar, Professor Authur Davies, of blessed memory, asserted that when it comes to judgment on cases involving Presidential elections, the Court would rather use its discretion in handling such cases. No court would pass a judgment that would result in protracted national crises and avoidable catastrophe. Recently, Chief Olisa Agbakoba in his comment (in PUNCH Newspaper online) on Atiku’s move accused Buhari of removing Walter Onnoghen replacing him with the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Mohammed Tanko. He further complained that the “burden of proof to succeed in the election petition is unfairly huge” and that he was ‘worried about the historical precedent as no petition on presidential election result has ever succeeded”
Atiku’s approach to the Courts might end in mere academic exercise and for record purpose just like others before it. It will be just a mirage and loud burst of hope for those anticipating him becoming the president of Nigeria following the recently conducted election. It may be a point of reference for further research for the Electoral Umpire on how to improve on their performance in subsequent elections in the country. But for the Court to upturn the election, and declare him the winner might be a dream to be realized in the next millennium or in the utopian world. The Court will not even order a re-run, worse still It is good Atiku goes to Court, because the lessons that will be learnt there will be for the benefit of the entire nation. It could be Atiku’s further contribution for better electoral processes in Nigeria.
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