Tag: President Tinubu

  • VeePee Kashim Shettima is 58 today

    VeePee Kashim Shettima is 58 today

    Alhaji Kashim Shettima, Nigeria’s Vice President is fifty-eight (58) years old today.

    He has ordered that no one should roll out the drums or go on a media frenzy to celebrate his new age.

    Media reports indicate however, that all may not be well at the centre of the Three Arms Zone following speculations about a meltdown interpersonal relations between Alhaji Shettima and his boss, President Bola Tinubu.

    This rumour about frosty relations gave rise to a spirited effort by Stanley Nkwocha, the spokesperson of Alhaji Shettima, who tried to douse the alleged tension by issuing a media statement on Sunday, describing the speculated crisis in relations between the two leaders as “mendacious propaganda.”

    Calling the development as false, the spokesperson said the rumour about crisis as “merely an illusionary strife and smear campaign targeted at tarnishing the cordial relationship between Tinubu and Shettima.”

    “In a political landscape where loyalty is often tested, Vice President Shettima stands out as a beacon of dedication and commitment to his principal, President Tinubu. His unwavering support and teamwork demonstrate a refreshing shift towards harmonious collaboration, setting a positive tone for their administration,” Mr. Nkwocha asserted.

     

     

  • President Tinubu appoints new DGs for NIA, DSS

    President Bola Tinubu has approved the appointment of Amb. Mohammed Mohammed as the new Director General for the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) and Mr. Adeola  Oluwatosin Ajayi as the new head of the Department of State Services (DSS).
    Both appointments are sequel to the recent resignation of erstwhile chiefs of both agencies.
    Background of the new DGs
    Both Directors-General are round pegs in round holes, having been seasoned security experts who rose through the ranks.
    Ambassador Mohammed, a 1990 graduate of Bayero University, Kano, has had an illustrious career in the foreign service since joining the NIA in 1995. He had served in various roles, culminating in his promotion to the rank of Director and his subsequent appointment as the head of the Nigerian mission to Libya.
    He  had served in North Korea, Pakistan, Sudan, and at the State House, Abuja.
    The new DSS Director-General, Mr. Adeola Ajayi, also rose through the ranks to attain his current post of Assistant Director-General of the Service. He had, at various times, served as State Director in Bauchi, Enugu, Bayelsa, Rivers, and Kogi.
    Presidential Mandate
    While appreciating the outgone DGs for the services to the nation, the President charged the new chiefs of the nation’s apex security institutions to build upon and endeavour to surpass the successes of their predecessors.
    President Tinubu expects that the new security chiefs will work assiduously to reposition the two intelligence agencies for better results and charges them to bring their experience to bear in tackling the security challenges bedeviling the country.
    A statement by the President’s adviser on Media and Publicity, Ajuri Ngelale disclosed that President charged them to establish enhanced collaboration with sister agencies and in surgical alignment with the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA).
  • 2027: Forget Re-election, North tells Tinubu

    2027: Forget Re-election, North tells Tinubu

    Several northern political figures and groups have expressed deep dissatisfaction with President Bola Tinubu’s administration, accusing him of neglecting northern interests and mistreating the politicians whose support helped him rise to power.
    These grievances range from concerns about governance and security to the perception that Tinubu has favored the Yoruba ethnic group in major government appointments at the expense of northern representation.
    Prominent northern leaders have pointed to the concentration of key positions, such as the Petroleum Minister, Finance Minister, Chief Justice of Nigeria, and others, in the hands of the Yoruba ethnic group.
    They argue that since Nigeria’s independence, no ethnic group has held such a large number of influential roles simultaneously.
    This perceived marginalization has fueled growing resentment within the northern political establishment.
    The Northern Elders’ Forum (NEF), a significant socio-political group in the region, has voiced regret over supporting Tinubu in the 2023 elections.
    According to Vanguard, Professor Usman Yusuf, a member of the NEF, reportedly lamented that Tinubu’s administration has led to “deception, destitution, and hopelessness” for many in the North.
    He said, “People have lost hope. It pains me to see our people lining up to collect cups of palliatives. Renewed Hope has turned into hopelessness. People have lost hope.”
    NEF Spokesman, Abdulaziz Sulaiman echoed these sentiments, promising that the North would not repeat the mistake of backing Tinubu in 2027.
    The North-East Governors’ Forum has also raised concerns, accusing Tinubu’s administration of neglecting their region, particularly in the areas of infrastructure development and electricity provision.
    The forum’s chairman, Borno State Governor Babagana Zulum, highlighted the lack of road and rail connections between the South-East and North-East as a particular grievance.
    Recent meetings among northern political heavyweights, including former Kaduna State Governor Nasir, El-Rufai and NNPP’s Rabiu Kwankwaso, as well as visits by former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar to former President, Muhammadu Buhari, have further stoked speculation of a northern political realignment ahead of the 2027 elections.
    Although Atiku described his visit as a Sallah homage, many analysts view these moves as strategic positioning for the next presidential contest
  • Tinubu Set To Return To France Less Than 24 Hours After Arriving in Nigeria

    Tinubu Set To Return To France Less Than 24 Hours After Arriving in Nigeria

    Barring any last minute change in plans, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is set to depart for France today, Friday, August 23, 2024, barely 24 hours after arriving from Paris to swear in the new Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN).

     

    Tinubu had returned to the country this morning to swear-in Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun as the new Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN).

     

    Tinubu swore-in Justice Kekere-Ekun at about 11:38 am at the State House in Abuja, making her the second Nigerian female jurist to serve as the Chief Justice of Nigeria, after Justice Aloma Mariam Mukhtar, who was the Chief Justice of Nigeria between July 2012 and November, 2014.

     

    She will operate in an acting capacity until confirmation by the Senate.

     

    Justice Kekere-Ekun takes over the new role following her recommendation for the position by the National Judicial Council and the retirement of Justice Olukayode Ariwoola.

     

    Among the dignitaries who witnessed the swearing-in event were other Justices of the Supreme Court; the President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio; the leadership of the House of Representatives, represented by Prof Julius Ihonbvere; the Governor of Lagos State, Babajide Sanwo-olu; and immediate past Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Olukayode Ariwoola.

     

    Also present were the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), George Akume; National Security Adviser (NSA), Nuhu Ribadu; Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila; Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris.

     

    Recall that President Tinubu had cut short his trip to France, returning to the country early this morning to swear-in the new CJN.

     

    The decision of the President to return to France has made some to wonder about the reason for Mr. Tinubu’s predilection for Paris, France at this critical time of national socioeconomic ad security challenges.

  • #EndBadGovernance: Over 2,000 protesters languish in Police detention

    #EndBadGovernance: Over 2,000 protesters languish in Police detention

    Following a merciless clampdown, some of the protesters during 10-day #Endbadgovernance protest were killed, while others were arrested and clamped into police detention.
    According to Femi Falana, SAN, human rights activist, and the Chair, Alliance on Surviving Covid-19 and Beyond, ASCAB, no fewer than 2,111 protesters were arrested in connection with the 10-day #Endbadgovernance action across the country that was held from August 1st to 10th.
    He added that 1,403 were brought to court, and then sent to prison custody.
    Below are the number of protesters arrested in states across the country, and the Federal Capital Territory.
    1. Kano — 873
    2. Jigawa — 403
    3. Katsina–120
    4. Gombe — 111
    5. Sokoto — 110
    6. Borno — 99
    7. Yobe — 90
    8. Bauchi-60
    9. Plateau — 51
    10. Kaduna — 50
    11. FCT — 50
    12. Nasarawa — 40
    13. Niger — 25
    14. Zamfara — 19
    15. Cross Rivers — 10
  • FG Announces Another Rate Hike 

    FG Announces Another Rate Hike 

    Hoping to tax itself out of the present financial challenge, the Nigerian Government has announced a massive rate hike in the cost of procuring a Nigerian passport, a mandatory document required for international travels.
    Announcing the new rates, officials at the Ministry of Interior explained that the higher cost was inevitable if Nigerian passports must uphold their quality and integrity.
    The ministry said that the new fee for the 32-page Passport booklet, which has a validity of five years, Previously priced at Thirty-five Thousand Naira (N35,000.00), it will now be Fifty Thousand Naira (N50,000.00) only.
    The fee for the 64-page Passport booklet with a validity of 10 years has been raised from Seventy Thousand Naira (N70,000.00) to One Hundred Thousand Naira (N100,000.00).
    The ministry announced that the fees for those in the Diaspora will however, remain the same.
  • Terrorism Financing: ‘Stop Ajaero’s Invite,

    …Don’t Create Confusion For Tinubu – Reps Tells Police

     

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President, Comrade Joe Ajaero

    The member representing Ideato North South Federal Constituency of Imo State in the House of Representatives, Ikenga Ugochinyere, has urged the Nigerian Police Force (NPF) to withdraw its invitation to the President of Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, Joe Ajaero.

     

    The invitation letter, signed by Assistant Commissioner of Police, Adamu Mu’azu, indicated that Ajaero is expected at the intelligence response team (IRT) complex in Abuja.

     

    Ajaero was invited for questioning over “a case of criminal conspiracy, terrorism financing, treasonable felony, subversion, and cybercrime”.

     

    Reacting, Ugochinyere, the spokesperson of the opposition coalition lawmakers, stated that “it’s clear to everyone that the NLC President didn’t commit any terrorism or murder”.

     

    He told the police to withdraw the invitation and avoid creating confusion for President Bola Tinubu, stressing that any move by the security operatives to detain Ajaero might lead to another nationwide protest.

     

    While recalling that he had been through similar situations, Ugochinyere urged the Police to channel their energy to curb the country’s worsening insecurity.

     

    He said: “Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC President didn’t commit any terrorism or murder challenge, drop it, so you don’t bring people back on the street and create confusion for the President. If you want to help President Tinubu go and chase out these bandits in the forest. Find out why crude oil is still being stolen.

     

    “You don’t help the President by inviting the NLC President and accusing him of murder and treason. Stop it!!!!! The President needs help, there’s insecurity, that’s why there’s economic hardship, that’s why food products are high. That’s the real terror that you need to deal with, not Comrade Ajaero.

     

    “I have to advise the Nigerian police, there’s no basis for this now, what Nigerians need now is more enhanced security, more involvement of security agencies in quelling security challenges across all parts of the country instead of inviting the President of Nigerian Labour Congress for a chat over his involvement in terrorism.

     

    “These are old strategies that people can decode, from someone that has been through it, this same police force invited me multiple times and charged me multiple times. Based on my personal experience, I think this invitation should be withdrawn, the country is at a difficult moment now.

     

    “I know Comrade Ajaero and I know he’s not involved in any terrorism. We are trying to find a way to maintain stability and navigate these economic challenges, the Nigerian police should Channel their energy on oil production, what the oil thieves are doing etc. they should focus on wiping out the bandits and criminal elements. I’m urging the Inspector General of Police, don’t let your era be known with what you used to have, don’t get involved in that. The biggest thing I know you can do for the President that I know you love is to find a way to energize the police force to go after all these criminal elements in different parts of the country.”

     

  • Endbadgovernance: Police Raid Homes in Abuja

    The police have intensified their actions against individuals and institutions suspected to have links to the End Bad Governance protests, with recent invasions targeting prominent figures in Abuja. 

     

    Mrs. Helen Batubo, proprietress of Stars of Nations School, had her home invaded by police officers.

     

    The operation is reportedly connected to her involvement in the protests.

     

    In a related incident, the home of Drew Povey, the owner of Iva Valley Books, was also raided by police.

     

    Iva Valley Books issued a statement condemning the invasion and highlighted the ongoing police actions against the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC).

     

    According to the statement, police officers, along with other armed men, forcibly entered the NLC buildings earlier in the month and removed all the books from a bookshop that had been operating there for seven years.

     

    The books covered various topics, including trade unionism, environmentalism, and feminism.

     

    The statement from Iva Valley Books also noted that Joe Ajaero, NLC President, and Povey’s partner received police interview invitations related to accusations of criminal conspiracy, terrorism financing, treasonable felony, subversion, and cybercrime.

     

    The bookshop firmly denied any involvement in such activities, calling the accusations baseless.

     

    The Iva Valley Books statement called on civil society organizations to support an inquiry into the attacks and urged for the immediate return of the confiscated property.

     

    Despite demands for the return of the books and other items taken during the raids, the police have yet to comply.

     

  • COP29: FG orders creation of portal to limit attendance

    COP29: FG orders creation of portal to limit attendance

    President Bola Tinubu has directed the establishment of a new portal aimed at reducing the number of government-sponsored delegates attending the upcoming United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP 29) in Azerbaijan, scheduled for November 11 to 22.
    The announcement was made on Tuesday by Ajuri Ngelale, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, during a briefing at the State House.
    Ngelale explained that the newly launched platform, called the Climate Accountability and Transparency Portal, is expected to save Nigeria over ₦10 billion during the 11-day conference. The portal will ensure that only delegates directly involved in climate-related activities are sponsored by the government.
    “This initiative is in direct response to public criticism over the excessive number of delegates sent to the previous climate conference in Dubai, many of whom had no substantive role in the proceedings,” Ngelale said.
    The portal will be developed in collaboration with the National Council on Climate Change (NCCC), headed by Director-General Nkiruka Maduekwe. It will serve as a transparent platform, listing all government-sponsored attendees from various ministries, departments, agencies, and the legislative branch.
    “The Climate Accountability and Transparency Portal will provide Nigerians with full, real-time access to the list of government-sponsored delegates attending COP 29. This ensures that every delegate has a legitimate economic reason to be at the conference, engaging with companies, multilateral partners, and stakeholders to attract finance and opportunities into the country for the benefit of our people,” Ngelale stated.
    He further emphasized that the platform represents a significant step towards restoring public confidence in the government’s climate-related activities, highlighting that COP 29 is just the beginning of a broader effort to audit and rectify past inefficiencies.
    “We are poised to save over ₦10 billion during this 11-day event in November. The President remains committed to ensuring that Nigerians trust the government’s actions as we move forward. COP 29 is just the start,” Ngelale concluded.
  • Beyond the seizure of presidential aircraft

    “…what is currently happening to Nigeria through the tardiness of Ogun state in handling an agreement could be replicated at the local government level with what appears to be our misguided approach to make council areas part of the country’s federating units.”

     

    By
    UGO ONUOHA

    GRACIOUS and humane creditors? Or how else can we describe the gesture of Zhongshan
    Fucheng Industrial Investment Co. Limited who are on the winning side, at least for now, of an arbitration dispute with Nigeria. The company has a standing Paris court order with which it impounded three of Nigeria’s presidential jets.

     

    They were grounded in France where two of the aircraft had gone for servicing. The third, a
    recently acquired Airbus, Nigerian president, Alhaji Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s latest luxury toy, was reportedly flown to France for retrofitting and sundry luxury upgrades to suit the status and taste of the ruler of the country which since 2019 has been designated as the global capital for the abject poor.

     

    There’s no evidence yet that our ruler who is reported by one of his array of official
    spokespersons, Chief Ajuri Ngelale, as denying himself of sleep and working his socks out since his accession to the presidency on May 29, 2023, to make Nigeria great had even taken a ride inside the Airbus before it was seized. What an insult! What temerity by the Chinese. Sorry.

     

    They are our creditors with sizeable credits in their favour and the disposition to lend us more, given our insatiable appetite for foreign loans.
    In their contests with some other countries, the Chinese are known to adopt the fearsome style of wolf warrior diplomacy. Somehow this Chinese company is adopting the stick and the carrot approach in its dispute with Nigeria. This is surprising because in China, companies that are big enough to play in the international arena enjoy subtle or glaring Chinese state backing. Indeed some of such firms are actually owned by the state.

     

    So it was interesting and curious when on Friday last week Zhongshan issued a public
    statement saying that it would grant a waiver by releasing the new presidential toy, the Airbus, to be flown to Nigeria to pick up Tinubu for a prior scheduled trip to Paris to meet with the French president, Emmanuel Macron this week. The statement was silent on whether it would be a short or long lease. And whether it would be a dry or wet lease. If it is a wet lease then the Chinese will provide the captain, the co-pilot and the crew. They will fly the bird into Abuja, pick up the president and his entourage, fly them to Paris, wait for them to finish the meeting with Macron and his team, and then ferry them back to Nigeria.

    “Furthermore, it should be concerning that a foreign, and probably a low level Chinese company, has fore knowledge of the travelling plans of the ruler of the ‘giant of Africa’. And to imagine that they knew about it well ahead of Nigerians, and I dare say, the kitchen cabinet and cabal in the Presidential Villa. This is staggering in its
    enormity. “

    The Chinese may not be that generous to indulge Tinubu with globe-trotting as he’s usually wont to during his frequent foreign trips in search of investors. By the way, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) which attendance is a jamboree for Nigerian government officials is afoot. Hopefully, Zhongshan will grant us the indulgence of using the Airbus to New York next month.

     

    The Chinese company had seized a Dassault Falcon 7X, a Boeing 737-7NG/BBJ, and an
    Airbus A330-243 belonging to Nigeria’s presidential fleet but were at the material time at Paris -Le Bourget and Basel-Mulhouse airports in France. If Tinubu actually travels this week to Paris in the Airbus aircraft it would mark yet another low in the life of this regime. It will be a humiliation no matter how much efforts his spin doctors will try to put a gloss to it as a diplomatic victory. Furthermore, it should be concerning that a foreign, and probably a low level Chinese company, has fore knowledge of the travelling plans of the ruler of the ‘giant of Africa’. And to imagine that they knew about it well ahead of Nigerians, and I dare say, the kitchen cabinet and cabal in the Presidential Villa. This is staggering in its
    enormity.

     

    Apparently determined to magnify its generosity and to leave no one in doubt about the gesture foreshadowing the release of the aircraft, the Chinese company wrote in part that it had “consistently sought to act reasonably and fairly in the course of a legal dispute with Nigeria which was not of its making”. In plain language the company was saying that Nigeria brought this predicament upon itself. It said that it has “now been made aware that an Airbus A330, currently detained in France as a result of a French court order obtained by Zhongshan, is needed by the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (Bola Ahmed Tinubu) to travel to a scheduled meeting with President Macron of France.
    “As a gesture of goodwill, Zhongshan has lifted the seizure of that aircraft immediately. This will allow it to be used for the President’s trip”. Nigerians would need to soak in this embarrassment of international dimension. A nondescript Chinese firm gloating over doing a favour to Nigeria’s president. This is choking. You will be in order if you feel like throwing up.

    How did we get here? And what are the deeper implications of what is currently playing out in the international arena in relation to the game we are playing with the status of Nigeria’s 774 local government areas. But first a rehash of how we got here will help us to understand how Nigeria as a country is setting itself up for future disasters and embarrassments in difficult contracts entered into by the sovereign or its sub nationals or the 774 councils which are being railroaded now as components of Nigeria’s federating units.

     

    The sequence of events that led to the seizure of the presidential jets started in 2001 when
    Nigeria and China signed a bilateral investment treaty. Nine years later Zhongshan, through its parent company Zhuhai Zhongfu Industrial Group, acquired rights to develop the Ogun
    Guangdong Free Trade Zone in Ogun state. In 2011 Zhongshan created Zhongfu International Investment (NIG) FZE to manage the development of the free trade zone. The Chinese subsidiary allegedly built roads, sewerage and power networks within the zone.

     

    In 2012, Ogun state appointed Zhongfu as the interim manager of the FTZ. Soon after, a joint venture agreement was signed between the state which reportedly gave Zhongfu majority shareholding and the status of permanent managers of the FTZ. But in 2016 things went awry and the state abruptly terminated the contract, got the federal government to revoke the immigration status of the Chinese, and then expelled them.
    Zhongshan claimed a breach of the bilateral investment treaty and triggered arbitration
    proceedings in 2017.

    Four years later, an arbitration tribunal found in favour of the Chinese, and awarded Zhongshan a total sum of about $70 million. Last year, after a fruitless effort to find an amicable resolution between the Ogun state government and the Chinese firm, Nigeria sought to use state immunity to shield itself from liability, but it was denied because Nigeria acted out of time. Nigeria lost again on appeal to a higher court in the UK.
    Then Zhongshan moved fast to secure charging and interim orders of forfeiture in various
    jurisdictions including the UK, the US and France, among other places. As in the UK, the US
    court of appeals for the District of Columbia this year affirmed the enforceability of the arbitration award. So Nigeria is entangled in a web. But it could get worse in the future given how we are structuring our federation.

    It could be dismissed as an exaggeration, but what is currently happening to Nigeria through the tardiness of Ogun state in handling an agreement could be replicated at the local government level with what appears to be our misguided approach to make council areas part of the country’s federating units. Apart from a few sane heads, many Nigerians appear to be giddy about the recent Supreme Court opinion on local government autonomy and direct funding from the federation account.

     

    Yes, the 1999 constitution as amended may have enabled the ruling of the court. But it needed to be restated that a political solution will be the right thing to do. On councils and other areas, the constitution is riddled with contradictions that should be untangled through clear-eyed amendments. Imagine a scenario where an autonomous council which is flush with money decided on a partnership with a foreign entity to deliver a big ticket project. And along the line something goes wrong, and gets to an arbitration. Then the local government loses, and Nigeria is held liable because of one treaty or the other. What will happen? There could be a case of multiple councils getting into such entanglements. If Ogun state with its legendary embarrassment of riches in human capital appear to have failed woefully in handling a contract divorce, then we can only conjecture what will be the outcome for a local government area.

    But we can save ourselves future ridicule by pulling back on this local government autonomy madness now that it is not too late. We have no evidence of anywhere in the world where local government areas are components of federating units. The framework for governance at that level should be the exclusive preserve of the states in Nigeria. They should create and fund as many councils as suit their fancies. The first step in this regard is to expunge the names of the current 774 local government areas from the constitution. It’s about time we stopped making simple things unnecessarily difficult.