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Senate Presidency and the Northwest: One good turn deserves another

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By Samuel Jackson

There comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe,  nor popular, but he must take it because conscience tells him it is right — Martin Luther King Jr.

By the time you are reading this, the conscience of some leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) who are trying to deprive the Northwest of the Senate Presidency slot, must be pricking them. This is because they know the truth; they know what is right; they know what is justice in this case. They are only trying to live in denial and we are waiting to see for how long they can continue to pretend and run away from this stark reality.

Let us start from the beginning. The emergence of President-elect, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, did not come ala carte. It was a product of struggle and a consistent fight for justice and advocacy for a power shift. It was a product of painstaking, peaceful and orderly agitation which some of us were part of because we knew there was a plot by persons who do not love this country for power to remain in the North.

But while the Northwest could have been the biggest beneficiary of the conspiracy against Tinubu, it was the leaders of the zone that selflessly led the agitation for the right thing to be done. When the National Chairman of the party, Senator Abdullahi Adamu, went to an NWC meeting to fly the kite of an Ahmad Lawan candidacy and claimed that President Muhammadu Buhari was behind it, it was Northwest Governors like Nasir El-Rufai (Kaduna), Abdullahi Ganduje (Kano), Bello Matawalle (Zamfara), Atiku Bagudu (Kebbi) and Abubakar Badaru (Jigawa) who led other APC Governors to storm the Villa to confront the President and urged him not to destroy his legacy with one last wrong choice. The result of that singular step was the President listening to the voices of reason and ordering that instead of a consensus presidential candidate from the Northeast, the party should go ahead and conduct a free and fair primary election. The Governors had insisted that power must return to the South and that if the President would not anoint anyone from the South, let there be a transparent primary to be held at the Eagles Square and they would know what to do.

The Northwest Governors did not stop there. They went ahead to mobilise massively for Tinubu who won almost all the Northwest votes and emerged victorious in a commanding fashion. The way and manner Tinubu emerged proved that the Governors were not on their own. The party leaders from the seven states of the zone were unanimous in their belief that Tinubu was the man who the cap fits.

Fast forward to February 25 when the Northwest had a choice between a Fulani Muslim, Atiku Abubakar, of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Tinubu, and chose the latter in line with a gentleman’s agreement that power should return to the South as part of measures to preserve the sanctity of Nigeria’s unity and sustain the Southwest/North political alliance that was struck with the emergence of President Buhari in 2015.

Despite all the ethnic politics and all the ‘Naka sai Naka’ sentiments that were deployed by PDP agents to ensure an Atiku victory, the good people of the Northwest stood firm and elected Tinubu who won the zone with 2,652,824 votes compared to Atiku’s 2,197,824. Tinubu took a whopping half a million votes in Kano alone, giving Atiku a crushing defeat as he scored only about 100,000 votes. Tinubu got 30 per cent of his total votes from the Northwest which is almost one-third!

The people of the Northwest are the real heroes of Tinubu’s emergence. Aside from the fact that the President-elect got more votes from the Northwest (2,652,824) than his home zone of Southwest (2,542,979), while he was being molested by Peter Obi of the Labour Party in his home base of Lagos, he was winning convincingly in Zamfara and Jigawa, and while Atiku was disgracing him in his traditional home of Osun State, he was giving the PDP candidate a bloodied nose in Kano.

For greed, selfishness and political expediency people want to underestimate what the Northwest did for the APC to retain power at the presidential level but those of us who care about the unity and greatness of this country won’t let them. For the records, out of the six states that gave the APC presidential candidate his highest voting numbers, four are from the Northwest. While Lagos came first with 572,606 votes, Kano came second with 517,341, followed by Katsina with 482,283. While Oyo came to fourth with 449,884 votes, Jigawa and Kaduna followed in fifth and sixth, with 421,390 votes and 399,293 votes respectively.

What is baffling is the fact that some persons are working round the clock to deny the zone with the highest votes the position of Senate President. If they succeed, it would be the greatest injustice done to any zone since the return of democracy in 1999. From the days of APP, ANPP to CPC and now to APC, no zone has invested in this party more than the Northwest zone. None has stood by the party through thick and thin like the Northwest. It is a huge credit to the political leaders and people of the Northwest that Tinubu won the zone even when he contested against traditional northern power brokers like Atiku and Rabiu Musa Kwanwaso of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP).

As is common with human beings generally, politicians too like to reap where they did not sow. The people who are against the Northwest tend to be hypocritical as they are now bringing religion into the mix again. They are saying a Muslim should not be Senate President since we will have two Muslims in the Villa already. If religion didn’t matter when the candidate was going to choose his running mate, why should it matter now to the extent of wanting to deny deserving people what should naturally be a reward for their diligence and hard work?

Success has many friends. Less endowed politicians who could not deliver their areas to the candidate are the ones warming themselves to the President-elect and advising him to ditch a zone that helped him to win. When the struggle was derailing and there were challenges, we didn’t see these people but now that the booty is ready, they are salivating. We won’t let them.

Northwest is deserving of the number three position in the country having given the winning party the highest votes among the zones. It is even due to the selflessness of the Northwest that APC won in the zone since it had none of the first two positions – neither presidential candidate nor running mate. Yet, some characters are still saying the highest contributors are not deserving of the number three position. What an irony!

Yari Lokan

“Great leaders are not defined by the absence of weakness but rather by the presence of clear strengths” — John Zenger

The Senator-elect for Zamfara West, Abdulaziz Abubakar Yari, is a household name in Nigeria today especially for lovers and followers of the country’s democratic evolution since 1999.

A former two-term Governor and former Chairman of the Nigerian Governors Forum (NGF), Yari has come a long way and paid his dues. It is therefore difficult if not impossible to see anyone in the race for Senate Presidency today who can match his pedigree and capacity.

Yari, a successful businessman before venturing into politics, is regarded by colleagues in political circles as a master strategist, boardroom genius and astute negotiator. It was his unrivalled negotiating skills that made his colleague Governors-elect him as their Chairman many years ago. And true to type, he was said to have gotten the best deals in terms of concessions made to states by the federal government. Yari’s negotiating skills are some of the reasons most of the governors got funds and were able to achieve all they did in their respective states.

Yari began his political career in 1999 when he served as the Secretary of the then All Nigeria People’s Party (ANPP) between 1999 and 2003. He was elected Chairman of ANPP Zamfara State in 2003 and later rose to the position of ANPP National Financial Secretary and served in this position till 2007 when he was elected as Member representing Anka/Talata Mafara Federal Constituency.

On April 26, 2011, Yari was elected Governor of Zamfara State on the platform of the ANPP. Again in the 2015 gubernatorial elections, he was re-elected as Governor under the platform of APC. He changed the face and fate of the state within those remarkable eight years in office.

On May 18, 2015, Yari’s colleagues in the NGF unanimously elected him as their Chairman to succeed Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State.

Yari won the election to go to Senate in 2019 but a Supreme Court judgement swept all APC candidates in the state away and he had to wait for February 25, 2023, for justice to be done to his case as he also won again convincingly via the ballots.

Now, the experienced lawmaker who has also excelled in all previous leadership positions wants to be Senate President of the 10th National Assembly and this calls for celebration as the country is yet to witness the charisma, erudition and oratory of Yari in that role ever before.

If the senators-elect are looking for a man, a tough nut to crack, and a savvy negotiator who can protect the interests of their respective constituencies, Yari is the best choice for Senate President. If the President-elect is looking for a loyal partner in progress and a willing collaborator in the affairs of moving Nigeria forward, Yari is the best man for the job.  If the ruling party wants to consolidate power at all levels and is looking for a loyal party man to advance the cause of the party, Yari is the best candidate for Senate Presidency.

In the spirit of Emi Lokan, if May 29, 2023, is the turn of Tinubu and (Kashim) Shettima, June 2023 has to be the turn of Yari if we want to have a robust National Assembly that will complement the efforts of the Executive to move the country forward; a National Assembly that will give the best service to Nigerians in terms of guiding and supporting the President and his cabinet to succeed and give good governance to Nigerians.

Yari Lokan !!!

Jackson is a public affairs analyst based in Kaduna.

Opinion

In the interest of justice

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By Bola Bolawole

One question which has always agitated my mind was answered last Monday, 15th April, 2024  by retired Justice Andrew Alaba Omolaye-Ajileye in a keynote address he delivered at the 2024 Law Week of the Nigerian Bar Association, Warri Branch, whose theme was “Emerging trends in legal practice and administration of justice: Challenges and prospects.” Justice Omolaye-Ajileye’s paper was titled “Tomorrow’s legal profession today: Today’s legal profession tomorrow”

I have always wondered if two sets of referees pursuing the same goal(s) can act in the same manner and still achieve the same result. The first is an official refereeing a football match and the second is a judge adjudicating in a matter between litigants. What is expected of both is impartiality, fairness, thoroughness, and even-handedness so that one side is not given undue advantage and unmerited edge over the other. So that, in the course of maintaining an even keel, the cause of justice can be served.

Now, a football referee that (repeatedly or in strategic moments) makes decisions that favour one team against another is said to have stepped into the field or ring. He is deemed to be biased and the cause of justice cannot in that way be served. But can a judge afford to maintain similar aloofness and neutrality in all instances and still serve the cause of justice?

In my 39 years in the journalism profession, I have seen cases lost not because the litigant did not have a good case but because of poor handling by counsel; sometimes deliberately so contrived for varying reasons. Uncountable number of cases get dismissed or get lost (and won) for lack of diligent prosecution; again, sometimes deliberately and in some others because of incompetence or carelessness of the prosecution or counsel.

In that instance, the innocent may suffer and the cause of justice may not have been served. Should a judge step into the ring in certain situations to avert the miscarriage of justice?  Oftentimes, we hear judges lambast counsel and bemoan the miscarriage of justice for lack of brilliance or diligent prosecution of cases. In that situation, can a judge step into the ring?

There was a time in this country when some of its brightest judges like Kayode Esho, Akinola Aguda, and Chukwudifu Oputa were not only described as philosopher-judges but also were well respected for what some have called their judicial activism. Yes, judges interpret the law but in interpreting laws, cerebral and conscious judges also make laws! Some even make statements.

Judges, when they are in their court, especially when reading their judgments, enjoy immunity, like the members of the Legislature when those ones, too, are in their hallowed chamber. Judges and the lawyers appearing before them are referred to as officers in the temple of justice, meaning that their primary obligation, even when lawyers represent opposing sides or views, is that justice is served, and not miscarried.

As such, even counsel not directly involved in a matter can chip in something as “amicus curiae,” that is, an impartial adviser to a court of law in a particular case or matter. This being so, are there instances that allow or, better still, is it incumbent on the judicial umpire to step into the ring to ensure that justice is not miscarried? Or should he or she simply maintain aloofness and rely only on the evidence brought before him or her to make a ruling?

Nowhere does this intrigue me more than in election matters and other cases that are as controversial or that have attracted a lot of public discourse and controversy. Judges, too, are members of the society. They read newspapers. They listen to the radio. They watch television. They may also be active on social media. They may or may not visit pubs and listen to gossip but they have friends and family members. Therefore, they must be aware, if I may so put it, of the merits and demerits of some of the cases coming before them before the arrival of such cases. Should they discountenance such information and only limit themselves to the evidence presented before them?

Omolaye-Ajileye provided what I consider to be an answer when he said, “I want to comment on a change of culture we can bring about in the way justice is administered. Administration of justice must shift from the orthodox adversarial approach to more collaboration between lawyers, parties and the court with the focus being an earnest effort to isolate the real issues in a dispute from a maze of ill-digested causes of action and defences.

“The judge’s role must be transformed from the traditional umpire role to that of active case manager. By this, I mean we must introduce in our Rule of Court situations where judges must take an active part – together with learned counsel – in identifying at an early stage of the proceedings what is the real dispute between the parties and, working together with the parties, charting a course that will result in the adjudication of the dispute as speedily as possible and at minimum costs. That is now the system of judicial case management that is taking hold in many jurisdictions across the world. We must move with the world in this regard.

“The days of over-pleading, raising as many issues that you can muster in the hope that one might just stick, should be something of the past. Courts should decide only the real disputes between the parties. In that way, the court’s time is saved and judges can dispose of more cases. Litigation should be limited to what is truly in dispute between the parties and not to obfuscate and terrorize the other side”

That is the answer I have been searching for! If the main objective is to serve the cause of justice at minimal costs and in record time, this is the way to go. I have watched such a system in operation in other climes and it is fun to watch, is not elaborate, is not long-drawn, adversarial and costly as the system we operate here.

Besides, the new system advocated by Omolaye-Ajileye will remove tension, enmity and bitterness amongst litigants. Our people have a saying, based on the adversarial system of administration of justice that we operate at the moment, that people who drag each other to court do not return from there to still be friends. We must change that narrative because it poisons the good health of our society.

Justice Omolaye-Ajileye may not have known or meant it; but he, like the Kayode Eshos, Akinola Agudas and Chukwudifu Oputas before him, is also seen by many as a fearless but even-handed judicial activist and icon. The judgments he delivered while on the Bench of the Kogi State judiciary testify to that. When he was retiring on 15 February, 2023, the outcry was much, as leading members of the Bar and others made a case that he be promoted to the higher Bench, which he eminently deserved, so that the Judiciary might still retain his services for an additional five years at the least. His pioneering work on the emerging field of electronic evidence stands him out as a leading authority in that field.

In the paper he delivered at Warri, the retired judge advocated what he described as “paradigm shift” in the practice of law and the administration of justice in the country “in order to secure tomorrow’s legal profession today”. He said: “The advocacy here is that our conservatism should not make us resist change. We live in a changing world. It is a great momentous and exciting time. Change is happening around us in ways that we had not imagined just a few years ago. All aspects of human endeavour are changing. The legal sector – to be precise, the practice of law and the administration of justice – is not spared. We must be amenable to change. As lawyers and judges, we must constantly adapt and innovate or be prepared to be pushed aside and become irrelevant.”

He advocated that lawyers and judges must imbibe technology because “we are in the middle of a technological revolution of a great magnitude, scale, scope, and complexity…To maintain relevance and remain competitive in any industry, profession or endeavour, one needs to understand the impact of emerging technologies on the future. Indeed, we need to go beyond the acquisition of knowledge. We must be prepared to integrate modern innovations strategically in our work to increase efficiency and productivity and improve our paradigms.”

Chief Consultant, Forensic Electronic and Digital Law Consultancy, Omolaye-Ajileye is also a visiting professor at the National Open University of Nigeria. To corroborate what he said, I recall here a personal experience of how technology can make hitherto indispensable hands redundant and surplus to requirement: When I was editor of PUNCH newspapers, the advent of computers displaced compugraphic machines and cut-and-paste artists had to be sent for training to plan pages on computer. Ironically, one of our best cut-and-past artists, much sought-after by everyone, could not cope with the new technology and had to be sent away!

Those who have ears, let them hear what Omolaye-Ajileye is saying to the Bar and Bench!

Bolawole is a former Editor of PUNCH newspapers and public affairs analyst on radio and television.

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Opinion

Ten years since Chibok, Nigeria will no longer pay the price

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By Bola Tinubu, President of Nigeria

Ten years ago today, 276 girls were abducted in the night from their school in Chibok, northeastern Nigeria. The attack by Boko Haram pricked the conscience of the world. From London to Washington, protesters held placards reading #BringBackOurGirls—the hashtag the girls’ families had posted to pressure their idle government into action. It would take almost three weeks for then-Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan even to make a public announcement. Critical time had been lost.

When this March, 137 children were tragically taken from a school in Kaduna, northwestern Nigeria, the shadow of Chibok lay ever present. Why, Nigerians and the world asked, after the passage of a decade was such an atrocity still happening?

This time, unlike Chibok, the girls and boys were brought back a fortnight later, the security and intelligence agencies deployed immediately to rescue them. Nevertheless, legitimate concerns over kidnappings persist in Africa’s most populous country. Success in Kaduna has brought families relief and praise for the military, yet the government bears no illusions: The scourge of kidnappings must be routed once and for all.

It begins with recognising the changing nature of the threat. Boko Haram translates to “Western Education is Forbidden” and reflects an ideological impetus as jihadi insurgents opposed to the very idea of a Nigerian state. Today, Boko Haram are splintered, and mass abductions are primarily the work of criminal gangs. There is no ideology here: kidnapping has become an illegal industry rewarded with ransoms. Within days of the Kaduna attack, the abductors were demanding 1 billion naira ($600,000).

Nothing was paid. As president, I have been clear that ransoms stop. Resolution through payment only perpetuates the wider problem. This extortion racket must be squeezed out of existence. Meanwhile, the costs for perpetrators must be raised: They will receive not a dime, and instead security services’ counter action.

But compressing the kidnap for ransom market only addresses the pull factors. If we are to avoid funneling the same people into other crimes that cause normal Nigerians to feel insecure, we must address the push factors: poverty, inequality, and a paucity of opportunity. Criminal gangs can find easy recruits among those without either a job, or the prospect of one.

Some 63 percent of Nigerians are multidimensionally poor. They are bearing the economic consequences of a failure by successive governments to get to grip with the Nigerian economy. Fiscal and monetary albatrosses have grounded the country’s flight, when surging demographics demand high economic growth to just maintain current standards of living.

A decades-old fuel subsidy was exhausting paltry public finances. By 2022, the cost had ballooned to $10 billion—more than the government’s combined spending on education, health care, and infrastructure in a budget of $40 billion. Currency controls that artificially propped up the naira deterred investment and led to shortages of foreign exchange. For decades we have been financially ransoming ourselves. When my government took office last May, we faced a pile of debt obligations.

Just as with kidnappers, we had to be tough with the economy. Unsustainable market distortions had to be removed. As expected, floating the naira caused it to plunge. Given Nigeria is a net food importer, the average shopping basket has consequently risen in price. The removal of the fuel subsidy, in a country where many businesses and households rely on generators for power, has also had far reaching effects. These reforms have caused pain across Nigeria; they are still painful. Yet there is no better alternative: These and other difficult reforms are necessary to arrest the economic rot that lies at the heart of insecurity.

Green shoots are now visible. In the first quarter of this year, foreign currency inflows have almost matched those for the whole of last year. A multi-billion forex backlog at the central bank has been cleared, giving foreign investors’ confidence to invest in Africa’s largest economy, safe in the knowledge they can repatriate earnings. The naira has begun to stabilize after its initial downward trend and has made huge gains against the dollar.

Talk of macroeconomics might seem remote from the challenge of insecurity. But without the fundamentals in place, it is impossible for an enabling environment where the private sector thrives, jobs are created, and opportunity is spread across the country. It is how we ensure children can go to school without fear.

For any who may have doubted our direction, it should now be clear. There will be no more ransoms paid—not to kidnappers, nor toward those policies which have trapped our people economically. Nigerians, and their economy, will be liberated.

Bola Tinubu is President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria

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Opinion

NIMASA in Blue Economy: Tinubu’s brainchild-ministry promoting Nigeria’s bilateral relations

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By Dr. Jimoh Olorede

Some deliberate initiatives taken by the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, upon his election and assumption of office in May 2023, did not only show the President was innovative, decisive and proactive, but also showed he came prepared and ready for a serious business of governance. One of the products of Tinubu’s innovative ingenuity is the creation of the novel Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy, which has been applauded by many national and international stakeholders.

This new Ministry, for a reason of its great economic potentials, is now a cynosure and centre of economic attraction to many countries of the world. The creation of the new ministry out of the preexisting Ministry of Transportation, seemed to have broadened and widened our economic perspectives and horizons in relation to increasing Nigeria’s economic growth through the sustainable use and maximization of its maritime vast resources, as against merely generating revenues from marine transport.

Recently, the newly appointed Director General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Dayo Mobereola, received, in Lagos, the Spanish Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Juan Ignacio Sell, on an inspection of two additional Bulletproof Security Boats from Spain, purposely built for NIMASA by Aresa, a Spanish company. Sell, as reported by the press, said: “We got the message with the creation of Maritime and Blue Economy Ministry by the Federal Government of Nigeria, and knowing there are lots of things to harness from the sea, we also want to be partners in that process”, adding Spanish government has pledged to support Nigeria through NIMASA on maritime security. Similarly, earlier in November 2023, the Spanish Navy was also in the country for collaboration in personnel training and ship building in a bid to curbing maritime crimes.

The viability, uniqueness, and resource-potentials of the then-old-but-now-new agencies (at least, now being under a new ministry) like NIMASA, the Nigerian Port Authority (NPA), and the Nigerian Shippers Council (NSP) among others, which hitherto were under the Ministry of Transportation, are now being appreciated for their revenue generation potentials, economic contributions to the growth of the nation and socio-utility, especially as causative of the administrative experience and fiscal expertise of the Minister, Mr. Adegboyega Oyetola, who is now steadily turning an eyesore of the inherited agencies as evident in the dilapidated infrastructure of the nation’s ports and others, into a cynosure of economic attraction to some countries of the world.

President Tinubu’s commendable innovative initiatives would not only boost the economic stamina of Africa’s most populous country, ensure security in the maritime sector, but also simultaneously increase and strengthen Nigeria’s bilateral ties with other countries. For instance, the President in March 2024 received the Special Envoy of the President of Equatorial Guinea, Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, in Abuja, according to a Release by The State House, during which he reaffirmed Nigeria’s commitment to enhancing maritime security and safety in the Gulf of Guinea.

The Gulf of Guinea is central to maritime activities because is a great inlet of the Atlantic Ocean on the western African coast whose tributaries are the Volta and Niger rivers with offshore oil deposits and metal ore deposits as its natural resources (Britannica), and via which about 80 percent of the trade with Nigeria goes.

Also in February this year, the Nigerian Navy led by the Chief of Training and Operations, Rear Admiral Zakariyyah Muhammed met with the U.S. Navy in Naples, Italy, hosted by the Commander, U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa, Admiral Stuart Munsch, with a view to improving regional cooperation, information-sharing practices, and maritime interdiction expertise aimed at countering sea-based illicit activities.

More so, Nigerian and Indian Navies, in October 2023, strengthened bilateral ties between the two countries to ensure maritime security in the Gulf of Guinea aiming at maintaining its sea lanes as a conduit of international trade. The visit led by Indian Defence attache° to Nigeria, Col. Romi Singh Legha was said to have recorded positive results on collaborative training against piracy and other maritime criminalities in the region.

Suffice to add was the arrival in Nigeria of the Chinese team and vessels earlier in July 2023, with the Chinese Ambassador to the country, Mr. Chi Jian Chun saying the visit, according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), “was to strengthen bilateral relations between the two countries and enhance maritime security within West Africa.” The above narrative shows the rate at which President Tinubu’s ingenious brainchild-ministry is attracting partnership-attention, engendering Memoranda of Understanding (MoU), and promoting bilateral relations with other nations.

Dr. Olorede, Head, Department of Strategic Communication and Media Studies at The Federal Polytechnic Offa, Kwara State, writes via

[email protected]/08111841887.

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