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Ten dead, many convicted: THE BEAUTIFUL, SAD STORY OF CLASS OF ’99 GOVERNORS

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On Wednesday, President Bola Tinubu hosted some former governors, who were his colleagues, at the council chamber of the presidential villa in Abuja.

The ‘class of 1999’, as they are referred to, were the first elected governors who served after the military era was halted and the fourth republic was welcomed on May 29, 1999.

It has been over 20 years since the governors made the historic moment and have all moved into various facets of life. While one was an ex-president, one is currently the president and another is the secretary to the government of the federation (SGF). Some were senators; some party national chairmen; some battled corruption cases; some have seen the four walls of the prison; while some have died. In fact, some have even retracted from the public glare.

With the recent reunion, this piece takes a quick glance into the lives and journeys of these historic leaders after they left office as governors.

TINUBU: CURRENT PRESIDENT

President Bola Tinubu was the governor of Lagos state from 1999 to 2007 and was once the senator for Lagos West in the Third Republic. During the military era, Tinubu was an activist calling for the return of democracy. He played a significant role in forming the All Progressives Party (APC) and became its national leader in 2014. He supported President Muhammad Buhari’s election in 2015 and in 2023, he won the presidential election.

KALU: SENATOR

In 1999, Orji Kalu was elected the governor of Abia state and four years after, he was re-elected and served till 2007. He was arrested by the Economic Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) over alleged corruption on July 11, 2007, but released on bail. He lost his senatorial bid to represent Abia North in 2011 and 2015 but later won during the 2019 election. His senatorial position was partly cut short when he was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment in 2019 but released in 2020 on a re-trial order. He was the immediate past senate chief whip who served from 2019 to June 11, 2023.

HARUNA: STILL POLITICALLY ACTIVE

Boni Haruna was elected governor of Adamawa state in 1999 and re-elected for a second term. He also faced corruption charges in 2008. Haruna lost the 2011 election for Adamawa North senatorial district and was later appointed the minister of youth development for one year in 2015. He is currently a member of the PDP board of trustees and campaigned for Atiku Abubakar in the 2023 election.

ATTAH: NOW A CONSULTANT

Attah, former Akwa Ibom governor

For eight years, Victor Attah governed Akwa Ibom state under the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). He was a member of the PDP board of trustees and in 2003, he became the chairman of the governors’ forum. Attah gave up politics after he lost his presidential nomination in the PDP and ventured into consultancy to assist firms in managing business challenges. The Akwa Ibom airport was named after him by Udoh Emmanuel, the immediate past governor of the state.

NBADINUJU: DEAD

Chinwoke Mbadinuju was governor of Anambra state from 1999 to 2003. Before his political career, he was an associate professor of politics and African studies at the University of New York. He lost his re-election bid to become governor for the second term. On April 11, 2023, Mbadinuju died after a brief illness at the National Hospital, Abuja.

 

MUAZU: FORMER PDP NATIONAL CHAIRMAN

After serving for four years as Bauchi governor from 1999, Adamu Muazu won his re-election in 2003. In 2015, he was the chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and rallied support for Goodluck Jonathan, who was the presidential candidate of the party. On May 20, 2015, Muazu resigned as chairman of the PDP following the defeat of the party in the 2015 general election.

ALAMIEYESEIGHA: DEAD

Diepreye Alamieyeseigha was governor of Bayelsa state from 1999 to 2005. He was among the class of 1999 governors who faced corruption charges. This led to his impeachment on December 9, 2005. He was said to have embezzled the sum of $3.2 million in cash and bank account but pleaded guilty before a court in 2007. Former President Goodluck Jonathan pardoned Alamieyeseigha in March 2013. He reportedly died of cardiac arrest at the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital in 2015.

AKUME: NOW SGF

President Bola Tinubu and George Akume

George Akume was a two-term governor of Benue state from 1999 to 2007. He was elected senator representing Benue North-West district from 2007 to 2019, where he later became the minority leader from 2011 to 2015. After he lost his senate re-election bid, Akume was appointed minister of special duties and inter-governmental affairs in the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari from 2019 to 2023. He was recently appointed secretary to the government of the federation by Tinubu.

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KACHALLA: DEAD

Mala Kachalla was Borno governor from 1999 to 2003 under the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP). He later joined the Alliance for Democracy (AD), but he lost his re-election bid to Ali Modu Sheriff. He later moved to the PDP. His political journey was cut shut when he died in 2007 at the age of 66 after battling a brief illness at his residence in Maiduguri, the Borno capital.

DUKE: POLITICALLY VIBRANT

Donald Duke, elected governor of Cross River state in 1999 at the age of 38, served for eight years. In 2004, he introduced the famous Calabar Carnival which was known as ‘Africa’s biggest street party’. Duke was also among the governors who were not under investigation by the EFCC. In 2018, he stated his interest in contesting for the presidential election of 2019. He left the PDP to pursue his ambition under the social democratic party (SDP) platform but later returned to the PDP in 2021.

IBORI: CONVICTED


Ibori reunites with Tinubu, Kalu

James Ibori, former governor of Delta state, also served two terms from 1999 to 2007. He also faced corruption charges. Ibori was arrested by the EFCC and arraigned for several charges bordering on abuse of power, theft of public funds, and money laundering among others. His 170 corruption charges were acquitted by a federal high court in Asaba, Delta state, in 2009. In 2012, the UK Southwark Crown Court sentenced Ibori to 13 years in prison for money laundering. After serving four years, he was released from prison after a court order in 2016.

It’s the second time Ibori is meeting Tinubu in the past two months. A picture of Ibori “re-uniting” with Tinubu and Kalu trended on social media in 2017.

EGWU: SENATOR

Sam Egwu served as Ebonyi governor from 1999 to 2007. In 2008, former President Umaru Yar’adua appointed him as minister of education, a position he held till 2010 after the death of Yar’adua. He won the Ebonyi North senatorial position in 2015 and he is currently the state committee chairman on industry.

IGBINEDION: NOT POLITICALLY ACTIVE

Lucky Igbinedion was governor of Edo state from 1999 to 2007 and was elected chairman of the Nigerian governors’ forum during this period. After leaving office, he was declared wanted by the EFCC for alleged 142 counts of financial fraud. Igbinedion was later invited by the EFCC for alleged diversion of public funds in 2021. In May 2023, he celebrated his 66th birthday with family and friends.

ADEBAYO: APC CHIEFTAIN

Adeniyi Adebayo was Ekiti state governor from 1999 to 2003 on the platform of the Alliance for Democracy (AD). He served as the minister of trade in the administration of former president Muhammadu Buhari from 2019 till 2003.

NNAMANI: POLITICALLY VIBRANT

Another 1999 class of governor is Chimaroke Nnamani, a medical doctor turned politician. He was governor from 1999 to 2007. He contested the Enugu East senatorial position, which he held from 2007 to 2011. Nnamani later won the senatorial seat in 2019. During the 2023 senatorial election, the former governor, who contested under the PDP platform, lost his bid to Kelvin Ugwu of the Labour Party (LP).

HASHIDU: DEAD

Abubakar Hashidu is among the 1999 governors who had a dramatic political career. He was the first elected governor of Gombe state and served from 1999 to 2003. He lost his re-election race in 2003. In 2007, Hashidu was arrested for alleged violence during his political campaign but was freed from court during the trial by his supporters who stormed the court premises. The former governor died after battling an illness on July 27, 2018.

UDENWA: NOT POLITICALLY ACTIVE

Achike Udenwa’s political career started smoothly when he was governor of Imo state from 1999 to 2007 under the PDP. He became the minister of trade and commerce in 2008 until Goodluck Jonathan assumed office as acting president in 2010 and dissolved the cabinet. In 2015, he worked as the coordinator of the PDP presidential campaign organisation in Imo state and was arrested for an alleged campaign fund scandal.

TURAKI: LOST 2023 SENATE BID

Like some of the 1999 governors, Ibrahim Turaki also had a tussle with the EFCC. He was governor from 199 to 2007 and was fortunate to get into the senate when he won the Jigawa north-west senatorial district election in 2007, but he lost his re-election bid in 2011. He was arrested in 2007 over allegations of money laundering and corruption and was letter apprehended in 2017 for “evading court order”. In October 2022, Turaki was discharged of the corruption charges by a federal high court in Dutse, the Jigawa state capital. In the same year, he won the PDP ticket to contest Jigawa north-west in the 2023 general election which he lost to Husaini Babangida Uba.

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MAKARFI: A PDP CHIEFTAIN

Ahmed Makarfi was Kaduna state governor from 1999 to 2007. He was a famous member of the PDP. He won his senatorial race for Kaduna North district after he completed his eight-year tenure as governor. Makarfi was removed as PDP national chairman in 2018 but later reinstated by the supreme court. He joined the presidential race in 2019 but dropped the ambition after what he described as an “unsatisfactory outcome” of the race. Makarfi was recently appointed by PDP as the chairperson of the electoral committee for the Kogi election.

KWANKWASO: THE STRONG MAN OF KANO POLITICS


Kwankwaso with Tinubu

From 1999 to 2003 and from 2011 to 2015, Rabiu Kwankwaso served as governor of Kano state. He lost his re-election ambition in 2003 but was compensated with the position of the first minister of defence. In 2015, he was elected to the senate and had since chased a presidential position but has been unsuccessful to date. Ahead of the 2023 election, he founded the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) and got the presidential ticket but lost the election.

Two weeks before his inauguration as president, Tinubu met with Kwankwaso for four hours in Paris, France. Last month, Tinubu received Kwankwaso at the presidential villa.

YAR’ADUA: DEAD

Umaru Yar’Adua won the Katsina governorship election in 1999 and served two terms. He was the first governor to publicly declare his assets. Yar’Adua became Nigeria’s president after winning the 2007 election to succeed former president Olusegun Obasanjo. The former president travelled out of the country for a medical trip but did not return after several months. The senate then transferred the presidential powers to Goodluck Jonathan, the then vice-president who became acting president. In 2010, Yar’adua, who returned to Nigeria after months of medical treatment in Saudi Arabia, died at the age of 58.

AUDU: DEAD

Abubakar Audu was the first civilian governor of Kogi state in 1992, but the democratic space was disrupted by military rule in 1993. In 1999, he became the governor of the state under the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP). He also had a corruption case with the EFCC in 2003. He won the APC ticket for the Kogi gubernatorial race in 2015 but died as a result of a “bleeding ulcer” on November 22, 2015.

ALIERO: SENATOR

Adamu Aliero also served as governor from 1999 to 2007. He was a member of the PDP and was a senator for Kebbi Central till December 18, 2008. He is famous for switching from one political party to another. During the Yar’Adua administration, he was named minister of federal capital territory (FCT) but vacated office after the death of Yar’Adua in 2010. He won the Kebbi Central senatorial election in 2023.

KURE: DEAD

Abdulkadir Kure was elected governor of Niger state from 1999 to 2007 under the PDP platform. He was famous for introducing Sharia in the state in 2000 and also revamping the state education system. He died at the age of 60 in Germany on January 8, 2017.

ADESINA: DEAD

Lamidi Adesina was Oyo governor from 1999 to 2003. He died in November 2012 at a private hospital in Lagos.

ODILI: NOT POLITICALLY ACTIVE

Peter Odili is another prominent Nigerian politician who was governor of Rivers state from 1999 to 2007. His political career was defined by dramatic events with the EFCC. In 2007, he filed a suit challenging the right of the EFCC to investigate his administration. In 2006, he declared his intention to run in the 2007 election but later stepped down for Yar’Adua.

AKANDE: STILL ACTIVE

Adebisi Akande was Osun governor from 1999 to 2003. He was the first interim chairman of the All Progressive Congress (APC) and Tinubu’s close ally. He marked his 84th birthday in January 2023.

YERIMA: APC CHIEFTAIN

Ahmad Yerima of the then All Progressive Party won the Zamfara governorship race in 1999 and was also re-elected for a second term in 2003. He was the first governor in Nigeria to introduce Sharia law in his state. After the completion of his second tenure in 2007, he went ahead to contest for the senatorial seat in Zamfara West district, a position he won and held till 2019. In 2022, Yerima got approval from former President Muhammadu Buhari to contest in the 2023 presidential election. However, he was not cleared by his party to contest in the primaries.

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BUKAR IBRAHIM: STILL ACTIVE

After serving as Yobe state governor between January 1992 to November 1993 when the military took over, Bukar Ibrahim was elected governor again in 1999, serving two consecutive terms that terminated in 2007. He later became the senator representing Yobe East in the 2007 elections and served in that capacity until 2019.

NYAME: CONVICTED

Jolly Nyame’s governorship tenure in Taraba was cut short in November 1993, one year after inauguration, as a result of a military takeover. He, however, came back to contest in 1999 and won the governorship election. He got re-elected in 2003 for a second term which ended in 2007. Immediately after leaving office, EFCC charged Nyame for fraud to the tune of N1.64 billion. He was convicted in 2018 and eventually sentenced to a 12-year jail term. Before leaving office, former President Muhammadu Buhari granted him a presidential pardon on April 14, 2023, an action widely criticized by civil society organisations and the public.

BAFARAWA: ACTIVE

In 1999, Attahiru Bafarawa became the governor of Sokoto state under the All Nigerian Peoples Party (ANPP). He served for two tenures till 2007. Upon leaving office, Bafarawa contested as president under Democratic Peoples Party (DPP), a party he founded, but lost the election to the late Yar’Adua. He was among the governors charged for alleged corruption by the EFCC. The charges bordered on illegal sales of government shares, and misappropriation of funds, among others. After a 10-year-long case, he was discharged and acquitted in 2018 by a high court in the state.

DARIYE: CONVICTED

Another 1999 governor that had a dramatic political journey was Joshua Dariye. He contested and won the Plateau state governorship election on the platform of the PDP. He ruled from 1999 to 2003. Dariye was re-elected for another four-year term but was impeached three years later by eight of the twenty-four state assembly members. In 2007, the state court of appeal ordered that Dariye be reinstated as governor and he completed his tenure in 2007. Dariye won the Plateau Central senatorial seat in 2011 and was re-elected in 2015. The EFCC, in 2007, charged Dariye with a 23-count charge of money laundering and was finally convicted on June 12, 2018 and was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment. He was, however, released after receiving a presidential pardon by Buhari in April 2023.

ADAMU: APC NATIONAL CHAIRMAN


Adamu speaking with Tinubu

Abdullahi Adamu won the 1999 Nasarawa governorship election under the platform of PDP, a party he co-founded. He got re-elected in 2003 and completed his two-term tenure in 2007. Subsequently, he became the secretary of the board of trustees (BOT) of the same party. He further contested and won the Nasarawa West senatorial seat in 2011 and ran for three consecutive terms till April 2022. He was a member of the New PDP that integrated into the APC before the 2015 elections. In March 2022, Adamu became the national chairman of the APC.

MOHAMMED LAWAL: DEAD

Mohammed Lawal was elected as the governor of Kwara state in 1999 under the platform of the All Peoples Party. He held office till 2003 and lost the re-election bid to Bukola Saraki of the PDP. Lawal died after a brief illness in a London hospital in November 2006.

ADEFARATI: DEAD

Adebayo Adefarati was elected governor of Ondo state on the platform of the Alliance for Democracy party (AD). After the completion of his first tenure in 2003, Adefarati lost his re-election bid to Olusegun Agagu, a PDP candidate. In 2007, Adefarati was chosen as AD’s flag bearer in the presidential election but died a few weeks before the poll at the age of 76.

OSOBA: POLITICALLY ACTIVE

Another governor whose tenure was truncated by the 1993 military takeover, but later came back to be elected governor in 1999 was Olusegun Osoba. He first served as governor under the SDP from January 1992 to November 1993. He won the 1999 governorship election under the AD party. He is also Tinubu’s close ally.

The 1999 set of governors was a vibrant one and still remains in close association as seen in the recent reunion with one of theirs who is the new president. In 2006, Tinubu, Boni Haruna, Orji Kalu, Ngige, Yerima and Shekarau objected to the third-term bid of former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

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NDLEA smashes international drug syndicate, arrests five suspects

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An international drug syndicate with networks in parts of Nigeria, South Africa and Thailand has been smashed by operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

Also, no fewer than five members of the cartel were arrested in a two-week intelligence led operation in Lagos, Abia and Anambra states following the seizure of their illicit drug consignments at the NAHCO import shed of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, MMIA, Ikeja Lagos.

This was disclosed in a Sunday statement by NDLEA spokesman, Femi Babafemi, saying the unravelling of the drug cartel started on Sunday 20th April when their cargo of four big suitcases arrived at the NAHCO shed on an Air Peace airline flight from Johannesburg, South Africa.


He said that the first suspect, Umeh Chisom Peter was arrested on Wednesday 24th April after he showed up to pick up two of the suitcases containing Loud, a synthetic strain of cannabis owned by a Thailand-based member of the syndicate, Obum Michael.

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According to Babafemi, the consignment of four parcels was concealed in false bottoms of the two suitcases, while the four suitcases contain a total of 17.6 kilograms Loud and drug candies.

He said another member of the syndicate, Mrs. Chiwendu Uche Ugbe whose South Africa based husband, Aloytus Uche Ugbe sent some of the consignments, was traced to Anambra state where NDLEA officers arrested her on Saturday 27th April while attempting to collect the drug parcels sent to her by her husband.

 

Two other suspects: Onyejakor Francis Chimezie and Naaji Valentine Chukwukere, with links to the cartel, were also arrested in parts of Lagos on Monday 29th April.


He stated that their arrest led to another operation in Abia state where Mrs. Chinazo Osigwe was arrested when she was to pick up some of the parcels containing Loud and drug candies sent by her husband, Osigwe Chidiebere Anthony who is equally operating from South Africa.

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Police arrest 17-year-old, two 18-year-olds, four others for robbery, cultism in Anambra

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Operatives of the Anambra State police command have arrested seven suspected cultists terrorising residents of Awka, the state capital.

The police spokesperson in the state, Tochukwu Ikenga, disclosed this in a statement on Saturday night.

Ikenga, a superintendent of police, said the suspects were arrested at about 10 p.m. on Friday.

 

How they were arrested
The police spokesperson said some police operatives from the Special Anti-Cult Squad were on patrol along UNIZIK Junction in the area on the fateful day.

 

He said that at the junction, the operatives intercepted a tricycle and arrested five male occupants of the tricycle, including its rider.

 

“Operatives in a bid to question them, the occupants took to their heels. While the others escaped, Chukwuemka Ozoekwe was arrested,” he said.

Ikenga said Mr Ozoekwe later led the police operatives to their hideout where two other suspects – Chidozie Anagor, 18, and Chukwuemeka Oyeoka, 18 – were arrested.

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“Also during the raid operation in their harbour, the operatives arrested Ebuka Okoye, 17, Olisa Obi, 19, Chidubem Nwakwu, 20, and Nwankwo Kosisochukwu,” he said.

“During interrogation, the suspects confessed to being members of Vipers Cult Group. They are one of the gangs terrorising Awka metropolis recently.

“The suspects also confessed that they were on a mission to rob the road users of their phones and personal belongings before the arrest,” the police spokesperson added.

 

He said two fleeing suspects – Makuo Nwosu and a yet-to-be-identified male – were declared wanted by the police.

Commissioner speaks
Reacting, the Acting Commissioner of Police in Anambra State, Fidelis Ogarabe, charged the operatives to sustain the fight against criminals in the state, Mr Ikenga said.

 

Mr Ogarabe, the deputy commissioner of police in charge of finance and administration, promised to repay residents of the state for their confidence in the police in the state.

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The acting police commissioner directed that all the suspects should be charged in court upon conclusion of investigations.

 

Background
There have been cult-related attacks and killings in Awka, the Anambra State capital, in recent times.

 

Several persons were reported killed in cult-related attacks in the last two months in the state capital.

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Lagos gives squatters inside abandoned Ikoyi Towers 48-hour quit notice

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The Lagos State Government has given a 48-hour quit notice to illegal occupants of abandoned Ikoyi Towers in Lagos Island.

 

The state’s Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources Tokunbo Wahab gave the notice on Saturday during an inspection of some sites, including the Federal Government-owned Ikoyi Towers.

“We were also on a site inspection to assess enforcement of Osborne underbridge after the illegal structures harbouring several persons were removed,” the commissioner wrote on his X account.

“Abandoned Ikoyi Towers which we observed were housing illegal occupants posing a security threat to the environment and nuisance to the State. An undocumented number of persons running into hundreds were seen in the premises with no sanitary provisions, and whose daily activities could not be ascertained. They have been given a 48-hour vacation notice to leave the area.”

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He also said, “Stagnant water bodies were also observed in the canal in Ebutte Elefun – Adeniji Adele, Lagos Island. Illegal structures and other business activities such as block/cement moulding were found along the fence of Ebutte Elefun High School. We have given a directive for the removal of these infractions.”

 

In recent months, the Lagos State Government has ramped up its clampdown on illegal structures to contain flooding and save lives.

Just last week, it cleared some illegal structures in under-bridge apartments where occupants pay as much as N250,000 yearly.

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