Connect with us

News

Obasanjo, northern elite, monarchs did not want APC to field Buhari in 2015 – Akande

Published

on

 

Former Osun State governor and Interim National Chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress, Chief Bisi Akande, has thrown some insight into the severe pressure mounted on the party by influential persons to make that sure President Muhammadu Buhari did not emerge as the party’s candidate for the 2015 election.

In his 559-page autobiography, titled ‘My Participations’, launched in Lagos on Thursday, Akande said persons like former President Olusegun Obasanjo and some unnamed elite, especially from the North, including royal fathers, were against Buhari becoming the party’s candidate.

Akande explained that an aristocratic leader from the North came to Osogbo, the state capital, to persuade the then governor, Rauf Aregbesola, to prevail on them to drop Buhari.

He, however, said the leaders of the newly formed party decided to go ahead with Buhari, given his charisma and the support he had garnered in his previous attempts, having contested the coveted position three times earlier. He said the emergence of the APC created a formidable structure for him and that Buhari’s candidacy was in fact one of the bases for the merger of the constituent political parties.

Regardless of this, he noted that the party allowed anybody interested in the ticket to contest against Buhari at the convention, where he eventually won.

On Obasanjo’s opposition to Buhari’s candidacy, he wrote, “When the party was ready and we were going around to all the leaders, someone reminded us that we had not seen Obasanjo and (former Head of State, Ibrahim) Babangida, and asked them to join us.

“We also met Obasanjo and asked him to join us. He said he would not join us, but that he had his sympathy for us. He said he had decided not to join any political party since he left the PDP (Peoples Democratic Party).

“Behind the scene however, I understood he was pressurising some of our leaders not to use Buhari as our candidate. It got to a point when Bola Tinubu had to confront him thus: ‘It is not fair sending me to Buhari. Buhari was a soldier and he was one of your junior officers in the army. Why don’t you call Buhari and let him know how you feel about his intention to be President?’

“I don’t know whether Obasanjo stopped at it. From the start, he did not want Buhari to be President.”

Also, on the opposition by the other elite, Akande wrote, “It was apparent from the start that Buhari would be our choice for President. That was one of the bases for the merger. However, there were pressures from the elite, especially from the North, including royal fathers, piling pressure on us not to allow Buhari to be our presidential candidate.

READ  Six IPOB/ESN members killed in shoot out with police in Imo

“A prominent aristocratic leader from the North stayed several nights in Osogbo, persuading Governor Aregbesola to prevail on us not to field Buhari. He threatened that if we did, there would be trouble in the North. We reviewed all these threats and decided to go through it with Buhari.”

Adebanjo pestered Tinubu to build his Lekki house 

Akande also described the leader of pan-Yoruba socio-political group, Afenifere, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, as a blank politically-minded leader who does not have what it takes to contest political positions.

He further said Adebanjo pestered the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, to build him a house in Lekki, where he now resides.

He also stressed that contrary to what Adebanjo believed, the ruling APC did not have restructuring in its manifesto in 2014 when the party presented Buhari as its torchbearer, adding that the APC only promised to support devolution of powers from the centre to the states.

On page 476, Akande wrote, the “APC did not have ‘Restructuring’ in its manifesto for the 2015 elections but promised to support devolution of powers from the centre to the states.

“While the President (whether Obasanjo, Yar’Adua, Jonathan or Buhari) has the whole of Nigeria as his constituency, members of the National Assembly that have the powers to amend the Constitution imposed on Nigeria by the military represent constituencies individually from different ethnic nationalities.

“It is therefore mischievous to place the responsibility for effecting ‘restructuring’ on the APC or its Presidency and not to appreciate that it would require deft negotiations among such members from different ethnic nationalities and constituencies or zonal and religious background before any political party or any ethnic nationality could successfully issue any fiat on the National Assembly to make laws on power devolution or on ‘restructuring’, whatever it might connote.”

The APC chieftain further alleged that the trio of Adebanjo, Sir Olaniwun Ajayi (now late), and Chief Olu Falae should have found younger Yoruba sons to represent the South-West at the 2014 National Conference convened by former President Goodluck Jonathan instead of pocketing “generous allowances” given to conference delegates.

Akande said, “I was not surprised that three old men who were virulently opposed to our aspirations in the APC found their ways into the Jonathan Conference. These men – Sir Olaniwun Ajayi, Chief Ayo Adebanjo and Chief Olu Falae were once our leaders in the old Afenifere until the passage of Papa Adesanya.

READ  CBN orders banks not to pay customers making over-the-counter withdrawals of new naira notes

“They could not find any younger Yoruba to send to the conference to represent our interest. They believed, even in their old age, that they were the only people who could have gone there. Sir Ajayi, who was close to 90 at the time of the Conference, has since joined his ancestors. Chief Adebanjo celebrated his 90th birthday in 2018. Chief Falae is in his 80s. Note that Jonathan paid the conference delegates generous allowances!”

2023: We’ll ensure free, fair elections, transfer of power to winners —Buhari
Reminiscing on the formation of Afenifere, the ex-governor of Osun State recalled that “Chief Olu Falae, a trained civil servant, who after retirement became decorated into leadership by his former military bosses, has since been trying to blindly straddle Nigeria’s complicated politics.

“The old Afenifere and PDP coalition was fronted by these three men and General Obasanjo. Chief Adebanjo, the most vociferous of them, is a blank politically-minded leader who recognises readily and always that he never has what it takes to aspire for high political positions.

“He constantly harbours lumps of yellow hate-bile in his heart for any co-political leader with brighter chances for any major public office within or outside his political party. Adebanjo detests all past governors produced by his party since the UPN days and proudly says so in his regular pontifications. I always passed him for a mere political agitator among the old local party paid canvassers euphemistically called ‘organising secretaries’.”

Continuing, Akande alleged that Adebanjo coerced Tinubu to build a house for him in the Lekki area of the state.

“One day, Sir Olaniwun was launching a book at Muson Centre, Lagos. After the book presentation, Tinubu said I should not go and that he would like to see me. We met in a small room where he also invited Sir Olaniwun Ajayi. ‘Papa, you can see that this document is old, Tinubu said as he handed over a big envelope to Ajayi. This is your C of O (Certificate of Occupancy)!’

“Tinubu told me later that after he presented Adebanjo’s C of O to him, Adebanjo was always pestering Tinubu until he helped built a house on the plot. The street was also named in honour of Adebanjo and he is living in that house now at Lekki Phase One,” Akande said.

When contacted on Friday, Adebanjo said he would give his response after carefully reading the book. “I’m not going to depend on hearsay; I am going to give a written reply after reading the book,” he said.

READ  Ex-minister of justice and former ICJ judge, Bola Ajibola, is dead

How Ikimi, others tried to hijack party 

Meanwhile, Akande also said a former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Chief Tom Ikimi; a former governor of Kaduna State, and a chieftain of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change had during the formative stages of the APC tried to hijack the party if and when it got registered by the Independent National Electoral Commission.

He said he had received reports that Ikimi and some members of the then Joint Merger Committee, comprising different political parties that had come together to form the APC, had tried to “share among themselves the new party leadership official positions”.

Akande, in his book, said a former governor of Kaduna State, had while lobbying for the position of the national secretary of the APC, told him that meetings were being held at the residence of Ikimi, who was then a member of the Action Congress of Nigeria, that the former minister had at the meetings been slated to become the national chairman of the APC while the position of the treasure “was perhaps being reserved for a chieftain of the Congress for Progressive Change, Alhaji Garba Gadi.

“The three of them, by chance, at one time or the other, were former members of ANPP and they became fortuitously co-chairmen of the Joint Merger Committee for the yet to be registered APC. I felt a revolt about how human beings take undue advantage of their principals which, in this case, were the parties that sent them to the Joint Merger Committee.

“To put practical effect to their mischief, Chief Tom Ikimi had been arranging a sort of public meeting – perhaps some sort of convention in an ostensible manner – which he termed, ‘APC Leadership Meeting’ at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel. I remained the chairman of the CAN that sponsored Tom Ikimi to the merger committee.

“He, as coordinating chairman of the Joint Merger Committee, wrote me an invitation for a public meeting of APC which to me was still waiting to be registered into corporate existence. What a hijack indeed!”

But reacting, Ikimi said he would react to the allegation of the former interim national chairman of the APC in a book he is currently writing.

“Well, I didn’t hear it (allegation). I was not there. I am writing my own book. I will react to it (Akande’s allegation) then (in my book),” he told one of our correspondents on the phone on Friday.,,

News

FG reconstitutes governing councils for 111 public tertiary institutions

Published

on

By

 

The Federal Government (FG) has approved the re-constitution of governing councils at public tertiary institutions.

 

Folasade Boriowo, media head at the federal ministry of education, confirmed this on Saturday.

 

In June 2023, the National Universities Commission (NUC) dissolved the councils of all federal varsities on a presidential directive.

 

The federal directive also affected the governing boards of government-funded parastatals, agencies, and institutions in education.

 

It stalled administrative decision-making in public tertiary institutions by mandating these universities, colleges of education, and federal polytechnics to seek ministerial approval for functions previously overseen by the governing board or councils.

 

The re-constitution of governing councils now comes after 11 months of repeated calls from education stakeholders.

 

Among them is the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) which argued that the non-reinstatement or reconstitution of governing councils in universities was causing an uptick in cases of “illegality and flagrant violation” of institutional autonomy in public universities.

READ  Mamora becomes ‘senior minister’ as Buhari reshuffles cabinet

 

Chris Maiyaki, the NUC’s executive secretary, said a committee was set up to ensure the most qualified people are put in the councils.

 

“As soon as they are constituted, they will be made to undergo orientation courses immediately, to ensure they are in tune with the expectations of the knowledge of government structures and laws of institutions,” the NUC head had stated.

 

“It will also help them to understand those cross-cutting issues that we need to nip in the bud, to ensure our institutions regain their glorious paths.”

Continue Reading

News

Minimum Wage: FG, labour to reconvene next week over negotiation

Published

on

By

 

The Tripartite Committee on Minimum Wage will reconvene on Tuesday, May 23 to further negotiate a reasonable new minimum wage for workers, after the organised labour walked out of the negotiation on May 15.

 

An invitation letter sent to the labour leaders by the chairman of the committee, Bukar Goni, states that the other members of the committee have agreed to shift grounds from the N48,000 proposal which was made on Wednesday.

 

The letter appealed to the labour leaders to speak to their members and attend the reconvened meeting next Tuesday.

 

The organised labour comprising the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) have proposed a new minimum wage of N615,000, which is way higher than the N48,000 proposal by the government.

 

The organised private sector, on the other hand, proposed an initial offer of N54,000. After dumping the talks, the labour leaders addressed a press conference where they expressed their anger over the Federal Government’s offer.

READ  Tribunal sacks Adeleke as Osun governor, declares Oyetola winner of election

 

They blamed the government and the private sector for the breakdown in negotiation.

 

May 31 Deadline
The Federal Government had failed to present a nationally acceptable minimum wage to Nigerians before the May 1 Labour Day.

The situation has forced labour to be at loggerheads with the government. In the wake of the tussle, the NLC President Joe Ajaero insisted on the N615,000 minimum wage, arguing that the amount was arrived at after an analysis of the economic situation worsened by the hike in the cost of living and the needs of an average Nigerian family of six.

 

Ajaero and labour leaders have given the Federal Government a May 31 deadline to meet their demands.

 

On January 30, Vice President Kashim Shettima inaugurated the 37-member tripartite committee to come up with a new minimum wage.

 

With its membership cutting across federal, and state governments, the private sector, and organised labour, the panel is to recommend a new national minimum wage for the country.

READ  JUST IN: President Buhari meets APC governors at Villa

 

During the committee’s inauguration, the Vice President urged the members to “speedily” arrive at a resolution and submit their reports early.

 

“This timely submission is crucial to ensure the emergence of a new minimum wage,” Shettima said.

 

The 37-man committee is chaired by the former Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Goni Aji.

 

With the cost of living rising following the removal of fuel subsidy, calls for a new minimum wage have continued to make headlines in Nigeria.

Continue Reading

News

Police arrest doctor, nurses over missing placenta in Kwara hospital

Published

on

By

 

The police in Kwara State have commenced an investigation into the disappearance of the umbilical cord and placenta of a newborn baby at Government Cottage Hospital, Iloffa in the Oke-Ero Local Government Area of the state.

The mother, identified as Mrs C. Williams, a class teacher at Orota Secondary School, Odo-Owa, was reported to have had the child on Sunday night but was not given the umbilical cord and the placenta by the hospital’s workers.

 

Five of the workers were later arrested in connection with the missing parts and were being detained by the general Investigation unit of the State Criminal Investigation Department of the command in Ilorin.

The suspects detained by the police include a resident doctor, three nurses and a ward attendant at the hospital.

 

It was gathered that the police were invited when efforts to settle the controversy at various levels failed.

 

It was further gathered that it took the efforts of elders of Odo-Owa community to calm some angry youths who suspected foul play and were about to burn down the hospital on Tuesday over the incident.

READ  APC loses Sierra Leone presidential election

 

Williams, while narrating her ordeal, said that she was rushed to the hospital while experiencing labour pains on Sunday afternoon and gave birth to a baby at about 7 pm the same day.

 

“I was feeling some labour pains on Sunday and I got to the cottage hospital, some minutes past 1 pm on Sunday, and told the nurse I met on duty that I was having contractions; she was the one that attended to me after confirming that I was truly in labour.

 

“She took me into the labour room and asked me to wait because I still had more time. Not quite long after I came, the doctor also came in and instructed the nurse to usher me into the labour room,” she said.

 

She said that after having the baby, the following morning, she was discharged and allowed to go home.

 

She, however, said that the hospital workers gave her a bag containing her items but did not give her the placenta and the umbilical cord of the baby when they asked her to go home.

READ  2023 Budget: Buhari proposes N470bn for universities, other tertiary institutions

 

“Although they handed a black nylon bag to me, I discovered that there were two missing items inside the nylon; they are the umbilical cord and the placenta,” she said.

 

Police Public Relations Officer, Ejire-Adeyemi Toun, confirmed the incident, adding that the investigation was ongoing.

 

“The police are investigating the incident and five suspects have been arrested in connection with it,” the PPRO said.

 

Continue Reading

Trending News