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Witch-hunt: I was disqualified from being minister out of envy – Stella Okotete

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Executive director of business development, Nigeria Export-Import (NEXIM) Bank, Stella Okotete, has spoken on her disqualification as a ministerial nominee by the senate.

 

Okotete was recommended to the senate for screening and confirmation by President Bola Tinubu as a ministerial nominee.

 

But the senate did not clear Okotete, Nasir el-Rufai, a former governor of Kaduna, and Danladi Abubakar, a nominee from Tabara state, citing security reports against them.

 

Senate President Godswill Akpabio had said the upper legislative chamber was waiting for the security clearance on the three nominees.

 

In 2020, Okotete was appointed as the national women leader of the All Progressives Congress’ caretaker/extraordinary convention planning committee (CECPC).

 

THOSE FIGHTING ME ARE ENVIOUS’

Speaking in an online interview “Mic on Podcast” on Saturday, Okotete said the refusal of the senate to clear her as a nominee was “purely political games”.

 

The former APC women leader said she would not have remained a director in the NEXIM bank if she was a security threat to the country,

READ  FG gives condition for passengers to board Abuja-Kaduna Train

 

Okotete added that she is not under investigation by any security outfit in the country.

 

“I was not beaten out of the game of becoming a minister, I think some people tried to stop me from serving the country on a higher platform and they didn’t succeed,” she said.

 

“I’m sure, logically speaking, if I’m a security threat or I have security issues, I won’t still be the ED of NEXIM Bank.”

 

Okotete said those fighting her are doing so because of their fears that she may vie for the 2027 Delta governorship election.

She added that there is no such intention to join the race to the Delta state government house in 2027.

“Most of the people fighting Stelle Okotete today are all out of envy. I will be 40 years old in April,” she said

“At 40, who can say they have seen through all the tiers of the government, from LG to state and the federal government?

READ  2023: Tinubu promises to protect Igbo businesses, make south-east Taiwan of Africa

“At 36, I was the national woman leader for the party and still the executive director of NEXIM. I’m sure in Nigeria, there is no woman who has held two positions of such, simultaneously.

“It is all envy. I have made impact. I understand their fears and worries. I even told those who cared to listen that I don’t have the intention…

 

“Some of the fears are about 2027. You know how these politicians think. I’m not vying for governor of Delta state.”

 

 

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Raisi’s vice expected to be sworn in as president of Iran

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Iran’s first vice president, Mohammad Mokhber, is expected to assume the presidency after Ebrahim Raisi’s death in a helicopter crash as the country gears up for early elections.

The Iranian constitution stipulates that the first vice president take over “in the event of the president’s death, dismissal, resignation, absence or illness for more than two months”.

 

Raisi, who died on Sunday along with Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and other officials, was nearing the end of his first four-year term as president.

 

Mokhber’s interim appointment requires the approval of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final word in all state affairs.

 

Presidential elections to pick a permanent successor are to be held within 50 days, according to the constitution.

 

A council made up of the parliament speaker, head of the judiciary and the vice president are to be tasked with organising the national vote.

 

READ  Budget padding claim damaged senate’s integrity, says Akpabio 

Mokhber, 68, was appointed vice president as Raisi took office in August 2021.

 

The vice president was born in Dezful city in the southwestern province of Khuzestan, where he held several official positions.

 

For years since 2007, Mokhber chaired the Execution of Imam Khomeini’s Order, a governmental organisation tasked with managing properties confiscated following the 1979 Islamic revolution.

 

The foundation, established in the 1980s, has over the years grown to become a major state economic conglomerate with shares in various sectors.

 

Iranians head to the polls for presidential elections every four years since the Islamic Republic’s first vote in 1980.

 

The constitution sets a two-term limit for Iranian presidents.

 

The position of prime minister does not exist in Iran, and the president — assisted by several vice presidents — is responsible for appointing and directing the cabinet.

AFP

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Good morning! Here Are Some Major News Headlines In The Newspapers Today: CBN withdraws circular on cybersecurity levy

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1. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has withdrawn its earlier circular directing commercial banks, mobile money operators, and other financial institutions to implement the National Cybersecurity Levy. The move was primarily informed by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s directive and widespread concerns raised by Nigerians.

 

2. There are indications that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is expected to receive the scorecard of members of his cabinet this week. The administration will be one year old next week, but the ministers will clock nine months in office tomorrow, having been sworn in on August 21 last year.

 

3. Troops of the Nigerian Army have rescued 383 women and children abducted by terrorists and insurgents in Sambisa Forest in Borno State. Those rescued include women and children who had been held in the forest for 10 years.

 

4. Presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP) in the 2023 general elections, Peter Obi, has visited victims of Kano mosque arson. Obi, who arrived in Kano, on Sunday, went straight from the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport to the Murtala Muhammad Specialist Hospital, where some of the victims are receiving treatment.

READ  UPDATED: EFCC declares Yahaya Bello wanted over N80bn ‘financial crime’

 

5. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has offered a fresh appointment to Ajuri Ngelale, his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity. Ngelale was named Special Presidential Envoy on Climate Action and secretary of the newly established 25-man committee to oversee Green Economic Initiatives.

 

6. A helicopter carrying Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi was involved in “an accident” amid poor weather conditions on Sunday, state media reported, with a search underway and no news yet on his condition.

 

7. A man, Taiwo Badejo, has allegedly stabbed his friend, identified simply as Monday, to death over N2,500 debt in the Oko Oba area of Lagos State. It was gathered that Badejo and Monday were arguing over the money when the argument degenerated into a fight between them on Friday.

 

8. The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency has declared a couple, Kazeem and Rashidat Owoalade, wanted for running a cocaine cartel from India. This followed the arrest of four members of the syndicate in Lagos, where a Sports Utility Vehicle was recovered and two houses traced to them were sealed for forfeiture to the Federal Government.

READ  Budget padding claim damaged senate’s integrity, says Akpabio 

 

9. Organised Labour has told the Federal Government to perish any thought of offering N100,000 as the new minimum wage. It also asked the government to be serious with negotiations on the issue of workers’ wages, insisting that it used the lowest minimum in arriving at N615,000 as the new minimum wage.

 

10. Olubadan-designate, Oba Owolabi Olakulehin’s nomination is awaiting Oyo State Governor, Seyi Makinde’s approval, Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs Commissioner, Segun Olayiwola said on Sunday. He disclosed that his nomination as the next Olubadan of Ibadanland has scaled through all the stages, except the final approval.

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BREAKING: Iran’s President Raisi killed in helicopter crash

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Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi has died in a helicopter crash at age 63, Iranian news outlets have reported. Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian was also among those killed, along with seven others.

His death comes at a fraught moment in the Middle East, with war raging in Gaza. The helicopter crashed weeks after Iran launched a drone-and-missile attack on Israel in response to a deadly strike on its diplomatic compound in Damascus.

Hardliner Raisi became president in a historically uncompetitive election in 2021. Previously the chief justice, he has overseen a period of intensified repression of dissent in a nation convulsed by youth-led protests against clerical rule.

Raisi was the second-most powerful person in the Islamic Republic’s political structure after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khomeini. The Iranian Constitution mandates that, in the case of the death of the president, the first vice president shall assume with the approval of the Supreme Leader.

 

Iranian state broadcasters are airing Islamic prayers in between their news broadcasts following the announcement that President Ebrahim Raisi and eight others died after the helicopter they were traveling in crashed in Iran’s East Azerbaijan province.

READ  Police arrest six railway vandals in Ogun

 

Iran’s government convened an “urgent meeting” on Monday, according to Iranian state news agency IRNA.

 

A photo shared by IRNA showed that the chair that Raisi usually sits in was vacant and draped with a black sash in memory of the president.

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