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Nigeria is very unlucky, very unlucky that people like Agbakoba will choose to upset the applecart at this crucial time in our history, when we are apprehensively facing a succession test, and when all hands should be on deck to ensure that our transition, succession, or continuation, goes smoothly. Nigeria is unlucky, very unlucky that an unknown, obscure judge, exercising what is at best judicial adventurism, will be allowed to invalidate the Constitution of the land, based, not on some violation of some express provisions of the Big Book, but on some imaginary provisions which he felt should be part of the Document. The absurdity of this judge's ruling will become apparent when one considers that the State Governors of the ratifying States are not required to sign the "Acts" emanating from the States. Why does he not insist that these resolutions from the States are Acts of the respective State assemblies and thus require the signature and assent of the respective Governors? The Amendment of the Constitution is a unique occurrence that has its own peculiar methodology. The requirement that two-thirds of the States are required to built to pass resolutions to ratify it provides the necessary checks and balances against whims and frivolous amendments, and obviates the need for executive assent. The ruling does not make sense, and I am sure that, as we say in American Football, it is "coming back": I expect it to be overturned on appeal. Mark my words. The presiding Judge erred when he ruled that the Constitution amendment is like an Act of the Legislature and needs Presidential assent and signature. Because the Constitution itself does not say that. Expressio Unius Est Exclusio Alterius is a maxim of law interpretation which means that the expression of one thing is the exclusion of the other. When certain persons, things, or conditions are expressed in a law, contract, will or statute, an intention to exclude all others from its operation may be inferred. Here, the Constitution provides for ratification for two-thirds of the States for an Amendment to take effect, and made no mention of Presidential assent, or mode of override of a Presidential veto, as for other laws, after or before ratification of the States. Therefore, one can safely infer that Presidential assent is not required. Nigeria is unlucky indeed that troublemakers like Agbako - ba are there to cause all these distractions, with the acquiescence of an ignorant judiciary. What Nigeria needs at this time is goodluck, not agbako. Nigeria is unlucky indeed. Cry the Beloved Country. Emmanuel O. Fashakin, M.D.; Esq.:-) Attorney at Law & President/ Medical Director, Alpha-K Family Medical Practice, P.C. 79-35 153rd Street, Flushing, NY 11367,USA Tel: (718) 591-1600; Fax: (718) 591-0265 web address: www.alphak.org alternative e-mail: mdfash2@gmail.com Mobile phones: +1-347-217-6175; +1-267-907-3127 "For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure." 1 Cor 2:13 |
Source of info, please |
The purpose of my writing was to focus our attention on Buhari's great opportunity, at a critical time in our nationhood, when he was head of a military dictatorship, and could have effected a radical change for the better at a fiat, and did nothing except terrorize professionals and compatriots who love the country more than he. The mantle of leadership should pass on to the newer generation, who are willing to work with fellow progressives to bring Nigeria out of this quagmire. Every aspect of our nationhood stinks: our health sector, education, power, even the judiciary; our economy is almost completely dependent on oil. Most people in politics are there for themselves -- to steal, or in Buhari's sake, to satisfy a quest for power, rather than the love of the people. The nation yearns for true patriots. I love the attributes Ribadu brings to the table -- Nuhu fought corruption in the country when it was unfashionable to do so. He brought Nigeria some semblance of respect abroad, which goodwill the present administration has all but squandered. I have heard of smears on Ribadu before -- houses in UK, Dubai etc which all turned out to be false. If someone has irrefutable evidence of corruption on Ribadu's part, except for the fairly selective prosecution induced by OBJ which I am willing to forgive, then I will like to see it. If the progressives choose another leader -- and we have abundant talent in this country -- then I am willing to follow. But please not Buhari. He waged a War Against Indiscipline when he had the opportunity, when he should have tackled corruption and solve our problems to make us a better nation. Buhari left Nigeria a worse nation, in terms of development and infrastructures than he met it, and IBB finished us off. Buhari instituted WAI to instill discipline, which is defined as listening to and obeying Buhari without complaining or writing, even the truth, in the newspapers if it will embarrass Buhari. Buhari is not fit to be our elected democratic President The struggle continues PresenceIcon Emmanuel O. Fashakin, M.D.; Esq.:-) Attorney at Law & President/ Medical Director, Alpha-K Family Medical Practice, P.C. 79-35 153rd Street, Flushing, NY 11367,USA Tel: (718) 591-1600; Fax: (718) 591-0265 web address: www.alphak.org alternative e-mail: mdfash2@gmail.com Mobile phones: +1-347-217-6175; +1-267-907-3127 |
Support Buhari for President? No, No, Never! In our search for a Progressive candidate to rally behind for the 2011 Presidential polls, I want to humbly submit that Buhari be not chosen as that candidate. I will tell you why. Buhari presided over this country as the head of a ruthless military junta for twenty months. What did he achieve in office except intimidate the population, cower the press, throw people who dissent in jail, especially journalists and other professionals, including Doctors. Buhari unpatriotically ruthlessly suppressed the legitimate struggle of the Nigerian Medical Association to improve healthcare delivery in the country, and at the end of the day, he caused such demoralization of Doctors which resulted in unprecedented “Brain Drain” of the cream of the profession abroad. Buhari seized the reins of power on December 31, 1983 from then President Shehu Shagari. I remembered the day very vividly. I was standing in the parking lot of St. Day Adventist Hospital in Ile-Ife, Nigeria, waiting for other Doctors about to travel to Ede for the funeral of one of our Resident Doctors who tragically succumbed to cancer. We switched on the radio, and heard one Brigadier Joshua Dongoyaro announced the take-over of the government by the military, declaring, inter alia, “our hospitals have become consulting clinics.” With such bold declaration of the raison d’etre for taking over the control of the country, Doctors had expected that Buhari was going to address the rapid deterioration in the healthcare of the country. The teaching hospitals were in shambles, and were shadows of what they once were, when for example, the University College Hospital, Ibadan was the pride of the continent and was taking referrals of complex cases from other African countries. There was no co-ordinated primary care to talk about in the country. Buhari did absolutely nothing, and there was no-one to hold him accountable, because he had cowered everybody, including the press, with the draconian Decree Number 4. It was left to the professionals to speak out, and Doctors did. The National Association of Resident Doctors, and later the Nigerian Medical Associaion, demanded that improvements be made in the health sector, so that our hospitals would not be merely places where people would go to die “after a brief illness.” A few journalists who dared to write the truth commended the patriotic stance of Doctors, and I remembered one Ayo Ositelu, even though he was a sports writer, wrote as follows in the Punch: “for once the Doctors are not asking for extra-pay for themselves, but want improvement in the health of the nation; the government should listen to them, and dialogue.” Dialogue? Hell, no! Buhari unleashed the might of the Federal Government against Doctors. NSO officials went round the homes of the leadership of the Association and hauled them off to detention. I was Secretary of the NMA Ife/Ijesha zone at that time, and my picture was once on the front page of the “Guardian” newspaper, attending a caucus meeting of the NMA at Luth, Lagos. When the government clamp down began, I learnt threw a local NSO official that order had been given out for me to be picked up, and I fled my home. I had to sleep in someone’s garage for many days, after evacuating my young son and pregnant wife to safety. True patriots like late Dr. Beko Ransome Kuti, Dr. Oye Adeniran, Dr. Atoyebi, Dr. Jacob Akoh (ABU Zaria), Dr. Arowolo (R.I.P)(UCH, Ibadan), Dr. Adewole (UCH Ibadan), to name a few, were either arrested or laid off their good jobs they had labored had for. The government won that battle, but lost the war to improve the health of the nation. The Government response to the Doctors’ action was so demoralizing that many of my colleagues, including myself, who had tenaciously held that we would not go abroad, but stay back in Nigeria to serve our people, started making plans to “check out.” As the top student in my graduating class at UCH Ibadan in 1979, I had lots of opportunities to go abroad, including one very good offer to do residency at a top hospital in London in 1980, right after my internship at Akure. Rather, I returned to Nigeria and did NYSC at Toro, Bauchi State, where I was the only Medical Doctor in the entire Local Government of over 300,000, and the very first Youth Corper Doctor who agreed to stay for the entire year at Toro, where there was no pipe borne water, electric power supply, or hospital admission facility. After the Buhari/Idiagbon clamp down, the sojourn of Doctors abroad, which was until then only in trickles, mainly by the older Doctors to countries like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, and the younger ones to the UK and US, became an avalanche, and the genesis of the exodus of Doctors from the country, the beginning of the explosion of the “brain drain.” Ironically, it was reported that the co-architect of the clamp down on Doctors, General Tunde Idiagbon was rushed into a hospital at Ilorin a few years ago, after he collapse, and had a heart attack. He did not survive the occurrence. I feel sorry for him, but I could not but wonder whether the outcome might have been different had his government heeded the clarion call from concerned Doctors to improve the country’s healthcare facilities. Even now in 2010, how many medical facilities in Nigeria can handle a full blown case of heart attack. Suffering a true medical emergency in Nigeria is virtually a death sentence, in a country where Cecilia Ibru stole 191 Billion Naira, and one billion Naira investment in the health sector in every state, if fully invested and not stolen, would make a huge difference. There is no co-ordinated ambulance service in the country, and many of the victims of the carnage on our ill-maintained highways die unnecessary deaths. The afore-mentioned Dr. Arowolo, laid off after the Doctor/Buhari confrontation of 1985, and a dynamic compatriot, Mr. Banji Adegboro, who was President of the Students’ Union of University of Ibadan, the year before I was elected Vice-President of the Union, were some of the cream of our society who died needless deaths after road accidents. Back to Buhari. Buhari has not fared better in politics, and has held fast to his military dictatorial tendencies. He was Presidential candidate for ANPP, and after losing the elections in 2007, both he and his party filed petition against the declared winner, Yaradua. How Buhari, with only significant support in only a handful of states in the North thought he could have won the presidency is beyond me, but that is not the main issue. His party decided to withdraw the petition and channel another course. As a true democrat, Buhari should have dialogued with the leaders of his party, and once a decision is taken, abide by that decision. Rather, Buhari insisted on the incongruous cause of action of pursuing his election petition by himself, against the wishes of the party which sponsored him for the post. Absurd: very, very absurd. We were told stories of how the Supreme Military Council ran by Buhari and Idiagbon was badly divided and fragmented. It appears that Buhari cannot work with anybody, because he always believes that his way is the only right way of looking at things. I can picture the situation were Buhari to be elected as an Executive President in the country. I can assure you that within a few weeks he would turn against the coalition that brings him to power. Politics is question of give and take, and the beauty of life is that one person is not the repository of wisdom. It’s a big problem if someone is, or more correctly, thinks that he is, right all the time. People who are worried about the “over-heating” of the polity better think twice about supporting Buhari for the Presidency, because he will not only over-heat the polity, he will take this country on a roller-coaster, and be at logger heads with the National Assembly, his party and even his own ministers, because he cannot work with anybody. Nuhu Ribadu has my vote, but support Buhari for Presidency? “Objection, Your Honor” – very strongly! emmanuel Fashakin MD, Esq |
Wow, these are the words of wisdom, and I hope that the country listens. If Danjuma says that the leadership in the country has failed, and that a good leader would make a heck of a difference, I think that we should listen to him and heed his warning. Danjuma knows Nigeria inside out, because he has played a part in the political development of this country for the past 46 years. To those who do not know, Lt. Danjuma was the one who led the soldiers who killed Ironsi and Fajuyi in the second 1966 coup which brought Gowon to power, and he has remained in Government since them, except for the few interruptions of civilian rule. I had no horse in this race, but I was leaning heavily towards Goodluck Jonathan and PDP, until Oceanic Bank/Cecilia Ibru saga. That made up my mind for me. I cannot in all conscience continue to support PDP when the plunder of the country is taking place unabated right under their noses. The subsequent revelations of OBJ's corruption and abuse of power by Prof Naiwu Osahon was shocking to me. PDP and his people have treated Nigeria as their private ATM to be plundered as they wish. The Progressives in Nigeria should bury their differences, shun tribalism, ethinicity, and sectional interests and rally behind one person to deliver Nigeria from this quagmire. The Goodluck Jonathan story is good, and he has been lucky, but this is not time for good and romantic story. Our dear beloved country with all its resources is sinking, and we the citizenry need to act now. Buhari is a good choice from what I hear (my brother Rotimi, is an avid supporter), but he has had his chance, and he allowed sectional and religious interests (remember the OIC saga?) to derail his agenda. It is time to give someone else a chance. It is time for Nuhu Ribadu. The battle to wrest power from the cabal holding Nigeria in stranglehold will be tough, and that is why Progressives cannot afford to split their votes. We must rally behind somebody, and I think that person should be Nuhu Ribadu. If you are a true Progressive, and you love this country, and you want us to be delivered from this mess, you will support whoever is most competent to run the affairs of the country at all Levels: Presidency, States and Local Governments, irrespective of their tribal or ethnic origin. Nigeria should come first and foremost. As long as we continue to engage in sectional and parochial politics, there will never be progress in the country. You might argue that Ribadu does not have a big enough structure to dismantle the PDP, and he is therefore unelectable. I disagree. Power belongs to the people. INEC has promised a fair election, and I hold them to their promise. If we have a fair election, and we rally round Ribadu and give him a tailwind, he will be swept into office like Barak Obama. When Obama declared for the Presidency, he had less than 1% chance of being President, according to the opinion polls in the US. However as people listened to him more and more, it was obvious that he was the best choice to lead the country after the mess left by President Bush and the Republicans. The people of the dear country America, my other country in addition to Nigeria, buried its racial prejudice to support a worthy candidate to deliver their country from sinking. I canvassed on foot for votes for Barak Obama in the small towns in suburban Pennsylvania, together with other volunteers, 95% ofd whom were white. We set aside racial differences to support a worthy cause. That is what progressive people do. Now is the time for Nigerians to do the same. IT IS TIME TO TAKE OUR COUNTRY BACK; IT IS TIME FOR NUHU RIBADU. Emmanuel O. Fashakin, M.D.; Esq.:-) Attorney at Law & President/ Medical Director, Alpha-K Family Medical Practice, P.C. 79-35 153rd Street, Flushing, NY 11367,USA Tel: (718) 591-1600; Fax: (718) 591-0265 web address: www.alphak.org alternative e-mail: mdfash2@gmail.com Mobile phones: +1-347-217-6175; +1-267-907-3127 "For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure." 1 Cor 2:13 |
Search | Advanced search Home | News | Danjuma backs Ribadu Danjuma backs Ribadu Font size: Decrease font Enlarge font Joseph Jibueze 29/10/2010 01:37:00 image Ribadu I recommend Nuhu Ribadu to you. He will fight corruption to a standstill. People must be held accountable. If not, they will get away with murder literally – Danjuma The taciturn general broke his silence last night on next year’s general elections and his kind of man to lead the country. Former Defence Minister Gen. Theophilus Danjuma (rtd.) endorsed the presidential aspiration of former boss of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission Mallam Nuhu Ribadu. Gen. Danjuma described the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) presidential aspirant as the only one among the numerous aspirants for the top job capable of fighting corruption which he identified as the nation’s main problem. “Corruption has assumed an oceanic proportion in Nigeria”, he said, warning that it might consume the nation if left unchecked. Danjuma, who is the chair of the Presidential Advisory Council (PAC) spoke yesterday at a Business lecture series organised by the Lagos Country Club. The topic of his lecture is “The Nigeria of my dream”. He said: ’The impunity with which perpetrators get away with corruption is a cause for concern. “I recommend Nuhu Ribadu to us. He will fight corruption to a standstill. People must be held accountable. If not, they will get away with murder literally. “If there is no restitution after persecution, we are sweeping the probe under the carpet because there is corruption of oceanic proportion in Nigeria.’’ The former Chief of Army Staff identified lack of transformational leadership as the greatest challenge facing this country. Declaring that all that is needed to take Nigeria to the Promised Land is the emergence of a leader determined to set things right, Danjuma expressed regret that Nigeria had been unlucky with the kind of leaders it has had since independence. He said: “One right man at the top can make all the difference in the life of a nation. Our country has so far been unlucky.’’ He lamented the nation’s economic backwardness despite the abundance of natural and human resources. Danjuma wondered why Nigeria does not refine oil, a situation that has affected her economic fortunes negatively. He said, ‘’we have added no value to the crude oil we sell to the world in crude form’’. He said Nigeria would not develop economically without self reliance. Danjuma bemoaned the inability of Nigerians to hold their leaders accountable. ‘’The average Nigerian is docile. They are very forgiving of those in authority. People don’t ask questions. Maybe it is because of poverty,’’ he stated. He flayed criticisms of the 1999 constitution, saying it was not fair to reject the constitution simply because it was produced by the military. He said the military created states which legally exist today. ‘’We cannot accept democratic rule while rejecting the fundamental laws upon which it is founded,’’ he argued. He however said the constitution “requires radical reconstruction’’. On insecurity, the former Chief of Army Staff said ‘the machinery of law enforcement is weak. Failure to punish crimes is responsible for the escalation of violent crimes in Nigeria.’’ He gave an insight into the regime of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, saying he failed. He said: ‘’I strongly believed that Obasanjo was going to deliver but he failed. “For instance, people who came to serve two terms decided to change their minds and go for a third term.‘’ Danjuma said the Obasanjo he knew in the Army was not the same person that came out of prison and became President. ‘’I was in the cabinet and I saw a totally different man. On so many occasions when memos were bought, we would be called upon to rubberstamp them because he had already given anticipatory approval.’’ He described the presidential system of government especially the legislature as very expensive and the least productive. Danjuma however lauded the judiciary and the media for being virile in saving the nation’s democracy. |
The time is now for the true Progressives in Nigeria to unite and throw out the hegemony holding Nigeria captive. Goodluck Jonathan is a decent man, but he is propped up by a fiercely corrupt cabal. A vote for Goodluck Jonathan is a vote for continuation of the status quo in Nigeria; a continuation for endless looting as evidenced by the recent looting of 191 Billion Naira by Cecilia Ibru. All progressive parties should unite behind NUHU RIBADU and sweep him into Aso Rock. This is our moment. We can take our country back. Yes we can! Join our group at: NuhuRibaduForPresident@yahoogroups.com Emmanuel O. Fashakin, M.D., Esq. Attorney at Law &President/Med Director Alpha-K Family Medical Practice, P.C. 79-35 153rd Street, Flushing, NY 11367 Tel: (718) 591-1600; Fax: (718) 591-0265 web address: www.alphak.org alternative e-mail: mdfash@aol.com cell phone: +1-347-217-6175 |
Thanks Gowaga. We appreciate your great service to the group Dr Fashakin |
I know it sounds crazy, it's bad but all is not lost. A Greece loss to Argentina (by any score), and a Nigeria win over S. Korea by any margin will see us through. Everything that could go wrong did today, but with a better bounce of the ball, we could still sail through. As a matter of fact, I think we have South Korea exactly where we want them -- letting them think that we are down and out "It ain't over until it's over", says Yogi Berra, Hall of Famer Yankee. It ain't over until the fat lady sings. We are still in this thing. The Eagles will make World Cup history: becoming the first team, since the 32 team format began, to qualify for the next round after losing the first two matches. Nigeria will shock the world. Let's go Eagles! Emmanuel O. Fashakin, M.D.; Esq. Attorney at Law & President/ Medical Director, Alpha-K Family Medical Practice, P.C. 79-35 153rd Street, Flushing, NY 11367,USA Tel: (718) 591-1600; Fax: (718) 591-0265 web address: www.alphak.org alternative e-mail: mdfash2@gmail.com Mobile phones: +1-347-217-6175; +1-267-907-3127 |
I know it sounds crazy, it's bad but all is not lost. A Greece loss to Argentina (by any score), and a Nigeria win over S. Korea by any margin will see us through. Everything that could go wrong did today, but with a better bounce of the ball, we could still sail through. As a matter of fact, I think we have South Korea exactly where we want them -- letting them think that we are down and out "It ain't over until it's over", says Yogi Berra, Hall of Famer Yankee. It ain't over until the fat lady sings. We are still in this thing. The Eagles will make World Cup history: becoming the first team, since the 32 team format began, to qualify for the next round after losing the first two matches. Nigeria will shock the world. Let's go Eagles! Emmanuel O. Fashakin, M.D.; Esq. Attorney at Law & President/ Medical Director, Alpha-K Family Medical Practice, P.C. 79-35 153rd Street, Flushing, NY 11367,USA Tel: (718) 591-1600; Fax: (718) 591-0265 web address: www.alphak.org alternative e-mail: mdfash2@gmail.com Mobile phones: +1-347-217-6175; +1-267-907-3127 |
Cheers David. You admit error -- you are a great Nigerian! |
You are wrong, Kgdavid! The writer says $.25m which is same as $250,000. You missed the initial decimal point, your error. However, even the 0.25m is too much to pay as cancellation fees, more than a full month before the event. How did the Nigerian officials enter into such a dumb arrangement? What happened to the age old tradition of full refund by hotels if you cancel reservations up to 24 hours in advance? Olusegun |
It is beginning to smell like IBB is going to contest the Presidency on the platform of AC -- or his faction of it. The PDP Presidential nomination arena is crowded, and IBB had already hinted that he could contest on the platform of any of the 51 parties. Like most people, I strongly suspect that he has an "arrangement" with our Comrade, the Governor of Edo, who apparently arranged the whole thing to "introduce" IBB to the other AC Chieftains. The intrigues of 2011 is worth waiting for. I suspect that IBB will fail, despite all his money, because he has generated too much animosity against himself. To succeed in politics, you need to keep your negatives to the minimum. IBB has too many negatives, with the Dele Giwa, 12.8 billion and June 12 sagas. He should have come out boldly and apologize for June 12, instead of trying, unsuccessfully, to dribble around it. His re-entry will serve one useful purpose nevertheless -- the people will get to spend some of the money he has hoarded. I think even he now realizes that he does not need so much money, and that he is better of spending it -- while he still can. Unfortunately, the excitement of the drama about to enfold before us will be incomplete -- unless we have honest -- or near-honest -- elections, which reflect, as nearly as possible, the will of the people. Olusegun |
Interesting. I can't wait for part 2 |
Pandemonium! |
Akunyili again •Nigerians must rise against this cabal From: Kenny Ashaka Abuja Sunday, February 28, 2010 •Akunyili Photo: Sun News Publishing More Stories on This Section If there is anybody that is not used to sitting on the fence when it comes to issues of national importance, it is the Minister of Information and Communications, Prof Dora Akunyili. She is predictable and Nigerians are conversant with her principles, beliefs and attitude to life. The former Director General of National Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) thinks out of the box. In this interview with Sunday Sun, she behaves true to type and bares her mind on the politics, intrigues and horse trading trailing the lingering health crisis of President Umaru Yar’Adua. Excerpts… What would you say of all that has happened since the return of the President to the country? The President’s return in the early hours of Wednesday, February 24, 2010 has actually exaggerated uncertainty, confusion, anxiety, fear and concern, not just by Nigerians alone but by the international community. These are the very sentiments Nigeria cannot actually afford, if we really want to build a modern nation. We have had uncertainty, confusion, anxiety, fear and concern reverberating across the country and even beyond. To what do we owe this uncertainty? Well, it is there because things have not been properly managed by some people around our dear President. We were not told officially that our president was coming back. It was even Al-Jazeera that broke the news, but I didn’t hear it because I had slept. They broke the news that he was leaving Saudi Arabia for Nigeria. They also broke the news of the arrival. But I heard it on CNN. For the fact that it was not officially announced that our dear President was coming back and the Acting President was not even aware, from his interaction with Ministers yesterday, we knew that he was not aware. That created a lot of concern among the populace and the tension is so high that even United States of America made a comment, which I don’t need to repeat, of how afraid they are about the situation in Nigeria. Our Council did not hold yesterday. We were there at 10.00 am and waited till 12, and as we were waiting, there was tension. Whatever the council members feared was exposed when we got the Press Release from the Presidency, referring to the Acting President twice as Vice President. That heightened the tension in the system because what it actually means by referring to him as Vice President that whatever he has done in the past few weeks to stabilize the sinking ship of the nation did not mean anything to the people around the President. Otherwise, why would they even release that kind of press statement? We have gone through a lot in the past few weeks, which actually culminated in the legislative resolution that pronounced Dr Goodluck Jonathan as the Acting President and Commander-in-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces. So, it was very inappropriate for the presidency, on return of our dear President, to refer to Dr Ebele Goodluck Jonathan as Vice President. Dr Jonathan should be addressed as Acting President. There was no need for that tension. It was unnecessarily generated. After the National Assembly resolution, the Federal Executive Council supported it. This was widely publicized. Across the world, this was praised. The ship of the nation was stopped from sinking but we are not yet stable. We are still working towards stabilizing the system. And since President Yar’Adua came back, we were expecting that he would, in one way or the other – knowing the type of person he is because the President Yar’Adua I know is very peace loving, he preached the rule of law and I believe he preached it from his heart. I never saw him as somebody that will come back to bring instability. So, it is not President Yar’Adua. I believe that it is people around him that were gaining from the confusion; people around him that are doing to him today what 100 million political enemies cannot do to him. The cabal wants to continue with their usual statement of the President said and you must comply. They want to continue with the status quo, dishing out instructions even when the President did not say so. If President Yar’Adua were to be my father or my brother, I will not allow anybody to do to him what they are doing to him today. This is the President of a country. This is a man so loved by Nigerians. At least, he is humble. He is from a rich family, but his humility is disarming. He is sincere. Look at what he did with Niger Delta. He has done a lot for this country and suddenly, a few people are rubbishing it. They stole him into this country in the night. This is the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. I think it’s something that is unnecessary and uncalled for and should be decried by all who sincerely love the President. Coming back to what you said about the way he was brought in, if he were brought in like a President and Nigerians had information that he was coming back, we would all go to receive him and he would be brought in as a President with honour and dignity and then when he comes in, prayers will continue. It doesn’t matter his state. He did not choose to be ill. There is no state of any human being that should call for anybody to feel happy or to gloat over. Anybody can be sick and people don’t even die because they are sick. We have an Igbo proverb that says people don’t die due to how long they are sick. You can be healthy today and tomorrow morning, you won’t wake up. You can go out and be shot. You just cannot hold life in your hand and boast of it. But what is important is the way we handle these issues. It has been so mishandled that it has made us a laughing stock and created all this confusion. The international community is watching. They have started making statements and we don’t want it to degenerate. We have suffered too much in this country, right through the civil war and the various levels of political instability and I believe that it is time we settled down to nation building. You are supposed to manage information as regard activities around Mr. President and the government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as the Information Minister. But here you are saying certain things that may not go down well with those who appointed you. What is the spur for this outspokenness? You manage information if you have information. We did not have information that our President was even traveling to Saudi Arabia until we saw it in the news, and when he was in the Saudi Arabia, we hardly got information. I only got information once from Mr. Segun Adeniyi and that was what I reported in Council, that the Doctors in Saudi Arabia said he was getting better and it’s only the doctors that would determine when he would come back and I reported it like that. That was the only information. When I asked him who told him, he said it was one of the aides of the President that gave him the information. Thereafter, it was they said, they said and they said. We never had a comprehensive channel of getting information that we are sure of and most of the information, sometimes, they don’t add up and it got very disturbing. When they don’t add up, you feel very awkward reporting such information. I believed the information, even though I kept wondering how things can be done better, until when I found that stories told by some of the presidential aide were not adding up, especially stories that are changed when they are told from one person to another. That was when I started feeling uncomfortable and that was when I now decided that I would go on holidays. People felt it was strange that I was going on holidays in the first week of January. But I traveled because I needed to rest a little, have a retreat, pray and attend a two-day meeting in India. But I went out for about three weeks and I decided that by the time I return, I would never again report about Mr. President’s illness until I sit down with people that will tell me the truth and nothing but the truth, so that I will not be involved in deceiving Nigerians. I know that most Ministers are credible people. But some Ministers also complained openly that they had no information and that’s why they were handicapped. But I had a peculiar position of being Minister of Information to inform the people. So, I was even more handicapped than everybody. When I came back from my holidays, I made up my mind, as I said earlier that I will not report about his health again and that was why the Executive Council Meeting a day after my return, at the end of the meeting, I did not argue when the Attorney General came to brief. I did not say he should brief because it’s the Minister of Information that should brief, because I had earlier made up my mind that I will not brief on our President’s health anymore. He came and did the briefing and I was stunned when he was talking. He convinced everybody that the President was capable and I was getting worried. I was getting worried so much that I asked myself that if he were capable, why could he not speak to Nigerians through our own channels. Why could he not speak to Nigeria through our NTA. Why speak to BBC. After that briefing, I really felt very miserable. I got really very depressed and I asked myself: now that Chief Andoakaa has briefed, what do I say about the President’s health next Wednesday? That depression went so deep that I used to take Lexotan twice at night to sleep and I still could not sleep. I kept asking myself what I would say. How can I say I don’t want to say anything about the President’s health? Would it not look as if I’m disloyal to the President? Would it not look unfair to the Federal Executive Council? So, I was caught in a very bad situation. Before even I traveled, because some Ministers said why didn’t I even consult them. I called three Ministers differently. I just called and said what do you feel about what is going on? Don’t you think that we need to tell the public the truth? How do we get the truth? The reaction I got from these three different Ministers, I will never forget. One of them said don’t you think he has a reason not to hand over to Dr Jonathan? I never said let him resign. I said it is better to find a way to encourage him to hand over to Dr Jonathan so that the system will be stabilized and our hard-earned democracy will not be truncated. But for each of the Ministers that I found a way of introducing it to, so that we could hold a discussion for us to mobilize more Ministers, I did not get a single support from one of the three. In fact, the reaction of one of them, as I said earlier is that he had a reason not to hand over. ‘You don’t even go there’. I said which reason. He said he must have had a reason. I talked to the second one. He said those people that were all around Yar’Adua are now going to Jonathan. I didn’t see logic. The third one said be very careful about the way you talk. This your big mouth will land you into trouble. Don’t you ever try it because if you talk to somebody that doesn’t like you, they will go and tell them. I just felt that this is getting ridiculous. I needed to bring this up because some people have variously said why didn’t you consult. When you consult three people and you got deadlocked, how can you continue? There was no way I could continue before I traveled. When I came back, couldn’t really live with myself. One Monday, I was in the church doing my usual morning mass. I took so many tough decisions during that mass. I said I must talk on Wednesday. But I will say my mind constructively. Then, from that morning, I started praying over it. But by 6pm Tuesday evening, I decided to jot down what I wanted to say and as I was jotting down, I said if I use talking points, people will misquote me. Some people that don’t like me will even say that I want President Yar’Adua to die. Some will say I want him to resign. Why don’t I put it down as I did during Abdulmutallab; as Ojo Maduekwe did during Abdulmutallab. We put down our discussions on paper and circulated to council. I said let me put it down so that as I talk, I will not be misquoted. I started writing and when I finished writing about quarter to seven, I called my PA and said let’s go. We came home and we stated typing and correcting. At about 10 pm, I called my Special Assistant and said I want you to go through something that I have for Council. He came and read it and when he finished reading it, he said this is suicidal. I said ‘if I die, I die’. I can only die once. Don’t worry yourself. I just want you to cross the Ts and dot the Is. Then he added that it’s not just about you. Our job is also on the line. I said then you go and look for another job because if the military comes in tomorrow, your job will still be on the line. So, he felt very bad. He came back in the morning and said what of Goodluck Jonathan; is he not going to be embarrassed? I said if I tell him about this and he heard about it yesterday, he would discourage me. He said did you consult anybody? I said who else should I consult except my God, because I talked to three Ministers and they rebuffed me. But I felt that if we could not continue waiting for who will talk. I just felt at that point that I needed to submit it. The next day, I circulated it. But even that morning, I talked to a few people. I didn’t say I brought a memo. I said don’t you think that we have to do something about what is going on. They said no, leave it. So, I didn’t have support. I told a few Ministers in that hall that I wanted to talk, but again, I didn’t have any support. So, I stopped. You know you will continue talking about something if you have support and you will get to the extent of saying this is what I want to say. But I didn’t get to that level because I was not encouraged. So, when I circulated it, by the time I started reading, of course, people had all read it and there was crisis. It was clear that nobody wanted it to be discussed. I felt very bad, but I felt a bit comfortable that I had gotten relieved of a big burden that had been weighing me down and not allowing me to sleep. I came back to the office. I called my media people and said read it. After reading it, keep it. I’m not giving it to anybody since they said it was not properly tabled. But I’m happy that I reminded everybody in council that Abdulmutalab’s case was not also circulated and discussed and what they said that day was that Abdulmutallab’s case was urgent. But when I look back, I wish we discussed it because the Council might have taken a position that day. But everything is as God wants it. When my people finished reading it, they said so this is what you went to Council with today. What happened? I said I won’t give you this paper until after Council next week. That was what I did with all of them. Then, at about 4.00 pm or 5.00pm, somebody called me and said one of the internet blocks had it. When we read it, we saw the second to last draft. You remember the one that has 145. But my final memo didn’t have it. When I saw it, I was embarrassed. The only difference between that particular one and the final is the removal of a section, and it was actually my S.A. that said remove this section because you are getting too legal. You are not a lawyer. He told me that morning to remove that section so that lawyers will not abuse you that you don’t understand the law. But the only thing we can arrive at now is that my Council box was forgotten in that council hall. Maybe I was so harassed that I forgot my box. It was at about 4.00pm that my Chief Detail, noticed that I did not come back with my box and he went back to collect it. But I cannot say whether it was during those few hours that somebody took it because I had a draft and the final in that box. When we saw it on the internet block, I now called all my media aides and said take copies. If it’s on the internet and I’m saying that you people should not have copies, then it doesn’t make sense. That was how it happened. Akunyili • Photo: Sun Publishing In your briefing, you said the Acting President had only been briefed by the President’s aides. Then the second part of it said the Acting President is still hoping to see the First Lady, from whom he hopes to get briefing on the President’s health. Is that… (Cuts in) The Acting President said he had been briefed by the President’s aide. He also heard that the President returned as we heard. He had been briefed by the aides of the President. He tried to see the First Lady on Wednesday evening and that on Wednesday next week during Council, the Ministers that went to Saudi will brief us. He also added that when he sees Mr. President and gets briefed, he would call us back. As at now, has the Acting President seen the President? As at 4.00pm today (Thursday), he had neither seen the President nor the First lady. As the Information Minister, I called one of his aides and asked if oga had seen the First Lady and he said no. Has he seen the President? He said no and I was worried. Have you seen the President yourself as the spokesman of the government? Am I more important than the Acting President? I think it would be too forward of me and it would be wrong if as the spokesperson, I go to see the President before the Acting President does. I don’t think it’s right. Even if he is my father or my brother, I will say please see the Acting President before briefing me. Would going to see Turai, for instance, be the normal line of communication? I think that going to see Turai is very informal and there’s nothing wrong with it. This is the wife of the President. No matter mistakes and whatever the aides had done, we should still face the truth. This is the wife of Mr. President. If he is very ill, we don’t even know. If he is too ill to see him, at least the wife would see him and discuss with him. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with it. It’s not the normal channel, but the things that are happening these days are also not normal. There is no provision in the Constitution that talks about the Office of the First Lady. Would you take directives from Turai if she instructs you to do something today? The Acting President did not say he was going to get directive from her. Even if a husband is ill and people come to the hospital and the wife takes care of her husband, there’s nothing wrong in seeing the wife first. I think he said something informal that probably shouldn’t have been reported. But I think it’s also okay that it was reported. But he said when he sees the President, he would call us and brief us. As the spokesperson of this government, what would be your reaction to the question of a journalist as to whether or not the President has returned since you have not seen him? Actually, my mind skipped today when I read different people saying different things in the newspapers today. It all revolves around the people around the President who are doing to him what a million political enemies cannot do to him. The rumours around our President is very discomforting. One group said he never came back because they have shrouded everything in secrecy, and when there is a vacuum, rumours take over. Another group said that he came back and he’s still in the ambulance. Another group said that he had been carried into the house. There are three different stories and as at today, it is difficult to argue with anybody to say you are lying because I don’t know the truth. What I do when I hear these things is to keep quiet. When I read it, my heart really skipped a bit. I said God please, I hope this is not correct and I don’t want to believe it is correct because it’s not good for us and those people that are writing this story should still remember that no matter what mistake our President may have made, he still remains our President and a symbol of this country. So, there are certain things we should not even talk about, so as not to continue ridiculing ourselves before the international community. If you as a Minister, you’ve lost certain aspects of your private life, it means that the President of a country has no private life. The photographer who got the picture of the ambulance took the risk of his life because he was on top of a tree and the soldiers almost shot at him. This is because you want to cover a President who had been away for over 90 days and… (Cuts in) I don’t think they wanted to cover the President. They wanted to continue the too many lies that we were told in the past because lies beget lies and this was done for personal gains and for people to gain fame, power and money. We are talking about the journalists who came to cover the arrival of the President and the risk they took with their lives. Journalists take risks all over the world. They are in war places all over the world and every job has its risk. I believe that’s the risk of being a journalist and many of them succeed. A few lose their lives or get maimed, but that is the risk of the job and that is why some of us really appreciate the job they are doing for this country. The steps and actions you have taken, what consequence has it brought to your person? I don’t want to indulge in self-praise, but sometimes it’s good to say the truth. The steps I have taken in this matter are to relieve myself of a great burden. I was having a heavy load in my heart and in my brain. But I’m happy that I did because I believe, possibly, that the memo was a turning point in the politics of Yar’Adua’s illness, unfortunately. It was a turning point for people to be sensitized and be goaded into action at various levels. I’m grateful to God about that. It’s not about me. How can it be about me? I don’t know any of the Ministers that is close to President Yar’Adua and his wife as I am. I’m very close to them and it was not easy for me to come out with that stand. It’s because I saw that we needed to do something. I have been like that all my life, even as a child. If there was a problem between any two people, I would come out and say the truth. Were they comfortable with that? Very uncomfortable. My son called my P.A. from America and said I read mommy’s memo. What is wrong with mommy? Is she on drugs? My P.A. said she doesn’t even drink alcohol. So, how can somebody who doesn’t even drink alcohol think of being on drugs? The only drug that I take is Multivite. What do you intend to achieve with all these? What I want is for us to stabilize this country because it is the only country we can call our own. I’m passionate about Nigeria and I didn’t start today. I literally took a bullet for this country when I was fighting drug counterfeiters for almost eight years. They nearly killed me in the village. I missed death by whiskers. So, anybody who is saying why is she doing this, I say why are they saying this? You are not discouraged. Yet you have none of your colleagues in the cabinet behind you. Why don’t you abandon this project of yours? It may not be as encouraging, but I will always remember what our Bishop said that somebody must speak up in the face of evil; that if one of the Jews had shouted when they were saying crucify him, if somebody had said no, the person would have heard others saying no. After all, after the memo, did people not start talking? This time around, I feel like saying a few things to say let us do something. Those that are supposed to talk, let them talk. Let those that are hearing what is wrong speak up because we have gotten to a point that if we all keep quiet, things will keep going downhill until we find ourselves in a situation that we may not feel comfortable about. There is need for Nigerians individually and collectively to come out in one way or the other to do the right thing, to tell people that are doing the wrong thing to right their wrongs and to find a way of stabilizing this ship that we have succeeded in keeping afloat because some five weeks ago, we were sinking. In fact, some people were even lobbying the army to take over. Some army chiefs impressed everybody by coming out - I saw it on the pages of newspapers – and warning politicians to desist from lobbying them. It happened in this country only a few weeks ago. After our soldiers have shown us such level of professionalism, why can’t we do something as citizens of this country? It’s not about us. Your children will grow in this country. Even if they are abroad, they will still come back. Nigeria is important in the comity of nations and therefore, we have a very important role to play. We cannot carry on as if we are an island because we are not. Bilateral, multilateral international relationships are all critical to the survival of Nigeria as a nation. Our national integrity is of great importance and when we think of what happened in the past and what can happen in future that can severely damage; I’ve actually become a laughing stock around the world. It is very important that both the players in the unfolding confusion and the people in leadership who ought to speak up and boldly take a stand against the orchestrated confusion and anarchy, take the time to seriously think of the roles they are playing and the roles they ought to play because posterity will certainly judge us all. Whatever we do, we should think of Nigeria before our individual interests because what is happening now is that some people are thinking of their own interests. If we allow things to go on properly, we are no longer going to be in control. It’s not about President Yar’Adua. Presidency is an institution. The President is in the Presidency. Look at what Condoleezza Rice came to tell us here. I’m not angry with her. We made ourselves mouse for the cat to eat. If you make yourself mouse, the cat will eat you. I know that she is fantastic but many Nigerians are fantastic too, if not better, for her to come to tell us to our face that what Nigeria needs are strong institutions and not strong leaders. I think that what she said, the statement America had made and looking at the tension in the system, Nigerians should individually and collectively think of what to do for us to come out of this impasse. The frustration this type of thing can give to you has not reached a point where you will say take your job. Why? I think that you should know that before anybody can bring up that type of memo, the person has weighed his or her risk. In fact, some Ministers asked me if I weighed my risk. I said yes, I weighed my risk. Some even came out to support me privately. Some that came to abuse me, I said is there anything in that memo that is not in the public domain. They will say it’s true but for you to just come and say it like that. It’s only one of them that came and said yes, there is something in that memo that I didn’t know. He said that aspect you said that the Vice President ccould not take documents to National Assembly. I said it means you know over 90 percent of what is in that memo. Coming back to what you said about my job, that’s why my staff told me that it’s not just about me but that their job is also on the line. So, when they tell you their job is on the line, it means that you can lose your job. I was not born as Minister. My life is not tied to the job. Anybody whose life is tied to a job is under bondage. So, I’m not desperate for any position. This is a very good position because my salary here is four times my salary in NAFDAC. My allowances are ten times my allowances in NAFDAC. But the money, the perk of office and everything is not enough to make you see evil and keep quiet because you will not be able to live with yourself. I am not so tied to this job as to keep quiet in the face of evil so that I will save my job. If my leaving this job will bring stability to Nigeria, then it’s the best thing that can happen to me. Why don’t you throw in the towel now? If it will be of the benefit to our fledging democracy, if it will stabilize the system and you can rationalize it for me, I will. Tell me what good it will do to the system if I resign today and I will. You are a lone voice You are not a lone voice when you make statement and you have people that will support you. People may not support you openly out of fear. But you will still have supporters. By the time I came in to submit my memo the second time, if people were allowed to vote, most Ministers would have voted for me to present. I believe it’s better to work from inside. But if anybody comes up tomorrow to explain to me why it is necessary for me to resign so as to help stabilize the polity, I will not waste one minute. There is this rumour of re-assignment. Would you serve in any other Ministry if assigned? It is an insult for anybody to feel I should take the risk of my life just to be taken to anywhere or gain anything. Quite frankly, I will not like to leave Ministry of Information for any other Ministry with about one year to the end to the life of an administration. What can anybody seriously achieve in one year? Even if I can, it would be too stressful. I’m already used to where I am. The rebranding projects have suffered serious setback because of Abdulmutallab, politicization of the health of the President and others. But I can still pick the bits and pieces and move on to consolidate the programme if it is the will of God. People see your recent action as a kind of volte face; a 360 degree turn around because, initially, you were for Yar’Adua and by extension, the whole FEC members. Suddenly, you shifted ground and authored a memo which was in favour of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan. What do we expect now that Yar’Adua is back and why did it take you so long to do that memo? I think I explained it. It would have been insensitive, wicked and disloyal of me to start saying it’s better to hand over to Jonathan three weeks after my boss traveled. What does that mean? I saw things degenerating and I started noticing that there were lies. In the first few weeks, I didn’t suspect there were lies and I had not seen that there were problems in the system because there was no President or Acting President. The problem started unfolding with time. I didn’t notice any vacuum in the first weeks until I started hearing stories that the Vice President cannot submit documents to National Assembly. In the case of Jos crisis, people came to say why did he send soldiers? Things were coming up one after the other. That statement about why he sent soldiers shocked me to my marrow. I said so this man cannot really do much for us. They queried why we were holding Federal Executive Council meetings and that it was illegal. We were all reading the papers and listening to commentaries. It was the unfolding scenario that made me feel that we needed to encourage our President to hand over to Dr Jonathan as the Acting President. People didn’t even read that memo well. They just say crucify her. I didn’t say he should resign. I still love him as my President. I knew that man from the campaign period. He has a beautiful spirit. I’m telling you this from the bottom of my heart. What is happening cannot be from him because a sick person that God helped to recover cannot conceive plans to maneuver over a whole country because if you have serious malaria, you are only praying of how to get well, not how to remain or how to make sure that nobody is there to act fully for you. So this question of why did it take her so long, would you not check my mental balance if I came out two weeks after my President traveled, when we had not started seeing problems… We were not seeing problems in the first few weeks until the Jos crisis and when people started talking about FEC as illegal. MEND started making statements that they were going to attack facilities. If all these things had not happened, I believe we would have still all relaxed that the Vice President was doing very well. But I noticed that if he carries on without being Acting President, the system would collapse because people were even going to court. So it didn’t start degenerating from the day he left. It happened gradually and it came to a point where I felt that if nothing was said and done, we could find ourselves in a very ugly situation. That’s why I talked. And before I talked, I tried to consult some Ministers so that we could form a critical mass, but I did not succeed. You also said why sudden. How can you say sudden? Did I not stake my life for almost eight years in this country? And if you say sudden, when I came to the Ministry of Information and Communication, it was a different job altogether. I started rebranding. What is evil about saying that we are basically good people and that this is a great nation. For those of us that are not doing well, let us change the way we behave, so that we can live up to that good name as good people and great nation. What is wrong with it? Is it deceit? Is it a lie? Did I ever say Nigeria doesn’t have criminals. Let us project our country positively and responsibly manage our negatives. So, where is it that people can look at and say volte face, as if I started deceiving people at any point in time? Which deceit? People have so abused me. When people were saying look at what they are writing in the internet, I said if not for the fact that Nigerian journalists are very understanding, we would have had more because the level of money that some of these people that are orchestrating this evil have, they can put in any amount just to be abusing me everywhere. Some people have even said in the internet that I should go and handle Halliburton and Ekiti. What is this? I’m not from Ekiti. I didn’t go for campaign in Ekiti. I didn’t vote in Ekiti. I’m not in INEC. So, where is my own. As the Minister of Information, I remember you people abused me so much after the Ekiti elections and your reason of abusing me is because I announced government’s position. There was nothing I didn’t hear and it’s been repeated these days in the internet through various sources. When you report government decision, it is not support for government. It’s a report. I want to also tell you that I will have to also believe in a report for me to report it. That’s why when I stopped being in the story of our President, I decided to stop. The report of Ekiti, I believed in it and the report was that Mrs. Ajoke should come out and conclude the election she started. There is no Minister of Information in this world that would say that statement is bad. They are just looking for anything to malign me and to rebrand my name. What is important is for me to do something that will make me to be able to live with my conscience, to work from morning till night and lie down and be able to sleep, and to know that I have done my best. That’s it. What would you say to people who are saying this is the hand of Jacob but the voice of Esau. That former President Olusegun Obasanjo is the one pulling the strings. Do I look like somebody that anybody in this world can tele-guide? Some people said Obasanjo and others said Ojo Maduekwe. I found it funny because it all boils down to a fact that people don’t know me. As a regulator under President Obasanjo, I never referred to him for any case. I know that regulators refer to the President on cases. But I never referred to him on any case, and because I believe he also knows my character, he never interfered. When I closed down Dangote’s factory, have you forgotten that Dangote was one of his close friends? I didn’t even remember President Obasanjo when I was doing what I did. I didn’t talk with him before the memo. I did not talk with him after the memo and he did not ask me. Has anybody commended you after the memo for being courageous? People have commended me variously but Obasanjo didn’t commend me. But many leaders have commended me. Many people you cannot expect have commended me. Even people around the Presidency have commended me to say God bless you . In the circumstance, what would you offer as an advice to stabilize the polity? My advice to stabilize the polity is for people that are raising this unnecessary dust around our dear President to cease fire, to know that this country is bigger than all of us and to know that if we destroy the system, we will all lose, and for people to advise them and people that can help in one way or the other to come out and help. If you can talk, you should come out and talk. If you can write, then write, so that people that are not doing the right thing will stop because our dear President may not be in a position to control what they are doing. That is the situation on ground now. They are being very unfair to Nigerians and utterly unfair to him and his family and they are not in line with what he stands for because he has always stood on the rule. [flash=200,200][/flash] |
I agree with you, Blustreak. The situation must not be allowed to continue. However, the best way is via Section 144 for the FEd Exc Co to declare him incapacitated. The only recourse for the National Assembly is to commence impeachment proceedings, which I personally think is inappropriate in this situation. It is not an impeachable offense to be comatose from illness, but it is a cause for change of leadership by invoking sec 144 |
I have little doubt that Yaradua was rushed back from Saudi Arabia to avoid the process of Section 144, which would have been triggered, were the ministerial delegation sent by the Federal Govt to see him in the vegetative state that he was in. The Saudi Govt must have told Turai and her cohorts that there was no way they could prevent the delegation from seeing Umaru, since they were backed by a request from the highest level of Govt in Nigeria. The stone-walling which had prevailed for three months would no longer work; the game was over. Hence the disingenious decision to bundle him out of there, literarily within a few hours, as the delegation was on its way to Jeddah to see him. Ironically, by bringing Umaru to Nigeria, his supporters may have actually hastened the course of implementation of Section 144. As you all know, Section 144 has two prongs. The declaration of the Fed Exec Council by 2/3 majority that the Prez is permanently incapacitated is only the first step. The second step requires the confirmation, by a medical panel, that the Prez is indeed incapacitated. This is where Turai and co. miscalculated. It would have been more cumbersome for the medical panel to complete its work in far away foreign soil, especially with the Saudi Govt co-operating with the Turai group in shrouding everything in secrecy. Now, it would be impossible to continue the facade in Nigeria: people will talk -- from maids, to cleaners, to security guards. Dem go talk! Words are already filtering out that Umaru is incommunicado and essentially comatose in his mobile intensive care ambulance residence. Eventually, the cat will be let out of the bag, and the medical panel will get to examine him in his mobile home. The showdown is inevitable. Hopefully, this whole saga will come to an end soon, for the sake of the motherland. But I must confess that the drama has been very interesting. Its stranger than fiction: a head of state bundled into an air-ambulance in the middle of the night, endotracheal tube in throat, in order to elude ministers sent from his own Government to check on his health. His plane taxiing to a stop in total darkness in a remote section of the airport in Abuja, his evacuation to a mobile intensive care over a period of ninety minutes, soldiers emptying out the airport and lining the route to the Presidential Villa to prevent the citizenry from catching a glimpse of him; the continued care in the mobile ambulance parked on his lawn, instead of the hospital, to ensure secrecy -- yes, you cannot make this stuff up. As I told someone, aren't we lucky to be Nigerians at this time, and alive to witness all this drama? It is almost like the Akintola - Awolowo saga all over again; hopefully, for everyone's sake, I hope that we will have a better outcome this time around. Best regards, Olusegun Fashakin |
Great story, the only problem is that it was not verifiable. I spent over one hour researching the contents of this post. The trail on the elementary school appointment is very cold. I was able to confirm that JG was Chairman of Council of Prefects in High School, but there was no mention that he was ever Deputy. More importantly, I was unable to confirm that JG was ever Deputy Local Govt Chairman. This was public record and should be verifiable. I could not verify it. It is still a great story that someone was Deputy Governor, and the Governor was impeached, making him Governor, and that he was Vice President and the President developed Pericarditis, making him President, albeit "temporarily." Its a great story, but unless you can show me your sources, I think you only make a great story sweeter through cleverly concocted embellishments. |
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I have for sale a big and elegant house in Ikosi-Ketu comprising of six 3-bedroom flats. House is located on Okunnowo Street off Jimoh Balogun in Ikosi Ketu; house is easily identified on said street as it is the biggest and most beautiful house on the street, right at the corner. Title is registered survey by previous owner. I have owned the house for the past six years. This is a huge property with very good cash flow and low maintenance. It should provide the new owner with good cash flow for many years to come. Asking price is N42 million or very best offer. No agents please, unless representing buyer. If interested, please contact Dr Ojo at 08033652478[img]http://[/img][img][/img][tt][/tt][color=#770077][/color] |
Gowaga68, I just want to let you know that I appreciate your service to the post very much, and I am glad that you took the justifiable criticism yesterday fairly well. The critic should not have called you a liar; I think it was an aberration, due to sudden, but temporary spike in the market. You probably should have made a supplementary post later in the day, when it appeared that the market had stabilized. All told, I appreciate your efforts in keeping us informed. Dr in the house. Writing from New York |
I am interested in this property. Please e-mail or call with more info. Thanks Dr Olusegun mdfash@aol.com 1-347-217-6175 (New York) |
I am interested. Could you be kind enough to provide pictures? Thank you Olusegun mdfash@aol.com |
I am interested in this property, could you please supply more details? Year built Title and pictures will be appreciated. You can reply privately to: brc6466@aol.com Dr Olusegun, New York, US Cell phone 1-347-217-6175 |
I am interested. Could you be kind enough to post a photograph? |
I want six contiguous plots at Sherry View. I will pay immediately with 5% discount. Please confirm availability. Olusegun e-mail: brc6466@aol.com |
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Is this property still available? I am interested. Thanks e-mail contact: mdfash@aol.com |
Is this property still available? I am interested. Thanks |