Sunday, February 28, 2010

US, UK, EU place visa ban on Yar’Adua’s men •President’s aides’ names compiled by global anti-money laundering body .


TOP officials of Western powers, including the United States of America (USA), United Kingdom, (UK), Canada and the European Union (EU), have given clear indications to the Nigerian government that they are placing visa restrictions on aides of ailing President Umaru Yar’Adua, who are believed to be

orchestrating political confusion that could endanger Nigeria’s democracy.

In separate representations to Acting President Goodluck Jonathan in the last one week, sources confirmed that the Western authorities have also compiled names of such “trouble makers” in the country and forwarded same to the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), the global anti-money laundering body, for the investigation of their alleged stupendous wealth.

Sources close to the administration confirmed to the Nigerian Tribune that while some of the Western governments made representation to the Nigerian authorities through their ambassadors in Nigeria, others actually sent special envoys.

It was gathered that a special envoy of the UK government actually met with the acting president behind closed doors on Saturday.

A source said that the delegation also included the UK Ambassador in Nigeria, Mr Bob Dewar, who led the team with a special message to the acting president.

Though the meeting was held behind closed doors, a source close to the government said that the discussions centred on how to stabilise the Nigerian democracy.

It was gathered that the UK government had, on its own, identified those described as ‘trouble makers’ in Nigeria, who are regarded as orchestrating political confusion in the country.

The acting president was told that, henceforth, such persons would be placed under scrutiny in the UK and that their names were being forwarded to the FATF.

It was gathered that while some of those involved have only earned salaries all their life, their offshore accounts are fatter than those of well known businessmen.

Sources said that there was the suspicion in the Western countries that some of those who have earned illicit funds could be willing tools and agents of terrorism.

It was also gathered that these Western governments were ready to seize assets of any of the targeted officials which could not be defended.

“There could be the likelihood of prosecutions at the end of the day but I guess they came early to inform the Nigerian authorities such that it will not be news to them when some Nigerians start facing serious times in the Western countries,” a source said.

It was learnt that the Western countries are seriously seeking the intervention of FATF to isolate the channels by which the said officials moved huge sums from Nigeria in recent years.

“They decided to inform Nigeria early enough because they would require the cooperation of the Nigerian authorities,” a source said.

Aondoakaa ‘frustrates' Halliburton probe.


A panel set up by the Senate to investigate the Halliburton bribery scandal said it gave up on the assignment because it was unable to get critical information from the former Attorney General of the Federation, Michael Aondoakaa.

The investigating panel which submitted its report to the Senate last week was made up of members of three senate committees: Committee on drugs, narcotics, financial crimes and Anti-corruption; Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters, and the Committee on Gas.

The panel was set up on March 24, 2009 as part of the resolution on a motion moved by Bassey Ewa-Henshaw (PDP Cross River State) and 10 other senators in reaction to public and international pressure on the government to fish out the Nigerians involved in the scam.

The panel began investigations two months later after studying the provisions of a treaty between Nigeria and the United States on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters.

According to the report recently submitted by the panel, it settled for Mr. Aondoakaa as its only source of getting the requisite information, after studying Article II (1) and Article II (2) of the Treaty, which provides that each contracting party shall designate a central authority to make or receive requests pursuant to the Treaty. It also states that for Nigeria, the central authority shall be the Attorney-General of the Federation or a person designated by him.

Excuses for inaction

The panel had argued in its report that the information regarding the Halliburton scandal emanated from legal proceedings initiated by the US government, "our Attorney-General should be asked to make a request for disclosure of information from the Attorney-General of the United States of America in accordance with the provisions of the Treaty."

The panel therefore invited Mr. Aondoakaa to appear before it; first on June 18th, 2009 and secondly, on June 23, 2009. According to the report, Aondoakaa honoured the second invitation but told them he hadn't the information they were looking for.

"The Attorney-General informed the Joint Committee that he had made a request in accordance with the provisions of Article I (1) of the Treaty, but that the government of the United States of America had responded invoking Article III of the Treaty that in view of the fact that investigation was still on-going, the United States of America was unable to oblige Nigeria with the requested information.

"It is the conclusion of the Joint Committee that, in view of this development and in the absence of an equally credible source of information, it was advisable that the Joint Committee should suspend its investigation until the government of the United States of America has concluded its investigation and is able to oblige our Attorney­ General with the requisite information," the committee concludes, in the report.

However, while the panel was temporarily dropping the probe, the U.S Ambassador to Nigeria, Robin Sanders, was simultaneously refuting Mr Aondoakaa's claims that the US was not sharing information on the case.

During a visit to the new Attorney General of Federation, Adetokunbo Kayode, Ms Sanders said her country had provided Nigeria with all information relating to the incident.

"The United States has deep relations with Nigeria and all other countries involved in the scandal. And we gave all the information at our disposal to Nigeria and others. It is not correct to say we did not cooperate. We have done our bit, it is up to your Attorney General to answer to the other part of your question," Sanders said, in response to questions from the media on Mr Aondoakaa's claims.

Members of the senate investigative panel however declined to comment on why they built their investigation on information from just one source. One of the senators said the report has just been laid before the senate and it was yet to be discussed or adopted.

Apart from the senate committee's apparent drawback in restricting itself to one source, the panel's report also indicates that they gave up too early. The decision of the members to abandon the investigation was based on what Mr. Aondoakaa told them when he appeared before the panel on June 23 last year.

Members of the investigating committees contacted by NEXT also refused to comment on why they were terminating the assignment for the same reason that, "it has not been discussed and adopted by the senate."

History of bribery

NEXT on Sunday, in its edition of May 3, 2009 detailed how three successive Nigerian leaders: the late Sani Abacha, Abdulsalam Abubakar and Olusegun Obasanjo; former petroleum ministers; top officials of the Nigerian National Petroleum Commission (NNPC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had benefitted from the $180million bribe offered by Halliburton, a US oil services company.

The bribes, which were paid over a period of ten years (1994-2004), were used to secure liquefied natural gas contracts worth $6billion by the consortium.

While the Nigerian government is deliberately being slow to reveal the identities of Nigerians implicated in the Halliburton bribery scandal, Halliburton and KBR, the major companies involved in issuing the bribe, have admitted the offence and paid $579million to US agencies as atonement for the bribe payments.

Other companies involved are also being tried or investigated in their countries.

Just last week, WM Kellogg, the company believed to have been used as the conduit for most of the bribes paid to Nigerian officials, admitted paying bribes to Nigerian government officials and is preparing to enter into a plea bargain with the UK's Serious Fraud Office (SFO).

Jeffery Tesler, 61, the British lawyer through whom the bribes were paid, is currently facing prosecution for his role in the scam at Westminster magistrate court in London.

The Senate panel's report is expected to be debated, before the Senate will reach any conclusion on whether to accept the recommendation of the investigating committees or ask it to continue the work.

They are all liars....Lady NAFDAC tells it like it is.


*Why I allowed Aondoakaa to take up the job of briefing on Yar‘Adua’s health
*Some aides have wounded President more than 100 million political enemies
*This is not the Yar‘Adua we know

Prof. Dora Nkem Akunyili caught the nation’s attention with her unrelenting campaign against fake and adulterated drugs in the country in her immediate past employment as Director General of the National Agency for Foods, Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC). Where many before her dreaded to dare, she simply plainly overwhelmed as her anti-counterfeit campaign literally uprooted the merchants of death from their fortresses. Her campaign came at a great cost including a miraculous escape from an assassination attempt. Her promotion as a Minister was generally applauded as a befitting reward for diligence in public service. Her efforts as Minister of Information and Communication have, however, not been the success many expected.

Controversies with some subordinates and a determination to repaint the negative perception of Nigerians in the global community have been some of her major challenges. Buried in this imaginative campaign to re-brand the standing of Nigeria and Nigerians nothing exceptional was heard from Mrs. Akunyili until the controversy over the ill-health of President Umaru Yar‘Adua enraptured the polity. Her memo to the Federal Executive Council (FEC) seeking to empower Dr. Goodluck Jonathan as Acting President caused a tremor that shook the consciousness of many Nigerians. The National Assembly resolutions and the coherence of elder-statesmen for the empowerment of Dr. Jonathan as Acting President soon followed.
Following reports of the sneaky return of President Yar‘Adua to the country in the wee hours of last Wednesday, the emotions were again stirred in the Information Minister who was compelled to now inform a trio of inquisitive newsmen the truth of how a few have turned the ill-health of the President into a desperate game for political merchandise.

By Emmanuel Aziken

How would you describe the state of affairs of the country with the President’s return 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 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.

Prof. Dora Nkem Akunyili

Why do you think this uncertainty is there?
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 (Wednesday), 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 today (Thursday), which I don’t need to repeat of how afraid they are about the situation in Nigeria. Our Council did not hold yesterday (Wednesday). We were there at 10.00 am and waited till 12 noon, 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 is 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 the resolution and this was widely publicized. Across the world, this was praised. Our ship was stabilized and was stopped from sinking. The ship of the nation was stopped from sinking.

We are not yet stable because 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 are gaining from the confusion; people around him that are doing to him today what 100 million political enemies cannot do to him. If President Yar’Adua were to be my father or my brother, I would 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. When people now claim that they love President Yar’Adua, I laugh because very few of them actually love him and his family as much as I do. I remember when I worked for him with all my heart and I’m still working for him. He’s still our President. We have a President and we have an Acting President.

About four months or thereabout before he travelled, I went to the Publisher and Chief Executive of Leadership. After meeting him and his staff, he didn’t really know why I came. He thought it was just a courtesy visit because he’s my professional colleague. I said my brother, I beg you, the way you are bashing our President in your paper is too much.
How can we be re-branding when we are literally saying our President died or is a criminal. We cannot go on this way and I beg you in the name of God. I can’t remember exactly how I said it, but I really pleaded with them.

But it’s not good to discuss anything with journalists because he exposed it about two weeks ago. I guess he got angry when people were abusing me about memo and no memo. He got angry and said this woman is so misunderstood and this is how she came to my office. When people brought the paper to me, I said it’s not good to discuss secrets with journalists, because I went to him secretly and as soon as I finished with him, I was happy. I asked him if I could get audience for him to speak with Mr. President. I want you to become friends. Criticize him constructively, but manage the negative stories about Nigeria and about us. I went to one of the President’s close aides and told him that I want you to help fix a meeting for Nda Isaiah to see oga because there are misunderstandings here and there. He said he would but he never did.

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.

Here is a Minister of Information who will manage information in respect of the Presidency and the government of Nigeria and here you are saying certain things that may not go down well will them. What would you explain spurred you to be outspoken in this manner?

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 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 get’s 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 aides 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 not brief because it’s the Minister of Information that should brief, because I had earlier made up my mind that I would 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 in 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 Aondoakaa 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 would 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; 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 Minister that I found a way of introducing it, 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 because some people have variously said why didn’t you consult. When you consult three people and you get deadlocked, how can you continue? There was no way I could continue, just before I traveled. When I came back and couldn’t really live with myself, on Monday before that meeting, I was in the church doing my usual morning mass. I took so many tough decisions during 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 that Tuesday evening by 6 pm, 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 started 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 “t”s and dot the “i”s. 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 will discourage me. He said did you consult anybody and 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 cannot 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 because since they said it was not properly tabled. But I’m happy that I reminded everybody in council that Abdulmutalab’s case was also not 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 happens 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 blogs 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 blog 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.

In your statement yesterday (Wednesday) 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 even hoping to see the First Lady, from whom he hopes to get briefing on the President’s health.

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 would try and see the First Lady yesterday evening (Wednesday) 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 he seen the President?
As of 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. 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.

Going to see Turai for instance, should that 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 the mistakes and whatever the aides have 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.

My problem is that there is no provision in the Constitution that talks about 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 if journalists or a section of the media confront you and tell you that the President did not return, since nobody has 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 are 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, more so when he had been away for some days. 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 him dead and all this 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 they told in the past because the 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 it’s own 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.

Have your recent steps and actions brought any consequences to you as a 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 is 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 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 closer to President Yar’Adua and his wife as I am. I’m very close to them and it was not even 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 memo?
Very uncomfortable. My son called my P.A. from America and said I read mummy’s memo. What is wrong with mummy? 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.

But I want to ask what is it you want?
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 the whiskers. So, anybody who is saying why is she doing this, I say why are they saying this?

But why are you not discouraged because it appears not many people are following you?
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 even 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 down 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 in the last weeks. 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 us. 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 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.

Has the frustration around you reached the point where you can walk out on the job? If not, 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 cannot 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 of our fledgling 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 want you to be honest.

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.

People believe that your recent action is a kind of volte face; a kind of 360 degree turnaround because initially, you were for Yar’Adua and by extension, the whole FEC members. Suddenly that your memo was a turnaround. What do we expect now that Yar’Adua is back and why did it take you so long to do this 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 the travel of my boss. 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 of 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’s 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 manoeuvre 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 carried 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 all together. 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 on the internet through various sources. When you report government’s decision, it is not support for government. It’s a report. I want to also tell you that I will have to 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.

How do you respond to suggestions that you could be affected in a possible cabinet shake-up?
Quite frankly I will if given the opportunity like to remain in the Ministry of Information and not to just go anywhere else with just about one year to the end of the life of the administration. What can anybody seriously achieve in one year? Even if I can, it will be too stressful and I am already used to where I am.
The rebranding project has suffered a serious setback because of the Abdulmuttalab fiasco and the politicization of the health of the President and other things, but then I can still pick the bits and pieces and move on to consolidate the programme if it is the will of God.

Some Nigerian political watchers say you are being teleguided by Obasanjo.
Do I look like somebody that anybody in this world can teleguide? Some people said Obasanjo and others said Ojo Maduekwe. I found it funny because it all boils down to the 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 when you are saying the right thing.

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 of law.

Madam, who do you take instructions from now?
It depends on what I want to do. I take instructions from the Acting President, Dr Goodluck Jonathan and I will revert to taking instructions from the President when he recovers and comes back to work.

If you are given instructions allegedly from the President and you have not seen the President, will you oblige?
I will not oblige.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Inside the Turai coup...



dris Akinbajo

February 28, 2010 12:22AM

The Nigerian Presidency is held hostage by four un-elected men who, working in concert with Turai Yar’Adua, the President’s wife, almost executed a military-type coup against the nation, NEXT investigations reveal.

Led and coordinated by Yusuf Muhammed Tilde, President Umaru Yar’Adua’s Chief Security Officer (CSO), and supported by Mustapha Onoyvieta, Mr. Yar’adua’s Aide de Camp (ADC); Abdurahman Dambazau, the Chief of Army Staff; and Abdul Mustapha, the commander of the guards brigade responsible for security at the presidential villa, this team kept the Acting President and commander in chief of the Nigeria armed forces, Goodluck Jonathan, as well as several serving ministers and military chiefs in the dark while they smuggled Mr. Yar’Adua back into the country and deployed armed troops, several intelligence and presidential sources said.

“This whole thing is being led by Tilde; he has become to Yar’Adua and Turai what Al-Mustapha was to Abacha (former head of state),” an Aso Rock intelligence source stated.

“He now talks directly to Dambazau (Chief of Army Staff) and Mustapha. They were the ones behind the troop deployment.”

The Botched rebellion

After being evicted by Saudi Authorities with the encouragement of the Americans, as reported exclusively by NEXT, the “Turai cabal” realised that their options had narrowed, and that hardly any western country would be willing to cover-up the degenerating health situation of the ailing President as the Saudis did for three months; they therefore decided to bring Mr. Yar’Adua home three days earlier than planned.

To ensure utmost secrecy for his return, Mr. Tilde contacted Dahiru Dodo, an Assistant Commissioner in the SSS who is the administration officer at the Presidential villa.

“Mr Dahiru changed the guards at the presidential wing of the airport three days before the President arrived. He deployed only his loyal boys there. Even the director of the SSS was not aware of the changes,” a presidency source disclosed.

This was, however, the first step in the process. The second was to get the support of some men of the Nigerian army. This was not so difficult according to military insiders who said Mr. Dambazau, harbours some disdain for Mr. Jonathan; and the media has reported the shocking fact that he was the only Service Chief who did not salute Mr. Jonathan during the last Armed Forces Remembrance Day parade in Abuja.

Civil society groups at a news conference in Abuja last Wednesday had harsh words for Mr. Dambazzau and warned him against allowing the army to be used to fracture the constitutional order.

Mr. Dambazzau, alongside Mr. Mustapha, are widely believed to have supervised the deployment of the two army units - the 4th battalion and Guards brigade - who were deployed to secure the road leading to the airport and escort the presidential convoy back to Aso Rock.

“Three hundred carefully selected officers were deployed and conveyed in 25 vehicles for the operation. Even the weapons were released to them at night,” army insiders said, emphasising that the men were chosen based on primordial loyalties than any professional abilities.

“The secrecy of the mission was very important to them. It was not only the Acting President that was unaware of the troops deployment, even the Chief of Defence Staff was kept in the dark. They even flew the four-star flag which is meant only for the C-in-C.”

When contacted on the deployed troops, the spokesperson of the Nigerian Army, Chris Olukolade attempted to downplay the issue and described the deployment as a “routine exercise” by the army. Top military chiefs were however divided on this claim and Ishola Williams, a retired army general and one time head of the training and doctrine command of the army said it was needless, “escorting him with soldiers, mobile police could have done the same job”.

“Ask him to tell you when it ever happened, that 300 officers will be deployed and allowed to use the Commander in Chief’s seal without his express permission. You cannot even set up a presidential guard under the Guards Brigade commander without the permission of the President. Could they have done this under General Obasanjo or Babangida, not to say Abacha?” asked a high ranking official.

Final coup trap

Having achieved some success in sneaking in the ailing President, the next stage was to set a trap for Mr. Jonathan.

“They brought in the ailing President without the Acting President’s consent on the day of the executive council meeting. They then deployed one of their boys to commandeer the President’s seat at the Council meeting venue. They thought Jonathan would insist on sitting on the seat. If he had insisted, they will just allow him and then accuse him of subverting the authority of the ‘real President.”

Mr. Jonathan learnt of their ploy, which was one of the reasons why he postponed the weekly council meeting. Worried that Mr. Jonathan was not biting the bullet, the duo of Mr. Tilde and Mr. Onoyvieta proceeded straight to his office to inform him that Mr. Yar’Adua had directed that he preside over the meeting. Mr. Jonathan insisted that he be directly briefed by Mr. Yar’Adua who had traditionally issued such directives on the phone, when he was unable to attend or chair the meeting.

Yet it was not merely a scheme isolated to the military corridor. It was gathered that a handful of legislators were told to help build consensus around a renewed Yar ‘Adua presidency and they were told to keep the news a secret because the president was returning to chair last week’s council meeting.

Umaru Dahiru, a senator and chairman of the Northern Senator’s Forum, promptly called a meeting on the night of the president’s arrival and after a rambling statement on the need to support the ailing president, finally dropped the bomb to a shocked gathering of fellow senators who then scampered out to figure out what that meant in the context of the Jonathan constitutional succession.

The colluding ministers

Some ministers were also carried along in the Tilde-schemes, among these were Adamu Aliero, minister of the Federal Capital Territory and an in-law to Mr. Yar’Adua; and Tanimu Yakubu, the Chief Economic Adviser to the President.

It is not clear if Sayaad Abba-Ruma, minister of agriculture, was in the know, as he was on the ministerial team dispatched to Saudi Arabi to access Mr. Yar Adua’s health. If he did know something, according to a ministerial aide, he not only kept it from the Acting President, he also kept it from his colleagues who were on the plane to Saudi Arabia.

The travelling ministers were still in flight when they received the news that Mr. Yar’Adua’s plane was about to leave Saudi Arabia. It was the many calls made by these ministers to their friends and media contacts that alerted the nation that the ailing president’s plane was inbound.

Not yet seen

It is four days since President Yar’Adua arrived, yet no one can claim to have seen him. Though Segun Adeniyi, the president’s spokesman has been speaking on his behalf, even he, according to our findings, has not seen or heard directly from the President. “Segun has been receiving briefs from Tilde and Onoyvieta; he cannot claim to have seen the President. Tilde is running the show now, but I believe he is getting directives from the first lady,” a source stated.

However, after the failure of the plot to push Mr Jonathan into committing some act of desperation, the cabal realised that their best bet was to pretend to show the Acting President some support while they wait for Mr Yar’Adua to recover. Mr Adeniyi, who had earlier said that Mr Jonathan’s title has reverted to Vice President, appeared the next day to tell Nigerians that Mr Yar’Adua has affirmed Mr Jonathan as the Acting President.

Friday, February 26, 2010

The Downfall of Her imperial majesty, Turai Yar'adua.



How does it feel to be President Umaru Yar'Adua's wife now? How does it feel to be at the center of all manner of scurrilous insinuations and innuendos? How does it feel to see presidential power sleep from your husband not on account of end of tenure but because of illness and nobody seems to be showing sympathy?

Read the intriguing detail of how the Yar’Adua administration has worked since inception, the controversy that Acting President Goodluck Jonathan meets Turai Yar’Adua, the first lady, to get directives before performing his duties as acting president.

If Turai Yar'Adua had watched the Eddy Murphy film 'Trading Place' some years ago, could she ever have imagined herself as one of the characters some day? SAMSON EZEA of the Guardian Newspapers wrote on the Turai Yar'Adua persona, the allure of power and the jostle for Jonathan's successor, as it becomes more and more obvious as the days go by that her husband, President Yar'Adua is unlikely to resume his seat soon.

But first, read the latest on Turai Yar’adua from the Associated Press and then her history, background and biography and downfall below:

While Nigeria's ailing president remains unseen after being brought back into the country under the cover of darkness, his assertive wife Turai Yar'Adua has stepped into the spotlight in the oil-rich nation.

Analysts warn a new political struggle could envelop Africa's most populous country that for weeks had no clear leader but now has a stricken president, an acting president who was formally named in a move not contemplated in the constitution and an increasingly powerful first lady.

Turai — not her husband Umaru Yar'Adua — planned to meet privately with Acting President Goodluck Jonathan shortly after the president's return to Nigeria. Details on the planned encounter were not released. She controlled access to her husband while he was hospitalized for three months in Saudi Arabia, allowing only very close family members and a few aides to see him. Many Nigerians believe she also organized a military convoy that escorted Yar'Adua from Abuja's international airport when he returned home unannounced on Wednesday.

On Thursday, a headline in The Daily Sun newspaper proclaimed "Turai takes over."

"She is indeed the person I think is calling the shots," said John Campbell, a former U.S. ambassador to Nigeria who now is a fellow with the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations. "The basis of her ability to do it is because she controls access to the president."

That control has allowed Turai to apparently bring Yar'Adua back into the country, putting new pressure on Jonathan. The vice president, who became acting president through an extraconstitutional vote of the National Assembly, has taken few public actions since taking power. Now with Yar'Adua back in the picture, it may mean Jonathan will do even less to avoid confrontation with the president and Turai.

Yar'Adua has not been seen in public since he suddenly left Nigeria on Nov. 23 for Saudi Arabia for treatment of what his chief physician described as acute pericarditis, an inflammation of the sac surrounding the heart. The president also has kidney ailments. There was no official information on his whereabouts Thursday.

Presidential spokesman Olusegun Adeniyi did not return a call for comment Thursday about Mrs. Yar'Adua's role. In a newspaper interview published Dec. 16, he described her as "a warm, caring, not-in-your-face woman who wants her husband to succeed and who is eager to ensure stability on the home front and leverage her moral power for the greater good of the society."

But Nigerian media say she also has political savvy.

An editorial Thursday in the newspaper NEXT said Mrs. Yar'Adua must have lined up allies to "have pulled off this feat of sweeping into the country in the pre-dawn hours and rudely shoving aside the acting president, in addition to effectively overruling the National Assembly.

"All would have been impossible were Mrs. Yar'Adua not already receiving support from powerful people in the security services and the bureaucracy," the newspaper said.

Yar'Adua left the country without formally putting Jonathan in power as acting president, forcing lawmakers to vote two weeks ago to put in him charge. However, the federal ministries remained stacked with Yar'Adua appointees and many in the military's ranks come from the Muslim north, as Yar'Adua does. Though military officials promised to stay out of politics, they did respond to a request from Yar'Adua's camp to send troops to attend his homecoming.

Nigerians have already known Mrs. Yar'Adua as assertive. After becoming first lady in 2007, she led an effort to bring a cancer treatment center to Abuja, the capital. Her image still graces billboards advertising the center, her bearing regal and serious. Nigerian television and newspapers also routinely covered her actions, carrying images of her in traditional dress, her head covered by finely woven cloth in line with her Muslim beliefs.

Now, she may prove to be the power behind presidency.

"She's always been protective of the president," said Nnamdi Obasi, a Nigerian analyst with the International Crisis Group. "I think people are surprised she's gone this far."

The Downfall of Her imperial majesty, Turai Yar'adua

TO say that these are not the best of times for Nigeria's First lady Hajia Turai Yar'Adua, is to belabour the obvious. Before now, she practically had the world at her feet as she commanded respect not only as an influential First Lady, but also as a powerbroker.

Hitherto, Mrs. Yar'Adua as wife former Governor Yar'Adua was a First Lady that was seen but hardly heard. But, of course, she became more visible to Nigerians when her husband, Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar'Adua emerged President of the country in 2007.

As the President's wife while he was Katsina State Governor for eight years, Turai was not well known among the governors' wives. Not because she couldn't hold her own among them but largely because, according to insiders, Mrs. Yar'Adua "is somewhat shy," an aspects of her, they say, she works hard to cover up in public.

But, at home and in her husband's government, the First Lady, close associates say, is quite influential. Indeed, as her husband's soul-mate, Turai Yar'Adua is said to make a lot of input into a number of important state matters, especially in the wake of her husband's ill health which made the president not strong enough to exert himself as he necessarily should. Consequently, a lot fell on Mrs. Yar'Adua to do if not for anything else at least to secure her husband's job. Thus, she was the head of Yar'Adua's kitchen cabinet in Katsina, a powerful position from which she dispensed favours and had a strong say in who was what in her husband's state administration.

Sources who spoke to The Guardian say it was on the basis of this antecedent that some of the commissioners who served in her husband's government in Katsina were appointed into the Federal Executive Council (FEC) or, as it is now called, Executive Council of the Federation (EXCOF), on Turai's request, as ministers and special assistants to form another kitchen cabinet in Abuja, to help in the running of government against the backdrop of President Yar'Adua's fragile health situation.

Prominent among such influential people are the Minister of Agriculture, Alhaji Abba Ruma, Economic Adviser to the President, Chief Yakubu Tanimu and a member of the House of Representatives and the president's childhood friend, Shehu Baba Inuwa. Others who are not in government but were part of them are Alhaji Dahiru Mangal, retired Inspector general of Police, Alhaji MD Yusuf and others. Together, these people allegedly formed a strong clique, which pundits have tagged 'the Katsina mafia' to run the government of the country with Turai as the leader.

To give the clique a national outlook, some people from the South and other part of the North were co-opted into it especially those who assisted in financing her husband's presidential campaign.

In the villa, perhaps until only a week or two ago, she was seen as the greatest powerbroker that was allegedly interested in virtually every issue regarding governance.

When asked to evaluate the First Lady, Mrs. Yar'Adua, one former top PDP official paused to weigh his words, then said: "She is far more than what Andy Uba was to Obasanjo. She is Uba, Maryam Babangida and Miriam Abacha thrown together." That is to say, she is enormously powerful and influential, indeed, one who, according to insiders, could cause the ouster of an official the First Lady does not like.

It was disclosed that she influenced the appointment of the former Group Managing Director of Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Alhaji Abubakar Lawal Yar'Adua and her blood brother, Bashir Abdullahi as the Managing Director of Port Harcourt Refinery Company (PHRC). It is believed that it was after Abubakar fell out of favour that the current managing director Alhaji Mohammed Barkindo was thrown up.

That was also what happened in the case of the new comptroller general of Customs whom she influenced his appointment through rapid promotion to pacify a member of the cabal, Ibrahim Mangal. She is also believed to have tried to influence the appointment of the Magajin Gari by the newly installed Emir of Katsina, Alhaji Abdulmumini Kabir Usman, ostensibly because she was allegedly interested in imposing her son-in-law, 39-year old Badamasi Kabir Usman, on the traditional post.

She is also believed to have single-handedly picked Ibrahim Shema as her husband's successor as governor of Katsina in 2007 but fell out with him following the political crisis between the governor and the 'Katsina mafia' in the villa.

A diplomatic source, who pleaded anonymity, disclosed to The Guardian that the First Lady also influences diplomatic business. "Not only is she courted by businessmen, many diplomats also prefer to talk to her rather than to meet her husband," the source said. "Turai is known as the go-to-person for all Aso Rock-based requests that may be delayed by her husband's sluggish bureaucracy.

Corporate executives, including bankers with one favor or another to ask, have found out that things become quicker once they have paid courtesy visits to Turai Yar'Adua".

She is said to be demanding absolute loyalty from government officials outside of and beyond their loyalty to her husband. It is alleged that the former Attorney General now minister of Special Duties Michael Aondoakaa and the former Inspector General of Police, Mike Okiro reported primarily to her before they left office.

It is known in several quarters that because of President Yar'Adua's failing health, his wife Turai holds sway on his behalf on many issues. For instance, during the last cabinet reshuffle, it was revealed that ministers who were desperate to retain their portfolios lobbied the First Lady.

She is believed to have been very influential in the appointment of the former Director-General of the National Action Committee on AIDS, Prof. Babatunde Osotimehin, as the Minister of Health. Before the time, Osotimehin was said to be contending for the post of Director General of National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration (NAFDAC).

Turai whose pet project is cancer eradication was said to have developed interest in Osotimehin's appointment to the health ministry because of the way he handled NACA anti-HIV/AIDS campaigns held in the six geo-political zones of the country.

It was also disclosed that she was responsible for the deployment of a long-serving minister, Dr. Hassan Lawal to the Ministry of Works and Housing from his previous Labour portfolio. Lawal, a Minister of Labour in the last administration, combined his portfolio with the supervision of the Ministry of Health, when Prof. Adenike Grange and her deputy, Mr. Gabriel Aduku were made to resign on allegation of financial misappropriation.

The First Lady who married Umaru Yar'Adua in 1975, and they have five daughters and two sons is also perceived to have influenced the President in several decisions although the President denied same when asked during a media parley whether his wife influences him.



The President's denial that his wife influences him has not however changed the common opinion about her. Before now in the Villa, the First Lady is perceived to be fully in charge of many of the decisions being taken. She is perceived to be the President's closest adviser and in the present era of his absence, she is said to be fully in charge.

Sources allege that many governors use their wives to court Turai's friendship by advising them to initiate some projects that would demand inviting the First Lady to their states.

Apart from President Yar'Adua denying the allegation of his wife's influence, her spokesman, Mr. Lawan Bakori also dismissed them as mere rumours, which have never been substantiated.

Turai Yar'Adua was born in the Katsina Metropolis in July 1957, and she spent her formative years at the Government Girls Secondary School, Kankiya.

Later on, she enrolled at the Katsina College of Arts, Science and Technology, Zaria, where she reportedly emerged as the best student in 1980.

She obtained a Bachelor of Arts (Education) in Language from the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, in 1983. She had previously worked as a teacher before she became Katsina State First Lady when Yar'Adua was elected governor in 1999.

She came into national reckoning in 2007 when her husband was elected president of the federal republic of Nigeria. Her antecedents affirm that she is committed to family life, love, charity and a strong faith in the Almighty God. She was later made the National Goodwill Ambassador for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (MNCH) in Nigeria.

Turbulent Times For The First Lady

AS time often runs off, First Lady, Mrs Turai Yar'Adua is now left in the lurch as her husband, President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua remains hospitalized in Saudi Arabia hospital without anybody including his doctors being specific on when he will be discharged to assume duty once again as Nigeria's President.

Before now, the deteriorating health condition of President Yar'Adua was an open secret to many Nigerians. It was disclosed that when he was governor of Katsina, he was once hospitalized for six months and his wife Turai and some members of his kitchen cabinet were running the government until he recovered and assumed office again. At the peak of his presidential campaign, Yar'Adua once fell ill and was rushed to Germany. Then he was rumoured to have died but he later recovered and joined his campaign train again.

Even as the jostle for vice president slot became intense in the belief that Yar'Adua may not come before the party primaries for 2011 election, the North is already positioning candidates for the slot. Prominent among names being touted by different groups are Gen. Theophilus Danjuma; Mallam Nuhu Ribadu; Mallam Nasir El-Rufai; and Governor Sule Lamido of Jigawa State.

Turai's group is allegedly pushing for one of her in-laws, Isa Yuguda and Adamu Aliero. But the odds against them might be their ties to Turai, which major stakeholders in the North may want to do away with. It is really a sad moment for a woman who was once the power centre in government.

With Materials from the Guardian Newspapers and AP

YAR’ADUA’S RETURN A GRAND DECEIT – AKANDE


Yar’Adua’s return a grand deceit – Akande
From MODESTUS CHUKWULAKA, Abuja
Friday, February 26, 2010

National Chairman of the Action Congress (AC), Chief Bisi Akande, has dismissed Wednesday’s reported return of President Umaru Yar’Adua to the country as a grand design to deceive Nigerians, and warned that the attitude of impunity and lawlessness of the present administration would quicken the collapse of the country.

Akande said what happened on Wednesday morning was a continuation of the deception by those around the President and challenged any person who had set an eye on the president since his “alleged” return to come out and fault him.
Speaking in Abuja shortly after the public presentation of a book authored by former chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Dr. Abel Guobadia, Akande described Yar’Adua as “a master in deceit,” while the country remained a rudderless state.

“Many miracles are happening in this country right now, and we don’t know who is ruling us. We must not allow miracles to continue to rule us. The attitude of impunity and lawlessness of this administration will quicken the collapse of the country,” he said.
Asked if the return of the president from his medical vacation would help in stabilizing the polity, the former Osun State governor retorted: “Are you sure he has come back? Have you seen him? Is the President back? Who has seen him?”

Reminded that the presidential spokesman had already issued a statement to the effect that Yar’Adua was back in the country after three months in Saudi Arabia, Akande said: “That’s how they have been deceiving us since he became President. He is a master in deceit. I don’t think that Yar’Adua is here in Nigeria. I believe Jonathan is now the Acting President. But those who are deceiving us will continue to deceive us, using the military to threaten us.”
Although he said Jonathan was in reality the Acting President, he expressed misgiving that he would be able to steer the country in the right direction for the reason that he belonged to the same Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

“Jonathan will not be capable; he is PDP. But what I am saying in reality is that Jonathan is the Acting President of Nigeria. These people who are using the military to threaten us are deceiving us that Yar’Adua is here. We must shun them. They are the ones destroying this country; we must shun them,” he said.
Earlier, Akande, like many others had paid glowing tribute to Guobadia who presided over INEC from 2000 to 2005. The book entitled: Reflections of a Nigerian Electoral Umpire, dwelled mainly on the author’s experience as the chairman of INEC and his views on the nation’s electoral system.

Former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Muhammed Uwais who chaired the presentation said Guobadia brought to INEC a wealth of experience no other chairman had brought to the office. “He was not a sit-tight chairman. He knew his tenure was only five years. He did not lobby for extension. At the end of five years, he wrote to the President, giving notice of his desire to disengage,” Uwais said.
A serving national commissioner of INEC, Mr. Philip Umeadi Jnr., also credited Guobadia with the introduction of technology in the electoral system as well as initiating electoral reforms. “The electronic voters’ register we met could have been enough for the conduct of any free and fair election in 2007,” he said.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Senate amends section 145 .


The Senate, on Wednesday, voted to alter the provisions of section 145 and 190 of the 1999 constitution.

The amendments make it compulsory for a president or a governor to transmit a letter to the leadership of the National Assembly or House of Assembly respectively to enable the vice president or deputy governor act “whenever the president is proceeding on vacation or is unable to discharge the function of his office.”

The bill also empowers the National Assembly or state legislators to pass a resolution, empowering the vice president or deputy governor to act on behalf of the president or governor if there is a failure to transmit such letter within 14 days of his departure.

The bill is sponsored by the Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, and supported by members of the senate Committee on Constitution Review.

The idea to alter the two sections proposed for amendment came up as a result of the inability of the lawmakers to constitutionally get the president to transmit a letter when he was absent. This led the Senate to adopt a creative resolution, empowering Vice President Goodluck Jonathan to act pending the return of President Yar’Adua.

The House of Representatives has already considered a similar bill, seeking to amend the same sections. While the Representatives are contemplating a 21-day grace period for the president or governor to be away on vacation without transmitting his powers, the senate voted in favour of 14 days grace period.

The differences will, however, be harmonised by a joint committee of the senate and House before the bill is passed down to the state Houses of Assembly for consideration.

Speedy passage

The bill was first read by the senate on 17 February. The following day, the senate started the second reading debate on the bill. After three days of debate, when nearly all senators contributed, on Wednesday, the bill passed its second reading.

It was immediately committed to the committee of the whole senate. There, the senate considered the provisions of the amendment bill, clause by clause, after which slight amendments were made on the original proposal.

The bill was then put to vote and senators stood in turns to vote a “yes” or “no” for or against the alterations. Out of the 109 senators, 17 senators were absent from the sitting and 89 senators voted “yes” to amend the first part of the bill.

Two senators, Yale Mallam Kaka (ANPP Borno State) and Garba Yakubu Lado (PDP Katsina State) voted against the alterations.

President Turai Yar’Adua.




Since returning her critically ill husband to the country in the dead of the night yesterday, Turai Yar’Adua has in the last twenty-four hours effectively seized control of the apparatus of government, shoving aside Goodluck Jonathan and unilaterally causing a reversal of the decision by the National Assembly to name him Acting President.

She has a combination of factors working to her advantage: on the one hand, her husband is back in the country and expected to resume Presidential functions; on the other, the state of his health renders him incapable of exercising any presidential authority, automatically creating a vacuum for a proxy.

This bizarre scenario is what Mrs. Yar’Adua is exploiting, with urgency and precision. Yesterday, she instigated a series of puzzling actions, aimed at curtailing the movement and powers of the Acting President.

These include the deployment of two members of the brigade of guards to barricade the “presidential seat”, allegedly to prevent Mr. Jonathan from sitting on it to preside over the meeting of the Executive Council of the Federation; and the early afternoon ransacking of Mr. Jonathan’s office by personnel of the State Security Service (SSS).

Not long after that action, the President’s spokesperson, Segun Adeniyi issued a statement announcing that, “while the President completes his recuperation, Vice President Jonathan will continue to oversee the affairs of state.” There is however no evidence that the Acting President is in any position to oversee Nigeria’s affairs, as he spent most of Wednesday holed up in his office or home, as ignorant as the rest of the country about happenings in the corridors of power. In the vacuum, the First Lady is in absolute control, not only of the affairs of state, but also of access to the President.

Acting in the dark

Over 20 hours after arriving in the country, no public official has yet seen Mr. Yar’Adua, NEXT findings reveal. It emerged yesterday that even Mr Jonathan, has not seen or spoken to Mr Yar’Adua since he returned to the country. A highly placed source in Aso Rock revealed this Wednesday, adding that a political stalemate is in the offing between the two men.

The source confirmed that the Mr. Jonathan was completely unaware of the president’s homecoming until just a few hours before his plane landed in Abuja. In addition, all the security and army personnel that were dispatched to the airport did not receive their orders from the Acting President’s office.

Two army units, the 4th battalion and Guards brigade, were deployed to secure the road leading to the airport and escort the presidential convoy back to Aso Rock.

According to our source, “300 carefully selected officers were secretly deployed and conveyed in 25 vehicles for the operation. Even the weapons were released to them at night.” The directive for this deployment was not issued by the Acting President who is also the present commander in chief of the armed forces of Nigeria. This caused a little pandemonium among the ruling class who wondered who deployed the men.

“The Acting President did not give orders for the deployment of the troops and neither were we consulted on such.

So we all wondered if the army was just acting on its own. Maybe it was the Chief of Defense Staff, or the Chief of Army staff or the National Security Adviser who deployed them; you know they all never liked Mr. Jonathan. We don’t know even up till now,” our source stated.

A President held hostage

The list of persons who are being denied access to the President by the First Lady is growing.

Apart from the Acting President, none of the Ministers or Presidential aides has seen or spoken to Mr. Yar’Adua. Not even Segun Adeniyi, Mr. Yar’Adua’s senior special assistant on media and communications, who issued a press statement on behalf of the President has seen or directly heard from him, NEXT findings reveal.

The Chairman of the Governors’ Forum, Bukola Saraki, and the Chairman of the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Vincent Ogbulafor, have also been unsuccessful in their attempts to see Mr. Yar’Adua.

“They are preventing everyone from seeing him. None of us, except his wife and his security aides have seen him since his arrival. Right from the airport, they hid him from everybody. The Vice President even tried to go see him yesterday, but was disallowed by Turai,” a senior government official stated.

At the moment, no one outside the tiny inner circle has any details about the current state of the President’s health. A widely-quoted NEXT exclusive story in January reported that he was “seriously brain damaged.” Our investigations continue to point to a man who remains incapacitated and clearly unable to function as President, contrary to Mr. Adeniyi’s statement that the President had been “discharged” by his Saudi doctors.

We have it on reliable authority that since the President’s arrival in the country on Wednesday, his critical condition has necessitated his continued stay in the Ford E-250 intensive care ambulance that picked him at the Abuja airport. He is expected to be in the ambulance until the intensive care unit that will receive him is retrieved by Julius Berger from Katsina and re-installed in House 7 within the grounds of the Presidential Villa.

Sources also said that the President was carried on a stretcher aboard the ambulance that airlifted him into the country. The arrival of the President in the early hours of Wednesday was engineered to take place in utmost secrecy. Just before midnight on Tuesday, the military units sealed off the presidential wing of the airport and cordoned off the area, ordering all airport staff to move to the international wing. The airport was sealed off from journalists and other visitors who had begun to gather at the presidential wing.

The air ambulance conveying the President landed at 1.45am in a remote section of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport runway. Tarmac floodlights were also dimmed, heightening the covertness of the operation.

Sinking deeper into confusion

A brief private meeting between Mr. Jonathan and the ministers held in place of the customary Wednesday Executive Council meetings, which Mr. Jonathan has consistently chaired in the absence of Mr. Yar’Adua. The meeting, which traditionally starts at 10.00am, was postponed by Mr. Jonathan as soon as news of the President’s arrival broke.

The Ministers were duly notified.

A minister confirmed that the instruction to postpone the council meeting came from Jonathan.

“I received a call at about 8.30 from his secretary saying that our meeting would be postponed,” the minister said. “I was asked to come directly to the conference room by 2 (o’clock) where they would explain why the meeting did not hold.” The minister went on to say that many of his colleagues did not know about the arrival of the President until Wednesday morning. “Some of us were hearing it from you people in the media as of this morning,” the minister said. “As for me I have not spoken to him since he left and that remains so.” The failure of the meeting to hold is just one of the many manifestations of the deepening confusion that has plagued the country since news first broke on Tuesday evening of Mr. Yar’Adua’s return.

At the end of the meeting, the Minister of Information, Dora Akunyili announced that the Mr. Jonathan would be meeting with Mrs Yar’Adua on yesterday evening. Even though a source said the meeting was not at Mrs Yar’Adua’s behest, but an attempt to stave off a constitutional crisis, the fact that it is taking place at all is yet another pointer to the significant role that the President’s wife will be playing in the current power configuration.

It remains unclear what the agenda of the meeting will be, but a source insisted that the ongoing political stalemate cannot be dispelled until the Acting President meets with the President. “Until the Acting President receives a secure directive from the President, the executive council cannot fulfil its duties,” the source said.

The Silent Coup d'état ..


Meanwhile, the Save Nigeria Group (SNG) has deplored the way President Yar’Adua was brought into the country.

The SNG condemned the secrecy that surrounded the president’s arrival and the alleged hounding of airport workers by armed soldiers.

“It is more curious that soldiers were deployed in the airport without the knowledge of the Acting President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, who was also not on hand to receive him.”

The group said when all was added up, it was clear that there was a sinister plot behind bringing a man, who should be having his health attended to, into the country, and that was evident in the fact that the Executive Council of the Federation was yet to commence its weekly meeting at the time this statement was issued.

“It has also been brought to our attention that a statement has been issued by Yar’Adua’s spokesperson, Mr. Segun Adeniyi, to the effect that he has been discharged by his doctors and that the Acting President, Dr. Jonathan, should act for him while he recuperates. Was it a slip that Adeniyi referred to Dr. Jonathan as “Vice-President” and not Acting President?” SNG queried.

It noted that it was clear and unacceptable and a further confirmation that Yar’Adua and his handlers saw Nigeria as their supermarket, which explained why he did not hand over in the first place while travelling out on medical trip, and the constitution did not confirm on him the right to verbally decide how Nigeria should be run.

According to it, “Nigerians need to see the man who is making this statement. He must address the joint sitting of the National Assembly, even if it’s only for five minutes, which shall transmit power back to him before he can begin to function as president again. In the alternative, he should address the nation on NTA and AIT to explain to the nation why he failed to respect the constitution in the last 93 days.”

SNG noted that if President Yar’Adua did not do any of the above, it would mean that he was totally incapacitated and his coming home would not have changed anything.

“Our quarrel with him was not the location where he was but the fact that we are not sure that his body and mind can support the functions of his office. This has been confirmed by the fact that it took one hour twenty five minutes to dislodge him from the air ambulance into the Ford Intensive Care Unit ambulance and another one hour ten minutes to take him from the airport to the secretariat junction in Abuja where he proceeded to the Villa. All these point to permanent incapacitation,” SNG stated.

The group insisted that the process of empanelling a medical board as stipulated in Section 144 must proceed forthwith. “And the Executive Council of the Federation has its job cut out for it, as they now have no excuse to fall on anymore. There is no need for any jamboree as Yar’Adua is now within the shores of Nigeria,” SNG said.

It called for a conclusive resolution of the crisis so that Nigeria could avoid a political disaster. “We remain resolutely committed to the logical closure of this matter and we stick to our March 3, deadline,” the group said.

Goodluck Jonathan Demoted Already?


By Olu Jacob and Daniel Momoh (234NEXT)

February 24, 2010 07:34PM
The handlers of the ailing President Umaru Yar'Adua who sneaked him into the country in the wee hours of today have not wasted any time in trying to wrest power from Acting President Goodluck Jonathan.

Unconfirmed reports speak of plans to make him resign if he doesn't toe the line now being drawn by Turai Yar'Adua who is now effectively in charge of the presidency. A number of ministers who were deemed to have been disloyal to Mr Yar'Adua, are also slated to be sacked, and Dora Akunyili is said to be top on that list.

A source in Aso rock confirmed that officials of the State Security Service had this afternoon gone into the office of Mr Jonathan and conducted a thorough search although it is not immediately clear what they were looking for. They were allegedly working under the directives of Mrs Yar'Adua.

Only a few hours after he arrived the country, and while he lies convalescing in a ‘clinic', aides to the President began systematically to divest Mr Jonathan of any opportunity to exercise the powers of the presidency. He has been denied access to the President and to any information that will keep him abreast of the unfolding drama. Sources say he is barely managing to avoid embarrassment as events keep changing around him and he only gets to hear of the changes after they were announced.

As early as 11.31am, while he prepared for the weekly meeting of the Executive Council of the Federation, a security detail entered the chambers and immediately secured the president's chair to prevent Mr Jonathan from sitting on it. Less than one hour later, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation Yayale Ahmed announced that the Council meeting has been postponed. Instead, Mr Jonathan was scheduled to have a private meeting with the ministers. That meeting eventually lasted less than 10 minutes and the confusion was evident in the faces of some of the ministers who appeared to be sleep walking .

As part of the process of demoting Mr Jonathan, Presidential spokesperson, Segun Adeniyi has announced that from now on the Acting president will revert back to his previous status of vice President, although he will still need to hold the fort while the President recuperates.

However, there are indications that none of this is happening with Mr Jonathan's consent as he remained locked out of the decision making process. Although no one has come out to say he is under house arrest, sources say after the search of his office, the Acting president was effectively kept apart and the coterie of visitors that has been around him in the last two weeks is no longer evident.

As a sign that Mrs Yar'Adua is now in charge of running the presidency, the Acting President has been scheduled to meet with her this evening, and sources say the fate of Mr Jonathan may depend on how that meeting goes.

US concerns
The United States of America has raised concern over the sudden return of Mr Yar'Adua. A statement from its mission in Abuja today warns that the President's return may create chaos in the nation's polity. According to Johnnie Carson, the US Under-Secretary of State on African Affairs, the US government hopes that, "President Yar'Adua's return to Nigeria is not an effort by his senior advisors to upset Nigeria's stability and create renewed uncertainty in the democratic process."

The statement also touched on the president's health: "We hope that his health is sufficient to enable him to fully resume his official duties," Mr Carson said, adding, "Nigeria needs a strong, healthy, and effective leader to ensure the stability of the country and to manage Nigeria's many political, economic and security challenges."

Some celebrate
Residents of Katsina, the home state of the president, yesterday came out in their thousands to celebrate the return of Mr Yar'Adua from Saudi Arabia. He was flown into the country from Saudi Arabia in an air ambulance Number HZM55A at about 1.47 a.m. yesterday.

Security sources say Mr Yar'Adua was forced to relocate to Nigeria from Saudi Arabia following the decision of the Saudi government to avoid mounting diplomatic crisis.

Status quo
The House of Representatives announced yesterday that it still recognises Mr Jonathan as the Acting President of Nigeria. According to the chairman, Rules and Business, Eta Inang, the status of Mr. Jonathan has not changed. Also, at about 5pm today, the Conference of Nigeria Political Parties welcomed the president into the country, but note that the manner of his arrival clearly indicates that he is too incapacitated to rule. However, a statement from the Peoples Democratic Party which also welcomed the President, praised Mr Goodluck Jonathan for holding the fort during the three months of the President's absence.