On top form: Mario Balotelli celebrated his second goal in exuberant style, with Claudio Machisio (below) is the first to congratulate him after the telling second
Friday, June 29, 2012
Germany 1 Italy 2: Magic Mario makes his mark as Azzurri extend tournament hoodoo
WHO SAYS BLACK MAN CANNOT DO IT? SHAME ON YOU!!!
On top form: Mario Balotelli celebrated his second goal in exuberant style, with Claudio Machisio (below) is the first to congratulate him after the telling second
On top form: Mario Balotelli celebrated his second goal in exuberant style, with Claudio Machisio (below) is the first to congratulate him after the telling second
Thursday, June 14, 2012
27 year old Pretty Woman prison officer jailed for having illicit relationships with convicts
A woman prison officer who swapped sexy letters and phone calls with
three inmates was jailed for 12 months today. Zanib Khan, 27, had
‘illicit relationships’ with two drug dealers incarcerated at HMP
Brixton and a third prisoner at Ford open prison in Sussex.
Khan shared nearly ten hours of intimate calls with the men on a secret phone she hid from her prison bosses and her personal phone.
Police also found sexually explicit love letters from prisoners at her home she smuggled out of jail stuffed inside her uniform.
Khan had relationships with Timothy Iyegbe, Daryl Smith and Jason Graham, between March and November 2011.
Police believe she was close to four other prisoners over three years.
Khan, who joined the prison service to pay for a law qualification, also covered up the fact her father and her boyfriend were both serving prisoners when she took up her post.
Judge David Higgins today jailed Khan for 12 months for what he described as ‘deplorable and deeply antisocial behaviour’.
He said: ‘The period of offending is approximately eight months between March and November 2011. ‘Inevitably that means you embarked on a knowing, sustained, voluntary, and indeed gross breach of trust. It is the very denial of that which you are employed to do. Your behaviour was both deplorable and deeply antisocial and the public will be rightly shocked by that behaviour by someone in your position. It certainly diminishes confidence in the prison service.’
The court heard Khan began work at HMP Feltham in 2009 before moving to HMP Brixton, in south west London.
She had been the subject of internal disciplinary proceedings prior to the discovery of the raunchy texts and letters after it was discovered she had been visiting her father and boyfriend Wahid Khalique in jail.
Khan was arrested on January 26, 2012, and officers found the box for the illicit phone in her bedroom. In interview she denied any involvement with the three men and attempted to frame her younger sister Zahira.
Daughters of Jezebel! She wants to fabricate lies against her own blood sister...
Khan shared nearly ten hours of intimate calls with the men on a secret phone she hid from her prison bosses and her personal phone.
Police also found sexually explicit love letters from prisoners at her home she smuggled out of jail stuffed inside her uniform.
Khan had relationships with Timothy Iyegbe, Daryl Smith and Jason Graham, between March and November 2011.
Police believe she was close to four other prisoners over three years.
Khan, who joined the prison service to pay for a law qualification, also covered up the fact her father and her boyfriend were both serving prisoners when she took up her post.
Judge David Higgins today jailed Khan for 12 months for what he described as ‘deplorable and deeply antisocial behaviour’.
He said: ‘The period of offending is approximately eight months between March and November 2011. ‘Inevitably that means you embarked on a knowing, sustained, voluntary, and indeed gross breach of trust. It is the very denial of that which you are employed to do. Your behaviour was both deplorable and deeply antisocial and the public will be rightly shocked by that behaviour by someone in your position. It certainly diminishes confidence in the prison service.’
The court heard Khan began work at HMP Feltham in 2009 before moving to HMP Brixton, in south west London.
She had been the subject of internal disciplinary proceedings prior to the discovery of the raunchy texts and letters after it was discovered she had been visiting her father and boyfriend Wahid Khalique in jail.
Khan was arrested on January 26, 2012, and officers found the box for the illicit phone in her bedroom. In interview she denied any involvement with the three men and attempted to frame her younger sister Zahira.
Daughters of Jezebel! She wants to fabricate lies against her own blood sister...
Monday, May 28, 2012
Alarm in Eagles over selection of players
SPORTS:
One official of the senior national team called on arrival from Peru to say the following: ‘’Stephen Keshi and his coaches are not happy that Keshi is not being given a free hand to do his work.
The problem may escalate and jeopardise our chances of qualifying for the World Cup and the Nations Cup.”
The official said that a top member of the federation had reduced the list of players for three matches from 28 to 23 because Keshi did not invite one particular player the NFF member recommended.
Nigeria will play Namibia in Calabar on Sunday, travel to Malawi for 2014 World Cup qualifiers and return to play Rwanda in a Nations Cup second leg qualifier.
‘’For them to reduce the number of players for three matches from 28 to 23 doesn’t mean well for the team because it will limit their options,” said the official, adding ‘’but the NFF board member told Keshi he could invite as many players as he wanted so far he invites the particular player in question.”
Another official confirmed this and said the NFF member had actually been campaigning for two players(names withheld) but this time particularised on one player insisting that he must be invited to the national team.
He, however, said that Keshi has gone to increase the team to 27 players and may open up if his request was not granted.
Asked if the player in question was not good enough for Eagles the official said that the player had been listed by Keshi as among the players he would try out later and noted that ‘’Keshi has scheduled different players for different matches and will from time to time invite different players in the process of building a team.”
We called Keshi to confirm the alarm two non technical officials raised he bluntly said that he would prefer to concentrate on the Calabar assignment for now.
The officials said that NFF President Aminu Maigari and Secretary-General Musa Amadu were not aware of this problem which from the way the officials sounded was serious and really hurting Keshi and his crew.
One official of the senior national team called on arrival from Peru to say the following: ‘’Stephen Keshi and his coaches are not happy that Keshi is not being given a free hand to do his work.
The problem may escalate and jeopardise our chances of qualifying for the World Cup and the Nations Cup.”
The official said that a top member of the federation had reduced the list of players for three matches from 28 to 23 because Keshi did not invite one particular player the NFF member recommended.
Nigeria will play Namibia in Calabar on Sunday, travel to Malawi for 2014 World Cup qualifiers and return to play Rwanda in a Nations Cup second leg qualifier.
‘’For them to reduce the number of players for three matches from 28 to 23 doesn’t mean well for the team because it will limit their options,” said the official, adding ‘’but the NFF board member told Keshi he could invite as many players as he wanted so far he invites the particular player in question.”
Another official confirmed this and said the NFF member had actually been campaigning for two players(names withheld) but this time particularised on one player insisting that he must be invited to the national team.
He, however, said that Keshi has gone to increase the team to 27 players and may open up if his request was not granted.
Asked if the player in question was not good enough for Eagles the official said that the player had been listed by Keshi as among the players he would try out later and noted that ‘’Keshi has scheduled different players for different matches and will from time to time invite different players in the process of building a team.”
We called Keshi to confirm the alarm two non technical officials raised he bluntly said that he would prefer to concentrate on the Calabar assignment for now.
The officials said that NFF President Aminu Maigari and Secretary-General Musa Amadu were not aware of this problem which from the way the officials sounded was serious and really hurting Keshi and his crew.
Police arrest 5 students with charms, alcohol
ABEOKUTA – Ogun, Ondo and Lagos states, yesterday, marked the
Children’s Day with funfare and policy statements from their governors.
In Abeokuta, men of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, NSCDC, arrested no fewer than five secondary schools students at M.K.O. Abiola Stadium, the venue of the Children’s Day Celebration, for being in possession of charms and intoxicated drinks.
The arrest came after Governor Ibikunle Amosun had warned students to shun any anti-social activities but to be upright in all their undertakings.
Amosun, while addressing the students, admonished them to begin the writing of their own history, so that their tomorrow could be asured.
He said: “As leaders of tomorrow, you must strive to be upright in all your undertakings. You should cultivate the virtues of discipline, decency, seriousness of purpose, focus, and respect for constituted authority and appreciation of dignity of labour.”
Also, Governor Olusegun Mimiko said one of the notable achievements of his government is the enthronement of peace and order in the state under which the children can be trained to actualise their potentials.
Speaking at the Gani Fawehinmi Freedom Arcade, Akure, venue of the celebration, Gov. Mimiko said, “children of Ondo State are being exposed to a culture of peace, security, healthy, modern and clean environment as opposed to the ambience of insecurity, intolerance and violence of the era gone by.”
During the Children’s Day parade and rally at the Police College Parade Ground, GRA, Ikeja, the Lagos State Government announced the introduction of inclusive schools for the physically- challenged students in the state which is aimed at reducing the number of out-of-school-children and also giving them a sense of belonging.
Gov. Babatunde Fashola: “There are 31 of such inclusive schools carved out of existing schools in the state and children should be their brother’s keepers by helping the physically- challenged in their schools.”
Meantime, the Lagos State Universal Basic Education Board, has flagged off the registration of compulsory free nursery/universal basic education for the 2012/13 school year.
Pointing out that the exercise will help reduce the number of OOSC in the state, SUBEB Board Secretary, Mrs. Titi Oluseye, said plans had been concluded to introduce the free mid-day meals so as to keep registered children in schools.
In Abeokuta, men of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, NSCDC, arrested no fewer than five secondary schools students at M.K.O. Abiola Stadium, the venue of the Children’s Day Celebration, for being in possession of charms and intoxicated drinks.
The arrest came after Governor Ibikunle Amosun had warned students to shun any anti-social activities but to be upright in all their undertakings.
Amosun, while addressing the students, admonished them to begin the writing of their own history, so that their tomorrow could be asured.
He said: “As leaders of tomorrow, you must strive to be upright in all your undertakings. You should cultivate the virtues of discipline, decency, seriousness of purpose, focus, and respect for constituted authority and appreciation of dignity of labour.”
Also, Governor Olusegun Mimiko said one of the notable achievements of his government is the enthronement of peace and order in the state under which the children can be trained to actualise their potentials.
Speaking at the Gani Fawehinmi Freedom Arcade, Akure, venue of the celebration, Gov. Mimiko said, “children of Ondo State are being exposed to a culture of peace, security, healthy, modern and clean environment as opposed to the ambience of insecurity, intolerance and violence of the era gone by.”
During the Children’s Day parade and rally at the Police College Parade Ground, GRA, Ikeja, the Lagos State Government announced the introduction of inclusive schools for the physically- challenged students in the state which is aimed at reducing the number of out-of-school-children and also giving them a sense of belonging.
Gov. Babatunde Fashola: “There are 31 of such inclusive schools carved out of existing schools in the state and children should be their brother’s keepers by helping the physically- challenged in their schools.”
Meantime, the Lagos State Universal Basic Education Board, has flagged off the registration of compulsory free nursery/universal basic education for the 2012/13 school year.
Pointing out that the exercise will help reduce the number of OOSC in the state, SUBEB Board Secretary, Mrs. Titi Oluseye, said plans had been concluded to introduce the free mid-day meals so as to keep registered children in schools.
Gunmen kill four at relaxation spot in Kano
KANO – Gunmen, weekend, killed four men who were playing cards at a
Gidan Hamisu Gurgu relaxation spot at Gaida quarters of Kano
municipality.
A resident who does not want his name in print told Vanguard that the gunmen arrived on a motorbike, took position and fired several shots in an overcrowded spot mainly patronized by pokers.
The eyewitness explained that the incident occurred around 6.00 p.m. barely an hour after the visiting vice president left the city that witnessed unprecedented security presence on the streets.
According to the eyewitness, “the gunmen, armed with assault riffles and were heard speaking fluent local dialect, threatened to wipe off all those consciously transgressing against God in the city.”
The ensuing pandemonium left three dead, while one other who was seriously injured and taken to the hospital died an hour later.
According to the eyewitness, “my neighbour, Abdullahi, was among the dead. Two others I cannot identify after the violent attack laid dead while a man who sustained life threatening injury was rushed to the hospital as many fled to safety.”
Poking (known in Hausa dialect as Karta) is a popular business among the predominantly Muslim population in Hausaland, but listed as a game of chance by Quran that enjoins Muslims to stay off it.
Vanguard recall that the bloody attack at a relaxation spot patronized by pokers brought to four the number of such violence since the ancient city of Kano came under attack January 20.
No group has yet claimed responsibility for the shooting, as the Kano Police Public Relations Officer, Tanimu Rilwan Dutse, confirmed the shooting incident, adding that the command has commenced investigations.
Dutse said: “We learnt that three people were shot dead by unknown gunmen Saturday evening at Filin Kashu relaxation spot at Gaida, and that one other person sustained injury.”
A resident who does not want his name in print told Vanguard that the gunmen arrived on a motorbike, took position and fired several shots in an overcrowded spot mainly patronized by pokers.
The eyewitness explained that the incident occurred around 6.00 p.m. barely an hour after the visiting vice president left the city that witnessed unprecedented security presence on the streets.
According to the eyewitness, “the gunmen, armed with assault riffles and were heard speaking fluent local dialect, threatened to wipe off all those consciously transgressing against God in the city.”
The ensuing pandemonium left three dead, while one other who was seriously injured and taken to the hospital died an hour later.
According to the eyewitness, “my neighbour, Abdullahi, was among the dead. Two others I cannot identify after the violent attack laid dead while a man who sustained life threatening injury was rushed to the hospital as many fled to safety.”
Poking (known in Hausa dialect as Karta) is a popular business among the predominantly Muslim population in Hausaland, but listed as a game of chance by Quran that enjoins Muslims to stay off it.
Vanguard recall that the bloody attack at a relaxation spot patronized by pokers brought to four the number of such violence since the ancient city of Kano came under attack January 20.
No group has yet claimed responsibility for the shooting, as the Kano Police Public Relations Officer, Tanimu Rilwan Dutse, confirmed the shooting incident, adding that the command has commenced investigations.
Dutse said: “We learnt that three people were shot dead by unknown gunmen Saturday evening at Filin Kashu relaxation spot at Gaida, and that one other person sustained injury.”
2015: Jonathan divides North
By Emmanuel Aziken, Political Editor, Henry Umoru, Abdulsalam Muhammad & Luka BinNIyat
ABUJA—Prominent political stakeholders from the North were at the weekend divided in their response to the renewed bid by elder-statesman Chief Edwin Clark to position President Goodluck Jonathan for another term in office in 2015.
While nearly all of them including those who vehemently opposed the president in his 2011 bid showed outrage over the renewed campaign, they nevertheless disagreed among themselves on a common position with some vowing that they would meet the President on the field in 2015.
Some of the Northern leaders also revealed that a prominent Ijaw leader pledged on his knees before northern leaders prior to the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP presidential primaries of 2011 that Jonathan would only serve a single term if supported by the Northern leaders.
The Ijaw leader who supposedly made the plea could not be reached last night and was said to be with the President at a function when Vanguard sought his opinion.
The PDP which controls power at the federal level has itself dismissed the renewed clamour, describing it as a distraction for the party and the president.
Chief Clark had at a press conference on the eve of his 85th birthday last Thursday, given vent to a second term for President Jonathan, the first person from the South-South geopolitical zone to lead the country. He based his claim on the fact that all other leaders of the country were not constrained in the bid for a second term.
Northern political leaders with the connivance of some Southern politicians had vehemently opposed Jonathan’s bid in 2011 on the basis of what they claimed as an infringement of the PDP’s zoning configuration. Among the most prominent vocal groups was the Northern Leaders Political Forum, NPLF led by Mallam Adamu Ciroma, a former Minister of Finance.
Yesterday, Ciroma whose bid to stop Jonathan failed at the PDP primaries refused to offer a comment maintaining the silence he has kept since the NPLF lost its fight against Jonathan in the 2011 presidential primaries.
Other northerners were, however, nonplussed on the issue. Among those who spoke were Ambassador Yayaha Kwande, Tanko Yakassaqi, civil rights activist, Shehu Sani, National President of the Southern Kaduna Peoples Organisation, SOKAPU which is the umbrella group of the non-Hausa population in Kaduna State and former vice chairman, House Committee on Appropriation, Alhaji Nasiru Garba Dantiye.
Speaking on Clark’s bid to sustain the Jonathan presidency beyond 2015, Kwande said yesterday:
No agreement stopping Jonathan — Kwande
“Even when we had an agreement in which Jonathan himself signed, it wasn’t put to practice so how much more when there wasn’t an agreement. So, if Clark said Jonathan will contest, Jonathan is a citizen of this country, so why do you think it is something extraordinary? Is there any agreement stopping him?
“Even when an agreement stopped him, it did not materialise. Leave Clark to talk, we will talk too. Clark has right to talk. If he didn’t obey known agreements why should he obey no agreements? Why?”
Clark refused to be dragged into assertions that a prominent supporter of the president from the South-South promised that Jonathan would serve only one term in office.
“I don’t even know whether we have three years ahead of us and we are talking. Those who have been elected should go and work we will meet them on the field in 2015 if we are alive,” he said.
Leading Kano politician Yakassai on his part refused to see Clark’s comment as an issue saying that debate on the issue could be a distraction for the president.
Yakassai who served as National Assembly liaision officer for President Shehu Shagari in the second republic said that the debate “may hand him excuses and license not to perform”.
“It is rather too early to begin this kind of debate when the President has a subsisting mandate and backlog of campaign promises to be fulfilled within the next three years”.
Yakassai who was one of the most prominent northerners to back Jonathan’s bid for the presidency in 2011 said: “Let’s help Jonathan deliver, let’s help him succeed because I believe this kind of debate over the prospect of being fielded by his party in 2015 has the capability of distracting Mr. President.”
Mallam Sani, one of the leading civil rights activists from the zone speaking in the same wise called for caution. Reacting to Clark’s declaration, he said: “That was a very weighty statement. Because the North and Southeast are also thinking that it is their turn too. But, you see, I cannot say anything now, because I believe that Chief Clark is not the official spokesman of Mr. President. I will be seeing Mr. Reuben Abati (Media aide to President Goodluck) to find out the position of the president on that statement. It is after that meeting that I will be able to voice my opinion. My concern now is that the President has not said anything so far. And, you know, if something is said about you, and you did not refute it, it would look as if you have no problem with it. So by tomorrow (today) I should be able to tell you my stand on that.”
SOKAPU, which is the platform for the non-Hausa population in Kaduna State in its reaction to the controversy gave fillip to the Clark declaration saying that there was no constitutional encumbrance to the President seeking another term in office.
Speaking through its national secretary Marshall Adamu, the group said:
“There is nothing that stops President Jonathan from contesting the 2015 Presidential elections. As a Nigerian, who has met the criteria, nothing in the constitution says he cannot contest.
“Yes, we understand that the PDP has some zoning arrangements to give other zones some sense of belonging and equality. But the constitution of a party is inferior to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. So we are not a union that would want to discourage anybody from pursuing his constitutional franchise. This is a simple matter that should not be stretched too far,” he told Vanguard in a telephone interview.
Dantiye, a stalwart of the opposition All Nigerian Peoples Party, ANPP on his part, however, saw the debate as a window for the opposition to throw out the PDP from office.
The former lawmaker who represented Garki /Babura federal constituency told Vanguard that “the dismal performance of the incumbent President has boxed him to a disadvantaged line and in effect boosted the campaign effort of the would be candidate of the opposition by 80 percent.
“As it stands today President Jonathan can not win a free and fair contest in Nigeria because he has proved his incompetence before us and his candidacy should elicit celebration among patriots.
“I for one I am beginning to see the prospect of demystifying the so called incumbency power for the first time in our national life and we only hope that we are ready to seize the opportunity” Dantiye stressed.
“We should not lose sleep over the plan by PDP or Aso Rock to field President Jonathan by 2015. What those of us in opposition should be doing for now is to harness our resources and make the final putsch by the next election and it is a sacrifice we must do for generations yet unborn”, Dantiye stressed.
It’s a distraction — PDP
Dismissing the debate as a distraction yesterday, the PDP said it would not waste its time on the issue.
Speaking with Vanguard yesterday, the PDP’s National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh said the party was presently preoccupied with how to deliver dividends of democracy to the people of Nigeria.
He said the debate was a scheme by the opposition to distract the President, adding, ‘’2015 is diversionary, we are not interested in 2015 now, we are more focused to ensure that we deliver on our promises to the electorate.
“Nigerians do not have to live from election to election and the issue of election at the moment is secondary to us, we are very busy with governance and how to improve on the present situation. The National Working Committee, NWC that is led by Alhaji Bamanga Tukur is supporting President Goodluck Jonathan to ensure that dividends of democracy were provided for the people of Nigeria. ‘’The opposition parties want us to focus on election and who will win or not instead of democracy.”
ABUJA—Prominent political stakeholders from the North were at the weekend divided in their response to the renewed bid by elder-statesman Chief Edwin Clark to position President Goodluck Jonathan for another term in office in 2015.
While nearly all of them including those who vehemently opposed the president in his 2011 bid showed outrage over the renewed campaign, they nevertheless disagreed among themselves on a common position with some vowing that they would meet the President on the field in 2015.
Some of the Northern leaders also revealed that a prominent Ijaw leader pledged on his knees before northern leaders prior to the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP presidential primaries of 2011 that Jonathan would only serve a single term if supported by the Northern leaders.
The Ijaw leader who supposedly made the plea could not be reached last night and was said to be with the President at a function when Vanguard sought his opinion.
The PDP which controls power at the federal level has itself dismissed the renewed clamour, describing it as a distraction for the party and the president.
Chief Clark had at a press conference on the eve of his 85th birthday last Thursday, given vent to a second term for President Jonathan, the first person from the South-South geopolitical zone to lead the country. He based his claim on the fact that all other leaders of the country were not constrained in the bid for a second term.
Northern political leaders with the connivance of some Southern politicians had vehemently opposed Jonathan’s bid in 2011 on the basis of what they claimed as an infringement of the PDP’s zoning configuration. Among the most prominent vocal groups was the Northern Leaders Political Forum, NPLF led by Mallam Adamu Ciroma, a former Minister of Finance.
Yesterday, Ciroma whose bid to stop Jonathan failed at the PDP primaries refused to offer a comment maintaining the silence he has kept since the NPLF lost its fight against Jonathan in the 2011 presidential primaries.
Other northerners were, however, nonplussed on the issue. Among those who spoke were Ambassador Yayaha Kwande, Tanko Yakassaqi, civil rights activist, Shehu Sani, National President of the Southern Kaduna Peoples Organisation, SOKAPU which is the umbrella group of the non-Hausa population in Kaduna State and former vice chairman, House Committee on Appropriation, Alhaji Nasiru Garba Dantiye.
Speaking on Clark’s bid to sustain the Jonathan presidency beyond 2015, Kwande said yesterday:
No agreement stopping Jonathan — Kwande
“Even when we had an agreement in which Jonathan himself signed, it wasn’t put to practice so how much more when there wasn’t an agreement. So, if Clark said Jonathan will contest, Jonathan is a citizen of this country, so why do you think it is something extraordinary? Is there any agreement stopping him?
“Even when an agreement stopped him, it did not materialise. Leave Clark to talk, we will talk too. Clark has right to talk. If he didn’t obey known agreements why should he obey no agreements? Why?”
Clark refused to be dragged into assertions that a prominent supporter of the president from the South-South promised that Jonathan would serve only one term in office.
“I don’t even know whether we have three years ahead of us and we are talking. Those who have been elected should go and work we will meet them on the field in 2015 if we are alive,” he said.
Leading Kano politician Yakassai on his part refused to see Clark’s comment as an issue saying that debate on the issue could be a distraction for the president.
Yakassai who served as National Assembly liaision officer for President Shehu Shagari in the second republic said that the debate “may hand him excuses and license not to perform”.
“It is rather too early to begin this kind of debate when the President has a subsisting mandate and backlog of campaign promises to be fulfilled within the next three years”.
Yakassai who was one of the most prominent northerners to back Jonathan’s bid for the presidency in 2011 said: “Let’s help Jonathan deliver, let’s help him succeed because I believe this kind of debate over the prospect of being fielded by his party in 2015 has the capability of distracting Mr. President.”
Mallam Sani, one of the leading civil rights activists from the zone speaking in the same wise called for caution. Reacting to Clark’s declaration, he said: “That was a very weighty statement. Because the North and Southeast are also thinking that it is their turn too. But, you see, I cannot say anything now, because I believe that Chief Clark is not the official spokesman of Mr. President. I will be seeing Mr. Reuben Abati (Media aide to President Goodluck) to find out the position of the president on that statement. It is after that meeting that I will be able to voice my opinion. My concern now is that the President has not said anything so far. And, you know, if something is said about you, and you did not refute it, it would look as if you have no problem with it. So by tomorrow (today) I should be able to tell you my stand on that.”
SOKAPU, which is the platform for the non-Hausa population in Kaduna State in its reaction to the controversy gave fillip to the Clark declaration saying that there was no constitutional encumbrance to the President seeking another term in office.
Speaking through its national secretary Marshall Adamu, the group said:
“There is nothing that stops President Jonathan from contesting the 2015 Presidential elections. As a Nigerian, who has met the criteria, nothing in the constitution says he cannot contest.
“Yes, we understand that the PDP has some zoning arrangements to give other zones some sense of belonging and equality. But the constitution of a party is inferior to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. So we are not a union that would want to discourage anybody from pursuing his constitutional franchise. This is a simple matter that should not be stretched too far,” he told Vanguard in a telephone interview.
Dantiye, a stalwart of the opposition All Nigerian Peoples Party, ANPP on his part, however, saw the debate as a window for the opposition to throw out the PDP from office.
The former lawmaker who represented Garki /Babura federal constituency told Vanguard that “the dismal performance of the incumbent President has boxed him to a disadvantaged line and in effect boosted the campaign effort of the would be candidate of the opposition by 80 percent.
“As it stands today President Jonathan can not win a free and fair contest in Nigeria because he has proved his incompetence before us and his candidacy should elicit celebration among patriots.
“I for one I am beginning to see the prospect of demystifying the so called incumbency power for the first time in our national life and we only hope that we are ready to seize the opportunity” Dantiye stressed.
“We should not lose sleep over the plan by PDP or Aso Rock to field President Jonathan by 2015. What those of us in opposition should be doing for now is to harness our resources and make the final putsch by the next election and it is a sacrifice we must do for generations yet unborn”, Dantiye stressed.
It’s a distraction — PDP
Dismissing the debate as a distraction yesterday, the PDP said it would not waste its time on the issue.
Speaking with Vanguard yesterday, the PDP’s National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh said the party was presently preoccupied with how to deliver dividends of democracy to the people of Nigeria.
He said the debate was a scheme by the opposition to distract the President, adding, ‘’2015 is diversionary, we are not interested in 2015 now, we are more focused to ensure that we deliver on our promises to the electorate.
“Nigerians do not have to live from election to election and the issue of election at the moment is secondary to us, we are very busy with governance and how to improve on the present situation. The National Working Committee, NWC that is led by Alhaji Bamanga Tukur is supporting President Goodluck Jonathan to ensure that dividends of democracy were provided for the people of Nigeria. ‘’The opposition parties want us to focus on election and who will win or not instead of democracy.”
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
How Nigeria can work, by Gowon, Obasanjo
Eminent Nigerians, including former Head of State Gen. Yakubu Gowon, former President Olusegun Obansanjo and former Head of Interim National Government Chief Ernest Shonekan, yesterday said the country can only develop when its systems and institutions are strengthened.
They said the judiciary must be ripped of corruption; the rule of law must be respected; and due regard must be accorded democratic institutions.
They also said the country must ensure that “rogues and armed robbers” do not assume public offices.
Former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Justice Mohammed Uwais, Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN) and legal scholar Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN) said a strong legal system free of corruption is crucial in making Nigeria work.
They spoke at the Fourth Annual Conference of the Academy for Entrepreneurial Studies Nigeria (AES) in Lagos. It had the theme: Strong systems: Necessity for Building a Virile Nation.
Gowon said for a system to work, it must be visionary and evolutionary.
He said: “It must recognise and be tolerant of opposing views. A leadership cannot make progress if it only relies on the echoes of its own voice.”
Obasanjo wondered how the country’s value system worsened years after independence. He recalled that when he bought his first car as an army Lieutenant, a panel was set up to probe how he raised money to buy a brand new Ford Tanus.
“That was after independence. How did we lose that?” Obasanjo asked. He said it was because things were taken for granted.
The former President said after he left the army, he once overheard a colonel asking a major to give him keys to his (the major’s) London apartment to stay.
In the past, such a thing would not be allowed in the army without questions being asked.
Obasanjo said: “There was no sanction. We took it for granted. Now, it is difficult to change things. These things happened in our korokoro eyes ( presence).”
On the judiciary, Obasanjo said corruption still remains among judicial officers. “We removed some corrupt judges, but not all of them.”
According to him, corruption persists in institutions such as the judiciary, police and National Assembly because “rogues and armed robbers” are allowed into public offices.
He said: “The diligence undertaken before a judge is appointed is no longer undertaken. The same applies to other institutions. What we have are more rogues and armed robbers in the state Houses of Assemblies and National Assemblies. What sort of law will they make?”
The former president said if the weight of evidence dismissed by a Nigerian judge was used to secure a conviction for corruption in the British judiciary, it means that “the judiciary is now riddled with corruption.”
According to him, amidst the corrupt system, there are still those who are different.
He said: “Let’s understand and even sing-song the good ones. When we find things that are good, let us applaud them.”
To Shoenakan, there is no reason why Nigeria should not be a leader on the continent, being the most populous black African country endowed with abundant resources.
He said the resources have not been properly harnessed for the benefit of all; rather there has been over-reliance on oil.
“We must diversify the economy away from oil and gas,” he said, adding that several solid minerals have been left untapped:
Shonekan said: “We need to have more of the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas (NLGN) in this country.
“Let us also embrace space technology to improve our telecommunication system and forecasting.”
Shonekan said much cannot be achieved if the government does not create an enabling environment for the private sector to thrive; if infrastructure remains at its present decadent state, and if the level of security remains low.
Justice Uwais said Nigeria needs “a strong judiciary” to work. The judiciary, he recalled, started on a strong footing following colonialism and independence, but is now bedeviled by corruption.
He urged the National Judicial Council (NJC) to do more in tackling judicial graft.
He said: “The problem of corruption has also spread to the judiciary. There is need to do something about it.
“When I was CJN, quite a number of judges were removed from office because they were found wanting. Now, the impression is created that judges who are corrupt are allowed to go scot-free.
“We need a strong judiciary to guarantee to guarantee a strong democracy and economic and socio-political development. Therefore, all must be done to bring the judiciary back to its days of glory.”
Fashola said citizens must continually question themselves as to their roles in subverting the institutions.
He said: “The institutions have operated sub-optimally. It is not all men and women who can build institutions. Such a person must have character, compassion and selflessness.”
The governor said it must be realised that “the judiciary does not belong to the government; it is part of the government.”
According to him, the judiciary will not perform efficiently until there is federalism in the administration of justice.
“The question of a state police is not about if, it is about when,” Fashola said, adding: “Institutions will endure only if we re-access our own values.”
Prof Sagay said a strong legal system is the answer to Nigeria’s problems. However, there is nothing wrong with the laws, he said.
According to him, the problem is with the political class who, he said, have “neutralised and rendered prostrate our laws.”
He recalled the subsidy scam, and alleged looting of the pension fund, saying: “People steal pension funds while ageing pensioners die on queues.”
He added: “The quality of the political class has fallen. Nigeria has become a value-deficient society. Our history of rigging has no precedent anywhere in the world. Strong laws have nothing to do with it.”
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