POLITICS
Polarized Country:
Due to the docility of the federal government in tackling the security challenges, many states especially in the South have resorted to putting up mechanisms to protect their people. One such state is Ondo State where the governor, Rotimi Akeredolu issued a quit order to unregistered herders living in the state’s forest reserves.
That incident caused a lot of uproar as many voices from the North including the presidency rose to condemn and challenge his powers to have done so.Garba Shehu, presidential spokesman was the first to tackle Akeredolu and while that was about to die down, Governor Bala Mohammed of Bauchi state joined the fray when he declared that the herders who are mainly of the Fulani ethnicity do not need the permission of the governor to occupy Ondo forests.
In all of these, they quickly quoted Section 43 of the Nigeria Constitution which empowers every Nigerian to live and own property in any part of the country of his choice. But those who are in support of quit order to herders also questioned whether the same Constitution gave the settlers the right to kidnap, kill and rape the people in their host communities.As the security situation worsens, Kadaria Ahmed, a Nigerian journalist decided to heap all the blame of the rising insecurity on the media. Ahmed wrote; “What exactly will we (media) gain if Nigeria descends into war? How does it advance us, if our fellow citizens turn on each other and begin large scale ethnic killings, against each other? Let me even assume that a few of us don’t believe in Nigeria anymore and want to see it broken into its constituent parts. How does enabling ethnic strife help achieve this objective in a way that guarantees the outcome you want?”
Kadaria for whatever reason decided to heap the blame on what is happening in Nigeria on her constituency, the media. By so doing she also tactically exonerated herself even if the media were to be adjudged to be complicit. But how on earth should anybody blame the media for simply reporting what is happening in the country? One would have expected Kadaria to reach out to the present government to change their ways.
When Buhari made his unnecessary 97%and 5% comparison, one did not hear Kadaria as an Amazon of peace and truth speak truth to power to tell the President it was not the way to go. Probably, she may have endorsed it because those that have been consigned to 5% attention by the federal government may not matter to her after all.
Since the government has been giving the bandits a slap on the wrist despite the heinous atrocities they have been committing, and at the same time rolling out tanks to crush the members of the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) who only asked for self-determination, Kadaria has not raised a voice against it. Her alibi will be that IPOB want to divide the country but one makes bold to ask is what manner of peace are we having today? The country has been so polarized along ethnic and religious lines, is this how we will continue?
So it is not surprising when you hear the likes of Bala Mohammed saying Fulani herdsmen are free to carry AK47 rifles to defend themselves, Governor Bello Matawalle of Zamfara state said not all bandits are criminals and Sheik Abubakar Gumi canvassing for amnesty for the bandits who are taking innocent Nigerians including school children hostage for ransom. All these point to the fact that they believe they should not use the force of arms on them because they consider them to be of the same stock with them, if not why do we try to deodorize crime?
POLITICS
Edo Lawmaker Dumps PDP for APC
A two-term member of Edo House of Assembly, Mr Ojezele Osesua, has dumped Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for All Progressives Congress (APC).
Osesua, representing Esan South-East Constituency, announced his defection on Monday in Benin at a news conference held at the APC state secretariat.
The development came less than two months after PDP lost the state to APC in the governorship election.
NAN also reports that the lawmaker was received by members of the State Working Committee (SWC) of the party headed by Jarrett Tenebe.
Osesua said that he decided to dump the opposition party over what he called”irreconcilable crisis.”
He said that his defection was like paying back a debt he owed the ruling when he left the party in 2020, after it had sponsored him to win election in 2019.
“In 2019, I was elected into the assembly on the platform of APC. Due to some challenges, I left the party and joined PDP after one year.
“Though I was elected on the PDP platform in 2023, I have been indebted to APC. It is that debt I have come to pay with my defection,” he said.
On his part, the APC chairman commended the legislator for joining the party.
Tenebe described Osesua as a ‘focused, election-winning’ member, adding: “It’s not APC’s fault that PDP has issues.
“You will recall that during the election campaigns, I said our doors were open and the doors are still open,” he said. (NAN)
POLITICS
APC Accuses PDP of Politicising Stampedes
The All Progressives Congress (APC) has accused the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of politicising the recent stampedes in Abuja, Anambra, and Ibadan, where several lives were tragically lost.
In a statement issued on Monday in Abuja, the APC’s National Publicity Secretary, Mr Felix Morka, condemned the PDP’s actions, calling them “grossly indecent, insensitive, and despicable.
”Morka criticised the opposition party for using the national grief over the stampedes to launch a political attack on the APC-led administration of President Bola Tinubu.
Morka stated, “At a time of national grief over the stampedes that resulted in the deaths of citizens, the PDP seized the moment to engage in callous political chicanery.
“Rather than genuinely commiserate with the victims and their families, the PDP chose to politicise the tragedy, blaming the incidents on the APC government.”
He emphasised that the tragedies had united Nigerians in mourning and reflection, with a collective focus on how the incidents might have been avoided through better planning and organisation.
“Our thoughts and prayers remain with the victims and their families,” Morka added.
Morka also rebuked the PDP for exploiting the stampedes to attack the APC, particularly since the current administration was committed to addressing the challenges inherited from nearly two decades of PDP rule.
He reminded the PDP of the 2014 Nigerian Immigration Service recruitment stampede, which occurred under its administration, where many job seekers lost their lives.
“The PDP’s allegations only serve to remind us of its sordid record of maladministration and incompetence,” Morka said.
He noted that the party’s suggestion that President Tinubu’s administration was not committed to the welfare of Nigerians was “mischievous and out of touch with reality.”
He pointed to the current administration’s efforts to invest in alternative energy sources and the introduction of the Credit Corps scheme and the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND).
Morka also highlighted salary reviews for workers and increased allowances for corps members as part of the government’s commitment to improving the welfare of Nigerians.
Morka further highlighted the government’s commitment to provide free and subsidised transportation during the holiday period, approving grants for farmers and Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), and other humanitarian initiatives.
He asserted that this administration is “the most people-centric in our history.”
He also dismissed the PDP’s claim that the APC’s policies had damaged the economy.
“For years, successive PDP governments operated a phantom economy riddled with distortions and corruption, deceiving Nigerians into believing the economy was thriving.”
Morka commended President Tinubu for suspending his scheduled activities to honour the victims and expressed condolences to the families affected by the tragedies.
He wished a speedy recovery to those injured in the incidents.(NAN)
POLITICS
Journalists Honour Barau for Topping Chart of Private Member Bills Sponsorship in Senate
By Mike Odiakose, Abuja
Journalists covering the Senate have honoured Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Barau Jibrin, with award on highest number of private member Bills sponsorship.
Records on Private Member Bills sponsorship among serving Senators in the 10th National Assembly , obtained from Rules and Business office , indicated that Senator Barau tops with 21 bills within the last 18 months.
One of the 21 private member bills sponsored by Senator Barau was the NorthWest Development Commission Bill which is now an Act of Parliament legalising the creation of North West Development Commission (NWDC) after assented to, by President Bola Tinubu.
Barau in his response to the honour, said it would make him to do more for his constituents in Kano North Senatorial District and Nigerians generally.
”Your recognition of my legislative inputs in the Senate within the last 18 months, particularly on series of development – driven bills sponsored so far, is something that will energize and propel me further to do more.
“Once you are given an award, it’s a kind of telling you to go and do more. To whom much is given, much is expected.
”This to me also is considered as your contribution to making sure that the legislature remains vibrant.
”Once you identify those who are doing well and you honour them through awards of this nature, that will create some kind of competition and will propel others to do more so that they can be recognized at some other time in the future.
”We can’t perform here in the best manner possible, without your contribution to what we are doing. And you are contributing in a very robust way to what we do here, making us as partners in progress for the good of Nigeria and Nigerians .
”So our relationship with you is sine qua non to our success. We can never succeed without you because without you reporting what happens here , Nigerians can’t know what we are doing,“ he said .
Earlier, the Chairman of the Corps, James Itodo, told the DSP that the honour is strictly on performance as contained in the records and not for any other thing.