Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts

Who was Alireza Akbari, the dual-national executed by Iran on spy charges

Saturday, January 14, 2023

 Story by Andy Silvester

Iran has executed British-Iranian national Alireza Akbari, the judiciary’s Mizan news agency reported on Saturday, after sentencing the former Iranian deputy defence minister to death on charges of spying for Britain.


Alireza Akbari has been executed by Iran on spy charges© Provided by City AM

Here are some details about Akbari and his case:

– He served as deputy defence minister when Ali Shamkhani was minister from 1997 to 2005, part of the administration of reformist President Mohammad Khatami. He had been a close ally of Shamkhani – currently the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council – since the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.

– He served in other security roles including as an advisor to the Iranian navy, and led the implementation of U.N. resolution 598 that ended the Iran-Iraq war in 1988.

– According to a caption in a video aired by Iran’s state news agency IRNA on Thursday, Akbari moved to Britain after being briefly detained and released on bail in 2008. Reuters could not verify if Akbari had moved to Britain in 2008, or when he returned to Iran.

– He was arrested in 2019. In an audio recording purportedly from Akbari and broadcast by BBC Persian on Jan. 11, he said he had returned to Tehran following an invitation by a senior Iranian diplomat involved in Tehran’s nuclear talks with world powers.

Iran executions condemned by Cleverly amid Tehran crackdown on Mesa Amini protests





Nigerian Heads of State and Presidents that die in power

Thursday, May 6, 2010

1. Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa -January 15th 1966 (Military Coup)
2. General Aguyi Ironsi-July 29th 1966 ( Military Coup)
3. General Murtala Mohammed-February 13th 1976 (Military Coup)
4. General Sanni Abacha-June 8, 1998 (Heart attack)
5. Alhaji Shehu Musa Yar'adua-5th of May 2010 (Pericadiatis}

Goodluck Jonathan sworn-in as President of Federal Republic of Nigeria (FRN)

 President Goodluck Jonathan 
Goodluck Jonathan has been sworn in as president of Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, hours after the death of the country's elected leader. Jonathan, who had been serving as acting president since early February, took the oath just after 9 a.m. (0800 GMT) Thursday at the presidential villa.

President Umaru Yar'Adua, who had a long history of kidney ailments and recently suffered from an inflamed heart, died Wednesday. His burial is to take place Thursday afternoon in his home state of Katsina.

Yar'Adua's death comes less than a year away from the next presidential elections in an oil-rich country once plagued by military coups. Under Nigeria's constitution, Jonathan now remains in charge until the vote.

Source: AP

Carl Paladino, Renegade Republican gubernatorial, is under fire again for sending out e-mail that depicts racism, pornography and Bestiality

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Carl Paladino
By Celeste Katz and Kenneth Lovett
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS

Renegade Republican gubernatorial hopeful Carl Paladino is under fire again - this time for sending a string of racist and smutty e-mails to pals and associates.

The outrageous e-mails, first posted onthe western New York blog www.WNYMedia.net, range from screeds against President Obama to videos of naked ladies.

And those were the tame ones.

His more revolting missives contained racist rants, hard-core porn and a video clip involving bestiality.

In one December 2008 e-mail, an African tribal dance is labeled an "Obama inauguration rehearsal."

Another e-mail titled "demotivated" spoofs a "motivational poster" with a group of African-Americans running away from a plane.

The caption: "holy s--t. Run n-----s, run!"

Democrats and Republicans quickly condemned the Buffalo businessman.

State Democratic Party boss Jay Jacobs said the "disgusting e-mails disqualify him completely from public service."

Republican Party spokesman Alex Carey deemed the e-mails "disturbing" and noted they "stand in stark contrast to what the Republican Party stands for and the values it promotes."

Paladino, a millionaire with ties to the Tea Party movement, insisted he's "not a racist."

"I confess to being human and imperfect, as are all of God's children," he told a Buffalo crowd Monday. "I am proud that I've created hundreds of jobs and opportunity for people of every ethnicity, color and sexual preference."

Paladino said he "didn't originate any of these e-mails" and was "somewhat careless" in forwarding them.

He said he tried to send the e-mails to "a very specific bunch of friends who somewhat enjoy that humor."

Paladino apologized to women for passing along porn - but not men.

"I say this to the men out there who have never opened a graphic image on the Internet: Don't vote for me. For those who have, I welcome your vote," he said.

For Paladino, a virtual unknown outside western New York, it's the latest in a string of embarrassing - and potentially politically fatal - revelations in recent weeks. He angered 9/11 families by saying Obama's health care reform will ultimately kill more people than the 2001 terrorist attacks.

The so-called "values" candidate also admitted to fathering a daughter 10 years ago during an extramarital affair. He has promised to spend up to $10 million of his own money in the race. He is running against Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy and former Rep. Rick Lazio for the GOP gubernatorial nod.

Source: www.nydailynews.com

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Sudanese begins voting in Sudan's historic elections

Sunday, April 11, 2010

By MOHAMED OSMAN, Associated Press Writer

KHARTOUM, Sudan – Sudanese across Africa's largest country voted Sunday in their first competitive elections in nearly a quarter century despite partial boycotts by the opposition and calls to delay the vote.

In Khartoum, turnout was lighter than expected in the first few hours of voting, aside from a few enthusiastic supporters of President Omar al-Bashir. Security was tight around polling stations and trucks loaded with uniformed security were deployed around the capital.


President Omar al-Bashir

Many of Sudan's 16 million registered voters, especially in the south where the war raged, have never experience competitive elections before.

"I have never voted in my life," South Sudan's President Salva Kiir said after casting his vote in a polling station in Juba, the southern capital. Kiir arrived exactly at opening time, but the voting station was not yet open and he had to wait outside for nearly an hour before he could cast his vote.

Kiir said he wished these elections laid the ground work for democracy in the country where military coups have been recurrent.



The elections, which will run through Tuesday, are an essential part of a 2005 peace deal that ended the north-south war that killed 2 million people over 21 years. They are designed to kick-start a democratic transformation in the war-plagued nation and provide a democratically elected government to prepare for a crucial southern referendum next year.

But two major political parties, including the southerners, decided to pull out fully or partially from the race, saying the process lacks credibility and was flawed from the start.
They called for a delay of the vote to address their concerns. The government refused.

Sudan's President al-Bashir, who came to power in a military coup in 1989, also cast his vote in Khartoum. It is the first time he is running for re-election in a multiparty race.
More than 800 international observers descended on Africa's largest country to observe the fairness of the contests, with the largest group from former U.S. President Jimmy Carter's organization. He toured polling stations in Khartoum at the start of the day.

"I think (opposition parties) want to see a peaceful transition and peace in this country, so I don't think there is any party that is threatening at all any disturbance or violence or intimidation of voters," he told reporters. "So we do expect and hopeful and believe there will be a peaceful election."

The opposition has made a series of complaints — that the National Election Commission is biased to the government, the ruling party has used state resources in the campaign, the number of polling stations nationwide was cut in half from 20,000, making it harder for those in remote villages to cast ballots.

"This is the first time that the party that carried out a coup organizes elections," said Sarah Nugdallah, the head of the political bureau of the Umma party, a major northern opposition group which is boycotting.

Some 16 million people will vote for over 14,000 candidates for everything from president to local councils. Experts said the elections are among the most complex in the world, where voters in the country's north have to cast eight ballots; while southerners cast a dozen votes. A hot line for voters has been set so they can inquire about where to cast their vote.

Voting took place amid heavy security and police have issued stern warnings that no disturbances will be tolerated on Election Day. Though the day is not a holiday, many shops in Khartoum were closed Sunday.

In the ravaged western Darfur region, rebels have called for a boycott of the election since a state of emergency exists and fighting continues.

Since 2003, this vast arid region has been the scene of a bloody conflict between the Arab-led government in Khartoum and ethnic African rebels. At least 300,000 have been killed and millions driven from their homes.

Election posters lined the few paved roads of the regional capital of al-Fasher, showing pictures of al-Bashir, the "strong and honest leader," and inciting voters to choose the "powerful party."

Essam Mohamed, a 28-year old resident of al-Fasher, said he is still waiting to see how peaceful the process is before going to cast his vote. He said mainly women, who are not working, have turned up to vote.

"It is still the beginning. Not a huge showing yet," he said. "I think these elections are important because we want to change local officials. But we are uncertain if that is possible. It is like a watermelon. We won't know until we open it."

In Khartoum, Amal Saleh, a housewife in her 30s, said she voted and expects al-Bashir's party to garner most of the votes.

"I spent no more than three minutes inside the center," she said. "I am not a ruling party member. But I think it will win...We know them better than others."
Associated Press Writer Sarah El Deeb in Cairo contributed to this report.

Source: Associated Press

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Sudan's Elections is a "Prearranged Elections" - Sham


Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir

By Mia Farrow

 In Khartoum this past weekend, U.S. Envoy to Sudan Scott Gration expressed his confidence that the April 11 elections in that country-the first since 1986-will be as "free and fair as possible."

Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir should be plastering "We Love Gration" posters all over Khartoum. No one in Sudan believes the elections will be anything approaching free or fair.

Intimidation, vote rigging, manipulation of the census, and bribing of tribal leaders are rampant. Most of the 2.7 million displaced Darfuris are living in refugee camps. They are unable or unwilling to be counted at all. All of this, plus the ongoing violence in Darfur, have caused key opposition candidates including Yassir Arman of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement to withdraw from the election.

The Carter Center, the only international observer mission in Sudan, announced that the election process is "at risk on multiple fronts" and requested a modest delay of the election. Mr. Bashir threatened to oust the observers, saying on state TV last month: "if they interfere in our affairs, we will cut their fingers off, put them under our shoes and throw them out."

Taking an unusually edgy stance, the Save Darfur Coalition -- an alliance of more than 190 faith-based, advocacy and human-rights organizations -- is urging the U.S. and the international community not to legitimize Sudan's presidential election. "We believe the election is not going to be free and fair, and it's not even going to be credible," said Robert Lawrence, the Coalition's director of policy. "The last thing we want is for the results to legitimize the dictatorial rule of President al-Bashir."

Hope is rare in Darfur, but when Barack Obama became president the refugees had reason to be hopeful. As a junior senator in 2006, Mr. Obama made his feelings about Darfur quite clear. "Today we know what is right, and today we know what is wrong. The slaughter of innocents is wrong. Two million people driven from their homes is wrong. Women gang raped while gathering firewood is wrong. And silence, acquiescence and paralysis in the face of genocide is wrong."

A year later, then-candidate Barack Obama said: "When you see a genocide, whether it's in Rwanda or Bosnia or in Darfur, that's a stain on all of us. That's a stain on our souls."

Darfuris were listening, and they hoped anew when President Obama said the Sudanese regime "offended the standards of our common humanity." They believed he would appoint an envoy who would take their plight seriously and serve as an honest broker between warring rebel groups and the Sudanese regime.

And how is his appointed envoy dealing with the perpetrators of those atrocities that have stained our souls? "We've got to think about giving out cookies," Mr. Gration told the Washington Post last fall. "Kids, countries-they react to gold stars, smiley faces..."

Cookies for a regime that is as savvy as it is cruel? Smiley faces for a thug who seized power by coup in 1989 and has retained it only through iron-fisted brutality? Gold stars for an indicted war criminal responsible for the murder, rape and displacement of millions?

This spectacularly naïve perspective-and accompanying policy of appeasement-has further terrified Darfur's refugees, who feel increasingly abandoned by the U.S. and marginalized within their country.

With the support of Mr. Gration and the U.S., the bogus Sudanese elections will move forward with what the International Crisis Group has labeled "catastrophic consequences."

"Since the April vote will impose illegitimate officials through rigged polls, Darfuris will be left with little or no hope of a peaceful change in the status quo," warns EJ Hogendoorn, the Crisis Group's Horn of Africa project director. "Instead many will look to rebel groups to fight and win back their lost rights and lands."

Following this Sunday's election, there is little doubt as to who will be the president of Sudan. So it is crucial that international observers, world governments, the African Union and the U.N. Security Council acknowledge the deeply corrupt voting process that will reinstate President Omar al-Bashir. They should declare publicly that Mr. Bashir, a man indicted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity, will rule without a genuine democratic mandate.

His regime must not be granted the legitimacy he craves.

Source: Huffinton post

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Sudan’s Multi-Party Elections produce Only One Winner

 President Omar-al Bashir

Rob Crilly
Journalist and Darfur author

The country's first multi-party elections in more than 20 years have produced a bewildering array of candidates running for parliament, president, regional assemblies and state governorships. The contest in Africa's biggest country has produced, perhaps fittingly, what must be the continent's biggest ballot papers.

But if the voting procedure is bewilderingly complex then it is already clear that the result will be straightforward: A crushing win for President Omar-al Bashir, Africa's most wanted man.

It wasn't supposed to be like this.

A year ago Bashir's unofficial pariah status was formalised by the International Criminal Court, which indicted him on seven charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for his role in Darfur. More than two million people are still living in squalid aid camps where they have clung on to life after being bombed and burned from their homes by Bashir's army and air force, or his allies among the Janjaweed - the mounted Arab militias.

Yet the past year has seen Bashir strengthen his grip on power. Minutes after judges in the Hague issued an arrest warrant, the Sudanese president responded by ordering the expulsion of 13 international aid agencies. Western governments and the United Nations cried foul but did nothing as the Sudanese authorities seized millions of pounds of cars, computers and satellite telephones - much of it paid for by international donors.

This year his troops have begun a fresh offensive in the Jebel Mara mountains, displacing tens of thousands more civilians as they battle rebels of the Sudan Liberation Army. Another rebel movement has been taken out of the equation, mired in cynical peace talks that lurch from stop to start and back again in Qatar.

And all the while, his henchmen have quietly been making sure that there can be only one winner in the four-day election that starts on Sunday. As the International Crisis Group pointed out in a report last week, the registration process has been skewed to favour supporters of the president's National Congress Party. At the same time, plans to have ballot papers printed outside Sudan have been abandoned, making it easier for blanks to fall into the wrong hands and for ballot boxes to be stuffed with bogus votes.

That's not good enough for most of Sudan's opposition leaders, some of whom have given up and withdrawn from the vote, wary of lending credibility to such a badly flawed process. The one challenger who could have pushed Bashir to a second round is among them. Yassir Arman, of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement, the former Southern rebel army, was the one candidate who might have had the clout to attract the support of other opposition groups and give the president a fright.

His decision though is clouded in mystery. Was it really because of shortcomings in the electoral process, or has a deal been hatched to hand the election to Bashir in return for a guarantee that Khartoum will not interfere in an independence referendum in the South next year?

The questions all leave the United Nations and donor governments, who are underwriting peace, in a bit of a pickle.

On the one hand, elections are a crucial step along a map laid down by the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement which ended the long running conflict in Southern Sudan. Sudan-wide elections this year are to be followed by that referendum in the South next January. There, voters will be deciding whether their future lies in an independent state, free from Bashir's Islamist-leaning Khartoum government. So if next week's elections fail, the bigger prize of peace and stability in the South, a land racked by hunger, disease and insecurity, could well be lost. Multi-party elections - flawed though they may be - are a step towards a more democratic Sudan and a final resolution of a 20-year war.

On the other hand, the biggest winner is looking like Bashir himself, a man who seized power in a coup and who will use a stolen election to cement his position possibly with a fresh wave of oppression. As an elected leader, he will have a defence against arrest by the International Criminal Court and the confidence to perhaps pursue the conflict in Darfur to its bloody end.

The choice is not a nice one: Cry "foul" and watch a five-year-old peace in the South collapse, sparking a fresh wave of death; or cry "fair" and watch Bashir emerge with a rigged mandate and the knowledge that once again he has outfoxed his opponents.

As so often in Africa, where wars tend to linger without resolution and power shifts from one big man to the next, it is the ordinary, voiceless Sudanese who will suffer. And once again, Western diplomats will try to talk about difficult choices and slow progress towards democracy as if they haven't just been made to look stupid by Africa's most wanted man.

Rob Crilly is the author of Saving Darfur, Everyone's Favourite African War:

Source: Huffinton post

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Michael Steele, RNC Chairman, calls his critics racist

Monday, April 5, 2010

By Alex Pappas — The Daily Caller


 
RNC chair Michael Steele defended his spending practices Monday morning, saying he has no plan to resign, and at one point suggesting that criticism of his tenure may be rooted in racism.

 
“I tend to come at it a little bit stronger, a little bit more streetwise if you will,” Steele explained to ABC’s George Stephanopoulos on Good Morning America, in his first interview since the Daily Caller broke the news last week that the RNC paid almost $2,000 at a risqué, bondage themed night club. “That’s rubbed some feathers the wrong way. At the end of the day, I’m judged by if I win elections and raise the money. That’s a standard I’m very comfortable with and meeting in November.”

 
Asked if “as an African-American” he has “a slimmer margin for error than another chairman would,” Steele replied: “The honest answer is yes.” Steele went on to explain that, like Barack Obama, he has had to contend with racism as someone who is “not ole boy network.”

 
Steele’s comments on race occured in the second part of the interview at the 1:01 minute mark.

 

After Stephanopoulos showed Steele a recent poll of Republican insiders that states 71 percent find him to be a liability, Steele said “they’ve been saying that since the day I got the job.” The chairman said he will not resign in the wake of the scandal and said the RNC is “taking steps” to fix the internal problems that allow financial irregularities to occur.

 
“The reality of it is, when I first heard about the behavior going on, I was very angry and we dealt with it,” Steele explained. “We got to the bottom of it. The employee was summarily dismissed for going against our internal policies and finance. We have been putting great controls in place for the last few months, as a matter of fact, on some of our finances.”

 
Despite FEC filings showing the RNC spent money on high-end hotels and airfare, Steele said he’s not the one the committee is spending the money on. “Those numbers that they talked about, you know, I’m not staying in fancy hotels — and Four Seasons — and flying around in corporate jets.”

 
But when Stephanopoulos pressed him, Steele rejected the notion that the RNC has spent more money than taken in. “No, I had more money left over at the end of the— I had a budget, I inherited a budget that had zero dollars left at the end of 2009.”

 
FEC filings show that Steele began his tenure in January 2009 with $22.8 million, and has since raised $96.2 million. During the same period, however, the RNC has spent $109.6 million, for a deficit of $13.4 million. A March 20 FEC filing shows the RNC has $9.5 million cash on hand.

 
Steele defended the RNC’s finances, pointing to money spent on Republican wins in New Jersey, Virginia, Massachusetts and 37 other races other state legislature and mayor races around the country. “We have managed the money in a way that has allowed us to compete in some races that we otherwise wouldn’t be able to compete in”

 
Steele also claimed he raised more money than the Democrats did in 12 months and that the RNC carried over same amount of money the DNC did from last year to this year.

 
Despite dismissing those “unnamed Republicans” who don’t like him and who speak to the press anonymously, Steele said, “I hear my donors. I hear my base out there. I hear the leadership.”

 
“And we’re taking steps to make sure that we’re even more — how should I say it — fiscally conservative in our spending and certainly making sure that the dollars are there when its time to run our campaigns,” he said.

 

 

Source: www.dailycaller.com

 

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RNC’s Chairman, Michael Steele, spent $2,000 at sexually themed nightclub with topless dancers


Finance documents show that the Republican National Committee spent nearly $2,000 last month at "a bondage-themed nightclub featuring topless women dancers imitating lesbian sex."


That is one of the many incredible expenditures reported by The Daily Caller, a conservative Web site. The Daily Caller's piece outlines the high-spending ways of RNC Chairman Michael Steele. Steele, the former lieutenant governor of Maryland, has spent much of his first year as RNC chief fending off controversy — and the latest Federal Elections Commission filings on the group's expenditures are sure to send him back into damage-control mode. According to The Daily Caller, two sources say he floated the possibility of the RNC buying him a private jet. He also spent tens of thousands of dollars at luxury hotels in Washington, Hawaii, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles, and the RNC spent $17,000 on chartered flights and $12,000 on limousines in February alone, according to the FEC reports.

Steele declined to comment to The Daily Caller, which noted that his defenders say such spending is necessary to lure wealthy donors.

The Washington Post's Greg Sargent reports that the RNC is denying that Steele spent the nearly $2,000 at the sexually themed nightclub. Implicitly acknowledging that the report was correct that RNC funds were spent at the nightclub, a spokesman adamantly denies that Steele was involved in any way, saying it was "a reimbursement made to a noncommittal staffer." The RNC says it is investigating.

MSNBC host and former Republican congressman Joe Scarborough has called for Michael Steele to leave the RNC, tweeting: "Michael Steele should resign or be fired."

— Andrew Golis is the editor of the Yahoo! News blog.

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RNC Chairman Steele suggested buying private jet with GOP funds

By Jonathan Strong - The Daily Caller


According to two knowledgeable sources, Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele once raised the possibility of using party money to buy a private jet for his travel.

“I know that … regular ongoing use of planes was something that was looked at,” says one person with direct knowledge. “I can’t speak to how serious those inquiries were.” Both sources say Steele considered purchasing a plane outright or buying fractional ownership in one, through a company such as NetJets.

Steele’s spokesman, Doug Heye, did not deny that such discussions took place, responding that the RNC never had a “plan” to buy a plane. “I don’t know what somebody might have discussed or might not have discussed.”

While Steele has not purchased a plane, he continues to charter them. According to federal disclosure records, the RNC spent $17,514 on private aircraft in the month of February alone (as well as $12,691 on limousines during the same period). There are no readily identifiable private plane expenses for Democratic National Committee chairman Tim Kaine in the DNC’s last three months of filings.

The RNC explains that Steele charters jets only when commercial service is unavailable, or when his tight schedule requires it. “Anytime the chairman has taken any private travel has been a either to a route that doesn’t exist or because of connections and multiple travel to where he just wasn’t able to do so,” Heye said. Yet Steele’s office repeatedly refused to explain in specific terms the circumstances of the February charter flights.

Once on the ground, FEC filings suggest, Steele travels in style. A February RNC trip to California, for example, included a $9,099 stop at the Beverly Hills Hotel, $6,596 dropped at the nearby Four Seasons, and $1,620.71 spent [update: the amount is actually $1,946.25] at Voyeur West Hollywood, a bondage-themed nightclub featuring topless women dancers imitating lesbian sex.

RNC trips to other cities produced bills from a long list of chic and costly hotels such as the Venetian and the M Resort in Las Vegas, and the W (for a total of $19,443) in Washington. A midwinter trip to Hawaii cost the RNC $43,828, not including airfare.

Steele himself declined numerous interview requests, though his defenders point out that luxurious accommodations are sometimes necessary to attract big-time donors, especially since Republicans remain in the minority in Washington.

Still, the nature and size of Steele’s expenses are likely to reignite persistent complaints from high-end donors and key party figures that the RNC is bleeding cash in the months before a pivotal midterm election. Several months into Steele’s term as chairman, his spending spurred Republican committeemen to pass a resolution requiring checks to be signed by at least two RNC officers, and contracts over $100,000 to go out to competitive bidding.

Complaints, almost always expressed off the record, have been bitter. “This is not somebody who is out recruiting candidates,” said an aide who worked closely with Steele. “He is not meeting with donors. He’s not asking for money. The guy is writing his book or doing his speaking gigs, or whatever the hell else he fills his days with. Those are his priorities.”

March 20 FEC filing shows the RNC has $9.5 million cash on hand. Steele began his tenure with $22.8 million, and has since raised $96.2 million. During the same period, however, the RNC has spent $109.6 million, for a deficit of $13.4 million. That spending included aid to the campaigns that elected Gov. Bob McDonnell in Virginia and Gov. Chris Christie in New Jersey.

“The story is less what’s left, and more what’s been spent,” said one longtime Republican operative. “It’s difficult to draw distinctions between various elections because the circumstances are so different. But what is worthy of scrutiny is the March cash on hand versus where it was January or February last year, which is essentially the same picture. And that comes despite having raised more than $90 million dollars.”

According to spokesman Heye, the RNC is right on track with fundraising. “We’re very comfortable with where we are financially and we know that we’ll have the resources on the ground to be competitive in November as we move forward to try and take back the House and Senate.” He noted the RNC had outraised the DNC in seven out of 12 months in 2009 and was raising gobs of money in the wake of President Obama signing health care reform legislation into law.

Source: http://www.dailycaller.com/

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RNC Chairman Michael Steele says he and Obama have it harder because of their race

Embattled RNC Chairman Michael Steele broke his silence on the RNC fundraising scandal known as "bondage-gate" Monday morning when he sat down for an interview with George Stephanopoulos on ABC's "Good Morning America." Expressing racial kinship with the man he spends a good deal of his time attacking, Steele said that because of the color of their skin, he and President Obama aren't granted much latitude for mistakes on the job.

Stephanopoulos, offering up a question from a viewer named "Myron" via his blog, asked, "Do you feel that, as an African-American, you have a slimmer margin for error than another chairman would?"

"The honest answer is yes," said Steele responded. "Barack Obama has a slimmer margin. A lot of folks do. It's a different role for me to play and others to play and that's just the reality of it. But you take that as part of the nature of it."

 Steele also highlighted the stylistic differences between himself and leaders of the GOP establishment. His approach to leading the party is "grass-roots-oriented" rather than "old-boy-network-oriented," he said, telling Stephanopoulos that he tends to "come at it a little bit stronger, a little bit more streetwise." He grants that his leadership style has "rubbed some feathers the wrong way."

Steele also addressed the scandal that broke last week when the conservative website The Daily Caller revealed that the RNC had reimbursed close to $2,000 in expenses for entertaining donors at a bondage-themed sex club in West Hollywood. The issue has become "larger than it needs to be," Steele said, and stressed that he took swift action, firing the staffer who had put in for the expenses and ensuring that the committee doesn't get involved in such spending in the future. Even so, longtime GOP donors have started to direct money away from the RNC, opting instead to give directly to candidates or the party's House and Senate campaign committees.

 "The reality of it is, when I first heard about this behavior going on, I was very angry, and we dealt with it. We got to the bottom of it," Steele said. "We have been putting great controls in place for the last few months, as a matter of fact, on some of our financing."

Steele also denied the larger thrust of the report in The Daily Caller: that he's a high-roller who overspends on private airfare, deluxe travel accommodations, and limousines. He added that figures within the GOP have been keen to flush him out of his post "since the day I got the job."

He insisted that his record speaks for itself. "At the end of the day, I've raised more money than the Democrats in seven out of 12 months," Steele said. "I carry over the same amount of money as the DNC in 2010. The bottom line is, I hear my donors, I hear our base out there, I hear the leadership. And we're taking steps to make sure that we're even more - how shall we say it - fiscally conservative in our spending and certainly making sure the dollars are there when it's time to run our campaigns."

Steele's charm offensive may give him some breathing room as he continues piloting the national GOP toward the critical 2010 midterms - though the committee's bid to move on and restore order was derailed a bit by a report in Monday's Washington Post that it had hired Neil S. Alpert as a fundraising aide. Alpert had been fined $4,000 by the District of Columbia for alleged fundraising improprieties involving a political action committee supporting major-league baseball in the District. Albert paid the fine but denied any wrongdoing, according to Post reporter Perry Bacon Jr.

Meanwhile, the White House has already weighed in with a jaundiced view of Steele's racial observations. When a reporter sought comment at Monday morning's press briefing, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs called Steele's racial aside a "silly comment to make" and quipped, "I think Michael Steele's problem isn't the race card; it's the credit card."

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Nigeria's elected President, Governors must be graduates as from 2011 as Senate, Reps amend 1999 Constitution

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Written by Idowu Samuel, Taiwo Adisa and Ayodele Adesanmi, Abuja



The Nigeria Senate and the House of Representatives, on Thursday, respectively endorsed the Constitution Amendment Report by the (House) Committee on Constitution Review and passed into law, the electoral reform aspect of the constitution amendment bill.

While there were points of convergence in the Thursday resolutions of the two chambers, there were equally points of differences.

As an instance, the two chambers differed on the issue of cross-carpeting. While the House outlawed it, the Senate endorsed it.

The report on constitution amendment presented to the plenary session by the Deputy Speaker, Honourable Usman Nafada, outlawed defection by political office holders, while allowing independent candidacy.

According to the amendments, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), National Assembly and state Houses of Assembly had been granted financial autonomy, as they would now be paid directly from the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the federation and states.


The approved report also indicated that to become president, vice-president, governor, deputy governor and member of the National Assembly, candidates must possess a degree from a recognised tertiary institution, just as it also indicated that a member of the National Assembly who had served before could contest, even without being a graduate.

An executive summary of the report, which was made available to the Nigerian Tribune, indicated that sections 65, 106, 131 and 171 of the 1999 Constitution was amended to accommodate independent candidacy.

Also, sections 68, 109, 135 and 180 of the constitution was amended to deal with defection, thus making a defector to automatically lose his seat.

According to the amended sections, where a person elected on the ticket of a political party decided to join another political party without evidence of a merger or factions in his former political party, he would vacate his seat.

The amended portion of the constitution also specified that where a person who was elected as an independent candidate became a member of a political party before the expiration of the period of his tenure of office, he would vacate his seat.

Any political office holder who was expelled by his political party, according to the amendment, would retain his seat only if he refrained from joining another political party when his tenure was still on.

Sections 81 and 121 so amended made provisions for inclusion of INEC, National Assembly and state Houses of Assembly for payment in the consolidated revenue fund of the federation and the states.

According to the proposed amendment, section 65, 131 and 177 had been altered to encourage a certain level of academic qualification among contestants into the office of president, vice-president, governors, deputy governors and member of National Assembly, such that contestants for the offices would need to possess a minimum of tertiary institution level or its equivalent, while obtaining relevant certificates of service as a member of the National Assembly for a complete tenure.

Sections 145 and 190 dealt with the periods of election in which a maximum of 60 days to a minimum of 30 days were required before the expiration of the term of office of the last holder of the office to a minimum of 120 days and a maximum of 150 days before the expiration of the term of office of the last holder of that office.

The report also recommended relevant sections of the Nigeria’s electoral law to accommodate the alterations and adjustments made in the 1999 Constitution.

Also, on Thursday, the Senate passed the electoral reform aspect of the constitution amendment bill into law, with the approval for a change in the time for holding general election which could see the next election holding between January and March 2011.

The senators had voted in favour of the amendment of all the clauses of the electoral reform bill on Wednesday, but they deferred the passage of the bill for the third and final reading because of the discovery of the omission of Section 109 and errors on other aspects of the bill.

The Senate thus directed that the errors be corrected and the bill represented for final passage on Thursday.

The bill passed by the Senate indicated that general election would hold, not earlier than 150 days before the expiration of the term of office of the office holder and not later than 90 days before the expiration of the tenure.

Another feature of the bill is the approval of the nominees for resident electoral commissioners (RECs) by the Senate, which were, before now, appointed by the president.

The senators, also on Thursday, approved the missing Section 109 of the constitution to pave the way for cross carpeting by members of the Houses of Assembly.

It was also approved that anyone who would seek elective office must be a university graduate or its equivalent, besides that he must be a citizen of Nigeria by birth, attained the age of 40 years and sponsored by a political  party of which he is a member.

The amendments also provided time frames for the disposal of election petitions before the swearing in a and general conduct of elections.


Source: www.tribune.com.ng

Acting President Goodluck Jonathan has sent the list of the first batch of ministers to the Nigerian senate today.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010




The List of Nominees

1.  Engineer Chris Ogienwonyi (Edo)

2.  Josephine Anenih (Anambra)

3.  Adetokunbo Kayode (Ondo)

4.  Godsday Orubebe (Delta)

5.  Dieziani Allison-Madueke (Bayelsa)

6.  Fidelia Njeze

7.  Somo Nuhu Wya

8.  Odein Ajumogobia

9.  Akinlabi Olasunkanmi

10.Professor M.K. Abubakar (Vice Chancellor Kebbi State University

11.Navy Captain N. S. Olubolade

12.Ndanusa Alao (Kogi) former NNN MD

13.Alhaji Murtallab Yar’Adua (katsina) Son of Late Gen Yar`adua .

14.Hon. Nduese Essien (Akwa Ibom)

15.Alhaji Umaru Aliyu (Taraba)

16.Alhaji Abubakar Sadiq (Gombe)

17. Olusegun Olutoyin Aganga (Lagos) MD Goldman  Sachs

18. Labaran Maku (Nasarawa)

19.Mrs. Josephine Tapgun (Plateau)

20.Bello Adoke, SAN

21.Captain Earnest Odebola

22.Chukwuemeka Worgu

23.Suleiman Bello

24.Sanusi Daggash

25.Bala Mohammed

United States mis-prioritized rebuilding of Iraq After Post Saddam Hussein:Former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice

Friday, March 19, 2010





HONG KONG – Former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Friday she would "many times over liberate" Iraq again, but she regretted the Bush administration failed to work closer with Iraqis to rebuild the war-torn country.

Rice, speaking at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said she believed history would eventually vindicate many of the decisions made during the presidency of George W. Bush.

"I would many times over liberate Iraq again from Saddam Hussein," Rice said. "I think he was a danger to the Middle East."

However, she suggested the U.S. government failed to understand "how broken Iraq was as a society" and should have focused its rebuilding efforts outside of Baghdad, the capital.

"We tried to rebuild Iraq from Baghdad out, and we really should have rebuilt Iraq from outside Baghdad in," she said.

"We should have worked with the tribes, worked in the provinces," she said, adding that smaller projects should have been favored over big ones.

"That's something that in retrospect that we finally got right" several years after the 2003 invasion. "And it's one reason I think Iraq has a chance."

Rice served Bush as national security adviser and later as America's chief diplomat. She now is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution public policy research group at Stanford University.

She is en route to the Chinese island of Hainan for the Boao Forum, an annual conference where executives hobnob with global leaders, early next month.

Source: Associated Press

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak undergoes an operation in Germany on Saturday, February 6, 2010.

Friday, March 5, 2010




Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak will undergo an operation on his gall bladder in Germany on Saturday, state television announced Friday after the veteran leader complained of pain. The ageing president had complained of gall bladder pain while in Germany for talks with Angela Merkel, the Chancellor of Germany.

Mubarak temporarily delegated presidential power to Ahmed Nazif, the country's prime minister.

"Whenever there is a health issue with president, all of a sudden questions of succession rise to the forefront of Egyptian politics, tremendous speculation, some concern and anxiety, and this is just one of those examples.

"The succession issue is one of the most hotly contested issues in Egypt right now. For good reason, it's tied into the issue of democratization and reform and so on."

In 2007, speculation snowballed to the extent that the president was forced to make an unscheduled public appearance to put a rest to the rumours.

One year later, Ibrahim Eissa, the editor in the chief of the independent daily al-Dustur, was sentenced to two months in jail after his newspaper published rumours on Mubarak's health in 2008, before receiving a presidential pardon.

President Hosni Mubarak turns 82 this year.

Niger: The fall of Mamadou Tandja

Wednesday, March 3, 2010



The military takeover, February 18, of neighboring Republic of Niger at a time when coup d’états were thought to be no longer fashionable, is, indeed, West Africa’s latest democracy deficit and must be condemned in all its ramifications.

Following a trend that has become depressingly familiar in West Africa over the past 18 months, army officers seized power in the uranium ore-rich country and removed President Mamadou Tandja from office.

There is no doubt that the ugly development was enabled by the political crisis that began last year when Tandja, through a referendum, extended his tenure in office indefinitely, beyond its December 2009 limit.

In fact, many people saw the coup coming because President Tandja had done everything to subvert the will of his people. And that explains why some have said that he got exactly what he deserved as it is popularly said that whoever makes peaceful change impossible, makes violent change inevitable.

Towards the expiration of his tenure, Tandja manipulated the legislature to amend the Constitution to accommodate a third term for him. He cracked down viciously on all opposition in the country and dissolved the parliament when he was not having his way with its members.

Indeed, he was operating as a maximum ruler. All entreaties by sub-regional groups, especially the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) that sent several delegations to him, fell on deaf ears, until that fateful day when soldiers, led by Maj Salou Djibo, shot into the Presidential Palace and took Tandja and members of his cabinet captive, dissolved all democratic institutions and suspended the Constitution.

Though, the newly installed junta, which calls itself the Supreme Council for the Restoration of Democracy, has promised to return the country to democracy, a military occupation of Niger Republic should not be the case at this point in the history of that country.

Sadly, the situation in Niger is a sobering reminder of the precarious state of democracy in a region all-too-familiar with the replacement of civilian presidents by military regimes.

For instance, the president and head of the army in Guinea-Bissau, was assassinated about a year ago, and the country is barely back on track towards civilian leadership with a transitional government comprised of both political and military figures.

Mauritania recently had a taste of this bitter pill and has struggled to regain its legitimacy after two coups in three years executed by the same military officers.

Now, if you should add the ongoing leadership crisis in Nigeria, the rising tension in Ivory Coast ahead of elections now five times postponed, and the slow and unsteady progress towards post-conflict reconciliation in Sierra Leone and Liberia, the picture is clearly that of a sub region acutely deficient in good governance and strong democratic institutions.

The Nigerien coup, the third in 18 months in West Africa alone, cannot be of any good to the people of the landlocked nation, most of who live on less than $700 a year.

Niger’s GDP growth rate is said to be just over three per cent per year with its population growth rate placed at about three and a half per cent per year.

The country remains handicapped by its landlocked position, desert terrain, poor education, poverty of its people, lack of infrastructure, poor health care, and environmental degradation.

In the 50 years since its independence, there have been three coups d’état, and the army has governed in place of elected leaders for 20 of those 50 years, with practically nothing to show to the nation of about 15 million people for their interventions.

Therefore, not many are taking seriously, the senior Nigerien officers, who, following serious condemnation of their act, protested that the army has no interest in politics.

Everything possible must, thus, be done by both the African Union (AU) and ECOWAS to make the Presidential Palace in Niamey uncomfortable for the coup plotters.

We totally condemn the takeover of power and support the immediate conduct of free and fair elections and handover to a democratically elected civilian government.

While we support all efforts being made in this direction, we must quickly note that the development in Niger should serve a note of warning to all leaders in the sub-region and, indeed, the continent, to desist from all acts of sit-tightism as they will only be creating an environment conducive for anarchy.

Military rule is unconstitutional and not fashionable anywhere in the world. And although the people of Niger may have celebrated the latest development as some of them were said to have hit the streets in wild jubilation on getting the news, it is instructive to note that what was being demonstrated on the streets of Niamey, the Nigerien capital, was basically the removal of Tandja. That should not mean endorsement for another un-democratic regime.

Tandja must be held responsible for this affront on democracy, and we recommend that he be tried for crimes against humanity for atrocities committed while trying to suppress the opposition, as such action will serve as deterrent to other leaders with similar plans.

While we urge the people of Niger to continue to defend democracy, regional bodies must put in place stronger measures to combat such unconstitutional change of governments.

Source: www.champion.com.ng

Danjuma’s $500m largesse





The recent confession by former Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General T. Y. Danjuma, of how he made a whopping $500million profit from an oil bloc the former Military Head of State, General Sani Abacha, awarded to him, has, among others, revealed how the nation’s commonwealth is being shared by a few privileged Nigerians, most of who do not know what to do with their share of the largesse.

Danjuma brought the matter to public knowledge when, at a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) consultative meeting with the theme: “Contributing to Philanthropy in Nigeria,” he explained his resolve to donate $100million out of his huge profit to float a foundation he named T. Y Danjuma Foundation, through which he intends to help the needy in the Nigerian society.

He said the grants from the foundation, which would be channeled to agencies and governments at all levels through NGOs across the country, would be deployed to help in at least three critical sectors of the nation’s economy, which he identified as “festering inadequate healthcare facilities, low quality education and extreme poverty.”
He explained that he decided to set up the foundation and to reach out to the needy because he realized he has become so rich and did not know what to do with the $500million.

Besides, he also realized that his fabulous wealth may cause quarrels among his children and family members when he dies. As he reportedly puts it: “At my age, I am 72 years now, what will I be doing with such money, $500million? … If I put it in the bank, these people will steal it and I don’t want my children to start fighting over money when I die, so I decided to commit 100 million dollars of the money to philanthropic activities that will help lift Nigerian society.”    

Noble as his action appears, there is no doubting the fact that the story of how he got the oil bloc on a platter of gold, how he sold it off to   organizations that have the competence to exploit it and how in the process, he pocketed a mind-boggling profit,  is at the very root of the problems of Nigeria.

What qualified  General Danjuma, who, as a soldier, had lived off Nigeria most of his life, for being specially awarded oil blocs, apparently at little or no cost to him,  by the then Head of State? Is it not one of the clear examples of the evils of military rule in Nigeria, an unfair system, where one man, in the guise of exercising power as Head of State and Commander-In-Chief of the Armed Forces, arrogates to himself the right to share off the commonwealth of over 150 million people to his personal friends and cronies?

This, of course, is how a few individuals close to the corridors of power, suddenly emerge multi-billionaires at the expense of the state and the common citizens, most of who do not know where the next meal would come from.

We roundly condemn the practice of giving away the people’s commonwealth to a handful of individuals for little or nothing and maintain that when this is done, both the state and the people become ultimate losers. Take the case of Danjuma, for example, while he may be rejoicing that he made $500million personal profit from the oil bloc deal, apparently because he got it for next to nothing, experts are of the view that he grossly under valued the bloc and so, sold it at the give away price of $1 billion. This means that in that oil bloc deal between Abacha and Danjuma, and between Danjuma and the ultimate buyers, the nation and her people have been grossly ripped off.  

This kind of official impunity, generally exhibited by past military leaders was transferred to the last civilian government in the form of import waivers. We condemn totally all these forms of abuse of power and suggest that thorough investigations should be carried out to unearth the details of such unwholesome and unfair diversion of the commonwealth to private pockets.

We believe that if the right thing had been done at the onset, the current proceeds from the oil bloc would have been of greater benefit to much more Nigerians, including the suffering people of the Niger Delta region and other parts of the country than what Danjuma is willing to give out as philanthropy to those impoverished by deals such as that which netted him $500 million.

This is why not many people seem to be impressed by the $100million philanthropic gesture because, in the first instance, the money should actually belong to the same common Nigerians, who are now being presented as beneficiaries who should dance and sing songs of appreciation. Also, given that this particular oil bloc deal is just one of the several juicy deals Danjuma and other bigwigs like him may have benefited from in such manner, he is expected to do much more than he is presently doing in order to level up with the exploited masses of Nigeria, most of who still lack basics like food and shelter.
This is however not to detract from the inherent nobility of Danjuma’s decision to confess and return a little of the people’s wealth unfairly put in his pocket by various past leaders.

Also, taking cognizance of the fact that Danjuma is certainly not the only citizen who has been so favored by various governments, we call on these individuals to please come out and also return part of the commonwealth in their possession for the benefit of the masses and by extension, for their own benefit, because it is the widespread poverty engendered by such situations that lead to increase in the crime rate, which affects both the rich and the poor alike.

Pfizer and Kano’s Trovan victims



Though the recent call by pharmaceuticals company, Pfizer on anyone with proof of participation in its 1996 Trovafloxacin Mesylate (Trovan) test in Kano, to come forward for a claim of USD175, 000 per person (about N26m each), is a welcome development,  the amount is mere pittance when compared to the criminal damage Pfizer did to the victims of their test in  Kano state.

About 200 people in the state took part in the test, which resulted in the death of 11 patients and permanent incapacitation of others.
Pfizer, towards effecting the out-of-court settlement reached, says claimants must come forward with proof of death or permanent incapacitation before they could be compensated. In fact, Pfizer has demanded a Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) report as a pre-condition for beneficiaries to draw down on the $75 million judgment money against it.

Pfizer apparently is insisting on this position considering that the trust fund set up by it, in conjunction with the state government to administer compensation to those affected, has received over 600 applications from Kano citizens, all of who claim they took part in the test and ought to be compensated.

Fortunately, Pfizer claims to be in possession of files and documents containing medical records and photographs of those who took part in the test, saying the tests by doctors to determine the real patients will be at no cost to those who come to make claims.

Breakdown of the settlement requires Pfizer to pay $10 million in legal fees, $30 million to the Kano state government and $35 million to the families of children who were drafted into the trial. The settlement also includes a provision that Pfizer rebuilds Kano’s Infectious Diseases Hospital (IDH), where the trial took place.

All that apart, what makes the Kano incident very curious is that the test was carried out even when animal testing had indicated that Trovan might cause significant side effects in children such as joint disease, abnormal cartilage growth, a disease resulting in bone deformation and liver damage.

In fact, the drug, which is said to belong to a powerful class of antibiotics called quinolones, in early-stage testing, had caused liver and joint damage in young rats and dogs, which should have ruled out testing in children.

That, apparently, did not matter to Pfizer, which cashed in on the outbreak of meningitis, measles and cholera in Kano, which claimed thousands of lives, to  dispatch its medical team to establish a treatment centre in the state’s IDH.

Otherwise, how come that while other humanitarian organizations such as Medecins Sans Frontieres (“MSF”), also known as Doctors Without Borders, that were in Kano’s IDH in respect of the outbreak, offered the sick safe and effective treatments for bacterial meningitis, Pfizer could only embark on a medical experiment involving the “new, untested and unproven” antibiotic, Trovan?
What happened in Kano in 1996, resulting in many children dying or being deformed through application of the Trovan test drugs, should never have happened and should serve as a big lesson to all other pharmaceutical companies in the world.

It obviously brings to the fore the need for them to conform to ethics in the testing of their new drugs and vaccines. It should also serve as a call on our local pharmaceutical companies to live up to the challenge of research and development of indigenous drugs.
The crisis, no doubt, must have been a 13-year public relations nightmare and a costly legal headache for Pfizer, but it is criminal that in its haste to test Trovan, Pfizer drafted the 200 children into its clinical trial without parental consent, and intentionally low-dosed its control drug to boost the Trovan profile, same way it falsified ethics approval forms.

And this can only happen in Nigeria. Before Pfizer’s 1996 trial, oral Trovan had never been tested for efficacy in children, in part because of concerns over its side effects. So how come nobody thought of, or even cared about these consequences before using them on Nigerian children? 

Where were our own government and hospital officials when Pfizer was conducting the unethical and unprofessional experiments?

Both the Kano and Federal Governments should, as a matter of fact, share in the blame for the pains the drug test must have caused the victims and their families. Rather than sharing in the $75m settlement, these governments should instead be co-accused for standing by and watching while these children were being used as guinea pigs. Everything Pfizer has to offer should go directly to the victims and their families.

 While we support every effort by the company to ensure that only genuine victims benefit from the compensation package, we insist that the amount offered by Pfizer is peanuts when compared to the damage done, because elsewhere, more stringent action would have been taken against company, which explains why some people are not happy that the case was settled out of court, as many issues would have been unearthed had it been allowed to run its full circle in the court.

Is this cabal more powerful than Nigeria?

The intrigues of a handful of presidential aides over President Umaru Yar’Adua’s illness have become too dangerous to condone any longer. With the connivance of elements within the army, the clique deployed troops on Wednesday last week in Abuja as they smuggled the ailing President home under the cover of darkness.

Completely ignoring the person and office of the Acting President and Commander-in-Chief, the clique deployed soldiers from the Brigade of Guards in the Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport, Abuja, where in something close to a coup manoeuvre, they switched off the power supply, transferred the ailing President from an air ambulance to a waiting land ambulance, and took him in a long convoy along a route lined with armed sentries to the presidential villa.

Executed entirely under the cover of darkness, it amounted to the most brazen security breach in the nation since the return to civilian rule in May 1999. Some knowledgeable commentators have already likened it to a coup or, at best, a dress rehearsal for one. It is alarming that troops could be deployed for any purpose in any part of the country, much less in the federal capital, without the knowledge of the Acting President and top defence chiefs. Even the Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Paul Dike, was reportedly kept in the dark about the troop movement.

Since the President’s long-standing ailment took a turn for the worse, necessitating his controversial evacuation to Saudi Arabia on November 23, last year, some presidential aides, allegedly supported by the President’s wife, Turai Yar’Adua, have used his predicament to deny access to him and used his name to promote their own private interests. In the process, they have heated up the polity, created a constitutional dilemma, promoted divisions and threatened democracy.

The troop deployment is one intrigue too many. This dangerous clique of power mongers and insubordinate security officials should be stopped forthwith. Who authorised the Brigade of Guards commander, Brig. Gen. Abdul Mustapha, to seize Abuja airport and the villa? What role did the Army Chief of Staff, Lt. Gen. Abdurahman Dambazzau, play? If Mustapha did not inform him before the exercise, what action did he take? If he did nothing, then he has lost grip of the army and should be shoved aside promptly.

If, as is widely believed, he was privy to the conspiracy, then he is unfit to continue as COAS. Jonathan should sack him if investigations reveal that he connived in the treasonable act. The argument that the guards have some autonomy in their professional task of protecting the President and his family is self-serving and untenable.

Acting President Goodluck Jonathan should not treat this grave security breach with levity or with his usual can’t-hurt-a-fly approach. There are indications that an investigation is under way. All the officials who conspired to smuggle the President into the country without the Acting President’s knowledge should be brought to book. Those still holding ministerial offices should be sacked. There is no point being C-in-C if troops can be deployed with no reference to him or the CDS.

It is tempting to say Jonathan is not safe until those who deployed troops illegally are punished and flushed out of the military. The ensuing investigation should also unearth the role of the National Security Adviser, Maj. Gen. Sarki Mukhtar(rtd). It has become obvious that the re-professionalisation programme of the armed forces begun in 1999 has suffered a setback. All the efforts made in the last 11 years to insulate the military from politics are being eroded by the unscrupulous clique that is manipulating the President’s unfortunate situation. The clique is reducing the President to a sectional leader and seeking to suck some senior military officers into its deadly gamble.

The officials privy to the Wednesday infamy — Col Mustapha Onoyvieta, the Aide-de-Camp; Yusuf Tilde, the Chief Security Officer; and Mustapha of the Guards Brigade — all report to various security agencies. Their various bosses, those who have not compromised their positions, should query them or replace them forthwith.

Dike should also, on his part, demand an explanation from Dambazzau for the Abuja insubordination and recommend appropriate punitive action to the Acting President.
The Acting President should also order officials to stop telling lies about the President. For three months and more, aides and ministers have lied shamelessly about his health and embarrassed the nation before the international community. Who, for instance, is giving Segun Adeniyi, the President’s Special Adviser on Media, the instructions to dish out the statements and comments he makes from time to time since he has also admitted to not seeing his boss?

Nigerians will not forget also that it is the refusal of the Federal Executive Council and the National Assembly to do their patriotic duty by invoking relevant sections of the 1999 Constitution to deal with the cabal’s shenanigans since November last year that has brought the country to this pass and emboldened the clique to more brazen actions.

It is commendable that the Acting President has sought to douse the heat unnecessarily foisted on the nation by the power-mongers, using the physically-incapacitated Yar’Adua, by empanelling a 26-member broad-based advisory board of eminent persons. Such moves are welcome as the nation rallies to confront the rascals toying with our collective destiny.

FEC has run out of excuses to avoid invoking Section 144 of the Constitution that empowers it to declare the President incapable of continuing to govern on account of his health. But it is not too late for the Council to free itself from a cabal that has so far prevented it from performing its role under the Constitution. Apart from dirty politics and sentiments, a President who had to be returned secretly in an ambulance after three months of intensive care abroad is surely unfit to remain in office.

Source: www.punchng.com

Mayhem in Edo Assembly


Adams Oshiomole, Edo State Governor, Nigeria


LAST week, members of the Edo State House of Assembly re-enacted the kind of disreputable conduct that had been so regularly acted out in other legislatures in the country. The Speaker at the time, Hon. Zakawanu Garuba, turned his gavel into a weapon, hitting the head and hands of another lawmaker. A legislator whipped out a teargas canister and sprayed some of his colleagues, with intent to suffocate them. Even more horrifying, another legislator emerged with an axe from his dress and split open the head of a fellow lawmaker.

The immediate cause of the mayhem was the attempt by some lawmakers to impeach Garuba as Speaker. To forestall the plan, Garuba hurriedly adjourned the plenary. His approach was to prevent a member whom he suspected would move the motion for his (Speaker's) ouster. Thereafter, commotion ensued, resulting in a bloodbath.

There can be no justification for honourable members of the legislature behaving like thugs. No matter how heated a debate might be; no matter how provocative a motion might be, lawmakers ought to be able to keep their anger in check. To suddenly lose their cool, and then resort to the use of dangerous weapons inside the otherwise hallowed chambers of the House, is to impugn their own integrity and lower their esteem in the eyes of the public.

Ordinarily, the choice of the principal officers of a legislature is the internal affair of the members. There are no compelling reasons to alter that principle. In exercising their prerogative, the legislators may opt to retain or to remove even their leaders, a fact which has been played out on several occasions in various state legislatures and the National Assembly. Often, though, it boils down to a game of numbers involving the protagonists and antagonists of the targeted officer for impeachment.

Garuba who was Speaker when all hell broke loose in the Edo House last week is a veteran of the somewhat routine but usually charged replacement of the Speaker. He was in the House of Assembly from 2003 to 2007. During that period, he witnessed the ouster of Friday Itulah as Speaker. He was also in the House when, in February 2006, there was another revenge ouster against David Iyoha, who was dropped and Itulah reinstated. In both instances, it was the result of the internal contradictions within the ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP), which held an unassailable majority in the House at the time.

Today, the composition of the Edo House is different. The PDP and the Action Congress (AC) each has 12 seats in the 24-member legislature. When he was elected Speaker in June 2007, Garuba's PDP had a majority of seats (16-8) from the flawed elections two months earlier. Just as Comrade Adams Oshiomhole (AC) judicially ousted Prof. Oserheimen Osunbor (PDP) to become Governor, over time, the election petition tribunal and the Court of Appeal had reversed the fortunes of the PDP in the Edo House. Last month, in a by-election, the AC trounced the PDP, thus making even the membership of the House.

Every discernible observer could foresee the crisis which engulfed the Edo House last week. Only a few days before, reports were rife about the AC reaching out to some PDP legislators to cross-carpet. The intention being to gain a majority and then assume the Speakership with the least constraint. Zakawanu Garuba, the then Speaker, retorted with a fiat, threatening to declare vacant the seat of any defector. This in spite of the constitutional support for such action, as evidenced, for example, by the crisis that has torn the PDP apart in Edo State. The party has two factional chairmen in the state, even though one is more vociferous.

The desperate attempt by Garuba to cling to the Speaker's chair is condemnable. He was not being recalled from the legislature; and so, he still has his seat as a floor member. As Speaker, he was only first among equals. The Speakership is not his birthright. With the defection of one PDP lawmaker to the AC, the legislature reconvened hours after the bloodbath and elected a protem Speaker, while impeaching and suspending Garuba and a few others. They are to be probed.

We do not expect calm to return so soon. In fact, a clash between supporters of the AC and the PDP was averted by the security agencies, the day after the squabble inside the chamber. But it is unacceptable that the police shut the gates to the Assembly. Save in so far as it was to prevent any breach of the peace, the police must recognise and respect the doctrine of separation of powers. The police cannot shut the lawmakers from their offices and their chamber. What the police should do is to provide the enabling environment for the Assembly to meet. Otherwise, by shutting the Assembly, the police would inadvertently be empowering a few thugs whose aim is to disrupt proceedings of the House.

The security agencies must be vigilant and firm while tempers run high. Only a few days ago, an explosive device, which the police said was capable of causing maximum damage within a radius of at least 250 metres, was discovered beside the perimeter wall of the Assembly complex. It is a frightening development that is bound to escalate the tensions in the House. Already, while the House has elected Hon. Bright Omokhodion as its substantive Speaker, a faction of the PDP has rejected the choice, insisting that Garuba remained the Speaker.

A parallel legislative leadership certainly bodes ill for the state. Ultimately, the tension in the House can be mediated by persons who can exercise moral authority over the lawless lawmakers. We urge their intercession, and let the House resume its regular business on the basis of its preferred leadership.
 
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