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No indigenous Fulani in Yorubaland, says Afenifere

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By Uche Mbah A Yoruba Socio-cultural group, the Afenifere Renewal Group, ARG, has advised the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, MACBAN, to get their facts right and stop misrepresenting facts. MACBAN Secretary General, Usman Baba Ngelzerma, was said to have declared on live TV that there are indigenous Fulani in the South West. “In Ondo and most of the Southern states, we have indigenous pastoralists whose fathers were brought up in those States and those who are there today were also brought up there. So, if you ask them to go, they won’t know where to go because they know these states as their own states", he was quoted to have said. But in a statement released by the ARG Publicity Secretary, Kunle Famoriyo, the group said there is no Fulani settlers in Yorubaland that can be remotely described as indigenous. “There is no Fulani man or woman living in any part of Southwest Nigeria that can own the ancestral history of the community as his or her family’s history. Conversely, there is none among the Fulani families that first settled in Yorubaland whose history of migration cannot be told by the indigenous Yoruba people", he said. “The deliberate use of words that confer on the Fulani people a status that is not theirs constitutes a security threat and does not portray MACBAN and its members as peace-loving people. The subtlety in Baba-Ngelzerma’s choice of words is another confirmation of the MACBAN’s alleged surreptitious plan to grab and claim ancestral land for its members through inappropriate means. “Baba-Ngelzerma’s claim that there are Fulani people who do not know any other place as their ancestry other than their place of birth owes its plot to mischief, deliberate distortion of facts, and a devilish plan to redraw the demography of indigenes of Southwest Nigeria.” According to the group, migration is a global phenomenon and "anyone should be able to live in any part of the world that suits his or her ambition...the ease of integration of a settler into a society is never determined by the settler’s terms, but by his or her readiness to abide by the laws and norms of the society. "As the saying goes, when in Rome, do as Romans do. MACBAN members and other Fulani herdsmen want to settle here on their own terms and by employing the most repugnant and vicious strategy, which the Ondo State governor, ArakunPOn Rotimi Akeredolu SAN, has been stood firmly against.”

By Uche Mbah

A Yoruba Socio-cultural group, the Afenifere Renewal Group, ARG, has advised the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, MACBAN, to get their facts right and stop misrepresenting facts.

MACBAN Secretary General, Usman Baba Ngelzerma, was said to have declared on live TV that there are indigenous Fulani in the South West.

“In Ondo and most of the Southern states, we have indigenous pastoralists whose fathers were brought up in those States and those who are there today were also brought up there. So, if you ask them to go, they won’t know where to go because they know these states as their own states”, he was quoted to have said.

But in a statement released by the ARG Publicity Secretary, Kunle Famoriyo, the group said there is no Fulani  settlers in Yorubaland that can be remotely described as indigenous.

“There is no Fulani man or woman living in any part of Southwest Nigeria that can own the ancestral history of the community as his or her family’s history. Conversely, there is none among the Fulani families that first settled in Yorubaland whose history of migration cannot be told by the indigenous Yoruba people”, he said.

“The deliberate use of words that confer on the Fulani people a status that is not theirs constitutes a security threat and does not portray MACBAN and its members as peace-loving people. The subtlety in Baba-Ngelzerma’s choice of words is another confirmation of the MACBAN’s alleged surreptitious plan to grab and claim ancestral land for its members through inappropriate means.

“Baba-Ngelzerma’s claim that there are Fulani people who do not know any other place as their ancestry other than their place of birth owes its plot to mischief, deliberate distortion of facts, and a devilish plan to redraw the demography of indigenes of Southwest Nigeria.”

According to the group, migration is a global phenomenon and “anyone should be able to live in any part of the world that suits his or her ambition…the ease of integration of a settler into a society is never determined by the settler’s terms, but by his or her readiness to abide by the laws and norms of the society.

“As the saying goes, when in Rome, do as Romans do. MACBAN members and other Fulani herdsmen want to settle here on their own terms and by employing the most repugnant and vicious strategy, which the Ondo State governor, ArakunPOn Rotimi Akeredolu SAN, has been stood firmly against.”

Coup In Guinea, President Conde Arrested

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Alpha Conde

By Gideon Njoku

Wearing a pair of blue jeans trousers, flowered shirt, unbuttoned a little below, and surrounded by heavily armed soldiers, President  Alpha Conde of Guinea, a tiny West African County of a little over 12.77m people, looked anything but Presidential.

There he sat, helplessly, looking scared and uneasy, not knowing what tomorrow  holds.

Conde was, in the early morning of Sunday, September 5, overthrown in a  Coup d’etat, by his country’s Military. He was immediately arrested and taken into custody, after being roughly shoved into a vehicle.

The Coup was announced to his country men and women by a deafening barrage of fire power which lasted for about two hours.

It is not known if there are casualties, but the country’s  constitution has been suspended.

A Colonel Mamady Doumboua of the Guinean Army  announced the dissolution of the Parliament and the closure of all land, sea and air borders/routes.

The reasons he gave for the Coup are the  usual in the third world, especially, West Africa -corruption and poverty in the land.

Conde, 83, won a third term in office in October 2020.

There has yet to be a reaction to the Coup from both the African Union,AU and the Economic Community of West African Countries, ECOWAS.

INEC Redeploys Commissioners, Top Staff

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INEC Logo
INEC Logo

By Ayodele Oni

The Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC) has announced the redeployment of five Resident Electoral Commissioners, (REC).

INEC National Commissioner and chairman (Information and Voter Education Committee), Festus Okoye, made the announcement in a statement issued on Sunday titled, ‘Redeployment of five RECs and four Directors.’

He said, “In the new postings, the Resident Electoral Commissioner in Osun State, Olusegun Agbaje, has been redeployed to Ogun State. At the same time, his counterpart in Ogun State, Prof. Abdulganiyu Olayinka Raji, will take charge as REC, Osun State.

“In the same vein, the REC, Bayelsa State, Dr. Cyril Omorogbe, will take up his new role as the REC for Cross River State, while Dr. Emmanuel Alex Hart proceeds to Bayelsa State as the REC from his former office in Cross River State.

“The REC, Zamfara State, Dr. Asmau Sani Maikudi, has also been redeployed to Kaduna State.

“Similarly, the Director (Voter Education and Publicity), Nick Dazang, has proceeded on terminal leave.

“Consequently, Victor Ayodele Aluko has been reassigned from Director (Administration) to Voter Education and Publicity as Director, while Mikah Thabbal Lakumna is redeployed to Administration from his erstwhile position as Director (Security).

“Nduh Lebari Samson moves from the office of the Secretary to the Commission to Director (Security). Yakubu Mohammed Duku, Director in the Electoral Operations Department, proceeds to Niger State as the substantive Administrative Secretary.

“The handing/taking over activities should be completed by Monday September 13 2021. The redeployments are part of the commission’s routine administrative posting.”

OPINION: Nigeria’s Cat and Mouse Fight With Amnesty International

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By Festus Adedayo

“Where the cat is a kitten, the court is wretched… No man there would rest at night because of rodents, for we mice would destroy many men’s malt, and you rats would tear men’s clothes were it not for the cat of the court who can pounce on you.  If you rats had your way, you could not rule yourselves” – William Langland, ‘The Parliament of Rats and Mice’.

There is this bitterly hostile rivalry between cats, mice and rats that is as old as antiquity. Unable to find a solution to this constant rodents/cats squabble, Odolaye Aremu, Kwara State, Ilorin’s dadakuada music exponent, retrieving his muse from ancient Yoruba wisdom, sang that only God could settle this endless rivalry – Olo’un lo le se’dajo ologbo at’ekute’le. In 2014, British’s House of Commons attempted to exploit this rivalry by using one to neutralize the other. Rising in parliament to debate the infestation of the House buildings built in 1860 by a huge mice population, MP Anne McIntosh said, “It is a matter of fact (that) the mice population is spiraling out of control.” To combat the rodents, members suggested storming the House of Commons with a herd of cats.

“The Parliament of Rats and Mice” is the title of the prologue to William Langland’s Piers Plowman. Considered to be one of the greatest works of English literature of the Middle Ages, it is an allegory of cats and rats, a narrative that tellingly depicts their rivalry. Though a social commentary on control of central power and authority during the reign of English king, Richard II, (1377-99) it is also a commentary on the disorder and abuse in government of his reign.

Just ten years old when his grandfather died, Richard’s reign was fraught with crises, ranging from economic, social, political, to the constitutional. It became so bad that a “continual council” had to be set up, with the purpose of “govern(ing) the king and his kingdom.”  Excesses of Richard II and his courtiers became intolerably high, including high level of corruption among royal councilors and advisers which the parliament could not stomach. Led by John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster and son of Edward III, the king’s uncle, the crown and the royal family considered the parliament’s eventual inquisition as threat to its power.

Langland’s allegory peered searchlight into this chaos, representing the cat as John of Gaunt and the kitten as Richard II.

After so many squabbles between them, the rats concluded that the world would have peace if rodents let the kittens be. One rat, addressing its colleagues, said, “Though we had killed the cat, another would come to catch us and all our kind, although we creep under benches.  Therefore I advise all the commons to let the cat alone… Where the cat is a kitten, the court is wretched.  That is witnessed in Holy Writ, to whoever will read it: ‘Woe to thee, O land, when thy king is a child.’  No man there would rest at night because of rodents, for we mice would destroy many men’s malt, and you rats would tear men’s clothes were it not for the cat of the court who can pounce on you.  If you rats had your way, you could not rule yourselves.”

Global human rights policeman, Amnesty International (AI) and the Nigerian government are acting out Langland’s allegory. AI, over the years, has become the “cat of the court who can pounce on you,” as it ferrets nooks and crannies, baying for the blood of “mice (that) would destroy many men’s malt.”

Last week, AI accused the Muhammadu Buhari-led government of extrajudicial executions in the Southeast and Niger Delta areas of Nigeria, as well as what it called “heinous crimes of enforced disappearances” of persons. It linked unknown whereabouts of persons to government. Said AI’s Media Manager, Isa Sanusi, “Not only these tragic disappearances, but also the government’s continuing failure to establish the truth and bring justice to their families, are growing stains on Nigeria’s reputation.

Scores of disappearance cases…remain unresolved and cast doubt on Nigerian government’s commitment to keeping its own citizens safe.”

Sauced with blood-curdling examples, AI’s frightening allegations were made on the anniversary of the International Day of Support for Victims of Enforced Disappearances.  Sister to a 33-year-old businessman whose disappearance since August 2014 after his arrest by Nigerian policemen, was quoted by AI to have said: “My brother’s disappearance affected everyone at home. We just decided to leave everything to faith, hoping he will show up one day. But we need closure, for us to know what actually happened to him.

As it is now, nobody knows whether he is alive or dead”.

Another was the celebrated disappearance of Abubakar Idris, known as Dadiyata. A university lecturer and vocal government critic, Dadiyata was abducted from his Kaduna home on August 2, 2019 and his whereabouts is shrouded in secrecy. He was a critic of the Kaduna state governor, Nasir El-Rufai. Another case cited by AI was that of 15 year-old Emmanuel John.

Arrested by soldiers in a raid of Synagogue church at Oyigbo in Rivers State in October, 2020 while soldiers were searching for members of the Indigenous People of Biafra, (IPOB) Emmanuel’s whereabouts too has remained unknown. Yet another was 44-year old Felix Adika. After his arrest by the Bayelsa state DSS on February 27, 2016, for alleged membership of the Niger Delta militancy, his family last saw him in March, 2019.

Recently, in a BBC piece she penned, Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani, Nigerian journalist and novelist, depicting the fad of “unclaimed bodies” of “missing people,” allegedly wasted by policemen on the streets of Nigeria, wrote about the experience of an Anatomy student of the University of Calabar, 26-year old Enya Egbe, who fled from his anatomy class upon seeing the body of a friend of his, hitherto declared missing, whose corpse was the specimen to be worked upon.

AI also alleged that Nigerian security forces’ clampdown on IPOB militants has resulted in a gale of arbitrary arrests, detentions, enforced disappearances and extrajudicial executions in the Southeast and Niger Delta area. It claimed that “the whereabouts of at least 50 suspected members of IPOB arrested in Oyigbo, Rivers State, are still unknown since October and November 2020.” So also 41-year old Izuchukwu Okeke, a commercial motorcycle rider who was last seen on July 5, 2021, after his invitation by the police in Owerri, Imo State.

“The cases of at least 200 people – including former militants from Niger Delta, members of IPOB, #EndSARS protesters and security suspects believed to have been subjected to unresolved enforced disappearances in Nigeria have been documented by Amnesty International – The real number is believed to be higher. Nigerian security forces often cite the anti-terror law that allows the authorities to hold people without charge or trial in unofficial places of detention, often without contact to the outside world in practice, clearly increasing the risk of people disappearing after being detained,” said AI.

While it could put up with allegation of the impunity of Nigerian police’s disappearance of persons which has been national pastime in Nigeria from time immemorial, the Buhari rat was pissed off at the temerity of the cat to question its right to urinate inside the soup bowl. In a reply to AI, similar to the flipping of an enraged rat’s whiskers, Garba Shehu, presidential spokesman, accused AI of championing the matters of “a tiny dot in a circle,” which he euphemized as “those that violently oppose the Federal Government of Nigeria.” He could not stand AI “parroting the line of Nnamdi Kanu and IPOB, a proscribed terror organization.”  He also claimed that “controversial American lobbyists are paid hundreds of thousands of dollars annually… laundering IPOB’s reputation in Washington DC.”

Global Terrorism Index, (GTI) n a 2015 document produced by the Institute for Economics and Peace, gave a comprehensive summary of key global trends and patterns in terrorism of the preceding 15 years. With data from the Global

Terrorism Database (GTD) GTI said terrorism had become highly concentrated, “in just five countries — Iraq, Nigeria, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria…. (countries which) accounted for 78 per cent of (global) lives lost.” It said further: “Nigeria has experienced the largest increase in deaths from terrorism… There were 7,512 fatalities from terrorist attacks… an increase of over 300 per cent. The country houses two of the five most deadly terrorist groups (in the world)…Boko Haram and the Fulani militants.” Yet, the government of which Shehu is a megaphone has deodorized the terrorism of Fulani herders, as well as bandits’, refusing to label the latter terrorists. It seems obvious that government is aware that the moment it does, many of the Northern bigwigs who offer nesting place for terrorists and their allies being masqueraded as bandits, would face the wrath of the globally authorized cats.

Justifying, rather than repudiating the allegations by the AI, Shehu wondered why the international organization would be interested in the case of an “IPOB (that) murder(s) Nigerian citizens… kill police officers and military personnel and set government property on fire, (who have now) amassed a substantial stockpile of weapons and bombs across the country.” He then propounded a racist counterfactual, a line of thought prevalent among and deployed by African despots to racially profile western opposition to their tyranny and thus legitimize their despotism:

“Were this group in a western country, you would not expect to hear Amnesty’s full-throated defence of their actions. Instead, there would be silence or mealy-mouthed justification of western governments’ action to check the spread of ‘terrorism.’”

Astonishingly, Shehu then queried AI’s legality in Nigeria. “Amnesty International has no legal right to exist in Nigeria,” he said. “The Nigerian government will fight terrorism with all the means at its disposal (italics mine). We will ignore Amnesty’s rantings… an organization that does not hold itself to the same standards it demands of others,” he concluded.

This cat and mouse tiff has endured between AI and the Buhari government almost since the latter’s inception. At a time, AI alleged that, in the name of fighting insurgency, Nigerian soldiers were massacring civilian population in the northeast. In 2019, same Nigerian government engaged in a spat with respected Wall Street Journal when it revealed that over 1,000 Nigerian soldiers killed by Boko Haram insurgents were secretly and unceremoniously buried in a graveyard at Maimalari Army barracks in Borno State.

Government’s attempt to query the legitimacy of AI for doing a job whose modus operandi is known all over the world is baffling and reveals its naivety or insincerity. Or both. The question to first ask is if Shehu was aware that Nigeria is a signatory to international legal obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, (ICCPR) as well as the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances? Does he know that by being a signatory to the conventions, Nigeria had ceded the right to “investigate, prosecute, punish and provide remedies and reparation for the crimes of enforced disappearance” to the AI?

It bears stating that AI is always at loggerheads with rogue governments all over the world that have no regards for the lives of their people. In Nasirabad, Sindh, Pakistan on April 17, 2017, like Nigeria’s Dadiyata, Hidayatullah Lohar was forcibly disappeared. An activist, his abductors, men in police uniform and civilian clothes, rough-handedly disappeared him from the school where he taught, shoved him inside a double-cabin grey coloured vehicle and his whereabouts, since then, has become a mystery. In same Pakistan in 2017 and 2018, repeatedly harassed blogger, Ahmad Waqass Goraya, was also forcibly disappeared, alongside three other bloggers in Punjab. Their sin was that they ran Facebook pages considered to be critical of Pakistani military’s policies. Same happened during the Brazilian military dictatorship in 1964 where 434 political deaths and disappearances reportedly occurred between 1946 and 1988.

As Langland said in ‘The Parliament of Rats and Mice’, humanity will never have rest at night if heartless rats are left to inflict destruction on the world. This philosophy explains the establishment of agencies of cats empowered to pounce on them. Yoruba have a saying that if a mentally challenged was left unchecked to do whatever they liked with the remains of their mother, they could barbecue it.

If despots and rogue governments, especially in Africa, were left unpoliced, they will turn the state into a field of blood. That was why the world criminalized in July, 2002, through the Rome Statue of the International Criminal Court, forced disappearance (or enforced disappearance).

It is a secret abduction or imprisonment of a person by a state or political organization, or by a third party “with the authorization, support, or acquiescence of a state or political organization, followed by a refusal to acknowledge the person’s fate and whereabouts, with the intent of placing the victim outside the protection of the law.”

IPOB has acted like a demented organization, inflicting irresponsible and senseless violence on the people of the southeast. Its sadism reflects the kind of leadership that Nnamdi Kanu gives it. It kills, maims and orchestrates untold arson on government buildings, with a magisterial impunity that must never be allowed in a community of human beings.

However, Nigeria has gone past the military despotism of 1984 – whether George Orwell’s or the cow-obsessed despot’s – where Bartholomew Owoh and his ilk could be executed retroactively. The moment we laud, rather than heckle government in its trampling on human rights, no matter who the victim is, we lose an essential component of human essence.

Felons abound all over the world and an eye for an eye would make the globe go blind. With patent bias harboured by the head of this government for Igbo and anyone else but the Fulani and his blood-soaked pedigree, it is dangerous for humanity to hand over Nigeria’s remains in his hand, unchecked. He will willingly make suya of it.

It is a notorious fact that his government’s sense of justice is warped and self-serving. Fulani nomads’ pillaging, acknowledged by the Terrorism Index, which made it to declare Fulani herders as a global terror as far back as 2014, is not worth the labeling of terrorism in the lingua franca of the Nigerian government; not the terrorism of northwest felons, even when they downed a military jet. Comparatively small-scale irritation of felons of southeast, spearheaded by Kanu and separatist agitators of southwest, never known to have shed a pint of blood, however provoke the misplaced hyper brawns of the government.

It is not difficult to explain the anger of this government against Amnesty International and its phobia for public disclosure. An English proverb says that evildoers are evil dreaders. Yoruba’s own version of this is that executioners mortally dread the presence of swords in their vicinity. Government’s dread manifests in its choice not to name Boko Haram sponsors all this while, even when requested by Rtd. Commodore Kunle Olawunmi and even Mary Beth Leonard, U.S.

Ambassador to Nigeria last Monday. Leonard had said America was eager to help Nigeria in the disclosure. Could government’s dread of disclosure be a consequence of fear of its own shadow?

Till date, government hasn’t said a word about the retired Commodore’s maggots-dripping allegations of its covert boost for insurgency.

Due to the collapse of the mirror that our society once used to reflect its core values, with which it identified evils in human action, it goes without saying that this Amnesty International and government’s cat and mouse tiff would be viewed by many Nigerians with the APC/PDP, region and religion lens.

As I write this, the pulsating rhythm of British reggae music sensation, UB40’s highly apocalyptic track, in the album entitled Labour of Love, the band’s fourth studio album released in the UK on September 12, 1983, filtered into my ears. Denouncing evil doers represented in a Johnny “who’s too bad,” who was busy “robbing and stabbing, looting and shooting,” UB40 had asked pointedly, “One of these days, when you hear a voice say come, Where you gonna run to?” It is such question we should ask Nigerians who legitimate known evils of this government.

So, like UB40, I ask, when individuals become personal victims of this governmental evil which they play the ostrich in labeling its correct name, where will they run to?


Adedayo, PhD, commentator on current and national issues, writes for Sunday Tribune

How Gunmen Abducted Traditional Ruler In Niger State

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Mahmud Aliyu

By Akinwale Kasali

Mahmud Aliyu, the District Head of Wawa in Borgu Local Government Area of Niger State, was relaxing in his house after a long day, when gunmen interrupted his rest and abducted him.

Nobody in the compound could stop them. Time was about 10pm.

The State Police Command through the Police Public Relation Officer, Wasiu Abiodun, confirmed the incident.

Abiodun said that the Traditional Ruler was abducted from his house on Saturday night at about 10pm by unknown , who were heavily armed.

He added that the Police are already on the trail of the abductors to rescue the Traditional Ruler.

“The Police tactical team and members of the vigilante of the area have been deployed for manhunt of the hoodlums, with a view to rescuing the victim and arrest the culprits”, he added.

Niger State is a hotbed for banditry and kidnapping activities, including mass kidnapping of pupils and students from their schools.

Insecurity: Governor Fintiri Orders Indefinite Closure Of All Boarding Schools In Adamawa State

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Adamu Fintiri

By Akinwale Kasali

Governor Adamu Fintiri of Adamawa State has ordered the immediate closure of all boarding schools in the State due to security issues.

The Governor ordered the closure of 30 boarding junior secondary schools out of 34 in the State.

According to a statement by the Adamawa State Commissioner of Education and Human Capital Development, Wilbina Jackson, the closure is to take effect from Monday  September 6, 2021 till further notice.

Wilbina described the move as a proactive measure to uphold the safety of the students, following the growing level of insecurity in the State.

The four schools not affected by the closure are; Government Girls Junior Secondary School (GGJSS), Yola, General Murtala Mohammed College, Yola, Special School Jada and Special School, Mubi.

The statement reads;

“The Hon. Commissioner Ministry of Education and Human Capital Development, wishes to announce that 30 boarding junior secondary schools out of the 34 schools in the state, have been de-boarded with effect from 6th September, 2021. From now henceforth, all the 30 government junior secondary schools are now day schools.

“The remaining four that are not affected are Government Girls Junior Secondary School Yola, General Murtala Mohammed College Yola, Special School Jada and Special School Mubi.

“This becomes necessary due to the present incessant security challenges faced by the country and owing to students’ tender age, hence the need for them to study under the care of their parents.

”All students from the affected schools are to be placed in the nearest public junior secondary schools within their catchment or domicile areas. Stakeholders, PTA, ANCOPS and others are to ensure compliance with this government policy.”

Insecurity: Akume Under Fire; SOKAPU Slams Him; Accuses Him Of Speaking Half Truths

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By Akinwale Kasali

George Akume, former Benue State Governor and Minister of Special Duties under the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration, has been slammed and accused of speaking half truth to his Principal on the State of Insecurity in the nation.

The Southern Kaduna Peoples Union, SOKAPU, said it was constrained to observe with total dismay and disappointment the insensitivity and utter recklessness with which Akume, who is one of the highly-placed persons of the Middle Belt extraction,  has continued to treat issues of insecurity affecting the Middle Belt Region with indifference.

SOKAPU made reference to what it described as embarrassing, the recent outing of Akume at a press conference held in Abuja. It said he pulled down Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom over his position on the state of insecurity in the region.

SOKAPU in a statement signed by its President, Hon. Jonathan Asake lashed out: “As if under a spell or influence of some illicit substances, the former Governor could not hide his desperation in pulling down Governor Samuel Ortom and indeed the entire people of Benue State who have for the past six years been under severe attacks by Fulani herdsmen militia.

“Instead of using his good office and closeness to President Muhammadu Buhari to tell Mr President the naked truth about the atrocities being perpetrated by invading Fulani herdsmen militia against the Benue people, he rather chose to play the role of an errand boy desperate to change the narrative and misinform or mislead the Nigerian people on the true situation on the ground.

“Nothing can be more unfortunate and pathetic than a situation where a man who is looked up to by the Benue people as a father and patriot chooses to stoop so low as to play the role of a man Friday in defence and promotion of a well-orchestrated agenda of Fulanisation which will ultimately consume everybody, including himself, if not checkmated.

“One may ask: why is SOKAPU interested in what is happening in Benue State? For the avoidance of doubt, we wish to stress here that we are interested in what is happening not only in Benue but also in Nasarawa, Plateau, Niger, Kogi, Taraba, Adamawa and, indeed, all other states of the Middle Belt, South-South, South-East, South-West, North-West and the North-East where these mindless Fulani militia has visited its terror on peaceful and defenceless communities leaving in its trail blood and devastation.

“Considering the fact that Southern Kaduna is one of the areas that has suffered the worst of these atrocious attacks by these terrorist, it beats our imagination that a man like Sen Akume who should, not only be heard but be seen supporting Governor Ortom in his unrelenting and resilient fight against the agenda of supplanting indigenous communities by sponsors of these terror attacks is regrettably not only keeping quiet, but also being used to attack his brother as if he is playing the character of a useful idiot.

“It is strange that Sen Akume in his press conference was more interested in defending his pay masters than speaking out in defence of the Benue people who are being terrorised, supplanted and their ancestral lands being taken over by the Fulani herdsmen invaders, a typical situation also being faced by the Southern Kaduna people. So, we feel the pain.

“The unfortunate call by the former governor on federal authorities to comb and retrieve dane guns, bows and arrows, kitchen knives, etc, with which the local communities have often used to defend themselves against the attackers shows directly that Sen Akume supports the genocide and ethnic cleansing being perpetrated against the Benue people and other ethnic nationalities across the Middle Belt and elsewhere in the country.

“We, the people of Southern Kaduna, being one of the main victims of these terror attacks, vehemently reject and oppose Sen Akume’s position and we hereby declare our solidarity and confidence in Governor Ortom who has taken a decisive stand for his people and the rest of humanity.

“Another issue raised by Akume is that Governor Ortom uses provocative language to insult his slave master but did not realise how he threw away decorum and insulted his own governor for committing no offence, other than standing firm in defence of the Benue people.

“It is laughable that Akume would accuse Governor Ortom of establishing Forest Guards as duly provided by a law enacted by the Benue House of Assembly, but chose to ignore the presence of Hisbah in Kano state, for instance, which enforces Sharia practices in line with the wishes of the people of the state. What a double standard of a leader!

“SOKAPU wishes to note here that if every governor remains resolutely committed in providing security and wellbeing of their citizens as Governor Ortom and a few other governors are doing, the present security challenges would have been a thing of the past.

“Finally, we call on President Buhari to heed to the voice of reason by Governor Ortom and other governors that have raised concerns on the present dangers facing the Nigerian state occasioned by the atrocious activities of these Fulani herdsmen invaders. The President can redeem his good name by supporting and partnering with state governors and other leaders who have seen existential threats posed by these attackers in order to stave off the imminent disintegration of the country under his watch.”

Gov Fayemi Says Nigeria Will Overcome Secessionists Agitations

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By Ayodele Oni

Ekiti State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi, has again expressed the hope that Nigeria will overcome its challenges, including secessionist agitations and remain united as a prosperous, indivisible nation.

The Governor made the remark in Ado Ekiti on Friday at a dinner organised in honour of members of Alumni Association of the 3rd Regular Course of the Nigeria Defence Academy led by former Senate President David Mark.

The NDA 3rd Regular Course alumni members, including former military Governors Tunde Ogbeha, Col Raji Rasaki, were in the State for the Annual General Meeting of the association.

A statement on Saturday by the Governor’s Chief Press Secretary, Yinka Oyebode, stated that Governor Fayemi maintained that the unity of the country, at this critical moment, was worth standing for.

In the statement, Dr Fayemi said: ” I believe in the possibility of a new and better Nigeria if all would be committed to confronting the challenges that bedevils the country.

“When you see the contributions made by the officers of this set, you will know that in spite of the challenges, the hills that we have transversed right from amalgamation, to independence, to civil war and now to democratization, you see possibility in a new Nigeria, a better Nigeria, a Nigeria that is responsive and responsible and that is dedicated to serving the people is certainly possible and it is ahead of us.

“All we need to do is commit ourselves to it as a journey and not as a destination. And on that journey we are going to confront difficulties but there also going to be hope in those challenges and we are going to come out triumphantly.

“I am confident that Nigeria will triumph at the end of the day, but we must speak truth to power.”

Governor Fayemi urged members of the association and leaders at different levels to be committed to building a Nigeria spoken of in the second stanza of the national anthem – where peace and justice shall reign.

“What you see in Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti (ABUAD) is a demonstration and reflection of the possibilities of a new Nigeria not through secessionist agitation, but through commitment that this country would be restructured, would be accountable and would serve its people in the best manner.”

The Governor lauded the retired military officers for bonding together since their admission into the NDA in 1967, through their distinguished careers and in retirement, despite their diverse socio- cultural backgrounds.

According to him, mutual understanding remains a key word in building a united country.

Founder of ABUAD, Chief Afe Babalola, in his remark, said one of the greatest challenges confronting the country was indiscipline, stressing that indiscipline is at the root of all socio – political and economic challenges confronting the country.

“This country is on a precipice everybody knows that, we must ensure that we keep this country as one.

“Let us have a new constitution similar to the one between between 60 and 66, less modification and of course true federalism.”

2023: Out Of Contention For PDP, APC Presidential Tickets, South-east Gropes For VP, Senate President

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By Chidi Levi

Contrary to Southeast’s desire, Nigeria’s two main political parties, the opposition Peoples Democratic Party, PDP and the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC will, in 2023, not be fielding Presidential candidates from that part of the country, this magazine can authoritatively reveal.

Southeast is an opportunistic Joiner- APC

“Our party, the APC, has zoned its Pesidential ticket to the South but I can tell you confidently that the Southerner who will be picking the ticket will not come from the Southeast”, a National officer of the party who is of a Northern extraction, told this magazine in confidence last week.

He further added that “South-east can not reap where it did not sow. Don’t forget that in 2015 and 2019, the South-east was in total rejection of the APC, the party cannot, in 2023, reward that rejection with a Presidential ticket”

Mai Mala Buni
Mala Buni, APC interim National Chairman: Did his party sell a dummy to Umahi and co?

Reminded that the Party now controls two out of the five South-east States, and has in its fold, a plethora of State and Federal lawmakers, the APC National officer simply quipped: “They are opportunistic joiners, they are not foundationers. They strolled into an already built and furnished house and hope to take it over. They were absent when we were toiling for the foundation. Manna doesn’t fall that way”

Southeast can’t win us the Presidency-PDP

Though the PDP is yet to officially make definite pronouncements about the zoning of its Presidential ticket, a top party official from North-central was categorical as to where the party will zone its 2023 Presidential ticket. Said he:

“I agree that the Southeast has a legitimate claim to the 2023 Presidency on our ticket, having solidly supported the party since 1999, but remember that our party’s unwritten rotational arrangement for the Presidency is between North and South

“President Obasanjo from the South-west ruled for eight years and President Jonathan from South-south ruled for almost six years. PDP’s only President from the North, President Yar’Adua, ruled for only two years.

“You can now see that out of PDP’s 16 years reign, the South held sway for 14 years and North for only two years. It is, therefore, logical that the North produces the next PDP president”

Besides the above argument, the PDP top shot was also of the view that “we are not a ruling party and looking at the present political configuration and temperature in Nigeria, the South-east cannot win the PDP the presidency at least, for now, maybe it can in the future.

“The counterforce our party needs to rout out the APC from power is a Northern- Muslim candidate but this does not mean that the North alone can produce the President”

Ironically, many PDP chieftains of Southern extraction, including the founder of African Independent Television, AIT, Chief Raymond Dokpesi, share a similar view.

Dokpesi: “We are all Nige­rians and there is no need for us to keep deceiving ourselves at this point. At the age of 70 and with my experience in or­ganising campaigns in this country, I can tell you that unless there is a candidate from the North, in my own considered opinion, the PDP will not stand a chance of winning the election.

“Let us look at it honestly. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo from the South-west did eight years; Goodluck Jonathan from the South-south also did six years. That made a total of 14 years.

“On the other hand, Uma­ru Yar’Adua from the North did three years, so there is an imbalance of 11 years. If in 2019, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar had not been rigged out of that election, he would have come back in 2023 to say that he wants to do a second term. And would anybody have stood in his way? No!

Raymond Dokpesi
Dokpesi: PDP can’t win the Presidency in 2023 without a Northern candidate

“So, for the PDP, the Presi­dential candidate must come from the North in 2023. People should exercise patience be­cause it will still come back to the South”

Eyeing the VP, Senate President Slots

Aware that the South-east has lost out in the chase for their parties’ 2023 Presidential tickets, several chieftains of the two parties from the zone who spoke to this magazine argued that it was time to come to terms with the grim political reality facing the Southeast and restrategize.

“It will be disastrous if we lose both head and tail. We must get the tail if the head is no longer available to us. We will, therefore, be making a big push for the VP and Senate President slots. We won’t allow both positions to slip away”, a PDP chieftain from Enugu told The Source.

However, River state Governor, Nyesom Wike’s rumoured Vice Presidential ambition, should its berth on the shores of reality, could jeopardise the South-east’s quest for the position.

Wike is allegedly working for the emergence of his Sokoto counterpart, Aminu Tambuwal, as the PDP Presidential flagbearer with himself as the running mate.

However, an unconfirmed source insisted that Wike and Tambuwal are no longer  in same camp since the leadership crisis that enmeshed the PDP at the National level. Wike is looking at, allegedly, running  with Atiku, or going to the Senate.

Nyesom Wike
Wike: Positioning for VP?

The dilemma of Southeast APC chiefs

Many of them, including Ebonyi State Governor, Engineer Dave Umahi, who was specifically promised the party’s ticket, was lured to the APC with the promise that the presence of top politicians from the zone in the party would facilitate the zoning of its 2023 Presidential ticket there.

These Party Chiefs have been selling the APC in the Southeast based on the above understanding, but the unfolding realities in the party have now left them in a big dilemma.

With a Southern Presidential candidate, the VP slot will naturally go to the North leaving the Senate President slot open for grap. Whether to push for the Senate President slot and how to explain to Ndigbo that the APC sold them a dummy with its presidential ticket promise are now the dilemma facing the likes of governors Umahi and Governor Hope Uzodinma of Imo state.

Sounds of Pessimism

Signs that the APC will after all not keep to its promise to the Southeast emerged on Friday when Governor Umahi featured on Channel TV’s current affairs programme, Politics Today, sounding pessimistic.

His words: “The heartbeat of the people of the South-East is that they should be given a chance whether in the PDP or the APC for Presidency of this country for the reason of equity, fairness and justice.

“I took that position in the PDP and one of the reasons why I took that position is because the South-East people have supported the PDP all the way and they have never been allowed to do that.

“If I follow APC for this length of time, and they don’t give the South-East an opportunity, I will feel bad.

“I will feel bad if I stay the same length of time as I did in the PDP and that happens. But I can’t say what I will do. It depends on what God places in my mind”

He seems to, now, have his regrets.

NYSC Member Delivered Of Baby Boy In Bayelsa

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NYSC Member gave birth

By Ayodele Oni

One of the female National Youth Corps (NYSC) members deployed to Bayelsa state for the 2021 batch B has been delivered of a baby boy.

The delivery took place at the Bayelsa NYSC Orientation Camp.

The Youth Corper, Yanusa Ranatu, was delivered of a baby boy on Thursday, August 31.

According to report, Ranatu, with call-up number BY/21B/1675, had just concluded her registration at the NYSC Orientation Camp in Kaiama, when she went into labour.

She was rushed to the State Referral Hospital in Kaiama, where she was successfully delivered of her baby, a boy, by another corps member, Dr. Clara Mbanusi, who was on duty.