Day: December 11, 2022

Tinubu in Ibadan

Tinubu to S/West Muslims: I will be a just President to all Nigerians [Video]

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PRESS RELEASE

Tinubu assures South West Muslim leaders of faster economic growth and fair treatment

The Presidential Candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, on Sunday again spoke of his plans to retool the economy for the benefit of all Nigerians.

He made the statement in Ibadan today, in continuation of his engagements with religious groups and leaders in the country.

At a TownHall meeting with Muslim Leaders from South West in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, the APC standard bearer also commended religious leaders in the country for their continued prayers and sermons, which he noted, had contributed to unity and peaceful coexistence.

Describing the forthcoming 2023 general elections as “Nigeria’s momentous encounter with destiny”, Asiwaju Tinubu urged the Islamic clerics to educate their followers on the importance of exercising their franchise and voting only tested candidates with a track record of excellent public service, “and not falling for the lies and gimmicks of those that have nothing to offer.”

Tinubu, who spoke partly in Yoruba language, said: “This election season has been a hybrid of facts and falsehood, truth and lies. I would like the election to be one based on facts and truth.

“What is a candidate’s record of performance and what are his policies. I ask you to urge your followers to come out and vote and to do so wisely. Vote for a candidate that has vision for a peaceful, prosperous Nigeria where tolerance and compassion undergird our constitutional and legal rights.”

The 2023 Presidential Election frontrunner assured Nigerians that he would be “a fair and just leader,” adding, “My pledge for fairness and justice is consistent with the tenets of Islamic faith.

“A leader in a plural society like ours is enjoined to be a leader of all. If elected, I shall govern in an honest and democratic manner in harmony with our nation’s constitution.”

Citing his excellent stewardship as Lagos State governor, Asiwaju Tinubu promised to use that experience to lead Nigeria in the “same spirit of innovation and pragmatic vision to uplift the nation and renew the hope of Nigerians.

On security, Asiwaju Tinubu vowed to end the reign of terror, kidnappings and other violent crimes by recruiting more personnel that would be trained and retrained, in addition to providing more security tools and gadgets for effective fight against criminal elements.

The nation’s economy, according to Tinubu, would be diversified and restructured towards achieving at least 6 percent growth annually. These goals would be achieved through the reforms of our industrial policy, infrastructural enhancement, power sector innovation and significant budgetary reforms.

“Regarding the economy, we seek to repair the very structure of the economy. We can no longer flourish as an economy based on natural resource extraction.

“We must become a dynamic, diversified economy where those who want to work can find a good job. But let us also be a society sufficiently compassionate to help those who cannot help themselves.

“We must revive manufacturing and industrial growth so as to create jobs as well as produce the goods and services that improve the daily lives of the average person.

“We seek a minimum of 6 percent growth annually through reform of our industrial policy, infrastructural enhancement, power sector innovation and significant budgetary reform,” Tinubu told the Muslim leaders.

Regarding the agricultural sector, Asiwaju Tinubu promised to guarantee food security through enhanced productivity and improved farm incomes in order to ensure that no child goes to bed without food to eat.

“In the end, may no Nigerian parent send a child to bed hungry, despairing what tomorrow might bring. Instead, let all of our children, regarding of their faith or creed, be able to lay their head down believing in a better tomorrow of hope renewed.”

Earlier welcoming Tinubu to the interaction, MUSWEN President, Alhaji Rasaki Oladejo, said the event provided an opportunity for the APC candidate to interface with the Muslim leaders of South West on his plans for the nation if elected, “particularly on how he could make the country a land of great opportunities where no man will be oppressed.”

The National Chief Missioner of Anwar-ur- Deen Movement, Sheikh Ahmad Abdulrahman, said the gathering was not to campaign or endorse Asíwájú or any candidate.

“But to seek and to know and to see whether Asíwájú Tinubu can still deliver for the country as he did as governor of Lagos State.”

Tinubu was accompanied to the meeting with the South West leaders by the Deputy Governor of Lagos State, Dr. Femi Hamzat, the APC Governorship Candidate in Oyo State, Senator Teslim Folarin, former House of Representatives Speaker, Dimeji Bankole, Deputy Director-General of his campaign, Hadiza Bala Usman, Senator Fatai Buhari from Oyo and many serving and former members of the National Assembly.

The APC candidate had earlier interfaced with Bishops from Pentecostal Churches in the 19 states of the North and the leadership of the Christian Association of Nigeria, where he delivered a similar message as he did to the Muslim leaders of South West.

He had told the Christian leaders that if elected, he would run an inclusive government that will be blind to ethnicity and religion, but fair and equitable to all Nigerians.

Tinubu Media Office
Tunde Rahman
December 11, 2022

Tinubu speaks at Chatham House as Alex Vines looks on

Tinubu, Chatham House address & other matters

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By Tunde Rahman

It was another glorious moment in his campaign for the presidency of Nigeria. The All Progressives Congress Presidential Candidate Asiwaju Bola Tinubu was outstanding as he addressed the elite audience at the Chatham House London, that intellectual powerhouse for exchange of ideas on Monday, December 5.

He spoke with clarity on the challenges confronting the country and the solutions they require. His thoughts on how to move Nigeria to greater heights, rekindling their hopes in a greater tomorrow, were clear, unequivocal and realistic. Part of the solutions he offered is contained in his Action Plan for Renewed Hope in the country.

At Chatham House, Asíwájú Tinubu spoke on three main issues namely security, economic and foreign policies. His address was titled “Nigeria’s 2023 Elections: Security, Economic and Foreign Policy Imperatives.”

He was making a return to that elevated podium having also delivered a lecture there in 2011 as a leading opposition figure in Nigeria. He was also at the House with President Muhammadu Buhari in 2013 shortly after forming the APC, a coalition of progressives from the North and South of the country, which went on to win the presidential elections in 2015 and 2019.

To say Tinubu seized the moment at Chatham House last Monday is an understatement. He delivered an excellent address. To lend credence to this, the speech was punctuated at every turn by incessant thunderous applause. The moderator of the event, who is also the Managing Director, Ethics, Risk and Resilience of Chatham House and Director Africa Programme, Dr. Alex Vines OBE, demonstrated a deep understanding of the issues in Nigeria’s politics and elections and the person of Asíwájú Tinubu who he described as a former governor of Lagos and prominent politician who is no stranger to the House.

The build-up to the lecture was interesting. Asiwaju’s train comprising governors, former governors, APC leaders and principal aides had berthed in London on Saturday, two days prior to the event. A few dignitaries including Governor Nasir el-Rufai of Kaduna State had even hit London much earlier. Everyone was excited about the event given the significance of the address and that of that internationally respected platform. Chatham House is a big platform for top political gladiators across the world to showcase themselves and the ideas they have to move their countries forward.

Among those who accompanied him to the lecture were House of Representatives Speaker Femi Gbajabiamila, eight state governors from Nigeria, namely el-Rufai (Kaduna), Abdullahi Umar Ganduje (Kano), Dapo Abiodun (Ogun), Babajide Sanwo-olu (Lagos), Abubakar Sani Bello (Niger), Ben Ayade (Cross Rivers), Abubakar Badaru, (Jigawa) and David Umahi (Ebonyi) as well as two former governors, Dr. Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti) and Comrade Adams Oshiomhole (Edo).

There were also members of APC National Working Committee particularly the Woman Leader Edu and her deputy, Hajiya Zainab Ibrahim, as well as former deputy governor of Lagos, Chief Femi Pedro; former Lagos Commissioner for Information Alake; and his former Finance counterpart, Mr. Olawale Edun,

At Chatham House, Tinubu offered clear directions on security, economy and foreign policy. The kernel of his address bears restating here. He began by highlighting the values inherent in democracy, stating that Nigeria under his watch would epitomise the values of democracy during elections anywhere in Africa by ensuring that democratic ideals are followed and all forms of electoral violence rejected, allowing only the will of the people to prevail.

He assured that on his part, he would stand firmly against all forms of electoral violence and intimidation, having spent most of his career in the political opposition. “I have long fought against electoral malpractice and any attempts to extinguish the legitimate choice of voters. I will continue to do so,” he said.

On foreign policy, Asiwaju emphasised Nigeria’s role in Africa as a big brother, which has continued to be a beacon of hope to the continent and the ECOWAS sub-region, stating that when he becomes Nigeria’s president, his administration will continue to provide quality leadership to the sub-region, to ensure democratic ideal are formed in nations of the ECOWAS region.

“For one, as Africa’s most populous country and the continent’s largest economy, it is generally acknowledged that the fortunes of the African continent and indeed the Black race is tied directly to the health of Nigeria,” he said, while noting that Nigeria shares direct land borders with four African countries with whose peoples Nigerians also share historical and cultural affinities.

“This effectively means that the relationship between Nigeria and its immediate neighbours is much more than just a geographical expression. To be fully secure at home, Nigeria has always believed it must be the brothers’ keeper,” he pointed out. Maintaining that the broad principles that enabled successive Nigerian governments to interface development and security, and establish an organic link between national security and economic development with regional peace and prosperity is both impeccable and remains relevant, he promised that such is an approach which he is committed to upholding and advancing.

To respond meaningfully to the discontents and to redress the many dislocations arising from them, the APC candidate said Nigeria must begin by “reminding ourselves of that old dictum: foreign policy is but a continuation of domestic policy. As a first step, we must recalibrate domestic policy in order to revamp the foundation on which our quest to pursue human security rests.”

On security, he promised to frontally tackle the situation the country is facing, so that Nigeria can also effectively provide security support for its neighbouring nations. “The challenges which have manifested themselves with regard to our national and regional development and security trajectories are very well-known to all of us here: radical extremist violence, terrorism, banditry, kidnapping, human trafficking, trafficking in weapons, trafficking in drugs, climate change and resource-driven conflicts, etc.”

The economic blueprint he enumerated at Chatham House remains instructive. It will prove helpful in returning Nigeria to where it ought to be. For instance, Asiwaju promised to improve the framework already in place to boost the generation and distribution of energy across the country, reiterating that effective energy generation and distribution will help build the economy of the nation.

He stated that the nation under his watch would place emphasis on the use of technology to improve the agricultural sector for better production and contribution to the nation’s economy. “The present administration has invested heavily in agriculture, providing loans and expanding the country’s total acreage of cultivated land. We will build on this, but our focus will be on using technology and expertise to accelerate growth and development by providing the critical infrastructure necessary to achieve the commodity transformation in the agriculture value chain.

Also prioritising fixing the perennial riddle of energy supply, Asiwaju said there is no version of the world where Nigeria’s ambitions for itself can be achieved without solving the problem of how to provide energy to homes and businesses across the country. “It is time to recognise that the centralised approach to energy policy and infrastructure is not an optimal arrangement and is unlikely to improve by mere tinkering around the sides,” he said.

While promising to engage the private sector to better drive economic development across the country, he said the government could not continue to be the regulator and operator. This is how he put it: “The Federal government as regulator and operator, and price fixer is a broken model and one that we fully intend to fix if elected. We have privatised power distribution in Nigeria and generation to a certain degree. What we need to do, going forward, is to improve the enabling environment and further reform the legal and regulatory framework to attract more private investments in the sector as we have experienced in the telecom industry.”

He pointed out that his belief that the private sector is the fulcrum of economic progress is evident and documented, adding, however that, “fundamental flaws with the basic design of our national economy imperil the private sector from playing the role it ought to and adding the value it is capable of. In this instance, the government must act as a catalyst.” This he promised to do on all fronts, one of which is to address the conflict between monetary and fiscal policies. Also, budgeting will be based on the projected spending levels needed to push the real annual growth rate above 7 per cent while reducing the unemployment rate so that we can double the economy in ten years.

After the address, Tinubu fielded questions from the audience in the hall. Now, the opposition and their fawning media have tried unsuccessfully to belittle the success of the programme. They tried to devalue the evident gains of the lecture by upbraiding Asiwaju for asking some in his team to respond to some questions. It would have been a big surprise if the opposition did not behave to type. Tinubu has never pretended to be a superstar; a man who has all the answers. Asiwaju’s success as governor of Lagos State was predicted on teamwork and recognition of talent. Asiwaju believes in team spirit, a tradition he had long established and demonstrated as governor of Lagos. He does not believe in taking personal glory; he would allow team members an opportunity to share the limelight. For instance, taking the question on youth development, he singled out Lagos Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu in the hall, describing him as a youth running the state that is the 5th largest economy in Africa and improving on the legacies he left behind as governor.

It is important to add that a total of ten questions were asked. Asiwaju took six by himself. He asked some of those in his team to respond to four. Even in those responses, his interjections were sharp and punchy. That is the leader some would shamelessly accuse of dodging scrutiny. By his decision, Asíwájú had shown to the whole world his inimitable leadership style and the robust team he would put together if elected president, as he did as governor of Lagos State. Indeed, reviewing the entire programme, a research fellow at Chatham House who sat beside this writer during the address stated that one thing is clear though: “Your principal has demonstrated the great team he has and will deploy in the business of governance if elected.” Any need to add more on the misplaced and misdirected criticism of the APC candidate!

*Rahman, Media Aide to Asiwaju Tinubu, was previously Editor of THISDAY on Sunday

Atiku and Okowa

Recover Wetin? Let Nigerians be wary of Atiku’s sugar coated promises

PRESS STATEMENT

RECOVER WETIN? LET NIGERIANS BE WARY OF ATIKU ABUBAKAR’S SUGAR-COATED PROMISES, HE DOES NOT MEAN WELL

We need to warn Nigerians to be wary of the sugar-coated promises of former vice president, Atiku Abubakar and his Peoples Democratic Party as they embark on their inordinate and desperate campaign to gain power at all cost.

A party that should be eternally shameful about its appalling record in governance between 1999-2015 is now busy rewriting history, embellishing the locust years as if it was a golden era in our history.

Of course, this is fake history at its worst. We are not fooled. Nigerians should also not be fooled about the boldfaced lies, being articulated by the candidate and his party.

What is more shocking is Atiku’s audacity in standing up to ask for our votes despite what his boss, President Olusegun Obasanjo wrote about him in his book, ‘My Watch’. Obasanjo wrote that it would have been an unpardonable mistake “and sin against God to foist him on Nigeria”. Obasanjo still believes so till tomorrow.

Obasanjo still rues till today making Atiku his vice president in 1999, only to discover later,
“his shadowy parentage, his propensity to corruption, his tendency to disloyalty, his inability to say and stick to the truth all the time, a propensity for poor judgment, his belief and reliance on marabouts, his lack of transparency, his trust in money to buy his way out on all issues and his readiness to sacrifice morality, integrity, propriety, truth and national interest for self and selfish interest.”

We are, however, not totally surprised about Atiku’s latest desperation.

Aware that this is his last shot at the elusive presidency, Atiku, while on the hustings, has been spewing series of lies, making empty promises and presenting a false narrative about our present reality and the legacy of the 16-year ignoble era of the PDP administration, of which he was a principal actor.

He claimed at his rally in Abuja on Saturday that the country is not secure for trading and farming, a false narrative that he has been pushing around for some time, since he relocated to Nigeria from his base in Dubai, principally to contest the election.

We believe in his private moment that Atiku will concede that his view about insecurity is exaggerated. Our country is certainly better secure than in 2015 when the PDP allowed insurgents to seize 17 local councils in Borno and some four councils in Atiku’s home state of Adamawa State, when Abuja was under constant bomb attacks and people slept with eyes wide open. What further proof of progress made by the APC does Atiku need than the fact that he was able, recently, to carry his party men and women to Maiduguri to hold a rally, without any attacks by insurgents and bandits. Atiku can also drive smoothly from Yola, his state capital to Jada, his home town on a reconstructed road by the Buhari-led APC administration. The road was impassable for 8 years Atiku was Vice President and got progressively bad and totally cut off from civilisation until the Buhari government reconstructed it.

Atiku claimed that our country has the highest number of out-of school children in the world, without telling his audience that the problem, which was exacerbated by banditry in North West and insurgency in North East, took its root from the stewardship of his party when the population of out-of-school children phenomenally rose from 10.5 million in 2010 to 13.2 million in 2015.

The most grotesque of Atiku’s promise is that he will ensure that the ASUU stopped going on strike so that universities “reopen forever and ever.” Mr Atiku forgot to tell his audience that a PDP government in 2009 signed an agreement with ASUU, which it never implemented for six years, leaving the mess of the agreement for APC to deal with.

Meanwhile, as Nigerian universities were left to rot under the PDP’s watch , Atiku and his boss, President Olusegun Obasanjo opted to set up their own universities, ABTI-American University and Bell University, meant for the children of the rich.

A pointer that this former vice-president has not changed in his character as portrayed by Obasanjo was his promise to sell the newly commercialised NNPC Ltd and all its assets and subsidiaries for just $10 billion. Even before inviting bids, he had already undervalued the oil conglomerate, the way he undervalued Nigerian companies he was asked to sell, under the abused privatisation programme of the Obasanjo administration. Nigerians will remember that he made a similar promise in 2019, saying he would sell the NNPC to his friends and cronies. Surely, he retains the same mindset, though he has changed the terminology to ‘privatisation’.

In his campaign. Atiku’s refrain has been to tell the less discerning Nigerians that he is on a recovery and restoration mission in presenting himself to be elected.

The question every Nigerian must ask him in pidgin is: Recover Wetin?

Can the PDP ever be a recovery vehicle for our country, judging by its old record of service, when it spent $16 billion on power that only resulted in worsening darkness?

Can the party ever be a recovery vehicle when it also midwifed the privatisation of power distribution to cronies, also leading to more darkness.

Now the nation’s hope for uninterrupted electricity lies on the $2.5 billion Nigeria-Siemens deal, initiated by the Buhari administration.

We need to further ask whether the PDP is hoping to be a recovery vehicle for our armed forces, when during its stewardship, it diverted billions of dollars allocated for arms, into private pockets and marabouts. Our ill-equipped soldiers, were left to die as they faced guerrillas with superior weapons.

Today, the APC government of President Buhari has changed the misfortune of our armed forces and boosted morale with modern weapons, fighter jets, warships and others.

We ask again, can a party that cannot recover itself due to its internal implosion and crisis recover and rescue Nigeria? Let PDP rescue and recover itself and its abandoned national secretariat first. After raising over N20billion to build a national party office, PDP and its leaders plundered the money the same way they plundered our country.

Our advice to Nigerians is to ignore anything Atiku Abubakar says. He is a bloody liar and a desperate politician who should never be trusted.

Atiku is not coming to recover Nigeria from anything, he is only coming to restore it back into his pocket and those of his cronies.

Bayo Onanuga
Director of Media & Publicity,
APC Presidential Campaign Council
December, 11, 2022

Alhaji Jamil Gwamna

Big blow for Atiku as campaign chief Gwamna, ex-deputy governor back Tinubu

Alhaji Jamil Gwamna, a chieftain of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in Gombe state and north east coordinator of the Atiku campaign, has defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

Charles Iliya, a former deputy governor of Gombe State, also joined Gwamna in decamping from PDP to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

Gwamna’s switch was announced by his media assistant, Ibrahim Sani.

Sani said Gwamna announced his defection along with his supporters on Friday.

Sani said Gwamna cited internal crisis, poor leadership, disregard for rule of law within the party and disunity as reasons for his decision to dump the PDP.

Gwamna said “the leadership of the PDP in the state has poorly managed affairs of the party which led to different factions within the party.

“My political ideology is anchored on unity, inclusiveness, fairness and justice and if those are not found in the party then there is no reason to be in that camp.”

Gwamna, who is also the Sardauna of Gombe, said the PDP could not manage Gombe State with the “crop of leadership it has that prioritises personal interest against collective interest.

“In politics, internal democracy is very key and if you cannot find that playing out, then practising democracy on a larger platform such as governing the state becomes a big issue.”

Gwamna said that the APC was more organised in Gombe State than any political party and has managed its affairs in a more family-like manner.

He called on his supporters to mobilise grassroots supports across the state to ensure that APC retained the state with better voting margin than that of 2019.

Gwamna was the first runner up in the Gombe State PDP governorship primaries conducted on May 25.

Peter Obi

Peter Obi Self-centred, not a leader: Parting shot of Gov. Candidate

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The governorship candidate of the Labour Party in the Osun election and former Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yusuf Lasun, has revealed why he dumped Labour for the PDP.

Yusuf told newsmen in Osogbo that he left the Labour Party for the PDP because the former is unserious and rather in the hands of characters who conceal their true identities.

He lambasted Peter Obi and accused him of being a pretentious character who lacks leadership qualities and is only interested in his growth and ambition.

The Labour Party is a breeding ground for political hawks, jokers and snipers who are not interested in leadership; it’s unfortunate that these characters that cluster the party are being led by Peter Obi, whom we thought was a different politician all-together, but in reality, he is a worse character.

“Obi never called or picked up my call after the governorship election in Osun State; he didn’t bother to ask how far we have gone with those who supported us in the election.

“ Most of the money we got from donors for the election has still not been accounted for or remitted. Every effort I made to reach out to the presumed leader of the party, Peter Obi, by virtue of his position as the presidential candidate, proved abortive, and I was reliably informed that he said he would not want to have any discussion with me.”

Yusuf noted that after the election, he owed debt ranging from logistics for those who worked closely for the party during the election, among others, but Obi never cared to ask questions for one day; he instead instructed Doyin Okupe and others to withhold funds donated for our election.

“Stories abound how Peter Obi is spending money for the Labour Party in his immediate Anambra State, but nothing at all is happening in any other state of the Federation; what he does is use the party name to raise funds and concentrate them on Anambra State alone, with nothing at all for other states; such actions leave us to wonder if he is running for governor of Anambra State or what.

“There’s no presence of the Labour Party in Osun State, and the few votes the party got in the last election were due to my popularity and not that of Obi or anyone else. I think it’s high time we began to tell Nigerians the truth, that the Labour Party and Peter Obi are playing pranks on Nigerians.”

The former candidate lamented that he was treated with leprosy fingers and the Labour Party in Osun abandoned while money raised for the sake of the party was rather being diverted by Obi and his cronies who are using the party to enrich themselves.

Yusuf said that and many more informed his decision to leave, saying that they are not serious and Obi is a self-centred man and treacherous politician.

Yusuf warned Nigerians as he called on Peter Obi and Okupe to account for the millions of Naira that passed through the Bank accounts provided for Osun election and how they were spent.

About

Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu is a man of many traditional honours across the country, from north to south, west to east. The array of titles he has garnered was only comparable to that of Chief Moshood Abiola, winner of the 1993 Presidential election.

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