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Monday, September 23, 2013

HEALTH VERSUS WEALTH: THE TRIUMPH OF GREED



There was this joke making the rounds in the social media about the physical and metal fitness of Taraba state governor Danbaba Danfulani Suntai.  Though the situation is critical and serious one cannot but see the funny side of such postings and ingenious thoughts of our people even in the face of tragedy.  The author posted something like this – since Danbaba is a pilot and his supporters keep saying he is fit to take back administrative reins from Garba Umar, it is only fair that they fill up a plane with the likes of Hauwa Danbaba, Emmanuel Bwacha, Emmanuel Bello, Aminu Jika, Gibon Kataps, Sylvanus Giwa and the rest.  Danbaba should then fly the plane to Abuja, take a stroll to the Aso Villa, say hello to Jonah and Dame Patience; fly to Katsina for lunch with Turai ‘Yar Adu’a, Tanimu Yakubu and Abba Ruma, then fly back to Jalingo and drive to the state Assembly Complex and address the doubting legislators.  This, according to the author, will bring to an end the brick-a-brats going on about his health condition.

Though it may sound funny, I agree with the author that this will have been the fastest and surest way of permanently shutting up the naysayers.  Almost a month after Danbaba was brought back to the country, he is yet to appear in public, not even once – him of the flying hobby.  I have never doubted God’s miracles and sparing the life of Danababa from certain death is one such miracle, for not many survived a plane crash.  But those hiding behind the chair that the governor is sitting are trying to stretch the miracle to ridiculous levels.  Be that as it may, why are they afraid of allowing the man free reign in public to do as he wish just like the old Suntai before that fateful evening when he had the plane crash.  Hiding the man in the darkest recess of his bedroom and issuing press releases in his name or running to the courts to seek for constitutional protection will neither help the people of the state nor Suntai.

Garba’s antagonists went to the court purportedly seeking for the enforcement of section 190 of the 1999 constitution (as amended) but if truth be told, the unstated intention is to stop the acting governor from taking over governance from a vegetative (permanently?) person.  The clear and unambiguous intention of section 190 is the smooth transfer of power between a chief executive and his deputy whenever the need arises.  It was inserted in the constitution after the ‘Yar Adu’a saga and is meant to avoid a repeat of that traumatic period.  The constitution and its framers didn’t take into account the machinations of some unscrupulous elements holding a chief executive captive and governing in his name.

The constitution is made for men and not the other way.  This was the same scenario we were confronted with two and a half years ago when the national assembly in its wisdom invoked what they called “the doctrine of necessity”; a doctrine alien to the constitution and nobody challenged that.   Emmanuel Bello, the vociferous spokesman of the anti-Garba group was an Editor at that time and I can’t remember him opposing the doctrine as propounded by the National Assembly.  Why is he stridently opposing the application of the same thing in the case of Garba Umar – after all, Suntai has refused to appear in public and there is no independently verifiable report on the true state of his mind.  Apart from a video released showing him purportedly swearing Kataps as Secretary to the State Government, which was grafted with another one where members of the House of Assembly visited, no one has seen Suntai in public.  His handlers are turning him into an enigma.  Howard Hughes did it and got away with it because he was running his private organisation.  Katap’s oath taking is a subject for another day but in my opinion any oath taken without the presence of a Commissioner of Oath shall be invalid.  If the Taraba state Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) is up and doing, they should look into this.

Seeing the unnecessary tension that gripped the nation during the twilight days of the ‘Yar Adua’a administration and the manner his wife and her co-conspirators handled the issue and the resultant bad blood it generated, one should be forgiven to think that Suntai’s praetorians will spare the struggling state of Taraba and her poor people the traumatic experience the country was forced to go through then.  By taking the case to the court, these conscienceless individuals are trying to drag the judiciary into their habitat – the pigsty.  When in 2010 the national assembly contrived the doctrine of necessity, I can’t remember anyone running to the courts, so why will any lover of Taraba state go to the court shouting “constitutionalism” because the House of Assembly, after visiting Suntai, pronounced him incapable and unfit to go through the rigours of governing a state?  I see similarities in the national assembly’s action in 2010 and that of Taraba state legislators in 2013.  I must say they were both guided by nationalism.

Those pulling the strings of this puppet show will surely be responsible for the disharmony pervading the state and should be held accountable by the people whenever the dust settles.  Garba Umar was trusted with the affairs of the state for ten months without derailing from a course charted by the puppeteers, whose sole interest is in keeping the acting governor under a tight leash for personal gains – both political and pecuniary.  When he decided to kick out some thieves from the cabinet he inherited from Suntai, the puppeteers became desperate which led them to bundling back a bumbling, sick and “brain damaged” Suntai.  Suntai was never meant to see the light of the day by this group.  All anyone needs to know is that he is ensconced in the Government House in Jalingo, purportedly dishing out orders through his special assistants and a Secretary to the State Government who administered the oath of office on himself.

In the recent past governors Liyel Imoke and Sullivan Chime of Cross River and Enugu states respectively had cause to travel abroad for medical treatment.  They came back, address their people through the mass media and continued with their gubernatorial responsibilities and duties.  Why is it difficult for Suntai to toe the same line as his colleagues?  A healthy and fit person shouldn’t be hidden from the people who voted him into office; Danbaba Danfulani Suntai is the property of the people of Taraba state from the day he decided to go into public service.  For some few people to appropriate him to the exclusion of the rest of the populace is criminal.  Please sir, come out and drive in an open top motorcade to shame those who say you are sick; failing that then take the advice of your legislators and go take care of your health.  They love you more than those whispering sweet nothings in your ears.


Tuesday, September 17, 2013

THE RIGHT TO CONTEST: GEJ & THE CONSTITUTION



In a suit instituted by Buba Marwa against Nyako (later joined by four other goveors and INEC), the Supreme Court of Nigeria delivered a landmark judgement on January 27th, 2012, asking the five governors to step down from their offices handover to their successors.  For those among them eligible for second term in office, they were to submit themselves to the electorate for another mandate.  But critically, the court pronounced that the tenures of the five governors elapsed since May 29th, 2011 thereby bringing to an end the issue of tenure elongation or otherwise.  The governors, who were made to go for re-runs for the 2007 elections always assumed the period they spent governing their states before their victories were annulled was “awuf” – bonuses if you may.  The Court was emphatic that the Constitution does not make room for anybody elected into an executive office spending a day more than the maximum allowable eight years and if we are to go by the governors’ reasoning, then some of them might have stayed in office for a period of nine years or more.  The Supreme Court ruling was very clear and unambiguous. 

With this Supreme Court ruling in mind and the provision of section 135 subsection 2b, which is similar to section 180 subsection 2b, I find it hard to comprehend the “no vacancy in the Villa” campaign going on. I am also at a loss as to whether the Supreme Court ruling was only for the governors or that it encompasses all executive offices seeing the similarities in sections 135 and 180 of the constitution.  The noise about Goodluck Jonathan contesting or not in 2015 and its legal implications taking into account the said ruling readily comes to mind.  Section 135 of the 1999 constitution (as amended) deals with the issue of tenure and is explicit on the period.  Subsection 2 of section 135 says “subject to the provisions of subsection (1) of this section, the president shall vacate his office at the expiration of a period of four years commencing from the date when:  (a) in the case of a person first elected as president under this constitution, he took the Oath of Allegiance and Oath of Office; and (b) the person last elected to that office took the Oath of Allegiance and Oath of Office or would, but for his death have taken such oaths.

Taking the Supreme Court ruling and Section 135 (2b), one will be forgiven to assume Jonathan is legally barred from contesting in 2015 irrespective of how high the decibel level of Clark and Anenih’s chorus singers – the likes of Abba Gana, Ameh Ebute, Jerry Gana, Asari Dokubo, et al.  Before Jonathan’s attack dogs descend on me, I would like us to study these legal positions carefully and dispassionately in order to locate where Jonathan’s ambition fit in.  The Supreme Court ruling says maximum allowable period of eight years made up of two terms of four years each. Therefore if Jonathan is to contest in 2015 and be forced once again on Nigerians for another four years, that will make him president for nine years since he took over from the late Umaru ‘Yar Adu’a on May 6th, 2010.  This goes against the grain of the Supreme Court ruling and since by convention all rulings and judgements from the Supreme Court are part of our sources of law, this particular one becomes a law of the land in as much as it is consistent with the constitution of the country.  So if the governors affected by the ruling forfeited their “awuf” period, it is only rational that Jonathan should also be affected by the ruling seeing the similarities between sections 135 and 180 of the constitution, our grund norm.  This is without prejudice as to whether he promised our mercenary governors that he would not contest in 2015 before they “endorsed” him and rig him into office in 2011.

On the other hand section 135 subsection 2b of the constitution makes it clear that a person’s tenure ends from such a time that the last person so elected into such office will have taken another oath but for his death – meaning the tenure of the dead person might have elapsed and he may seek for a renewed mandate but for his death.  Jonathan took over from ‘Yar Adu’a whose first term would have expired by May 29th, 2011 and might have taken another Oath of Allegiance and Oath of Office were he to have contested and won the election but for his death.  And the second tenure will come to an end by May 29th, 2015.  

So taking the relevant sections and subsections of the constitution and the supreme court judgment regarding the five governors in (Marwa V. Nyako), Goodluck Jonathan will spent nine years as the president of Nigeria.  One year more than the constitutionally stipulated period.  If this is the case, and that is my understanding, then Jonathan doesn’t have the constitutional right to contest for the office of the president of Nigeria, irrespective of how bloody his campaign is going to be (bloody according to one of his closest lieutenants).  The doctrine of necessity doesn’t have a room here or any element of good luck.  In anticipation of this constitutional roadblock, Jonathan appeared to have deployed his uncouth campaign co-ordinators to launch verbal missiles and threats against those who may have the guts to call for the application of the right things.  The likes of Edwin Clark, Ahmed Ali Gulak and Asari Dokubo have been throwing threats like confetti at the same people they want to garner support for their dozy candidate.  Spent forces like Abba Gana and Ameh Ebutteh have been recruited to give the campaign a touch of national spread.

Goodluck Jonathan and his handlers believe because of the good luck in his name, is born to lead us whether we like it or not.  Ali Gulak went to the ridiculous extent of saying God has packaged Nigeria and Nigerians and handed us over to Goodluck Jonathan.  Gulak also in a recent press conference said nobody should stampede Jonathan into declining to contest in 2015 because the constitution guarantees him the right to contest.  But my reading of section 135 appears to suggest otherwise.  The constitution can ‘stampede’ Jonathan into bowing out.  The refrain by the Jonathan campaigners that northerners claimed to have been born to rule doesn’t hold water anymore because with the campaign of brimstone by his supporters, Nigerians are beginning to know those who claimed to be born to rule.  With gerantocrats and creek riff raffs threatening that there will not be Nigeria if Jonathan isn’t given a second term, with the security agencies looking the other way, they have the right to claim the sobriquet of being to rule.  The fact that no northern politician ever raised the spectre of violence on account of his perception that he may be barred from contesting should effectively put to rest this fallacy.  In a civilised society anyway.

Instructively while Edwin Clark, Asari Dokubo and Ayo Oritsejafor are beating the drums of war and no security agency deem it necessary to even slap them on the rest, Senator Sani Ahmed Yerima was arrersted from the Radio Nigeria Kaduna during a phone-in programme in a commando style operation with the Kaduna state Police Commissioner leading a posse of men in five trucks.  His offence?  He was said to have threatened that the leadership of the then yet to be registered All Progressives Congress (APC) will take to the streets in the event Jega’s INEC refuse to register their party.  Yerima had to write an undertaking before he was released.  No such treatment for Clark or Dokubo.

If it is alright for those in Jonathan’s corner to be sending barbs in the direction of those who opposed his style of administration and the undisguised ambition of contesting in 2015, why is it a gargantuan security issue when any opponent of the presidency voice his disagreement to Jonathan? Case of different strokes for different folks?  If it is okay to block the passage of an elected governor, the chief security officer of a state according to the constitution, then Jonathan’s people shold be ready to either throw more people in jail or kill them.  If you can’t take the heat, get out of the kitchen.

If Goodluck Jonathan and his horde of Gulaks have honour (though I doubt they have) he shouldn’t contemplate contesting, constitutional right or not for the simple fact that he promised at four different occasions not to go for a second chance when voted for in 2011.  The promise that stands out to me was the one made in Addis Ababa.  I pray his handlers may not tell us he made the promise while in the toilet since the president’s stomach have something against Addis.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

THE CABALIYA AND HER CABAL IN JALINGO



After several false starts by Turai & co. mimics to re-enact the tragi-comedy that played out during the last days of the late president Umaru Musa ‘Yar Adu’a by Turai, his wife and her associates, Hauwa Danbaba Suntai, the mini Turai, is trying hard to re-enact the same thing done by Lady Macbeth in Shakespeare Macbeth in this long suffering north eastern state of Taraba.  The copycat has a full complement of a “cabal” to assist her in murdering sleep while she plays the role of “Cabaliya” as my friend aptly named her. The “cabal” and “cabaliya’s” interest is to run the state by proxy and not her husband’s health.  To this group, as long as they can continue to milk the state dry and keep the people of Taraba state under a tight leash, they don’t care what happens to the constitution and constitutionalism.  The acting governor is to be shunted aside and treated as an unnecessary irritant.

Danbaba Suntai, a plane crash survivor, who some claim is damaged, is who these people are trying to hoist on the people as a governor. Coming barely after two and half years since the Turai saga, this should be unacceptable to all Nigerians who mean well for democracy and the rule of law.  Sadly, this group has introduced a very dangerous element into the whole affair by giving it religious undertone.  From those who received the wobbly Danbaba at the Abuja airport to the deliberate blocking of the acting governor from seeing him at the Jalingo airport, it was all very clear to the discerning that religion has taken over politics.  I failed to fathom the presence of the likes of Pastor Jerry Gana from Niger State and John Dara from Kwara state acting as spokesmen for Danbaba.  To complete the religious toga, you have Damien Dodo, Emmanuel Bwacha, Darius Ishiaku, Obadiah Ando and Jonah Jang as the masquerades behind the charade.  If this is not an exclusive religious affair, then I am a monkey’s uncle.

Danbaba Danfulani Suntai had a near fatal accident with a plane he was piloting (nobody is allowed to ask how he got the money to buy the plane in the first place) about ten months ago and by the grace of God he survived the accident but with debilitating consequences. The injuries that Danbaba sustained could be of permanent nature.  After intensive management by specialists in both Germany and USA, his political associates and an uncaring wife bundled the poor guy back into a Nigeria that lacks the basic equipment to manage trauma victims, which was why Danbaba was taken to the USA in the first place.  What we are witnessing in Taraba state is exactly what the nation witnessed two and a half years ago when Turai ‘Yar Adu’a and a handful of trusted aides attempted to run the country by proxy, not minding the pathetic condition of her dying husband.  Hauwa appear to be walking the same road Turai took.  Turai and her “cabal” are now footnotes of history after having gotten their fifteen minutes of fame.  Danbaba’s wife surrounded herself with political vultures masquerading as sympathisers and loyalists of her husband. If they truly love her husband, they would have left him in the hospital and wouldn’t have given the whole drama a religious tone.

As an elected governor of Taraba state, Danbaba Danfulani was elected by a broad spectrum of people in the state, irrespective of creed.  Surprisingly, those at the Abuja airport to receive the governor were all Christians, giving adherents of other religions in the state the jitters.  Pointedly, the roles of Jerry Gana and John Dara leaves many bewildered as to what interest do the duo have in the politics of Taraba state seeing that they both come from out of the state.  It was also alleged that Jonah Jang of Plateau state and Gabriel Suswan of Benue are neck deep in the whole tragedy.  Much as I try to deny the religious link, I find religion rearing its ugly head.  The role-played by these gentlemen in blocking even the acting governor from receiving him or even meeting him speaks volumes.

In continuation of the charade, a letter was sent to the state legislature purportedly written by a Danbaba whose wife told the world less than 24 hours back that her husband wouldn’t be able to see anyone until after 72 years.  Wonders shall never end.  Turai tried to bullshit Nigerians but failed.  Hauwa and her ‘people’ are not even original.  All they can come up with is a script written by the ‘Katsina Mafia’. 

To compound the situation you have uncouth goons insulting anyone who dare question the mental and physical condition of Danbaba including members of the state House of Assembly, who are equally elected by the electorate, same as Danbaba.  This ultimately proved to be their undoing as the legislators threatened to impeach Danbaba in the event that the cabal and the cabaliya continue to block access to Danbaba.  Being amateurs, the cabal, cabaliya and their chorus singers panicked and arranged a meeting with a man who couldn’t recognise any of the members that visited him.  When the Senator Hope Uzodinma led PDP Committee visited him, it was the same result.  The Committee was left with no choice than to ask Alhaji Umar Garba to continue acting for the governor as chief executive of Taraba state.  This is exactly what the cabal were trying to avoid but had to happen.  Ultimately,

Two ugly things became manifest in this saga.  The pivotal role of religion in the imbroglio and the insensitivity of the human being to fellow being’s plight.  Several people may disagree with me on the issue of religion but may only resort to name-calling rather than address the fundamental questions I raised here.  Bottom line is that, all those who hustled Danbaba from Seaview Hospital in Mew York belong to the same faith with him and their attempt to whip up religious emotions on the day he was brought back to Jalingo says much about the religious undertone of the misadventure.  The return of the governor that was supposed to be celebrated by all was turned into a sort of religious revival rally.  Sad.  Very sad.

On the other hand, those lusting for power and money don’t care about what happens to the man as long as they can have him in the Taraba state government house either as a prisoner or as a governor.  Their main objective is to have access to the state’s treasury and loot to their hearts’ delight.  Why do we easily fall prey to our base instincts where lucre is concerned?  Distressing. 

Seeing a bewildered Danbaba alight from the plane that brought him from New York at the Abuja airport, made me aware of my fallibility.  It may more aware of how a human being, no matter how powerful, can become useless within a twinkle eye.  It made appreciate how the poor cripples and other people with health challenges are coping with daily challenges life throw at them.  It made me appreciate my life, my health and several things I take for granted.  Hauwa should be well advised to take her husband back to New York and help nurse him back to health.  She was reported to have told the Uzodinma Committee that Danbaba was brought to Nigeria because he complained of homesickness.  Though I find it difficult to disagree with her, I am forced to disagree with her – the Danbaba I saw is not capable of saying so.

Be that as it may, the cabaliya and her cabal shall please leave the stage before the stoning commences because their production cannot even be rated.  Curtains.