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News Politics

President Buhari Meets Behind Closed Doors with President-elect Tinubu

President Muhammadu Buhari and President-elect Sen. Bola Tinubu met behind closed doors on Friday to mark the end of the 30-day Ramadan fast and offer Sallah prayers at the State House Mosque in Abuja.

In a statement released by Malam Garba Shehu, the two leaders discussed several issues of common concern during the day and I their private meetings.

President-elect Tinubu was accompanied to the State House by several prominent politicians, including Speaker of the House of Representatives Femi Gbajabiamila and two Governors, Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano and Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq of Kwara.

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Politics

Top Nigerian Lawyer Criticizes Chimamanda Adichie’s Election Stance

Top Nigerian lawyer and professor Yemi Oke wrote an open letter to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and US President Joe Biden regarding the Nigerian elections.

In the letter, dated Sunday April 9th, Oke criticized popular Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Adichie’s stance on the February 25th presidential polls.

Oke referred to Adichie’s letter to Biden as “seditious” and accused her of engaging in extraterritorial ethnocentric politicking as a non-resident Nigerian-American.

Oke went on to state that Adichie’s letter was unbecoming and that she had written a seditious letter against the government and people of Nigeria, falling short of expectations.

Oke expressed his surprise that a privileged Nigerian-born writer like Adichie would choose to portray her country of origin in such a negative light.

“Chimamanda’s letter was against entire Nigeria’s Democracy that was fought and procured with patriotic bloods and undeterred resolve of democrats, chief among them being Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu,” he said.

Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Adichie wrote an open letter to US President Joe Biden accusing Nigeria’s electoral commission of ignoring “glaring red flags” and manipulating the presidential election.

Adichie supported the Labour Party candidate, Peter Obi, and claimed that if the results had been uploaded in real-time, the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, Tinubu, would not have won.

The APC candidate was declared the winner, with 8,794,726 votes, beating his closest challenger, Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party, who scored 6,984,520 votes. Peter Obi came third with 6,101,533 votes.

In response, Nigerian lawyer and professor Yemi Oke wrote an open letter to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and President Biden, criticising Adichie’s letter as “seditious.”

Oke accused Adichie of engaging in “extraterritorial ethnocentric politicking” as a non-resident Nigerian-American.

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Features Politics

Mamman Daura and the Next President of Nigeria

By Wale Adebanwi

Whoever wins the February 2023 presidential election in Nigeria would have done so chiefly because of, or, in spite of, Mamman Daura, the 83-year-old senescent nephew of President Mohammadu Buhari. This might seem an ostentatious claim or an inflationary attribution of power to a man whose only claim to it, in the present circumstances, is that the president is his younger nephew. Yet, this is an open secret among those with a deep knowledge of the current struggle for the presidency and the nature of power under the Muhammadu Buhari administration. But most people are not eager to discuss the matter directly in public, either because of discretion and/or fear of the ‘almighty’ Daura.

However, between the candidate of the ruling party, Governor Bola Tinubu, and the candidate of the main opposition party, Vice President Atiku Abubakar, there is a clear recognition of the central role that Daura is playing and would play regarding who becomes the next president of Nigeria. For the former Lagos Governor, this could not have come as a surprise. He recognizes that the presidency, which has been, for the most part of the last eight years, effectively under the control of Daura, is being mobilized one way or the other against him. Perhaps more than any other person, it is Daura who has ensured that Tinubu would not reap, as ‘designed,’ the full benefits of his total investment in making Buhari president.

When Buhari declared upon acceding to power that he “belonged to nobody,” it was in part a ventriloquist shot from his nephew in the direction of the man who had assumed that he would be the power behind the throne. At the centre of the process that eventuated in the much analyzed “outburst” of the Jagaban at Abeokuta, when he let it be known to the world that “emi lo kan” (“it is my turn”; or “I am next”) was Daura’s machinations to ensure that Tinubu would not be the presidential candidate of the ruling party, let alone succeed Buhari.

Those who thought that the outburst sealed Tinubu’s fate were to realize later that the man has not governed Nigeria’s most important state either directly or by proxy for 22 years for nothing. By taking the battle to Buhari and his handlers, the Abeokuta wager turned out to be a courageous venture that helped to stop Daura and his constituents in their tracks – and thus, made a mockery of their desperate bid to hand over the party’s ticket to the Senate President, Ahmad Lawan. If Tinubu’s spirited survival of the President Olusegun Obasanjo-led “tsunami” that swept all the other AD governors out of power in 2003 did not convince most people about the man’s political genius, how he retrieved every single South-western states in installments from the opposition and ended up installing Buhari as president in concert with other forces, should have confirmed his unusual political potency. No doubt, that potency was at its most vulnerable when he formally joined the bid to win the APC ticket – and remains so now that he goes for the ultimate prize. Yet, it was also the point at which all of his accumulated political assets had to be mobilized in the service of his life-long ambition.

However, it must be noted that it was not until Tinubu encountered Daura that he experienced his first major sustained checkmate in the politics of the Fourth Republic. The man who has since become the most valuable player in Yoruba politics was dealing with an unusual adversary in Daura. None of those that Tinubu had had to wrestle with since 1998 – that is, when he started his campaign to be the governor of Lagos State – possessed the strategic advantage of a combination of stealth, reticence and unaccountable power as Daura does.

Cerebral, generous but taciturn, Mamman Daura, the fascinating power-monger par excellence, and the former newspaper editor and manager seems resolved to terminate Tinubu’s political ambition on the eve of the latter’s ultimate home run.

As the only surviving member of the triumvirate that can lay claim to almost unbridled influence over Muhammadu Buhari, Daura is well-placed to either hinder or advance the ambition of the two leading presidential contenders, Bola Tinubu and Atiku Abubakar in the February 2023 presidential election. And he is not shy to use his leverage in tipping the scale against the former Lagos governor.

With the passing of the two other closest people to Buhari, that is, the late Emir of Borgu, Haliru Dantoro Kitoro III, who died in October 2015, barely five months after Buhari came to office, and Liman Ciroma, Nigeria’s first qualified archaeologist (who the Guardian of London described in an obituary in 2014 as a “a fine public servant” who was ‘courteous, considerate and generous”), the Daura-born presidential nephew has had no counter weight since 2015. Had he lived well past 2015, the late Emir, who was singularly responsible for brokering the rapprochement that made the “political marriage” of Buhari (CPC) and Tinubu (ACN) possible, would not have allowed the deliberate distancing between the two that followed Buhari’s ascendancy to power.

The first lady, Aisha Halilu Buhari, could not replace the late Borgu monarch. Her intrepid effort to stand up to Daura ended in semi-exile in Dubai, as her husband declared that her place was in the “other room.” But the resolute woman is back with vengeance. Now, as we move towards February 25, she wants to ensure that Daura’s reign would end with that of his kin.

It was as if fate was conspiring against Tinubu and Nigeria in the passing of the Emir of Borgu and Ciroma. Not a few around Buhari believe that his administration would not have come to this sorry pass if the two had lived longer. At least, Daura would not have had a debilitating unchecked leverage over Buhari in the last eight years, which most people believe to be a tragedy for Nigeria. These two late gentlemen, not having to be around the Villa like Daura, would have provided some other avenues of reaching Buhari in moderating the excesses of those who have determined the terrible trajectory of his headship of the Nigerian state. But those who know Daura well still wonder how such an otherwise fine mind and quiet soul had turned into one of the most consequential and hindering power mongers in Nigeria’s history.

Those in this category even insist that Daura’s influence on Buhari and his leverage in this government have been overstated. They would add that if the country were to have been differently organized, the suave, lettered and cultivated man would have been the president and his not similarly lettered uncle would have been his aide.

But the reality of Daura’s influence and imprint on the most devastating actions and inaction of this administration are too glaring. Take the way he has preserved and protected the tragedy that answers to the tag of the Governor of the Central Bank, Godwin Emefiele – even encouraging, as many believed, the latter to run for the presidency, and keeping Emefiele in office after that abortive ambition. How could such a man who clearly had a conflict of interest be allowed to not only continue in office, but claim to be changing the colour of the currency in order to affect the outcome of the presidential election? Imagine the untold suffering of the poor masses of the country that this ill-considered measure has caused.

Whatever you think of the leading contenders for the presidency, his adversaries would insist, there are fewer stronger examples of Daura’s gamble with the fate of the nation and of democracy than the recent moves by edgy fifth columnists of all stripes.

For those still wondering what happened to the candidness of ‘Candido,’ the famed masked newspaper columnist of the defunct New Nigerian: it is power. This is what power does to human beings, especially when they assume that they have Power with a capital “P” – though all that any of us can have, even in the best of circumstances, is only power with a small “p.” No one can have Power. It eludes even the most deranged among us throughout human history. Yet, that does not stop some people from attempt to play God.

Will Daura’s role as the “unseen god of the Aso Rock Villa” in the last eight years be confirmed or repudiated in the next presidential election? We have only a few weeks to find out. But whatever happens, Daura would no doubt have done his best to determine who would (not) be our next president.

*Adebanwi, author of Yoruba Elites and Ethnic Politics in Nigeria, is the Presidential Penn Compact Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, USA.

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Business & Economy Politics

Buhari Approves New Deadline on Old Naira Notes Hours After Meeting With Tinubu

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has extended the Jan. 31 deadline for exchanging old naira notes by extra ten days.

This CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, said a new deadline of February 10, 2023, was approved on Sunday by President Muhammadu Buhari, who was in Daura, Katsina State.

Mr. Buhari made the decision shortly after a closed doors meeting with the All Progressives Congress (APC) Presidential candidate, Bola Tinubu, who visited him in Daura on Saturday.

Mr Tinubu had on Wednesday during a campaign rally in Southwest Nigeria that the issues of naira change and fuel scarcity in the country could be a policy targeted against his chances of winning the February 25 Presidential election. A statement his media team said was mistaken as an affront on the administration of Buhari.

Emefiele was summoned to Daura on Sunday morning to a closed-door meeting with the Buhari from where he received the approval to extend by ten days.

The CBN Governor said the ten days window provides opportunity for Nigerians who are yet to change their old Naira notes to new ones to “now do so”.

“This in an opportunity that people must utilise, because the deadline will not be extended again,” he said.

Nigeria government had I’m November 2022 unveiled the redesigned notes of N200, N500 and N1,000 denominations and said the existing ones cease to be legal tender by January, 31,2023.

Weeks to the end of the deadline, tension mounted across the country as citizens panicked while traders began to reject the old notes in fear of rumours that banks have no adequate new notes for everyone.

The National Assembly had to sit in a joint session to call for many months’ extension, especially as Nigerians lament that most Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) across the country were still handing out the old Naira notes. Many fuel stations had to stop operation to avert the situation of collecting old naira notes, thereby causing artificial petrol scarcity.

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Politics Press Release

Tinubu Lauds Bisi Akande’s Courage, Outstanding Leadership Qualities @ 84 

All Progressives Congress Presidential Candidate, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has sent out a hearty birth day wish to his party’s former Interim National Chairman , Chief Bisi Akande, who clocked 84 years today.

A statement from Tinubu Media Office said the leading 2023 contender for Nigeria’s Presidential seat hailed the elder statesman “for his courage and extraordinary leadership.”

The statement released by head of the APC Candidate media office, Tunde Rahman, the APC flag bearer “commended Chief Akande for his helpful contributions to Nigeria and dedication and commitment to progressive politics and good governance.”

Mr Rahman said Tinubu “noted the unblemished public service record of Chief Akande from the start of the Second Republic when he was a member of the Constituent Assembly that drafted the 1979 constitution, Secretary to the Government of old Oyo State and Deputy Governor of the state in the administration of late Chief Bola Ige, and later governor of Osun State.”

Rahman’s statements continue that While thanking God on behalf of Chief Akande and his family for the grace to witness another year in good health, Asiwaju Tinubu acknowledged that the former Osun State governor served Nigeria and the people of Oyo and Osun States with integrity, and used public office to improve their lives.

Tinubu’s media aid directly quoted his thus:

“I rejoice with Chief Bisi Akande on his 84th birthday celebration. Baba Awon Omo ke ke ke as he is fondly called is a role model, mentor and extraordinary man of courage who has served the people with dignity and rare honour. 

“His life continues to inspire us who are his younger ones and associates as a shining example to emulate.

“Baba Akande has been at the vanguard of progressive politics and good governance, ideals for which he has not compromised even with attendant inconveniences and challenges including detention and other risks to his life. 

“We remain grateful to God for sparing his life in good health and fecund mind.

“I join family, friends, associates and all lovers of this venerable elderstatesman across Nigeria and beyond to wish him happy birthday and many memorable returns of the day and more years of joy and happiness.”

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Politics

INTERVENTION: Fraudulent analogy of ‘Naka Sai Naka’

By Mahmud Jega

The political “analogy” widely circulated on the social media in recent days by the Kaduna State Chapter of Naka Sai Naka [roughly translated as Only Yours] campaign, that the 2023 election in Nigeria is going to be analogous to the 1979 presidential election, deserves closer scrutiny.

The group claims that “Peter Obi/Labour Party is analogous to Azikiwe/NPP [of the Second Republic]. That Tinubu/APC is analogous to Awolowo/UPN. That Atiku/PDP is analogous to Shagari/NPN, and that Kwankwaso/NNPP is analogous to Aminu Kano/PRP.”

It then added:

“1. Aminu Kano was from Kano and won only in Kano State. (Kwankwaso will do the same).

  1. Obafemi Awolowo was from the South West and won the region. (Tinubu will do the same).
  2. Azikiwe won his zone, South East (Peter Obi will do the same).
  3. Shagari won the presidential election because he had North in his bag and also gathered meaningful votes from all other regions of Nigeria. Shagari also had spread all across the regions at that time. Atiku will do the same… North will massively vote for Atiku Abubakar. Naka Sai Naka!”

My observations are:

  1. Kwankwaso/NNPP is not Aminu Kano/PRP. NNPP lacks PRP’s leftist ideology, lacks PRP’s long NEPU history dating back to 1949, lacks PRP’s spread into the old NEPU strongholds and, while Kwankwaso is charismatic and dynamic, he nowhere measures up to Aminu Kano in towering political personality.
  2. Peter Obi/LP is not Azikiwe/NPP. Obi is the biggest political discovery of this election cycle, has made big impact on the social media and might sweep South East states. However, LP is not the South East Establishment that NPP was. Obi has nothing like Zik’s overwhelming national and Africa-wide charisma, Zik’s decades-long political staying power, his unrivalled education, intellect and dazzling eloquence. Besides, NPP went beyond South East and won old Plateau State. Doesn’t look like LP can do the same.
  3. Atiku/PDP of 2023 is not Shagari/NPN of 1979. Sure, at one point PDP had more national spread than NPN, but it is now reduced to control of 14 states, 5 of them in rebellion, one more governor wavering, which NPN never experienced. NPN’s strongholds were North and southern minority states, while PDP’s strongholds since 2015 were South East and Niger Delta states, both of them now shaky. Atiku is more dynamic, more resolute and a more vigorous campaigner than Shagari, but Shagari recorded electoral success as an instantly sellable compromise candidate who had almost no personal enemies in Nigerian politics.
  4. Tinubu/APC is a world different from Awo/UPN. The only historical connection is that Tinubu was probably an Awoist in 1979 and the AD/AC/ACN structure he subsequently built and led was an offshoot of AG/UPN. Yet, Tinubu achieved what Awo/UPN never did, i.e. integrated the West, once synonymous with opposition politics, into a truly national party that captured power at the federal level while retaining hold on the region. Awo could not even find a Northern running mate in 1979 and he settled for an Igbo man. Tinubu on the other hand is now supported by the Northern Political Establishment and most of the region’s governors. Awo never visited Northern Emirs during his helicopter-bound campaigns. But Tinubu receives the warmest receptions in emir’s palaces. [The emirs have no choice because most of the governors are on his side].

So all the Naka Sai Naka analogies are fraudulent.

A hush, pro-PDP Naka Sai Naka campaign is historically fraudulent because it was PDP that brought Chief Olusegun Obasanjo in 1999 and convinced Northerners that he was a tried and tested friend of the region.

Two can play the same game. It is now APC’s turn to bring Tinubu and say he is a tested friend of the region.

Naka Sai Naka is not true. It is also dangerous. What happens to Nigeria if every region says Naka Sai Naka?

Mahmud Jega is a respected Nigerian columnist

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