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Wednesday, April 1, 2015

TEXT OF BUHARI'S ACCEPTANCE OF ELECTION VICTORY

1. First of all, I wish to express my gratitude to the Chairman and members of the Convention Committee for planning and conducting a hitch-free convention. The same appreciation goes to the chairmen of National and State Executive Councils of our party. Thank you very much for doing an excellent job.

2. I would like to pay tribute to Chief Bisi Akande the first chairman of APC and his National Executive for managing the party in its early stages.

3. I also wish to commend Lagos State Government and state party for hosting this convention. Time was when people feared to come to Lagos. Today, Lagos is the cleanest and dare I say safest city in Nigeria. This achievement is due to the leadership and strength of purpose of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and Chief Babatunde Fashola the two Governors since 1999 and their team of professionals for this wonderful transformation Nigeria greets you!

4. The outcome of the presidential primaries of the All Progressives Congress is a demonstration of democracy at work. It is testimony to the fact that democracy as a concept is greater than the interests of individuals in a free and functional political system. What has just happened is not about winning or losing but about the triumph of liberty, freedom of choice and association, which are hallmarks of democracy.

5. To my fellow contestants; Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, Owelle Rochas Okorocha and Mr. Sam Nda Isaiah, I wish to thank you for putting up a good fight. The keenly contested primaries we just had will help to strengthen our party and democracy, and ultimately send our message to Nigerian voters in the impending elections.

6. To you all, I pay my absolute compliments and congratulate you on the success of your respective campaigns. I extend my gratitude to you all for accepting the outcome of this convention and agreeing to support my candidature as we move forward. I shall meet with you all in the coming days to fashion out how we shall confront the challenge ahead.

7. My dear fellow countrymen and women, it is with a deep sense of humility that I stand before you today to accept the nomination of my party, the All Progressives Congress to be its candidate and flag-bearer in 2015 presidential elections.

8. My nomination is not because I am better than any of the other contestants. I see it as a tribute and mark of confidence to carry the torch as we all join hands to rescue our dear country Nigeria, from those who have led us into the current state of insecurity, poverty, sectarian divide and hopelessness among our people.

9. I stand before you today to ask that you join me in a common cause. My call to you is not to realise the personal fulfilment of one man. This Common Cause is nothing less than the love for our nation and concern for its present condition; and a resolve to make things better for Nigeria.

10. What I say today is for all Nigerians: Christian and Muslim, Southern and Northern, rich and poor, young and old, man and woman. We are all citizens of Nigeria. There is no dividing line among us that I care to honour. Either we advance as one or fail altogether.

11. My choice and my colleagues’ choice and wish are that we progress together. Preserving the nation’s future is a scared obligation to all of us in this party. Leaders should be wholly committed to fulfilling this obligation otherwise they have no business being leaders.

12. Sadly, the current administration does not believe in this obligation. By their actions they are leading us to calamity.

13. At International Conferences, the Nigerian delegation is usually among the largest but at the same time the least effective. Our president should have the status and the voice of Africa’s largest nation. But in political influence we are among the weakest.

14. Shall we at home continue to live in a condition where the Power Holding Company and its successors seem only to have the power to hold us in darkness?

15. Shall we continue in a situation where 250 of our daughters have been abducted and the government has been unable to rescue them or provide credible information about what steps they are taking?

16. Shall we live in a nation where several people were trampled to death in search of jobs in a stadium and yet no one has taken responsibility for the tragedy?

17. Shall we live in a nation where the ranks of the poor swell and their poverty increase while the consorts of the powerful enjoy unprecedented wealth? The lives of the poor are bled dry while those of the powerful soak in excessive abundance.

18. My answers to these questions are “No, No, No, No!”

19. It is time to close this demeaning chapter in our nation’s history.

20. I ask that you join this effort, not for me, but to establish a better land for all of us.

21. I understand and accept the hard challenge ahead. When all is said and done, let it be written that Muhammadu Buhari gave his all for this nation.

22. As such, I make these five pledges regarding the government if we are elected next February;

a. We will govern Nigeria honestly, in accordance with the constitution.

b. We will strive to secure the country and efficiently manage the economy.

c. We will strive to attack poverty through broadly-shared economic growth and attacking corruption through impartial application of the law.

d. We will tolerate no religious, regional, ethnic or gender bias in our government.

e. We will return Nigeria to a position of international respect through patriotic foreign policy.

f. We will choose the best Nigerians for the right jobs.Our government will be committed to the cause of the common man. Whether you are a Christian from Bayelsa State or a Muslim from Katsina State, you are first and foremost a Nigerian in my eyes. I shall treat you equally as my people, my national family, my brothers and sisters. There can be no genuine love of our country without loving all its people in our diversity.

23. Just as APC stands as a new party for a new Nigeria, our government will institute new policies to realise the new Nigeria.

24. We shall institute just policies that afford people the dignity of work and pay them a living wage for their sweat and toil. We intend to do this by instituting a national industrial policy, coupled with a national employment directive, that together shall revive and expand our manufacturing sector, creating jobs for our urban population and decreasing our reliance on expensive foreign imports.

25. We shall implement a national infrastructure master plan that will provide construction and related jobs across the land. Furthermore, by improving our transportationinfrastructure through road, rail and port construction we expand the outer bounds of economic growth as no economy can grow beyond the capacity of its infrastructure.

26. Agriculture remains the backbone of the economy. Our government, when elected, will establish an agricultural policy that provides farmers a dignified living through improved inputs, improved extension services, access to credit and price support mechanisms.

27. On corruption, the government will enhance EFCC’s powers to investigate independently. Moreover, we intend to plug the holes in NNPC accounting. There will no longer be two sets of books, one for public consumption and another for insiders who profit from this slick fraud. In an APC government, the public will know how much NNPC makes and where all the money goes.

28. No longer shall illegal flows of massive sums leave these shores to finance other economies. While our people languish in poverty, we effectively give financial aid to nations that is not justified. I am sick of this. It must stop. The money saved will finance jobs, health care and the provision of social safety net for the needy, weak and vulnerable of our land.

29. We will be a compassionate government, for out of compassion arises the truest forms of wealth and progress a society can attain. We shall open the door to tertiary education to excellent students who otherwise could not afford it. Pregnant and poor women and children shall be entitled to basic health care.

30. This is a Nigeria that I envisage but it is a far cry from the Nigeria that is now. Change is imperative if we are to avoid the impending national failure. Poor leadership placed us in the ditch. Continuation of poor leadership will only dig a deeper trench for all of us to fall in.

31. Let us join hands in progressive union to pull each other and the nation from the abyss.

32. I pledge to do my utmost to make this happen but cannot do it alone. I need your support. I need your help to become President of Nigeria so that government may come to serve you, so that it may bring relief to the broken and weary among us and so that it may usher in a new Nigeria meant for us all, a Nigeria that is the birthright of everyone but the exclusive possession of no one.

God bless you.
God bless our fatherland – Nigeria

Thank you.

General Muhammadu Buhari [rtd], APC Flag Bearer for 2015 Presidential election. 

DAWN OF A NEW GENERAL

General Muhammadu Buhari rides on doggedness and integrity to become Nigeria’s new President, AKEEM LASISI writes

In many circumstances, any mortal above 70 years of age is seen, at best, as a symbol or agent of history. He is not the first person you want to consider when you are looking for an agent of change.

But, at 72, Daura, Katsina State-born retired General, Muhammadu Buhari, has upturned that philosophy. On Tuesday, he emerged winner of Nigeria’s most keenly-contested presidential election, thus making him the first person to sack a sitting President in Nigeria.

With this, Buhari appears to have completed the process of his professed conversion from a dictator to a democrat.

But the General’s victory did not come from the blues. While observers believe the accumulated failures of the Goodluck Jonathan administration constituted hazards for any candidate that the Peoples Democratic Party might have presented, it is Buhari’s integrity and doggedness, which inspired the people to fall in love with him, that have eventually paid off.

Thrice he had contested the presidential election, thrice he had lost. He had, indeed, somehow given up hope when shortly before the 2011 election, he betrayed his grey hairs as he burst into tears and said the attempt was likely to be the last he would make.

Yet, somewhere in his spirit, he appeared to believe that winners do not quit just as quitters do not win. And Buhari’s success was baked in the oven of towering odds.

The first is that he was up against an incumbency that was prepared to give the fight all it could. Apart from the fact that the PDP had been entrenched, having been in power since 1999, the Jonathan administration was determined to stay in power, with some of its drivers flaunting indices of desperation.

Of course, the opposition All Progressives Congress too are far from being angels. But many believe that the presidential election has been the most expensive Nigeria has witnessed, with the Federal Government, predictably, been the shining star in the dirty game of money the country has turned democracy into.

Besides, Buhari’s antecedents are loaded with both roses and thorns. In the negative side, he carried a baggage that would make his journey to Aso Rock as tight as passing through the proverbial needle’s eyes.

Here is a General that wanted to benefit from a system he and his co-coup plotters once truncated, having sacked the Shehu Shagari government in 1983.

His enemies were simply not prepared to care whether or not his regime had some pluses in terms of the discipline it wanted to instil in the social structure.

And apart from being an analogue man, as his age and opponents projected him to be, Buhari seemed to have a vault of utterances that portrayed him as a religious and tribal extremist.

That is why it was not too difficult for Jonathan’s campaigners to feast on these issues and projected the General as the worst thing that could happen to Nigeria.

They did these in vulgar speeches, hate adverts and several documentaries, one of which is so deadly that whoever survived it is likely to have something supernaturally working for him.

But while the case against him was that phenomenal, his supporters too were simply fanatical. To every person that was ready to cast the first stone, there were three or more disciples ready to anoint his feet with ballot oil.

That is why in the fight over Jonathan and Buhari, Twitter was rattled with infernal messages, Facebook friends became Facebook enemies, with spouses torn at each other’s throat, just as scores of people found themselves in graves.

The PDP too knew how tough the Buhari candidature would be. This is evident in statements made by some of its leaders when Buhari won the presidential primary of the APC.

Indeed, a Jonathan would do all he could to prevent Buhari from emerging as his opponent in the first place. But somehow, the man who actually had no money to compete with his opponents in the APC dusted the likes of former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar and Governors Rabiu Kwakwanso and Rochas Okorocha of Kano and Imo respectively.

The adversity was daunting, but the General’s time has come. The reason is that in him, people see a flicker of hope. They see a leader who has preached what he preaches in terms of his stance against corruption.

Jonathan ironically helped him when, several times, he laboured to teach the world the difference between stealing and corruption, and the fact that Nigerian politicians are not as corrupt as many people think.

If anything, it was during the extra time of the presidential campaign that the now Otuoke-bound man pointedly promised to fight the menace with digital mechanism.

Buhari has been a head of state, a minister of petroleum and head of the juicy Petroleum Trust Fund, but he did not come out as bogusly rich as many of his contemporaries are.

So, most people who chose him in the election genuinely did so, firmly believing that he will not steal their money. That is why when the PDP was campaigning that Buhari would send people to prison, many voters were very happy because they know that most Nigerian politicians are supposed to be behind bars.

Day and night, Buhari radiates the kind of seriousness and discipline that a leader should be synonymous with. He does not give in to frivolities and that is the kind of leader that Nigeria needs now. Will Buhari truly bring sanity to governance in this wealthy but impoverished country?

It has been noted that a tree does not make a forest, in terms of the kind of people he will work with. Latter Rain Assembly Pastor, Tunde Bakare, put it tactically when he said that he believed in Buhari’s capacity to deliver, but that he was afraid of the environment in which the General would work.

This seems to be an area in which not only Buhari, but also all Nigerians should work. Buhari has come to be the symbol of change that the country needs badly. But he must not only deliver, he must be moved and seen to do so.

At every point that he takes a wrong step, and that any agent of his government does so, as many people and organisations as possible should vehemently query them, so that the story of the change will not be a fluke.

Nigerians know he has enjoyed a kind of goodwill that, at times, one wonders if he merits. He dares not mess this up. This is the way Jonathan had it in 2011.

Posterity forbids, if Buhari too thus disappoints the polity, he and the entire APC can be sure that it is the same broom with which the incumbent is being swept out that they will be visited with. Will the General truly deliver and give the country the dawn of a new era? Time must tell.

-PUNCH- 

PRESIDENT JONATHAN'S SPEECH

Fellow Nigerians, I thank you all for turning out en-masse for the March 28 General Elections.

I promised the country free and fair elections. I have kept my word. I have also expanded the space for Nigerians to participate in the democratic process. That is one legacy I will like to see endure.

Although some people have expressed mixed feelings about the results announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), I urge those who may feel aggrieved to follow due process based on our constitution and our electoral laws, in seeking redress.

As I have always affirmed, nobody’s ambition is worth the blood of any Nigerian. The unity, stability and progress of our dear country is more important than anything else.

I congratulate all Nigerians for successfully going through the process of the March 28th General Elections with the commendable enthusiasm and commitment that was demonstrated. nationwide.

I also commend the Security Services for their role in ensuring that the elections were mostly peaceful and violence-free.

To my colleagues in the PDP, I thank you for your support. Today, the PDP should be celebrating rather than mourning. We have established a legacy of democratic freedom, transparency, economic growth and free and fair elections.

For the past 16 years, we have steered the country away from ethnic and regional politics. We created a Pan-Nigerian political party and brought home to our people the realities of economic development and social transformation.

Through patriotism and diligence, we have built the biggest and most patriotic party in Nigerian history. We must stand together as a party and look to the future with renewed optimism.

I thank all Nigerians once again for the great opportunity I was given to lead this country and assure you that I will continue to do my best at the helm of national affairs until the end of my tenure.

I have conveyed my personal best wishes to General Muhammadu Buhari. May God Almighty continue to bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

I thank you all.

Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, GCFR

President, Federal Republic of Nigeria

March 31, 2015

Photo credit: Forward Nigeria 

WITH BUHARI'S VICTORY, I'LL SURELY GO ON EXILE- BODE GEORGE

Former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Chief Bode George says he may be going on exile following the victory of the Presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Maj-Gen Muhammudu Buhari (retd).

George had said in an interview that he would proceed on exile if the APC wins at the federal level.

Speaking with Vanguard, on the PDP’s defeat at the polls, the PDP chieftain said, "What will I be doing here? I can decide to go and live anywhere. Look at everyone surrounding him (Buhari).

"So, I am not joking about it, what will I be doing here? At 70, what will I be doing here? All we have been doing to restructure the country has been lost. We have been trying to ensure balance in the polity but all that has gone. What else will I be doing here?"
 
-VANGUARD- 

SENATOR ABATEMI-USMAN CONGRATULATES BUHARI

The Vice Chairman, Senate Committee on Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Nurudeen Abatemi-Usman, has congratulated the winner of the 2015 presidential election, General Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

Buhari polled a total of 15,424,921 votes to defeat the incumbent President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who scored a total of 12,853,162 votes to place second in the race involving 14 contestants.

In a statement issued by his special assistant on media and publicity, Michael Jegede, the Senator noted that the massive support given to the former military Head of State, showed how much Nigerians were determined for a change which the General was believed to represent.

Abatemi-Usman observed that things have gone too bad in the country, that only a man with high level of integrity and credibility in the likes of Buhari can change the situation for the betterment of the Nigerian people.

This, according to him, informed his total support for the candidature of the retired soldier in the presidential election.

“I congratulate the people’s General, Muhammadu Buhari, candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the just concluded presidential election for his emergence as the President-elect.

"No doubt, his victory was borne out of the fact that Nigerians were eager for a change and they needed a man like him who can truly bring them the desired change that will meet their yearnings and aspirations.

"I am confident that with Buhari in the helms of affairs in this country, things will certainly change for the better.

"I urge all Nigerians to give the incoming government of Buhari the necessary support, so that together we can move our dear country Nigeria to the next level, where life will be better for all citizens," Abatemi-Usman said.

The Senator applauded members of the Buhari Presidential Campaign Organisation led by Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State and all other leaders of the APC for their strong determination and unrelenting spirit in the struggle to bring about change in the governance of the country.

According to Abatemi-Usman, the efforts of the leaders of the APC at the top, contributed in no small measure to the party’s victory in the presidential poll.

Photo credit: Newsdiaryonline 

2015 ELECTIONS: COURT GRANTS INTERLOCUTORY INJUCTION AGAINST   AIT FROM BROADCASTING DOCUMENTARY AGAINST TINUBU

A Lagos High Court sitting in Ikeja, presided over by Justice Iyabo Akinkugbe, today granted an order of interlocutory injunction, stopping the African Independent Communication (AIT), from further airing a documentary on the national leader of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Bola Ahmed Tinubu.I

It is recalled that the judge had on March 16, 2015 granted an interim order against the AIT, restraining it from further airing the documentary.

Delivering ruling on an application instituted by lawyer to the APC national leader, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), Justice Akinkugbe declared that the  interlocutory injunction will remain, pending the determination of the substantive N150 billion libel suit, initiated by Tinubu against Daar Communications Plc, owners of AIT.

The court maintained that the continued airing of the documentary titled  "Lion of Bourdilion", would affect the res of the suit which was the reputation of the applicant.

The judge held that Tinubu cannot be adequately compensated if AIT is allowed to continue to broadcast the documentary which it started airing daily from March 1.

According to Justice Akinkugbe, "I hereby order an interlocutory injunction in this suit restraining the defendant from further airing, publishing or disseminating, broadcasting the documentary 'Lion of Bourdilion' which it started broadcasting on March 1, pending the determination of the substantive suit."

She subsequently adjourned the matter till April 16, 2015 for further direction.

It would be recalled, that Tinubu who was former governor of Lagos State had initiated the suit against AIT, alleging that a documentary broadcast by the station, entittled, 'Lion of Bourdillion' was libellous and aimed at tarnishing his image.

Specifically, the former governor through an ex-parte motion sought an order of interim injunction restraining AIT whether by itself, agents, privies and or other persons from producing or continuing to broadcast, airing, or continuing to reproduce the documentary.

The motion also sought to restrain the TV station from continuing the broadcast of the documentary, which it started airing on March 1st and had been repeating daily, pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice dated March 5, 2015.

The APC national leader argued further that damages would not adequately compensate applicant/claimant if the ex-parte order was not granted and prayed that the rest of the suit may be extinguished if the ex-parte order was not granted.

The motion equally revealed that there was real, imminent and urgent threat and danger of continuing to decimate the person and integrity of Tinubu by AIT by continuing to air the “offensive” broadcast if the ex-parte motion was not granted.

In moving the application, Tinubu's lawyer, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN) prayed the court to grant the motion as the defendants, AIT stands to lose nothing by temporary stopping the broadcast of the contentious documentary pending the determination of the substantive suit.

The senior lawyer also stated that AIT's argument that most of the contents in the said documentary were already on various online publication was not an excuse to continue to broadcast the document.

Chief Olanipekun equally informed the court that the television station's position that the said documentary was a sponsored advertorial was also not an excuse to further continue the broadcast which has become a subject of litigation.

The SAN noted that AIT cannot continue to make money at the expense of Tinubu who he claimed had never been convicted by any court of law either in Nigeria or abroad.

But responding, lawyer to AIT, Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN), maintained that Tinubu's applicantion would not in anyway be prejudiced if the court chooses to make an order stopping the broadcast.

He also explained that the television station had since stopped the broadcast of the documentary immediately after the former governor filed the action.

The SAN contended that the issues contained in the documentary was already public knowledge as several website had already published similar facts.

Ozekhome further argued that since Tinubu had already demanded for N150billion as compensation which is the worth of his purported damaged integrity, it would not be wise to grant his prayer for interlocutory injunction restraining AIT from further broadcasting the documentary.

Photo credit: OsunDefender 

PDP TO CHALLENGE BUHARI'S VICTORY

The opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has indicated its readiness to question the outcome of the March 28 presidential election.

It would be recalled that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), had  through its Chairman and Chief Returning Officer, Professor Attahiru Jega. At the early hours of today declared Muhammadu Buhari of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) as the winner of the election.

But the opposition PDP through its agent, Bello Fadile at the National Collation Centre in Abuja when the final result was declared, refused to sign the result sheet despite its candidate, President Goodluck Jonathan, having earlier conceded defeat.

Bello, while addressing journalists stated that the PDP was not satisfied with the outcome of the election and had decided to challenge it at the election tribunal.

Accordiing to him, "Whether I sign it (the result sheet) or I don’t sign it,  does not make any difference. It doesn’t invalidate the result‎. When we go to court, then we can challenge the result.

"Sure! The party petitioned. Don’t forget. So the party will follow through the petition. There are rules for this. The law is there. The result was declared on the 1st of April, I think. We will follow the due process.

"Like the president (Jonathan) said, ‘If you have any grievances, follow due process and the due process in this instance is to go to the tribunal."

Photo credit: Premiumtimes