Thursday, 24 August 2017

Buhari to decide SGF, NIA DG’s fate




• Receives report from Osinbajo panel

From Juliana Taiwo-Obalonye, Abuja, Seye Ojo, Ibadan and Romanus Ugwu

President Muhammadu Buhari would decide the fate of the suspended Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Babachir Lawal and the Director-General of the National Intelligence Agency (NIA), Ayo Oke, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said yesterday.
Lawal and Oke were suspended on April 19 following and a three-man committee which included the Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Abubakar Malami and National Security Adviser, General Babagana Monguno (retd) raised to investigate them.
Prof. Osinbajo, who spoke to journalists after he presented the report to the president, decline to revealthe content. He insisted that the president would study it make his decisions known at a yet to be determined date.
“Of course not. I mean this is a report, which contains recommendations to the president. It is a fact finding committee as you know and what our terms of reference were was to find out, based on the fact available to us and based on the interviews of witnesses of what transpired in those cases of the report, one involving the SGF and the other the DG of NIA. We have now concluded and we submitted a full report with recommendations to the president. We cannot, of course, give you any kind of details because the president has to look at the report, study it and then make his own decisions based on that report.”
Buhari was originally scheduled to receive the report on May 8, but had to leave travel on May 7 after he received the 104 released Chibok secondary school girls, for medical consultations with his doctors in London. He returned last Saturday after 103 days.
Asked if Nigerians should expect a fair report despite the fact that the suspended SGF is a friend of the president, the vice president replied: “Well, as you can imagine, we are always fair-minded and the whole approach is to ensure that justice is done in all cases.
“It is in the interest of the government and also in the interest of the nation that things are done properly and that there is due process and that we are not unfair. You can be sure that we will do the right thing.”
On how soon Nigerians should expect the president’s decision on the report, Osinbajo said: “All I can now say is that we have submitted the report, and it is a very detailed report, as a matter of fact. The president has to study the report and make decisions.”
Asked if heads would roll, he replied: “No, how can I tell you? If you want to know what is in the report you have to wait, you really have to wait.”
President Buhari had in April ordered the suspension of Lawal and Oke.
He also ordered investigation into the allegations of violations of law and due process made against Lawal in the award of contracts under the Presidential Initiative on the North East (PINE).
The Senate had indicted Global Vision Ltd., owned by the SGF last December for benefiting from inflated and phantom contracts – or ones not executed at all – awarded by the Presidential Initiative for the North East (PINE). The company got over N200 million contracts to clear invasive grass in Yobe State Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camp.
Oke’s travail followed the discovery of substantial sum of money in local and foreign currencies by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in a residential apartment at Osborne Towers, Ikoyi, Lagos, over which the NIA made a claim.
Dr. Habibat Lawal was named acting SGF, while Ambassador Arab Yadam, was also named acting NIA DG as directed by Buhari that the most senior permanent secretary in the Office of the SGF and senior deputy in NIA.
Earlier, the weekly Federal Executive Council (FEC) which has held all the time Buhari was away on medical vacation was shelved.
Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, however, failed to give reasons for the cancellation of the meeting.
Adesina only said the president would receive the report of the investigation committee into the allegations against the suspended SGF and the DG, NIA.
However, Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Chief Mike Ozekhome described as shameful and disgraceful, a statement by the presidency that Buhari could not work from his office because of rats and rodents.
Ozekhome said the statement derided and shamed Nigeria as a country.
“So, a whole Julius Berger, the German construction giant has to be called in to drive them away and repaint the office! This statement further derides and shames Nigeria as a country. Why didn’t the same, or similar rodents pursue Obasanjo, Yar’adua and Jonathan during their presidency?” he queried.
He said that for truth, there was another mini office at the villa quite different from the official residence and main office.
“Let PMB work from them. Let’s see our president working, not through still photo shopping. For how long will this government take the Nigerian citizens for a ride and for robots? Who told the image makers we are as brainless as they are? Don’t they know that lies have expiry date and that propaganda cannot substitute for image making?”
Meanwhile, former presidential aspirant, Princess Hadiza Ibrahim, said Buhari should probe allegations that hyenas and jackals have infiltrated his administration.
She described the hyenas and jackals as “those people that did not want Buhari to come back and wanted this country to be upside down.They are the enemies of this country. And they know themselves. I know that Buhari will do some fact-finding and get to know them. I advise the hyenas and the jackals to run. So, those who feel they should run, should run now.
“President Buhari should sit down properly, look at the right and left, though he has done a little mistakes, which he accepted by his speech and he should put them right. We are all happy that President Buhari has returned to Nigeria. It is a great loss to be ashamed of a shameless person. Baba should throw out the hyenas and jackals in his kingdom. If they wished him dead and he is back, he should put them in their places.”

Culled from Sun

Thursday, 10 August 2017

Akintola at 98: Anyaoku delivers lecture today


FORMER Secretary General of the Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, will today deliver a lecture in commemoration of the 98th birthday of Chief Akintola Williams, the first African to qualify as a chartered accoun- tant.
Anyaoku’s lecture, entitled: “Re-establishing Nigeria’s leadership position in the World,” is the third in series of lectures organised by the Akintola Williams Foundation since 2015.
Born on August 9, 1919, Chief Williams began his education at Olowogbowo Methodist Primary School, Bankole Street, Apongbon, Lagos Island, in the early 1930s, the same primary school his late younger brother, Chief Rotimi Williams attended.
His firm, founded in 1952, later grew organically and through mergers to become the largest professional ser- vices firm in Nigeria by 2004.
Williams participated in founding the Nigerian Stock Exchange and the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria. During a long career, Williams received many honours.
Anyaoku, the lecturer, was the third Commonwealth Secretary-General.
He was educated at Merchants of Light School, Oba and attended the University College of Ibadan, then a col- lege of the University of London, from which he obtained an honours degree in Classics as a College Scholar.
Anyaoku joined the Commonwealth Development Cor- poration in 1859 and by 1962, he came in contact with the then Prime Minister of Nigeria, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Belewa, having accompanied his visiting boss, Lord Ho- wick, Chairman of the Commonwealth Development Corporation, to a meeting with the Prime Minister on the activities of the corporation in Nigeria and the West Afri- can region.
The Prime Minister, impressed by Anyaoku’s answers to some of his questions on the projects supported by the CDC in West Africa, took an interest in his future and persuaded him to consider joining the Nigerian Foreign Service.
After a grueling interview by the Federal Civil Service Commission, Anyaoku was offered an appointment in the Foreign Service in April 1962. Within a month of his en- try, he was appointed Personal Assistant to the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry for External Affairs.
In 1966, Anyaoku joined the Commonwealth Secretar- iat as Assistant Director of International Affairs. In 1977, the Commonwealth Heads of Government elected him as Deputy Secretary-General. Anyaoku was to become Ni- geria’s Foreign Minister in 1983 in the short-lived Shehu Shagari’s second term in office as president.
After the overthrow of the government by the mili- tary later that year, he returned to his position as Deputy Secretary-General. In 1989, at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting at Kuala Lumpur, Anyaoku was elected the third Commonwealth Secretary-General. He was re-elected at the 1993 CHOGM in Limassol for a sec- ond five-year term, beginning on April 1, 1995.

Sun