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PDP house of commotion: Factional Chairman Despite Court Order, Resumes
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By Kayode Sanni-Arewa
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Treasurer Ahmed Yayari Mohammed on Sunday said he has resumed as acting national chairman despite court order hanging over the party.
Although yet to visit the party’s national secretariat in Abuja, he said in a statement that he has started work as interim chairman following his endorsement by a section of the National Working Committee (NWC).
Mohammed vowed to carry out the responsibilities of the office, despite the Abuja High Court order restraining any party organ from removing the Acting National Chairman, Ambassador Umar Damagum, and the peace moves by governors and members of the Board of Trustees (BoT).
The leadership crisis deepened as the factional Acting Chairman invited applications from those interested in the vacant position of National Chairman from the Northcentral geo-political zone.
The former national chairman, Senator Iyorchia Ayu, is from Benue State, one of the six states constituting the region.
The latest round in the PDP crisis broke out on Thursday when the NWC suspended National Legal Adviser Kamaldeen Ajibade and National Publicity Secretary Debo Ologunagba.
Shortly after, Ajibade and Ologunagba claimed that the NWC had suspended Damagum and National Secretary Samuel Anyanwu.
They added that Yayari had been appointed acting National Chairman.
Also on Friday, a Federal High Court in Abuja affirmed Damagum as National Chair.
It restrained all organs of the party from removing him until December next year when his tenure is due to expire.
A former PDP governor of Ekiti State Ayodele Fayose said with the court order, Damagum remains chair of the party.
But he said the counter suspension in the party had destroyed the fabric of the PDP.
“The party is gone,” he added.
‘I have resumed’
A statement by Mohammed titled: “Acceptance of appointment as Acting National Chairman of our party,” said he has replaced Damagum as acting chairman.
It reads: “The domestic events within our party in the last few days call for deep reflection about the management of the PDP, especially at this crucial time in our nation, particularly as it relates to our role as an opposition party and general management as a constitution compliant party in the true spirit of the mission and vision of the founding fathers which are equity, fairness and justice.
“I am humbled and grateful by the numerous messages of solidarity, support and best wishes received from members of our party across the country.
“The enthusiasm and relief expressed revealed the desire and determination of our members to see a PDP that is strong, democratic and based on strict adherence to its Constitution.
“Regrettably, we must admit that we have not satisfactorily carried out the critical role expected of a virile opposition in a democracy.
“This it has been observed is a result of conflict of interests – personal or political – elevated above party interest, which continues to have a debilitating effect on the ability of our party to perform effectively at various levels, particularly at the national level.
“This state of affairs continues to affect the performance and viability of our party to perform its role as expected as a platform which Nigerians have come to admire and look up to in view of the robust Constitution of the PDP (as amended in 2017 ) and the monumental achievements of the party in the 16 years in government, which period is referred to with nostalgia as the golden years• of governance in Nigeria.
The National Working Committee (NWC) of the PDP, desirous of revamping the party in line with the vision of its founding fathers, on Thursday, October 10, 2024, appointed me as the Acting National Chairman to lead the charge to rekindle the hope and aspiration of our teeming members especially the youths, critical stakeholders and generality of Nigerians who wish to see a political party that is ready and willing to play the role of effective opposition in the quest to develop our democracy and seek for responsible and responsive government in our country
“The NWC under my leadership will be guided strictly by the constitution of our party and I will at all times be fair to all members irrespective of their status, position or state in the party.
“Only this will guarantee and engender loyalty and commitment of our teeming members.
“In this regard, my primary goal, focus and mandate in the onerous assignment is to restore the confidence of our members by immediately setting in motion the process to hold the long overdue National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting of our party already scheduled for Thursday, October 24, 2024.
“In line with the provision of our party’s constitution, the Northcentral Zone which is constitutionality entitled to produce a replacement to serve out the tenure of the former National Chairman, Sen. Iyorchia Ayu, is hereby requested to urgently meet and forward its nominee to my office for necessary preparation and forwarding for consideration and approval by NEC at the October 24, 2024 meeting.
“I hereby seek and solicit the co-operation, support and advice from my colleagues NWC members, all organs of the party, especially the PDP Governors’ Forum, the Board of Trustees (BoT), National Assembly Caucus as well as leaders, critical stakeholders and members towards a successful NEC meeting that we can all be proud of.”
The Acting National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Ahmed Abdullahi Manga, said the factional acting chairman was daydreaming.
He also dismissed the insinuation that PDP governors had endorsed Damagum’s suspension. He described it as “lies from the pit of hell.”
Yayari not at party secretariat
The factional officers – Mohammed, Ologuagba and Ajibade – have not visited the PDP national secretariat since the crisis escalated at the weekend.
They have also not reacted to the order of the Abuja court that affirmed Damagum’s right to remain in office as acting national chairman until the national convention billed for December 2025.
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A member of the House of Representatives Ikenga Ugochinyere (Ideato North and South) Imo, commended Mohammed for his decision to hit the ground running.
He said the group would support the new acting leadership’s resolve to reform the party.
PDP is gone, says Fayose
PDP is gone, Fayose said on a television programme last night.
Noting that the main opposition party has been hit by internal strife, leadership squabbles and disunity, he said there was no solution in sight.
The former governor also said Vice President Atiku Abubakar should jettison his plan to contest for president, saying that age is not on his side.
He said: “I’m sure Atiku Abubakar will stay away from elective office politics. By the time Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu will finish, Atiku will be around 80 to 81 years old. So, what will be the attraction?”
Atiku contested on the PDP platform in the 2019 and 2023 elections. He has expressed interest in running again in 2027.
Fasoye added: “We should leave the stage when the ovation is loudest. I respect him and I think Nigerians are craving for younger generations more than before.
“We can defeat a party, but when we don’t have a party, how shall we talk about defeat? As it stands, the party is gone.
“When the head is sick, the whole body is gone. This party will need God’s intervention; a miracle for the party to be put together again.
“In this instance, the party is not helping matters. When was the last time this party had a NEC meeting? When was the last time we sat down to talk together? When was the last time we sat together?
“We only hear of people being suspended, people going their ways, people exiting the party. It’s very, very unfortunate.”
Fayose said the PDP found itself in the quagmire because of its disdain for truth, adding that it cannot beat the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in future elections.
He said: “It has been difficult to find a way out of the quagmire of disunity within the party because the party is not sitting on truth, equity, and fairness.”
Fayose attributed the current turmoil in PDP to past missteps and leadership failure, adding that “there is no doubt that your past will haunt you. That is the story of the party today.”
Lamenting that PDP NWC is dancing naked in public, the former governor said the suspension and counter-suspension of the party officials could herald a doom that would make PDP become history.
He said: “The current situation in our party has made a mockery of suspension and counter-suspension, especially at that level of leadership.
“Sadly, the current situation of the party has taken the party so low causing embarrassment.”
Be patient with Tinubu’
Fayose urged Nigerians to be patient with the Tinubu Administration
He said: “It’s not been too easy for Nigerians, but I think the government of President Bola Tinubu is giving its best. However, that best still needs to be upped.
“I know it’s not been too easy, but in a little time, things will get better. The damage to the economy is long-term, and the repairs will not come overnight.”
‘Ekiti governor will win re-election’
Fayose gave kudos to Ekiti State Governor Biodun Oyebanji, saying he is on course.
He said he does not know the magic the state chapter of PDP would use to defeat him because it is neck-deep in crisis.
Fayose said most Ekiti leaders are behind Oyebanji, who is of the APC, because of his style of consultation, inclusion and wisdom.
He stressed that the governor has given the stakeholders a sense of belonging.
Fayose added: “He has the support of all leaders. He has visited me 18 times.”
The ex-governor explained that Oyebanji reconciled all the leaders and his predecessors in the state.
According to him, all former Ekiti governors are with the governor.
“Unless something different happens between now and the next election, the governor will win a second term,” Fayose predicted.
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93 percent of inmates are State offenders, half don’t need jail — Tunji-Ojo
Minister of Interior, Dr Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, has disclosed that 93 percent of inmates in Nigerian custodial facilities are state offenders, with only 7 percent held for federal offences, adding that a significant proportion of these inmates do not require incarceration in the first place.
Tunji-Ojo, who spoke on Wednesday in Abuja at the Regional Conference on the Classification of Prisoners and the Use of Technology in Prisons in Africa, jointly organised by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime UNODC and the African Correctional Services Association ACSA, said the Federal Government had moved decisively to decongest correctional facilities by targeting inmates jailed for minor offences.
“93% of our inmates in Nigeria are state offenders. Only 7% are federal offenders. And of this 93%, I want to tell you before this president came on board, a lot of them were for minor offences that had no need for incarceration,” the minister said.
He recounted how he ordered an audit of inmates held over minor fines and compensation judgments soon after assuming office.
“When I became minister, I called my permanent secretary, I called the Controller General of the Correctional Service, and I said, listen, give me the data, the record of people who are in correctional centres for fines and compensation of less than 500,000 or something. And guess what? Over 4,000 people,” he said.
According to him, the exercise exposed the futility of keeping such offenders in custody at public expense. “I said, what is the sense in this? Because I feed them in a year with more than 10 times of the fine. So how is the government benefiting? And we were able to clear that, and in one day, we decongested our correctional centre by 5% in one day. In one day,” he said.
The minister said the episode underscored a broader question that correctional authorities across Africa must confront: whether their facilities are rightly overcrowded. “The question is this. Is your correctional centre rightfully overcrowded? That is the question. You have to look at those particular offences. You will realise that more than 30, 40, 50 percent are offences that do not warrant incarceration,” he said.
Tunji-Ojo also disclosed that recidivism in Nigeria’s correctional centres had fallen sharply under the current administration, from about 13,000 cases annually in 2023 to 1,000 last year, a development he attributed to expanded access to education and vocational training for inmates. He said the correctional service currently has 62 inmates pursuing postgraduate studies, 261 in undergraduate programmes, 1,125 in formal education, 18 National Open University centres domiciled in correctional facilities, and 9,582 inmates enrolled in vocational and non-formal rehabilitation programmes.
He said Nigeria had also gone three years without recording a single jailbreak or attack on a correctional facility, a feat he linked to improved data management and inter-agency information sharing. He cited an incident in which an escaped inmate was rearrested after attempting to obtain a Nigerian passport using biometric data linked across security agencies. “Immediately he put his finger at the level of Nigeria immigration service to procure a passport. Immigration saw it immediately that he was an inmate. And immediately they reached out to correctional service and he was arrested right there,” he said.
The Controller General of the Nigerian Correctional Service, Sylvester Ndidi Nwakuche, said Nigeria has continued to modernise its correctional system through reforms anchored on the Nigerian Correctional Service Act, 2019.
He said effective prisoner classification has become a strategic tool for identifying inmates’ risks, protecting vulnerable prisoners, deploying resources efficiently and delivering targeted rehabilitation programmes.
Nwakuche added that integrating technology into correctional administration would enhance record management, improve information sharing and strengthen institutional accountability, stressing that no single correctional service possesses all the solutions to today’s security and rehabilitation challenges. “We have a unique opportunity to exchange ideas, share practical experiences and collectively develop solutions that will strengthen correctional systems across Africa,” he said.
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Corruption Charges: Ex-CCT Chairman Umar gets N100m bail as trial begins Oct 29
Six days after he was remanded in prison custody, a High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), sitting in Maitama, on Wednesday granted bail to the former chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), Mr Danladi Umar, to the tune of N100 million.
The court, in a ruling delivered by Justice Peter Kekemeke, further directed the erstwhile CCT boss, who is facing a four-count corruption charge, to produce one surety in like sum.
According to the court, the surety must be an owner of a property located within the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, who must depose to an affidavit of means.
Besides, the court ordered the defendant to surrender his international passport and not travel out of the country without permission.
The case was subsequently adjourned to October 29 for trial.
Umar was, on July 9, after being arraigned before the court by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), remanded to Kuje prison.
The anti-graft agency said its investigations revealed that the defendant abused his official position by conferring an undue advantage on himself while he served as head of the tribunal.
He was alleged to have collected kickbacks totalling about N15.5 million from contractors.
The prosecution told the court that the defendant, in 2021, used his wife’s bank account to collect the sum of N5.5 million from a contractor engaged to paint the headquarters of the CCT in Abuja.
It was further alleged that on January 25, 2024, he also used his wife’s account to collect another N6 million from a contractor that handled the digitisation of the tribunal’s records.
Furthermore, the defendant was accused of directing a contractor to pay N2.43 million for his daughter’s tuition fee at Baze University, Abuja.
He was said to have committed offences punishable under Section 19 of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act, 2000.
However, upon his arraignment, the embattled former CCT chairman pleaded not guilty to the allegations.
At the resumed proceedings on Wednesday, his legal team, led by Mr Sunday Edward, prayed the court to release him on bail pending the conclusion of the trial.
His bail application was anchored on Section 36(5) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), as well as Sections 162 and 163 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA), 2015.
Even though the prosecution counsel, Mr Christopher Mshelia, opposed the bail request on the premise that the defendant had the capacity to influence some of the proposed witnesses, Justice Kekemeke dismissed the objection.
He held that nothing was adduced to establish that the defendant could interfere with an investigation that had already concluded, with all documentary evidence frontloaded before the court.
The court further set aside the prosecution’s claim that the defendant could commit another offence or evade trial.
It held that the charges contained bailable offences.
It will be recalled that the defendant, while in office as CCT Chairman, on January 23, 2019, issued a controversial ex parte order that led to the removal of a serving Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen.
Following the ex parte order, the late President Muhammadu Buhari, on January 25, swore in the next most senior jurist of the Supreme Court, Justice Tanko Muhammad, as Acting CJN.
Although Onnoghen later voluntarily resigned his position as CJN on April 4, Umar went ahead and convicted him on April 18, 2019, on the federal government’s allegation that he had failed to properly declare his assets as required by law.
He gave the federal government the go-ahead to confiscate all monies in five accounts belonging to the former CJN and also removed him as chairman of both the National Judicial Council (NJC) and the Federal Judicial Service Commission (FJSC).
In 2024, the Senate, citing alleged gross misconduct, removed Umar as chairman of the CCT.
President Tinubu has since appointed Mr Abdullahi Bello to head the tribunal.
Some of the counts in the charge against the former CCT chairman read:
“That you, Danladi Yakubu Umar, while serving as the Chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal and Chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal Tenders Board, on or about the 5th day of October, 2021, in Abuja, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, did confer upon yourself a corrupt and unfair advantage by causing the sum of N5,500,000.00 (five million, five hundred thousand naira only) to be paid to your wife, Zulaihatu Danladi Umar, through her Keystone Bank Account No. 6031167105, by Kurchmives International Limited, a sub-contractor under the contract awarded by the Code of Conduct Tribunal to Momanaf Global Ventures Limited for internal and external painting of the headquarters of the Code of Conduct Tribunal, and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 19 of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act, 2000, and punishable under the same section.”
“That you, Danladi Yakubu Umar, while serving as the Chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal and Chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal Tenders Board, on or about the 25th day of January, 2024, in Abuja, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, did confer upon yourself a corrupt and unfair advantage by causing the sum of N6,000,000.00 (six million naira only) to be paid to your wife, Zulaihatu Danladi Umar, through her Zenith Bank Account No. 2085458208, by Portal Realities Limited, a sister company of JTF Global Links Limited, a company which was awarded the contract for the digitalisation of the Code of Conduct Tribunal management records by the Code of Conduct Tribunal, and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 19 of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act, 2000, and punishable under the same section.”
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INEC portal submission completed before deadline, says LP
The Labour Party has dismissed reports alleging that it failed to upload the names of its presidential and vice-presidential candidates before the Independent National Electoral Commission’s nomination portal closed, insisting that it completed the process four days ahead of the deadline.
In a statement issued in Abuja on Wednesday, National Publicity Secretary, Ken Asogwa, described the reports as “patently false and misleading” and urged its members and supporters to disregard them.
Asogwa explained that it successfully uploaded the names of all its duly nominated presidential, vice-presidential and National Assembly candidates before the July 14 deadline set by INEC.
According to him, the names of the party’s presidential and vice-presidential candidates were uploaded on July 10, in compliance with the electoral umpire’s timetable and guidelines.
He said, “The Labour Party wishes to categorically state that it successfully completed the upload of the names of all its duly nominated candidates for the presidential and National Assembly elections ahead of the closure of the INEC nomination portal on 14th July, 2026.
“Our attention has been drawn to media reports in certain quarters alleging that the party failed to upload the names of its presidential and vice presidential candidates before the expiration of the INEC deadline.
“This claim is patently false, misleading, and exists only in the imagination of the purveyors of that fake news.
“For the avoidance of doubt, the Labour Party successfully uploaded the names of its presidential and vice presidential candidates on 10th July, 2026, four clear days before the close of the INEC nomination window on 14th July, 2026.
“The process was completed seamlessly and in full compliance with the commission’s guidelines.”
The party also faulted the media report, accusing the unnamed organisation that published it of failing to verify the claim with the party’s leadership.
“It is, however, disturbing that a media organisation would publish such a weighty and misleading report without making the slightest effort to verify the information with the leadership of the Labour Party, particularly when the story was purportedly sourced from an anonymous INEC official.
“This raises legitimate questions about the professional responsibility of the media organisation concerned and whether the publication was intended to serve some ulterior political objective rather than the public interest,” he stated.
Asogwa, however, expressed confidence that INEC’s publication of the final list of validly nominated candidates for the 2027 general elections would settle the matter.
He urged Nigerians to ignore the report, insisting it was a deliberate attempt to discredit it ahead of the elections.
“In any event, INEC has already published its timetable for the release of the final list of validly nominated candidates for the 2027 general elections.
“Once the commission makes the publication, Nigerians will clearly see the names of all duly nominated candidates of the various political parties, including those of the Labour Party, thereby putting this baseless misinformation to rest.
“We, therefore, urge our teeming members, supporters and the general public to disregard the fake report in its entirety.
“Those who have become unsettled by the renewed strength, growing acceptance and increasing momentum of the Labour Party should channel their energies into preparing for the electoral contest ahead rather than resorting to crude propaganda and discredited tactics.
“This latest attempt has collapsed under the weight of the facts, like a pack of cards,” the statement added.
The clarification comes amid heightened political activities as parties conclude the nomination of candidates for the 2027 general elections in line with INEC’s timetable.
The electoral body earlier fixed 6 p.m. on July 11 as the deadline for the upload of names for presidential, vice presidential and National Assembly candidates by respective parties, before extending the deadline to Tuesday, July 14.
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