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Ex-Presidents, Obasanjo reminisce on democracy at Ozekhome’s birthday bash
At the birthday celebration for distinguished lawyer Mike Ozekhome, former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan shared insights on the state of Nigeria’s democracy, underscoring concerns about the judiciary’s role.
Obasanjo, in his opening remarks, praised Ozekhome as an “extraordinary man” and highlighted his radical advocacy for political and social change.
He emphasized the importance of Ozekhome’s work, encouraging continued efforts in educating future generations.
Jonathan, co-chairing the event alongside Obasanjo, expressed deep worries about the judiciary’s current trajectory.
He pointed to a troubling ruling that allowed a ward chairman to expel a national chairman of a political party, stating, “This judgment has turned the cone upside down.”
He warned that such decisions could destabilize the political landscape, making it crucial for legal professionals to remain impartial and resist political pressures.
He lamented the excessive number of election-related cases flooding Nigerian courts, a situation he felt was detrimental to democracy. “Most countries don’t experience this level of litigation,” he noted, advocating for a more stable political process that could prevent crises within parties.
Both leaders emphasized the need for a robust judiciary that upholds justice and supports democratic stability. Jonathan called for a review of recent judicial decisions, asserting that the integrity of Nigeria’s political system is at stake.
The event did not only celebrated Ozekhome’s contributions but also served as a platform for addressing pressing issues in Nigeria’s political landscape, highlighting the vital intersection of law and governance.
Abansanjo in his opening remarks said, “Leet me start by congratulating Mike and his family, but particularly his wife, for occasion, for this occasion. When I accepted Mike’s invitation to write a tribute and to also make a statement in a video, I thought my job was done.
“I didn’t realize that he would ask me to be chairman, because when I realized that my brother and colleague, President Goodluck Jonathan, was coming, I thought he will be made the chairman of this occasion.
“But when I was called, then I decided we have got two chairmen for this occasion. So, we are co-chair. But before I give President Jonathan the opportunity to say his statement as a co-chair, I have two or three words to describe Mike.
“And the first one is that he’s an extraordinary man. Extraordinary man. And I thought I will live by that until yesterday I was out.
“And when I was coming back home, a friend of Mike called and said, where will you be tomorrow? And I said, tomorrow I will be attending a double ceremony for a friend who is celebrating his birthday and who also at the same time is presenting 50 books. And he said, who is that friend? I mentioned his name, Mike. Oh, and his reaction was, oh, he’s one of those radicals.
“So, I thought that, well, I have said that this man is an extraordinary man. When my friend said he’s one of those radicals, I did not know what to say. So, when I got home, I took my dictionary because I don’t know whether I will want to tell Mike that he has been described as a radical.
Or whether I will not.
“So, I took my dictionary. And of course, dictionary never lies. It will tell you. So, I look at the word radical, and it says, a person who advocates thorough or complete political or social change. Ah, I like that.
“So, I said, well, look, I will add that to my description of Mike. Mike is a person, and I also add a little bit of mine to the dictionary definition. So, I now read it out to you what I put down.
“Mike is a person who advocates thorough or complete political or social change with conviction, courage, and integrity. And that is the man that we have come to honor. Mike, happy birthday, and more grease to your elbows.
Jonathan on his part thanked Obasanjo saying, “Your Excellency, In fact, President Obasanjo described me as his younger brother.
He’s my father, I am not his younger brother, and he’s somebody I admire so much, even before I got into politics.
So, thank you, sir, for giving me this opportunity. You have brought me to speak at this time.
“I would have been made to speak maybe towards the last. And you have now upgraded me to be a co-chair. Thank you so much.
“So, as a co-chair, the chairman has already said what we should say. I don’t want to belabor the issues. And more so, like President Obasanjo said, I wrote the forward of one of the books and I also made the brief remarks in the video that maybe they will play on the multimedia and so on.
“So, I may not even want to talk about Mike because I made some statements, especially on the video. “But looking at the titles of the 50 books, then you’ll see that Mike is more than even being a radical.
“Because if you look at the various titles cut across almost all spheres of life, political science, law, history, biography, philosophy, health, etc., he’s writing like the philosophers of old, in those days when knowledge was not compartmentalized.
“And one philosopher can talk across the sphere of knowledge, and that is Mike. We thank God for creating people like you that can educate our children and continue to do your work.
“Well, because Mike is a very senior lawyer. So, I know so many senior lawyers are here, both at the bar and the bench. So, in such occasions, we only use such platforms to pledge, especially those of us who are into the political environment, that the way things are going in this country, especially listening to the judgments being given regarding political cases, which Baba will not want to go in, but I can go in.
“We are beginning to see that democracy in Nigeria is like a cone that is being turned upside down. And if you turn a cone upside down, and the top is supposed to be big, even if it’s a little roundish, and you manage to stand it, it cannot be so stable. The slightest perturbation, it will fall.
“When I listen to senior lawyers like Olisa Agbakoba, who was making comments on some Supreme Court judgments, I felt very sad that the country has gotten to that level.
“I’m pleadkng that if democracy will endure, the people both at the bar and the bench should not be carried away by political influence. That is the only way.
“And that is the only way we can stabilize the political process. I know the lawyers enjoy, during the middle of the election, the avalanche of litigation, because it’s like Christmas for lawyers, but most countries don’t go that way, People don’t go to courts. But in Nigeria, pre-election matters, election matters fill all the courts.
“This does not give a good sign for democracy. Comparing Nigeria to other African countries, and some countries outside Africa that have been able to get involved in the electoral processes. So, to me, it worries me.
“In fact, towards the end of this month, I’ll be going to Botswana. I want to go and see what others do. And you come back home and see what we do.
“It worries us. There is a particular judgment that has been haunting, and I need to mention that luckily I’m not a lawyer. I’m saying that from a layman’s view.
:Most very senior lawyers are here. That really turned the cone upside down. And if the courts don’t really look into this and rectify it, it will create so much instability in the political system that it will affect all of us.
“Even those who claim to have succeeded, their victory song will not last long, because we will all be victims. Where the courts say a ward chairman can expel a national chairman of a political party, this is not in line with national justice.
“The law is to control human behavior, and human behavior must follow our God-created systems. You cannot tell me that a head of department, for example, in a university, can expel the vice chancellor.
“So how can the Nigerian laws tell me that a ward chairman can expel a national officer of a political party? And since that judgment has been given, it has created all kinds of instability in the party. In fact, my PDP is in crisis because of that judgment.
“APC was also in crisis because of that judgment. And I’m not looking at it from a legal perspective, because I don’t know anything about the law. But when I look at how nature works, I have never seen a system where a subunit can discipline the top.
“For PDP, of course, Baba knows, in the constitution of PDP, if a national officer, even in your state, cannot discipline you, not to talk about a ward officer that are not even members of NEC, the National Executive Council.
“We are saying that a ward chairman of a party can suspend and expel a national chairman of a political party. I’m pleading with the Supreme Court to review that judgment.
“Because that judgment has turned the cone upside down. And the political process in the democracy is wobbling. I don’t want to go more, but let me just use this as an example.
“Baba, thank you for bringing me. Let me join you to congratulate Mike Ozakome, the wife and the family, for this 67th birthday celebration.
“Let me also, as the co-chair that I’ve been promoted to, thank all of you for coming to celebrate this family and celebrate this man that has made significant impact in the groups of Nigeria, especially his struggles for good governance and political leadership.
Concluding, Obasanjo said,
“I thank you all. I just want to thank you for the comment you made about political judgment. And you said I wouldn’t say anything.”
News
US Congress Certifies Trump Win Four Years After Capitol Riot
By Kayode Sanni-Arewa
Donald Trump capped a historic political comeback on Monday as Congress certified his election victory, in a remarkable turn from four years ago, when a mob he had summoned to Washington ransacked the US Capitol.
The president-elect spent much of his campaign facing prosecution over the 2021 insurrection, when his supporters — fueled by his false claims of voter fraud — rioted to halt the certification of his defeat to Joe Biden
But Trump, 78, was voted back into office in November and Monday’s ceremony went much more smoothly, even with a major winter storm blanketing the capital and much of the country in snow.
“Donald J Trump of the state of Florida, has received 312 votes. Kamala D Harris of the state of California has received 226 votes,” Harris herself declared to assembled lawmakers after the counting was complete.
Harris — who oversaw the certification as part of her vice-presidential duties — said the official count “shall be deemed a sufficient declaration” for Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance to take their oaths of office on January 20.
The ceremony marked the final blow to efforts to have the Republican leader face justice over the riot, the culmination of a multi-pronged alleged criminal conspiracy that prosecutors said Trump led — before they dropped all charges upon his election.
Trump has vowed to pardon an unspecified number of the rioters — around 900 of whom have admitted federal charges from trespassing and vandalism to assaulting police — describing them as “hostages.”
In a Washington Post op-ed, Biden slammed Trump’s allies for downplaying the violence of 2021 and urged Americans to be “proud that our democracy withstood this assault.”
“We cannot accept a repeat of what occurred four years ago,” he said. “An unrelenting effort has been underway to rewrite — even erase — the history of that day.”
Indiana conservative Mike Pence had Harris’s job — certifying his own defeat alongside Trump — in 2021 when, in a desperate bid to cling to power, the then-president demanded that he reject Biden’s victory.
Lawmakers in both parties have occasionally used the certification process to challenge elections, but more than half of House Republicans rejected the results in 2021.
– ‘Emotional trauma’
No Democratic leaders followed the Republican example this time around and there were no objections to certifying Trump’s victory — a process that took barely half an hour.
The former reality TV star was impeached for inciting the 2021 insurrection after delivering a raucous speech outside the White House early in the day, demanding that supporters march on the Capitol and “fight like hell.”
Thousands attacked the citadel of American democracy — battering police with metal bars and flag poles, smashing windows, sending lawmakers running in fear and chanting “Hang Mike Pence!”
Four people died — two from heart attacks, one from a potential overdose, and a rioter fatally shot by police as she tried to force her way into the House chamber. Four police officers committed suicide subsequently.
Republican Speaker Mike Johnson has vowed to investigate the House committee that probed the riot and found that Trump had instigated it after the failure of a host of other schemes to overturn an election he knew he had lost.
US Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement the Justice Department had over the last four years charged more than 1,500 people suspected of involvement in the “unprecedented attack on a cornerstone of our system of government.”
The certification — which launches a two-week countdown towards Trump’s January 20 inauguration — was designated for the first time as a national security special event, with 500 National Guard personnel on standby.
But the federal government and Washington public schools were closed Monday with up to a foot (30 centimeters) of snow expected.
“Four years ago today, our nation watched in horror as a terrorist mob stormed the Capitol grounds and desecrated our temple of Democracy in a violent attempt to subvert the peaceful transfer of power,” Democrat Nancy Pelosi, who was House speaker at the time of the rebellion, said in a statement.
“The January 6th insurrection shook our Republic to its core — and left behind physical scars and emotional trauma on members of our congressional community and our country that endure to this day.”
AFP
News
Senate Sets Jan 31 For Passage of N49.7trn 2025 Budget
By Kayode Sanni-Arewa
The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, Adeola Olamilekan, has affirmed January 31, 2025, as a provisional date for the passage of the 2025 ₦49.7tn budget as the committee prepares to begin budget defence on Tuesday.
He made this disclosure on Monday during a meeting with the chairmen of relevant committees on the template for the 2025 Budget Defence Session to guide the budget process towards its eventual signing into law.
Olamilekan further revealed that upon the resumption of plenary by the 14th of January 2025, the Senate would immediately commence a two-week break for the seamless continuation of the budget defence process.
He equally revealed a planned retreat on Thursday on the budget consideration which will involve ministries, departments and agencies, civil society organisations, and other stakeholders in the polity for further consultation and insight into the content of the budget proposal
According to the timetable, from the 15th to the 18th of January, it is expected that the committees would report back on their documents, after which collation and tiding of documents by the Appropriation Committee.
Acknowledging the limited timeframe, Olamilekan emphasised the need for lawmakers to intensify their efforts. He also urged his colleagues to forgo their holidays and begin immediate work on the proposed budget estimate, underscoring the importance of timely and efficient handling of the budget process within the stipulated timeframe.
News
My life now under heavy threat after my new year message – Obi alleges
By Kayode Sanni-Arewa
The Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate in the 2023 elections, Peter Obi, has alleged threat to his life following his criticism of President Bola Tinubu’s administration in his new year message.
Obi’s allegation follows a statement credited to the national spokesperson of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Felix Morka, in a recent interview.
Morka was quoted to have said that “Peter Obi has crossed the line so many times and has it coming to him whatever he gets”.
In his new year press conference on Thursday, Obi had lamented the political, economic and security, healthcare situation in the country.
The former Anambra State governor said that the political, economic and security situation of Nigeria is worsening daily, despite government’s contrary positions and claims of improvement in different spheres of human endeavour.
“Our national challenges are visibly worsening. Our nation and its fortunes are in clear reverse. The indices are clearly indicative of our decline; thus our national indices tell a disconcerting story,” Obi said.
“Nigeria remains one of the poverty capitals of the world, with over 100 million people living in extreme poverty and more than 150 million in multidimensional poverty. The situation has deteriorated significantly over the past 18 months under the current administration.
“As a nation, we have fallen from being the largest economy in Africa, with a GDP of $574 billion and a per capita income of over $3,500 in 2014, to now ranking fourth on the continent. Our current GDP is less than 50% of what it was a decade ago, standing at approximately $200 billion, with a per capita income of barely $1,000.”
Reacting to Morka’s statement in a post on his X handle on Monday, Obi asked if he has “really crossed the line” after receiving threats against his life, family, and associates following his New Year’s message.
He challenged anyone who thinks he has crossed the line to point it out to him where he did, expressing his commitment to upholding decorum.
The former governor also vowed not to be silenced in his resolve to speak truthfully, especially as the country “drift toward undemocratic practices.”
His post reads, “I ask the question because my New Year message has now led to threats against my life, my family, and those around me. While I have received all sorts of messages, one Mr. Felix Morka has gone further to accuse me of “crossing the line” and has warned that I will face the consequences.
“If I have truly crossed the line, I invite anyone to point it out, as I remain committed to upholding decorum. However, I will not be silenced in my resolve to speak truthfully, especially as our nation continues to drift toward undemocratic practices.
“We are increasingly transforming into an authoritarian and repressive regime, where freedom of expression is being systematically suppressed. May God help us create a better and freer society for the sake of our children.”
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