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2019: Ex-governor Jonah Jang joins presidential race

Former Governor of Plateau State and serving senator representing Plateau North in the National Assembly, Senator Jonah Jang has declared his intention to contest for the presidential primary on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party.

A close associate of Senator Jang, who was a former Secretary to Plateau State Government, Professor Shedrach Best, made this known in an interview with the Tribune newspaper.

He said the former governor has submitted his letter of intent to the National Secretariat of the PDP in Abuja and also made a declaration at his constituency.

According to him, Senator Jang joined the race after a wide consultation in the country especially in the Middle Belt which is his immediate constituency as far as the presidential race is a concern.

“After he submitted his letter of intent to contest at the National Secretariat of the PDP in Abuja, he had a wide consultation and meeting with his followers in his constituency and got the nod of the people to contest for the number one seat.

“Senator Jang decided to throw his hat into the ring having examined the state of the nation especially the insecurity, energy, bad economy and lack of purposeful direction by those in leadership positions in the country. He joined the race primarily to make a difference,” he said.

Professor Best, who said Jang had the full support of the Middle Belt for his aspiration added that the fact that the geopolitical zone has not enjoyed representation through electoral governance further propelled Senator Jang to indicate his interest to contest.

“PDP has zoned presidency to the North, the North Central otherwise called the Middle Belt has not enjoyed representation through electoral governance, it is the belief of Senator Jang that since North Central is part of the North it should be given an opportunity this time around,” he said.

Professor Best further disclosed that the former governor will start campaign this week from Plateau State, where it will be taken to other parts of the country.

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2019: You are daydreaming, can’t allow takeover from Buhari – Adebanjo tells Tinubu

A chieftain of Afenifere, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, has said that the All Progressives Congress, APC, National Leader, Bolaji Tinubu must be naive to think that the North will allow him to succeed Buhari in 2023.

Adebanjo further called on the people of the South-West not to allow themselves to be fooled by Tinubu a second time.

“Tinubu is daydreaming if he thinks the North will ever support his presidential ambition. We have our principles,” Adebanjo was quoted by Punch as saying.

“We are not supporting Buhari under any circumstance and Tinubu cannot lead Yoruba land because all he has done is to lead us astray. All he has done for us is to give some of our people who are close to him appointments.

“Nothing tangible has been done for Yoruba land. He gave his stooges appointments, nothing more, nothing less. If he has done more than that, let him say it.”

The 90-year-old said the only demand the Yoruba had made was restructuring, which the APC had been dishonest about.

He added, “How can they be telling us about restructuring committee, when from the outset, they were supposed to have started restructuring. Who do they think they are fooling?

“If Tinubu is daydreaming, he shouldn’t think others are daydreaming like him.

“Buhari is a stranger to us in Yoruba land. The only Yoruba supporting him are those benefiting from this corrupt regime.”

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Melania Trump announces plan to visit Africa in October

The First Lady of the United States of America has announced a solo visit to Africa in October.  The trip is going to be Melania’s first big solo international visit and she intends to visit several countries in the continent.  President Trump who was criticized earlier this year for his ‘shithole countries’ in Africa will not accompany the first lady.


In a statement released on Monday, Melania will be visiting Africa to learn about the issues that children living on the continent face, as well as appreciating Africa's history and culture.

"This will be my first time traveling to Africa and I am excited to educate myself on the issues facing children throughout the continent, while also learning about its rich culture and history,” she said in the statement. This comes a few months after she launched “Be best initiative” that promotes children’s well-being.

Melania Trump's spokeswoman, Stephanie Grisham, said the first lady chose Africa after she learned about some of the development programs that are under way in many of its countries, especially in children's health and education.


"We are a global society, and I believe it is through open dialogue and the exchanging of ideas that we have a real opportunity to learn from one another," the statement said.

The dates of her visit and the specific countries she will be visiting are yet to be confirmed.

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Outside help not wanted, says DR Congo as key elections loom

Mountainous hurdles face the Democratic Republic of Congo as it prepares for elections, just four months away, that will shape the future of one of the world's powder-keg countries.

Organising elections among some 40 million voters in a troubled, impoverished state nearly five times the size of France is a huge challenge.

But, prickly about intrusion, the DRC is rejecting offers of advice, oversight and election funding from abroad.

On Monday, it was regional neighbour South Africa's turn to be spurned.

The authorities rejected the appointment of South African former president Thabo Mbeki as "special envoy" to the December 23 ballot, a role announced in the press but not officially confirmed by Pretoria.

"I can tell you that there will be no special envoys to the DRC, even if they are Thabo Mbeki" -- the host of peace negotiations that ended the Second Congo War in 2003 -- President Joseph Kabila's diplomatic advisor, Barnabe Kikaya Bin Karubi, told AFP.

Observers "tend to behave like proconsuls. They don't respect the DRC's autonomy. We want to mark our sovereignty," added Communications Minister Lambert Mende.

- Frosty to UN -

The DRC's electoral commission has also said it is refusing help offered by the UN mission, MONUSCO, which proposed using its helicopters and planes to ferry imported voting machines to polling stations nationwide.

"We won't impose ourselves," a MONUSCO spokesman said -- a marked contrast to the situation in 2006, when Kabila was elected by the people after coming to power. The UN played an important role that year in lending logistical assistance.

Kinshasa wants to see MONUSCO gone by 2020, ending a 20-year presence including more than 16,000 pairs of boots on the ground at an annual cost of more than a billion dollars.


In July, Kabila's aides said a potential visit by UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres would be "inopportune".

On August 8, Kabila, 46, eased months of tension when he signalled he would not stand again for the office he has held since 2001.

He threw his support behind a close ally as the candidate of his political majority -- former interior minister Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary, who is permanent secretary of Kabila's People's Party for Reconstruction and Democracy (PPRD).

The DRC opposition, which shed blood in protests against Kabila's grip on power after his mandate ended in 2016, remains deeply suspicious.

It has raised concerns about nuts-and-bolts issues such as the electoral roll and the voting method, and fears Kabila is simply plotting to remain the power behind the throne.

"Our people cannot and will not accept a sham election where Joseph Kabila, while not himself being a candidate, remains absolute master of the electoral process," the pro-democracy movement Lucha (Struggle for Change) said on Monday.

- 'Cheating machines' -

One of the trigger points is the novel use of touch-screen voting machines which the DRC election commission says are crucial, given the problem of printing, distributing and tallying ballot sheets in a sprawling country with communications problems.

Lucha, though, has branded the South Korean-made devices "cheating machines." It is urging the public to march on the commission's headquarters on September 3.


The European Union, like the UN and US, is closely following the election buildup.

It has frozen assets and denied visas to a dozen Congolese figures -- including Shadary -- on the grounds of human rights abuses since the constitutional end of Kabila's second and last mandate in December 2016.

"Obviously we would like to send an observer mission from the European Union," said a diplomat.

"But to do that, we need an invitation from Kinshasa. In the present climate, I find that hardly likely."

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APC crisis: Buhari, Lai Mohammed at war over Minister’s move to sack Kwara exco

The Publicity Secretary of the Kwara State chapter of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Sulyman Buhari has tackled the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed over the call for dissolution of its executives.

Buhari said Mohammed does not have the locus standi, adding that Mohammed easily forgot that Nigeria was running a democratic system.

This is contained in a press statement issued by Buhari to journalists in Ilorin, the state capital on Sunday.

Buhari’s statement said, “The Ishola Balogun-Fulani led State Executive Committee of the APC is a product of law and due process.

“It was an executive duly inaugurated by the NEC of the APC as the authentic and legitimate. It’s not a jankara executives that Lai Mohammed and his other irrelvant Abuja-based colleagues wanted unsuccessfully to foist on the party during the last congress.

“Alhaji Lai Mohammed lacks the locus to call for the dissolution of the lawfully elected members of the State Executive Committee of the APC in Kwara. He is neither a member of the State Executive Committee nor a member of the APC National Executive Committee.

“Worst still, he’s not recognised as a leader of the party even in his Oro ancestral home, how much more across Kwara State.

“A man that did not attend the last congresses of the APC nor vote during the process does not have the standing to call for the dissolution of the executives that lawfully emerged from thatprocess.

“The tragedy of a character like Lai Mohammed is that they forgot that we are in a democracy where the rule of law reigns supreme.

“No matter how much they try, the only lawfully recognised executives of the APC in Kwara State at the moment is the Balogun Fulani led executives. No amount of name calling and blackmail can change that”

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Senate President is the cause of APC’s problems – Itse Sagay

The Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), Itse Sagay has said that Senate President Bukola Saraki has been the cause of the problems in the All Progressives Congress (APC) since 2015.

Sagay said this while reacting to reports of the Senate President’s resignation from the ruling party.

The Senate President, on Tuesday, July 31, 2018, announced his departure from the APC on Twitter.

According to Saraki, he had to leave because all the governance principles required for peaceful running of the ruling party were deliberately violated and undermined.

Bad blood

Speaking further on the Senate President’s defection, Sagay described his exit as the last bad blood in the APC that has been flushed away.

According to The Independent, he said that the ruling party will be stronger and better as a result of Saraki’s resignation.

“It is a cleansing process. To me, with Saraki’s exit, the last bad blood in the APC has been flushed out. So, the APC is strengthened and is not going to be pulled down.

“This man right from the beginning was the source of all the problems of APC. The way he got into the presidency of the senate by subterfuge, by selling off APC’s deputy senate presidency position in senate and then forming alliance with the opposition PDP to torture the government of his own party and betray them left, right and centre.

“He has been a terrible millstone on the neck of APC. So, with his exit, APC will be lighter, stronger and better positioned and be free from internal enemy.”

Meanwhile, Saraki, in his statement which he issued after he dumped the ruling party, took a swipe at President Buhari’s war against corruption.

The Senate President said that the anti-corruption war is being used as a weapon to silence dissenting voices.


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Breaking! Army opens fire on protesters in Harare

Soldiers and police fought running battles with hundreds of protesters in Harare on Wednesday, firing live ammunition, teargas and water cannon as rising tensions over Zimbabwe’s presidential election spilled into violence.

The army was deployed in the capital after police proved unable to quell demonstrators who claim Monday’s historic election is being rigged.



By mid-afternoon much of the city centre resembled a war zone, with military helicopters flying overhead, armoured personnel carriers moving through burning debris and patrols of soldiers chasing stone throwers down narrow streets. A pall of smoke filled the sky. On cracked pavements there was glass and – in some places – blood.

Terrified commuters took cover in shop doorways or behind walls still covered in posters bearing portraits of election candidates as volleys of shots rang out and stones flew through the air. There were unconfirmed reports that one person had been shot dead near a bus rank and several more seriously injured. Witnesses reported seeing soldiers beating people with makeshift batons.



An armed soldier patrols a street in Harare during protests. Photograph: Mujahis Safodien/AP

Opposition supporters have expressed growing impatience over delays in releasing the results of the historic vote, the first since Robert Mugabe was ousted after four decades in charge.

The scenes of violence contrasted dramatically with the jubilation and joy on the same streets that greeted the end of Mugabe’s rule in November. Then soldiers were seen as patriotic heroes. On Wednesday afternoon, in the opposition stronghold of Harare at least, they were seen once more as thuggish defenders of the ruling Zanu-PF party.

Early clashes took place outside the headquarters of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), which opposition supporters accuse of bias, and spread rapidly.

“We support [opposition leader Nelson] Chamisa and we want him to be our president. The electoral commission is not fair. Our election is being stolen,” said a 19-year-old student among the protesters.

Some chanted: “This is war,” while others shouted slogans calling for the country’s president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, to step down.

 Supporters of the opposition MDC burn an election banner bearing the face of Emmerson Mnangagwa in Harare.

“This is all the government’s fault,” Abigail Nganlo, a 29-year-old nurse, told the Guardian as she sheltered from the clashes in a narrow alley. “We are on our knees with the economic situation. People are so angry. The [election] figures they are producing are fake. Where there are 500 people at a polling station, they are saying 5,000.”

Alex Kamasa, 30, an unemployed graduate, said: “They are desperate. It is a big robbery. At least Mugabe rigged with brains. These guys rig like school children. They insult us.”

The country’s justice minister, Ziyambi Ziyambi, said the army had been deployed to disperse a violent crowd and restore “peace and tranquility.”

“The presence of the army is not to intimidate people but to ensure that law and order is maintained. They are there to assist the police,” Ziyambi said in an interview broadcast on eNCA television. “They are there as a people’s army to ensure that peace and security prevails.”

The authorities are under increasing pressure to release the results of Monday’s poll, which pitted Chamisa, a 40-year-old lawyer, pastor and leader of the main opposition party the Movement for Democratic Change, against Mnangagwa, 75, a longtime Mugabe aide and head of the Zanu-PF.

Zimbabwe’s rulers know that the widespread perception overseas that they have rigged an election would block the country’s reintegration into the international community and deny it the huge bailout package needed to avoid economic meltdown.

So too could scenes such as those seen in Harare on Wednesday afternoon. Images of soldiers firing on civilian protesters recall the darkest days of Mugabe’s rule and are a serious setback to Zanu-PF’s effort to improve its image overseas.

The US embassy said it was “deeply concerned by events unfolding in Harare”, called on leaders of all parties to call for calm and urged the military “to use restraint in dispersing” protesters.

Less than an hour before the violence, election monitors called for votes to be counted in an open and timely way.



Soldiers beat a protester outside the Movement for Democratic Change party headquarters in Harare. Photograph: Mike Hutchings/Reuters

Zanu-PF has already won a massive majority in parliament after sweeping rural constituencies by significant margins, official results show, but the parliamentary outcome does not necessarily indicate voters’ choice of head of state.

Under electoral law the result in the presidential vote has to be announced by 4 August.

Elmar Brok, the head of the first EU monitors to be allowed into Zimbabwe for 16 years, praised an “opening up of political space” before the poll but said the government had failed to ensure a level playing field and accused the ZEC of bias.

Brok called on the ZEC to make detailed results public to ensure the credibility of the election given earlier shortcomings. Other monitors also expressed concerns as the count went into a third day.

“Election day is only a snapshot of a long electoral process,” said the US congresswoman Karen Bass, one of the monitors deployed jointly by the US International Republican Institute and National Democratic Institute.

“It is vital to see the electoral process to its conclusion, and it is still too early to make an assessment on the nature of these elections.”

If no candidate wins more than half of the votes in the presidential election, there will be a runoff in five weeks. Negotiations to form a coalition government are another possibility.

The two presidential candidates represent dramatically different ideologies and political styles, as well as generations. Pre-election opinion polls gave Mnangagwa, a dour former spy chief known as “the Crocodile” due to his reputation for ruthless cunning, a slim lead over Chamisa, a brilliant if sometimes wayward orator.



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Futo post utme date fixed

The post utme of futo (Federal university of technology  owerri) which was to start July 
23rd but was postponed  has now been fixed to 30th
Of July candidates are been told to go carry out the reprinting to know their exam date 

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My father never took a bribe – Ex-CBN Deputy Governor, Moghalu

Former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Kingsley Moghalu, has claimed his father never took a bribe in his 35 years in the civil service.

Moghalu, who is also a presidential aspirant on the platform of the Young Progressives Party (YPP), stated this while speaking with reporters in Lagos.

He said his father, who worked as diplomat in Geneva, Switzerland, had a huge influence on him.

“My family background pretty much shaped me. My father was in the civil service for most part of his life; my father had a very important influence in my life for two reasons, one, ethics and morality.

“I remember him as a very jovial man. When we were growing up; he would beat his chest and say 35 years as a civil servant I never took a bribe, so I was impressed by that and it helped in shaping me. It makes me think of my background.

“My family is a family of five, I was the first child so I grew up being a leader. I had not only a value system but a strong sense of responsibility placed on my shoulders right from when I was young.”

“In those days, my parents will delegate authority to me to discipline my siblings; they used to call me, Okoli the headmaster, I mean I had my cane, so those kinds of things place some responsibilities on you where you have to live up to expectation.

“These are the little but important things that shaped my personality and worldview,” Moghalu said.

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We will fence Nigeria, change its name if elected into power - JMPP

Justice Must Prevail Party says there are people outside Nigeria printing the nation’s currency

The acting national chairman of the party, Olusegun Ijagbemi, states that the CBN six months ago revealed to the National Assembly that more than 20% of Nigeria’s currency is fake

An aide to the governor of Akwa Ibom state, Ekong Sampson, says the late Chief MKO Abiola used his wealth in contributing to the development of Nigeria

Justice Must Prevail Party (JMPP) on Thursday, June 14, said if elected into power in 2019, it would construct perimeter fence around Nigeria and change the name of the country and the currency.

The acting national chairman of the party, Olusegun Ijagbemi, revealed at a news conference in Abuja, The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

He said that the need to change the name of the country and its currency was divinely revealed to the leadership of the party, adding the changes were important if Nigeria must make progress.

According to Ijagbemi, the 14th pillar of the party is to change the name of Nigeria to Pisonia and its currency from Naira to Pison.

“It is a miracle that the leadership of this party got a wind of how the entire African nation is being impoverished with their currency.

“There are people outside Nigeria printing our currency and they have agents among us, including our political leaders.

“They are printing money and they have agents in CBN and throughout Africa. We brought this information to Nigeria that they are destroying our economy,’’ he said.

The chairman added that about six months ago, the CBN revealed to the National Assembly that more than 20% of Nigeria’s currency was fake.

Ijagbemi said that promoting citizens’ welfare and security of lives and property would be one of the major concerns of the party, if elected.

He said that the party would use technology to monitor the country’s borders and that security forces would be highly motivated.

“This party is going to fence Nigeria and create only regulated route for people to come in and go out of the country.

“You can no longer move boys or girls across the border with trailer and then say you have captured or recovered them.

“There will be no need for people sleeping with their hearts panting. You cannot just come into the country, invade it and steal our oil.’’

Ijagbemi stated that JMPP government would strengthen the immigration laws, and that border control would be exercised maximally.

He said that citizenship laws would also be reviewed to meet the exigencies of current happenings in the world.

Ijagbemi decried the level of unemployment in the country, saying it was unacceptable, “considering the fact that the nation was reputed as one of the richest in the world in human and natural resources’’.

To address the challenge, he said that JMPP would equip Technical Colleges and Polytechnics to provide high-level manpower to form the backbone of technological and industrial development.

“The party will also encourage the formation of new industries in line with modern technological trends using the products of the revamped technical schools and polytechnics.

“Skills development centres will be established in all local government councils of the country. ‘’

He added that JMPP government would ensure that international agreements negotiated and entered into by the Federal Government were in tandem with the interests of Nigerians.

Meanwhile, the special adviser to the governor of Akwa Ibom state on political and legislative affairs, Ekong Sampson, has said the resumed winner of the June 12 presidential election, late Chief MKO Abiola would have been a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) if he were to be alive today.

The Nation reports that the aide speaking in an interview on Thursday, June 14, said the late MKO epitomized the democratic ideals of the party.

Sampson noted that Abiola used his wealth in contributing to the development of Nigerian sports, infrastructure and paying huge sacrifices for the benefit of Nigerians.

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MKO Abiola: I tried thrice to make Jonathan confer GCFR on my father – Kola

Kola Abiola, the oldest son of the presumed winner of the June 12, 1993 Presidential election, Chief MKO Abiola, has claimed that he made three attempts to make former President Goodluck Jonathan bestow the Grand Commander of the Order of the Federal Republic, GCFR, title on his late father.

He said this during a programme titled, ‘Question Time’, which aired on Channels Television on Thursday.

According to MKO’s son, he first approached the then Attorney-General of the Federation, Mohammed Adoke (SAN), to honour his father during the Centenary celebration in January 2014 but a gold award was given to the deceased, which was rejected by the family.

He said even after Jonathan had lost and was preparing to leave office, he made another attempt to get him to honour MKO but it failed again.

Kola said, “Towards the election, I approached them again, this time in writing, and solicited the help of Pastor Bakare and told them that even if it was for selfish political reasons, this was something you could do to help your chances of winning elections.

“I really didn’t mind how he got it done. But we couldn’t get President Jonathan to get it done so we left that.

“After he lost the election, I approached him a second time also through the same Pastor Bakare to try to get him to do this as a legacy of his Presidency, something that Nigerians would never forget about him. Last minute, we couldn’t get it to happen.”

Kola noted that he did not approach former President Olusegun Obasanjo to honour his father because he felt there was no point doing so as the answer would have been obvious.

He, however, said he approached the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, who promised to address the issue but died in office.

When asked his view on Jonathan’s naming of the University of Lagos as Moshood Abiola University, Lagos, Kola said, “That was a mistake. They were trying to regionalise MKO. He was beyond that. This man was voted across Nigeria irrespective of religion.

“I went back to them and told them if they had consulted me, I would have told them what to do.”

Kola added, “Like Rochas Okorocha would say, ‘It is Ibeberism’ as far as I am concerned. How many times have I been to the National Assembly? All they do is just talk and it gets to the committee and it dies there. That is what they call filibuster in politics. How many times have they not done what is right?”

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Trump, America's oldest first-time president, turns 72

President Donald Trump turned 72 on Thursday, having returned to the fray of Washington politics after his grueling trip to Singapore for the summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

Trump in 2016 was the oldest person to assume the US presidency -- he was 70 then -- although Ronald Reagan was 73 when he was re-elected in 1984.

Trump's health, both physical and mental, have been the subject of keen interest in America.

He underwent an official physical in January and then White House physician Ronny Jackson described his health as "excellent."

When Trump was still a presidential candidate, his then personal doctor Harold Bornstein released a letter on Trump's behalf in December 2015 in which he described the businessman's health in grand hyperbole.

It depicted Trump’s blood pressure and laboratory results as "astonishingly excellent," his physical strength and stamina as "extraordinary," and said he would be "the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency."

Last month Bornstein told CNN that Trump had personally dictated the letter.

Bornstein also said last month that a bodyguard visited his Park Avenue office last year and confiscated the president's medical records.

Bornstein said the "raid" took place on February 3, 2017, two days after The New York Times quoted the physician as saying he had prescribed Trump a hair growth medicine for years.

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Senator Sani asks Buhari to apologise to families of Ken Saro Wiwa, others

   Senator Shehu Sani gave a list of pominent Nigerians he thinks President Buhari should apologise to

   Senator Sani said the families of late Ken Saro Wiwa and his kinsmen

  The senator also advised the president to honour Shehu Musa Yar’adua, Beko Kuti and Chima Ubani

Senator Shehu Sani has called on President Muhammadu Buhari to apologise to the families of Ken Saro Wiwa, the eight leaders of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP), as well as the four chiefs of Ogoni who were brutally murdered.

Sani, who represents Kaduna central senatorial district, said the Ogoni nine should also be given national honours.

Wiwa and eight leaders of the MOSOP were arrested and executed during the Abacha regime after they were accused and tried by a special tribunal for allegedly inciting the brutal murders of the four Ogoni chiefs.

Sani, who made this statement in a tweet days after President Buhari honoured late Moshood Abiola with the GCFR award, also asked the president to honour General Shehu Musa Yar’adua, Beko Kuti and Chima Ubani.

Sani tweeted: "There’s need for the FG to tender an unreserved apology to the families of Ken Saro-Wiwa and his Ogoni Kinsmen and honour the 9 and the 4 Ogonis with national honours.Same should be done to late Gen Shehu Musa Yar’adua.Dr Beko Kuti & Chima Ubani must also not be forgotten."

Meanwhile, emiratco.com earlier reported that a daughter of Moshood Abiola has apologised to President Muhammadu Buhari over incident that might have occurred within the June 1993 election and the death of her father.

Hafsat Abiola-Costello, during the June 12 investiture in honour of her father and two others, said things seem impossible until its done.

Apologising to President Buhari and his family, Hafsat said it is unbelievable that the president was used by God as an instrument to restoring honour to her father.

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2019: I haven’t seen anyone who can defeat President Buhari – Alao-Akala

 President Muhammadu Buhari have a bright chance in winning next year's presidential election

  This is the prediction of a former governor of Oyo state, Otunba Adebayo Alao-Akala

  The All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain boasted that President Buhari has both electoral and political value

A former governor of Oyo state, Otunba Adebayo Alao-Akala, has predicted a total victory for President Muhammadu Buhari in next year’s presidential election.

Alao-Akala, who is a chieftain of the ruling APC said though the opposition is preparing well for the election, nobody stands any chance of defeating President Buhari, including his former party, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

According to Daily Independent, Alao-Akala further boasted that President Buhari has both electoral and political value.

His words: “There is nobody who can beat President Buhari as at today, not in the PDP. I am a politician and I know this country very well. There is nobody yet who can beat Buhari. I have not seen any. May be, as time goes on, there can be other candidates.

“But, today, there is none. He will get more votes than he got the last time. I don’t see anything that has changed. The opposition is preparing yet, I don’t see anybody who can beat him now.

“In politics, some politicians have political value. Others have electoral value. Fortunately, Buhari has the two; political value and electoral value. If the election holds tomorrow, Buhari will win.”

In contrast, frontline politician and businessman, Gbenga Olawepo-Hashim, recently predicted that both the ruling APC and the main opposition, PDP will lose the presidential seat at the forthcoming 2019 election.

Olawepo-Hashim, 53, who made the comment while addressing select journalists in the Nigerian capital, Abuja, on Friday, June 8, said Nigerians are tired of the leading political parties in the country and are yearning for a change of the country's political status quo.

The founding member and former deputy publicity secretary of the PDP, blamed the country’s economic challenges on the “mismanagement and poor of leadership quality” of “those sneaked into power.”

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2019 elections: APC will 'abduct' Senator Aduda - President Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari is known for throwing light banters during official functions

  The president displayed his funny side again on Friday, June 15 when he played host to senior government officials from the Federal Capital Territory (FCT)

  The only senator representing the FCT in the National Assembly, Philip Aduda was the subject of the president's joke

President Muhammadu Buhari jokingly said the ruling party, All Progressives Congress (APC) would 'abduct' the Senate Minority Whip, Philip Aduda, from the opposition People's Democratic Party (PDP).

The president made the comment when he played host to senior government officials from the FCT who came to pay him Sallah homage.

President Buhari who expressed delight at the turnout for the homage, jokingly said that perhaps for the 2019 elections, the ruling APC would try and "abduct" Aduda, who was among his visitors, from the opposition PDP.

The president said Aduda seemed to be enjoying at the Senate so much that “he was putting on weight by the day.”

There have been rumours in the past that the FCT senator is considering joining the APC ahead of the 2019 elections.

Political watchers in the FCT say Aduda decision might have been informed by the heavy loss suffered by their party at the last FCT area council polls held two years ago.

According to the analysts, Aduda is vulnerable politically at the grassroots due to the fact that the council offices are now dominated by APC members.

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Country imposes equal tariffs on US imports in retaliation

   China Friday swiftly retaliated by imposing "equal" tariffs on US products following a decision by Donald Trump to slap duties on $50 billion of Chinese products.

"We will immediately launch tax measures of equal scale and equal strength," the commerce ministry said in a statement on its website which also called on other countries to "take collective action" against this "outdated and backwards behaviour".

China would also cancel agreements it had reached with the US during previous discussions over the penalties, it said.

The statement was issued after the US president announced tariffs of 25 percent on $50 billion of Chinese imports, making good on a pledge to punish the alleged theft of US intellectual property.

In a statement, he warned of "additional tariffs" should China hit back with tit-for-tat duties on American goods and services exports.

"Launching a trade war does not accord with global interests," the Chinese commerce ministry said.

"China definitely does not want a trade war, but in the face of the US's malicious, harmful and shortsighted conduct, China has to impose powerful countermeasures and resolutely defend the national interest and the people's interests," it said.

Trump's announcement capped months of sometimes fraught shuttle diplomacy between Washington and Beijing, in which Chinese offers failed to assuage Trump's grievances over the soaring US-China trade imbalance.

US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said Friday the United States would begin collecting duties on 818 Chinese imports valued at $34 billion as of July 6.

A second tranche of 284 goods valued at $16 billion -- which would bring the total to $50 billion -- will undergo an additional process of review and public comment, according to the trade representative's office.

"This is likely to be manageable for the Chinese economy, and the government could offset the damage through tax cuts and domestic subsidies," the company said.

"The risk is that the situation continues to escalate and turns into a trade war, which would have heavier negative impact not only on China but on other economies in the region."

The Chinese commerce ministry did not provide details of how it planned to implement the new duties.

China previously issued a list of US products it would hit with 25 percent tariffs in the event of a trade war -- from big products like soybeans and beef to more niche items such as bourbon and ginseng -- although no timetable was specified.

China is the largest market for US soy and the threat of tariffs on exports of the commodity has the potential to whip up trade anxieties in stalwart Republican states.

US pork and cars manufactured in the United States are already on the radar of Chinese customs, which has stepped up inspections.

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Former presidential candidate reiterates support for Buhari ahead of 2019 general elections

More supports are coming President Muhammadu Buhari's way ahead of the 2019 presidential election

A former presidential candidate, Rafiu Salau, said Buhari is still the best option for the Presidency

Salau was the presidential candidate of the Alliance for Democracy in the 2015 general elections, but later withdrawn from the race to support Buhari

Rafiu Salau, the presidential candidate of the Alliance for Democracy (AD) in the 2015 general elections, has reiterated his support for President Muhammadu Buhari's second term bid, saying that he remains the best option for Nigeria.

Recall that Salau withdrew from the presidential race in 2015 after AD agreed to adopt the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Muhammadu Buhari, Daily Trust reports.

  Emiratco. com notes that Salau expressed optimism that Buhari would win the 2019 presidential election with a landslide.

According to the ex-presidential candidate, Buhari remains the only person that could lead Nigeria to its rightful position in Africa and the world.

He said: “I will continue to support him because I know that at the end of the day, Nigerians will smile and realise that what he was doing was actually in the interest of the nation.

“It is good for Nigerians to know that the nation will be moving forward if Buhari is allowed to complete his eight years as president because he is God’s gift to the nation."

Meanwhile emiratco .com previously reported that the executive chairman, Centre Against Corruption and Open Leadership (CACOL), Debo Adeniran, described President Muhammadu Buhari as the best option for the 2019 presidential election.

According to Adeniran, Buhari remains the best among the pack of politicians eyeing the presidency.

He said: "Personally, I have not heard that he (Buhari) has launched his re-election campaign. I only hear speculations that he has appointed some people into his campaign committee. But I can tell you that among those parading themselves as willing candidates; President Buhari stands head and shoulders above them."

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Why I returned to Labour Party – Mimiko

Former governor of Ondo State, Olusegun Mimiko, has explained why he returned to the Labour Party (LP).

He had on Wednesday, written to the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party, informing them of his resignation from the party.

In his declaration on Thursday at the Civic Centre in Ondo, Mr Mimiko, said he left the PDP out of the conviction to join forces with a political ideology relevant to the need of the present day Nigeria.

According to him, all other parties, including his former party, the PDP, run on ideologies that would not serve the purpose of transforming the country.

He said returning to the LP was borne out of “the need to catalyse a greater focus on the ideological content of the Nigerian political firmament.”

“LP, and its few ideological soul mates among the legion of parties in the country today, provide the requisite platform for this type of deep ideological introspection,” he said.

“Without doubt, this social democratic mantra, which LP and its soul mates represent, remains the best possible outlet for leading Nigeria into a new era of progressive governance.

“We have also come with the conviction, consequent upon several years of practical involvement in the nation’s political process, that the need for ideologically focused political engagement is now more pressing than ever before.

“Virtually all the existing political parties in Nigeria today belong to the right of the centre, ensconced as it were in a neo-liberal mental construct, the name or mantra they choose to enrobe themselves in, notwithstanding.

“This is evident not in terms of the pretentious claims they make to ideological purity, but in the way and manner they have used power; including the extent to which they have mainstreamed the interest and welfare of the weak and poor in our society.

“This ideological fluidity, within which the nation’s extant democracy has evolved since 1999, deserves now to be fully interrogated, with a view to engendering a transition to a more ideologically defined system of engagement.

“This will at once allow for a nuanced examination of the context and content of governance, provide the Nigerian people with real alternatives, and help the electorate in making informed decisions as to which individual or platform to invest with power; and how to hold such to account at all times.”

“We would begin to sharpen the ideological divide in Nigerian politics, with a view to mainstreaming the welfare and interest of the mass of our people,” Mr Mimiko added.

In his address, a factional National Chairman of the party, Abdukadir Abdusalam, said he was delighted to welcome back Mr Mimiko and his followers to the party as the nation approached the coming general elections.

“I feel highly delighted to preside over the return to Labour Party of His Excellency Dr Olusegun Mimiko, the immediate past Governor of Ondo State and all his followers,” he said.

“His people oriented programmes in health, education, housing, rural development, urban renewal, youth and women empowerment attest to the value inherent in his return to the party.

“In him, we have an example of what power could be used to achieve on the side of the people.

“Therefore our hope and confidence is rekindled by his return to the party today to be part of the renaissance of the party and Nigeria.

“Today is indeed not a day for long speeches. We are here to welcome Dr. Mimiko to our party. By his history and achievements, he qualified pre-eminently to be a member of our great party.

“The Labour Party is elated that that a social democrat like Dr. Mimiko, who through his sterling performances as governor mainstreamed pro-people and pro-poor people policies, programmes and projects, is returning to add value to the party. I assure you of our support and commitment at all times,” he added.

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What I did when Buhari was attacked – Kalu

Former Governor of Abia state, Orji Uzor Kalu, has revealed that he took permission from President Muhammadu Buhari, to go and defend him when a particular region in Nigeria was attacking him.

Kalu, speaking on Friday during a courtesy call on Governor Aminu Masari of Katsina, insisted that Buhari deserves a second term.

“When they started attacking the president from that region, I took his permission to go and explain to the people of the region, that the person attacking him was not qualified to attack him and we succeeded in doing that.

“All traditional rulers in the region agreed with us that we were doing the right thing. He has done very well even for us who did not vote him. Go and see, our Niger bridge is being done, roads and many other things are being done in our area,” he said.

Kalu also visited the Emir of Katsina, Abdulmumin Kabir Usman and his Daura counterpart, Umar Faruk, to pay him Sallah homage

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Conviction of two ex-governors; Jolly Nyame, Joshua Dariye rekindles hope for better Nigeria – NACOMYO

The National Council of Muslim Youth Organisation (NACOMYO) on Friday declared that conviction of two ex-governors; Reverend Jolly Nyame (Taraba) and Chief Joshua Dariye (Plateau), and their sentencing to 14 years imprisonment each by Justice Adebukola Banjoko of the Federal High Court, Abuja has rekindled hope of a better Nigeria in the hearts of ordinary citizens.

NACOMYO in its Eld-Kabir message signed by Mallam Sani Suleiman Maigoro (National Presidnet) and Alhaj Mas’ud Akintola (National Secretary General), a copy which was mailed to DAILY POST in Ibadan, described the conviction of the two ex-governors as, “It is also a signal to political office holders in the country that offices are trusts and not opportunities for personal corrupt enrichment.

The Muslim body while rejoicing with Muslims a cross the country for the successful completion of the one month Ramadan fast, however, declared that “The development is a credit to the judiciary and a boost to the anti-graft crusade of President Muhammadu Buhari.

NACOMYO while speaking further, commended Justice Banjoko for her uprightness, courage and resilience and urged other jurists in the country to emulate her virtues.

They maintained that, “The council viewed the conferment (though post humously) of Grand Commander of the Federal Republic Nigeria (GCFR) on the winner of June 12 1993 Presidential election as a step in the right direction.

“Conviction of two ex- governors, Rev. Jolly Nyame of Taraba and Joshua Dariye of Plateau respectively and their sentencing to 14 years

imprisonment each by Justice Adebukola Banjoko of the Federal High Court, Abuja has rekindled hope of a better Nigeria in the hearts of ordinary citizens”.

“The apologies tendered by both President Muhammad Buhari and Hafsat Abiola respectively, on behalf of the Government and Abiola family have set the tone for genuine reconciliation and national rebirth and is in tandem with the spirit of Ramadan. It therefore, enjoined politicians and electorates alike to imbibe the lessons of June 12 which had been adjudged as the freest, fairest and most peaceful in the future elections.

“Finally, The Council implored President Donald Trump of the United States to translate his new found love for Islam as demonstrated during the special Iftar held in the Whitehouse during Ramadan to peace, tolerance, love and justice to the Palestinians. We ask President Trump to halt the daily genocide and attacks being unleashed against the venerable land owners by the Isralis”.

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