Saturday, 21 December 2013

Controversial letter: Gowon, Danjuma caution Obasanjo

Olusegun Obasanjo
Former Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon (rtd) and former Minister of Defence, Gen Theophilus Danjuma (rtd), have flayed former president, Olusegun Obasanjo over his recent 18-page open letter to President Goodluck Jonathan.
They described the letter as being capable of sparking anarchy in the country.
The duo stated this yesterday at the 6th edition of the Abuja Festival of Praise, hosted by Danjuma, at the International Conference Centre, Abuja.
In his goodwill message, Gowon warned Nigerians, especially politicians, against making inciting comments capable of breaching the peace of the country, noting that, it was important for leaders, past and present to be careful not to say things that can bring about problems, since all Nigerians will suffer if there is no peace in the country.
“Let all Nigerians, leadership and followership make sure that we do not make utterances or say things that can really create problems for the leadership and for the country because if that happens, if we listen to such utterances, there shall be no peace and we will be the sufferers for it.
“I want all of us as faithful to bear in mind that this country needs peace and this peace can only come from all of us, the leadership, past and present and from all of us. We must play our part to ensure that there is peace in the country,” he emphasised, stressing that the message became pertinent in view of recent happenings in the country.
Similarly, Danjuma in his goodwill message noted that even though he was mentioned in the letter, he had refrained from making comments to the press about it, insisting that he has unfettered access to the president and will speak with him “face to face” if he has anything to say to him.
“The press have been after me, they want me to react to what Obasanjo said about Mr President and I told them that I have complete access to the president and if I have anything to say to him, I will do so face to face.
“These are very difficult times and we must be careful, especially as leaders, what we say in public,” he added.
Guests at the event were thrilled by performances from different groups. Some of the performances were by the mass choir comprising Abuja Metropolitan Music Society (AMEMUSO), All Saints Choir, Samaru, Zaria, Cathedral Youth Choir, Minna, St. Matthew’s Church Choir, Maitama, Abuja, and Festival Orchestra, Abuja, while guest performances were by The Amiables, Lagos, J-Cleff Chorale, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Mt. St. Gabriel’s Boys’ Choir, Makurdi and St. Luke’s Catholic Church Choir, Kubwa.
Some of the dignitaries who graced the event were former president, Gen Yakubu Gowon (rtd), former FCT Minister, Gen Jeremiah Useni (rtd), Group Managing Director, Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Andrew Yakubu, former Adamawa State governor, Boni Haruna, former Edo State Governor, Osunbor Osaremen and a representative of the Anambra State Governor, Peter Obi.

DailyPost

Nobody Should Use My Name To Create Division, Discord In Nigeria – Patience Jonathan


First-Lady-Patience-JonathanThe First Lady, Dame (Dr.) Patience Jonathan, has decried what she termed a campaign of calumny against her following recent media reports that she summoned some Peoples’ Democratic Party, PDP, governors and coerced them into dropping their agitations for the removal of the party’s national chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur.
A statement on Friday by a Director of Information in the presidency, Mrs Ayo Adesugba, said it was unfortunate that at a time “when all men and women of God are striving hard to share love and promote peace as a sign of the coming of the Prince of Peace, our Lord Jesus Christ, some individuals are doing the opposite”.
The statement particularly noted a damning report which was published on the front page of the Thursday edition of This Day newspaper with the title “First Lady Threatens PDP Governors Over Tukur”, saying the article made reference to an unnamed source which purported that the First Lady was interfering in the affairs of the PDP.
The said article had narrated how Dame Jonathan discussed with the governors of Kogi, Akwa Ibom and Abia States respectively on why they should back-pedal on the removal of Tukur as national chairman of PDP, saying it would affect President Goodluck Jonathan’s 2015 ambition.
But the First Lady’s spokesperson urged members of the Forth Estate of the Realm to be more mature in their reportage and adhere to the basic ethics of journalism by being fair, factual and balanced.
According to the statement, “The article made reference to a vague source with no name. No reporter approached the First Lady or her office for comments or at least to ascertain the veracity of the story. In that respect, the story was not balanced.
“The language used in the report cannot be called fair. In fact, it should draw consternation from all well-meaning individuals as being uncharitable. Words like “haranguing the party’s governors” and “Threatens PDP Governors” are not only untrue but capable of causing disaffection and portraying the First Lady in a bad light.
“We wish to restate that the First Lady, like any other Nigerian is guaranteed the freedom of expression and freedom of association as enshrined in the Nigerian Constitution. The First Lady has always exercised this basic right maturely and patriotically by advocating peace, tolerance and dialogue as demonstrated in all her public speeches and statements.
“For the avoidance of doubt, it must be stated clearly that the First Lady has never harangued or threatened anyone, needless to say, serving governors”.
The statement said in continuation of her efforts towards a peaceful nation, Mrs Jonathan, last Tuesday led a National Women Fasting and Prayer for Peace and Unity in Nigeria event in Abuja.
It recalled that both Christian and Muslim women came together as agents of peace, carrying olive branches, “beseeching the Lord to uphold the peace and unity of Nigeria; peace in all the political parties; peace in the National Assembly and peace in the Presidency, as only peace and unity can move our nation, Nigeria forward”.
The statement added that “Nobody should, under any guise, use the name of the First Lady to cause division or discord in the nation as she has committed herself to fasting and praying for the peace and unity of Nigeria.
“The First Lady will continue fasting until we achieve unity and peace in our Fatherland”, it concluded.

InformationNigeria
 

Presidency Calls On Tambuwal To Declare Defecting Lawmakers’ Seats Vacant, INEC To Conduct Fresh Polls


A GulakThe Presidency has commenced moves to ensure that the 37 lawmakers that defected from the ruling Peoples Democratic Party to the All Progressives Congress on Wednesday, lose their seats.
To achieve this aim, the presidency has asked the Independent National Electoral Commission and the Speaker, House of Representatives, Alhaji Aminu Tambuwal, to declare the seats of the lawmakers vacant.
It has also asked INEC to prepare to conduct fresh elections in the affected lawmakers’ constituencies with a view to replacing them since there is still one more year before the tenure of the legislators expires.
Speaking in an exclusive interview with Saturday PUNCH, the Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters, Mr. Ahmed Gulak, said President Goodluck Jonathan was not losing sleep about the development especially as speculations continue to gain ground that the lawmakers may commence the process of impeaching him.
According to Gulak, “We have asked the Speaker and INEC to declare the seats of the lawmakers vacant. Anyone that wants to remain in the House should face the electorate and contest on the platform of their new party”.
He added that the President was not afraid of impeachment “because he has not committed any impeachable offence”.
The presidential aide argued that what played out on the floor of the House of Representatives on Wednesday was just a case of lawmakers toeing the path already laid down by their state governors, who had earlier defected to APC.
He noted that since INEC had taken a position that there was no division in the ruling party and that the electoral umpire had given a verdict to that effect, “the next step for the commission is to declare the seats of the defected lawmakers vacant and conduct fresh elections to replace them”.
Gulak also extended the call to the Speaker saying the next step is for him “to declare the seats of the defected lawmakers vacant to pave the way for INEC to conduct fresh elections for their constituents to elect their replacements.
“Since there is still one year to go, INEC should prepare for elections”, he added.
Gulak advised the affected lawmakers to simply go and re-contest on the platform of their new party if they were desirous of remaining in the House of Representatives just as he explained that the presidency’s position is that nobody should be forced to remain where they do not want to be.
When asked whether Mr. Jonathan is reaching out to the leadership of the House of Representatives on the development, Gulak said the President was in constant touch with the leadership of the National Assembly at the party level.

InformationNigeria

THE LETTER SAGA: Experts Analyze Obasanjo’s “Deadly” Letters To Nigerian Leaders

If there is anything Nigerians should have learnt from the letters of General Olusegun Obasanjo to the nation’s presidents and heads of state, and what President Jonathan should be particularly mindful of, it is that one needs to carefully read between the lines and be cautious. This is because Obasanjo’s letters have a history of being some sort of omen for the government of the day.
OBASANJO-1
Experts analyse Obasanjo’s “deadly” letters

Experts were almost unanimous in their views that patriotic Obasanjo may be, but he also may be seeking for “notice”.
According to Barrister B.M. Salihu, “The truth is that Obasanjo has lost relevance and that is why he is making all these noise…didn’t he know these things earlier that he chose to speak only now? He is a master in double speak, was he not the one who asked Gowon what he forgot in the Presidential Villa but later on came on to contest?”
In his analysis, Hassan A. Hassan, Dean, Faculty of General Studies and Head of Mass Communication Department at the Federal Polytechnic Bauchi, said, “To be fair, Obasanjo is one of the most patriotic Nigerians around. You know he was known as a statesman of international repute after his first tenure.”
Hassan, who is also the Bauchi state Chairman of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations, however lamented that “the man has lost that privilege because he woefully failed to address the issues he is now accusing Jonathan of, in the eight years he held sway.”
According to Mr Pam Henry Dung, a Psychology lecturer with the Plateau State University, “My basic impressions are, first of all, President Jonathan will not let Obasanjo meddle so much into his government any more. So Obasanjo is disgruntled about that.
“Secondly, Obasanjo does not want anyone to beat his record of being the longest served president of the country. Above all, Obasanjo does not have the credibility to write such a letter. His words should be taken with a pinch of salt.”
In his submission, erudite constitutional lawyer, Malam Yusuf Alli (SAN) said that he believes that former president Obasanjo’s letter to president Jonathan should be seen as a catalyst for development. According to him, past leaders must continue to speak up on national issues.
He said, “All those who havebeen privileged to rule Nigeria must continue to speak up on national issues whether the incumbent is performing or not. That is the way to ensure that the country attains its greatness.”
Obasanjo and his letters in history of Nigeria
Even though many Nigerians see Obasanjo as a “wrong messenger”, his messages have always struck a chord.
It took a letter or comments from Obasanjo, to different administrations, for the nation to come to terms with the need for a change of guard at either the Dodan Barracks in Lagos, or the Presidential Villa in Abuja.
For Alhaji Shehu Shagari, the first executive president of Nigeria, it came in 1983. For the apostle of “War Against Indiscipline”, General Muhammadu Buhari, it came in 1985, and for the first and only military president of the nation, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, there are stories to tell from his 1989 and 1993 experiences with Obasanjo. Even the dreaded General Sani Abacha had his share, with Obasanjo’s “attack” in 1995. He did not spare the gentle Umaru Musa Yar’Adua in 2010 either.
Apart from having the privilege of ruling the country on two different occasions (1976-1979 and 1999-2007), the former president has remained the most active Nigerian leader after exit from office.
Obasanjo, in an 18-page open letter, titled Before It Is Too Late, written on Monday, December 2, gives 10 reasons for making the “letter of appeal public”.
He accused President Goodluck Jonathan of ruling the nation as a tyrant, training snipers, driving the country to the edge of an abyss by allowing corruption to thrive and of favouritism and sowing discord in the military.
Obasanjo wrote, “The roles of the military and the security agencies should be held sacrosanct in the best interest of the nation. Again, let not history repeat itself. You should learn the lesson of history and please do not take Nigeria and Nigerians for granted”.
The uproar generated by this letter to Jonathan may not have mattered much if not for the antecedents of such previous letters from the former president.
Obasanjo has a penchant for talking down the government of the day, with his letters appearing to play the role of a ‘sniper’, as such governments became history shortly after receiving them.
Obasanjo’s letters or comments have almost always led to the sacking of the objects of his attacks.
Obasanjo spoke against the government of Shagari in 1983, a government he handed power over to and in a matter of weeks the administration was history. Obasanjo was quoted to have said that he was not surprised when Shagari was overthrown.
Babangida later confirmed that the 1983 coup actually wanted to install Obasanjo as president after toppling the Shagari administration, but that the Ota farmer rejected the offer.
“It is true that we wanted to bring General Obasanjo back as head of state in 1984, but to be fair to Obasanjo, he rejected the offer. He said no. He said it would destroy his integrity; that he handed over to Shagari and it was not right for him to get involved. But he [Obasanjo] said he was not stopping us from going ahead with the plot,” Babangida explained.
Such a signal came for Gen. Buhari in 1985 and soon after, Gen Babangida came on board.
His speech on how structural adjustment “must have a human face and the milk of human kindness,” on Babangida’s Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP), was a prelude to the famous SAP riot of 1989.
Obasanjo also won the heart of the nation as a defender of democracy when he tackled the Babangida administration over its endless transition programme, which ended in the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election won by the late Chief Moshood Abiola.
The former president told everyone who cared to listen, that Abiola was not the messiah the nation needed.
The tragedy of the statements was that Babangida was forced to step aside and Abiola never became president.
Obasanjo’s attack did not spare the late Gen Sani Abacha’s administration.
The Arewa House keynote address condemning the Abacha regime and a BBC interview, in which he accused Abacha’s government of spending like a drunken sailor, are things Nigerians will not forget in a hurry.
Generals fight the last war and that was a mistake. The no-nonsense Abacha sent him to jail for allegedly participating in a coup plot. He was lucky he didn’t get the death penalty.
Again, he went after the late President Musa Yar’Adua’s administration. A day after leaving office in 2007, Obasanjo was said to have written to President Yar’Adua, his successor, in a letter dated May 30, 2007, trying to tutor him on what to do.
“As you know, for the next few months, perhaps years, your government will be regarded as being in the penumbra of the Obasanjo regime given the situation that brought you into office. Against this background you must toil to carve out a unique identity for yourself and administration. To do this, you must choose wisely your vision and the folks in your cabinet to drive the vision.”
After seeing Yar’Adua in hospital, Obasanjo went public to hint at the life-threatening health challenges confronting the leader, setting in motion at a very frenetic pace a sequence of events that led to the emergence of Jonathan as acting president.
Unlike in his letters to other presidents, Obasanjo had, in his recent letter to Jonathan, craved his indulgence to “share the contents of this letter, in the first instance, with General Ibrahim Babangida and General Abdulsalami Abubakar, who, on a number of occasions in recent times, have shared with me their agonising thoughts, concerns and expressions on most of the issues I have raised in this letter concerning the situation and future of our country.”
The question is, where will this letter take either Obasanjo or Jonathan? The two leaders in any case should not be seen washing their dirty linen in public.
Their acts of commission and omission have direct and indirect consequences on the overall leadership of the country.
This is why it has been suggested in some quarters that Nigerians should collectively ignore the messenger, but take the message, especially as serious issues bordering on national security were raised in Obasanjo’s letter to President Jonathan.
Because Obasanjo’s letter raised very serious issues against the person and office of the president, it has become imperative for the presidency or the president to come out and address the Nigerian public on some of the issues, for the sake of posterity.

Leadership

The Future Awards And Its Misrepresentation Of The Nigerian Youth


By Gimba Kakanda
I have absolute confidence in the strength and ability of the Nigerian youth. All over the world, the Nigerian youth is a newsmaker, known for exhibiting talent, using his brain either to redeem or to reduce whichever system he is in. The Nigerian youth, despite having bad role models, has defied setbacks and limitations to climb up the ladder of excellence. This is why I am among the many upset by the misrepresentation of their achievements by the sham called "The Future Awards" – an award which was designed to highlight these achievements, but has been reduced to rewarding the ‘efforts’ of the organisers and their friends and friends of their friends!
Whoever is in charge of TFA - a comedian who has recently published a list of 100 most outstanding young Nigerians embarrassingly dubbed "The 100 Guardians of the Future" - has not only misrepresented  the achievements of young Nigerians home and abroad, but is delusional for actually believing that cyberspace is a dependable database of successful Nigerians. Going through the list was depressing; I kept muttering, "Are these people really exceptional?" “What here is beyond ordinary?” “How about X?” “What about Y? Z?” The list just validated the the obvious, that TFA is really just a haughty celebration of mediocrity. A body with no fund for research in the age of Google has no business scoring the success of Nigerians and if it must, let it not embarrass the nation with a ridiculous list of self-adulatory make-up artists, actors, musicians, bloggers, and small-time entrepreneurs - tired and irrelevant - as the best of us!

This is why I dismiss the average Nigerian online for pandering to delusions that only escalate our woes: the posturing that we are the best, or represent the best mainly because we can afford the luxury of maximising the use of our phones. The Nigerians on Twitter especially, ever elitist in their thinking and method of approaching the nation's political evolution and social realities, allied to nominate friends or Facebooking-and-tweeting citizens who do what a thousand others outside the social media do even better. The honourees are a cheap list of young Nigerians whose peculiarities are praised because the really peculiar do not tweet or are less known.

A click or two into Google search bar would've revealed that there are Nigerians who graduated top of Ivy League colleges at 19 or a little older, became sought-after scientists and are now among the world’s finest scientists. If we must honour academic excellence, there are many of them. We have hundreds of them! Still in their 20s! Despite all the country has passed through this year, we find in the "Advocacy and Activism" category of TFA a list without a people who are risking their lives fighting Boko Haram, exhibiting a measure of appreciable humanity in the land of terror. No, I don't mean the JTF soldiers. I mean the young men audaciously referred to as "Civilian JTF". Is there any advocacy or activism as dangerous this year? And there are also young Nigerians risking their lives in the peace building efforts across crises-ridden regions - like the organisers of "Peace Football" in Jos, attempting to blur the ethno-religious lines in the map of that segregated city - yet their struggles are not mentioned in our tweets. Those are influential Nigerians, those are Nigerians who have touched lives intellectually, culturally, economically, politically, name it!

The tragedy is, nominating this people is a waste of time. They are virtually nonexistent: no Twitter account, no Facebook account, no friend and no follower. Nobody to promote their cause. Our obsession with the virtual world has affected our understanding of our realities, and that is why I won't be surprised if Goodluck Jonathan ends up as our President in 2015. We're embarrassingly disconnected from our realities. And if this list is a representation of our best, then we're unfit to succeed these extraordinary Vagabonds in Power!

We appreciate only what we know, that I understand. But that is not the essence of an award. I minded my business when TFA used to be awards shared among friends and friends of friends and friend of friends' friends, but the moment they gathered at Mr. President's shadow and declared that those indeed are representatives of our best, the fraud became too obvious. Some journalists, for instance, risked their lives, and their families', exposing the evils of, say, Boko Haram. Some were killed. Some were arrested. Some fled. None was considered for recognition. A few journalists sit in Abuja pinging and tweeting and sensationalising what actual journalists have exposed. Yet only the tweeting group is found worthy of an award for excellence in journalism. And nobody finds anything wrong here. Some journalists have been praised for merely contributing articles to foreign media. And there is another now in exile, with his family, suffering - for stirring Boko Haram's nest in his newsgathering adventures. He remains unsung!

The Future Awards (TFA) misrepresents our achievements, simple. It's a popularity contest that not only insults the intelligence and sensibilities of hardworking Nigerians, but hauntingly fraudulent. Its mission is bold, misleading and disturbing. How do we actually gauge an awardee's influence? In cyberspace: by his ‘followers,’ and by his ‘friends’, no doubt. If we must reward our own, let's do it right. Let's stop asking for "your" and "another’s" list. Yes, there are people in the list whose recognitions are deserved, but their inclusion shouldn't be an excuse to shut up. Nonetheless, I congratulate my friends in the TFA list - the best 100 of us! Also congrats to the Lagos blogosphere, the online version of Lagos-Ibadan Press, for its dictatorial representations of our (under)achievements.

As for my fellow northerners, I hope you see the backlash of our un-progressive attitude. This is how a pack of clowns and opportunists, to whom we're just "almajirai with laptops", organise cliquey shams to reward their own. It is not too late to overcome petty antagonisms over religious differences and ethnic supremacy to redeem ourselves. I cannot believe that a Nigerian has been listed as one of our best 100 for merely converting our Constitution into downloadable apps when my brother Nasir Yammama develops apps half-asleep, when a friend in FUT Minna has designed a rocket launcher. These are just my friends. A simple research would show there are Nigerian youth more successful, more influential, more important than my friends! Who knows, say, Uti Nwachukwu beyond Lagos Blogs? He's not known for any nationally relevant thing aside from winning BBA, which a few other Nigerians have done, and now wearing good clothes and partying; yet he is deemed a representative of our achievements.

The important question is: how do we gauge influence and exceptionality? Who tells the achievements of the North? Ali Nuhu, even though he is not the best in Kannywood, wouldn't have been recognised had he not crossed over to the South. How, I ask again, do we gauge influence and exceptionality? Answering this question should be the first task of panels set up to select our best. Everything else comes later. May God save us from us!

Saharareporters

Shock as Boko Haram terrorists sack barrack; massacre troops, families

Hundreds of suspected Boko Haram terrorists launched a fierce attack Friday on Bama, Borno state, sacking the military barrack there, and killing troops and their families in what a senior military official called another “sad day” for a town that has witnessed multiple bloodshed this year.
Security officials and witnesses told PREMIUM TIMES Friday noon that the attackers came in their numbers in the morning and killed “everything in sight.”
The military confirmed the attack in a statement released later Friday.
Major-General Chris Olukolade, the Director, Defence Information, said Bama barracks was attacked by terrorists who came from cells located across Nigerian Border with Cameroun through Banki town.
“High caliber weapons such as anti-aircraft and rocket propelled guns were freely used in the attack that lasted several hours,” he said.
He said ground troops backed by the Air Force repelled the attack and were in pursuit of the insurgents. He did not give the number of casualties.
“Details of casualties recorded in the incident will be released when the ongoing cordon and search operations in the general area is concluded,” he said.
But officials and witnesses told PREMIUM TIMES the attack was massive and sweeping, with the attackers descending on women and children. The rampage lasted hours, they said.
Bama has witnessed some of the fiercest attacks this year as insurgents have struck multiple times ,killing many.
Dozens of people died in repeated attacks in the town, which lies about 65km from the state capital Maiduguri. The latest attack occurred in August, forcing several residents to flee to neighbouring communities.
In November 2013, residents said normalcy had returned to the area with the increased presence of security forces.

PremiumTimes

Ex-CJN Writes Jonathan, Accuses President Of Unjustly Treating Justice Salami


By Ini Ekott
A letter from a former Chief Justice shows how President Jonathan turned down advice from the National Judicial Council on the Salami case.
President Goodluck Jonathan brushed aside recommendations from the National Judicial Council and the Chief Justice of Nigeria to sack former Appeal Court president, Ayo Salami, ignoring firm arguments by the two authorities that Mr. Salami was innocent of allegations against him.
The two authorities are mandated by law to advise the president on such judiciary matters.
The government accused Mr. Salami of professional misconduct, but he is widely believed to have been punished for political reasons.
A letter to the president by former Chief Justice of the Federation, CJN, Dahiru Musdapher, obtained by PREMIUM TIMES, shows how the top echelon of the nation’s judiciary laboured to have President Jonathan realize Mr. Salami’s innocence in his dispute with Mr. Musdapher’s predecessor, Aloysius Katsina-Alu; and how they advised that punishing Mr. Salami would terribly dent an already integrity-deficient judiciary.
In the four-page letter, dated January 27, 2012,  Mr. Musdapher informed the president how a committee he named to review Mr. Salami’s suspension in 2011 absolved him, and made it extensively clear why ensuring justice on the case- by reinstating Mr. Salami- was crucial for a judiciary bereft of public confidence.
“Your Excellency, this report is not only before the National Judicial Council, it is also at the court of public opinion,” Mr. Musdapher said of the findings of the review committee. “And Mr. President will agree with me that this recommendation no doubt should challenge our commitment to the redemption of the image and credibility of the judiciary.”
Mr. Musdapher told the president that the committee, led by another former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Mohammed Uwais, found Mr. Salami not guilty of any of the misconduct he was accused of, and recommended his immediate reinstatement.
“There was no evidence before any of the National Judicial Council panels or in any of the petitions to justify any findings that Salami PCA contravened the code of conduct for judicial officers by talking to the mass media,” he said in his etter to the president. “…On the whole, there was no evidence to show any form of misconduct on the part of Salami PCA to justify any sanction or punishment.”
The committee, Mr. Musdapher informed Mr. Jonathan, also recommended that “…in order to maintain the integrity of the judiciary and to assuage public feeling and restore confidence in both the bar and bench, this committee strongly advises the Chief Justice of Nigeria and National Judicial Council to reconsider its earlier decision on the suspension of Justice Salami PCA and reinstate him back to his position as soon as possible and in that way assure the public that the suspension of Justice Salami as the President of the Court of Appeal is not ill motivated.”
The former Chief Justice’s letter to the president came ahead of an official recommendation by the National Judicial Council, that Mr. Salami be recalled.
Both calls were rejected by the president.
Mr. Jonathan’s firm refusal to reinstate the judge, who finally retired October 2013, spurred widespread allegations that the president’s decision was politically-motivated beyond the professional breach the government claimed as its reason for suspending him. Mr. Musdapher’s letter appears to back that claim.
Justice Salami’s suspension in 2011 was linked partially to his refusal to be elevated to the Supreme Court. More specifically, he was punished for speaking to the media and accusing Mr. Katsina-Alu, who was CJN at the time, of attempting to interfere in the Sokoto state’s governorship election case that was before the Appeal court.
He was suspended by the NJC for refusing to apologize to Mr. Katsina-Alu.
Mr. Salami’s case became a sore point for political outfoxing between the governing Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, and the defunct opposition Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN (now All Peoples Congress, APC).
The PDP accused the former judge of working for the ACN, hobnobbing with its leaders and dispensing judgments deliberately skewed in favour of the party. Mr. Salami had presided over the Court of Appeal’s upturning of governorship elections in Osun, Ekiti and Edo States, decisions he based on evidences showing that the sacked PDP governors in those states were beneficiaries of rigged elections.
The PDP said there was evidence of telephone calls between leaders of the ACN, and the judge.
While the ACN, now APC, spoke in defence of Mr. Salami, the ruling PDP, President Jonathan’s party, backed Mr. Katsina-Alu with a spokesperson for the party, Olisa Metuh, recently accusing Mr. Salami of lying against the former CJN.
Reflective of the political tinge of the controversy, Mr. Salami was suspended August 18, 2011, just as the Court of Appeal was hearing a suit brought by the presidential candidate of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change, CPC, Muhammadu Buhari, against President Jonathan’s election.
Mr. Salami’s suspension was approved by the president even while the matter had gone before a court.
After Mr. Katsina-Alu left office, his successor, Mr. Musdapher ordered a review of the case. The Uwais panel found Mr. Salami not guilty, and rather, it criticized Mr. Katsina-Alu in his capacity as CJN then.
Mr. Musdapher’s letter provides an insight into how President Jonathan turned down recommendations for Mr. Salami’s recall, rebuffing detailed presentation from the Chief Justice, and the NJC. The NJC is mandated by the constitution to advise the president on such matters.
In his letter, Mr. Musdapher warned that the judiciary was already suffering a damning public opinion deficit nurtured by perceived impunity and corruption, and that the Salami case, if not well addressed, could only exacerbate that perception.
“And Your Excellency would agree that it is judicial schisms of this nature, and not necessarily the paucity of administrative or judicial infrastructure, that overstretch the ethical and moral fiber of our judiciary, robbing it inevitably of the confidence of the public.”
On May 10, 2012, five months after the letter was delivered to the president, the NJC officially voted 10 to 8, in favour of recalling Mr. Salami eight months after he was suspended.
At the time, judiciary officials who spoke to PREMIUM TIMES said the plan was for the former Appeal Court president to be reinstated and made to serve three months before retirement as his case had severely polarised the ranks of the judiciary.
Weeks later, the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke, said Mr. Jonathan would not act since the matter was already in court, again raising eyebrow since the same government approved Mr. Salami’s suspension even while a court was considering the case. Mr. Musdapher noted that point in his letter.
“Firstly, the National Judicial Council, NJC, took action on the matter when it was subjudice,” he said. “Normally we do not take decisions on matters before us which are pending before the court.”
Throughout the episode, opposition leaders accused the president of being pressured by PDP officials not to heed the recommendation of the NJC.
That concern grew after an Abuja-based lawyer, Amobi Nzelu representing one Wilfred Okoli, rushed to the Federal High Court in Abuja, shortly after the NJC’s recommendation, asking the court to restrain the president from accepting them, because the “recommendations were not binding”.
Mr. Nzelu, who became known after handling the infamous Apo six killings of 2006, said while the NJC had powers to recommend the removal of the President of the Court of Appeal, it lacked power to recommend his reinstatement.
Curiously, officials of the federal government circulated his court papers to the media.

Saharareporters