Governors (3)

The Governor’s Forum, in a meeting with Acting President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday, said it does not want President Umaru Yar’Adua to resign.

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The meeting, which held at the Aguda House, the residence of the Acting President, lasted for almost two hours, with all 36 state governors in attendance.

As they trooped into Mr Jonathan’s residence from the venue of an earlier meeting of the forum, their faces were bright and the banters were light, indicating that all was well. But when the governors left after their meeting with Mr Jonathan, they all looked grim, and a source close to one of the governors said the meeting had not been devoid of argument.

While briefing newsmen after the closed door meeting, the Akwa Ibom State governor, Godswill Akpabio, said the group did not discuss the hundred days of Mr Yar’adua’s absence and that the issue of his resignation was also not touched upon.

He said: “We did not discuss that. We noted that the president has returned to the country and we noted the need for him to recuperate and get better soon, before he can think of assuming duty. For us the issue of his resignation is not an option for now. For us what is important is for us to be compassionate, to be sympathetic and to realise that anybody, no matter highly placed, even if you are a Christian and you are a Pope can get ill. Thank God he is back now and he is recuperating and we are satisfied that recovery is on the way. We are praying for him.”

Governor of Kwara State and head of the Forum, Bukola Saraki also said “We congratulated the Acting President towards stabilizing the polity of the country at the moment and we also in return pledged our support to the Acting President during this trying time. We encouraged him and said he is doing a good job and he has the full support of the governor’s forum in this exercise.”

Akunyili went overboard

Mr Saraki said Mr Jonathan gave reasons why he set up the presidential advisory council. He, “educated us on a number of issues, for example the advisory council that was set up and the reason behind it and other things,” Mr Saraki said. “By and large, we emphasized the need for the government to work very hard to ensure that we all play our role to provide leadership at this crucial time and to talk to members of government to ensure that the comments made are well guided. At the end of the day we acknowledged what he is doing and we appreciated it and the 36 governors will continue to support the Acting President for this country to move forward.

“We have expressed that we are happy to see that the president is back in the country, we have also said that we should separate the two issues. The return of the president to the country is an indication that there is progress in his recovery process and that does not deviate at all from any decision we took as a forum, where we all decided that a political solution to provide a resolution for Mr. Vice President to act as the Acting president and that is still the position.

Mr. Vice President acting as the president is still running this country and we are wishing the president speedy recovery. Our resolution was taken not because Mr. President was out of the country, but because he was ill and that has not changed.”

Bayelsa State governor, Timipre Sylva however condemned the public statements making the rounds by public office holders. He picked issues with Information Minister, Dora Akunyili’s whom he said “went overboard” with her statements.

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Why governors, PDP abandoned Yar'Adua

OLUSOLA FABIYI

The sudden decision by governors to back Dr. Goodluck Jonathan as acting President has changed the tone of debate on the lingering crisis in the Presidency over the absence of President Umaru Yar'Adua, writes OLUSOLA FABIYI Until Thursday last week, there was no serious scare in the camp of members of President Umaru Yar'Adua's kitchen cabinet. They were upbeat that the clamour by several people for the President to step aside and allow his deputy, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan to act, would soon fizzle out. Even when the 36 governors, under the aegis of Nigerian Governors Forum called for an emergency meeting in Abuja that night, there was nothing to suggest that the game was up. But after the meeting, it was glaring that the pro-Yar'Adua group were certainly becoming orphans.

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President Umaru Yar'Adua
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But if the pro-Yar'Adua group had been following events, they would have realised that they might not be able to carry on for long. Before the governors met, their counterparts from the Northern part of the country, the President's immediate constituency, had met the same day in Kaduna, where their leader who is also the Governor of Niger State, Dr. Babangida Aliyu, raised the alarm that some cabals had hijacked Yar'Adua's government.

While cautioning that the regime of late General Sani Abacha experienced the same thing when his security aides usurped government structures and shielded him from public view, he warned that the same thing should not be allowed to happen to Yar'Adua.

It was this mindset that the governors brought to their emergency meeting in Abuja. To show the seriousness the meeting deserved, 31 states were represented. Out of this, 28 state governors were in attendance while seven deputies represented their governors. Only Plateau, Ogun, Yobe, Zamfara and Anambra states were not represented at the meeting. Two of the governors in attendance are sons-in-law to the President. They are Usman Dagingari (Kebbi) and Isa Yuguda (Bauchi). Unlike before, our correspondent observed that the meeting started early, with almost all those who attended coming early.

But while the governors at their last meeting said the President was getting better based on his contentious interview with the British Broadcasting Corporation's Hausa Service, their countenance at the end of Thursday's meeting was different. After the over five hours meeting, the governors changed their position and canvassed for support for the Vice-President to act in the President's stead. They also said they would visit the leadership of the National Assembly with a view to supporting them to pass a resolution to that effect.

What would have necessitated such change of heart? Was it their love for the country, as canvassed by the chairman of the Forum, who is also the Governor of Kwara State, Dr. Bukola Saraki? Findings by our correspondent revealed that the governors were confronted with the reality that the clamour for Yar'Adua to cede power to his deputy was assuming a dangerous dimension.

A source at the meeting, who spoke with our correspondent on condition of anonymity, said that the governors realised that they needed to act fast to save the country from imminent crisis, which he said the governors realised was capable of jeopardising national security. Not only that, it was also learnt that the governors were confronted with several arguments that their job would also be on the line if the agitation against Yar'Adua's continued hold on to power, which was said to have generated a lot of tension, was not doused.

It was learnt that unlike before, when some of the governors were always sceptical to discuss issues concerning the President with caution due to the presence of his in-laws among them, Thursday's meeting was said to have been different.

The governors were said to have argued that since the President left, none of them, including his sons-in-laws, had been able to speak with him to actually know the true position of his health. Not only that, they were said to have made reference to the claim by Saraki, at their last meeting that the President spoke with Jonathan; Senate President, David Mark and the Speaker of House of Representatives, Mr. Dimeji Bankole.

Saraki had claimed that the President assured these people that his health was improving and that he would soon return to the country. The governors, according to the source, said it was not true that the President spoke with these people as Mark was said to have denied speaking with the President.

They were said to have wondered how long it would take to take Nigerians for a ride since none of them could say when the President would actually return. The source said, "Several issues were considered. The governors were confronted with the security implication of unending agitation by the people for the President to hand over power to his deputy since they are from the same political party.

"They realised that since several eminent Nigerians, irrespective of party affiliations and geo-political consideration, have all called on the President to cede power, there was no need to disregard such calls.

"Not only that, it was argued that since none of them have seen the President since he left the country 75 days ago, there is no need waiting for him before doing anything again. The governors also said that Nigeria was becoming a laughing stock in the comity of nations and that there was the need to address it so as not to stem the tide."

Though the governors said they also discussed the recent crisis in Jos, which led to the death of over 230 people, the meeting was actually centered on what Saraki called the state of the nation. At the end of the meeting, the governors according to Saraki, "resolved to meet with the leadership of the National Assembly with a view to urging them to pass a resolution to formally recognise the vice-president as the Acting President in the interest of the nation."

He also said that the Forum called "on all arms of government to continue to give full and total support to the Acting President until the President returns in the interest of our dear and beloved country, Nigeria."

Though the governors were silent on how this would be done as the constitution insists that the President must transmit a letter to the National Assembly before such a resolution could become valid. But the source dismissed that, wondering whether Nigerians were not told that the President signed the Supplementary Budget, even on his sick bed.

"So, if he could do that, what stops him from doing that," the source quipped.

Before the governors made their U-turn, the leadership of the party, led by its National Chairman, Chief Vincent Ogbulafor, had paid a solidarity visit to Jonathan in his office.

During the meeting, Ogbulafor had said, "On behalf of the Peoples Democratic Party, I pledge our unalloyed support to you as you continue to steer the ship of our nation. You can count on our support in this regard at all times. Furthermore, the words of the Holy Scripture in Psalm 62:11 are apt for this moment, that 'God has spoken once, twice I have heard this: That power belongs to God."

Ogbulafor, while pouring encomium on Jonathan, also said that the party's leadership was satisfied with his (VP) performance and that he had also demonstrated "patriotism and an enviable measure of loyalty and statesmanship" since Yar'Adua left Nigeria on November 23, 2009.

A party source told our correspondent that the leadership knew that the game was up and that it was a matter of time before their numerous manoeuvres would fall like pack of cards as Jonathan would soon become Acting President. "So, in the new power game, none of them want to lose out," the source added.

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The web of secrecy woven around ailing President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua might have been thicker than many Nigerians envisaged and dated far back than now as it has been revealed that First Lady, Hajia Turai Yar’Adua even barred highly favoured individuals, including the Chairman of the Governors’ Forum, Dr. Bukola Saraki together with a governor–in-law, Isa Yuguda of Bauchi and Katsina State governor, Ibrahim Shema from seeing him when they visited Jeddah late November, 2009. A highly placed source revealed that the First Lady just refused to bend the rules in favour of anybody to stave off any attempt to exploit the situation on ground to the detriment of the family. The tension generated by the sudden movement of the president to the Arabian country and his condition, even in those early days were said to have made the first family to decide on strigent measures to keep away prying eyes at bay. According to the source, " Even those governors who rushed to Saudi Arabia with the intention to see Mr. President were barred by the First Lady from seeing him. It could have been because of the state of the president, which then was considered pretty frightening and she did not want to expose it for anybody to use the condition of the president against him." Besides, the source revealed that part of the reasons the First Lady acted the way she did was because of a conspiracy theory even within the inner caucus to the effect that she had gotten wind of the immediate actions of some political figures back home in the first four days of the president’s departure to Saudi Arabia. "You will not believe this, but she was actually warned to be wary of visitors from Nigeria, especially political figures, irrespective of their position and status. And she did just that; whatever you heard after that was just part of the game to make people believe that we are the ones there and try to take credit for what they never did," the source revealed. Yar’Adua left for Saudi Arabia on Friday, November 23, 2009 for a medical check-up, having suffered acute pericarditis (inflammation of the covering of the heart) after a Jumat service. The President has since then been receiving treatment at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre in Jeddah. Saraki, the other governors and some members of the kitchen cabinet had left for Saudi Arabia to see the president in what was supposed to be a get-well visit and to have first hand information on the state of health of the President.
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