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Tuesday, 20 May 2014
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Friday, 13 December 2013
What My Husband Told Me Before His Death – Turai Yar’Adua
Hajiya Turai Umaru Musa Yar’adua has revealed how her husband, former President Umaru Musa Yar’adua once told her that his relatives would quarrel with her after his death as they would think he had left so much money.
“There was a time he said to me that ‘Turai, I pity you because when I die you will have quarrels with my relatives because they will think I have so much money in my possession”, she said.
She said the situation in Nigeria would have been better had the late president survived his ailment because he was a “focused, committed and determined leader”.
“Although my husband was sick for a long time he did his very best for Nigeria. Also as governor of Katsina State, he did his best for the state; he is an honest man who believed in service”, she said.
Extolling his virtues as a leader, Turai said the late President would not give out contract without having the money to pay for it.
“There was a time I approached him that people are complaining that the government was slow. But he said to me people can say whatever they like but I will not give out contract if I have no money to pay.
“The late Umaru was a kind of leader that would go out and monitor projects. I could recall when I used to join him to supervise the projects at Umaru Musa ‘Yar’adua University, Turai ‘Yar’adua Hospital and the roads,” she said.
This Is Why Oprah Winfrey Never Had Children
While Oprah Winfrey undoubtedly has a killer career, the media mogul has made many sacrifices in her personal life, one of those being motherhood.
During a sit-down interview with The Hollywood Reporter, the 59-year-old star, opened up about her decision to forego having children while admitting she doesn’t regret her choice.
“If I had kids, my kids would hate me.
“They would have ended up on the equivalent of the Oprah show talking about me; because something in my life would have had to suffer and it would’ve probably been them,” she said.
Winfrey also admitted she’s never found the idea of parenthood particularly appealing even when she was a little girl and always had different dreams than her peers.
“Gayle King, Winfrey’s best friend and now a mother of two was the kind of kid who, in seventh grade Home Ec class, was writing down her name and the names of her children,” she recalled.
“While she was having those kind of daydreams, I was having daydreams about how I could be Martin Luther King.”
While Winfrey may not have children of her own, the former talk show host dedicates a great deal of time to the students attending the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls, the school which she opened in 2007 and to which she has contributed more than $100 million.
Letter To Jonathan: Show Proof That I’m Being Used To Run Killer Squad Or Keep Quiet, Al-Mustapha To Obasanjo
Former Chief Security Officer to late Head of State, General Sani Abacha, Major Hamza Al-Mustapha on Thursday challenged former President Olusegun Obasanjo to provide evidence on his claims that President Goodluck Jonathan influenced the Appeal Court judgment which discharged and acquitted him of the murder of Alhaja Kudirat Abiola.
Information Nigeria reports that in his December 2 letter to the President titled ‘Before it is too late’, Mr. Obasanjo had alleged that Mr. Jonathan interfered with the court process to set an unnamed murderer free, and organised a presidential reception for him.
Apparently, the former president was referring to Al-Mustapha, who was freed by the Court of Appeal in July over the murder of the late Kudirat Abiola.
But Al-Mustapha, who spoke through his counsel Barrister Olalekan Ojo yesterday, dared Mr. Obasanjo to produce evidence to back up his weighty allegations in the said letter.
Obasanjo had written: “Presidential assistance for a murderer to evade justice and presidential delegation to welcome him home can only be in bad taste generally but particularly to the family of his victim.
“Assisting criminals to evade justice cannot be part of the job of the presidency. Or, as it is viewed in some quarters, is he being recruited to do for you what he had done for Abacha in the past? Hopefully, he should have learned his lesson. Let us continue to watch”, he wrote in an 18-page letter that has now gone viral.
In his reaction, Ojo told Daily Trust: “To the best of my knowledge, President Jonathan never organised or sponsored any welcome rally to Al-Mustapha after his release”.
Al-Mustapha had been incarcerated for 14 years before he was acquitted by the Lagos Division of the Court of Appeal, after being sentenced to death by a Lagos High Court.
Ojo said, “The impression (of Obasanjo’s letter) is that the Court of Appeal caved into pressure from President Jonathan, to that extent, the comment is disturbing, worrisome and unwarranted.
“The judiciary should be left alone and not be dragged into politics. The Justices of the Court of Appeal in Lagos that sat over the case are jurists of impeccable character and it is not fair for anybody, no matter how well-placed, to attack the integrity of these judges. We challenge Obasanjo to produce evidence of such interference to make it available to the public”.
He added: “My client was discharged and acquitted on the merit of his appeal. Majority of those who commented on the judgment expressed satisfaction. It is most unfortunate that a person like OBJ could accuse the President of using his exalted office for such a sinister and morally reprehensible thing. It must be stated that if OBJ has any issue to settle with the President, he should not drag Al Mustapha into it”.
Speaking specifically on the allegation that Al-Mustapha is being used by Jonathan to run a hit squad, Ojo said that the accusation was a pointer to the enormous hatred Obasanjo had for Al-Mustapha.
“At no time has he been involved in any such thing. It is totally false. Al-Mustapha is earnestly committed to the promotion of peace and harmony in Nigeria. It is most unfair that such an allegation should be made against him. It is an attempt to give a dog a bad name to hang him. When Al-Mustapha returns (from abroad) he will make a fuller response”, Ojo said.
UNBELIEVABLE: prof Hafiz ‘Saka’ Oyetoro Turns Down President Jonathan’s Appointment Offer
prof Hafiz Oyetoro also known as Simply Saka has turned down the
appointment given to him by his excellence, President Goodluck Jonathan
as one of his ministers

Saka is said not to be happy with Mr President because he has not improved the lives of many Nigerians who really needed the help, but rather than helping the needs, Nigerian government is adding to those who are absolutely living better.
Though, this act is very rare in this nation. According to Saka’s tweet on his twitter account last September 14th
“Please ignore any rumour of me being made a minister. Yes, president GEJ called me and I declined for personal reasons”.
This tweet was retweeted by a Lagos based stand up comedian, Omobaba that same day.
Saka is said not to be happy with Mr President because he has not improved the lives of many Nigerians who really needed the help, but rather than helping the needs, Nigerian government is adding to those who are absolutely living better.
Though, this act is very rare in this nation. According to Saka’s tweet on his twitter account last September 14th
“Please ignore any rumour of me being made a minister. Yes, president GEJ called me and I declined for personal reasons”.
This tweet was retweeted by a Lagos based stand up comedian, Omobaba that same day.
Obasanjo’s ‘satanic’ letter
Chief Olusegun Obasanjo’s damning letter
to President Goodluck Jonathan must rank as the most narcissistic (and
the narcissism of our rulers is legendary) action of any Nigerian ruler
in recent times.
In the 18-page diatribe, Obasanjo took
President Jonathan to task for his handling of corruption, insecurity,
and the crisis in the ruling Peoples Democratic Party among other
issues.
Like most Nigerians, the former president
expressed deep concern about the tragic consequences of the current
crisis. Unlike most Nigerians, however, Obasanjo has had two glorious
opportunities to help turn around the fortune of Nigeria and he
squandered both. Of course, it is easy to say we should focus on the
message rather than the messenger. But this is one instance in which the
messenger can’t be divorced from the message.
Obasanjo’s letter dated December 2, 2013,
and titled, “Before it is too late” had all the telltale signs of a
deeply troubled man. Rather than writing this particular letter,
Obasanjo should have atoned for his many crimes against Nigeria and
Nigerians.
It was bad enough that his eight years as
president were a tragedy; to have imposed Umaru Yar’Adua and Goodluck
Jonathan on the nation as a farewell gift is unpardonable. Perhaps, it
was payback for the trenchant opposition to his third term agenda.
In his warped thinking, Obasanjo must
have reasoned that his only option was to foist on Nigerians the very
worst amongst us; people so inept and incapable that after a while we’ll
be hankering after him. Looking back now, that theory has worked well
as Nigerians now look with nostalgia at the Obasanjo era.
All the things Obasanjo said about
President Jonathan and his administration may be true. But we can say
the same and even more about the two Obasanjo’s administrations,
1976-1979 and 1999-2007. Obasanjo seems to have forgotten too soon his
squabble with his deputy, Atiku Abubakar, that made a nonsense of
governance, the political assassinations (including that of Bola Ige,
his Attorney-General of the Federation and minister of justice) during
his macabre rule, the massacres in Odi and Zaki Biam. The less said
about corruption (who could forget the wholesale pillage of our
patrimony in the name of privatisation) the better. Obasanjo laid the
foundations on which President Jonathan is building and consolidating.
He is acting out the Peoples Democratic Party’s playbook.
Obasanjo’s latest intervention is no
doubt anchored on the politics of 2015. In his messianic posturing, he
feels he has a divine right to determine or at least have a say on who
emerges as president in the 2015 election, an election that may sound
the death knell of Nigeria if we go by the postulations of Mujahid
Dokubo-Asari, Junaid Mohammed and Farouk Adamu Aliyu for whom the
election is a “do-or-die” affair, à la Obasanjo.
A few months ago, rather than
participating in activities marking Democracy Day (May 29) that he and
his military collaborators foisted on us, Obasanjo was in Jigawa State
as guest of Governor Sule Lamido. He literally made a case for Lamido as
the next president of Nigeria, the same Lamido whose two sons have been
accused by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission of laundering
billions of Jigawa State funds through companies allegedly owned by the
governor.
That is the problem with Nigeria: the
Feeling of entitlement which the likes of Obasanjo and Ibrahim Babangida
survive on. Obasanjo should realise that his “ethnic balancing” theory
is not the solution to “strengthening the unity and stability of
Nigeria.”
In the postscript to his letter, Obasanjo
referenced Generals Ibrahim Babangida and Abdulsalami Abubakar as
those “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.” This
simply, and amply too, shows that Nigeria and we (the 99 per cent who
ought to decide the future of the country) are in a big trouble. It’s
like asking cats to help improve the conditions of rats.
Suddenly, President Jonathan has become
the alibi of a ruling class fearful of its imminent implosion. Earlier
in the week, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu
Tambuwal, who superintends over a house that reeks of corruption accused
President Jonathan of paying lip service to the fight against
corruption.
Many Nigerians know the problems of the
country, and if the likes of Obasanjo and Babangida will allow, perhaps
they can seriously begin the long and arduous task of fixing the mess
created by these rulers.
Obasanjo has outlived his usefulness, if
ever anyone found him useful. Now that he has confirmed that the man he
imposed on the country is not fit to rule, we shouldn’t grant him the
opportunity to decide the person to replace him. It is time we the
people rose in unison to decide that.
Let no one be in doubt where I stand on
the PDP, the Jonathan administration and our so-called democracy: To
reecho Karl Maiaer, “This house has fallen.” There is no amount of
letter writing or patchwork that can fix it.
Obasanjo should know that the train has
left the station; that the problem he and his cohorts caused can’t be
solved by letter writing but by a complete restructuring of the country.
Obasanjo, Babangida and company have lost all moral right to dictate how to define the new Nigeria we envisage.
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