Image copyrightReutersImage caption Raila Odinga says the changes needed for a credible election are not yet in place
Kenya’s opposition leader Raila Odinga has said that he will not take part in the presidential election re-run slated for 17 October “without legal and constitutional guarantees”.
Last week, the Supreme Court annulled August’s election result saying the electoral commission (IEBC) had not followed the constitution.
Incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared the winner by the IEBC.
The court said a new election needs to be held by 31 October.
Speaking to journalists, Mr Odinga said that the fresh vote must held in an environment where everything that went wrong can be corrected.
“We know exactly what transpired in these last elections, we know what the IEBC did and we know that if we were to go back there will be no different results and that’s why will say there will be no elections on the 17 October,” he said.
Mr Odinga’s opposition Nasa alliance went to the Supreme Court to challenge President Kenyatta’s win arguing that the results had been tampered with during transmission from the polling stations.
They alleged that someone gained access to the IEBC’s computer servers to tweak the results in favour of Mr Kenyatta.
The court found that, among other things, the IEBC had committed “illegalities” in the transmission of results. But as it has not released its full ruling it is still not clear exactly what went wrong.
The Supreme Court said on Friday that it would make its full ruling public within 21 days.
Image copyrightAFPImage caption Opposition supporters celebrated the court’s annulment of August’s election result
Mr Odinga wants the IEBC to strictly follow the constitution’s guidance on conducting elections.
He also wants some of the commissioners to be sacked, alleging that they are partisan, and he is pushing for access to IEBC’s electronic voting and result transmission system.
Mr Odinga criticised the IEBC for announcing the new election date saying that opposition parties had not been consulted.
Nasa sent a letter to the IEBC arguing that the date for the fresh election “should be a product of consultation with concerned parties and not a unilateral decision”.
Image copyrightReutersImage caption President Kenyatta said that though he respected the Supreme Court’s decision he disagreed with it
The opposition leader alleged that the election date was set by the governing Jubilee Party.
Mr Odinga also faulted the IEBC for saying that the new election will just be between him and Mr Kenyatta. There were eight candidates on the ballot paper in August.
“The entire election was cancelled by the Supreme Court,” he said. “So it means that you do a repeat of the presidential elections afresh.”
For his part, President Kenyatta said last Friday that while he respected the court’s annulment of the election he disagreed with the decision.
Speaking to supporters later that day, at an impromptu rally in the capital, Nairobi, he described Chief Justice David Maraga as a “crook”. On Saturday he vowed to “fix” the Supreme Court if he was re-elected.
This story is auto-generated from ‘BBC News’ syndicated feed and has not been edited by Africa Prime News staff.
Despite recession in Nigeria, in this interview with Correspondent Auwal Mohammed in Gombe last weekend, Minister of State for Power, Works and Housing, Suleiman Hassan Zarma, has expressed optimism that things are getting better in the country, and that they are going to get a lot better.
Sir now that people are celebrating sallah in the northeast of the country without fears what you are saying about fight against insurgency.
The successes of the fight against insurgency is such that you can see that people have now celebrated the Eid-El-Fitir and Eid-El-Kabir with pump and pageantry in all the states in the states in the North-East.
We also do know that the markets, even within Borno, the Baga Fish Market is back to life, activities in the Lake Chad are being conducted, the Mubi Market is now bubbling with activities, much more than ever before. There are more people coming into Mubi, coming into Maiduguri, coming into Gombe transacting business, day in day out.
A lot of activities rebuilding the North-East are taking place with a lot of economic activities, constructions are going on, people are being employed, lives are earning money, economy is bubbling and so it’s a lot, lot success that we can see.
If you take the military that are participating in the activity, you will see their renewed vigour, they are being trained, they are being kitted, day in day out.
So that tells you that a lot of successes have been recorded, the insurgents have been degraded, even though yes, there are pockets of activities by the so-called insurgents, but these are all fits of deaths and they will surely go out of extinction and then we can take our lives back.
Sir how can the peace be sustained?
Peace can be sustained by us trusting each other, giving out information as it’s required by the military. If you see anything suspicious, no information is too small in security circles. So, if you notice anything that is going to contribute to the improvement of that peace for peaceful co-existence, I mean, you and I, for example go to the farm, if we see any activity, persons or movements around our farm area, we can talk about it.
If we see anything new in our community, we can talk about it. If you go to the market and see some movements, you can talk about it.
So, you and I are going to be a part of that peaceful co-existence, confidence building in our security, amongst ourselves and so on and so forth.
Sir recently, we see that the economy is picking up and things are getting better
Things are getting better and they are going to get a lot better. It is as a result of that peace, that you and I can go to the farm that means more food on the table, for both the farmer and he can take some to the market and can sell. More again for the farmer, because the alternative funding, instead of fuel, we are now looking at alternative funding to our national budget, this will contribute in no small measure. And I can tell you, we are building roads, we are hydro-dams for power.
These are all engagements that will engage one or two persons. And if you employ one person who earns a salary, he feeds his wife, he feeds his children and the effect will go down to the family and it will permeate the economy. Sometimes I use to argue, people say they do not see any activity, but I say there are activities, because we are constructing roads. If you are constructing a road, it’s not something that you can start on a Monday and finish on a Friday. It is project that takes two years to deliver. So, activities are going on, more people are employed. The person supplying sand to the contractor is there, the person supplying tar will also anchor on that value chain and a lot of other activities.
But the people see the road and think of what they see on the road alone. No, there are a lot of activities. Tipper is involved, gravel is involved and cement seller, and everyone is involved. So is you are building houses. Mass houses all over the country, people are not talking about it. But again, any small contractor will have at least mason, a brick layer, somebody taking sand, somebody mixing concrete, people buying diesel to power the tipper and so on and so forth. So, money is being distributed in this small activity but people that are not talking about it are people that have gotten a lot of dollars stashed away, but you and feel this economy trickling down to our own people.
Sir is housing an agenda for this government?
It is an agenda for “Housing for All”. We are talking of delivering houses that are adaptable, that are affordable, it will take our culture into consideration it will take our climate into consideration and I tell you, we have just done a workshop last week, that is saying we should do housing that are energy efficient. What do I mean by energy efficient? A house that will use less power consumption, better ventilation, so that you needn’t have to use so many ACs [air conditioners] in your house, you don’t have to use so many bulbs in your house, but minimum energy, maximum comfort. So, these are the concepts and it is going to be delivered in every state and possibly, every local government area of the country, because even the local government tier of government is going to anchor on this programme.
How accessible is this policy going to be to the average Nigerian?
That is what we are trying to see. We are trying to make it as accessible to everybody, as it is possible. We are looking at a model, where the cost of the building will come less. So, what constitute the cost of the building, we will look at it. If it is the land, we will see how easy it will be to access land to make housing better for the people. Is it the structure that is being built? We will look at that one and look at the person that is going to occupy that building and say ok, build to this man’s capacity without compromising quality. That is what we intend to do, even if it means, if you build three-bedroom houses for everybody, then my need may not be three-bedroom. It may be two-bedrooms. Then again for another person, it may be five or seven bedrooms. So, we’ll look at your needs first, we look at the needs of the persons we are building the houses for, and say this is what this people need and then we can build houses for them. Because again, you are the one who will contribute into the fund, anyway. So, as you are contributing, we will ask for your need and then factor you into it before we deliver the project.
We don’t want to deliver houses that will not be occupied. Because it is not what we intend. There are so many houses all over the place, but people are not talking because it is not their need.
What is the Buhari administration policy direction?
You know the Buhari Administration came in and promised security and economic revival. These are the two principal issues, but most of all, the war against corruption. Now, the war against corruption can stand for the all and two. If you fight corruption, the economy will thrive. If you fight corruption, security will thrive, because all of them are anchored on the same thing. And we can see that corruption is now at the minimum. At least people are not brazen about it. Before now, people celebrate corrupt persons, and I am not sure someone can come and flaunt a wealth that is illegally gotten now, but before, people flaunt it. But you can’t do it now, we have so many policies. There is a TSA for government workers and then there is the whistle blowers’ programme, if you stash it in your house and somebody sees it, he will tell people. So, you see that, if you tackle corruption, you are now tackling the economy to prosper.
A head of the 2019 general election, a group known as Southern Kaduna Democrats, has commenced sensitization of the people of the area on the need to participate actively in politics.
Senator representing the Southern Kaduna senatorial zone, Danjuma La’ah, while commending the organisers of the programme, said the sensitization would go a long way in preparing the people of the area for the 2019 general elections.
“The people of Southern Kaduna, irrespective of tribe and religion must come together to ensure that their desire is achieve.
“We should not be carried away by the antics of some people who wants to divide us. As Southern Kaduna people, we must do away with our differences, pursue peace and development of our area,” La’ah advised.
The senator lamented that the people of Southern Kaduna have not been getting their fair share in the present government, adding that 2019 would be another opportunity for them to make rightful choices.
Speaking at the maiden edition of the programme tagged: “Political Configuration,” held at the Bajju Town Hall, Zonkwa in Zangon Kataf LGA of Kaduna state, one of the organisers, Pastor Isaac Ango Makama said Southern Kaduna must take it proper place in the politics of Nigeria.
Isaac said the sensitization would continue in all the 12 local government areas that make up Southern Kaduna.
The programme which cut across diverse people in different political parties, had the Senator Danjuma La’ah, Mr. Godfrey Ali Gaiya, Mr. Mark Jacob, Dr Bonat Zwahu, former interim management committee chairman of Zangon Kataf LGA, Anthony Wakili, Sunday Funom Modacai, among others in attendance.
However, the sources cautioned that Mr Trump could still change his mind.
He is due to formally announce his decision on Tuesday.
The Obama-era Daca programme protects hundreds of thousands of so-called “Dreamers” from deportation and provides work and study permits.
Trump puts his party in tough spot
Anthony Zurcher, BBC News, Washington
Candidate Trump promised to do away with Daca, and it appears that’s what he’s going to do, despite warnings from a cross-party collection of politicians. Or, knowing this president, those objections from “the establishment” only make him more determined to act.
Fortunately for him, unlike repealing Obamacare or building his Mexican border wall, he doesn’t need Congress’s help here.
In fact, by setting a six-month fuse on Daca’s destruction, Mr Trump puts all the pressure on legislators if they want to protect undocumented immigrants who entered the US as children.
While the votes may be there for some type of fix, Congress already has its hands full with other pressing issues – hurricane relief, budget resolutions, the need to authorise new government debt and, at some point, tax reform.
Mr Trump may not care, but he’s putting Republicans with tough re-election races in a difficult spot. If the president’s Daca bomb goes off, they will face angry constituents just as the campaign season gets into gear.
The president, however, satisfies his anti-immigration base with this move – and washes his hands of the matter. The loyalists who have stood by him are rewarded, others in his party be damned.
According to Politico, the White House informed House Speaker Paul Ryan of the president’s decision on Sunday morning.
Mr Ryan last week urged the president not to scrap the scheme, arguing it left many young people “in limbo”.
“These are kids who know no other country, who were brought here by their parents and don’t know another home,” he said.
Image copyrightAFPImage caption President Trump has previously said he “loves” the Dreamers
Mr Ryan is one of a growing number of Republican lawmakers and business leaders to speak out against scrapping the programme.
While campaigning for office, Mr Trump took a hard-line on immigration and said he planned to “immediately terminate” the Daca programme.
But since then he has said he finds the subject “very, very tough”.
He said he intends to show “great heart” in dealing with what he described as, in many cases, “incredible kids”.
The decision to give Congress six months to draft an alternative is seen as a compromise after Republican lawmakers and business leaders from companies including Google, General Motors and Microsoft urged Mr Trump to retain the programme.
On Sunday, former Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton tweeted: “Thanks to Dreamers’ courage & resolve, #DACA has allowed thousands of young people to contribute to our society. We’re better for it.”
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Cuban-American Republican Representative from Florida, also took to Twitter to vent her frustration, saying: “After teasing #Dreamers for months with talk of his ‘great heart,’ @POTUS slams door on them. Some ‘heart’.”
What is Daca?
The Daca programme protects roughly 750,000 people in the US from deportation and provides temporary permits for work and study.
In order to qualify for Daca, applicants under the age of 30 submit personal information to the Department of Homeland Security.
Media playback is unsupported on your device
Media captionWhere do America’s undocumented immigrants live?
They must go through an FBI background check and have a clean criminal background, and either be in school, recently graduated or have been honourably discharged from the military.
In exchange, the US government agrees to “defer” any action on their immigration status for a period of two years.
The majority of so-called Dreamer immigrants in the US are from Mexico and other Latin American countries.
This story is auto-generated from ‘BBC News’ feed and has not been edited by Africa Prime News staff.
Information reaching AFRICA PRIME NEWS says flood has damaged a portion of Makurdi – Lafia road, around Yelewata in Guma LGA of Benue state, north central Nigeria.
It indicates that shuttling across that axis is becoming increasingly difficult for motorists and other road users.
The corridor links the South-East part of Nigeria to Makurdi-Lafia-Abuja-Kaduna to the North-West axis. It also links Makurdi-Lafia-Jos to the North-Eastern axis.
The information says, so far, agencies of Nigerian government like the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency (FERMA) and Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) are yet to visit the site.
Photos below taken from the spot have been circulating on the social media.
Kaduna State House of Assembly has been implored to speed up the passage of the Child Right Act in the state.
The bill is meant to protect millions of children in the state who are vulnerable to child abuse, trafficking, labour and other social vices.
The Committee on Defence of Children, CDC, Kaduna State, has team up with National Human Right Commission, NHRC, and students to push for the passage and demonstration of child rights acts in Kaduna State.
The CDC President, Abubakar Sani, on Sunday in an interview with journalists in Kaduna, said he has met the State Coordinator of NHRC to intervene in the process in ensuring that the state consider the passage of the acts through the State House of Assembly.
He noted that the none passage of the bill would not be in the interest of the children, the future leaders of the country that needed the right due to them to be able to grow as responsible citizens ready to take over the mantle of leadership of the country in years to come.
He added, “Any attempt to deny the young Nigerians to fully explore their potentials will be to the detriment of the state and the country as a whole.”
According to him, CDC was set up as a committee to advocate for the quick intervention on passage of the child right bill in Kaduna State, pointing out that the committee was also formed under the international NGO (Aflatoun) Child Rights Cooperative Project funded by European Union and implemented by Linking the Youth of Nigeria through Exchange (LYNX-NIGERIA) and its partners.
He lamented failure of Kaduna State House of Assembly to pass and domesticate the Child Rights Act passed since 2003 by the National Assembly.
The State Coordinator, National Human Rights Commission, Kaduna Chapter, Christopher Oshishi Eneji, stated that what is called vulnerability of children is adult irresponsibility.
Eneji expressed dismay that Kaduna, the historical centre of the north was yet to domesticate the Child Rights Act ,when 24 states have done so.
He observed that work was in progress to ensure that the Act is passed and domesticated in Kaduna, while assuring that the grey areas that needed to be resolved for the Assembly to pass it would be looked into without delay.
“Some persons are not satisfied with some parts of the Acts, but the Human Rights Commission is working closely with the Ministry of Women Affairs to ensure that the law is passed once those grey areas have been addressed.
“If passed the children will not only know their rights, but will also report to the appropriate authorities when such rights are infringed upon,” he observed.
Speaker of Nigeria’s House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, has condoled with the government and people of Benue State in central part of the country, over flooding which displaced over a hundred thousand people in the state and destroyed properties in 12 local government areas.
“I sympathise with the government and people of Benue State over the loss caused by the floods that ravaged their homes, farmlands and businesses and displacement of over 100,000 people from their homes.
“This is one flooding too many and emphasises the urgent need for targeted solutions to the problems affecting our environment, ” he said.
A statement by his spokesman, Turaki Adamu Hassan, said the Speaker also expressed deep sympathy for all the victims who lost their livelihoods, homes, business, farmlands, and families of those who died in the unfortunate natural disaster.
He disclosed that the House is in the final stages of providing legal framework to address natural disasters caused by the effects of climate change.
“The House of Representatives has already gone far in this regard, with a Bill for the Establishment of an Agency dealing exclusively with Climate Change issues”
He further enjoined “National Emergency Management Agency, Ecological Funds Office and other relevant government agencies to urgently come to the aid of Benue State and the victims”.
Pastor Buru Presenting Food to Group of Beneficiaries
By Amos Tauna
Pastor Buru Presenting Food to Group of Beneficiaries
Christ Evangelical and Life Intervention Fellowship , Kaduna, in the spirit of togetherness and peaceful coexistence, extended hands of charity to Muslim inmates, destitute and Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs, on Eid-el-Kabir day.
The General Overseer of the Church, Pastor Yohanna Buru, while providing food and other items, said the gesture was a way to encourage the Muslims in distress to take active part in the Sallah festivity.
While urging good citizens of Nigeria to always help the under-privileged among them in the society anytime they are in a position to do so, he said there was the need for wealthy individuals to make them happy and carry them along for the overall peace, unity and development of the country.
“As Christian leaders, we share whatever we have to make every Nigerian happy on this special day, be
Pastor Buru Presenting Food to female Beneficiary
cause we are from one family of Adams and Eve, our Bible teaches us to assist the less privileged and the needy in the society,” he said.
He stressed the need to straighten relationship between Muslims and Christians in the country, saying, “We are brothers and sisters and we must be united and live as one.”
Speaking on the importance of tolerance and peaceful coexistence amongst Christians and Muslims, Buru said the decision to provided food for over 1000 street beggers, destitute, IDPs and some orphans in the state was aimed at creating a platform of expressing unity and love .
Receiving the Sallah Gift items at the destitute home at Kano Road Kaduna, Mallam Muntari saleh ,who is the Public Relations Officer of Northern Blind Forum, expressed satisfaction over what he described as “kind esture” by the Christian leaders that stormed their home.
Pastor Buru Presenting Food to a male Beneficiary
Muntari showered prayers of blessings upon the Pastor asking for continued provision from God so he could continue to extend same kindness to destitute in the country.
“No one remembered us today as the world is celebrating Eid-el-kabir only our neighbours the Christians. We are grateful that during every Sallah and even valentine’s day, the pastor and other clergymen do usually come and show us love,” he observed.
He called on other Islamic scholars to always remember them and refugees that are residing in Kaduna metropolis.