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Former President Goodluck Jonathan has advised Peoples Democratic Party leadership to increase statutory delegates’ number for the party’s elections, especially state and local government primaries, in its Constitution’s review.

Jonathan gave the advice in his office in Abuja on Thursday when he received a delegation of the former Speakers of State Houses of Assembly elected on PDP platform.

He said one of the major challenges facing the PDP was how it elected candidates and national officers of the party.

He said there would always be crisis over outcome of the party’s primary elections or conventions unless the number of statutory delegates to those elections was reviewed upward to about 70 per cent.

Jonathan said the party must work out modalities in which no one person could influence the choice or number of delegates to elections.

He suggested that those who had served at certain levels, including governorship, ministerial, parliamentarian positions at all levels, should be statutory delegates.

He said: “That is the area we have not been able to manage properly that is still creating problem for us.

“I believe the next constitution amendment should advocate for that area to be properly examined.

“From my own experience, if that area is strengthened, the party will be okay and nobody will complain at the end of primaries.

“If you lose, you lose gallantly and you support the person that wins.”

On war against corruption, the former president advised PDP members not to be intimidated.

He said: “There are stories of corruption.

“I say this will always be there because if you read the statement of the organisers of the first military coup, their statement was attributed to corruption.

“After that, all other coup plots were always targeted at corruption.

“It will continue to be but one day we will get out of it.

“Most nations passed through this stage of life.

“The only thing I plead of you is not to politicise certain basic things.

“Issues of corruption, yes, it is worrisome, and nobody will encourage it.

“The society must come up with reform to reduce it, if you cannot eliminate it totally.

“No society is 100 per cent free of some of these vices but the approach you adopt about it is key.

“You may approach it in a way that it will become detrimental to the society.

“It should be done in a way that will enhance the development of the nation.

“So we encourage people to do well.”

Jonathan also said that in due time, he would state his position on why the PDP lost in the 2015 general elections.

He, however, said he would only do this after the beneficiaries have left power.

The incumbent, President Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress, defeated Jonathan.

The ex-president said: “PDP is still the strongest party.

“We know the reason why we lost in the elections.

“People may be writing left and right, but at the appropriate time, some of these things will be properly addressed because of history.

“There are certain things you don’t write now because it will be misunderstood as if you are playing politics.

“After some years, five, six or eight years, when the beneficiaries have left, you can state it in writing and people will not fight with you.”

Jonathan encouraged the former speakers to continue with the party unlike those playing “politics of the stomach” defecting to other parties.

He said that PDP did well during the 16 years it was in power, by the number of reforms it introduced and implemented.

The former president commended the forum members for coming together to form such association, saying that they were important in the strategy of PDP reclaiming power in 2019.

Earlier, the Chairman of the forum, Inuwa Garba, said that their visit was to introduce the forum to Jonathan.

Garba also said that it was also to congratulate him and leaders of the party on the success at the Supreme Court over the party’s leadership crisis.

BIG STORY

Naira Abuse: CBN Proposes N500,000 As Minimum Fine In New Bill — NASS

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A bill to modify the Central Bank of Nigeria Act 2007 has been submitted in the Nigerian Senate, which would increase the minimum fine for abusing naira by 900%, from N50,000 to N500,000.

Senator Mukhail Adetokunbo Abiru (Lagos East) is the sponsor of the proposed legislation, which aims to severely enhance the punishment for abusing naira.

Prior to his removal from office by a Lagos Appeal Court, Senator Darlington Nwokocha was the bill’s original sponsor.

The goal of the bill, “A Bill for an Act to Amend the Central Bank of Nigeria Act No. 7 of 2007,” is to provide the CBN more authority to carry out its main goals.

The bill proposes a minimum fine of N500,000 or six months imprisonment for anyone who refuses to accept naira as a means of payment in Nigeria. 

The amendment bill read: “A person who refuses to accept the Naira as a means of payment or who prices or denominates the cost of any product or service or consummates any non-export business in Nigeria other than in Naira is guilty of an offence (unless the Bank has by written circular published in the National Gazette permitted such transaction) and liable on conviction to a fine of N500, 000 or 6 months imprisonment.”

The Senate also proposes a new minimum fine of N500,000 for anyone who engages in the buying and selling of naira notes. 

The amendment bill read: “A person who buys/sells Naira notes at a mark-up is guilty of an offence and shall on conviction be liable to imprisonment for a term not less than six months or to a fine not less than N500,000 or Ten per cent of the transaction value (whichever is higher), or six (6) months imprisonment.”

These proposed changes are designed to deter the misuse and abuse of the national currency, ensuring that the naira remains the principal means of transaction within the country.

By imposing stiffer penalties, the Senate aims to reinforce the sanctity of the naira and uphold its value in the face of economic challenges.

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BIG STORY

JUST IN: After 23 Months Of Suspending Operations In Nigeria, Emirate Airlines To Resume In October

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Emirates Airlines has stated that it is prepared to resume direct flight service from its base in Dubai to Nigeria twenty-three months after it halted operations there.

The airline made this announcement on Thursday through its official X account.

The service will be operated using a Boeing 777-300ER. EK783 will depart Dubai at 0945hrs, arriving in Lagos at 1520hrs; the return flight EK784 will leave Lagos at 1730hrs and arrive in Dubai at 0510hrs the next day.

“We’re back, Nigeria! We’ll be resuming services to Lagos from 1 October 2024, and we can’t wait to offer unrivalled connectivity to Dubai and beyond to over 140 cities,” the tweet read.

Adnan Kazim, Emirates’ Deputy President and Chief Commercial Officer said, “We are excited to resume our services to Nigeria. The Lagos-Dubai service has traditionally been popular with customers in Nigeria and we hope to reconnect leisure and business travellers to Dubai and onwards to our network of over 140 destinations. We thank the Nigerian government for their partnership and support in re-establishing this route and we look forward to welcoming passengers back onboard.

“With the resumption of operations to Nigeria, Emirates operates to 19 gateways in Africa with 157 flights per week from Dubai, with further reach to an additional 130 regional points in Africa through its codeshare and interline partnerships with South African Airways, Airlink, Royal Air Maroc, Tunis Air, among others.

“As a major economic hub in Africa, Nigeria and the UAE have built strong bilateral trade relations over the years, headlined by Lagos as the nation’s commercial centre. With the resumption of daily passenger flights, the airline’s cargo arm, Emirates SkyCargo, will further bolster the trade relationship by offering more than 300 tonnes of bellyhold cargo capacity, in and out of Lagos every week.”

Nigeria’s Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, SAN, hinted at the development earlier.

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Corrupt Politicians Should Not Get Any Serious Punishment, They “Steal And Share With The People” — Ndume

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Ali Ndume, the Chief Whip of the Senate, has explained the difference between corruption by politicians and other people.

Ndume said corruption by Nigerian politicians should not warrant any serious punishment, noting that it is People-Driven.

The senator admitted that politicians “steal and share with the people”.

He stated this on Tuesday when he featured on Channels TV Politics Today while speaking on the death penalty as the deterrent for those caught with drugs.

He said when politicians’ corruption is compared to others, it is a “small one’

He stated, “If you compare us, politicians, to all the corruption, it is very small. Our corruption is people-driven. If you steal it, you will go and share it with the people. If you don’t, you are not coming back for four years. There is no reason for stealing.

“I have been to the National Assembly, I can’t say because we are on TV now and not tell the truth. If the death penalty is supposed to be included in corruption, I will support it but you don’t go and kill someone that stole one million or one billion, no. But someone who steals one trillion of government money should be killed.

The senator said he supports death punishment for drug dealers.

“The death penalty is the best deterrent for those being caught for drugs. If you do drugs, you are killing people.

“In fact, that means you have destroyed the lives of so many people and killed so many people,” he said.

Recently, the Senate passed a bill, the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency Act (Amendment Bill) 2024 passed by the Senate.

The bill prescribed death penalty for persons found guilty of trading in hard drugs and narcotics.

This has, however, been debated and faulted by many stakeholders on whether or not President Bola Tinubu should accent the bill.

On Saturday, some legal practitioners expressed different opinions on the debate over the bill. Some of them urged President Bola Tinubu not to assent to the bill passed by the Senate while others pressed for it to be signed into law.

Some of the lawyers stressed that the death penalty was not a solution to drug trafficking and other drug-related offences in the country.

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