Selling my cars won’t end Nigeria’s recession, I’ve ordered more – Melaye
Selling my cars won’t end Nigeria’s recession, I’ve ordered more – Melaye
Culled from: The Citizen Ng
The Chairman, Senate
Committee on the Federal Capital Territory, Senator Dino Melaye, speaks
on Senate President Bukola Saraki, the anti-corruption crusade of
President Muhammadu Buhari and other national issues
What motivated you to go into politics?
My drive in politics is to make life more bearable for Nigerians. My
interest in politics is for developmental reasons. I am in politics to
right the wrongs of the society. I am in politics to offer palliatives
to Nigerians. I am in politics to make sure that the youths of this
country get their fair share in power sharing and resources of this
country. My drive has always been revolutionary books which affected my
life. Early in life I read books on Mahatma Gandhi, Malcolm X and Martin
Luther King Jr. and that has helped in revolutionising my life and
resulted in a positive effect on me politically. So my driving force is
my orientation, my indoctrination from most autobiographies that I have
read and more important God.
Most Nigerians, especially your peers, have expressed reservations about
your sudden rise politically. How did you do it?
I give all honour, glory and adoration to the Almighty God who has
supreme control over the universe. I want to believe that God is the
ultimate reason for where I am today. I have tremendous belief in myself
and I believe that every man must dream a dream; every man must have in
mind the picture of what he intends to be; and I want to believe that
with resilience, commitment, perseverance and prayers, one will always
attain his goal in life. It is not all about me; it is about God.
Failure to plan is planning to fail. For me, the battle to attain my
goal is a battle of no retreat, no surrender and I will continue to
pursue it. I also want to announce that I am still climbing the ladder. I
still have some steps up to climb.
What is the future of youths in attaining the political leadership of
this country?
Power is never served as a buffet. To attain power, you must struggle
for it. The youths of this country will not get power on a platter of
gold. So they must come out of their cocoons and begin to make
sacrifices in search for power. The youths of this country must be
resolute. They should be interested in how they are being governed and
they must be interested in policy formulation and implementation. They
must be interested in their political and economic environment. That is
the only way they can capture power because power is not given; power is
taken. The youths of this country must show capacity and interest in
every facet of our national life and they must also make sure that they
react to the environment. Power ultimately belongs to God. But when man
wants it, man must labour for it because he that refuses to labour
should not eat. The youths of this country are about 65 per cent of our
population and have about 70 per cent of the voting rights in this
country. The youths have the strength, the energy, the dynamism, the
intellectual prowess and more important the population to capture power.
Several allegations have been made that you are close to the Senate
President, against the interest of your political party, because he
‘settled’ you. What is your reaction to this?
Bukola Saraki is my friend. He is my brother and I value friendship. My
definition of friendship is he or she who walks in while others are
walking out. I am not a monetised character. I don’t commercialise my
conscience. I do what is only right in man’s sight and in the sight of
Almighty God. No one has the money to buy me. My relationship with
Bukola Saraki is true friendship and I will stand by him come rain or
shine. I will always be by his side as a friend and I will always advise
him rightly. I did not pitch any tent against my party because as a
senator, I swore an oath before God and before man using the
constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended) and
also using the Holy Book. I swore to uphold the constitution and there
is no All Progressives Congress senator, there is no Peoples Democratic
Party senator. All we have is senator of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria. So, the party to me is just a vehicle for winning elections
because no political party in this country is ideologically based; no
political party in this country has a manifesto that is being
implemented. The governor of Kaduna State is from the APC; the governor
of Kano State is from the APC, but the programmes of the Kaduna State
governor is apparently at variance with that of his Kano State
counterpart. So people should not use the instrumentality of political
parties to determine loyalty to the nation. My loyalty is first to
Nigeria before my political party and the independence of the Senate is
important to me. I believe that the internal issues of the Senate should
be handled internally and I give my support to Bukola Saraki. I have no
regrets about it.
So was your loyalty why Saraki compensated you with the position of
chairman, senate committee on the Federal Capital Territory?
In every facet of life, people work for loyalty and today as a Muslim or
as a Christian, we all strive to make heaven because there is a hope
and a promise of eternity. So if a man gets rewarded for diligence and
loyalty, it is not a crime. And if I got rewarded with the position of
chairman, senate committee on FCT because I was loyal to Bukola Saraki,
then the losers should lick their wounds.
Many believe that you are young and therefore they query the source of
your stupendous wealth. How did you get your money?
I don’t know about stupendous wealth. I don’t know about being wealthy,
but I will say I am a comfortable Nigerian and I have never got any
contract from the government contract in my life. I have also never
taken any political appointment in my life or a position where I have
control over government funds. I have never had government imprest and I
challenge anyone who has any criminal allegation against me to actually
come out and present it. With the vigour with which I fought the
administration of President Goodluck Jonathan, if I had any skeleton in
my cupboard, by now it would have been exposed. For a man who buys very
expensive cars with his name labelled on the number plate, it is enough
to tell you that he is clean. I am a very transparent Nigerian, a very
open and honest Nigerian. I have never stolen from government and I can
say it without fear. I challenge anyone to prove me otherwise. But at
the same time, God is the ultimate giver of legitimate wealth and anyone
who really wants to tap into the anointing of getting resources from
God should please consult me.
Before you became a senator, were you already a millionaire?
I have not acquired anything dramatically new since I became a senator.
The houses I have in this city (Abuja), I acquired before being sworn in
as a senator. Hard work pays and the Holy Book says God shall supply my
needs according to His riches in glory in Christ Jesus. To me, that is
very fundamental. My source of wealth is heavenly, my purse is divine
and it won’t dry up.
You were the brains behind the ‘Like-Mind’ senators; a platform through
which Saraki became the Senate Presidnt. Now, he is facing the Code of
Conduct Tribunal over discrepancies in the declaration of his assets.
Why didn’t you advise him to resign honourably?
I am not Bukola Saraki. I don’t speak for Bukola Saraki. And I cannot
speak for Bukola Saraki. But all I want to say is that if Bukola Saraki
thinks he is guilty, he should resign. But if he thinks he is not
guilty, there is no reason he should resign. I say it without fear or
favour that what Bukola Saraki is passing through is not prosecution. It
is persecution. You don’t punish a man for being ambitious. The reason
Saraki was before the Code of Conduct (Tribunal) in the first instance
was because he was being ambitious. President Muhammadu Buhari is also
an ambitious character; having contested (the presidential) election
three times and he got it (won the poll) the fourth time. That shows
how ambitious he is and then getting to the Presidency now, he should
not be queried for being ambitious. I am also ambitious; I want to be
the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. It is God that gives
power to whosoever he wishes. So for me, the CCT trial is a kangaroo one
and at the end of the day, nothing will come out of it. Just as the
case of forgery was withdrawn, this in due course won’t see the light of
the day.
You founded the Anti-Corruption Network. How will you assess Buhari’s
administration in his fight against graft?
The President is sincere about his corruption war. But is the approach
right? He cannot say so. I want to say the approach of Mr. President in
fighting corruption will yield no dividends because in the ongoing
trials, no single Nigerian has been successfuly prosecuted and jailed.
Because of the magnitude of resources available to the looters of our
national treasury, they will have a way of manipulating Nigerian courts.
Most of the cases are still at the court of first instance and one year
after, witnesses have not been examined and cross-examined in the
courts. Then you will use two years in the court of instance, you will
use another two years in the Court of Appeal and you have the Supreme
Court. By that time, the President might have been out of power, money
not retrieved from the looters, time and resources wasted because the
Federal Government is also engaging lawyers and congesting the courts. I
believe in transparency, accountability and respect for the rule of
law. But in this particular incident, I am advocating for an economic
amnesty in the sense that government will invite all looters and ask
them to return the loot within a stipulated period of time, for example
six months. If in six months the loot is not returned, then we should
have a court that will expeditiously sentence them within the shortest
time possible. By so doing, it will be a win-win situation for all
because ultimately, at the end of the day, we want these monies to be
recovered so that they can be used for the development of this country.
We must look at the procurement process in the country that gave birth
to the weak structures that exposes Nigerians to corruption and
stealing. We must look at the procurement laws and the loopholes that
create room for stealing and wastage — that must be looked at
critically. Secondly, we must block wastage; without doing all these,
the same corruption structure remains and it will still be exploited.
The Presidency is said to have been hijacked by a cabal. Do you believe
this, going by the allegation recently made by the First Lady, Aisha
Buhari?
I am not an occupant of Aso Rock, so I don’t really know if it has been
hijacked or not. And, I don’t know if it has been invaded or not,
because I don’t have access to Aso Rock.
The recent amendment to the Code of Conduct Bureau and CCT Acts were
believed to have been due to the ongoing trial of Saraki. Is that
correct?
For everything in this world, there is a reason; situations give birth
to circumstances. We amended the Act of the Independent National
Electoral Commission because Prince Abubakar Audu died and we discovered
that there was no provision in our laws for somebody who eventually won
an election and died before swearing-in. So, the lacuna in our law
necessitated the amendment of the law. For every amendment, there is a
reason for it. I want to say that the reason for all the amendments in
the CCB and CCT Acts are also as a result of necessity. I want you to
disassociate the person and personality of Saraki from any amendment
because Bukola Saraki is occupying an office that is time-bound. These
laws will live beyond him. They are lifetime established laws for
generations yet unborn. It will outlive all of us and people should not
tie a particular law to a particular individual. Laws are made for man
and not man for laws.
Since the death of the former Minister of State for Labour, James Ocholi
(SAN), Kogi State has not been represented in the federal cabinet. Are
you satisfied?
I moved a motion today (Wednesday) on the floor of the Senate quoting
the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Section 14, saying
the people of Kogi State have been automatically robbed socially,
economically and politically because for eight months now we don’t have a
minister. Our mileage has been completely shortened and the provision
of the constitution made it explicitly clear that there shall be,
meaning that at all times there must be one minister from each state of
the federation. So for me, it is a constitutional breach that for eight
months, we are not represented in the federal cabinet. That has been
taken care of and we got the resolution of the House, mandating Mr.
President to immediately recommend to the Senate for screening a
minister representing Kogi state.
Recently, you had an altercation with a fellow senator, Oluremi Tinubu,
what is the update?
For me, old things have passed away and behold they have become new. I
leave the dead to sleep.
It was alleged that she was not the one you were targeting but her
husband because of the role he played in an attempt to stop Saraki from
becoming Senate President.
I am trying to emphasise again that I don’t cry over spilt milk. The
things of history are left in the realm of history. I have moved on.
Why is it difficult for Saraki to publish details of the National
Assembly’s budget, despite his promise to do so? Is he or the Senate up
to something else?
The truth of the matter is that the Freedom of Information Bill has been
passed; Nigerians should take the opportunity of the FoI Bill to ask
any Nigerian anywhere, not only the National Assembly, including the
President, any question they want. You have the right to write Saraki
and ask him any question about the finances of the National Assembly and
he is obliged by law within seven days to respond. There is no secret
about that.
You are from the Okun Yoruba-speaking part of Kogi State and your people
have been crying of marginalisation by the Igala ethnic nationality
that has been controlling the political machinery of the state. What are
the chances of the Okun people producing the next governor?
Power is not given; power is taken and when it is time for us to get it,
we will take it.
What is your relationship with your governor, Yahaya Bello? It is
believed that you are having some altercations over the sharing of
political offices in Kogi State?
The relationship between me and the governor is the relationship between
a citizen and his governor. He is my governor and I am a citizen of the
state.
Where is Mrs. Melaye and what can you say specifically about your
marital life?
I am single. I have three children. But I am not married. I won’t remain
single forever. Very soon I will invite you (to my wedding) and I
assure you (that the person I will marry) will be a Made-in-Nigeria
woman.
Why do you find it difficult to settle down with one woman?
I have always been married to one woman and all my children are from one
woman. I have only been married once. Whatever marriage I am going into
now will be my second marriage. If you are anxious to know, I will
invite you.
Are you ruling out the possibility of reconciling with your wife?
I don’t have a wife.
Some Nigerians have a negative perception about you. Are you not
disturbed by that?
There is no negative perception about me on social media. I appreciate
those who appreciate me and I get a lot of support from there. I get a
lot of encouragement. Nigerians have demonstrated love for me. I don’t
think there is any politician that has the kind of followers I have on
Twitter, Facebook and Instagram and I get a lot of love and appreciation
from Nigerians. But you cannot rule out those who will antagonise you.
It’s normal and it happened to Jesus Christ and Prophet Muhammad. It is
the same with everybody. You can’t be loved by all but I want to say
that all those who dislike me, who blackmail me, and lie against me,
are giving vitamins to my soul and it makes me fresh.
Why do you love cars?
I love automobiles and everybody can be passionate about a particular
thing. Some can be passionate about homosexuality. They can spend any
amount of money to sleep with a man. Some are passionate about
occultism. They can buy blood at any amount of money. Some are
passionate about diamonds; you can ask Diezani (Alison-Madueke). My
passion is automobiles and there is no crime in that and I am very proud
of it. Once the automobiles are not products of crime and they are not
got from any ill-gotten wealth, then a man should be proud about what he
is passionate about. I love automobiles and I am waiting for the next
collection.
You have ordered for more cars at this period of economic recession,
when many Nigerians, even those from your constituency and senatorial
district cannot feed and there is poverty everywhere?
Yes, my cars cannot underwrite the recession problems of this country.
Even if you sell my cars now, it will not make Nigeria to come out of
recession. – Culled from Punch.
Culled from: The Citizen Ng
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