The call of duty is over for top ranking members of the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) who were appointed ambassadors by former
President Goodluck Jonathan.
They were recalled home last night by President Muhammadu Buhari after three years of service abroad.
Prominent among them are a former Foreign Affairs Minister , Chief
Ojo Maduekwe (Canada); Chairman of the Jonathan Presidential Campaign
Organisation in the 2011 election, Dr. Dalhatu Tafida (UK);Professor Ade
Adefuye (USA);widow of the late Ikemba Nnewi, Chief Emeka
Odumegwu-Ojukwu, Bianca (Spain);and former deputy governor of Oyo State,
Mr. Taofeek Arapaja (Jordan).
Also on the list are: Chief Asam Asam (SAN), (Russia); Mr. Okwudili
Nwosu (Burundi); Mr. Okeke Chukwuemeka (Vatican); Mr. Eric Aworahbi
(Italy); Dauda Danladi (Pakistan); and Mrs. Katherine Okon (Czeck
Republic); Mr. Nwofe Alexander,; Princess Victoria Bosede Onipede
(Republic of Congo); Senator Haruna Garba (Kuwait); Mrs. Nonye
Rajis-Okpara (Singapore); Chief Eddy Onuoha (Hungary); Mr. Adamu
Babangida Ibrahim (Syria); Dr. Sam Jimba (Poland)
They were among the 93 envoys posted out in June 2012.
Authoritative sources said last night in Abuja that the Permanent
Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, had communicated the President’s
directive to the affected ambassadors.
They were told to hand over to the highest ranking officer in their various locations.
A Presidency source confirmed to The Nation that some of the
ambassadors including the envoy in Saudi Arabia were already on their
way back to the country at press time.
The source said: “the President has issued a directive to the
Permanent Secretary in Ministry of Foreign Affairs to recall all the
political appointees currently serving as ambassadors in all parts of
the world.
It doesn’t matter whether they have just few months to the end of their tenure.
“I am sure the envoy in Saudi Arabia is already on his way and quite many others should be reporting to the ministry by Monday.
I really don’t have a comprehensive list of the number of people that
are affected but they are posted in different continents mostly in key
European, Asian and American countries.”
The sack is the biggest since President Buhari assumed office on May 29.
Their nominations were endorsed by the Senate on Wednesday February
8, 2012, nearly two months after former President Jonathan submitted
their names.
On the list were 32 names of politicians.
The ex-President in a letter to the then Senate President, David
Mark, requested that in line with section 171(1) C, sub-section 4 of the
1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended, the
Senate should consider the list, hoping that “this exercise will receive
the usual kind expeditious attention of the Distinguished Members of
the Senate of the Federal Republic.”
Of the 88 nominees sent to the Senate by Jonathan, only 87 appeared
before the screening committee, while 84 passed the screening.
Two of the nominees, Mrs. Sifawu Momoh, Edo; and Mazi Okafor Ojih,
Ebonyi, could not scale the screening as the Senate Committee on Foreign
Affairs did not recommend them for confirmation.
Mrs. Bianca Ojukwu, who was nominated to represent Anambra State on
the list of non-career category, did not appear for screening but was
confirmed nonetheless, her nomination coming barely a week after her
husband died in a London hospital.
Maduekwue was nominated by Jonathan following his ouster as National
Secretary of the party in what observers said was a move to placate him.
Kamson, Njeze and Arapaja had all failed to secure the party’s governorship tickets in their states.
The recall of Ambassadors serving in foreign missions is a routine
exercise especially where there is a change of guard at the federal
level.
Source: TheNation
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