ABAVO CHRONICLE ABEJUKOKO VANGUARD ABIA REPORTERS ABIA SUN ABIGBORODO SUN ABRAKA STATESMAN ABUJA ABUJA CHRONICLE ABUJA GAZETTES ABUJA GUIDE ABUJA MORNING NEWS ABUJA NEWS ABUJA NEWSPAPERS ABUJA NOW

Nigeria: An Economic Misnomer for Sixty-Three Years

By

Enajite Enajero, Ph.D.

African Association for Evolutionary Economics

www.aafee.org

 

His Excellency,

Bola Ahmed Tinubu, President

Federal Republic of Nigeria

 

Dear Mr. President,

I must first congratulate you for becoming the President of Nigeria. Nigeria is faced with so many challenges. The problem facing Nigeria is not only that of reducing poverty, but also that of saving a chunk of humanity by creating the capacity to coalesce the most populous Black Country into the comity of developed nations. Some might think Nigeria becoming a developed nation will not occur in the foreseeable future. The purpose of this letter is to assure the president that Nigeria could become a developed nation if only it applies the appropriate development model at its economic stage.  Furthermore, the country’s future cannot be charted by only one person or a few people.  All Nigerians, especially those in the Diaspora, will have to participate either by relocating back to Nigeria or by contributing well-thought ideas from abroad.

In August 2016, I had the opportunity to interview with a University in Nigeria after numerous attempts to be on the ground in Nigeria or any part of Africa.  I had an interview with the same university five years earlier but was not successful. I believed teaching and researching in Africa would afford me the opportunity to feel economics as taught, discussed, and practiced in Africa.  The continent has been brutalized by all human qualities measured by economic indices. Thus, it becomes imperative for well-meaning people with flowing adrenaline to tackle the economic challenges in Africa.

During the interview, after the introduction and discussions about the position, the first question given to me by one of the interviewers was: “Is Nigeria in a recession?”  Surprised, but confirmed my fears during my grad school years that African nations, at their stage of development, were practicing the wrong economics.  Nigeria in a recession? I asked myself, when was Nigeria in an economic peak? We know from the introductory economics discussing business cycles that a nation must be producing at a peak, when resources, especially labor, are fully utilized, then cool off to a recession. Since independence, one cannot point to any period in the history of the country that everyone who wished to work was employed in Nigeria. Characterizing the situation in the country as a recession at any time in its history is flattering but deceptive. Also, it is tantamount to describing a passenger jetliner as descending and about to land when actually it is sitting in a terminal, still boarding, and not even on the runway. It was a misnomer to construe any period of Nigeria’s economy as a recession.

Yes, the Nigerian economy is akin to other economies in Africa that are still “boarding” a gigantic jetliner at their stage of economic development. Unfortunately, mainstream economics does not emphasize the boarding stage because it would be contradictory to the basic tenets of mainstream economic theories founded on the concept of “rational choice.” These theories are constructed on “what ought to be,” an “ideal situation,” and the benchmark of efficiency. Moreover, these theories comply with the political principles of freedom and liberty. However, the economic history of developed nations would reveal that “what ought to be,” or an “ideal situation” may not be practicable. Therefore, at this stage of Nigeria’s economic development, it is imperative to discuss workable models. Before then, I wish to discuss the second question posed during the interview with my potential employer in Nigeria’s academia.

The next question during the interview was less shocking: “Do you believe in money as an economic tool?” I pondered again. In a society with scanty transaction and speculative motives for money, how does money work? Yes, I believe in money; however, money works well depending on money demand, which is a function of transaction and speculative motives, aka, the financial market. There are no mortgage markets. Except for imports, no market for automobiles, no vast market for furniture and kitchen utensils, no market for repair men, and very few borrow to start a business. All the transactions are “cash and carry.”

Yes, the central bank buys and sells government securities, which is the major function of notable central banks of the world, but how many Nigerians, retirement funds, or foreign investors are holding Nigerian government securities? If there is a money market, only a handful of Nigerians participate because majority of Nigerians remain in a deep subsistence life, let alone invest their wealth in government securities.  In the early households, for example, the men were hunting, and the women were gathering; the households were independent of each other, and transactions were unnecessary. Thus, money was not needed.  Subsistence life in Africa is one rung higher than the practices of early humans.  Heavy transactions are necessary to make money meaningful.  For money to have an impact on the gross domestic product (GDP), transactions far above the subsistence level will be needed.

Perhaps, my interviewer meant M1 (coins, currency plus checking accounts), and not M2.  Even if he meant M1, the currency content of M1 in some countries is less than 50% of what is referred to as money in the economic sense.  Besides, billions of the Nigerian currency, the Naira, were reportedly set ablaze for ritual purposes or buried in officials’ backyards and abandoned buildings because they were ill-gotten. In these scenarios, money defies its mnemonic role in society, because money is not in transactions and not in circulation.

Therefore, the two questions during my interview were intertwined.  A recession is when economic activities or transactions slow down, not because the price of oil dropped to $20-$25 a barrel as it was in August 2016. Theoretically, when the price of an essential input such as oil drops, it is good for business, and it is a period of economic recovery for most nations of the world. If it was otherwise in Nigeria due to sole reliance on one global commodity, that was not a recession; it was a result of economic dysfunction. Thus, Nigeria is operating a counter-cyclical economy. In addition, money matters in a society because it facilitates transactions. When transactions are flat, based on the quantity theory and the velocity of money as discussed in the 1970s, money is neutral.  Meaning it has no impact on output but only on prices.  That is the experience in many African nations.

A passenger jetliner must board all its passengers in the terminal before departure.  Nigeria and the rest of Africa seem to believe that they could skip the stage of economic onboarding, the development stage of making the economic man, the stage of democratizing the economy, the stage of mobilizing the people, and, best of all, the stage of creating an egalitarian society.  People are more crucial elements of an economy than oil and gas. People consume, spend, engage in entrepreneurship, and make transactions. Oil and gas do not. Therefore, the first stage of economic development is to be inclusive and induce people into making transactions. This agrees with the development theory in evolutionary economics that economic development occurs through changes in the ‘habits of thought.’  Please visit my website, www.aafee.org, African Association for Evolutionary Economics1.  Thus, economic development must be people focused.

For the new administration, it must not be business as usual and must realize Nigeria’s stage of economic development. Therefore at this onboarding stage, the federal, state and local governments need to collaborate and align the desires of the people with the development objectives of the nation. What are the desires of the people? Which goods are in the utility function of Nigerians? Utility is an economic jargon for satisfaction or pleasure.

To be less technical, I refer to utility function as the happiness function.  What makes people happy in addition to food and clothing? They are standardized affordable homes, education, healthcare, and transportation. These are the lifetime ambitions of every household in the entire world.  To own and live in a home with inner plumbing.  They also wish their children receive a good education, affordable healthcare, and subsidized public transportation. These could be produced by low-to-medium skilled workers that are abundant in Nigeria. Furthermore, affordable homes are, in the long-run, self-financed, and it does not require Forex. Therefore, in economics, it is self-contradictory that a nation has homes to build, roads to construct, education, healthcare, transportation, and safety to provide, yet a good percentage of youths are unemployed. There is a coordination problem.

Fortunately, the process of onboarding, making money matter, and moving people from subsistence life are related. These are supported by transactions or economic activities. Any federal government administration, in collaboration with the state and local governments, can taxi the Nigerian economy to the runway, and ready for takeoff.  The outcome of the appropriate policy could result in 25-30% GDP growth in the first year if properly implemented, and the rate subsequently drops gradually as the economy approaches its potential production level––That is, producing on the production possibility frontier.  Then, we are ready for capital accumulation, the second stage of economic development. Evidence in many developed countries began with providing these infrastructures (social capital), then financial and physical capital started flowing in.

Therefore, Mr. President, the purpose of this letter is for you to re-examine the existing development model of this country, whether it has outlived its purpose, and whether it is time, the country considered a different development approach2.  An approach focused on the people rather than oil for Forex for elephant projects, many of which remain non-functional after 63 years.  People are economic agents; they bear the burden of an economy, and they also ferry an economy through good and bad times.  Thank you for your time.

Yours sincerely,

Enajite Enajero, Ph.D. (Economics)

B.Sc. (Accounting)

ABAVO CHRONICLE ABEJUKOKO VANGUARD ABIA REPORTERS ABIA SUN ABIGBORODO SUN ABUJA CHRONICLE ABUJA GAZETTES ABUJA GUIDE ABUJA MORNING NEWS ABUJA NEWS ABUJA NEWSPAPERS

SANWO-OLU HAILS FIRST LADY, REMI TINUBU AT 63

PRESS RELEASE

 

Lagos State Governor, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has congratulated Senator Oluremi Tinubu, the wife of President Bola Tinubu, on the occasion of her 63rd birthday.

He described Senator Tinubu, a former First Lady of Lagos State and now First Lady of Nigeria, who will clock 63 on Thursday, as a passionate and kindhearted leader who has impacted many lives positively all through her journey in public life.

Governor Sanwo-Olu in a statement issued on Wednesday by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr Gboyega Akosile, described Senator Tinubu, a former three-term member of the Senate, as an advocate of social justice, a philanthropist and a voice of the voiceless.

He said, “On behalf of my wife, Ibijoke, the Government and the people of Lagos State, leaders and members of our party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), I heartily congratulate Senator Oluremi Tinubu, the wife of our leader and President, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, on the occasion of her 63rd birthday.

“Senator Oluremi Tinubu deserves to be celebrated, especially on her birthday, given the quality service she has rendered to our dear State and to Nigeria in different capacities both in private and public service.

“Over the years, our Amazon, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, has etched her name in gold as an advocate of social justice, a philanthropist, a voice of the voiceless, kindhearted Lagos State First Lady, performing Distinguished Senator and now the Wife of the President, working and supporting the President with her Renewed Hope Initiative.

“Senator Oluremi Tinubu has played critical roles in the growth and development of Lagos State and Nigeria, thereby setting examples for other women in leadership and governance.

“Since Asiwaju Bola Tinubu became President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria on May 29, Senator Oluremi Tinubu as First Lady has impacted many lives positively through her pet project, Renewed Hope Initiative, which has brought succour and relief to many families.

“She is a good ambassador of Lagos State and we are proud of her achievements at the state and national levels. On this 63rd birthday of Senator Oluremi Tinubu, I pray for continued God’s guidance and good health for her. God will give her the strength to render more service to humanity, Lagos, and our dear country, Nigeria.”

 

SIGNED

GBOYEGA AKOSILE

CHIEF PRESS SECRETARY

20 SEPTEMBER 2023

 

 

PRESS RELEASE

 

SANWO-OLU EXPRESSES SADNESS OVER ADEBOLA AKIN-BRIGHT’S DEATH

  • Says death of 12-year-old boy painful loss to him

Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has expressed sadness over the death of Adebola Akin-Bright, the 12-year-old boy with missing intestines, who was admitted at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) on Tuesday.

Governor Sanwo-Olu in a condolence message issued on Wednesday by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Gboyega Akosile, described the death of Adebola as a painful loss, not only to the deceased family and friends, but also to him personally and the entire State, considering the efforts made by the Lagos State Government to save the young boy.

The Governor sympathised with the late Adebola’s family and friends, especially his mother, Mrs. Deborah Abiodun, who did all she could and went the extra mile as a mother to save the life of her son.

Governor Sanwo-Olu also commended the medical team of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, who treated Adebola for several months and gave him the best medical care before he died on Tuesday evening.

“I am saddened by the death of Adebola Akin-Bright, a promising 12-year-old boy who died at LASUTH after months of medical treatment to save his life. I had close contact with Adebola and his mother a few days ago at LASUTH and I was committed to doing everything humanly and medically possible to save him.

“The medical team at LASUTH did everything possible to save the boy. They gave him the best medical care based on our collective commitment to save Adebola but we lost him on Tuesday night.

“I am sad that we lost Adebola despite the huge efforts by his mother, Deborah Abiodun, the medical team at LASUTH and the Lagos State Government to save him. Adebola’s death is a painful and personal loss to me because of my commitment in conjunction with the medical team to save the boy.

“Adebola will be missed by his family, especially his beloved mother, Deborah Abiodun, who did what is expected of a true mother to save a child. I pray that God will give her and the entire family the grace to bear the irreplaceable loss of Adebola.”

 

SIGNED

GBOYEGA AKOSILE

CHIEF PRESS SECRETARY

20 SEPTEMBER 2023

 

 

US Court Orders Release Of Tinubu’s Academic Records

A United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, has granted the request filed by the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar, seeking the release of President Bola Tinubu’s academic records by the Chicago State University.

 

Judge Jeffrey Gilbert, a US magistrate, gave the ruling on Tuesday, ordering CSU to produce “all relevant and non-privileged documents” to Abubakar Atiku, the plaintiff, within two days.

 

 

“This matter is before the Court on Atiku Abubakar’s Application Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 for an Order Directing Discovery from Chicago State University for Use in a Foreign Proceeding (“Application”) [ECF No. 1]. For the reasons discussed below, the Application is granted,” the judge ruled.

Tinubu’s lawyers have argued that their client is not willing to lift his privacy privilege, with the ruling also conceding this by using the term ‘non-privileged documents”.

 

 

Atiku had approached the court seeking an order that will compel the university to release Tinubu’s records.

Although Tinubu’s credentials indicated that he graduated in 1979 with a bachelor’s degree in accounting, there have been allegations bordering on discrepancies in the President’s certificate.

 

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

 

In re Application of ATIKU ABUBAKAR No. 23 C 5099

For an Order Directing Discovery from Jeffrey T. Gilbert

 

 

CHICAGO STATE UNIVERSITY  United States Magistrate Judge

Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782.

 

 

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

This matter is before the Court on Atiku Abubakar’s Application Pursuant to

28 U.S.C. § 1782 for an Order Directing Discovery from Chicago State University for Use in a Foreign Proceeding (“Application”) [ECF No. 1]. For the reasons discussed below, the Application is granted.

  1. BACKGROUND

Atiku Abubakar was Vice-Present of Nigeria from 1999 to 2007 and was a candidate for president in Nigeria’s presidential election that occurred in February

  1. Memorandum of Law In Support of Application for Judicial Assistance

Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 (“Applicant’s Memorandum”) [ECF No. 4], at 2. Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission (“INEC”) declared Bola Ahmed Tinubu won the election, and he is the current president of Nigeria. Mr. Abubakar says he came in second place in the presidential election. Id at 1. After the election, Mr. Abubakar along with the People’s Democratic Party filed a petition (“Petition”), challenging the results of the presidential election with the Court of Appeal in the

Presidential Election Petition Court in Nigeria (the “Nigerian Proceedings”). Id. at 1, Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 2 of 31 PageID #:2504

  1. Abubakar contends the Nigerian Proceedings address, among other things, whether President Tinubu submitted what Mr. Abubakar characterizes as a forged diploma to the INEC stating that he received an undergraduate degree from Chicago State University (“CSU” or “Respondent”) on June 22, 1979. Memorandum of Law In Support of Application for Judicial Assistance Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782

(“Applicant’s Memorandum”) [ECF No. 4], at 2-7, 10-11; Omnibus Reply In Further Support of his Application Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 (“Applicant’s Reply”) [ECF No. 22], at 5. Mr. Abubakar says that, under Nigerian law, the submission of a fraudulent document to the INEC would have disqualified now President Tinubu from participating in the election.  Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 5.

Mr. Abubakar filed the present Application pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 to obtain discovery from CSU for use in the Nigerian Proceedings. Application [ECF No. 1], at 1. The discovery Mr. Abubakar is seeking relates to his challenge as to the authenticity of the diploma President Tinubu submitted to the INEC and also to other educational records from CSU that Mr. Abubakar says are related to that challenge. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 3-5.

When the Application was filed, Mr. Abubakar’s Petition was pending before the Nigerian Court of Appeal. Application [ECF No. 1], at 1. On September 6, 2023 during the briefing on his Application, Mr. Abubakar notified the Court that the Nigerian Court of Appeal reportedly issued a ruling on his election challenge, finding in favor of President Tinubu and against Mr. Abubakar. Applicant’s Reply [ECF No.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 3 of 31 PageID #:2505

22], at 1. Mr. Abubakar has represented to this Court that he intends to appeal to the

Supreme Court of Nigeria. Id.

  1. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On August 2, 2023, Mr. Abubakar (“Applicant”) filed his Application [ECF No. 1] and Memorandum [ECF No. 4] in support of his Application, seeking discovery from Respondent on the CSU documents at issue. The presiding District Judge referred the Application to this Magistrate Judge for resolution. [ECF No. 7].

The day after the Application was filed, President Tinubu (“Intervenor”) filed a Motion to Intervene [ECF No. 10], which Applicant did not oppose. See Applicant’s Response to Bola A. Tinubu’s Motion to Join or Intervene [ECF No. 13]. The District Judge granted the Motion to Intervene on August 7, 2023, and this Court set a date for Intervenor to file a response to the Application and for Applicant to file a reply. [ECF Nos. 14, 15]. On August 23, 2023, CSU filed its Response to Application Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 (“CSU’s First Response”) [ECF No. 20], and Intervenor filed his Response to Application Under 28 U.S.C. § 1782 (“Intervenor’s Response”) [ECF No. 21].

As mentioned above, when Applicant filed his Application for discovery in the district court, his Petition challenging the presidential election was pending before the Nigerian Court of Appeal. On September 6, 2023, Applicant filed his Reply [ECF No. 22] and notified the Court that the Nigerian Court of Appeal reportedly issued a ruling on his election challenge that same day, finding in favor of Intervenor and against Applicant. [ECF No. 22], at 1-2; see also Second Declaration of Angela M. Liu Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 4 of 31 PageID #:2506

(“Second Liu Decl.”) [ECF No. 23], at ¶5. Applicant further explained that he has until September 27, 2023, to file his appeal of that ruling to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, which he states he intends to do. Id.; see also Declaration of Ahmed Tijjani Uwais (“Uwais Decl.”) [ECF No. 24], at ¶13.

In light of the time constraints to file his appeal to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, Applicant narrowed the scope of the discovery he is seeking from CSU. Compare [ECF Nos. 38, 39] (revised subpoenas) with [ECF Nos. 1-1, 1-2] (original subpoenas).[1] Specifically, Applicant wants to serve four document requests, seeking true and correct copies of: (1) an exemplar of a CSU diploma issued in 1979; (2)

Intervenor’s diploma issued in 1979; (3) any exemplar of a CSU diploma that “contains the same font, seal, signatures, and wording (other than the name of the recipient and the specific degree awarded) as contained in Exhibit C to the First Liu

Declaration, which purports to be a CSU diploma issued to Mr. Tinubu on or about June 22, 1979;” and (4) the CSU documents that were certified and produced by Jamar Orr (an associate general counsel at CSU) as well as communications relating to these documents (the “Orr Documents”). [ECF No. 38], at 4-5 (revised subpoena for production of documents).

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 5 of 31 PageID #:2507

Applicant also wants to take a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(b)(6) deposition of a CSU witness to explore five topics: (1) the authenticity of the documents produced by CSU in response to the Application and how and where CSU located the documents; (2) CSU’s position on the authenticity of other CSU documents related to Intervenor purportedly produced by CSU in another Nigerian proceeding (“Enahoro-Ebah v. Tinubu”); (3) the contents of the Westberg Affidavit;[2] (4) CSU’s position on the authenticity of a letter from Caleb Westberg (the “Westberg Letter”) on CSU letterhead regarding Intervenor and other facts, including who requested the letter, who prepared the letter, and to whom it was sent; and (5) CSU’s position on the authenticity of the Orr documents and other facts regarding why the documents were certified, if he was authorized to do so, who requested the documents, and to whom they were sent. See [ECF No. 39], at 4-5.

After Applicant narrowed his discovery requests and in light of the tight timeframe, the Court requested a substantive response from Respondent to the revised subpoenas and asked CSU to file any objections it had to the scope of the revised subpoenas prior to the hearing. CSU filed its Response to Court Order Dated September 8, 2023 (“CSU’s Second Response”) [ECF No. 32]. Prior to the hearing, Intervenor also requested and was granted leave to file a Sur-Response to Reply in Support of Application (“Intervenor’s Sur-Response”) [ECF No. 33].

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 6 of 31 PageID #:2508

Mr. Abubakar as Applicant, CSU as the responding party from whom  discovery is being sought, and President Tinubu as Intervenor have filed briefs with the Court setting forth their positions regarding the propriety of the discovery sought in the Application and submitted evidence for the Court’s consideration. The Court held a hearing on September 12, 2023, and heard arguments from the parties.

III. ANALYSIS

28 U.S.C. § 1782 provides that a district court may authorize the production of documents or testimony for use in a foreign legal proceeding unless the disclosure would violate a legal privilege. 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a). Determining whether to grant an application under Section 1782 involves a two-part analysis. Intel Corp. v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., 542 U.S. 241, 264 (2004). First, an applicant must satisfy the threshold statutory requirements set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a). If the district court determines an applicant has satisfied the threshold requirements and it has the authority to grant the application, the district court then must focus its analysis on discretionary factors to determine whether and to what extent the Section 1782 application is appropriate. Intel, 542 U.S. at 264 (“[A] district court is not required to grant a § 1782(a) discovery application simply because it has the authority to do so.”).

  1. The Statutory Requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 1782 Are Satisfied

28 U.S.C. § 1782 requires an applicant to satisfy three straight-forward threshold requirements: (1) the person or entity from whom the discovery is sought must reside or be found in the district of the court to which the application is made; (2) the discovery must be “for use” in a proceeding before a foreign tribunal; and (3) Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 7 of 31 PageID #:2509

the application must be submitted by a foreign or international tribunal or an “interested person.” 28 U.S.C. § 1782. The first requirement is not disputed in this case. Respondent is a public university located with this judicial district. Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 5; CSU’s Response [ECF No. 20]. Intervenor, however, disputes whether Applicant is seeking the discovery “for use” in the Nigerian Proceedings and whether Applicant is “an interested person” in the Nigerian

Proceedings in which this discovery would be used.

  1. The Discovery is “For Use” in the Nigerian Proceedings

To obtain discovery under 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a), an applicant must establish

“that the discovery sought is for use in a proceeding before a foreign tribunal.” In re King, 2021 WL 722850, at *1 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 24, 2021). “‘[F]or use in’ mirrors the requirements in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1) and means discovery that is relevant to the claim or defense of any party, or for good cause, any matter relevant to the subject matter involved in the foreign action.” In re Application for an Ord. for Jud. Assistance in a Foreign Proceeding in the Labor Court of Brazil, 466 F. Supp. 2d 1020, 1029 (N.D. Ill. 2006). Moreover, the proceeding does not need to be pending at the time of the discovery request; it is sufficient that “the planned proceedings are ‘within reasonable contemplation.’” Id. (quoting Intel, 542 U.S. at 259); Heraeus Med. GmbH v. Biomet, Inc., 2021 WL 4133710, at *4 (N.D. Ind. Sept. 10, 2021) (“28 U.S.C. § 1782 ‘does not require that [a] … foreign … proceeding must have already commenced or … be pending or imminent….’”) (internal citations omitted).

Applicant argues the discovery he seeks from Respondent regarding the authenticity of documents Intervenor submitted to the INEC or more broadly related Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 8 of 31 PageID #:2510

to the status of Intervenor’s degree from CSU is “for use” in the Nigerian Proceedings, including Applicant’s intended appeal to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1782. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 2-6, 10-11; Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 3-7. In the Nigerian Proceedings challenging the election results, Applicant argued, among other things, that Intervenor submitted a forged diploma to the INEC stating that he received an undergraduate degree from CSU on June 22, 1979. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 2-6, 10-11;

Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 3-7. Applicant says Section 137(1)(j) of the Nigerian Constitution and Section 134(1)(a) of Nigeria’s Electoral Act of 2022 provide that a person is not qualified to participate in a Nigerian presidential election if the candidate has submitted a forged certificate and that such a disqualification challenge may be raised post-election. See Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 5 (citing Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶3 and Exs. A & B)).

Applicant questions the authenticity of the CSU diploma Intervenor presented to the INEC before the election because, among other things, a second CSU diploma has since emerged (dated June 27, 1979) that bears the name “Bola Ahmed Tinubu” but also presents with a different font, punctuation, seal, and signatures, than the

June 22, 1979 diploma, among other alleged discrepancies. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 2-6; Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 5-6. Applicant also references other documents allegedly produced by CSU for use in related electoral challenge proceedings in Nigeria that he says raise additional questions about the authenticity of the diploma that Intervenor submitted to the INEC and his other educational Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 9 of 31 PageID #:2511

records from CSU. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 6; Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 8 (citing Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24] at ¶6 & Ex. D). Because of the discrepancies in some of the documents purportedly issued by CSU, Applicant says there are questions about whether all the CSU documents actually came from CSU and when they were created. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 6; Applicant’s

Reply [ECF No. 22], at 6. Although Applicant acknowledges that CSU has stated that Intervenor did, in fact, graduate from CSU on June 22, 1979, Applicant still questions whether President Tinubu actually attended and received an undergraduate degree from CSU. Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 5-6. At least in the Court’s view, however, the primary issue that animates Applicant’s position in this case appears to be whether a CSU diploma in the name of “Bola Ahmed Tinubu” dated June 22, 1979, that was submitted to the INEC before the Nigerian presidential election in February 2023 is genuine or was forged.

Intervenor contends that the discovery Applicant seeks is not relevant to the Nigerian Proceedings because issues regarding his educational background were not referenced specifically in Applicant’s Petition filed with the Court of Appeal. See Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 5-6 (citing [ECF No. 5-2]). Those matters instead were raised in Applicant’s reply materials filed in support of the Petition. As addressed further below, the Nigerian Court of Appeal declined to consider issues related to Intervenor’s educational background that had not been included in

Applicant’s Petition but rather were belatedly raised for the first time in Applicant’s Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 10 of 31 PageID #:2512

reply filings. See September 6, 2023 Judgment in the Presidential Election Petition Court (“Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision”) [ECF No. 34], at 545-558, 606, 608-09.3

Applicant responds that in his intended appeal of the Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision, the Supreme Court of Nigeria can consider new evidence in “exceptional circumstances” under the Nigerian Electoral Act of 2022 and/or in its discretion, and he provides a declaration to that effect from his counsel in the Nigerian Proceedings. Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 10; Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶12 & Ex. G. Applicant further argues that whether the Supreme Court of Nigeria actually would consider any evidence obtained through discovery in this case is irrelevant to the “for use” analysis because the statute does not impose a foreign admissibility requirement. Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 7.

 

3 Applicant’s Petition in the Nigerian Proceedings generally raised the argument that Intervenor “was at the time of the Election not qualified to contest the Election,” but apparently without the addition of supporting facts or evidence. See Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 3-4 (citing Declaration of Angela Liu In Support of the Application (“First Liu Decl.”) [ECF No. 5], Ex. B, Petition in Abubakar et al. v. INEC et al., at ¶16(d); see also [ECF No. 5], Ex. B at ¶146. Applicant submitted a declaration from one of his attorneys in the Nigerian Proceedings attesting that arguments and evidence about the authenticity of Intervenor’s diploma were submitted by Applicant in those Proceedings. Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶4. In addition, that declaration also states that a related case (brought by Peter Obi and the Nigerian Labour Party) raised questions about additional documents related to Intervenor’s educational background (the Orr Documents), and that Mr. Obi’s case has been consolidated with Applicant’s proceeding. Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶6. The Court notes the Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision declined to consider that evidence and the underlying argument that Intervenor was not qualified to participate in the Nigerian election because the argument was raised for the first time in reply filings rather than in the initial Petition. [ECF No. 34], at 545-558, 606, 608-09. The Court understands Applicant intends to appeal that Decision, and as discussed below, Applicant submitted evidence in support of his argument that there is a mechanism by which new evidence could be presented to the Supreme Court of Nigeria.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 11 of 31 PageID #:2513

Based on the record submitted with the Application, the Court agrees with Applicant.  In Brandi-Dohrn v. IKB Deutsche Industriebank AG, the Second Circuit joined several other circuit courts in concluding “as a district court should not consider the discoverability of the evidence in the foreign proceeding, it should not consider the admissibility of evidence in the foreign proceeding in ruling on a section 1782 application.” 673 F.3d 76, 82 (2d Cir. 2012) (citing decisions from First, Third and Ninth Circuits). Although the Seventh Circuit has not addressed this issue, district courts in this jurisdiction similarly have concluded that whether the evidence sought in discovery is admissible in evidence in the foreign proceeding should not be considered in determining whether the Application satisfies the “for use” requirement of Section 1782. See, e.g., Lumenis Ltd. v. Alma Lasers Ltd., 2013 WL 1707571, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 19, 2013) (“courts have found the term ‘for use in’ does not require the material request to be discoverable or admissible in the foreign jurisdiction”); In re Labor Court of Brazil, 466 F. Supp. 2d at 1029-30 (same). Thus, as the Second Circuit explained, “a Section 1782 applicant must establish that he or she has the practical ability to inject the requested information into a foreign proceeding” and “it is not fatal to the application that he or she lacks a claim for relief before the foreign tribunal…. Rather, the term ‘for use’ in Section 1782 has only its ordinary meaning— that the requested discovery is ‘something that will be employed with some advantage or serve some use in the proceeding.’” In re Accent Delight Int’l Ltd., 869 F.3d 121,

132 (2d Cir. 2017).

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 12 of 31 PageID #:2514

Consistent with this authority, it is sufficient for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1782 that Applicant has presented evidence of a legal process in Nigeria – his appeal to the Supreme Court of Nigeria – by which the discovery he seeks here could be used in that country. Whether or not the Supreme Court of Nigeria will consider or admit the new evidence sought in this Application is beyond the purview of this Court. See In re Labor Court of Brazil, 466 F. Supp. 2d at 1029 (holding “the history of the statute, the case law, and the prudent tendency of American courts to avoid construing foreign law support the plain meaning that ‘for use in’ does not require that the discovery be admissible in the foreign proceeding”). Applicant, therefore, has made the “for use” showing required under 28 U.S.C. § 1782 by providing evidence that the Supreme Court of Nigeria could, at the very least, consider the new evidence he seeks to discover here.[3]

Based on this record, the Court finds Applicant has satisfied the statutory requirement that the requested discovery is “for use” in a proceeding before a foreign tribunal—in this case, specifically, Applicant’s anticipated appeal to the Supreme

Court of Nigeria.

 

 

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 13 of 31 PageID #:2515

  1. Applicant is an “Interested Person” in the Nigerian Proceedings

 

To obtain discovery under 28 U.S.C. § 1782, an application also must be submitted by a foreign or international tribunal or an “interested person.” 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a). Courts have recognized that a litigant in a foreign proceeding is “the most common example” of an “interested person” who would file an application seeking discovery under 28 U.S.C. § 1782. Intel, 542 U.S. at 256 (“[L]itigants are included among, and may be the most common example of, the ‘interested person[s]’ who may invoke § 1782.”); see also In re Semrush SM LLC, 2022 WL 3084601, at *2 (S.D. Ind. July 6, 2022), report and recommendation adopted, 2022 WL 3083487 (S.D. Ind. Aug. 3, 2022) (holding that because the applicant is a party to the underlying foreign litigation he is an “interested person” within the meaning of Section 1782);  In re Medytox, Inc., 2019 WL 3162174, at *4 (S.D. Ind. July 16, 2019), report and recommendation adopted, 2019 WL 3556930 (S.D. Ind. Aug. 5, 2019).

Applicant argues he is an “interested person” because the discovery he seeks from Respondent will be used in his intended appeal of the Court of Appeal Decision denying his Petition to the Supreme Court of Nigeria. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 11; Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 8. Intervenor argues that Applicant is not an “interested person” because the information he seeks to discover from CSU was not contained in his initial electoral challenge Petition but rather was produced in a different proceeding to which Applicant was not a party. Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 7-8. It is undisputed, however, that the evidence Intervenor Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 14 of 31 PageID #:2516

references eventually was presented to the Nigerian Court of Appeal and the Court of Appeal decided not to consider it for the reasons addressed above.[4]

Even though the Nigerian Court of Appeal declined to consider the latesubmitted evidence, Applicant has submitted evidence to this Court that the argument was raised in the Nigerian Proceedings (albeit late), and Applicant is a party to those proceedings. Id.; see also Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision [ECF No. 34], at 545-558, 606, 608-09. Applicant also unequivocally has stated he intends to appeal the Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision, and will present any new evidence he can obtain from CSU on the diploma issue as well as Intervenor’s educational records from CSU to the Supreme Court of Nigeria. He thus will be a party to those Supreme Court proceedings as well.

Based on the record submitted with the Application and the arguments presented during the September 12, 2023 hearing, the Court finds that Applicant has satisfied the “interested party” statutory requirement.

  1. On Balance, the Discretionary Factors Weigh in Favor of Granting the Application for Discovery

 

Because Applicant has satisfied the statutory requirements under 28 U.S.C §

1782, the Court next turns to the discretionary factors it must consider in

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 15 of 31 PageID #:2517

determining whether and to what extent the Section 1782 application is appropriate and should be granted. Intel, 542 U.S. at 264. The United States Supreme Court’s Intel decision is the leading authority on how district courts should evaluate an application for discovery under 28 U.S.C § 1782. In Intel, the Supreme Court concluded that even if an application meets the statutory requirements under Section 1782, the district court’s decision to grant the application still is discretionary. Id. at 255. The Supreme Court discussed four factors a district court should consider when deciding what discovery, if any, to allow:

whether “the person from whom discovery is sought is a participant in the foreign proceeding”;

 

“the nature of the foreign tribunal, the character of the proceedings underway abroad, and the receptivity of the foreign government or the court or agency abroad to U.S. federal-court judicial assistance”;

 

whether the discovery request “conceals an attempt to circumvent foreign proof-gathering restrictions or other policies of a foreign country or the United States”; and

 

whether the discovery requested is “unduly intrusive or burdensome.”

 

Id. at 264-65. The Supreme Court also recognized that Section 1782 has “twin aims” of “providing efficient assistance to participants in international litigation and encouraging foreign countries by example to provide similar assistance to our courts.”

Id. at 252 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

  1. The Parties’ Burdens Under Intel

Before the Court discusses the Intel factors, it must first consider whether, as

Applicant suggests, the Court should employ a burden-shifting framework to properly Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 16 of 31 PageID #:2518

weigh the Intel discretionary factors. See Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 12. In Department of Caldas v. Diageo PLC, 925 F.3d 1218 (11th Cir. 2019), the Eleventh Circuit held that “the Supreme Court, in announcing the discretionary § 1782 factors, did not set out the appropriate burdens of proof, though it did say in a footnote that the party ‘targeted’ in a § 1782 application ‘would no doubt wield the laboring oars in opposing discovery.’” 925 F.3d at 1221-22 (quoting Intel, 542 U.S. at

265 n.17); see also In re Schlich, 893 F.3d 40, 49 (1st Cir. 2018) (noting that the “Supreme Court has not established the appropriate burden of proof … for any of the discretionary factors, or the legal standard required”).

There is one case in the Seventh Circuit that discussed a burden-shifting framework after the applicant in a Section 1782 proceeding demonstrated its need for discovery in a foreign lawsuit. See Heraeus Kulzer, GmbH v. Biomet, Inc., 633 F.3d 591, 597 (7th Cir. 2011) (“[o]nce a section 1782 applicant demonstrates a need for extensive discovery for aid in a foreign lawsuit, the burden shifts to the opposing litigant to demonstrate, by more than angry rhetoric, that allowing the discovery sought (or a truncated version of it) would disserve the statutory objectives”).

Other circuits, however, have declined to adopt a strict burden-shifting approach. In In re Schlich, the First Circuit concluded that the Supreme Court in Intel “intended for both parties to make their arguments as to all of the [discretionary] factors, and for the district court to then determine whom those factors favor.” 893 F.3d at 50. “In this sense,” the First Circuit explained, “we do not see the factors as creating a burden for either party to meet, but rather as considerations to guide the Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 17 of 31 PageID #:2519

district court’s decision.” Id. Similarly in Department of Caldas v. Diageo PLC, the Eleventh Circuit preferred the First Circuit’s “middle-of-the-road approach” and held that “district courts need not apply a rigid burden-shifting framework to properly weigh the discretionary factor of receptivity in a § 1782 case.” 925 F.3d at 1223. The Eleventh Circuit recognized that the discretionary factors “are guideposts which help a district court decide how to best exercise its discretion” and concluded that “it is not necessary (or helpful) to put the burden on one side or the other with respect to receptivity.” Id.

This Court will follow the Seventh Circuit’s guidance and employ a burdenshifting framework when analyzing the discretionary factors and also will address the parties’ arguments on how to balance each of the discretionary factors. The Court will now turn to the Intel discretionary factors.

  1. The First Intel Factor Weighs in Favor of Granting the Application

The first discretionary factor looks to whether “the person from whom discovery is sought is a participant in the foreign proceedings.” Intel, 542 U.S. at 264. The parties agree that CSU is not a party in the Nigerian Proceedings and is beyond the jurisdictional reach of the Nigerian courts.[5] Accordingly, the Court finds that factor one weighs in favor of granting the Application.

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 18 of 31 PageID #:2520

  1. The Second Intel Factor Does Not Weigh Against Allowing the Discovery Sought in the Application

The second discretionary factor looks to whether the foreign court would accept assistance from a federal district court. See Intel, 542 U.S. at 264; see also In re Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, 2022 WL 1422758, at *3 (N.D. Ill. May 5, 2022). Some “courts have held that this factor weighs in favor of granting the application unless there is some ‘authoritative proof’ that the foreign court would oppose such assistance.” See In re Medytox, 2019 WL 3162174, at *5 (same) (citing Euromepa, 51 F.3d at 1100-01 among other cases). Whether the party opposing discovery must provide “authoritative proof” of the lack of receptiveness of the foreign court, however, has been called into question by other circuits.[6]

In Heraeus Kulzer, the Seventh Circuit concluded the district court abused its discretion in denying the discovery sought under Section 1782 where “there is nothing to suggest that the German court would be affronted by Heraeus’s recourse to U.S. discovery or would refuse to admit any evidence . . . that the discovery produced.” 633 F.3d at 597. The Seventh Circuit observed that Biomet, the respondent opposing

 

authenticity of those records and alleged discrepancies between the two versions of Intervenor’s diploma. [ECF No. 22], at 9; [ECF Nos. 38, 39].

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 19 of 31 PageID #:2521

discovery who was also party to the German proceedings, did not ask “the German court for a ruling that would bar or limit Heraeus’s U.S. discovery” and further noted “[t]he measures that Biomet has not taken in this discovery dispute are eloquent testimonials to the weakness of its position.” Id., at 596–97. Nevertheless, the Seventh Circuit has not specifically defined what evidentiary showing under the second Intel factor would be sufficient to weigh against an application or satisfy the burden on the party opposing discovery. See id., at 597 (describing burden on litigant opposing discovery as “to demonstrate, by more than angry rhetoric that allowing the discovery sought (or a truncated version of it) would disserve the statutory objectives.”). Moreover, the Seventh Circuit has not analyzed the receptiveness inquiry in the context presented here, which turns on whether a foreign tribunal (the Supreme Court of Nigeria) that has not yet had the opportunity to consider the evidence sought in this Application would be receptive to such evidence.

Intervenor points to the recent Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision, issued after this Application was filed, which declined to consider the question of the authenticity of his diploma from CSU on the procedural grounds that this argument and the evidence proffered in support of it were raised in late submissions. Intervenor’s Sur-

Response [ECF No. 32], at 5; Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision [ECF No. 33], at 545558, 606, 608-09. Based on that Decision, Intervenor asserts the Supreme Court of

Nigeria would not be receptive to the discovery sought in the Application.[7]

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 20 of 31 PageID #:2522

The Court is not persuaded by Intervenor’s argument. The record before the Court does not establish the Supreme Court of Nigeria would necessarily reject the evidence sought in the Application. As discussed above, Applicant intends to appeal the Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision. He submitted evidence to this Court that the Supreme Court of Nigeria can consider new evidence in exceptional circumstances. Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 10; Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶12 & Ex. G.

Intervenor does not contend that Applicant cannot argue to the Supreme Court of

Nigeria that exceptional circumstances permit the introduction of the evidence

Applicant is seeking from CSU. Rather, Intervenor argues, in effect, it is unlikely the Supreme Court of Nigeria will consider or admit that evidence given, in part, the decision not to do so by the Court of Appeal. Although Applicant acknowledges establishing exceptional circumstances to warrant the consideration of new evidence is “a demanding standard” (Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 10), Intervenor does not dispute that a legal mechanism exists for the Supreme Court of Nigeria to consider new evidence obtained by the discovery sought in this Application.[8]

 

that it has none—at least not yet” because “[applicant] does not need these documents to make out its claim, then no purpose would be served by their production in the United States under § 1782.” Kestrel Coal, 362 F.3d at 406; see Republic Techs. (NA), LLC v. BBK Tobacco & Foods, LLP, 2020 WL 208825, at *4 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 14, 2020) (describing circumstances in Kestrel Coal as “[a]fter the Supreme Court of Queensland denied the plaintiff’s request to require Joy Global’s subsidiaries to hand over certain documents, the plaintiff commenced a Section 1782 proceeding in the Eastern District of Wisconsin” seeking discovery of those same documents). By contrast, here, although the Court is aware of the procedural ruling of the Nigerian Court of Appeal, the Court does not know the position of the Supreme Court of Nigeria on the discovery sought in the Application because the Supreme Court has not yet spoken on that issue.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 21 of 31 PageID #:2523

To that end, Intervenor has not satisfied his burden to show that allowing this discovery would “disserve the statutory objectives.” See Heraeus Kulzer, 633 F.3d at 597.10 Applicant has articulated a procedural mechanism by which he may be able to introduce to the Nigerian Supreme Court the evidence he is seeking from CSU in his Application. The Court does not know whether the Supreme Court of Nigeria will be receptive to that evidence, but that is not determinative, as explained above. Accordingly, the Court concludes the second Intel factor does not weigh against allowing the discovery sought in the Application.[9]

 

Inc., 2022 WL 823856, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 18, 2022) to argue the Application should be denied based on the asserted lack of receptiveness of the Nigerian courts to Applicant’s arguments is misplaced. [ECF No. 33] at 5. Rather, the district court in Venequip concluded the second Intel factor was “neutral” where the record submitted as to Swiss law “suggests that . . . the Swiss courts would not consider [evidence obtained via Section 1782] ‘downright null and void’” while also acknowledging Swiss courts “would approach the wholesale importation of American civil procedure warily and with a degree of skepticism, as American pre-trial discovery proceedings are ‘alien to Swiss law’ and potentially inadmissible.” Id., 2022 WL 823856, at *2.

10 Even if this Court had applied a less rigid burden-shifting analysis and used a more balanced approach, the Court still would have concluded that the second Intel factor does not weigh against allowing the discovery sought in the Application.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 22 of 31 PageID #:2524

  1. The Third Intel Factor Does Not Weigh Against Allowing the

Discovery Sought in the Application

 

The third discretionary factor looks to whether the Section 1782 application is an attempt to circumvent the foreign tribunal’s proof-gathering restrictions. Intel, 452 U.S. at 264-65. When analyzing this factor, courts regularly look to see if granting the application would undermine a proof-gathering policy of the foreign tribunal. In re Application of Procter & Gamble Co., 334 F. Supp. 2d 1112, 1116 (E.D. Wis. 2004) (holding that “to decline a § 1782(a) request based on foreign non-discoverability, a district court must conclude that the request would undermine a specific policy of a foreign country or the United States”) (emphasis added).

Applicant says he has no reason to believe that any of the discovery he is seeking would circumvent any foreign proof-gathering restriction or policy in Nigeria. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 15. In response, Intervenor says it is unclear whether, under the appropriate circumstances, a Nigerian election court might consider material gathered using Section 1782(a) and acknowledges that this factor is neutral. Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 12. Applicant has submitted unrebutted evidence that there is a procedural mechanism by which he can attempt to submit new evidence in his appeal of the Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision.

There is no evidence in the record to suggest that granting the Application would undermine or circumvent any Nigerian policy, and both Applicant and Intervenor say the third Intel factor is neutral. Based on the evidence and arguments presented, the Court agrees with the parties that the third Intel factor does not weigh against allowing the discovery sought in the Application.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 23 of 31 PageID #:2525

  1. The Fourth Intel Factor Does Not Weigh Against Allowing the Discovery Because Any Burden on CSU Can Be Resolved by Limiting the Discovery

 

Under the final discretionary factor, the Court looks to see if the requested discovery is “unduly intrusive or burdensome.” Intel, 542 U.S. at 241. This factor requires an examination of the breadth of the discovery requests for the court to determine whether it is unduly intrusive or burdensome. See In re Labor Court of Brazil, 466 F. Supp. 2d at 1031. Section 1782 does not establish a standard for discovery. Texas Keystone, Inc. v. Prime Nat. Res., Inc., 694 F.3d 548, 554 (5th Cir. 2012). Instead, it is a screening mechanism “designed for preventing abuses of the right to conduct discovery in a federal district court for use in a foreign court. Once the court has determined that such abuses are unlikely, the ordinary tools of discovery management, including Rule 26, come into play; and … [S]ection 1782 drops out.” Heraeus Kulzer, 633 F.3d at 597; 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a).

Therefore, if a district court decides to allow the discovery to proceed, the discovery requests are managed under Rule 26 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and other rules governing discovery in federal courts. Heraeus Kulzer, 633 F.3d at 598; see also In re Labor Court of Brazil, 466 F. Supp.2d at 1033. Rule 26 provides:

Parties may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party’s claim or defense and proportional to the needs of the case, considering the importance of the issues at stake in the action, the amount in controversy, the parties’ relative access to relevant information, the parties’ resources, the importance of the discovery in resolving the issues, and whether the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 24 of 31 PageID #:2526

Information within this scope of discovery need not be admissible in evidence to be discoverable.

 

FED. R. CIV. P. 26(b)(1). Section (b)(2) of Rule 26 empowers a district court to limit the scope of discovery if the discovery sought is “unreasonably cumulative or duplicative, or can be obtained from some other source that is more convenient, less burdensome, or less expensive.” FED. R. CIV. P. 26(b)(2).

In his Reply, Applicant narrowed the scope of the discovery he is seeking. The Court, therefore, will consider the discovery requests contained in the revised subpoenas. See [ECF Nos. 38, 39]. As discussed above, there are now four narrowed document requests, which relate to the two different versions of Intervenor’s CSU diplomas, that have been presented to this Court (documents that purport to be dated June 22 and 27, 1979), any similar diplomas issued by CSU to anyone other than

Intervenor, and the Orr documents allegedly certified by CSU’s Associate General Counsel, Jamar Orr, for use by Intervenor in the related case bought by Mr. Obi that now has been consolidated with Applicant’s case. See First Liu Decl. [ECF 5-3], Ex. C (June 22, 1979 Diploma); First Liu Decl. [ECF 5-5], Ex. C (June 27, 1979 Diploma); Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24-4], Ex. D (Orr documents).

The revised Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice contains five narrowed topics asking for: (1) CSU’s position on the authenticity of the documents produced in response to the Application and how and where CSU located the document; (2) CSU’s position on the authenticity of other CSU documents purportedly produced by CSU and used in other Nigerian proceedings;  (3) the contents of the Westberg Affidavit;

(4) CSU’s position on the authenticity of the Westberg Letter, including who Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 25 of 31 PageID #:2527

requested the letter, who prepared the letter, and to whom it was sent; and (5) CSU’s position on the authenticity of the CSU documents certified by Orr and other facts regarding why the documents were certified, if he was authorized to do so, who requested the documents, and to whom they were sent. [ECF No. 39].

Intervenor first argues the discovery Applicant seeks is intrusive because educational records are private and protected by both federal and state law from disclosure, and it is burdensome because CSU has submitted an affidavit confirming Intervenor graduated from CSU in June 1979 which is all the information that is relevant here. Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 13-14, see also Westberg Affidavit [ECF No. 21-3], at 1-2. Again, however, framing the relevance issue in this way ignores a central tenet of the Application, which is not necessarily whether Intervenor attended CSU (though that is a part of Applicant’s argument) but whether the June 22, 1979 CSU diploma that Intervenor presented to the INEC is an authentic copy of Intervenor’s actual diploma issued by CSU.

With respect to Intervenor’s privacy interest in his educational records, under the Family Educational and Privacy Rights Acy (“FERPA”), a plaintiff has a right of privacy in his educational records. See McDaniel v. Loyola Univ. Med. Ctr., 2015 WL 13901029, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 28, 2015) (citing Black v. Kyle-Reno, 2014 WL 667788, at *1 (S.D. Ohio Feb. 20, 2014) reconsideration denied, 2014 WL 1308353 (S.D. Ohio Mar. 31, 2014)). The FERPA statute, however, does not create an independent privilege for educational records, but instead makes educational records confidential.

Id. (citing Catron v. Miles, 215 Ariz. 446, 453 (2007); see also Ragusa v. Malverne Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 26 of 31 PageID #:2528

Union Free School Dist., 549 F. Supp. 2d 288, 290 (E.D.N.Y. 2008) (“FERPA does not provide a privilege that prevents the disclosure of student records.”). Disclosure of educational records is permitted under FERPA if it is necessary to comply with a lawfully issued subpoena or judicial order. 20 U.S.C. § 1232g(b)(2)(B). There is, however, a “significantly heavier burden” on the party requesting educational records to show that the interest in obtaining the records outweighs the privacy interest of the student. Id. (citations omitted).

Here, the Court finds that Applicant’s interest in obtaining Intervenor’s records from CSU outweighs Intervenor’s privacy rights because Intervenor put his diploma at issue by submitting it to the INEC. Intervenor also submitted other educational documents in a related proceeding in Nigeria, some of which were certified by a CSU official, as discussed above. Further discovery into the CSU records, therefore, is relevant to the arguments Applicant intends to make to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, as discussed above. See McDaniel, 2015 WL 13901029, at *3 (holding that the defendant’s interest in obtaining the plaintiff’s educational records outweighs plaintiff’s interest in privacy because the records are relevant to defendants’ affirmative defenses as well as the damages at issue).

Applicant also argues that Intervenor does not have standing to object to the supposed burden the discovery would place on CSU. The Court agrees with Applicant on the issue of standing.  CSU is the proper party to raise any burden associated with Applicant’s discovery requests, other than with respect to Intervenor’s privacy interest which is discussed above.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 27 of 31 PageID #:2529

With respect to burden, CSU notes that, as the discovery respondent, “it is not a party to any of the Nigerian election proceedings, has no stake in the outcome of those proceedings, and does not take any position on the legal issues that have been litigated there.” CSU’s Second Response [ECF No. 32], at 1. CSU emphasizes that it has limited information that would be relevant to the Nigerian proceedings. CSU’s First Response [ECF 20], at 1-2; CSU’s Second Response [ECF No. 32], at 1-2. It, therefore, urges the Court not to allow the discovery to proceed because, among other reasons, it is a public university and already has devoted a significant amount of time and legal expense to discovery for proceedings in Nigeria. CSU’s Second Response [ECF No. 32], at 2.

In the Court’s view, these reasons are not sufficient for the Court to deny completely the Application. CSU seems to acknowledge its arguments may be insufficient to merit denial of the Application because it also requests that “any discovery which may be directed here be focused in scope and take into account the information CSU has already provided, as well as the information CSU has already notified Applicant’s counsel it does and does not possess.”  CSU’s Second Response [ECF No. 32], at 2. Because there is no evidence in the record to suggest that granting the Application would constitute an abuse of the right to conduct discovery in a federal district court for use in a foreign court, the Court finds that the fourth Intel factor does not weigh against allowing most of the discovery sought in the Application to proceed and that the Court can address any burden issues by limiting the discovery

Applicant can seek as discussed below.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 28 of 31 PageID #:2530

The Court has reviewed the narrowed requests in Applicant’s revised subpoenas. [ECF Nos. 38, 39]. As to the revised requests for the production of documents, CSU does not object to the first three document requests but does object in part to Request No. 4. Id. at 3. Because CSU does not object to responding to Request Nos. 1 through 3, the Court orders CSU to answer Request Nos. 1 through 3 and produce all responsive, non-privileged documents, if any, within 48 hours of the issuance of this Memorandum Opinion and Order. The Court notes, parenthetically, that CSU has proffered that it does not save or retain diplomas it issues to its graduates so CSU may not have any documents to produce in response to Request

Nos. 1, 2, or 3.

Respondent CSU does not object to producing true and correct copies of the Orr documents pursuant to Request No. 4. CSU does, however, object to producing “all communications to or from CSU concerning the certification of such documents by Jamar C. Orr, Esq., during the period of August 1, 2022 to August 1, 2023” based on undue burden and expense to the extent Applicant is seeking an expedited production of electronically stored information and communications. The Court agrees with Respondent and finds this portion of Request No. 4 to be an unduly burdensome request particularly given the tight timeframe created in no small part by Applicant in filing his Application in August 2023 with respect to a presidential election held in February 2023 and documents submitted to the INEC in mid-2022. A complete response to Request No. 4 likely would require Respondent to identify document custodians, agree with Applicant on key words, run key word searches in the custodial Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 29 of 31 PageID #:2531

databases, and produce electronically stored information all on an extreme and unrealistic time frame. In addition, at least a portion of what Applicant hopes to discover with this document request potentially can be obtained under Topic No. 5 in a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition discussed below.

As to the revised subpoena for a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition, CSU objects to a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition and instead requests that any deposition inquiry be conducted by written questions pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 31 and that CSU be given seven days to respond to any questions. CSU’s Second Response [ECF No. 32], at 2-3. While Rule 31 authorizes a party to take a deposition by written questions, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do not give the deponent a choice of whether he or she prefers to proceed orally or by written question. FED. R. CIV. P. 31(a)(1). In addition, responses to Rule 31 deposition questions must be provided orally in accordance with Rule 30(c), (e), and (f), under oath and on the record. FED. R. CIV. P. 31(b). And Respondent would have the right under Rule 31(a)(5) to serve their own written questions, and Applicant could serve redirect questions. So, the Rule 31 process of a deposition on written questions is not necessarily as streamlined as Respondent would have it, and the entire process very well may be more burdensome and time consuming under the circumstances of this case, in the Court’s view, than a single Rule 30(b)(6) oral deposition. The Court agrees with Applicant that his Rule 30(b)(6) topics are reasonably tailored to obtain information for possible use in his imminent appeal to the Supreme Court of Nigeria.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 30 of 31 PageID #:2532

In essence, CSU is seeking a protective order to prevent Applicant from taking an oral Rule 30(b)(6) deposition. Rule 26(c) provides that protective orders may address “matters relating to a deposition” and that a court “may, for good cause, issue an order to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense.” FED. R. CIV. P. 26(c)(1). The party seeking a protective order bears the burden of demonstrating good cause why the order should be entered. Global Material Techs., Inc. v. Dazheng Metal Fibre Co., Ltd., 133 F.Supp.3d 1079, 1084 (N.D. Ill. 2015).

Here, CSU has not established good cause for the Court to require Applicant to proceed with a deposition by written questions. In the Court’s view, an oral deposition is the most effective method to obtain information from a deponent under the circumstances of this case. Therefore, the Court overrules CSU’s objections and orders that the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition proceed on the narrowed topics identified in the revised subpoena within two days of Respondent’s production of documents. [ECF

No. 39]. As noted above, Topic No. 5 includes to some extent information that Applicant requested in Request No. 4 of his document subpoena without the attendant burden of time consuming electronic document searches and production.

  1. CONCLUSION

For all of the reasons discussed above, Atiku Abubakar’s Application Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 for an Order Directing Discovery from Chicago State University for Use in a Foreign Proceeding [ECF No. 1] is granted. Respondent CSU shall produce all relevant and non-privileged documents in response to Requests for

 

[1] The narrowed subpoenas originally were filed by Applicant at [ECF Nos. 22-1, 22-2]. Corrected versions of the narrowed subpoenas subsequently were filed by Applicant at [ECF Nos. 38, 39]. Accordingly, the Court considers the corrected versions of the narrowed subpoenas that Applicant filed at [ECF Nos. 38, 39].

 

[2] The “Westberg Affidavit” is defined in the subpoena as the Affidavit of Caleb Westberg, the Registrar of CSU, attached to the Intervenor’s Response to the Application. See [ECF No. 39] (citing [ECF No. 21-1]).

[3] Seee.g.John Deere Ltd. v. Sperry Corp., 754 F.2d 132, 136 n.3 (3d Cir. 1985) (“[i]t is doubtful” the legislative history of 28 U.S.C. § 1782 “can be expanded to impose a requirement that district courts predict or construe the procedural or substantive law of the foreign jurisdiction”); Euromepa S.A. v. R. Esmerian, Inc., 51 F.3d 1095, 1099-100 (2d Cir. 1995) (“we do not read the statute to condone speculative forays into legal territories unfamiliar to federal judges”).

[4] As noted above, Applicant’s Petition in the Nigerian Proceedings generally raised the argument that Intervenor was not qualified to participate in the election without citing to specific supporting facts or evidence. See Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 3-4 (citing First Liu Decl. [ECF No. 5-2], Ex. B at ¶16(d)); see also [ECF No. 5-2], Ex. B at ¶146; Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶4. Applicant specifically identified and discussed the forged documents argument in his reply filings in support of his Petition to the Nigerian Court of Appeal. Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶7; see also Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision [ECF No. 34], at 545558, 606, 608-09.

[5] Although Intervenor acknowledges CSU is not a party to the Nigerian Proceedings, Intervenor contends this factor weighs against granting the Application because it is his (President Tinubu’s) educational records that are sought in the subpoena. Intervenor’s Response, [ECF No. 21], at 9-10. Contrary to Intervenor’s characterization, however, Applicant does not merely seek production of records allegedly already produced by CSU to Intervenor (and that maybe theoretically could have been obtained from Intervenor in the Nigerian Proceedings). Rather, Applicant is seeking information from CSU about the

[6] See, e.g., In re Biomet Orthopaedics Switzerland GmBh, 742 F. App’x 690, 698 n.9 (3d Cir. 2018) (“we decline to speak to whether an ‘authoritative proof’ standard . . .is the appropriate inquiry under the second Intel factor”); In re Schlich, 893 F.3d at 51 (1st Cir. 2018) (“requiring the party opposing discovery to present ‘authoritative proof’ of the foreign tribunal’s unreceptiveness … could place pressure on the foreign tribunal and could exacerbate comity and parity concerns … [a]nd, if the opposing party fails to provide such exigent proof, then that could give carte blanche to the moving party for seeking discovery that is only marginally relevant to the foreign proceeding, thus potentially promoting fishing expeditions”); Dep’t of Caldas, 925 F.3d at 1222–23 (declining to require authoritative proof of foreign tribunal’s non-receptivity to the discovery sought under Section 1782).

[7] Intervenor cites Kestrel Coal PTY. LTD. v. Joy Global, Inc., 362 F.3d 401, 406 (7th Cir. 2004). Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 11. In that decision, the Seventh Circuit found that where the presiding justice in the foreign tribunal in the proceedings for which the discovery was sought had “already . . . analyzed [applicant’s] need for the documents and held

[8] Although Intervenor was granted leave to file a Sur-Response, he did not respond to Applicant’s evidence that the Supreme Court of Nigeria may consider new evidence in exceptional circumstances. Moreover, Intervenor’s reliance on Venequip, S.A. v. Caterpillar,

[9] See Heraeus Med. GmbH, 2021 WL 4133710, at *6 (second Intel factor “was equivocal and neither favors nor disfavors” the application where petitioners submitted declarations from attorneys in France, Germany and Belgium in support of position that tribunals in those countries would accept evidence produced pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 and “[r]espondents cite nothing to show that these tribunals would reject this evidence”). Other courts, applying an “authoritative proof” standard, have found circumstances arguably analogous to those here demonstrated the second Intel factor weighed in favor of allowing the discovery. See In re Martin & Harris Priv. Ltd., 2021 WL 2434069, at *6 (D.N.J. June 14, 2021) (“It therefore appears from the High Court of Bombay’s own orders that it has the authority to extend the deadline for discovery, not unlike a United States district court’s discretion to extend discovery under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16” and “Merck has proffered no specific evidence that, to the extent the application seeks relevant discovery, the High Court of Bombay would reject it”; holding second Intel factor weighed in favor of allowing discovery sought in Application).

 

 

 

GOV AKEREDOLU RECEIVES APC NATIONAL CHAIR, EXPRESSES CONFIDENCE IN HIS LEADERSHIP

  • ••We Can’t Forget The Good Governance You’ve Been Providing In Ondo, Nigeria- Ganduje

Ondo State Governor, Arakunrin Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, SAN, CON, has expressed confidence in the capacity of the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Chairman, Dr. Abdullahi Ganduje, to move the party towards growth and unity.

Governor Akeredolu stated that Ganduje’s extensive experience garnered from serving two terms as Kano State Governor, has equipped him adequately to steer the party towards significant progress and development.

The Governor spoke on Tuesday while hosting a high-powered delegation led by the National Chairman of the APC, Ganduje.

The delegation include: National Secretary, Sen. Surajudeen Ajibola Bashiru; National Vice Chairman Southwest, Hon. Isaac Kekemeke; Deputy National Secretary, Sir Festus Fuanter; Deputy National Financial Secretary, Hon. Hamma Ali Kumo; and former deputy Governors, Chief Moses Adeyemo and Rauf Olaniyan, among others.

“I thank God for the gift of life for all of us. I personally want to express my gratitude that I’m alive and well. We are back by the grace of God,” the Governor said.

The Governor further expressed his appreciation for the chairman’s directive for state party structures to maintain appropriate offices. “You will know that we have a befitting office when you visit Akure. After the Abuja office, it’s the Ondo office that we can be proud of.

“I want to thank you all for coming. I know that the Lord has answered my prayers, but I need more. My Chairman, I know you are capable, and you can count on my support anytime. The party has survived, and it must continue to take full control of the country’s affairs,” Akeredolu declared.

Earlier, the National Chairman noted that the Governor is extremely important to the party and the country.

Ganduje, while acknowledging the party’s consistent prayers for the Governor, emphasised that they could not forget about the good governance he has been offering Ondo and the country.

“We are here solely to see you after your prolonged absence from the country. You hold extreme importance to us in the APC and the country. We prayed intensively for your health.

“We can not forget the good governance you have been providing for Ondo state and Nigeria at large. When one of us faces health challenges, we feel it too. We have come with our Bishop to offer prayers for your health”, Ganduje said.

Dr. Ganduje informed the Governor that the party’s National Working Committee underwent a reformation during his absence.

“In your absence, the National Working Committee was reformed. The National Chairman and the National Secretary of the party both resigned. Prior to this, there were gaps due to resignations or deaths.

“The Chairman’s departure left a significant void, and the NEC felt the need to fill the crucial positions. By the grace of God, I am the new Chairman of the party, and Bashiru is the new Secretary. The National Working Committee is now fully operational,” Ganduje explained.

Richard Olatunde

Chief Press Secretary to the Governor.

September 19, 2023.

 

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU TO AFRICAN UNION: NIGERIA IS BEHIND YOU AND WE WILL NOT LET YOU FAIL TO SECURE STABILITY AND PROSPERITY FOR AFRICA

  • AU seeks close coordination with Nigeria on all continental matters
  • President Tinubu tells OIC: Islamic leaders in Africa must learn to accept will of Allah
  • OIC hails President Tinubu’s “bold” leadership on economic reform and geopolitical stability

President Bola Tinubu asserted that the African Union (AU) is strategically positioned to secure consensus positions for the continent on economic and socio-political relations with the world, particularly with Nigeria’s stalwart backing, as he engaged in a bilateral discussion with the President of the Union of Comoros and Chairperson of the African Union (AU), President Azali Assoumani, on Monday in New York.

“There is nothing that can bring development and prosperity, outside of embracing freedom and constitutional order. It is a critical hallmark of sustainable development. We appreciate that the AU is working hard to bring about peace in the Sahel and is actively negotiating between the warring factions in Sudan. Peace in Sudan will be a great achievement. I appreciate your effort in Burkina Faso and our effective cooperation on Niger.

“You can call me at anytime and we will discuss the peace and stability of AU member states. We need stability and prosperity for the black race. This is our era. We must be peaceful in order to take maximum advantage of the developmental opportunities presented to Africa in this era. We must build a model of sustainable development. Nigeria will collaborate with you. But we must move beyond those whose vision of Africa is narrow and evil. We are not afraid of confrontation, but we prefer to be restrained for now, at this time,” the President declared.

The Chairperson of the African Union, President Azali Assoumani, noted that the African Union seeks to complete Nigeria’s effort in securing peace and prosperity in Africa, rather than competing with it.

“It is our responsibility to confront the extra-constitutional wrestling for power on the continent. We have told China and Russia that they have a responsibility to ensure that there is stability in these countries, as there will be no developmental partnership where there is a lack of stability in countries being impacted by coupists. We appreciate your stand on these matters,” the AU Chairperson said.

As President of the Union of Comoros, the AU Chairperson said that Comoros seeks to learn from Nigeria’s experience concerning the steady improvement in diversity management, electoral officiation and economic growth over many years.

“We want to turn our country into an emerging economy and we need the experience of Nigeria as we seek your cooperation to conduct an election that will win us the respect of the international community and allow us to develop at the right speed and quality,” the Comoros President emphasized.

President Bola Tinubu also welcomed the Secretary-General of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Hissein Brahim Taha, and reiterated that the Islamic world has a strategic role to play in the sustenance of peace and development in Africa, and across the globe.

“The effort we are making in the Sahel is very important. We know we must double our efforts. We must tell our muslim brothers who are struggling to steal power that only Allah chooses leaders. We must respect the will of Allah. I am ready to collaborate with you. Your efforts in supporting agricultural growth and food security through the provision of resources from Islamic banks has been most commendable and our region is appreciative. I am determined to work with you in uplifiting Nigerians and Africans,” the President assured.

The leader of the 57-nation body of cooperation praised the Nigerian President for his active effort in bringing African states to a place of common understanding.

“We must gain consensus on the need for peace, especially amongst our member states. When you were elected as ECOWAS Chairman, it gave us confidence and hope that the situation in the Sahel region would improve because you are bringing people together. We were also happy about your election as President of Nigeria and we see the changes,” the OIC leader stated.

The OIC Secretary-General extended an invitation to President Tinubu to participate at the OIC Heads of State Summit, expected to hold in a few months.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 19, 2023

 

 

 

NIGERIA HAS THE RESOURCES AND THE LEADERSHIP, WE HAVE NEVER BEEN MORE READY FOR BUSINESS,” PRESIDENT TINUBU TELLS GLOBAL ENERGY INDUSTRY

  • ExxonMobil pledges nearly 40,000bpd in new Nigerian production in the short-term

President Bola Tinubu played host to a delegation consisting of the global leadership of an Oil & Gas transnational giant, ExxonMobil, on Monday in New York, where he made his position known that Nigeria is no longer settling for crumbs and leftovers on the investment agenda of the world’s most prolific energy conglomerates, saying “Nigeria has never been more ready for business than it is now.”

President Tinubu says that, following an illustrious private sector career as a professional accountant in the oil & gas industry, he has proven his capacity to take difficult decisions as President and is best prepared to solve problems and crush all bottlenecks standing in the way of new and large-scale capital flowing into Nigeria’s oil & gas industry.

“The knotty issues require direct supervision on my part. Despite many contending obligations, I will sit down and oversee the process of removing these encumbrances to job and wealth creation for the Nigerian people. We know the industry. We grew up in it. We are positioned to solve the problems, and we are pragmatic, and we will solve the problem,” the President firmly assured.

ExxonMobil President of Global Upstream Operations, Liam Mallon, assured President Tinubu that he is aware of the new and personal commitment that the President is bringing to bear on behalf of Nigeria and is well placed to reciprocate the President’s efforts with new investment as he pledged new production of nearly 40,000bpd in its Nigerian operations in phase one of a new investment push in Nigeria.

“What you told us was that your team would collaborate with us, and that has proven true. We have made significant progress since we last met. We are growing our production, and we are working hard on expanding in the deepwater production. We appreciate your efforts, and we will respond in kind. The time is right. Thank you for your leadership,” the ExxonMobil President stated.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 19, 2023

 

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU ADDRESSES 78TH UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY; ADVOCATES UNIVERSAL SANCTION BY UN NATIONS FOR THEIR COMPANIES AND PERSONS ILLEGALLY SMUGGLING ARMS AND MINERALS INTO AND OUT OF AFRICA

President Bola Tinubu, on Tuesday in New York City, addressed world leaders at the 78th United Nations General Assembly, during which he made a firm and compelling declaration that the time is now for UN member states to show, with their actions, that they mean what they say concerning the crackdown on terror financing, economic sabotage, and illicit mineral & arms smuggling in the developing world.

“The fourth important aspect of global trust and solidarity is to secure the continent’s mineral rich areas from pilfering and conflict. Many such areas have become catacombs of misery and exploitation. The Democratic Republic of the Congo has suffered this for decades, despite the strong UN presence there. The world economy owes the DRC much, but gives her very little.

“Foreign entities that are abetted by local criminals, who aspire to be petty warlords, have drafted thousands of our people into servitude to illegally mine gold and other resources. Billions of dollars meant to improve the nation now fuel countless violent enterprises. If left unchecked, they will threaten peace and place national security at grave risk. Given the extent of this injustice and the high stakes involved, many Africans are asking whether this phenomenon is by accident or by design. Member nations must reply by working with us to deter their firms and nationals from this 21st century pillage of the continent’s riches. To keep faith with the tenets of this world body and the theme of this year’s Assembly, the poverty of nations must end. The pillage of one nation’s resources by the overreach of firms and people of stronger nations must now end,” the President declared.

President Tinubu further noted that his aggressive economic development diplomatic push for new investment has been demonstrably effective in presenting Nigeria as business-ready, but the ease of doing business, according to the President, might not be the major encumbrance to large scale investment.

“The question is not whether Nigeria is open for business. The question is how much of the world is truly open to doing business with Nigeria and Africa in an equal, mutually beneficial manner. Direct investment in critical industries, opening their ports to a wider range and larger quantity of quality African exports, and meaningful debt relief are important aspects of the cooperation we desire,” the President affirmed.

The President equally noted that the global fight against the effects of climate change can not be based on a “one size fits all” approach and that nations must be cooperated with in the design and implementation of their own strategies, which are tailored to their respective socio-economic strengths and weaknesses.

“African nations will fight climate change, but we must do so on our own terms. To achieve the needed popular consensus, this campaign must accord with our overall economic efforts. In Nigeria, we shall build political consensus by highlighting remedial actions which also promote the broader economic good.

“Projects such as ‘The Great Green Wall’ to stop desert encroachment; halting the destruction of our forests through the mass production and distribution of gas burning stoves; and the provision of employment through local water management and irrigation projects are examples of efforts that equally advance both economic and climate change objectives simultaneously. Continental efforts regarding climate change will register important victories, only if established economies were more forthcoming with public and private sector investment for Africa’s preferred projects and initiatives,” the President cautioned.

President Bola Tinubu concluded by reminding the world what Africa truly represents in the global village.

“Walk with us as true friends and partners. Africa is not a problem to be avoided, nor is it to be pitied. Africa is nothing less than the key to the world’s future.”

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 19, 2023

 

PRESS RELEASE

 

SANWO-OLU CONGRATULATES HIS DEPUTY, OBAFEMI HAMZAT AT 59

 

Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has congratulated his deputy, Dr. Obafemi Hamzat, who clocked the age of 59 years today.

Governor Sanwo-Olu in a congratulatory message issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Gboyega Akosile, on Tuesday, praised Dr. Hamzat for being a trustworthy partner in the Greater Lagos agenda of the incumbent administration.

The Governor said his deputy has been very supportive of the administration’s delivery of good governance and dividends of democracy to Lagos residents.

He also commended Dr. Hamzat’s contribution to the growth and development of Lagos State in the last 18 years in different capacities before being sworn in as deputy governor on May 29, 2019.

Sanwo-Olu said Dr. Hamzat has used his position as commissioner in different ministries and now the number two citizen of the Centre of Excellence, to bring about positive change to Lagos State and Nigeria at large.

The Governor said the emergence of Dr. Hamzat as a two-term elected deputy governor and the longest-serving deputy governor in the political history of Lagos State, is a testament that he is a seasoned technocrat, administrator, politician and committed democrat.

He said: “Happy 56th birthday to my reliable, hardworking, dependable, supportive, trustworthy and committed brother, friend and partner in the Greater Lagos agenda of our administration.

“On behalf of my wife, Ibijoke, the people and government of Lagos State, leaders and members of our party, the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), I wish Dr. Obafemi Hamzat many happy returns of today.

“As you celebrate your 59th birthday today, I pray that God will increase you in good health to enable you to render more service to humanity, Lagos State and Nigeria.”

GBOYEGA AKOSILE

CHIEF PRESS SECRETARY

19 SEPTEMBER 2023

 

Press Release

Death Of Hon. Loolo, Big Blow To Ogonis – Rt. Hon. Dekor

The member representing Khana/Gokana Federal Constituency in the National Assembly, and Chairman, House Committee on Host Communities, Rt. Hon. Dumnamene Robinson Dekor has described the death of Hon Barr. DineBari Loolo, member representing Khana State Constituency 2 in the Rivers State House of Assembly as a personal loss and big blow to the Ogoni people.

Obviously devastated by the sudden news of the death of a man he said was so dear to him, a close and reliable ally, Rt. Hon. Dekor said the Ogoni people have sadly lost a rare gem.

Rt. Hon. Dekor made the remarks while on condolence visit to the wife and family of late Hon. Loolo at their Port Harcourt residence on Tuesday, September 19, 2023.  On the entourage of the federal lawmaker to the condolence visit include: Chairman of Khana Local Government Council, Hon. Dr. Thomas Bariere, former Deputy Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Dr. Befii Nwile, the Acting Rector of Captain Elechi Amadi Polytechnic, Rumuola, Port Harcourt, Dr. Moses Neebee, His Majesty, Mene King Dr. Suanu T. Y. Baridam, JP, Gbenemene, and Kasimene VII of Ancient Bangha Kingdom, Hon. Inaania LeneBari, Chairman, PDP, Khana LGA,  among other prominent Ogoni sons and leaders of the PDP in Khana.

Hon. Barr. Loolo’s demise, the federal lawmaker regretted, is not only a loss to his immediate family but also to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on whose platform he (the deceased) was elected into the State Legislature, and to Rivers State as a whole.

For the short period he served the State as a lawmaker, Rt. Hon. Dekor noted, late Barr. Loolo was a rallying point because of his humility, legislative acumen and imitable sense of reasoning.

He regretted that doing the 8th Assembly, late Loolo only spent 6 months in office and in this 10th Assembly, death has just cut short his service to his fatherland barely three months in office.

“My brother, and friend, Hon. Barr. DineBari Loolo was an accomplished professional, respected politician and astute administrator. By dint of hard work, he was deservedly chosen by our people over his political opponents as our representative in the State House of Assembly.

“And while serving as a lawmaker, he made a remarkable mark, always radiating exceptional brilliance and courage. Loolo’s memories will continue to live with me as a brother, and friend, an associate and close ally who was always there for me and my family in all my political endevours”, Rt. Hon. Dekor reminisced.

The former Deputy Speaker of the State House of Assembly, and one time Commissioner of Works, however, believes that all hope is not lost as his late friend had a good family and left behind many he lifted as well as worthy legacies of honour and hard work.

He enjoined late Hon. Loolo’s wife to take solace in the fact that her husband lived a life worthy of emulation.

“On behalf of my wife, the good people of Khana/Gokana Federal Constituency, I commiserate with the immediate family, the entire Loolo family, and the members of the PDP in Khana, and pray the ever faithful God to grant the family and all his loved ones the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss, and as well grant the soul of the departed eternal rest”, Rt. Hon. Dekor prayed.

Signed:

 

Rt. Hon. Dekor Media Team.

Tuesday, September 19, 2023.

 

PRESS STATEMENT

Federal Appointments: Gov Akeredolu Hails Ayodele Olawande’s Ministerial Nomination, Congratulates Yejide Ogundipe

Ondo State Governor, Arakunrin Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, SAN, CON, has welcomed the nomination of the State’s Youth Leader, Mr. Ayodele Olawande as Minister of State for Youth.

The Governor also congratulated Hon. Yejide Ogundipe on her appointment as Senior Special Assistant to the President (Food Security).

He described Hon. Ogundipe as a staunch advocate who has consistently championed the rights and empowerment of women in the State.

Governor Akeredolu said Olawande’s appointment is a recognition of his unwavering dedication, loyalty, and hard work to the party, APC, and the State.

“Olawande and Ogundipe have consistently demonstrated their commitments to the growth of our great party, APC, and development of our State. Olawande’s relentless efforts in championing the cause of youth inclusion in government and politics have not gone unnoticed. This appointment serves as a well-deserved reward for his outstanding service.

Governor Akeredolu appreciated President Bola Tinubu for considering a worthy son of the state for such significant National assignment.

The Governor expressed confidence that Mr. Olawande’s wealth of experience and passion for youth development and engagement will make a meaningful impact on the national stage.

“As we look forward to Olawande’s tenure as Minister of State for Youth, we have every confidence that he will continue to work tirelessly in advancing the interests of Nigerian youths.

“These appointments not only reflects the trust placed in Olawande and Ogundipe but also serve as an inspiration to other party faithful across our nation. We kindly urge the National Assembly to consider the speedy confirmation of Mr. Olawande.” The Governor said.

Governor Akeredolu congratulated Ayodele Olawande and Yejide Ogundipe and wished them success in their new roles.

Signed:

Richard Olatunde

Chief Press Secretary to the Governor.

September 18, 2023.

 

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU ADVANCES STRONGER ECONOMIC TIES WITH SOUTH AFRICA; SEEKS REFORM OF BRETTON WOODS INSTITUTIONS TO STRENGTHEN ECONOMIC RESILIENCE OF DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES

President Bola Tinubu has on Monday advanced his economic development diplomatic drive for investment attraction as he engaged extensively in a bilateral discussion with South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa, in New York City, ahead of the United Nations General Assembly.

President Tinubu asserted that Africa must have a consensus view that the hundreds of billions of dollars spent through International Development Finance Institutions over the years must meet the specific needs of developing democracies in Africa, even if it is done with exclusive regard for their own enlightened self-interest.

“During the end of the Second World War, the Marshall Plan was established for the reconstruction and economic restoration of European nations through Bretton Woods institutions. Where has this presence been for Africa? We have to be careful not to replace the broken shackle of yesterday with a new set of shackles. You can not have a stable democracy in the presence of a poverty of knowledge and a starvation of people. Democracy without food on the table is a breeding ground for what will consume us, if care is not taken. We must join hands and agree that International Finance Institutions require reform as Africa is not to be a ground for economic scavenging any longer, but it is a place with gifted people that is ready for investment and cooperation.

“We have all the human and natural resources required between our nations. We can collaborate in a mutually beneficial way that enriches our populations. South African Mining industries have a role to play in the Nigerian solid minerals development sector. Your business community has done well in Nigerian Telecommunications. We have great mineral wealth across our land, and you have good expertise in this area. We expect to deliver jobs and mutually beneficial results in this area as brother and sister countries,” the President affirmed.

Referencing President Tinubu’s quick implementation of what he called “brave” economic reforms, the South African President agreed that the two countries have much more wealth to create together in close and intentional partnership, with each nation leveraging on each other’s respective strengths.

“We are two major economies on our continent, and it is important that we deepen economic ties, particularly in light of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement. We are very keen on the deepening of our economic relations,” the South African President said.

The South African President emphasized that history has proven that Nigeria and South Africa can move the world on matters of mutual concern when the two nations operate on the same wavelength.

“We would love to see Nigeria and South Africa working closely together on a number of issues because whenever we join hands, we have made an impact globally through those joint positions. Together, we can move the global south forward. We are a continent that has been plundered. And wealthy nations made so much of it from us, and we must seek out partners who will help us to advance our own interests,” the South African President emphasized.

Recognizing President Tinubu’s effective stewardship as the Chairman of the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State, the South African leader said that Southern Africa needed to emulate the solidarity being demonstrated in West Africa, following the Niger Crisis.

“We believe that we have a lot to learn from ECOWAS and its unity in reaching consensus positions on sub-regional matters. This is something we seek to emulate in the Southern African sub-region in view of events in Mozambique and other areas,” President Ramaphosa said.

The South African leader also used the opportunity of the bilateral engagement to extend an invitation to President Bola Tinubu to visit South Africa, following President Ramaphosa’s recent visit to Nigeria, as part of efforts to deepen economic ties and the broader relationship between both countries.

While accepting the invitation, President Tinubu affirmed that an Africa, in which Nigeria and South Africa are working in synergy to advance their common interests, is the strongest version of the continent, which can make more impact on global affairs for the benefit of over one billion Africans with its enormous human and natural resource wealth.

“Our continent is the last untapped ground for accelerated, massive growth and new economic opportunity on earth. We must be in charge of our own resources, and we must work to use each other effectively to achieve what is best for all of us, Mr. President. We look forward to an era of economically productive relationship,” the Nigerian leader concluded.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 18, 2023

ABAVO CHRONICLE ABEJUKOKO VANGUARD ABIA REPORTERS ABIA SUN ABIGBORODO SUN ABRAKA STATESMAN ABUJA ABUJA CHRONICLE

US Court Orders Release Of Tinubu’s Academic Records

A United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois has granted the request filed by the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar, seeking the release of President Bola Tinubu’s academic records by the Chicago State University.

 

Judge Jeffrey Gilbert, a US magistrate, gave the ruling on Tuesday, ordering CSU to produce “all relevant and non-privileged documents” to Abubakar Atiku, the plaintiff, within two days.

 

 

“This matter is before the Court on Atiku Abubakar’s Application Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 for an Order Directing Discovery from Chicago State University for Use in a Foreign Proceeding (“Application”) [ECF No. 1]. For the reasons discussed below, the Application is granted,” the judge ruled.

Tinubu’s lawyers have argued that their client is not willing to lift his privacy privilege, with the ruling also conceding this by using the term ‘non-privileged documents”.

 

 

Atiku had approached the court seeking an order that will compel the university to release Tinubu’s records.

Although Tinubu’s credentials indicated that he graduated in 1979 with a bachelor’s degree in accounting, there have been allegations bordering on discrepancies in the President’s certificate.

 

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

 

In re Application of ATIKU ABUBAKAR No. 23 C 5099

For an Order Directing Discovery from Jeffrey T. Gilbert

 

 

CHICAGO STATE UNIVERSITY  United States Magistrate Judge

Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782.

 

 

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

This matter is before the Court on Atiku Abubakar’s Application Pursuant to

28 U.S.C. § 1782 for an Order Directing Discovery from Chicago State University for Use in a Foreign Proceeding (“Application”) [ECF No. 1]. For the reasons discussed below, the Application is granted.

  1. BACKGROUND

Atiku Abubakar was Vice-Present of Nigeria from 1999 to 2007 and was a candidate for president in Nigeria’s presidential election that occurred in February

  1. Memorandum of Law In Support of Application for Judicial Assistance

Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 (“Applicant’s Memorandum”) [ECF No. 4], at 2. Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission (“INEC”) declared Bola Ahmed Tinubu won the election, and he is the current president of Nigeria. Mr. Abubakar says he came in second place in the presidential election. Id at 1. After the election, Mr. Abubakar along with the People’s Democratic Party filed a petition (“Petition”), challenging the results of the presidential election with the Court of Appeal in the

Presidential Election Petition Court in Nigeria (the “Nigerian Proceedings”). Id. at 1, Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 2 of 31 PageID #:2504

  1. Abubakar contends the Nigerian Proceedings address, among other things, whether President Tinubu submitted what Mr. Abubakar characterizes as a forged diploma to the INEC stating that he received an undergraduate degree from Chicago State University (“CSU” or “Respondent”) on June 22, 1979. Memorandum of Law In Support of Application for Judicial Assistance Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782

(“Applicant’s Memorandum”) [ECF No. 4], at 2-7, 10-11; Omnibus Reply In Further Support of his Application Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 (“Applicant’s Reply”) [ECF No. 22], at 5. Mr. Abubakar says that, under Nigerian law, the submission of a fraudulent document to the INEC would have disqualified now President Tinubu from participating in the election.  Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 5.

Mr. Abubakar filed the present Application pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 to obtain discovery from CSU for use in the Nigerian Proceedings. Application [ECF No. 1], at 1. The discovery Mr. Abubakar is seeking relates to his challenge as to the authenticity of the diploma President Tinubu submitted to the INEC and also to other educational records from CSU that Mr. Abubakar says are related to that challenge. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 3-5.

When the Application was filed, Mr. Abubakar’s Petition was pending before the Nigerian Court of Appeal. Application [ECF No. 1], at 1. On September 6, 2023 during the briefing on his Application, Mr. Abubakar notified the Court that the Nigerian Court of Appeal reportedly issued a ruling on his election challenge, finding in favor of President Tinubu and against Mr. Abubakar. Applicant’s Reply [ECF No.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 3 of 31 PageID #:2505

22], at 1. Mr. Abubakar has represented to this Court that he intends to appeal to the

Supreme Court of Nigeria. Id.

  1. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On August 2, 2023, Mr. Abubakar (“Applicant”) filed his Application [ECF No. 1] and Memorandum [ECF No. 4] in support of his Application, seeking discovery from Respondent on the CSU documents at issue. The presiding District Judge referred the Application to this Magistrate Judge for resolution. [ECF No. 7].

The day after the Application was filed, President Tinubu (“Intervenor”) filed a Motion to Intervene [ECF No. 10], which Applicant did not oppose. See Applicant’s Response to Bola A. Tinubu’s Motion to Join or Intervene [ECF No. 13]. The District Judge granted the Motion to Intervene on August 7, 2023, and this Court set a date for Intervenor to file a response to the Application and for Applicant to file a reply. [ECF Nos. 14, 15]. On August 23, 2023, CSU filed its Response to Application Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 (“CSU’s First Response”) [ECF No. 20], and Intervenor filed his Response to Application Under 28 U.S.C. § 1782 (“Intervenor’s Response”) [ECF No. 21].

As mentioned above, when Applicant filed his Application for discovery in the district court, his Petition challenging the presidential election was pending before the Nigerian Court of Appeal. On September 6, 2023, Applicant filed his Reply [ECF No. 22] and notified the Court that the Nigerian Court of Appeal reportedly issued a ruling on his election challenge that same day, finding in favor of Intervenor and against Applicant. [ECF No. 22], at 1-2; see also Second Declaration of Angela M. Liu Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 4 of 31 PageID #:2506

(“Second Liu Decl.”) [ECF No. 23], at ¶5. Applicant further explained that he has until September 27, 2023, to file his appeal of that ruling to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, which he states he intends to do. Id.; see also Declaration of Ahmed Tijjani Uwais (“Uwais Decl.”) [ECF No. 24], at ¶13.

In light of the time constraints to file his appeal to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, Applicant narrowed the scope of the discovery he is seeking from CSU. Compare [ECF Nos. 38, 39] (revised subpoenas) with [ECF Nos. 1-1, 1-2] (original subpoenas).[1] Specifically, Applicant wants to serve four document requests, seeking true and correct copies of: (1) an exemplar of a CSU diploma issued in 1979; (2)

Intervenor’s diploma issued in 1979; (3) any exemplar of a CSU diploma that “contains the same font, seal, signatures, and wording (other than the name of the recipient and the specific degree awarded) as contained in Exhibit C to the First Liu

Declaration, which purports to be a CSU diploma issued to Mr. Tinubu on or about June 22, 1979;” and (4) the CSU documents that were certified and produced by Jamar Orr (an associate general counsel at CSU) as well as communications relating to these documents (the “Orr Documents”). [ECF No. 38], at 4-5 (revised subpoena for production of documents).

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 5 of 31 PageID #:2507

Applicant also wants to take a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(b)(6) deposition of a CSU witness to explore five topics: (1) the authenticity of the documents produced by CSU in response to the Application and how and where CSU located the documents; (2) CSU’s position on the authenticity of other CSU documents related to Intervenor purportedly produced by CSU in another Nigerian proceeding (“Enahoro-Ebah v. Tinubu”); (3) the contents of the Westberg Affidavit;[2] (4) CSU’s position on the authenticity of a letter from Caleb Westberg (the “Westberg Letter”) on CSU letterhead regarding Intervenor and other facts, including who requested the letter, who prepared the letter, and to whom it was sent; and (5) CSU’s position on the authenticity of the Orr documents and other facts regarding why the documents were certified, if he was authorized to do so, who requested the documents, and to whom they were sent. See [ECF No. 39], at 4-5.

After Applicant narrowed his discovery requests and in light of the tight timeframe, the Court requested a substantive response from Respondent to the revised subpoenas and asked CSU to file any objections it had to the scope of the revised subpoenas prior to the hearing. CSU filed its Response to Court Order Dated September 8, 2023 (“CSU’s Second Response”) [ECF No. 32]. Prior to the hearing, Intervenor also requested and was granted leave to file a Sur-Response to Reply in Support of Application (“Intervenor’s Sur-Response”) [ECF No. 33].

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 6 of 31 PageID #:2508

Mr. Abubakar as Applicant, CSU as the responding party from whom  discovery is being sought, and President Tinubu as Intervenor have filed briefs with the Court setting forth their positions regarding the propriety of the discovery sought in the Application and submitted evidence for the Court’s consideration. The Court held a hearing on September 12, 2023, and heard arguments from the parties.

III. ANALYSIS

28 U.S.C. § 1782 provides that a district court may authorize the production of documents or testimony for use in a foreign legal proceeding unless the disclosure would violate a legal privilege. 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a). Determining whether to grant an application under Section 1782 involves a two-part analysis. Intel Corp. v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., 542 U.S. 241, 264 (2004). First, an applicant must satisfy the threshold statutory requirements set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a). If the district court determines an applicant has satisfied the threshold requirements and it has the authority to grant the application, the district court then must focus its analysis on discretionary factors to determine whether and to what extent the Section 1782 application is appropriate. Intel, 542 U.S. at 264 (“[A] district court is not required to grant a § 1782(a) discovery application simply because it has the authority to do so.”).

  1. The Statutory Requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 1782 Are Satisfied

28 U.S.C. § 1782 requires an applicant to satisfy three straight-forward threshold requirements: (1) the person or entity from whom the discovery is sought must reside or be found in the district of the court to which the application is made; (2) the discovery must be “for use” in a proceeding before a foreign tribunal; and (3) Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 7 of 31 PageID #:2509

the application must be submitted by a foreign or international tribunal or an “interested person.” 28 U.S.C. § 1782. The first requirement is not disputed in this case. Respondent is a public university located with this judicial district. Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 5; CSU’s Response [ECF No. 20]. Intervenor, however, disputes whether Applicant is seeking the discovery “for use” in the Nigerian Proceedings and whether Applicant is “an interested person” in the Nigerian

Proceedings in which this discovery would be used.

  1. The Discovery is “For Use” in the Nigerian Proceedings

To obtain discovery under 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a), an applicant must establish

“that the discovery sought is for use in a proceeding before a foreign tribunal.” In re King, 2021 WL 722850, at *1 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 24, 2021). “‘[F]or use in’ mirrors the requirements in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1) and means discovery that is relevant to the claim or defense of any party, or for good cause, any matter relevant to the subject matter involved in the foreign action.” In re Application for an Ord. for Jud. Assistance in a Foreign Proceeding in the Labor Court of Brazil, 466 F. Supp. 2d 1020, 1029 (N.D. Ill. 2006). Moreover, the proceeding does not need to be pending at the time of the discovery request; it is sufficient that “the planned proceedings are ‘within reasonable contemplation.’” Id. (quoting Intel, 542 U.S. at 259); Heraeus Med. GmbH v. Biomet, Inc., 2021 WL 4133710, at *4 (N.D. Ind. Sept. 10, 2021) (“28 U.S.C. § 1782 ‘does not require that [a] … foreign … proceeding must have already commenced or … be pending or imminent….’”) (internal citations omitted).

Applicant argues the discovery he seeks from Respondent regarding the authenticity of documents Intervenor submitted to the INEC or more broadly related Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 8 of 31 PageID #:2510

to the status of Intervenor’s degree from CSU is “for use” in the Nigerian Proceedings, including Applicant’s intended appeal to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1782. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 2-6, 10-11; Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 3-7. In the Nigerian Proceedings challenging the election results, Applicant argued, among other things, that Intervenor submitted a forged diploma to the INEC stating that he received an undergraduate degree from CSU on June 22, 1979. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 2-6, 10-11;

Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 3-7. Applicant says Section 137(1)(j) of the Nigerian Constitution and Section 134(1)(a) of Nigeria’s Electoral Act of 2022 provide that a person is not qualified to participate in a Nigerian presidential election if the candidate has submitted a forged certificate and that such a disqualification challenge may be raised post-election. See Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 5 (citing Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶3 and Exs. A & B)).

Applicant questions the authenticity of the CSU diploma Intervenor presented to the INEC before the election because, among other things, a second CSU diploma has since emerged (dated June 27, 1979) that bears the name “Bola Ahmed Tinubu” but also presents with a different font, punctuation, seal, and signatures, than the

June 22, 1979 diploma, among other alleged discrepancies. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 2-6; Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 5-6. Applicant also references other documents allegedly produced by CSU for use in related electoral challenge proceedings in Nigeria that he says raise additional questions about the authenticity of the diploma that Intervenor submitted to the INEC and his other educational Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 9 of 31 PageID #:2511

records from CSU. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 6; Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 8 (citing Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24] at ¶6 & Ex. D). Because of the discrepancies in some of the documents purportedly issued by CSU, Applicant says there are questions about whether all the CSU documents actually came from CSU and when they were created. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 6; Applicant’s

Reply [ECF No. 22], at 6. Although Applicant acknowledges that CSU has stated that Intervenor did, in fact, graduate from CSU on June 22, 1979, Applicant still questions whether President Tinubu actually attended and received an undergraduate degree from CSU. Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 5-6. At least in the Court’s view, however, the primary issue that animates Applicant’s position in this case appears to be whether a CSU diploma in the name of “Bola Ahmed Tinubu” dated June 22, 1979, that was submitted to the INEC before the Nigerian presidential election in February 2023 is genuine or was forged.

Intervenor contends that the discovery Applicant seeks is not relevant to the Nigerian Proceedings because issues regarding his educational background were not referenced specifically in Applicant’s Petition filed with the Court of Appeal. See Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 5-6 (citing [ECF No. 5-2]). Those matters instead were raised in Applicant’s reply materials filed in support of the Petition. As addressed further below, the Nigerian Court of Appeal declined to consider issues related to Intervenor’s educational background that had not been included in

Applicant’s Petition but rather were belatedly raised for the first time in Applicant’s Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 10 of 31 PageID #:2512

reply filings. See September 6, 2023 Judgment in the Presidential Election Petition Court (“Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision”) [ECF No. 34], at 545-558, 606, 608-09.3

Applicant responds that in his intended appeal of the Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision, the Supreme Court of Nigeria can consider new evidence in “exceptional circumstances” under the Nigerian Electoral Act of 2022 and/or in its discretion, and he provides a declaration to that effect from his counsel in the Nigerian Proceedings. Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 10; Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶12 & Ex. G. Applicant further argues that whether the Supreme Court of Nigeria actually would consider any evidence obtained through discovery in this case is irrelevant to the “for use” analysis because the statute does not impose a foreign admissibility requirement. Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 7.

 

3 Applicant’s Petition in the Nigerian Proceedings generally raised the argument that Intervenor “was at the time of the Election not qualified to contest the Election,” but apparently without the addition of supporting facts or evidence. See Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 3-4 (citing Declaration of Angela Liu In Support of the Application (“First Liu Decl.”) [ECF No. 5], Ex. B, Petition in Abubakar et al. v. INEC et al., at ¶16(d); see also [ECF No. 5], Ex. B at ¶146. Applicant submitted a declaration from one of his attorneys in the Nigerian Proceedings attesting that arguments and evidence about the authenticity of Intervenor’s diploma were submitted by Applicant in those Proceedings. Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶4. In addition, that declaration also states that a related case (brought by Peter Obi and the Nigerian Labour Party) raised questions about additional documents related to Intervenor’s educational background (the Orr Documents), and that Mr. Obi’s case has been consolidated with Applicant’s proceeding. Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶6. The Court notes the Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision declined to consider that evidence and the underlying argument that Intervenor was not qualified to participate in the Nigerian election because the argument was raised for the first time in reply filings rather than in the initial Petition. [ECF No. 34], at 545-558, 606, 608-09. The Court understands Applicant intends to appeal that Decision, and as discussed below, Applicant submitted evidence in support of his argument that there is a mechanism by which new evidence could be presented to the Supreme Court of Nigeria.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 11 of 31 PageID #:2513

Based on the record submitted with the Application, the Court agrees with Applicant.  In Brandi-Dohrn v. IKB Deutsche Industriebank AG, the Second Circuit joined several other circuit courts in concluding “as a district court should not consider the discoverability of the evidence in the foreign proceeding, it should not consider the admissibility of evidence in the foreign proceeding in ruling on a section 1782 application.” 673 F.3d 76, 82 (2d Cir. 2012) (citing decisions from First, Third and Ninth Circuits). Although the Seventh Circuit has not addressed this issue, district courts in this jurisdiction similarly have concluded that whether the evidence sought in discovery is admissible in evidence in the foreign proceeding should not be considered in determining whether the Application satisfies the “for use” requirement of Section 1782. See, e.g., Lumenis Ltd. v. Alma Lasers Ltd., 2013 WL 1707571, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 19, 2013) (“courts have found the term ‘for use in’ does not require the material request to be discoverable or admissible in the foreign jurisdiction”); In re Labor Court of Brazil, 466 F. Supp. 2d at 1029-30 (same). Thus, as the Second Circuit explained, “a Section 1782 applicant must establish that he or she has the practical ability to inject the requested information into a foreign proceeding” and “it is not fatal to the application that he or she lacks a claim for relief before the foreign tribunal…. Rather, the term ‘for use’ in Section 1782 has only its ordinary meaning— that the requested discovery is ‘something that will be employed with some advantage or serve some use in the proceeding.’” In re Accent Delight Int’l Ltd., 869 F.3d 121,

132 (2d Cir. 2017).

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 12 of 31 PageID #:2514

Consistent with this authority, it is sufficient for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1782 that Applicant has presented evidence of a legal process in Nigeria – his appeal to the Supreme Court of Nigeria – by which the discovery he seeks here could be used in that country. Whether or not the Supreme Court of Nigeria will consider or admit the new evidence sought in this Application is beyond the purview of this Court. See In re Labor Court of Brazil, 466 F. Supp. 2d at 1029 (holding “the history of the statute, the case law, and the prudent tendency of American courts to avoid construing foreign law support the plain meaning that ‘for use in’ does not require that the discovery be admissible in the foreign proceeding”). Applicant, therefore, has made the “for use” showing required under 28 U.S.C. § 1782 by providing evidence that the Supreme Court of Nigeria could, at the very least, consider the new evidence he seeks to discover here.[3]

Based on this record, the Court finds Applicant has satisfied the statutory requirement that the requested discovery is “for use” in a proceeding before a foreign tribunal—in this case, specifically, Applicant’s anticipated appeal to the Supreme

Court of Nigeria.

 

 

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 13 of 31 PageID #:2515

  1. Applicant is an “Interested Person” in the Nigerian Proceedings

 

To obtain discovery under 28 U.S.C. § 1782, an application also must be submitted by a foreign or international tribunal or an “interested person.” 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a). Courts have recognized that a litigant in a foreign proceeding is “the most common example” of an “interested person” who would file an application seeking discovery under 28 U.S.C. § 1782. Intel, 542 U.S. at 256 (“[L]itigants are included among, and may be the most common example of, the ‘interested person[s]’ who may invoke § 1782.”); see also In re Semrush SM LLC, 2022 WL 3084601, at *2 (S.D. Ind. July 6, 2022), report and recommendation adopted, 2022 WL 3083487 (S.D. Ind. Aug. 3, 2022) (holding that because the applicant is a party to the underlying foreign litigation he is an “interested person” within the meaning of Section 1782);  In re Medytox, Inc., 2019 WL 3162174, at *4 (S.D. Ind. July 16, 2019), report and recommendation adopted, 2019 WL 3556930 (S.D. Ind. Aug. 5, 2019).

Applicant argues he is an “interested person” because the discovery he seeks from Respondent will be used in his intended appeal of the Court of Appeal Decision denying his Petition to the Supreme Court of Nigeria. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 11; Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 8. Intervenor argues that Applicant is not an “interested person” because the information he seeks to discover from CSU was not contained in his initial electoral challenge Petition but rather was produced in a different proceeding to which Applicant was not a party. Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 7-8. It is undisputed, however, that the evidence Intervenor Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 14 of 31 PageID #:2516

references eventually was presented to the Nigerian Court of Appeal and the Court of Appeal decided not to consider it for the reasons addressed above.[4]

Even though the Nigerian Court of Appeal declined to consider the latesubmitted evidence, Applicant has submitted evidence to this Court that the argument was raised in the Nigerian Proceedings (albeit late), and Applicant is a party to those proceedings. Id.; see also Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision [ECF No. 34], at 545-558, 606, 608-09. Applicant also unequivocally has stated he intends to appeal the Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision, and will present any new evidence he can obtain from CSU on the diploma issue as well as Intervenor’s educational records from CSU to the Supreme Court of Nigeria. He thus will be a party to those Supreme Court proceedings as well.

Based on the record submitted with the Application and the arguments presented during the September 12, 2023 hearing, the Court finds that Applicant has satisfied the “interested party” statutory requirement.

  1. On Balance, the Discretionary Factors Weigh in Favor of Granting the Application for Discovery

 

Because Applicant has satisfied the statutory requirements under 28 U.S.C §

1782, the Court next turns to the discretionary factors it must consider in

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 15 of 31 PageID #:2517

determining whether and to what extent the Section 1782 application is appropriate and should be granted. Intel, 542 U.S. at 264. The United States Supreme Court’s Intel decision is the leading authority on how district courts should evaluate an application for discovery under 28 U.S.C § 1782. In Intel, the Supreme Court concluded that even if an application meets the statutory requirements under Section 1782, the district court’s decision to grant the application still is discretionary. Id. at 255. The Supreme Court discussed four factors a district court should consider when deciding what discovery, if any, to allow:

whether “the person from whom discovery is sought is a participant in the foreign proceeding”;

 

“the nature of the foreign tribunal, the character of the proceedings underway abroad, and the receptivity of the foreign government or the court or agency abroad to U.S. federal-court judicial assistance”;

 

whether the discovery request “conceals an attempt to circumvent foreign proof-gathering restrictions or other policies of a foreign country or the United States”; and

 

whether the discovery requested is “unduly intrusive or burdensome.”

 

Id. at 264-65. The Supreme Court also recognized that Section 1782 has “twin aims” of “providing efficient assistance to participants in international litigation and encouraging foreign countries by example to provide similar assistance to our courts.”

Id. at 252 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

  1. The Parties’ Burdens Under Intel

Before the Court discusses the Intel factors, it must first consider whether, as

Applicant suggests, the Court should employ a burden-shifting framework to properly Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 16 of 31 PageID #:2518

weigh the Intel discretionary factors. See Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 12. In Department of Caldas v. Diageo PLC, 925 F.3d 1218 (11th Cir. 2019), the Eleventh Circuit held that “the Supreme Court, in announcing the discretionary § 1782 factors, did not set out the appropriate burdens of proof, though it did say in a footnote that the party ‘targeted’ in a § 1782 application ‘would no doubt wield the laboring oars in opposing discovery.’” 925 F.3d at 1221-22 (quoting Intel, 542 U.S. at

265 n.17); see also In re Schlich, 893 F.3d 40, 49 (1st Cir. 2018) (noting that the “Supreme Court has not established the appropriate burden of proof … for any of the discretionary factors, or the legal standard required”).

There is one case in the Seventh Circuit that discussed a burden-shifting framework after the applicant in a Section 1782 proceeding demonstrated its need for discovery in a foreign lawsuit. See Heraeus Kulzer, GmbH v. Biomet, Inc., 633 F.3d 591, 597 (7th Cir. 2011) (“[o]nce a section 1782 applicant demonstrates a need for extensive discovery for aid in a foreign lawsuit, the burden shifts to the opposing litigant to demonstrate, by more than angry rhetoric, that allowing the discovery sought (or a truncated version of it) would disserve the statutory objectives”).

Other circuits, however, have declined to adopt a strict burden-shifting approach. In In re Schlich, the First Circuit concluded that the Supreme Court in Intel “intended for both parties to make their arguments as to all of the [discretionary] factors, and for the district court to then determine whom those factors favor.” 893 F.3d at 50. “In this sense,” the First Circuit explained, “we do not see the factors as creating a burden for either party to meet, but rather as considerations to guide the Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 17 of 31 PageID #:2519

district court’s decision.” Id. Similarly in Department of Caldas v. Diageo PLC, the Eleventh Circuit preferred the First Circuit’s “middle-of-the-road approach” and held that “district courts need not apply a rigid burden-shifting framework to properly weigh the discretionary factor of receptivity in a § 1782 case.” 925 F.3d at 1223. The Eleventh Circuit recognized that the discretionary factors “are guideposts which help a district court decide how to best exercise its discretion” and concluded that “it is not necessary (or helpful) to put the burden on one side or the other with respect to receptivity.” Id.

This Court will follow the Seventh Circuit’s guidance and employ a burdenshifting framework when analyzing the discretionary factors and also will address the parties’ arguments on how to balance each of the discretionary factors. The Court will now turn to the Intel discretionary factors.

  1. The First Intel Factor Weighs in Favor of Granting the Application

The first discretionary factor looks to whether “the person from whom discovery is sought is a participant in the foreign proceedings.” Intel, 542 U.S. at 264. The parties agree that CSU is not a party in the Nigerian Proceedings and is beyond the jurisdictional reach of the Nigerian courts.[5] Accordingly, the Court finds that factor one weighs in favor of granting the Application.

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 18 of 31 PageID #:2520

  1. The Second Intel Factor Does Not Weigh Against Allowing the Discovery Sought in the Application

The second discretionary factor looks to whether the foreign court would accept assistance from a federal district court. See Intel, 542 U.S. at 264; see also In re Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, 2022 WL 1422758, at *3 (N.D. Ill. May 5, 2022). Some “courts have held that this factor weighs in favor of granting the application unless there is some ‘authoritative proof’ that the foreign court would oppose such assistance.” See In re Medytox, 2019 WL 3162174, at *5 (same) (citing Euromepa, 51 F.3d at 1100-01 among other cases). Whether the party opposing discovery must provide “authoritative proof” of the lack of receptiveness of the foreign court, however, has been called into question by other circuits.[6]

In Heraeus Kulzer, the Seventh Circuit concluded the district court abused its discretion in denying the discovery sought under Section 1782 where “there is nothing to suggest that the German court would be affronted by Heraeus’s recourse to U.S. discovery or would refuse to admit any evidence . . . that the discovery produced.” 633 F.3d at 597. The Seventh Circuit observed that Biomet, the respondent opposing

 

authenticity of those records and alleged discrepancies between the two versions of Intervenor’s diploma. [ECF No. 22], at 9; [ECF Nos. 38, 39].

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 19 of 31 PageID #:2521

discovery who was also party to the German proceedings, did not ask “the German court for a ruling that would bar or limit Heraeus’s U.S. discovery” and further noted “[t]he measures that Biomet has not taken in this discovery dispute are eloquent testimonials to the weakness of its position.” Id., at 596–97. Nevertheless, the Seventh Circuit has not specifically defined what evidentiary showing under the second Intel factor would be sufficient to weigh against an application or satisfy the burden on the party opposing discovery. See id., at 597 (describing burden on litigant opposing discovery as “to demonstrate, by more than angry rhetoric that allowing the discovery sought (or a truncated version of it) would disserve the statutory objectives.”). Moreover, the Seventh Circuit has not analyzed the receptiveness inquiry in the context presented here, which turns on whether a foreign tribunal (the Supreme Court of Nigeria) that has not yet had the opportunity to consider the evidence sought in this Application would be receptive to such evidence.

Intervenor points to the recent Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision, issued after this Application was filed, which declined to consider the question of the authenticity of his diploma from CSU on the procedural grounds that this argument and the evidence proffered in support of it were raised in late submissions. Intervenor’s Sur-

Response [ECF No. 32], at 5; Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision [ECF No. 33], at 545558, 606, 608-09. Based on that Decision, Intervenor asserts the Supreme Court of

Nigeria would not be receptive to the discovery sought in the Application.[7]

 

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 20 of 31 PageID #:2522

The Court is not persuaded by Intervenor’s argument. The record before the Court does not establish the Supreme Court of Nigeria would necessarily reject the evidence sought in the Application. As discussed above, Applicant intends to appeal the Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision. He submitted evidence to this Court that the Supreme Court of Nigeria can consider new evidence in exceptional circumstances. Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 10; Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶12 & Ex. G.

Intervenor does not contend that Applicant cannot argue to the Supreme Court of

Nigeria that exceptional circumstances permit the introduction of the evidence

Applicant is seeking from CSU. Rather, Intervenor argues, in effect, it is unlikely the Supreme Court of Nigeria will consider or admit that evidence given, in part, the decision not to do so by the Court of Appeal. Although Applicant acknowledges establishing exceptional circumstances to warrant the consideration of new evidence is “a demanding standard” (Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 10), Intervenor does not dispute that a legal mechanism exists for the Supreme Court of Nigeria to consider new evidence obtained by the discovery sought in this Application.[8]

 

that it has none—at least not yet” because “[applicant] does not need these documents to make out its claim, then no purpose would be served by their production in the United States under § 1782.” Kestrel Coal, 362 F.3d at 406; see Republic Techs. (NA), LLC v. BBK Tobacco & Foods, LLP, 2020 WL 208825, at *4 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 14, 2020) (describing circumstances in Kestrel Coal as “[a]fter the Supreme Court of Queensland denied the plaintiff’s request to require Joy Global’s subsidiaries to hand over certain documents, the plaintiff commenced a Section 1782 proceeding in the Eastern District of Wisconsin” seeking discovery of those same documents). By contrast, here, although the Court is aware of the procedural ruling of the Nigerian Court of Appeal, the Court does not know the position of the Supreme Court of Nigeria on the discovery sought in the Application because the Supreme Court has not yet spoken on that issue.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 21 of 31 PageID #:2523

To that end, Intervenor has not satisfied his burden to show that allowing this discovery would “disserve the statutory objectives.” See Heraeus Kulzer, 633 F.3d at 597.10 Applicant has articulated a procedural mechanism by which he may be able to introduce to the Nigerian Supreme Court the evidence he is seeking from CSU in his Application. The Court does not know whether the Supreme Court of Nigeria will be receptive to that evidence, but that is not determinative, as explained above. Accordingly, the Court concludes the second Intel factor does not weigh against allowing the discovery sought in the Application.[9]

 

Inc., 2022 WL 823856, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 18, 2022) to argue the Application should be denied based on the asserted lack of receptiveness of the Nigerian courts to Applicant’s arguments is misplaced. [ECF No. 33] at 5. Rather, the district court in Venequip concluded the second Intel factor was “neutral” where the record submitted as to Swiss law “suggests that . . . the Swiss courts would not consider [evidence obtained via Section 1782] ‘downright null and void’” while also acknowledging Swiss courts “would approach the wholesale importation of American civil procedure warily and with a degree of skepticism, as American pre-trial discovery proceedings are ‘alien to Swiss law’ and potentially inadmissible.” Id., 2022 WL 823856, at *2.

10 Even if this Court had applied a less rigid burden-shifting analysis and used a more balanced approach, the Court still would have concluded that the second Intel factor does not weigh against allowing the discovery sought in the Application.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 22 of 31 PageID #:2524

  1. The Third Intel Factor Does Not Weigh Against Allowing the

Discovery Sought in the Application

 

The third discretionary factor looks to whether the Section 1782 application is an attempt to circumvent the foreign tribunal’s proof-gathering restrictions. Intel, 452 U.S. at 264-65. When analyzing this factor, courts regularly look to see if granting the application would undermine a proof-gathering policy of the foreign tribunal. In re Application of Procter & Gamble Co., 334 F. Supp. 2d 1112, 1116 (E.D. Wis. 2004) (holding that “to decline a § 1782(a) request based on foreign non-discoverability, a district court must conclude that the request would undermine a specific policy of a foreign country or the United States”) (emphasis added).

Applicant says he has no reason to believe that any of the discovery he is seeking would circumvent any foreign proof-gathering restriction or policy in Nigeria. Applicant’s Memorandum [ECF No. 4], at 15. In response, Intervenor says it is unclear whether, under the appropriate circumstances, a Nigerian election court might consider material gathered using Section 1782(a) and acknowledges that this factor is neutral. Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 12. Applicant has submitted unrebutted evidence that there is a procedural mechanism by which he can attempt to submit new evidence in his appeal of the Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision.

There is no evidence in the record to suggest that granting the Application would undermine or circumvent any Nigerian policy, and both Applicant and Intervenor say the third Intel factor is neutral. Based on the evidence and arguments presented, the Court agrees with the parties that the third Intel factor does not weigh against allowing the discovery sought in the Application.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 23 of 31 PageID #:2525

  1. The Fourth Intel Factor Does Not Weigh Against Allowing the Discovery Because Any Burden on CSU Can Be Resolved by Limiting the Discovery

 

Under the final discretionary factor, the Court looks to see if the requested discovery is “unduly intrusive or burdensome.” Intel, 542 U.S. at 241. This factor requires an examination of the breadth of the discovery requests for the court to determine whether it is unduly intrusive or burdensome. See In re Labor Court of Brazil, 466 F. Supp. 2d at 1031. Section 1782 does not establish a standard for discovery. Texas Keystone, Inc. v. Prime Nat. Res., Inc., 694 F.3d 548, 554 (5th Cir. 2012). Instead, it is a screening mechanism “designed for preventing abuses of the right to conduct discovery in a federal district court for use in a foreign court. Once the court has determined that such abuses are unlikely, the ordinary tools of discovery management, including Rule 26, come into play; and … [S]ection 1782 drops out.” Heraeus Kulzer, 633 F.3d at 597; 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a).

Therefore, if a district court decides to allow the discovery to proceed, the discovery requests are managed under Rule 26 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and other rules governing discovery in federal courts. Heraeus Kulzer, 633 F.3d at 598; see also In re Labor Court of Brazil, 466 F. Supp.2d at 1033. Rule 26 provides:

Parties may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party’s claim or defense and proportional to the needs of the case, considering the importance of the issues at stake in the action, the amount in controversy, the parties’ relative access to relevant information, the parties’ resources, the importance of the discovery in resolving the issues, and whether the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 24 of 31 PageID #:2526

Information within this scope of discovery need not be admissible in evidence to be discoverable.

 

FED. R. CIV. P. 26(b)(1). Section (b)(2) of Rule 26 empowers a district court to limit the scope of discovery if the discovery sought is “unreasonably cumulative or duplicative, or can be obtained from some other source that is more convenient, less burdensome, or less expensive.” FED. R. CIV. P. 26(b)(2).

In his Reply, Applicant narrowed the scope of the discovery he is seeking. The Court, therefore, will consider the discovery requests contained in the revised subpoenas. See [ECF Nos. 38, 39]. As discussed above, there are now four narrowed document requests, which relate to the two different versions of Intervenor’s CSU diplomas, that have been presented to this Court (documents that purport to be dated June 22 and 27, 1979), any similar diplomas issued by CSU to anyone other than

Intervenor, and the Orr documents allegedly certified by CSU’s Associate General Counsel, Jamar Orr, for use by Intervenor in the related case bought by Mr. Obi that now has been consolidated with Applicant’s case. See First Liu Decl. [ECF 5-3], Ex. C (June 22, 1979 Diploma); First Liu Decl. [ECF 5-5], Ex. C (June 27, 1979 Diploma); Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24-4], Ex. D (Orr documents).

The revised Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice contains five narrowed topics asking for: (1) CSU’s position on the authenticity of the documents produced in response to the Application and how and where CSU located the document; (2) CSU’s position on the authenticity of other CSU documents purportedly produced by CSU and used in other Nigerian proceedings;  (3) the contents of the Westberg Affidavit;

(4) CSU’s position on the authenticity of the Westberg Letter, including who Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 25 of 31 PageID #:2527

requested the letter, who prepared the letter, and to whom it was sent; and (5) CSU’s position on the authenticity of the CSU documents certified by Orr and other facts regarding why the documents were certified, if he was authorized to do so, who requested the documents, and to whom they were sent. [ECF No. 39].

Intervenor first argues the discovery Applicant seeks is intrusive because educational records are private and protected by both federal and state law from disclosure, and it is burdensome because CSU has submitted an affidavit confirming Intervenor graduated from CSU in June 1979 which is all the information that is relevant here. Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 13-14, see also Westberg Affidavit [ECF No. 21-3], at 1-2. Again, however, framing the relevance issue in this way ignores a central tenet of the Application, which is not necessarily whether Intervenor attended CSU (though that is a part of Applicant’s argument) but whether the June 22, 1979 CSU diploma that Intervenor presented to the INEC is an authentic copy of Intervenor’s actual diploma issued by CSU.

With respect to Intervenor’s privacy interest in his educational records, under the Family Educational and Privacy Rights Acy (“FERPA”), a plaintiff has a right of privacy in his educational records. See McDaniel v. Loyola Univ. Med. Ctr., 2015 WL 13901029, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 28, 2015) (citing Black v. Kyle-Reno, 2014 WL 667788, at *1 (S.D. Ohio Feb. 20, 2014) reconsideration denied, 2014 WL 1308353 (S.D. Ohio Mar. 31, 2014)). The FERPA statute, however, does not create an independent privilege for educational records, but instead makes educational records confidential.

Id. (citing Catron v. Miles, 215 Ariz. 446, 453 (2007); see also Ragusa v. Malverne Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 26 of 31 PageID #:2528

Union Free School Dist., 549 F. Supp. 2d 288, 290 (E.D.N.Y. 2008) (“FERPA does not provide a privilege that prevents the disclosure of student records.”). Disclosure of educational records is permitted under FERPA if it is necessary to comply with a lawfully issued subpoena or judicial order. 20 U.S.C. § 1232g(b)(2)(B). There is, however, a “significantly heavier burden” on the party requesting educational records to show that the interest in obtaining the records outweighs the privacy interest of the student. Id. (citations omitted).

Here, the Court finds that Applicant’s interest in obtaining Intervenor’s records from CSU outweighs Intervenor’s privacy rights because Intervenor put his diploma at issue by submitting it to the INEC. Intervenor also submitted other educational documents in a related proceeding in Nigeria, some of which were certified by a CSU official, as discussed above. Further discovery into the CSU records, therefore, is relevant to the arguments Applicant intends to make to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, as discussed above. See McDaniel, 2015 WL 13901029, at *3 (holding that the defendant’s interest in obtaining the plaintiff’s educational records outweighs plaintiff’s interest in privacy because the records are relevant to defendants’ affirmative defenses as well as the damages at issue).

Applicant also argues that Intervenor does not have standing to object to the supposed burden the discovery would place on CSU. The Court agrees with Applicant on the issue of standing.  CSU is the proper party to raise any burden associated with Applicant’s discovery requests, other than with respect to Intervenor’s privacy interest which is discussed above.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 27 of 31 PageID #:2529

With respect to burden, CSU notes that, as the discovery respondent, “it is not a party to any of the Nigerian election proceedings, has no stake in the outcome of those proceedings, and does not take any position on the legal issues that have been litigated there.” CSU’s Second Response [ECF No. 32], at 1. CSU emphasizes that it has limited information that would be relevant to the Nigerian proceedings. CSU’s First Response [ECF 20], at 1-2; CSU’s Second Response [ECF No. 32], at 1-2. It, therefore, urges the Court not to allow the discovery to proceed because, among other reasons, it is a public university and already has devoted a significant amount of time and legal expense to discovery for proceedings in Nigeria. CSU’s Second Response [ECF No. 32], at 2.

In the Court’s view, these reasons are not sufficient for the Court to deny completely the Application. CSU seems to acknowledge its arguments may be insufficient to merit denial of the Application because it also requests that “any discovery which may be directed here be focused in scope and take into account the information CSU has already provided, as well as the information CSU has already notified Applicant’s counsel it does and does not possess.”  CSU’s Second Response [ECF No. 32], at 2. Because there is no evidence in the record to suggest that granting the Application would constitute an abuse of the right to conduct discovery in a federal district court for use in a foreign court, the Court finds that the fourth Intel factor does not weigh against allowing most of the discovery sought in the Application to proceed and that the Court can address any burden issues by limiting the discovery

Applicant can seek as discussed below.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 28 of 31 PageID #:2530

The Court has reviewed the narrowed requests in Applicant’s revised subpoenas. [ECF Nos. 38, 39]. As to the revised requests for the production of documents, CSU does not object to the first three document requests but does object in part to Request No. 4. Id. at 3. Because CSU does not object to responding to Request Nos. 1 through 3, the Court orders CSU to answer Request Nos. 1 through 3 and produce all responsive, non-privileged documents, if any, within 48 hours of the issuance of this Memorandum Opinion and Order. The Court notes, parenthetically, that CSU has proffered that it does not save or retain diplomas it issues to its graduates so CSU may not have any documents to produce in response to Request

Nos. 1, 2, or 3.

Respondent CSU does not object to producing true and correct copies of the Orr documents pursuant to Request No. 4. CSU does, however, object to producing “all communications to or from CSU concerning the certification of such documents by Jamar C. Orr, Esq., during the period of August 1, 2022 to August 1, 2023” based on undue burden and expense to the extent Applicant is seeking an expedited production of electronically stored information and communications. The Court agrees with Respondent and finds this portion of Request No. 4 to be an unduly burdensome request particularly given the tight timeframe created in no small part by Applicant in filing his Application in August 2023 with respect to a presidential election held in February 2023 and documents submitted to the INEC in mid-2022. A complete response to Request No. 4 likely would require Respondent to identify document custodians, agree with Applicant on key words, run key word searches in the custodial Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 29 of 31 PageID #:2531

databases, and produce electronically stored information all on an extreme and unrealistic time frame. In addition, at least a portion of what Applicant hopes to discover with this document request potentially can be obtained under Topic No. 5 in a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition discussed below.

As to the revised subpoena for a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition, CSU objects to a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition and instead requests that any deposition inquiry be conducted by written questions pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 31 and that CSU be given seven days to respond to any questions. CSU’s Second Response [ECF No. 32], at 2-3. While Rule 31 authorizes a party to take a deposition by written questions, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do not give the deponent a choice of whether he or she prefers to proceed orally or by written question. FED. R. CIV. P. 31(a)(1). In addition, responses to Rule 31 deposition questions must be provided orally in accordance with Rule 30(c), (e), and (f), under oath and on the record. FED. R. CIV. P. 31(b). And Respondent would have the right under Rule 31(a)(5) to serve their own written questions, and Applicant could serve redirect questions. So, the Rule 31 process of a deposition on written questions is not necessarily as streamlined as Respondent would have it, and the entire process very well may be more burdensome and time consuming under the circumstances of this case, in the Court’s view, than a single Rule 30(b)(6) oral deposition. The Court agrees with Applicant that his Rule 30(b)(6) topics are reasonably tailored to obtain information for possible use in his imminent appeal to the Supreme Court of Nigeria.

Case: 1:23-cv-05099 Document #: 40 Filed: 09/19/23 Page 30 of 31 PageID #:2532

In essence, CSU is seeking a protective order to prevent Applicant from taking an oral Rule 30(b)(6) deposition. Rule 26(c) provides that protective orders may address “matters relating to a deposition” and that a court “may, for good cause, issue an order to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense.” FED. R. CIV. P. 26(c)(1). The party seeking a protective order bears the burden of demonstrating good cause why the order should be entered. Global Material Techs., Inc. v. Dazheng Metal Fibre Co., Ltd., 133 F.Supp.3d 1079, 1084 (N.D. Ill. 2015).

Here, CSU has not established good cause for the Court to require Applicant to proceed with a deposition by written questions. In the Court’s view, an oral deposition is the most effective method to obtain information from a deponent under the circumstances of this case. Therefore, the Court overrules CSU’s objections and orders that the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition proceed on the narrowed topics identified in the revised subpoena within two days of Respondent’s production of documents. [ECF

No. 39]. As noted above, Topic No. 5 includes to some extent information that Applicant requested in Request No. 4 of his document subpoena without the attendant burden of time consuming electronic document searches and production.

  1. CONCLUSION

For all of the reasons discussed above, Atiku Abubakar’s Application Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 for an Order Directing Discovery from Chicago State University for Use in a Foreign Proceeding [ECF No. 1] is granted. Respondent CSU shall produce all relevant and non-privileged documents in response to Requests for

 

[1] The narrowed subpoenas originally were filed by Applicant at [ECF Nos. 22-1, 22-2]. Corrected versions of the narrowed subpoenas subsequently were filed by Applicant at [ECF Nos. 38, 39]. Accordingly, the Court considers the corrected versions of the narrowed subpoenas that Applicant filed at [ECF Nos. 38, 39].

 

[2] The “Westberg Affidavit” is defined in the subpoena as the Affidavit of Caleb Westberg, the Registrar of CSU, attached to the Intervenor’s Response to the Application. See [ECF No. 39] (citing [ECF No. 21-1]).

[3] Seee.g.John Deere Ltd. v. Sperry Corp., 754 F.2d 132, 136 n.3 (3d Cir. 1985) (“[i]t is doubtful” the legislative history of 28 U.S.C. § 1782 “can be expanded to impose a requirement that district courts predict or construe the procedural or substantive law of the foreign jurisdiction”); Euromepa S.A. v. R. Esmerian, Inc., 51 F.3d 1095, 1099-100 (2d Cir. 1995) (“we do not read the statute to condone speculative forays into legal territories unfamiliar to federal judges”).

[4] As noted above, Applicant’s Petition in the Nigerian Proceedings generally raised the argument that Intervenor was not qualified to participate in the election without citing to specific supporting facts or evidence. See Applicant’s Reply [ECF No. 22], at 3-4 (citing First Liu Decl. [ECF No. 5-2], Ex. B at ¶16(d)); see also [ECF No. 5-2], Ex. B at ¶146; Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶4. Applicant specifically identified and discussed the forged documents argument in his reply filings in support of his Petition to the Nigerian Court of Appeal. Uwais Decl. [ECF No. 24], at ¶7; see also Nigerian Court of Appeal Decision [ECF No. 34], at 545558, 606, 608-09.

[5] Although Intervenor acknowledges CSU is not a party to the Nigerian Proceedings, Intervenor contends this factor weighs against granting the Application because it is his (President Tinubu’s) educational records that are sought in the subpoena. Intervenor’s Response, [ECF No. 21], at 9-10. Contrary to Intervenor’s characterization, however, Applicant does not merely seek production of records allegedly already produced by CSU to Intervenor (and that maybe theoretically could have been obtained from Intervenor in the Nigerian Proceedings). Rather, Applicant is seeking information from CSU about the

[6] See, e.g., In re Biomet Orthopaedics Switzerland GmBh, 742 F. App’x 690, 698 n.9 (3d Cir. 2018) (“we decline to speak to whether an ‘authoritative proof’ standard . . .is the appropriate inquiry under the second Intel factor”); In re Schlich, 893 F.3d at 51 (1st Cir. 2018) (“requiring the party opposing discovery to present ‘authoritative proof’ of the foreign tribunal’s unreceptiveness … could place pressure on the foreign tribunal and could exacerbate comity and parity concerns … [a]nd, if the opposing party fails to provide such exigent proof, then that could give carte blanche to the moving party for seeking discovery that is only marginally relevant to the foreign proceeding, thus potentially promoting fishing expeditions”); Dep’t of Caldas, 925 F.3d at 1222–23 (declining to require authoritative proof of foreign tribunal’s non-receptivity to the discovery sought under Section 1782).

[7] Intervenor cites Kestrel Coal PTY. LTD. v. Joy Global, Inc., 362 F.3d 401, 406 (7th Cir. 2004). Intervenor’s Response [ECF No. 21], at 11. In that decision, the Seventh Circuit found that where the presiding justice in the foreign tribunal in the proceedings for which the discovery was sought had “already . . . analyzed [applicant’s] need for the documents and held

[8] Although Intervenor was granted leave to file a Sur-Response, he did not respond to Applicant’s evidence that the Supreme Court of Nigeria may consider new evidence in exceptional circumstances. Moreover, Intervenor’s reliance on Venequip, S.A. v. Caterpillar,

[9] See Heraeus Med. GmbH, 2021 WL 4133710, at *6 (second Intel factor “was equivocal and neither favors nor disfavors” the application where petitioners submitted declarations from attorneys in France, Germany and Belgium in support of position that tribunals in those countries would accept evidence produced pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 and “[r]espondents cite nothing to show that these tribunals would reject this evidence”). Other courts, applying an “authoritative proof” standard, have found circumstances arguably analogous to those here demonstrated the second Intel factor weighed in favor of allowing the discovery. See In re Martin & Harris Priv. Ltd., 2021 WL 2434069, at *6 (D.N.J. June 14, 2021) (“It therefore appears from the High Court of Bombay’s own orders that it has the authority to extend the deadline for discovery, not unlike a United States district court’s discretion to extend discovery under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16” and “Merck has proffered no specific evidence that, to the extent the application seeks relevant discovery, the High Court of Bombay would reject it”; holding second Intel factor weighed in favor of allowing discovery sought in Application).

 

 

 

GOV AKEREDOLU RECEIVES APC NATIONAL CHAIR, EXPRESSES CONFIDENCE IN HIS LEADERSHIP

  • ••We Can’t Forget The Good Governance You’ve Been Providing In Ondo, Nigeria- Ganduje

Ondo State Governor, Arakunrin Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, SAN, CON, has expressed confidence in the capacity of the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Chairman, Dr. Abdullahi Ganduje, to move the party towards growth and unity.

Governor Akeredolu stated that Ganduje’s extensive experience garnered from serving two terms as Kano State Governor, has equipped him adequately to steer the party towards significant progress and development.

The Governor spoke on Tuesday while hosting a high-powered delegation led by the National Chairman of the APC, Ganduje.

The delegation include: National Secretary, Sen. Surajudeen Ajibola Bashiru; National Vice Chairman Southwest, Hon. Isaac Kekemeke; Deputy National Secretary, Sir Festus Fuanter; Deputy National Financial Secretary, Hon. Hamma Ali Kumo; and former deputy Governors, Chief Moses Adeyemo and Rauf Olaniyan, among others.

“I thank God for the gift of life for all of us. I personally want to express my gratitude that I’m alive and well. We are back by the grace of God,” the Governor said.

The Governor further expressed his appreciation for the chairman’s directive for state party structures to maintain appropriate offices. “You will know that we have a befitting office when you visit Akure. After the Abuja office, it’s the Ondo office that we can be proud of.

“I want to thank you all for coming. I know that the Lord has answered my prayers, but I need more. My Chairman, I know you are capable, and you can count on my support anytime. The party has survived, and it must continue to take full control of the country’s affairs,” Akeredolu declared.

Earlier, the National Chairman noted that the Governor is extremely important to the party and the country.

Ganduje, while acknowledging the party’s consistent prayers for the Governor, emphasised that they could not forget about the good governance he has been offering Ondo and the country.

“We are here solely to see you after your prolonged absence from the country. You hold extreme importance to us in the APC and the country. We prayed intensively for your health.

“We can not forget the good governance you have been providing for Ondo state and Nigeria at large. When one of us faces health challenges, we feel it too. We have come with our Bishop to offer prayers for your health”, Ganduje said.

Dr. Ganduje informed the Governor that the party’s National Working Committee underwent a reformation during his absence.

“In your absence, the National Working Committee was reformed. The National Chairman and the National Secretary of the party both resigned. Prior to this, there were gaps due to resignations or deaths.

“The Chairman’s departure left a significant void, and the NEC felt the need to fill the crucial positions. By the grace of God, I am the new Chairman of the party, and Bashiru is the new Secretary. The National Working Committee is now fully operational,” Ganduje explained.

Richard Olatunde

Chief Press Secretary to the Governor.

September 19, 2023.

 

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU TO AFRICAN UNION: NIGERIA IS BEHIND YOU AND WE WILL NOT LET YOU FAIL TO SECURE STABILITY AND PROSPERITY FOR AFRICA

  • AU seeks close coordination with Nigeria on all continental matters
  • President Tinubu tells OIC: Islamic leaders in Africa must learn to accept will of Allah
  • OIC hails President Tinubu’s “bold” leadership on economic reform and geopolitical stability

President Bola Tinubu asserted that the African Union (AU) is strategically positioned to secure consensus positions for the continent on economic and socio-political relations with the world, particularly with Nigeria’s stalwart backing, as he engaged in a bilateral discussion with the President of the Union of Comoros and Chairperson of the African Union (AU), President Azali Assoumani, on Monday in New York.

“There is nothing that can bring development and prosperity, outside of embracing freedom and constitutional order. It is a critical hallmark of sustainable development. We appreciate that the AU is working hard to bring about peace in the Sahel and is actively negotiating between the warring factions in Sudan. Peace in Sudan will be a great achievement. I appreciate your effort in Burkina Faso and our effective cooperation on Niger.

“You can call me at anytime and we will discuss the peace and stability of AU member states. We need stability and prosperity for the black race. This is our era. We must be peaceful in order to take maximum advantage of the developmental opportunities presented to Africa in this era. We must build a model of sustainable development. Nigeria will collaborate with you. But we must move beyond those whose vision of Africa is narrow and evil. We are not afraid of confrontation, but we prefer to be restrained for now, at this time,” the President declared.

The Chairperson of the African Union, President Azali Assoumani, noted that the African Union seeks to complete Nigeria’s effort in securing peace and prosperity in Africa, rather than competing with it.

“It is our responsibility to confront the extra-constitutional wrestling for power on the continent. We have told China and Russia that they have a responsibility to ensure that there is stability in these countries, as there will be no developmental partnership where there is a lack of stability in countries being impacted by coupists. We appreciate your stand on these matters,” the AU Chairperson said.

As President of the Union of Comoros, the AU Chairperson said that Comoros seeks to learn from Nigeria’s experience concerning the steady improvement in diversity management, electoral officiation and economic growth over many years.

“We want to turn our country into an emerging economy and we need the experience of Nigeria as we seek your cooperation to conduct an election that will win us the respect of the international community and allow us to develop at the right speed and quality,” the Comoros President emphasized.

President Bola Tinubu also welcomed the Secretary-General of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Hissein Brahim Taha, and reiterated that the Islamic world has a strategic role to play in the sustenance of peace and development in Africa, and across the globe.

“The effort we are making in the Sahel is very important. We know we must double our efforts. We must tell our muslim brothers who are struggling to steal power that only Allah chooses leaders. We must respect the will of Allah. I am ready to collaborate with you. Your efforts in supporting agricultural growth and food security through the provision of resources from Islamic banks has been most commendable and our region is appreciative. I am determined to work with you in uplifiting Nigerians and Africans,” the President assured.

The leader of the 57-nation body of cooperation praised the Nigerian President for his active effort in bringing African states to a place of common understanding.

“We must gain consensus on the need for peace, especially amongst our member states. When you were elected as ECOWAS Chairman, it gave us confidence and hope that the situation in the Sahel region would improve because you are bringing people together. We were also happy about your election as President of Nigeria and we see the changes,” the OIC leader stated.

The OIC Secretary-General extended an invitation to President Tinubu to participate at the OIC Heads of State Summit, expected to hold in a few months.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 19, 2023

 

 

 

NIGERIA HAS THE RESOURCES AND THE LEADERSHIP, WE HAVE NEVER BEEN MORE READY FOR BUSINESS,” PRESIDENT TINUBU TELLS GLOBAL ENERGY INDUSTRY

  • ExxonMobil pledges nearly 40,000bpd in new Nigerian production in the short-term

President Bola Tinubu played host to a delegation consisting of the global leadership of an Oil & Gas transnational giant, ExxonMobil, on Monday in New York, where he made his position known that Nigeria is no longer settling for crumbs and leftovers on the investment agenda of the world’s most prolific energy conglomerates, saying “Nigeria has never been more ready for business than it is now.”

President Tinubu says that, following an illustrious private sector career as a professional accountant in the oil & gas industry, he has proven his capacity to take difficult decisions as President and is best prepared to solve problems and crush all bottlenecks standing in the way of new and large-scale capital flowing into Nigeria’s oil & gas industry.

“The knotty issues require direct supervision on my part. Despite many contending obligations, I will sit down and oversee the process of removing these encumbrances to job and wealth creation for the Nigerian people. We know the industry. We grew up in it. We are positioned to solve the problems, and we are pragmatic, and we will solve the problem,” the President firmly assured.

ExxonMobil President of Global Upstream Operations, Liam Mallon, assured President Tinubu that he is aware of the new and personal commitment that the President is bringing to bear on behalf of Nigeria and is well placed to reciprocate the President’s efforts with new investment as he pledged new production of nearly 40,000bpd in its Nigerian operations in phase one of a new investment push in Nigeria.

“What you told us was that your team would collaborate with us, and that has proven true. We have made significant progress since we last met. We are growing our production, and we are working hard on expanding in the deepwater production. We appreciate your efforts, and we will respond in kind. The time is right. Thank you for your leadership,” the ExxonMobil President stated.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 19, 2023

 

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU ADDRESSES 78TH UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY; ADVOCATES UNIVERSAL SANCTION BY UN NATIONS FOR THEIR COMPANIES AND PERSONS ILLEGALLY SMUGGLING ARMS AND MINERALS INTO AND OUT OF AFRICA

President Bola Tinubu, on Tuesday in New York City, addressed world leaders at the 78th United Nations General Assembly, during which he made a firm and compelling declaration that the time is now for UN member states to show, with their actions, that they mean what they say concerning the crackdown on terror financing, economic sabotage, and illicit mineral & arms smuggling in the developing world.

“The fourth important aspect of global trust and solidarity is to secure the continent’s mineral rich areas from pilfering and conflict. Many such areas have become catacombs of misery and exploitation. The Democratic Republic of the Congo has suffered this for decades, despite the strong UN presence there. The world economy owes the DRC much, but gives her very little.

“Foreign entities that are abetted by local criminals, who aspire to be petty warlords, have drafted thousands of our people into servitude to illegally mine gold and other resources. Billions of dollars meant to improve the nation now fuel countless violent enterprises. If left unchecked, they will threaten peace and place national security at grave risk. Given the extent of this injustice and the high stakes involved, many Africans are asking whether this phenomenon is by accident or by design. Member nations must reply by working with us to deter their firms and nationals from this 21st century pillage of the continent’s riches. To keep faith with the tenets of this world body and the theme of this year’s Assembly, the poverty of nations must end. The pillage of one nation’s resources by the overreach of firms and people of stronger nations must now end,” the President declared.

President Tinubu further noted that his aggressive economic development diplomatic push for new investment has been demonstrably effective in presenting Nigeria as business-ready, but the ease of doing business, according to the President, might not be the major encumbrance to large scale investment.

“The question is not whether Nigeria is open for business. The question is how much of the world is truly open to doing business with Nigeria and Africa in an equal, mutually beneficial manner. Direct investment in critical industries, opening their ports to a wider range and larger quantity of quality African exports, and meaningful debt relief are important aspects of the cooperation we desire,” the President affirmed.

The President equally noted that the global fight against the effects of climate change can not be based on a “one size fits all” approach and that nations must be cooperated with in the design and implementation of their own strategies, which are tailored to their respective socio-economic strengths and weaknesses.

“African nations will fight climate change, but we must do so on our own terms. To achieve the needed popular consensus, this campaign must accord with our overall economic efforts. In Nigeria, we shall build political consensus by highlighting remedial actions which also promote the broader economic good.

“Projects such as ‘The Great Green Wall’ to stop desert encroachment; halting the destruction of our forests through the mass production and distribution of gas burning stoves; and the provision of employment through local water management and irrigation projects are examples of efforts that equally advance both economic and climate change objectives simultaneously. Continental efforts regarding climate change will register important victories, only if established economies were more forthcoming with public and private sector investment for Africa’s preferred projects and initiatives,” the President cautioned.

President Bola Tinubu concluded by reminding the world what Africa truly represents in the global village.

“Walk with us as true friends and partners. Africa is not a problem to be avoided, nor is it to be pitied. Africa is nothing less than the key to the world’s future.”

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 19, 2023

 

PRESS RELEASE

 

SANWO-OLU CONGRATULATES HIS DEPUTY, OBAFEMI HAMZAT AT 59

 

Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has congratulated his deputy, Dr. Obafemi Hamzat, who clocked the age of 59 years today.

Governor Sanwo-Olu in a congratulatory message issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Gboyega Akosile, on Tuesday, praised Dr. Hamzat for being a trustworthy partner in the Greater Lagos agenda of the incumbent administration.

The Governor said his deputy has been very supportive of the administration’s delivery of good governance and dividends of democracy to Lagos residents.

He also commended Dr. Hamzat’s contribution to the growth and development of Lagos State in the last 18 years in different capacities before being sworn in as deputy governor on May 29, 2019.

Sanwo-Olu said Dr. Hamzat has used his position as commissioner in different ministries and now the number two citizen of the Centre of Excellence, to bring about positive change to Lagos State and Nigeria at large.

The Governor said the emergence of Dr. Hamzat as a two-term elected deputy governor and the longest-serving deputy governor in the political history of Lagos State, is a testament that he is a seasoned technocrat, administrator, politician and committed democrat.

He said: “Happy 56th birthday to my reliable, hardworking, dependable, supportive, trustworthy and committed brother, friend and partner in the Greater Lagos agenda of our administration.

“On behalf of my wife, Ibijoke, the people and government of Lagos State, leaders and members of our party, the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), I wish Dr. Obafemi Hamzat many happy returns of today.

“As you celebrate your 59th birthday today, I pray that God will increase you in good health to enable you to render more service to humanity, Lagos State and Nigeria.”

GBOYEGA AKOSILE

CHIEF PRESS SECRETARY

19 SEPTEMBER 2023

 

Press Release

Death Of Hon. Loolo, Big Blow To Ogonis – Rt. Hon. Dekor

The member representing Khana/Gokana Federal Constituency in the National Assembly, and Chairman, House Committee on Host Communities, Rt. Hon. Dumnamene Robinson Dekor has described the death of Hon Barr. DineBari Loolo, member representing Khana State Constituency 2 in the Rivers State House of Assembly as a personal loss and big blow to the Ogoni people.

Obviously devastated by the sudden news of the death of a man he said was so dear to him, a close and reliable ally, Rt. Hon. Dekor said the Ogoni people have sadly lost a rare gem.

Rt. Hon. Dekor made the remarks while on condolence visit to the wife and family of late Hon. Loolo at their Port Harcourt residence on Tuesday, September 19, 2023.  On the entourage of the federal lawmaker to the condolence visit include: Chairman of Khana Local Government Council, Hon. Dr. Thomas Bariere, former Deputy Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Dr. Befii Nwile, the Acting Rector of Captain Elechi Amadi Polytechnic, Rumuola, Port Harcourt, Dr. Moses Neebee, His Majesty, Mene King Dr. Suanu T. Y. Baridam, JP, Gbenemene, and Kasimene VII of Ancient Bangha Kingdom, Hon. Inaania LeneBari, Chairman, PDP, Khana LGA,  among other prominent Ogoni sons and leaders of the PDP in Khana.

Hon. Barr. Loolo’s demise, the federal lawmaker regretted, is not only a loss to his immediate family but also to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on whose platform he (the deceased) was elected into the State Legislature, and to Rivers State as a whole.

For the short period he served the State as a lawmaker, Rt. Hon. Dekor noted, late Barr. Loolo was a rallying point because of his humility, legislative acumen and imitable sense of reasoning.

He regretted that doing the 8th Assembly, late Loolo only spent 6 months in office and in this 10th Assembly, death has just cut short his service to his fatherland barely three months in office.

“My brother, and friend, Hon. Barr. DineBari Loolo was an accomplished professional, respected politician and astute administrator. By dint of hard work, he was deservedly chosen by our people over his political opponents as our representative in the State House of Assembly.

“And while serving as a lawmaker, he made a remarkable mark, always radiating exceptional brilliance and courage. Loolo’s memories will continue to live with me as a brother, and friend, an associate and close ally who was always there for me and my family in all my political endevours”, Rt. Hon. Dekor reminisced.

The former Deputy Speaker of the State House of Assembly, and one time Commissioner of Works, however, believes that all hope is not lost as his late friend had a good family and left behind many he lifted as well as worthy legacies of honour and hard work.

He enjoined late Hon. Loolo’s wife to take solace in the fact that her husband lived a life worthy of emulation.

“On behalf of my wife, the good people of Khana/Gokana Federal Constituency, I commiserate with the immediate family, the entire Loolo family, and the members of the PDP in Khana, and pray the ever faithful God to grant the family and all his loved ones the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss, and as well grant the soul of the departed eternal rest”, Rt. Hon. Dekor prayed.

Signed:

 

Rt. Hon. Dekor Media Team.

Tuesday, September 19, 2023.

 

PRESS STATEMENT

Federal Appointments: Gov Akeredolu Hails Ayodele Olawande’s Ministerial Nomination, Congratulates Yejide Ogundipe

Ondo State Governor, Arakunrin Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, SAN, CON, has welcomed the nomination of the State’s Youth Leader, Mr. Ayodele Olawande as Minister of State for Youth.

The Governor also congratulated Hon. Yejide Ogundipe on her appointment as Senior Special Assistant to the President (Food Security).

He described Hon. Ogundipe as a staunch advocate who has consistently championed the rights and empowerment of women in the State.

Governor Akeredolu said Olawande’s appointment is a recognition of his unwavering dedication, loyalty, and hard work to the party, APC, and the State.

“Olawande and Ogundipe have consistently demonstrated their commitments to the growth of our great party, APC, and development of our State. Olawande’s relentless efforts in championing the cause of youth inclusion in government and politics have not gone unnoticed. This appointment serves as a well-deserved reward for his outstanding service.

Governor Akeredolu appreciated President Bola Tinubu for considering a worthy son of the state for such significant National assignment.

The Governor expressed confidence that Mr. Olawande’s wealth of experience and passion for youth development and engagement will make a meaningful impact on the national stage.

“As we look forward to Olawande’s tenure as Minister of State for Youth, we have every confidence that he will continue to work tirelessly in advancing the interests of Nigerian youths.

“These appointments not only reflects the trust placed in Olawande and Ogundipe but also serve as an inspiration to other party faithful across our nation. We kindly urge the National Assembly to consider the speedy confirmation of Mr. Olawande.” The Governor said.

Governor Akeredolu congratulated Ayodele Olawande and Yejide Ogundipe and wished them success in their new roles.

Signed:

Richard Olatunde

Chief Press Secretary to the Governor.

September 18, 2023.

 

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU ADVANCES STRONGER ECONOMIC TIES WITH SOUTH AFRICA; SEEKS REFORM OF BRETTON WOODS INSTITUTIONS TO STRENGTHEN ECONOMIC RESILIENCE OF DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES

President Bola Tinubu has on Monday advanced his economic development diplomatic drive for investment attraction as he engaged extensively in a bilateral discussion with South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa, in New York City, ahead of the United Nations General Assembly.

President Tinubu asserted that Africa must have a consensus view that the hundreds of billions of dollars spent through International Development Finance Institutions over the years must meet the specific needs of developing democracies in Africa, even if it is done with exclusive regard for their own enlightened self-interest.

“During the end of the Second World War, the Marshall Plan was established for the reconstruction and economic restoration of European nations through Bretton Woods institutions. Where has this presence been for Africa? We have to be careful not to replace the broken shackle of yesterday with a new set of shackles. You can not have a stable democracy in the presence of a poverty of knowledge and a starvation of people. Democracy without food on the table is a breeding ground for what will consume us, if care is not taken. We must join hands and agree that International Finance Institutions require reform as Africa is not to be a ground for economic scavenging any longer, but it is a place with gifted people that is ready for investment and cooperation.

“We have all the human and natural resources required between our nations. We can collaborate in a mutually beneficial way that enriches our populations. South African Mining industries have a role to play in the Nigerian solid minerals development sector. Your business community has done well in Nigerian Telecommunications. We have great mineral wealth across our land, and you have good expertise in this area. We expect to deliver jobs and mutually beneficial results in this area as brother and sister countries,” the President affirmed.

Referencing President Tinubu’s quick implementation of what he called “brave” economic reforms, the South African President agreed that the two countries have much more wealth to create together in close and intentional partnership, with each nation leveraging on each other’s respective strengths.

“We are two major economies on our continent, and it is important that we deepen economic ties, particularly in light of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement. We are very keen on the deepening of our economic relations,” the South African President said.

The South African President emphasized that history has proven that Nigeria and South Africa can move the world on matters of mutual concern when the two nations operate on the same wavelength.

“We would love to see Nigeria and South Africa working closely together on a number of issues because whenever we join hands, we have made an impact globally through those joint positions. Together, we can move the global south forward. We are a continent that has been plundered. And wealthy nations made so much of it from us, and we must seek out partners who will help us to advance our own interests,” the South African President emphasized.

Recognizing President Tinubu’s effective stewardship as the Chairman of the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State, the South African leader said that Southern Africa needed to emulate the solidarity being demonstrated in West Africa, following the Niger Crisis.

“We believe that we have a lot to learn from ECOWAS and its unity in reaching consensus positions on sub-regional matters. This is something we seek to emulate in the Southern African sub-region in view of events in Mozambique and other areas,” President Ramaphosa said.

The South African leader also used the opportunity of the bilateral engagement to extend an invitation to President Bola Tinubu to visit South Africa, following President Ramaphosa’s recent visit to Nigeria, as part of efforts to deepen economic ties and the broader relationship between both countries.

While accepting the invitation, President Tinubu affirmed that an Africa, in which Nigeria and South Africa are working in synergy to advance their common interests, is the strongest version of the continent, which can make more impact on global affairs for the benefit of over one billion Africans with its enormous human and natural resource wealth.

“Our continent is the last untapped ground for accelerated, massive growth and new economic opportunity on earth. We must be in charge of our own resources, and we must work to use each other effectively to achieve what is best for all of us, Mr. President. We look forward to an era of economically productive relationship,” the Nigerian leader concluded.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 18, 2023

ABAVO CHRONICLE ABEJUKOKO VANGUARD ABIA REPORTERS ABIA SUN ABIGBORODO SUN ABRAKA STATESMAN ABUJA ABUJA CHRONICLE

SANWO-OLU CONGRATULATES HIS DEPUTY, OBAFEMI HAMZAT AT 59

 

PRESS RELEASE

 

 

Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has congratulated his deputy, Dr. Obafemi Hamzat, who clocked the age of 59 years today.

Governor Sanwo-Olu in a congratulatory message issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Gboyega Akosile, on Tuesday, praised Dr. Hamzat for being a trustworthy partner in the Greater Lagos agenda of the incumbent administration.

The Governor said his deputy has been very supportive of the administration’s delivery of good governance and dividends of democracy to Lagos residents.

He also commended Dr. Hamzat’s contribution to the growth and development of Lagos State in the last 18 years in different capacities before being sworn in as deputy governor on May 29, 2019.

Sanwo-Olu said Dr. Hamzat has used his position as commissioner in different ministries and now the number two citizen of the Centre of Excellence, to bring about positive change to Lagos State and Nigeria at large.

The Governor said the emergence of Dr. Hamzat as a two-term elected deputy governor and the longest-serving deputy governor in the political history of Lagos State, is a testament that he is a seasoned technocrat, administrator, politician and committed democrat.

He said: “Happy 56th birthday to my reliable, hardworking, dependable, supportive, trustworthy and committed brother, friend and partner in the Greater Lagos agenda of our administration.

“On behalf of my wife, Ibijoke, the people and government of Lagos State, leaders and members of our party, the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), I wish Dr. Obafemi Hamzat many happy returns of today.

“As you celebrate your 59th birthday today, I pray that God will increase you in good health to enable you to render more service to humanity, Lagos State and Nigeria.”

GBOYEGA AKOSILE

CHIEF PRESS SECRETARY

19 SEPTEMBER 2023

 

Press Release

Death Of Hon. Loolo, Big Blow To Ogonis – Rt. Hon. Dekor

The member representing Khana/Gokana Federal Constituency in the National Assembly, and Chairman, House Committee on Host Communities, Rt. Hon. Dumnamene Robinson Dekor has described the death of Hon Barr. DineBari Loolo, member representing Khana State Constituency 2 in the Rivers State House of Assembly as a personal loss and big blow to the Ogoni people.

Obviously devastated by the sudden news of the death of a man he said was so dear to him, a close and reliable ally, Rt. Hon. Dekor said the Ogoni people have sadly lost a rare gem.

Rt. Hon. Dekor made the remarks while on condolence visit to the wife and family of late Hon. Loolo at their Port Harcourt residence on Tuesday, September 19, 2023.  On the entourage of the federal lawmaker to the condolence visit include: Chairman of Khana Local Government Council, Hon. Dr. Thomas Bariere, former Deputy Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Dr. Befii Nwile, the Acting Rector of Captain Elechi Amadi Polytechnic, Rumuola, Port Harcourt, Dr. Moses Neebee, His Majesty, Mene King Dr. Suanu T. Y. Baridam, JP, Gbenemene, and Kasimene VII of Ancient Bangha Kingdom, Hon. Inaania LeneBari, Chairman, PDP, Khana LGA,  among other prominent Ogoni sons and leaders of the PDP in Khana.

Hon. Barr. Loolo’s demise, the federal lawmaker regretted, is not only a loss to his immediate family but also to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on whose platform he (the deceased) was elected into the State Legislature, and to Rivers State as a whole.

For the short period he served the State as a lawmaker, Rt. Hon. Dekor noted, late Barr. Loolo was a rallying point because of his humility, legislative acumen and imitable sense of reasoning.

He regretted that doing the 8th Assembly, late Loolo only spent 6 months in office and in this 10th Assembly, death has just cut short his service to his fatherland barely three months in office.

“My brother, and friend, Hon. Barr. DineBari Loolo was an accomplished professional, respected politician and astute administrator. By dint of hard work, he was deservedly chosen by our people over his political opponents as our representative in the State House of Assembly.

“And while serving as a lawmaker, he made a remarkable mark, always radiating exceptional brilliance and courage. Loolo’s memories will continue to live with me as a brother, and friend, an associate and close ally who was always there for me and my family in all my political endevours”, Rt. Hon. Dekor reminisced.

The former Deputy Speaker of the State House of Assembly, and one time Commissioner of Works, however, believes that all hope is not lost as his late friend had a good family and left behind many he lifted as well as worthy legacies of honour and hard work.

He enjoined late Hon. Loolo’s wife to take solace in the fact that her husband lived a life worthy of emulation.

“On behalf of my wife, the good people of Khana/Gokana Federal Constituency, I commiserate with the immediate family, the entire Loolo family, and the members of the PDP in Khana, and pray the ever faithful God to grant the family and all his loved ones the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss, and as well grant the soul of the departed eternal rest”, Rt. Hon. Dekor prayed.

Signed:

 

Rt. Hon. Dekor Media Team.

Tuesday, September 19, 2023.

 

PRESS STATEMENT

Federal Appointments: Gov Akeredolu Hails Ayodele Olawande’s Ministerial Nomination, Congratulates Yejide Ogundipe

Ondo State Governor, Arakunrin Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, SAN, CON, has welcomed the nomination of the State’s Youth Leader, Mr. Ayodele Olawande as Minister of State for Youth.

The Governor also congratulated Hon. Yejide Ogundipe on her appointment as Senior Special Assistant to the President (Food Security).

He described Hon. Ogundipe as a staunch advocate who has consistently championed the rights and empowerment of women in the State.

Governor Akeredolu said Olawande’s appointment is a recognition of his unwavering dedication, loyalty, and hard work to the party, APC, and the State.

“Olawande and Ogundipe have consistently demonstrated their commitments to the growth of our great party, APC, and development of our State. Olawande’s relentless efforts in championing the cause of youth inclusion in government and politics have not gone unnoticed. This appointment serves as a well-deserved reward for his outstanding service.

Governor Akeredolu appreciated President Bola Tinubu for considering a worthy son of the state for such significant National assignment.

The Governor expressed confidence that Mr. Olawande’s wealth of experience and passion for youth development and engagement will make a meaningful impact on the national stage.

“As we look forward to Olawande’s tenure as Minister of State for Youth, we have every confidence that he will continue to work tirelessly in advancing the interests of Nigerian youths.

“These appointments not only reflects the trust placed in Olawande and Ogundipe but also serve as an inspiration to other party faithful across our nation. We kindly urge the National Assembly to consider the speedy confirmation of Mr. Olawande.” The Governor said.

Governor Akeredolu congratulated Ayodele Olawande and Yejide Ogundipe and wished them success in their new roles.

Signed:

Richard Olatunde

Chief Press Secretary to the Governor.

September 18, 2023.

 

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU ADVANCES STRONGER ECONOMIC TIES WITH SOUTH AFRICA; SEEKS REFORM OF BRETTON WOODS INSTITUTIONS TO STRENGTHEN ECONOMIC RESILIENCE OF DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES

President Bola Tinubu has on Monday advanced his economic development diplomatic drive for investment attraction as he engaged extensively in a bilateral discussion with South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa, in New York City, ahead of the United Nations General Assembly.

President Tinubu asserted that Africa must have a consensus view that the hundreds of billions of dollars spent through International Development Finance Institutions over the years must meet the specific needs of developing democracies in Africa, even if it is done with exclusive regard for their own enlightened self-interest.

“During the end of the Second World War, the Marshall Plan was established for the reconstruction and economic restoration of European nations through Bretton Woods institutions. Where has this presence been for Africa? We have to be careful not to replace the broken shackle of yesterday with a new set of shackles. You can not have a stable democracy in the presence of a poverty of knowledge and a starvation of people. Democracy without food on the table is a breeding ground for what will consume us, if care is not taken. We must join hands and agree that International Finance Institutions require reform as Africa is not to be a ground for economic scavenging any longer, but it is a place with gifted people that is ready for investment and cooperation.

“We have all the human and natural resources required between our nations. We can collaborate in a mutually beneficial way that enriches our populations. South African Mining industries have a role to play in the Nigerian solid minerals development sector. Your business community has done well in Nigerian Telecommunications. We have great mineral wealth across our land, and you have good expertise in this area. We expect to deliver jobs and mutually beneficial results in this area as brother and sister countries,” the President affirmed.

Referencing President Tinubu’s quick implementation of what he called “brave” economic reforms, the South African President agreed that the two countries have much more wealth to create together in close and intentional partnership, with each nation leveraging on each other’s respective strengths.

“We are two major economies on our continent, and it is important that we deepen economic ties, particularly in light of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement. We are very keen on the deepening of our economic relations,” the South African President said.

The South African President emphasized that history has proven that Nigeria and South Africa can move the world on matters of mutual concern when the two nations operate on the same wavelength.

“We would love to see Nigeria and South Africa working closely together on a number of issues because whenever we join hands, we have made an impact globally through those joint positions. Together, we can move the global south forward. We are a continent that has been plundered. And wealthy nations made so much of it from us, and we must seek out partners who will help us to advance our own interests,” the South African President emphasized.

Recognizing President Tinubu’s effective stewardship as the Chairman of the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State, the South African leader said that Southern Africa needed to emulate the solidarity being demonstrated in West Africa, following the Niger Crisis.

“We believe that we have a lot to learn from ECOWAS and its unity in reaching consensus positions on sub-regional matters. This is something we seek to emulate in the Southern African sub-region in view of events in Mozambique and other areas,” President Ramaphosa said.

The South African leader also used the opportunity of the bilateral engagement to extend an invitation to President Bola Tinubu to visit South Africa, following President Ramaphosa’s recent visit to Nigeria, as part of efforts to deepen economic ties and the broader relationship between both countries.

While accepting the invitation, President Tinubu affirmed that an Africa, in which Nigeria and South Africa are working in synergy to advance their common interests, is the strongest version of the continent, which can make more impact on global affairs for the benefit of over one billion Africans with its enormous human and natural resource wealth.

“Our continent is the last untapped ground for accelerated, massive growth and new economic opportunity on earth. We must be in charge of our own resources, and we must work to use each other effectively to achieve what is best for all of us, Mr. President. We look forward to an era of economically productive relationship,” the Nigerian leader concluded.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 18, 2023

ABAVO CHRONICLE ABEJUKOKO VANGUARD ABIA SUN ABIGBORODO SUN ABRAKA STATESMAN ABUJA ABUJA CHRONICLE ABUJA GAZETTES ABUJA GUIDE ABUJA MORNING NEWS ABUJA NEWS ABUJA NEWSPAPERS ABUJA NOW

GOODBYE BARRISTER PAUL EROVE

SLEEP WELL, UNCLE P

Certainly, your death is a great loss to the good people of Isoko, Okpe and Agbon.

As we mourn our departed uncle, let us give thanks to God Almighty for his very exemplary and accomplished life.

Let us be comforted by the knowledge that Barrister Paul Erove is returning to his Creator as a very blessed and fulfilled man.

ABAVO CHRONICLE ABEJUKOKO VANGUARD ABIA REPORTERS ABIA SUN ABIGBORODO SUN ABRAKA STATESMAN ABUJA ABUJA CHRONICLE

PRESIDENT TINUBU NOMINATES NEW MINISTERS FOR FEDERAL MINISTRY OF YOUTH

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

President Bola Tinubu has approved the nomination of Dr. Jamila Bio Ibrahim to serve as the Minister of Youth, pending her confirmation by the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

The President has further approved the nomination of Mr. Ayodele Olawande to serve as the Minister of State for Youth, pending his confirmation by the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Dr. Jamila Bio Ibrahim is a young medical doctor and most recently served as the President of the Progressive Young Women Forum (PYWF). She has also served as the Senior Special Assistant to the Kwara State Governor on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Mr. Ayodele Olawande is a community development expert and youth leader in the governing All Progressives’ Congress (APC). He most recently served in the Office of the Special Adviser to the President on Innovation from 2019 to 2023.

President Tinubu charges the above-mentioned nominees to ensure that they consistently reflect the dynamism, innovative zeal, and unyielding productivity that are synonymous with the young people of Nigeria as they discharge their duties.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 17, 2023

 

 

SERAP sues Tinubu over ‘failure to stop Wike, Umahi, others from collecting retirement benefits’

 

Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has filed a lawsuit against President Bola Tinubu over “the failure to stop the former governors who are now serving as ministers in his administration from collecting life pensions and other ‘retirement benefits’ from their states while they serve as ministers.”

 

The ministers mentioned in the suit are: Badaru Abubakar; Nyesom Wike; Bello Matawalle; Adegboyega Oyetola; and David Umahi. Others are: Simon Lalong; Atiku Bagudu; and Ibrahim Geidam.

 

SERAP said, “the ministers are to be joined in the suit as Defendants.”

 

In the suit number FHC/L/CS/1855/2023 filed last Friday at the Federal High Court in Lagos, SERAP is seeking: “an order of mandamus to direct and compel President Tinubu to instruct the former governors who are now serving as ministers to stop collecting life pension, and other ‘retirement benefits’ from their respective states.

 

SERAP is seeking: “an order of mandamus to direct and compel President Tinubu to instruct the former governors who are now serving as ministers to forthwith return any pensions and ‘retirement benefits’ collected by them since leaving office to the public treasury.”

 

SERAP is also seeking: “a declaration that the failure by President Tinubu to publicly instruct former governors who are now serving as ministers to stop collecting life pensions, exotic cars, and other ‘retirement benefits’ from their states while serving as ministers is a violation of his constitutional oath of office.”

 

In the suit, SERAP is arguing that: “Compelling and directing President Tinubu to stop the former governors from collecting any ‘retirement benefits’ while serving as ministers would serve the public interest, especially given the current grave economic realities in the country.”

 

SERAP is also arguing that, “The appointment of those who collect life pensions and other ‘retirement benefits’ as ministers is an arbitrary and unlawful exercise of discretion and presidential power of appointment.”

 

According to SERAP, “While many pensioners are not paid their pensions, former governors serving as ministers get paid huge severance benefits upon leaving office, and are poised to enjoy double emoluments on top of the opulence of political office holders.”

 

SERAP is also arguing that, “The Tinubu government has constitutional and international legal obligations to stop the former governors from collecting any ‘retirement benefits while serving as ministers.”

 

The suit filed on behalf of SERAP by its lawyers, Kolawole Oluwadare and Andrew Nwankwo, read in part: “The appointment of former governors who collect life pensions while serving as ministers is implicitly forbidden by the Nigerian Constitution 1999 [as amended] and the country’s international legal obligations.”

 

“Constitutional oath of office requires public officials to abstain from all improper acts, including collecting ‘retirement benefits’ while serving as ministers. This is clearly inconsistent with the public trust and the overall objectives of the Constitution. A false oath lacks truth and justice. The oath statements require the oath takers to commit to uphold and defend the Constitution.”

 

“Stopping the former governors from collecting double emoluments would ensure that the country’s wealth and resources are used for the common good and benefit of the socially and economically vulnerable Nigerians rather than to satisfy the opulent lifestyle of a few politicians.”

 

“Compelling President Tinubu to stop the former governors from collecting any ‘retirement benefits’ would ensure that the exercise of presidential power of appointment is entirely consistent with requirements of the Nigerian Constitution and the fundamental principles of integrity and honesty.”

 

“The following former governors are now ministers in the Tinubu administration: Badaru Abubakar (former governor of Jigawa State and Minister of Defence); and Nyesom Wike (former governor of River State and FCT Minister).”

 

“Others include: Bello Matawalle (former governor of Zamfara State and Minister of State for Defence); Adegboyega Isiaka Oyetola (former governor of Osun State and Minister of Transportation); and David Umahi (Minister of Works).”

 

“Others are Simon Bako Lalong (former governor of Plateau State and Minister of Labour and Employment); Atiku Bagudu (former governor of Kebbi State and Minister of Budget and Economic Planning); Ibrahim Geidam (former governor of Yole State and Minister of Police of Affairs.”

 

“The states currently implementing life pensions and other ‘retirement benefits’ for former governors reportedly include Jigawa, Kebbi, Jigawa, Ebonyi, Yobe, and Rivers. These states owe workers’ salaries and remain the poorest in the country.”

 

“Several of the pension laws in these states include provisions for six cars every three years, a house in Lagos worth N750 million, and another in Abuja worth N1 billion, unrestricted access to medical attention, and pensionable cooks, stewards, and gardeners.”

 

“Other provisions include 100 per cent annual salaries of the incumbent governor, security operatives and police officers permanently assigned to former governors.”

 

“In President Tinubu’s inaugural speech as president, he promised that his administration would be guided by ‘the principle of the rule of law, a shared sense of fairness and equity’, and that ‘Nigeria will be governed according to the constitution.’”

 

“These commitments are consistent with the constitutional duties under sections 5, 130 and 147, and oath of office, under the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution of Nigeria 1999 (as amended).”

 

“By the combined reading of these provisions, the Tinubu government has a legal obligation to appoint as ministers former governors whose conduct is entirely consistent and compatible with constitutional and international legal requirements.”

 

“The country’s international legal obligations especially under the UN Convention against Corruption also impose a legal commitment on public officials to discharge a public duty truthfully and faithfully.”

 

“Life pensions for former governors serving as ministers are entirely inconsistent and incompatible with the Nigerian Constitution and the country’s obligations under the UN Convention against Corruption.”

 

“The convention specifically in paragraph 1 of article 8 requires the Tinubu government to promote integrity, honesty and responsibility in the management of public resources.”

 

“Furthermore, Justice Oluremi Oguntoyinbo in a judgment dated 26 November, 2019 also indicated that double emoluments for former governors are unacceptable, unconstitutional and illegal. Indeed, former governors collecting ‘retirement benefits’ while serving as ministers would clearly amount to taking advantage of entrusted public positions.”

 

“‘Public function’ means activities in the public interest, not against it. The alleged collection of ‘retirement benefits’ by former governors now serving as ministers amount to private self-interest or self-dealing. It is also detrimental to the public interest.”

 

No date has been fixed for the hearing of the suit.

 

 

Kolawole Oluwadare

SERAP Deputy Director

17/9/2023

Lagos, Nigeria

Emails: info@serap-nigeria.orgnews@serap-nigeria.org

Twitter: @SERAPNigeria

Website: www.serap-nigeria.org

For more information or to request an interview, please contact us on: +2348160537202

 

 

Obasanjo’s tenure most successful in terms of economic growth, job creation, and inflation rate in Nigeria – Former Governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji  Nasir El-Rufai

 

Former Governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji  Nasir El-Rufai , has said the second term of former President Olusegun Obasanjo yielded the most successful in terms of economic growth, job creation, and inflation rate in Nigeria.

Obasanjo governed the country from 1999 to 2007, as the first democratically elected leader of the fourth republic.

El-Rufai, who served as a minister under Obasanjo, said Nigeria, the most populous African country, experienced economic prosperity during his second term extending from 2003 till 2007.

The former governor said Nigeria returned to “proper integrated planning and we also got lucky” at the time.

He made this known on Friday during a session at the Africa in the World conference in Stellenbosch, South Africa, as he clamoured for the need for proper planning to aid the economic growth of any country.

“We have a planning commission in Nigeria but it has not been as effective.”

“If you look at Nigeria’s economic trajectory, the most successful four to five-year period of economic growth, job creation, and reduced inflation was the period of the second term of President Obasanjo in 2003 to 2007, when for the first time, the country went back into proper integrated planning and we also got lucky,” he said.

“Oil prices began to rise but we did not waste the windfall because we had planned. We had an excess crude account (ECA) that was based on fiscal rule that any surpluses above a certain benchmark price of crude oil goes to that savings account.

“And with that, we were able to get rid of all our foreign debt.”

El-Rufai said Nigeria’s fiscal vigour was at its best in 2007, such that when the global financial crisis took place in 2008, “Nigeria did not feel anything”.

“Nothing was felt in Nigeria because Nigeria had a big savings account; we had huge reserves and we were able to absorb the shock without any internal problems unlike most countries,” he said.

 

 

100 Days In Office: Delta APC Denounces Former Member, Hon. Silas Bouwe, Over Comments Praising Oborevwori*

 

 

The attention of the All Progressives Congress Delta State has been drawn to a grossly misleading and fallacious press release/statement by one Hon. Silas Bouwe, captioned ‘100 Days In Office: APC Stalwart Hails Oborevwori On Projects’  published by the SpadeNigeria, an online news platform.

 

For the avoidance of doubt and to set the record straight, the Party hereby states categorically for the uptenth time that the said Hon. Silas Bouwe is not a registered member of the Party in Delta State having been expelled a long time ago by the State Executive Committee of the Party for various acts of anti-party activities and at no time has he been readmitted into the Party as a bona fide member.

 

Furthermore, the assertion and reference to him by the SpadeNigeria publication as a former state secretary of the Party is not only a journalistic error of monumental proportions, but also hilariously puerile as it is a well known fact that the factional State Executive to which he once belonged to, was declared illegal by the supreme court.

 

More instructively, is the fact that, the said Hon. Silas Bouwe is presently a known member of the All Progressives Grand Alliance(APGA), where he ran as a candidate for the house of representatives for Isoko Federal constituency. It is therefore strange to see him granting interviews, falsely representing himself as a member of the APC or do we now assume that the publishers of SpadeNigeria erroneously referred to him as a member of the APC, instead of APGA to which he truly belongs?

 

We therefore call on the management of SpadeNigeria to be more circumspect by exhibiting due diligence in their reports as more investigation would have revealed the fact that Hon. Silas Bouwe together with other candidates of APGA in Delta State led by Chief Great Ogboru went into alliance with the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) against the APC in the 2023 general elections and this was confirmed by the presence of Chief Great Ogboru at the press conference immediately after the announcement of Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori by INEC. This alliance was further recently cemented by the appointment of Michael Ogboru, the son of Chief Great Ogboru, as a special adviser to the state governor. The conclusion to be drawn here is that this press release by Hon. Silas Bouwe is a continuation of that unholy alliance.

 

Albeit, the point that must be emphasized for the purpose of clarity devoid of any ambiguity, is that Hon. Silas Bouwe, lacks character and integrity and a notorious serial liar that consistently engages in cheap political blackmail and praise singing in order to curry both political and financial favours from those in authority. And his present interview in question, must be viewed from that prism as a sheepish effort of seeking political relevance for possible personal advancement in this period of seeking appointments.

 

The pertinent question is what exactly is Hon. Silas Bouwe celebrating?

Is it the secretive and dubious award of the construction of 3 flyovers at the whooping cost of 78 billion purportedly to Julius Berger? Or is it not the same Julius Berger that the immediate past governor of Rivers State, Nyesom Wike, used in constructing over 15 flyovers at the cost of about 10 -15 billion per flyover?

 

As earlier expressed in our press release regarding the 100 days in office of Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori, the entire Delta State is in total agreement that there is nothing to celebrate but abject failure and executive dereliction having surrendered his office and duties to his immediate predecessor who is actually in control of the reigns of power in the State.

 

Conclusively, Hon. Silas Bouwe, while being entitled to his own warped opinions as to the deplorable state of affairs of our dear State, should do so as a member of APGA or any other political party to which he belongs, but not our great Party and thereby maligning the name of the APC as we will not hesitate to take necessary steps, both criminal and civil, in seeking redress against him.

 

APC Renewed Hope

 

Signed

 

Valentine Onojeghuo Esq State Publicity Secretary APC Delta State

13/9/2023.

 

 

Tinubu’s rapprochement with UAE is a key economic diplomacy win, says Omo-Agege

Immediate past Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Ovie Omo-Agege, has commended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for the initiative to restore the mutually beneficial economic relationship between Nigeria and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), describing it as a key win in economic diplomacy.

Reacting to President Tinubu’s meeting with the leadership of the UAE on his way back from the BRICS summit in India, Omo-Agege who is also the Delta State governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) said restoring and strengthening mutually beneficial economic relationships is pivotal to the return to sustainable development.

In a press statement issued by Mr. Sunny Areh, Media Adviser to Senator Omo-Agege, the APC chieftain stated that it takes a bold vision and aggressive diplomacy to revive the important economic relationship between both countries which will ultimately see the restoration of direct flights and the lifting of the visa ban.

“Economic diplomacy is a crucial component of the bid to bring Nigeria’s economy back to the path of growth. We need to harness the opportunities inherent in our relationship with major economic centres. That is why President Tinubu’s initiative and success recorded with his meeting with the leadership of the UAE is commendable.

“It reinforces my confidence and belief in the President that he has the capacity to lead Nigeria out of the present economic doldrum to the path of prosperity. Again, I believe Nigerians will find this as an affirmation that they made the right choice in voting him as our President on February 26,” Sen. Omo-Agege said.

He urged the National Assembly and all Nigerians that genuinely desire a better society to rally round President Tinubu.

“The task of rebuilding our economy is a huge one. It requires getting the private sector and the international business community to buy into the project. Thankfully, our President has succeeded in doing that. With the confidence of the business community in Nigeria’s president and his economic policies, we are on track to becoming a major investment destination once again”, Omo-Agege stated.

 

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU CONDOLES WITH LIBYA OVER STORM DANIEL AND RESULTING FLOODS

President Bola Tinubu extends his profound condolences to the government and people of Libya in the aftermath of the devastating impact of Storm Daniel and the subsequent flooding that has severely affected the eastern regions of the country.

The President further commiserates with all families who have lost loved ones in this monumental disaster and sends his best wishes for a speedy recovery to all who have been injured during the tragic incident.

The Nigerian leader assures the great people of Libya of Nigeria’s unwavering solidarity and goodwill during these trying times, adding that this disheartening loss of lives, homes, livelihoods, and critical infrastructure remains a shared grief that further unites the people of both nations.

“Nigeria is ready to provide all necessary support to assist the Libyan people in overcoming this harrowing tragedy,” President Tinubu concluded.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 13, 2023

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU APPOINTS NEW ACTING EXECUTIVE CHAIRMAN OF THE FEDERAL INLAND REVENUE SERVICE

President Bola Tinubu has approved the appointment of Hon. Zacch Adedeji as the new Acting Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS).

The President has directed the erstwhile FIRS Chairman, Mr. Muhammad Nami, to proceed on 3 months of pre-retirement leave, as provisioned by Public Service Rule (PSR) 120243, with immediate effect, leading to his eventual retirement from service on December 8, 2023.

Hon. Zacch Adedeji is hereby appointed in acting capacity for a 90-day period before his subsequent confirmation as the substantive Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service for a term of four (4) years in the first instance.

Hon. Zacch Adedeji is a first-class graduate in accounting from the Obafemi Awolowo University. He most recently served the nation as the Special Adviser to the President on Revenue, following meritorious service terms as the Oyo State Commissioner of Finance and as the Executive Secretary / CEO of the National Sugar Development Council (NSDC).

By these directives of the President, the new appointment takes immediate effect.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 14, 2023

 

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU APPOINTS NEW NATIONAL COORDINATOR / CEO OF THE NATIONAL SOCIAL INVESTMENT PROGRAMMES AGENCY (NSIPA)

President Bola Tinubu has approved the appointment of Mrs. Delu Bulus Yakubu as the pioneer National Coordinator / Chief Executive Officer of the National Social Investment Programmes Agency (NSIPA), pending Senate confirmation.

The National Social Investment Programmes Agency (NSIPA) (Establishment) Act, 2023, was signed into law on May 22, 2023.

Mrs. Delu Bulus Yakubu is a recipient of a Masters degree in agronomy from the State University of Bio-Technology in Kharkiv, Ukraine, with over 15 years worth of working experience in Social Investment Programme management.

President Tinubu expects the new appointee to convey the highest level of efficiency, transparency, and qualitative service delivery at NSIPA, in his determination to actualize the Renewed Hope agenda of his administration.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 14, 2023

 

 

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU NOMINATES NEW CBN GOVERNOR AND MANAGEMENT TEAM FOR SENATE SCREENING AND CONFIRMATION

President Bola Tinubu has approved the nomination of Dr. Olayemi Michael Cardoso to serve as the new Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), for a term of five (5) years at the first instance, pending his confirmation by the Nigerian Senate.

This directive is in conformity with Section 8 (1) of the Central Bank of Nigeria Act, 2007, which vests in the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the authority to appoint the Governor and Four (4) Deputy Governors for the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), subject to confirmation by the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Furthermore, President Bola Tinubu has approved the nomination of four new Deputy Governors of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), for a term of five (5) years at the first instance, pending their confirmation by the Nigerian Senate, as listed below:

(1) Mrs. Emem Nnana Usoro

(2) Mr. Muhammad Sani Abdullahi Dattijo

(3) Mr. Philip Ikeazor

(4) Dr. Bala M. Bello

In line with President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope agenda, the President expects the above listed nominees to successfully implement critical reforms at the Central Bank of Nigeria, which will enhance the confidence of Nigerians and international partners in the restructuring of the Nigerian economy toward sustainable growth and prosperity for all.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 15, 2023

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU PROMISES TO RECONSTRUCT ELEME AXIS OF EAST-WEST ROAD; THANKS RIVERS STATE FOR STALWART SUPPORT GIVEN TO HIS ADMINISTRATION

Blessed with enormous human capacity and natural resource wealth, President Bola Tinubu on Thursday in Abuja, said that neither Rivers State or Nigeria has any business being associated with poverty, insecurity or under-development, assuring that under his leadership, the narrative will be permanently and positively changed.

Welcoming a high-powered 62-man delegation, comprising of leaders from both the governing All Progressives’ Congress (APC) and the opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP), to the State House, the President said the Honourable Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, has left big shoes to fill for the new Rivers State Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, and that as one of his most trusted allies, Rivers State will always have direct access to him in their joint march toward sustainable development.

“We are not meant to be in a position to be poor. We will turn the tide! Somewhere, somehow in this storm, there’s a quiet and peaceful place for us. We will locate it!

“We are not lazy people. We are richly endowed. We just need to be our brother’s keeper, and good neighbours to one another. I am not a President that will give excuses. I will work hard for our nation with purpose, determination and dedication to create wealth for all Nigerians. We have no reason to be poor! We will not look back, we will run aggressively forward.

“Today, we may be swimming against the tide. But the waves will soon propel us forward from behind. We will achieve the goals and dreams of our forefathers. I am inspired by the nation of people I now lead,” the President thundered.

President Tinubu noted that concerning infrastructure development in Rivers State, he had heard the cries of prominent Rivers sons, with particular reference to the Eleme Junction-Onne axis of the East-West Road, linking the Port Harcourt Refinery. On this, the President said the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, is a strong adviser, and would follow up on the issue for prompt action.

“The Honourable Minister, Wike, is not just the Minister of FCT, he is also my adviser and an admirer of mine. He has hit the ground running and he should be encouraged by the State,” the President affirmed.

Advising the younger generation to be more patient with the processes of government, the President said, “I am the Captain and Chief Salesman of the country. We have to reverse the trend and achieve possibilities within a short period of time. Our people have high expectations for us. I pledge to work hard, and I pray to God to put me on the right path, not to disappoint Nigerians,” the President concluded.

In his remarks, the Rivers State Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, told the President that the delegation, which included leaders of political parties, and past and present members of the State and National Assemblies across parties, was on a solidarity and thank you visit.

“The people of Rivers State voted for you in the last general elections based on their belief in fairness, equity and justice. This is the first time that Rivers State is truly feeling the impact of the federal government since the inception of democracy in 1999,” he said.

The Governor noted that the delegation greatly appreciated the President for appointing capable sons and daughters of the state into highly strategic positions within his administration.

The Governor particularly thanked the President for the appointments of the Honourable Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Barr. Nyesom Wike; Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity & Official Spokesperson of the President, Chief Ajuri Ngelale, as well as other sons and daughters of Rivers State into the Boards and Management of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) and other institutions.

The Governor applauded the President for attracting a $14 billion dollars investment approval for projects nationwide during the G-20 Summit, including the expansion of Indorama Petrochemicals in Eleme, Rivers State, adding that the State had just allocated 209 hectares of land in support of the new investment.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 14, 2023

 

 

 

PRESS RELEASE

 

SANWO-OLU FELICITATES ALAKE OF EGBALAND, OBA GBADEBO AT 80

 

Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has congratulated the Alake and Paramount Ruler of Egbaland, His Royal Majesty, Oba (Dr.) Adedotun Aremu Gbadebo (Okukenu IV), on his 80 years birthday celebration.

 

Governor Sanwo-Olu in a statement issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Gboyega Akosile, on Thursday, said Oba Gbadebo’s visionary leadership, coupled with his ceaseless quest for the upliftment of his subjects, has fostered an era of unprecedented growth and prosperity in Egbaland.

 

The Governor said Oba Gbadebo, who retired voluntarily as Colonel in the Nigerian Army, left the Military with impeccable records, exhibiting the true spirit of royalty in him.

 

He said: “Oba Gbadebo’s reign as the Alake has been a beacon of wisdom, benevolence and cultural heritage, enriching the lives of his subjects and the larger Nigeria populace. His leadership has been the cornerstone of peace and progress in Egbaland, and his commitment to the preservation and promotion of our rich cultural heritage is unparalleled.

 

“His Majesty’s commitment to peace, unity and progress is well-known and deeply respected. His visionary leadership, coupled with his ceaseless quest for the upliftment of his subjects, has fostered an era of unprecedented growth and prosperity in Egbaland.

 

“On this momentous day,  we celebrate not just Oba Gbadebo’s birth but the remarkable life he has led, the lives he has touched, and the legacy he continues to build. His Majesty has indeed been a great source of inspiration and role model to the younger generation.

 

“On behalf of my family, the Government and the people of Lagos State, I wish Oba Gbadebo a happy birthday and pray that the Almighty God continues to bestow on his Majesty, wisdom for a continuous reign of peace, prosperity and love in Egbaland.

 

“As Oba Gbadebo marks this milestone,  it is my prayer that the Almighty God will continue to bless him with good health, wisdom and many more years of service to Egbaland,  Ogun State and our dear country, Nigeria. May his reign continue to bring prosperity and unity to Egbaland and beyond.”

 

SIGNED

GBOYEGA AKOSILE

CHIEF PRESS SECRETARY

14 SEPTEMBER 2023

 

 

The Big Five Construct Nigeria Exhibition:

Accolades as leading Brand, Julius Berger and its subsidiaries, is celebrated by quality enthusiasts in Lagos.

The Big 5 Construct Exhibition ended Thursday in Lagos with much accolades from visitors at the event for leading engineering construction company, Julius Berger Nigeria Plc for quality products on display during the three-day international meet.

It would be recalled that Julius Berger had announced recently that its subsidiary companies will be participating at the landmark event. At the just concluded international exhibition, apart from the mother company, Julius Berger Nigeria Plc, its subsidiaries including Abumet (for premium aluminium and glass works), PrimeTech Design and Engineering (), Julius Berger Piling and Geotechnical Services, Julius Berger Facility Management Works as well as Julius Berger Idu Pre-cast Products, were all in active participation at the event in Lagos .

While the Julius Berger brand is uniquely renowned for its extensive portfolio of highly successful engineering construction projects, and the company is now transforming into more than just a construction company that boasts of unique construction capabilities, project management expertise, and state-of-the-art engineering solutions that have solidified its position as a trusted and reliable partner for progress, its aluminium and glass subsidiary, Abumet, displayed outstanding designs, advanced fabrication techniques, offering sustainable solutions to clients’ needs.

Another subsidiary, PrimeTech displayed new and recently updated  engineering and architectural designs including its comprehensive range of services, emphasising the company’s signature commitment to delivering efficient and sustainable solutions. PrimeTech’s service offerings include all structural, architectural, infrastructural, mechanical, electrical and pipe design and engineering services as well as work preparation and cost estimation services

Julius Berger Piling and geotechnical services was not left out. The subsidiary displayed some of its products and interacted with visitors to the stand on its piling and geotechnical engineering services with available specialist services in consultancy of varying scope and complexity.

The expansive Julius Berger pavilion at the Big 5 exhibition also had another subsidiary participating. The Idu Precast Products situated in Abuja put on display samples of its block and concrete products all moulded to the acclaimed Julius Berger standard ensuring that they meet the most stringent engineering requirements to withstand every elemental impact.

 

The Facilities Management Works Services subsidiary also participated with its highly skilled workforce busy interacting with visitors on services available. With the solution-oriented and quality stamp on the also quite experienced Julius Berger Facilities Management Works team, it was clear to significantly impressed visitors that they were the partners of choice for public and private organisations seeking high quality consistent, compliant, integrated asset management solutions.

An early visitor to the Julius Berger stand at the Big 5 exhibition is the Chairman, Board of Directors of Julius Berger Nigeria Plc, Mr. Mutiu Sunmonu, CON.

In his remark at the stand he said, “…we have come here to showcase our multi talents and capabilities. We want the world to be reminded that Julius Berger is not just a builder of house and bridges, but that we are into other unique aspects that really affect humanity positively.”

Julius Berger’s Commercial Manager, Mr. Christian Bauer, said the company is delighted to be a participant at the Big5 Construct Nigeria event alongside its esteemed and horizontally integrated subsidiaries. The exhibition, he said, provided Julius Berger with a great platform to showcase the Group’s collective expertise, foster industry collaboration, and highlight its commitment to delivering high-quality solutions that will continue to drive Nigeria’s infrastructure development.

As for the CEO of leading properties company, Lichfield Properties Limited, Dr. David Odi “…it was a nice experience moving inside the Julius Berger stand.  The feeling I get is that Julius Berger is one big deal where you find a potpourri of highly professional services and products one must require to live a comfortable life.”

THE operations Manager of Abumet, Markus Erhardt was hopeful of the fallouts of the Big 5 show. He said, “…we got valuable contacts and hopefully they would place good orders.”

The Project Evaluation Manager of Abumet, Mr Werner Christian Willegger said,
the exhibition was good. “We expect something productively positive from this exhibition.” Looking around the exhibited Abumet glass and aluminium fabrications in the company’s pavilion, Werner said, “…this shows just a few of our jobs so far and we have marketed this premium grade quality to the equally enthusiastic visitors that you can see.” He added that “…the visitor traffic to our stand has been nice and we are expecting lots of contracts in the next business cycle after this exhibition.
All we had to do was show visitors our perfectly engineered products and they could see the cutting-edge quality for themselves. The marketing was a perfectly joyful activity for us. For Abumet, every client is King, and the feedback we are getting has been good.”

Mr. Karnauke Christoph head of Julius Berger Piling and Geotechnical Services, was clearly hopeful of good business post the exhibition. He said, “…it has been a unique experience here. We are very hopeful to convert all the enquiries we have entertained today into concrete contracts soon.”

Other Julius Berger officials present at the exhibition included the Brand Marketing Coordinator of Abumet, Esther Obong-Duruibe; and Mr James Agama and Prince Moses Duku, Fnipr, Heads of Corporate Communications and Media Relations Departments respectively.

ABAVO CHRONICLE ABEJUKOKO VANGUARD ABIA REPORTERS ABIA SUN ABIGBORODO SUN ABRAKA STATESMAN ABUJA ABUJA CHRONICLE

The Big Five Construct Nigeria Exhibition: Accolades as leading Brand, Julius Berger and its subsidiaries, is celebrated by quality enthusiasts in Lagos.

The Big 5 Construct Exhibition ended Thursday in Lagos with much accolades from visitors at the event for leading engineering construction company, Julius Berger Nigeria Plc for quality products on display during the three-day international meet.

It would be recalled that Julius Berger had announced recently that its subsidiary companies will be participating at the landmark event. At the just concluded international exhibition, apart from the mother company, Julius Berger Nigeria Plc, its subsidiaries including Abumet (for premium aluminium and glass works), PrimeTech Design and Engineering (), Julius Berger Piling and Geotechnical Services, Julius Berger Facility Management Works as well as Julius Berger Idu Pre-cast Products, were all in active participation at the event in Lagos .

While the Julius Berger brand is uniquely renowned for its extensive portfolio of highly successful engineering construction projects, and the company is now transforming into more than just a construction company that boasts of unique construction capabilities, project management expertise, and state-of-the-art engineering solutions that have solidified its position as a trusted and reliable partner for progress, its aluminium and glass subsidiary, Abumet, displayed outstanding designs, advanced fabrication techniques, offering sustainable solutions to clients’ needs.

Another subsidiary, PrimeTech displayed new and recently updated  engineering and architectural designs including its comprehensive range of services, emphasising the company’s signature commitment to delivering efficient and sustainable solutions. PrimeTech’s service offerings include all structural, architectural, infrastructural, mechanical, electrical and pipe design and engineering services as well as work preparation and cost estimation services

Julius Berger Piling and geotechnical services were not left out. The subsidiary displayed some of its products and interacted with visitors to the stand on its piling and geotechnical engineering services with available specialist services in consultancy of varying scope and complexity.

The expansive Julius Berger pavilion at the Big 5 exhibition also had another subsidiary participating. The Idu Precast Products situated in Abuja put on display samples of its block and concrete products all moulded to the acclaimed Julius Berger standard ensuring that they meet the most stringent engineering requirements to withstand every elemental impact.

 

The Facilities Management Works Services subsidiary also participated with its highly skilled workforce busy interacting with visitors on services available. With the solution-oriented and quality stamp on the also quite experienced Julius Berger Facilities Management Works team, it was clear to significantly impressed visitors that they were the partners of choice for public and private organisations seeking high quality consistent, compliant, integrated asset management solutions.

An early visitor to the Julius Berger stand at the Big 5 exhibition is the Chairman, Board of Directors of Julius Berger Nigeria Plc, Mr. Mutiu Sunmonu, CON.

In his remark at the stand he said, “…we have come here to showcase our multi talents and capabilities. We want the world to be reminded that Julius Berger is not just a builder of house and bridges, but that we are into other unique aspects that really affect humanity positively.”

Julius Berger’s Commercial Manager, Mr. Christian Bauer, said the company is delighted to be a participant at the Big5 Construct Nigeria event alongside its esteemed and horizontally integrated subsidiaries. The exhibition, he said, provided Julius Berger with a great platform to showcase the Group’s collective expertise, foster industry collaboration, and highlight its commitment to delivering high-quality solutions that will continue to drive Nigeria’s infrastructure development.

As for the CEO of leading properties company, Lichfield Properties Limited, Dr. David Odi “…it was a nice experience moving inside the Julius Berger stand.  The feeling I get is that Julius Berger is one big deal where you find a potpourri of highly professional services and products one must require to live a comfortable life.”

THE operations Manager of Abumet, Markus Erhardt was hopeful of the fallouts of the Big 5 show. He said, “…we got valuable contacts and hopefully they would place good orders.”

The Project Evaluation Manager of Abumet, Mr Werner Christian Willegger said,
the exhibition was good. “We expect something productively positive from this exhibition.” Looking around the exhibited Abumet glass and aluminium fabrications in the company’s pavilion, Werner said, “…this shows just a few of our jobs so far and we have marketed this premium grade quality to the equally enthusiastic visitors that you can see.” He added that “…the visitor traffic to our stand has been nice and we are expecting lots of contracts in the next business cycle after this exhibition.
All we had to do was show visitors our perfectly engineered products and they could see the cutting-edge quality for themselves. The marketing was a perfectly joyful activity for us. For Abumet, every client is King, and the feedback we are getting has been good.”

Mr. Karnauke Christoph head of Julius Berger Piling and Geotechnical Services, was clearly hopeful of good business post the exhibition. He said, “…it has been a unique experience here. We are very hopeful to convert all the enquiries we have entertained today into concrete contracts soon.”

Other Julius Berger officials present at the exhibition included the Brand Marketing Coordinator of Abumet, Esther Obong-Duruibe; and Mr James Agama and Prince Moses Duku, Fnipr, Heads of Corporate Communications and Media Relations Departments respectively.

ABAVO CHRONICLE ABEJUKOKO VANGUARD ABIA REPORTERS ABIA SUN ABIGBORODO SUN ABRAKA STATESMAN ABUJA ABUJA CHRONICLE

PRESIDENT TINUBU NOMINATES NEW CBN GOVERNOR AND MANAGEMENT TEAM FOR SENATE SCREENING AND CONFIRMATION

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

President Bola Tinubu has approved the nomination of Dr. Olayemi Michael Cardoso to serve as the new Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), for a term of five (5) years at the first instance, pending his confirmation by the Nigerian Senate.

This directive is in conformity with Section 8 (1) of the Central Bank of Nigeria Act, 2007, which vests in the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the authority to appoint the Governor and Four (4) Deputy Governors for the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), subject to confirmation by the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Furthermore, President Bola Tinubu has approved the nomination of four new Deputy Governors of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), for a term of five (5) years at the first instance, pending their confirmation by the Nigerian Senate, as listed below:

(1) Mrs. Emem Nnana Usoro

(2) Mr. Muhammad Sani Abdullahi Dattijo

(3) Mr. Philip Ikeazor

(4) Dr. Bala M. Bello

In line with President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope agenda, the President expects the above listed nominees to successfully implement critical reforms at the Central Bank of Nigeria, which will enhance the confidence of Nigerians and international partners in the restructuring of the Nigerian economy toward sustainable growth and prosperity for all.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 15, 2023

 

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT TINUBU PROMISES TO RECONSTRUCT ELEME AXIS OF EAST-WEST ROAD; THANKS RIVERS STATE FOR STALWART SUPPORT GIVEN TO HIS ADMINISTRATION

Blessed with enormous human capacity and natural resource wealth, President Bola Tinubu on Thursday in Abuja, said that neither Rivers State or Nigeria has any business being associated with poverty, insecurity or under-development, assuring that under his leadership, the narrative will be permanently and positively changed.

Welcoming a high-powered 62-man delegation, comprising of leaders from both the governing All Progressives’ Congress (APC) and the opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP), to the State House, the President said the Honourable Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, has left big shoes to fill for the new Rivers State Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, and that as one of his most trusted allies, Rivers State will always have direct access to him in their joint march toward sustainable development.

“We are not meant to be in a position to be poor. We will turn the tide! Somewhere, somehow in this storm, there’s a quiet and peaceful place for us. We will locate it!

“We are not lazy people. We are richly endowed. We just need to be our brother’s keeper, and good neighbours to one another. I am not a President that will give excuses. I will work hard for our nation with purpose, determination and dedication to create wealth for all Nigerians. We have no reason to be poor! We will not look back, we will run aggressively forward.

“Today, we may be swimming against the tide. But the waves will soon propel us forward from behind. We will achieve the goals and dreams of our forefathers. I am inspired by the nation of people I now lead,” the President thundered.

President Tinubu noted that concerning infrastructure development in Rivers State, he had heard the cries of prominent Rivers sons, with particular reference to the Eleme Junction-Onne axis of the East-West Road, linking the Port Harcourt Refinery. On this, the President said the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, is a strong adviser, and would follow up on the issue for prompt action.

“The Honourable Minister, Wike, is not just the Minister of FCT, he is also my adviser and an admirer of mine. He has hit the ground running and he should be encouraged by the State,” the President affirmed.

Advising the younger generation to be more patient with the processes of government, the President said, “I am the Captain and Chief Salesman of the country. We have to reverse the trend and achieve possibilities within a short period of time. Our people have high expectations for us. I pledge to work hard, and I pray to God to put me on the right path, not to disappoint Nigerians,” the President concluded.

In his remarks, the Rivers State Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, told the President that the delegation, which included leaders of political parties, and past and present members of the State and National Assemblies across parties, was on a solidarity and thank you visit.

“The people of Rivers State voted for you in the last general elections based on their belief in fairness, equity and justice. This is the first time that Rivers State is truly feeling the impact of the federal government since the inception of democracy in 1999,” he said.

The Governor noted that the delegation greatly appreciated the President for appointing capable sons and daughters of the state into highly strategic positions within his administration.

The Governor particularly thanked the President for the appointments of the Honourable Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Barr. Nyesom Wike; Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity & Official Spokesperson of the President, Chief Ajuri Ngelale, as well as other sons and daughters of Rivers State into the Boards and Management of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) and other institutions.

The Governor applauded the President for attracting a $14 billion dollars investment approval for projects nationwide during the G-20 Summit, including the expansion of Indorama Petrochemicals in Eleme, Rivers State, adding that the State had just allocated 209 hectares of land in support of the new investment.

Chief Ajuri Ngelale

Special Adviser to the President

(Media & Publicity)

September 14, 2023

 

 

100 Days In Office: Delta APC Denounces Former Member, Hon. Silas Bouwe, Over Comments Praising Oborevwori*

 

 

The attention of the All Progressives Congress Delta State has been drawn to a grossly misleading and fallacious press release/statement by one Hon. Silas Bouwe, captioned ‘100 Days In Office: APC Stalwart Hails Oborevwori On Projects’  published by the SpadeNigeria, an online news platform.

 

For the avoidance of doubt and to set the record straight, the Party hereby states categorically for the uptenth time that the said Hon. Silas Bouwe is not a registered member of the Party in Delta State having been expelled a long time ago by the State Executive Committee of the Party for various acts of anti-party activities and at no time has he been readmitted into the Party as a bona fide member.

 

Furthermore, the assertion and reference to him by the SpadeNigeria publication as a former state secretary of the Party is not only a journalistic error of monumental proportions, but also hilariously puerile as it is a well known fact that the factional State Executive to which he once belonged to, was declared illegal by the supreme court.

 

More instructively, is the fact that, the said Hon. Silas Bouwe is presently a known member of the All Progressives Grand Alliance(APGA), where he ran as a candidate for the house of representatives for Isoko Federal constituency. It is therefore strange to see him granting interviews, falsely representing himself as a member of the APC or do we now assume that the publishers of SpadeNigeria erroneously referred to him as a member of the APC, instead of APGA to which he truly belongs?

 

We therefore call on the management of SpadeNigeria to be more circumspect by exhibiting due diligence in their reports as more investigation would have revealed the fact that Hon. Silas Bouwe together with other candidates of APGA in Delta State led by Chief Great Ogboru went into alliance with the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) against the APC in the 2023 general elections and this was confirmed by the presence of Chief Great Ogboru at the press conference immediately after the announcement of Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori by INEC. This alliance was further recently cemented by the appointment of Michael Ogboru, the son of Chief Great Ogboru, as a special adviser to the state governor. The conclusion to be drawn here is that this press release by Hon. Silas Bouwe is a continuation of that unholy alliance.

 

Albeit, the point that must be emphasized for the purpose of clarity devoid of any ambiguity, is that Hon. Silas Bouwe, lacks character and integrity and a notorious serial liar that consistently engages in cheap political blackmail and praise singing in order to curry both political and financial favours from those in authority. And his present interview in question, must be viewed from that prism as a sheepish effort of seeking political relevance for possible personal advancement in this period of seeking appointments.

 

The pertinent question is what exactly is Hon. Silas Bouwe celebrating?

Is it the secretive and dubious award of the construction of 3 flyovers at the whooping cost of 78 billion purportedly to Julius Berger? Or is it not the same Julius Berger that the immediate past governor of Rivers State, Nyesom Wike, used in constructing over 15 flyovers at the cost of about 10 -15 billion per flyover?

 

As earlier expressed in our press release regarding the 100 days in office of Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori, the entire Delta State is in total agreement that there is nothing to celebrate but abject failure and executive dereliction having surrendered his office and duties to his immediate predecessor who is actually in control of the reigns of power in the State.

 

Conclusively, Hon. Silas Bouwe, while being entitled to his own warped opinions as to the deplorable state of affairs of our dear State, should do so as a member of APGA or any other political party to which he belongs, but not our great Party and thereby maligning the name of the APC as we will not hesitate to take necessary steps, both criminal and civil, in seeking redress against him.

 

APC Renewed Hope

 

Signed

 

Valentine Onojeghuo Esq State Publicity Secretary APC Delta State

13/9/2023.

 

PRESS RELEASE

 

SANWO-OLU FELICITATES ALAKE OF EGBALAND, OBA GBADEBO AT 80

 

Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has congratulated the Alake and Paramount Ruler of Egbaland, His Royal Majesty, Oba (Dr.) Adedotun Aremu Gbadebo (Okukenu IV), on his 80 years birthday celebration.

 

Governor Sanwo-Olu in a statement issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Gboyega Akosile, on Thursday, said Oba Gbadebo’s visionary leadership, coupled with his ceaseless quest for the upliftment of his subjects, has fostered an era of unprecedented growth and prosperity in Egbaland.

 

The Governor said Oba Gbadebo, who retired voluntarily as Colonel in the Nigerian Army, left the Military with impeccable records, exhibiting the true spirit of royalty in him.

 

He said: “Oba Gbadebo’s reign as the Alake has been a beacon of wisdom, benevolence and cultural heritage, enriching the lives of his subjects and the larger Nigeria populace. His leadership has been the cornerstone of peace and progress in Egbaland, and his commitment to the preservation and promotion of our rich cultural heritage is unparalleled.

 

“His Majesty’s commitment to peace, unity and progress is well-known and deeply respected. His visionary leadership, coupled with his ceaseless quest for the upliftment of his subjects, has fostered an era of unprecedented growth and prosperity in Egbaland.

 

“On this momentous day,  we celebrate not just Oba Gbadebo’s birth but the remarkable life he has led, the lives he has touched, and the legacy he continues to build. His Majesty has indeed been a great source of inspiration and role model to the younger generation.

 

“On behalf of my family, the Government and the people of Lagos State, I wish Oba Gbadebo a happy birthday and pray that the Almighty God continues to bestow on his Majesty, wisdom for a continuous reign of peace, prosperity and love in Egbaland.

 

“As Oba Gbadebo marks this milestone,  it is my prayer that the Almighty God will continue to bless him with good health, wisdom and many more years of service to Egbaland,  Ogun State and our dear country, Nigeria. May his reign continue to bring prosperity and unity to Egbaland and beyond.”

 

SIGNED

GBOYEGA AKOSILE

CHIEF PRESS SECRETARY

14 SEPTEMBER 2023

 

 

The Big Five Construct Nigeria Exhibition:

Accolades as leading Brand, Julius Berger and its subsidiaries, is celebrated by quality enthusiasts in Lagos.

The Big 5 Construct Exhibition ended Thursday in Lagos with much accolades from visitors at the event for leading engineering construction company, Julius Berger Nigeria Plc for quality products on display during the three-day international meet.

It would be recalled that Julius Berger had announced recently that its subsidiary companies will be participating at the landmark event. At the just concluded international exhibition, apart from the mother company, Julius Berger Nigeria Plc, its subsidiaries including Abumet (for premium aluminium and glass works), PrimeTech Design and Engineering (), Julius Berger Piling and Geotechnical Services, Julius Berger Facility Management Works as well as Julius Berger Idu Pre-cast Products, were all in active participation at the event in Lagos .

While the Julius Berger brand is uniquely renowned for its extensive portfolio of highly successful engineering construction projects, and the company is now transforming into more than just a construction company that boasts of unique construction capabilities, project management expertise, and state-of-the-art engineering solutions that have solidified its position as a trusted and reliable partner for progress, its aluminium and glass subsidiary, Abumet, displayed outstanding designs, advanced fabrication techniques, offering sustainable solutions to clients’ needs.

Another subsidiary, PrimeTech displayed new and recently updated  engineering and architectural designs including its comprehensive range of services, emphasising the company’s signature commitment to delivering efficient and sustainable solutions. PrimeTech’s service offerings include all structural, architectural, infrastructural, mechanical, electrical and pipe design and engineering services as well as work preparation and cost estimation services

Julius Berger Piling and geotechnical services was not left out. The subsidiary displayed some of its products and interacted with visitors to the stand on its piling and geotechnical engineering services with available specialist services in consultancy of varying scope and complexity.

The expansive Julius Berger pavilion at the Big 5 exhibition also had another subsidiary participating. The Idu Precast Products situated in Abuja put on display samples of its block and concrete products all moulded to the acclaimed Julius Berger standard ensuring that they meet the most stringent engineering requirements to withstand every elemental impact.

 

The Facilities Management Works Services subsidiary also participated with its highly skilled workforce busy interacting with visitors on services available. With the solution-oriented and quality stamp on the also quite experienced Julius Berger Facilities Management Works team, it was clear to significantly impressed visitors that they were the partners of choice for public and private organisations seeking high quality consistent, compliant, integrated asset management solutions.

An early visitor to the Julius Berger stand at the Big 5 exhibition is the Chairman, Board of Directors of Julius Berger Nigeria Plc, Mr. Mutiu Sunmonu, CON.

In his remark at the stand he said, “…we have come here to showcase our multi talents and capabilities. We want the world to be reminded that Julius Berger is not just a builder of house and bridges, but that we are into other unique aspects that really affect humanity positively.”

Julius Berger’s Commercial Manager, Mr. Christian Bauer, said the company is delighted to be a participant at the Big5 Construct Nigeria event alongside its esteemed and horizontally integrated subsidiaries. The exhibition, he said, provided Julius Berger with a great platform to showcase the Group’s collective expertise, foster industry collaboration, and highlight its commitment to delivering high-quality solutions that will continue to drive Nigeria’s infrastructure development.

As for the CEO of leading properties company, Lichfield Properties Limited, Dr. David Odi “…it was a nice experience moving inside the Julius Berger stand.  The feeling I get is that Julius Berger is one big deal where you find a potpourri of highly professional services and products one must require to live a comfortable life.”

THE operations Manager of Abumet, Markus Erhardt was hopeful of the fallouts of the Big 5 show. He said, “…we got valuable contacts and hopefully they would place good orders.”

The Project Evaluation Manager of Abumet, Mr Werner Christian Willegger said,
the exhibition was good. “We expect something productively positive from this exhibition.” Looking around the exhibited Abumet glass and aluminium fabrications in the company’s pavilion, Werner said, “…this shows just a few of our jobs so far and we have marketed this premium grade quality to the equally enthusiastic visitors that you can see.” He added that “…the visitor traffic to our stand has been nice and we are expecting lots of contracts in the next business cycle after this exhibition.
All we had to do was show visitors our perfectly engineered products and they could see the cutting-edge quality for themselves. The marketing was a perfectly joyful activity for us. For Abumet, every client is King, and the feedback we are getting has been good.”

Mr. Karnauke Christoph head of Julius Berger Piling and Geotechnical Services, was clearly hopeful of good business post the exhibition. He said, “…it has been a unique experience here. We are very hopeful to convert all the enquiries we have entertained today into concrete contracts soon.”

Other Julius Berger officials present at the exhibition included the Brand Marketing Coordinator of Abumet, Esther Obong-Duruibe; and Mr James Agama and Prince Moses Duku, Fnipr, Heads of Corporate Communications and Media Relations Departments respectively.

ABAVO CHRONICLE ABEJUKOKO VANGUARD ABIA REPORTERS ABIA SUN ABIGBORODO SUN ABRAKA STATESMAN ABUJA ABUJA CHRONICLE

Julius Berger Projects: “We are impressed by what we saw at the Lagos-Shagamu Expressway and also at the Second River Niger Bridge“

 

– Chairman, House of Representatives Adhoc Committee, during oversight inspection visit to projects funded by the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority, NSIA

 

The House of Representatives Adhoc Committee on oversight inspection visit to projects funded by the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority, NSIA has lauded the excellent qualitative works executed by leading engineering construction company, Julius Berger Nigeria Plc both at the Lagos-Shagamu Expressway and at the Second Niger Bridge, describing them as impressive.

 

Before the physical inspection of the project, Chairman of the committee, Hon. Ademorin Kuye said their mission was to investigate the funding of some key infrastrucral projects being funded by the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority employing the Presidential Infrastructure Development Fund nationwide.

 

When the team inspected the Lagos -Sagamu Expressway, it underscored the significant expertise employed by Julius Berger for the effective construction of the ever-busy highway with the chairman declaring that, “…we all know the importance of this road towards the overall economic development of the country. Nobody can doubt that Julius Berger has done a great work here. The good engineering works of the project speaks eloquently of top quality and durability. The company has done well.“

 

Accompanied by other members of the House Adhoc Committee, the Chairman at the end of their investigative inspection of the project, expressed satisfaction with the job done by Julius Berger so far even as he encouraged communities along the project corridor to be at peace withe Julius Berger adding that, the project will be completed this year.

 

At the Second Niger Bridge project site, the next day, the committee members equally praised the premium grade engineering construction expertise of Julius Berger. Nigerians ask for roads, they have a masterpiece of a good road connecting the country here. But we know that when you give them road, they will begin to ask for the costs. And that is why we are embarking on this oversight duty to ensure that everyone complied with relevant laws establishing the Presidential Infrastructure Development Fund,“ said the Committee Chairman.

 

Hon Kuye continued, the essence of our duty is to ensure that the funding by NSIA was judiciously spent. We are impressed so far. Very soon, work on this road will end and effective road use will begin.“

 

Turning to the Julius Berger team, the Chairman said, what you have done is commendable, very commendable, but we have to explain to Nigerians the process that birthed this wonderful edifice, including the challanges of that process.“

 

On the Committee’s team were Hon. Ademorin Kuye, Timiehin Adelegbe, Hon. Isa Muhammed Anka, Hon. Umar Yabo, Hon Festus Akingbaso and Hon. Nasiru Isika.

 

The Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) was represented by Mr. Kola Owodunmi, Dr. Adepoju Anthony and Nduka Okoronkwo while the Project Manager, Engr. Clemens Mueller of Julius Berger led other officials of the company to receive the House adhoc Committee Chairman and members at the site of the Second Niger Bridge.

 

 

 

CSR PROJECT: JULIUS BERGER RENOVATES, RESTORES DILAPIDATED PRIMARY SCHOOL IN ABUJA, FCT

 

Julius Berger Nigeria Plc recently handed over the renovated LEA Primary School Jahi – Kado Kuchi, FCT Abuja, worth 32.5 million naira, under its Corporate Social Responsibility initiative.

Known for only excellent quality deliveries in its works, the scope of the project undertaken by Julius Berger Nigeria Plc included the renovation and complete rehabilitation of the 6 classroom blocks, including the roof, walls and the classrom floors of the school. It also included the provision of furniture for classrooms and staffrooms, and the installation of a playground for the students and a complete repainting of the entire 6 blocks of classrooms.

The intervention was done in collaboration with Stewards of the Environment for Sustainable Change Initiative (SESCI). Speaking at the handover ceremony, SESCI’s Convener, Mrs Adiza Ujo, narrated the origin of the laudable intervention. According to Adiza, “…we visit schools to promote care for the environment and to also pay school fees for indigent students, but after vising LEA Primary School Jahi Kado Kuchi last year, we realised that the environment is totally unconducive for learning and the magnitude of the rehabilitation work needed to put the school back in shape could only be undertaken by capable and willing corporate organisations. We reached out to a couple of organisations and only Julius Berger responded.“ She added that, “In January this year the Julius Berger team came along with us to assess the level of damage and the amount of renovation that needed to be done, and to our surprise they were ready to singlehandedly finance the project.“ To graphically capture the appreciation and excitement by stakeholders at the handing over ceremony by Julius Berger, Mrs Adiza enthused, “…here we are today, the students are happy, the two communities of Jahi and Kado-Kuchi are happy, the teachers are happy and UBEB is also happy. Julius Berger has done very well, and we want to thank them very much”.

Handing over the completed project, Julius Berger’s Head of Corporate Communication, Mr. James Agama, expressed his excitement at the reception given to the company‘s delegation. He explained that Julius Berger Nigeria Plc is committed to improving education and literacy in its project communities, and that the company continues to look forward to such opportunities because of the long-lasting positive relationship between the people and Julius Berger. He said that the renovation is one of many other interventions made by the company in the FCT this year. He enjoined the school management to make good use of the facilities provided and ensure that its impact is felt by the children in the communities.

In his appreciation speech, the FCT Universal Basic Education Board (UBEB) Chairman, Dr. Alhasan Sule thanked Julius Berger for the laudable project. According to him, “the intervention is the largest so far by any private organisation, recorded by the Board in recent time,“ adding that “the initiative proves that Julius Berger truly and indeed cares about its host communities and about education.“  With gratitude, Dr Hassan Sule further said and promised, “…we will prove to you that we appreciate what you have done here by ensuring the enrolment of more pupils in this school. We send our appreciation to the Management of Julius Berger.“

 

Also speaking, the school’s Head Mistress, Mrs Arhanmhunde Edith, thanked Julius Berger Nigeria Plc, and conveyed appreciation messages from community leaders and the Parents Teachers Association (PTA) to the company.

The FCT Universal Basic Education Board (UBEB) Chairman, Dr Alhasan Sule was accompanied by the Mr. Habibah Aliyu-Barau who is the Board’s Director of Primary School Services, and Architect Monsur Muhammed Sule, the Board’s Director of Fiscal and Project Planning.

Julius Berger Nigeria Plc is a dynamic group of companies, seamlessly expanding horizons from its engineering background into diverse sectors. It harnesses an entrenched culture of excellence, responsibility, courage, and collaboration to sustainably redefine possibilities and shapes industries with ingenuity and unwavering commitment.

ABAVO CHRONICLE ABEJUKOKO VANGUARD ABIA REPORTERS ABIA SUN ABIGBORODO SUN ABRAKA STATESMAN ABUJA ABUJA CHRONICLE

UDUAGHAN CONGRATULATES ENGR. MATTHEW EDEVBIE AS HE BAGS HONORARY DOCTORATE DEGREE* 

 

The Alema of Warri Kingdom, Chief Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan, has congratulated the Group Managing Director of Income Electrix Limited, Engineer Matthew Edevbie on the conferment of a Doctor of Science in Engineering (Honoris Causa) on him by the Michael & Cecilia Ibru University.

 

In a statement on Sunday, Chief Emmanuel Uduaghan who is also the Chief Executive Officer of Webster Group of Companies said the honorary doctorate degree conferred on Edevbie was evidence of his immense contribution to the development of the engineering profession and the power sector as well as human capacity development in Nigeria and across Africa.

 

The prominent chief said Michael & Cecilia Ibru University made the right choice by conferring the honorary doctorate degree on Engineer Edevbie.

 

‘’I am delighted that Engineer Matthew Edevbie has been honoured by the Michael & Cecilia Ibru University in this special way. This is a well-deserved award and highly commendable’’.

 

Edevbie, a seasoned engineer with over 30 years’ cognate experience in various aspects of electrical engineering concept, design, procurement, construction, operations management, maintenance and consulting was given the honour at the university’s 5th convocation ceremony which held on Wednesday, September 6, 2023.

 

Engr. Matthew Edevbie attended several prestigious professional courses and workshops including but not limited to: IESE Business School, University of Navarra, Barcelona, Harvard Business School, John. F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Massachusetts, Wharton Business School, University of Pennsylvania and Lagos Business School.

 

An astute administrator, people manager, Fellow of the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE), a Fellow of the Nigerian Institute of Management and the Nigerian Institute of Management Consultants is a registered member of the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN) and the Nigerian Environmental Society,

 

Edevbie is also an active member of Enterprise Development Services (EDS) of the Lagos Business School. He is the Founder,  GMD/ CEO of Income Electrix Group.