The immediate past Special Adviser to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan
on Niger Delta Affairs, Mr. Kingsley Kuku has denied claims that he is
lobbying the Buhari administration to remain in office as Chairman,
Presidential Amnesty Programme.
Kuku, who spoke to newsmen in Abuja on Saturday, said he was honoured
to have served the nation at the time he did and that he had since
completed his assignment and moved on.
He dismissed claims by a group of ex-agitators in the Niger Delta,
who took up space in some newspapers, alleging that he had intensified
lobby to stay on.
Kuku said there was no way he could have stayed back at the Amnesty
Office after giving his valedictory address to staff and the media and
having clearly stated where he was returning home even before the
handing over of baton on May 29, 2015.
He said, “Kuku has not, is not and does not intend to lobby anyone
directly or subtly to remain in office beyond what has been provided for
under the Nigerian law.
“Having
served as a Special Adviser to President Goodluck Jonathan, who handed
over power to his successor, Muhammadu Buhari, on May 29, 2015, it is
inconceivable that Kuku would still be in the lobby of either President
Buhari or anyone in his yet-to-be-formed cabinet to stay back as the
Chairman of the Presidential Amnesty Office.
“There is no truth whatsoever in the claim by the so-called
ex-agitators that Kuku is lobbying some unnamed top government officials
to stay back as Chairman of the PAO.”
The former presidential aide said it was unfortunate for the
ex-agitators to make spurious allegations against his person, claiming
that none of the allegations was true.
He noted that having been at the forefront of the struggle for many
years to improve the lot of the Niger Delta and his people, it was
uncharitable for some persons, seeking cheap publicity to describe him
as a stranger to the Niger Delta cause.
Kuku also dismissed allegations that he ran the amnesty office as his
personal estate, insisting that the office was regularly scrutinised by
relevant government agencies and the National Assembly.
On the issue of the May salary for ex-militants, Kuku said the salary
was paid into the Amnesty Office Account by the Central Bank of Nigeria
on the eve of the change of government on May 28, 2015.
He explained that he could not have tampered with the money even though he is a major signatory to the account.
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