Drug charges: Decamp to APC and forget extradition, Oyegun tells Buruji Kashamu
Reprieve may be coming the way of the embattled Senator representing
Ogun East, Buruji Kashamu, as the National Chairman of the All
Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Odigie Oyegun has vowed to see to it
that he (Kashamu) is saved from being extradited to the United States of
America (USA) to face trial for his alleged involvement in drug
trafficking.
Senator Kashamu was however said to have been told
in clear terms that he should formally decamp to the APC and accept Ogun
State Governor, Ibikunle Amosun as his leader as the only condition for
the federal government to intervene in his matter.
The Senator
was said to have argued that he should rather be allowed to remain in
PDP and continue to work for the APC, but Oyegun objected, arguing that
the power brokers in the APC, especially Governor Amosun do not trust
him (Kashamu) to that extent, more so that he is also interested in the
Ogun State governorship in 2019.
Sources said Senator Kashamu met
with Chief Oyegun in Abuja on Monday night and he was assured by the
APC national chairman that; “For all that you have done for our party,
and most importantly that the new United States President, Donald Trump
is not friendly with our government, we will resist any attempt to
extradite you.”
Oyegun, who was full of praises for Senator
Kashamu for his roles in ensuring victory for the APC in Edo and Ondo
States governorship elections, was quoted to have said that the moment
Senator Kashamu joins APC, he will ensure that the federal government do
everything within its powers to prevent the Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP) Senator from being extradited to United States.
Our source
disclosed that to assure Senator Kashamu of his seriousness, Chief
Oyegun called the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of
Justice, Abubakar Malami, who also assured that all necessary legal
means will be deployed to frustrate any move by the United States
government to extradite the Senator.
“Senator has assisted our
party and our government greatly. It is partly to his credit that PDP
lost Edo and Ondo States governorship elections and that PDP remained
destabilised. This is a payback time and we will stand by him at this
trying period so as to give other PDP top-shots willing to join our
party the assurance that we will always protect them.
“You can
see what we have done for Chief Orji Uzor Kalu, Senator Joshua Dariye,
and even the Senate President, Bukola Saraki. Now that Saraki has opted
to team up with us and behave well, he now has peace of mind,” the
source quoted the Attorney General to have said.
For 18 years,
Senator Kashamu has remained in the eyes of the storm, being wanted in
the United States for allegedly acting as the kingpin of a drug
smuggling and money laundering ring. It was the same operation that
landed American author Piper Kerman in jail for a year and inspired her
memoir “Orange Is The New Black.”
Kashamu strenuously denies the
charges and claims it’s a case of mistaken identity; he says the US
really wants his late brother, but he has refused to heed calls that he
should visit the United States to clear his name once and for all.
Last week, a United States Appeals Court upheld a ruling against Senator Kashamu.
In an April 2015 filing, Kashamu asked a district court to prevent his “abduction abroad by U.S. authorities.”
The court however dismissed the complaint, and the U.S. Seventh Circuit
Court of Appeals upheld the ruling last Monday. It said United States
agents’ attempt to arrest Kashamu in coordination with local authorities
would not constitute “an attempted abduction
Troubled by this
court judgment, the embattled senator warned yesterday, that before
anybody could succeed to extradite him to the US to face trial for
drug-related offences, “about three, four or five people will die.”
He vowed that any attempt to ‘abduct’ him would be met with violence,
saying he planned to engage the services of members of the Oodua
Peoples’ Congress for protection.
The senator vowed that any
attempt to ‘abduct’ him would be met with violence, and that he planned
to engage the services of members of the Oodua Peoples’ Congress (OPC)
for protection.
He said, “There is no extradition that can be
brought against me again. The only thing they can do is to watch and
catch me on the road; take me to the airport or Cotonou or throw me
inside a vessel and take me through the Atlantic Ocean. But I am not
going to let that happen. I don’t go to the beach, and now, I will go
and hire OPC, may be like 40. I will load them (in my vehicle), because
the day we meet, one has to kill one. That is for sure! One has to kill
one because I am not ready to go anywhere. Before that happens, maybe
about three, four or five people will die.”


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