Author: The Nation

  • 2021 is end of your reign in Anambra – Says Ngige to APGA

    Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, says the dominance of the All Progressive Grand Alliance APGA in Anambra State, will come to the end in 2021.

    The former governor of the state, and Senator who represented Anambra Central senatorial zone, spoke with The Nation at the weekend.

    Read Also: Igbo presidency: Ngige, Sagay disagree on zoning

    He declared that the All Progressives Congress (APC) had made mistakes in the state before and would not allow such to repeat itself again during the forthcoming governorship election in the state.

    Ngige took APGA government in the state to the cleaners, adding that in the party’s many years of leadership everything had collapsed including roads, hospitals education, among others, noting that only the roads his administration built in the state were the only ones standing.

  • Five wedding guests die, several injured In Ekiti accident

    No fewer than five people have lost their lives in an accident along Ado-Akure Road Ekiti State on Saturday.

    Several others were reported to have sustained various degrees of injuries.

    The accident, which involved an 18-seater white Toyota hummer bus with registration number Ekiti LG 05 MUE, occured around 5pm.

    The bus belonging to Ekiti State Market Women, which was reportedly conveying some guests from a wedding reception was said to have suffered brake failure.

    While three of the occupants were said to have died on the spot, two among the injured persons rushed to Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital, Ado Ekiti for medical attention died owing to the severity of the injuries sustained.

    Read Also: Five die in Lagos-Ibadan Expressway accident

    Multiple sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity with The Nation, said the driver of the bus which was on high speed lost control following which the vehicle somersaulted several times.

    According to the sources, three occupants of the bus died on the spot while others sustained injuries.

    They said: “The injured occupants of the vehicle have been taken to hospital for medical attention while the remains of the three dead persons have also been evacuated to the morgue.

    A source at the EKSUTH alleged that “two of the injured occupants rushed for medical attention had died.

    The Police Public Relations Officer, Ekiti State Command, Caleb Ikechukwu, who confirmed the accident, said: “It was a lone fatal accident. Three persons were confirmed dead while others sustained various degrees of injuries”.

    According to Ikechukwu, it was alleged by some eyes witnesses that the driver was driving on a high speed, so he lost control of the vehicle and it somersaulted for a number of times”.

    The police spokesperson confirmed that the injured person had been moved to hospital for treatment and the dead to the morgue.

  • Bayelsa PDP convenes stakeholders’ meeting

    The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has scheduled an expanded meeting of the State Caucus of the party and the Elders Advisory Council for 4pm on Sunday.

    Read Also: No division in Bayelsa PDP, says Diri

    The state party Chairman, Cleopas Moses, said the meeting would discuss the issue of the preparedness of the party for the election, strategies, approval of the campaign council and team and other topical issues.

    “The meeting will also receive a brief from the party’s candidate, Senator Douye Diri, on the issue of running mate,” he said.

  • Oshoala scores brace in Barcelona rout

    Asisat Oshoala ended her three-match goal drought in the Spanish Primera Iberdrola this season with a brace in Barcelona’s 6-1 comeback thrashing of Atletico Madrid.

    Saturday’s encounter was the fourth for the three-time African Women’s Footballer of the Year in all competitions this season after her stunning pre-season form, netting eight goals in five games.

    After being denied by the woodwork this season, the Nigeria international scored in both halves to ensure Lluis Cortes’ ladies bounced back from a 1-1 draw at Rayo Vallecano in style.

    Read Also: ASISAT OSHOALA: I want to change world of girl-child

    The 24-year-old broke her Primera Iberdrola duck this term with a calm finish as she scored the hosts’ fourth goal of the game on the brink of half time.

    Two minutes after the restart, the Super Falcons star grabbed her second of the match to make it 5-1 for Barcelona before being replaced by Claudia Pina in the 73rd minute.

    Her brace means she has now scored 21 goals in 19 matches in all competitions for Barcelona since she teamed up with the Spanish giants in January.

    The win helped Barcelona return to the summit of the log with seven points from three matches and they host Juventus in the Champions League Round of 32 reserve fixture on Wednesday.

  • I won’t resign, daring Bayelsa Speaker tells Dickson, others

    Bayelsa Speaker, Tonye Isenah, has vowed not to resign his position contrary to the directive of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leaders including Governor Seriake Dickson.

    Isenah came under intense pressure to relinquish his office in the House of Assembly to enable his party balance political equations ahead of the November 16 governorship election.

    The speaker was said to have reached an agreement with Dickson and other PDP leaders to vacate his office in the event that Senator Douye Diri, who hails from his Kolokuma-Opokuma Local Government Area, emerged the candidate of the PDP for the election.

    Following the emergence of Diri, PDP leaders were said to have asked Isenah to surrender his position to another lawmaker from Southern Ijaw to enable the party garner votes from the council.

    But Isenah was said to have insisted that he would not let go of his position before the governorship poll.

    The Speaker in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media, Aotendeike Boloigha, said he had served the PDP faithfully and had yet to see how his resignation would help the party in the forthcoming poll.

    Read Also: Bayelsa governorship: fresh crisis hits PDP as pressure mounts on Speaker to resign

    He also denied the insinuations that Dickson was after him because he failed to carry out the governor’s request to initiate an impeachment proceeding against his Deputy, Rear Admiral John Jonah (retd).

    Isenah was compelled to officially react on the matter following a social media post by his Senior Special Assistant in New Media, Mr. Dickson Didi Opuene, that the speaker was undergoing the travail for refusing the governor’s request.

    Opuene in the post that went viral wrote: ““First they asked him to impeach the deputy governor for no just reason and he refused, now they want him to resign just to perfect their aim and plan. No way, he will not resign, they should come and impeach him and lets see.

    “Rt. Hon. Tonye Emmanuel Isenah remains the Speaker of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly and he has not resigned or will ever contemplate of doing so, please disregard any rumour of his resignation”.

    Debunking Opuene’s claims, Isenah described the posts as generated and authored by over ambitious politicians taking advantage of the present situation in the assembly.

    Isenah said the claims were not only untrue but misleading and aimed at heating up the system.

    He said at no time had the governor imagined anything relating to impeachment of his deputy, whom he constantly described as a dependable ally adding that Dickson had never given such directive to the assembly.

    He said: “My stand on the issue of resignation has been that I have served the party PDP and  Govermor Seriake Dickson faithfully and with unflinching loyalty and I will not resign as doing so at this time will not in anyway help the party succeed in the November 16, governorship elections.

    “I call on my teeming supporters to distance  themselves from making unnecessary statements and posts in the social media. When the need arises, I will make official statements on his stand”.

  • FG charges Sowore with money laundering, treasonable felony

    The Federal Government on Friday charged the convener of #RevolutionNow protest,  Omoyele Sowore, with treasonable felony and money laundering.

    Sowore, promoter of an online media platform – Sahara Reporters, who was also  presidential candidate of African Action Congress (AAC) in the last presidential election, is charged along with Olawale Bakare, also known as Mandate,  in a seven-count charge filed by the office of the Attornery General of the Federation.

    Sowore is currently being detained by the Department of State Services (DSS) upon an order of the Federal High Court, Abuja given on August 8, 2019, permitting  the DSS  to detain him for 45 days in the first instance, following the security agency’s claim that he was involved in acts of terrorism and plotted to topple the government; allegations he has since denied.

    The charge filed yesterday was signed on behalf of the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN), by Aminu Alilu, a Chief State Counsel in the Department of Public Prosecutions of the Federal Ministry of Justice.

    Read Also: Where are Sowore, Ohimai, Dadiyata?

    The two defendants are, in the charge, accused of committing conspiracy to commit treasonable felony in breach of section 516 of the Criminal Code Act by allegedly staging “a revolution campaign on September 5, 2019 aimed at removing the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

    They are also alleged to have  actually committed  the offence of reasonable felony in breach of Section, 4(1)(c) of the Criminal Code Act, by using the platform of Coalition for Revolution, in August 2019 in Abuja, Lagos and other parts of Nigeria, to stagedthe #RevolutionNow protest allegedly aimed at removing the President.

    Sowore was, in the charge, accused of involvement in cybercrime offences in violation of section 24(1)(b) of the Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention) Act, by “knowingly” sending “messages by means of press interview granted on Arise Television network, “which you knew to be false, for the purpose of causing insult, enmity, hatred and ill-will on the person of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

    The state aso accused Sowore of money laundering offences in breach of section 15(1) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2011 by allegedly transferring by means of swift wire various sums of money from his United Bank of Africa Plc account with number 3002246104  into Sahara Reporters Media Foundation’s account with Guaranty Trust Bank in order to conceal the origin of the funds.

    He was alleged to have allegedly transfered $19,975 on April 2, 2019; $20,475 on May 21, 2019, $16,975 on June 27, 2019, and another $16,975 on July 16, 2019.

    Listed as exhibits to be relied upon by the prosection are Sowore’s written statement, transcripts of his statement, video recordings, audio recordings, statements of bank accounts, media publication and “any other exhibits the prosecution may later supply in its additional proof of evidence.”

    The prosecution also listed six specific witnesses to be called.

    They are Paul Clement, Moses Amadi, Cyril Odawn, Paul Okafor, UBA employee, GTB employee and “any other witness or witnesses to be supplied later in the additional proof of evidence.”

    The DSS arrested Sowore in Lagos on August 2, 2019, following his call for revolution in a protest he organised to take place in some major cities on August 5, 2019.

  • Insecurity: Group calls on Buhari to tighten security in borders

    Perturbed by the spate of insecurity in Nigeria, a socio-cultural organization, Yoruba Koya Initiative, has advised President Muhammad Buhari to tighten the security in the borders in a order to tackle the prevailing insurgency.

    The group said doing so will also boost the nation’s economic activities.

    The President of Yoruba Koya Initiative, Mr. Sunday Akinyemi, gave the advice during empowerment programme and inauguration of Senator Ajayi Boroffice and Chief Olalekan Folorunsho as Patron and Alatunse of the initiative, in Osogbo, Osun State capital.

    Akinyemi, who said one of the objectives of Yoruba Koya Initiative is to defend the interest of Yoruba people, expressed the readiness of the group to work with other security agencies to combat insurgency and other crimes in the country.

    He noted that the peace and unity of Nigeria remains sacrosanct and must not be negotiated for any other interests, urging President Buhari to mount surveillance in the zones of the country to check the proliferation of arms that made the nation insecure, check the influx of bandits and kidnappers migrated from neighbouring country.

    Read Also: Adopt multi-level policing to address insecurity in Nigeria, Educationist urges FG

    President of Yoruba Koya Initiative commended Mr.  President over the border closure policy, of his administration, stressing that the decision has further demonstrated Buhari’s desire to secure the nation from insurgents.

    However, he urged the President to take proactive measures in eradicating unemployment, suggesting that the Federal Government should give priority to youth empowerment, this according to him would help in reducing the menace of insecurity in the country.

    Speaking, the Olowu of Owukuta, Hammed Adekunle Oyelude Makama, commended Yoruba Koya Initiative for contributing  to the development of the country.

    Oba Makama who described the socio-cultural group as a strong and powerful initiative, said he was very glad by the empowerment Initiative of the group.

    He said Yoruba Koya Initiative has distinguished itself by introducing empowerment programmes apart from the security functions of the group.

    He, therefore, urged the group not to relent in their efforts toward making life better to the Yorubas just as he advised them no to engage in any act capable of tarnishing their good image.

    Seriki Fulani in Osun State, Alhaji Adamu-Mina Yahaya, who spoke on behalf of Hausa, said there is need for more holistic intervention to arrest “this felonious situation in.the.country.”

  • How ex-PDP gov’s deal with Buhari’s men went awry

    A former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governor in one of the northern states is biting his finger after a deal he struck with some foot soldiers of President Muhammadu Buhari in the build-up to the 2019 presidential election went awry.

    As part of their efforts to ensure victory for Buhari in the election, the President’s men were said to have approached the former PDP governor, asking him to support their candidate’s re-election bid with a promise that the former governor would be appointed as the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)

    With the end of the first term of the Central Bank governor, Godwin Emefiele, only a few months away, the former governor considered the proposal a good and realistic deal. He had no problem agreeing to it, particularly because he believed that his pedigree eminently qualified him for the position.

    His moves thereafter were said to have aroused the suspicion of his party members but he kept assuring them that he had no deal whatsoever with the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Presidential Villa in particular.

    The election came and APC won the state hands down. His party, the PDP, was livid, with many of the party’s top shots accusing him of betrayal. Today, he is not in the good books of the PDP and the powers that be in the party while the APC and the Villa have since sidetracked him with Buhari renewing Emefiele’s appointment.

    Now an outcast in the PDP, the former governor is said to be feeling terribly bad, wondering if he had not been used and dumped.

  • How Masari’s dialogue caged banditry, kidnapping in Katsina

    The resolve by Governor Aminu Bello Masari of Katsina State to engage bandits and kidnappers in the state in dialogue appears to have paid off as evident in the quick return of peace and reconciliation in the state, AUGUSTINE OKEZIE writes.

    The option of dialogue as a way out of the insecurity that held Katsina State by the jugular was first blown open by Governor Aminu Bello Masari on August 29 when he engaged representatives of bandits, killer herdsmen and community elders from the eight frontline local government areas in the state with a view to finding a permanent solution to the incessant attacks and kidnappings that have gripped the state for some time.

    The meeting, which was held at the state secretariat, also had in attendance the heads of security agencies, the Deputy Governor Alhaji Manir Yakubu, traditional rulers and districts heads, led by the Emir of Katsina, Alhaji Abdulmuminu Kabir Usman; the Secretary to the State Government Alhaji Mustapha Inuwa; transition committee chairmen of the affected front line local government areas and representatives of the association of cattle rearers popularly called Myyeti Allah.

    The Nation gathered at the meeting that attendance by representatives of the bandits was made possible by the recent amnesty declared by North West governors at a recent meeting held in the state.

    Masari, who spoke in Hausa, had warned at the meeting that the insecurity rocking the affected local government areas (LGAs) in the state had become embarrassing to both the state government and President Muhammadu Buhari, who is also an indigene of the state, adding: “Enough is enough!”

    He further restated the commitment of his government to deploy whatever means possible in dealing decisively and ruthlessly with the activities of bandits and kidnappers in the state. He also expressed the belief that securing the lives and property of Katsina citizens lies not only in the hands of government or security personnel but also in everyone.

    A stronger indication of his willingness to dialogue irrespective of location or environment was clearly indicated in his decision to meet with bandits wherever they invited him to, since he was not afraid to meet with anyone that could end the problem

    He said: “As a leader, I must find the solution to the problem of my people, so that if today I die, I know how to defend myself before God. I will not allow this to continue. Enough is enough. I have directed the security operatives to take all necessary measures to change the narrative on insecurity in the state by any means necessary.”

    Tortuous journey to dialogue

    Travelling to the hideouts and dubious strongholds of bandits to dialogue with them was one of the most challenging and daring journeys Governor Aminu Bello Masari had undertaken. Not a few people in the state had expected that arrangements would be made to bring the bandits to the comfort zone of the governor. But they were disappointed because the governor rather chose to go into the forests, wade through bumpy and rough terrains, sometimes finding his jeep stuck in the mud on the way to Faskari-Geza and Banda in Faskari and Danmusa Local Government Areas.

    The first day of the dialogue meeting, which held at Gbagegi Primary School, Dankolo for Dandume and Sabwa local government areas, witnessed a heavy downpour which threatened to disrupt it, but the governor and other top government functionaries at the meeting deployed umbrellas and other improvised covers to endure the weather condition.

    Although the journey to the respective strongholds of the bandits was definitely tortuous, it presented a firsthand opportunity for the governor to appreciate the challenges and living conditions of the people and the need to urgently address them

    Governor’s appeal/message to bandits and kidnappers

    Masari’s message to the bandits at each meeting point was consistently hinged on the bandits realising the futility of their engagements and isolation in the bush, the need to fear God in dealing with their brothers and community, embracing peace and concord and not daring the ability of government to win the war against banditry and kidnapping should they persist.

    He further told the people who turned out in their numbers that it is better they abandon the bush and killing of their brothers and embrace peace and amnesty.

    He said: “If you gather all the cattle, get all the money in this world and shed innocent blood, there is yet no benefit. You can never defeat government. If you kill 10 soldiers, government will bring 100 more and also bring thousands of guns. We will look into your requests, build roads and schools and ensure better quality of lives.’’

    Governor Masari further assured residents of the state that the dialogue would bring peace to Katsina State, North-West and Nigeria, saying: “We believed that we have started well and there is nothing better than peace.”

    While restating the commitment of his government to rendering assistance to the Fulani people living in forest areas, he urged them to embrace dialogue and live peacefully with one another in their respective territories. He promised to rebuild the schools and other decayed infrastructure and address other requests they had made.

    Complaints/grievances of repentant bandits

    Repentant bandits who appeared at the dialogue meetings with Governor Masari at each point, never ceased to accuse security operatives, particularly SARS and the Nigerian Army, of extorting money and cattle from them in exchange for their support and supply of weapons.

    Idris Yayande, one of the group leaders of the bandits, told the governor that large scale extortion perpetrated by the security operatives had seriously undermined efforts by any government to address insecurity challenges in the state and country.

    He said: “Some soldiers, policemen and other security agents are fuelling banditry, kidnapping and other heinous crimes bedevilling the state through large scale extortion in return for supporting us.”

    Earlier, the leader of the Volunteers (Yan-sakai) in the state, Lawal Tsoho, had accused the army, police and other security agencies in the state of fuelling bandits’ attacks on innocent civilians.

    He said: “Soldiers, policemen and other security agencies and politicians in the state are against the ongoing dialogue between the bandits and the state government because they are benefiting from it. I have all the evidence to prove my statement.”

    He urged the state to help facilitate the release of their members arrested by security agencies and detained in various prisons across the country.

    He said: “Some of our members were apprehended in villages across the state and detained for numerous years without committing offence.”

    One of the bandits, whose name was not immediately known, said: “We have some complaints. Our biggest complaint is that some of our members were arrested and detained in different prisons across the state. Government should release them before dialogue.

    “They are: Alhaji Lawal Bandu, Ibrahim Nabutamu, Sani Marji, Sani Zafi, Lawal Mairuwa. And and there are some of our children that were arrested by the army in Layin-Mahuta last year: Ali, Adamu and Abdurrahman. And since then, nobody has told us where they are and what happened to them.

    “So, we are pleading with the state government to release them to us. We don’t have anybody in our custody now. We promised before that nobody will farm within this area. But because of the dialogue, we have surrendered. If you hear of any attack, it is not from us.”

    Another of the repentant bandits, Haruna Mazge, blamed the prevailing security problem in the state on farmers who blocked cattle routes, saying 70 per cent of the cattle routes have been blocked by farmers.

    He said: “Farmers in the state have blocked all cattle routes. Even roads that our cattle do pass, they blocked them. If you look at our problem, consider that of farmers too,” he said.

    He, however, said the effort of the state government to tackle the security challenges in the state had prompted some of them to repent from their deadly attacks.

    Mazge further called on other bandits whom he said were terrorising villages in the state to surrender their arms to sustain the peace.

    He said: “This forest that we are hiding from is not beyond government’s power. Since the governor has forgiven us, we should not betray government in this dialogue by attacking any village in the state again.”

    Another bandit, Yahaya Fulani Dangogo, who appeared to set the tone for the dilemma of the Fulani, described them as browbeaten and left to despair in the circumstances they found themselves in.

    While listing their grievances as demanded by Governor Masari, which warranted their descent into banditry, he mentioned deprivation, denials and isolation, deceit by those in authority, including traditional rulers, DPOs and security operatives, including the Yansakai and SARS, and several other members of the political class.

    He said: “Yansakai and several other security operatives’ attacks and harassments are never checked and no action is taken. If you are killed, no one asks a question; your people will cry until they are tired.

    “I am begging the governor that any group that does not follow Islamic teachings should be dissolved. We don’t want armchair leadership. Every appointee of government must be transparent and up an doing.’’

    Swap agreements between government and bandits

    A major fallout from the various dialogue meetings held between the governor and the bandits was the offer to swap victims of banditry with the release of arrested bandits between both sides.

    The leader of one of the gangs, Alhaji Mansuni, who spoke on behalf of others, told Governor Masari at one of the dialogue meetings held at Angwa Tsamia Primary School, Birni Gogo, in Faskari Local Government Area, that the groups were pleased with his presence and drive to ensure peaceful coexistence in the state and the country. And to reciprocate his gesture of freeing their kinsmen and fellow bandits who were in the custody of security operatives, they were renouncing banditry and would immediately begin to free the abductees in their camps.

    He further told the governor that fear of insecurity, deprivation and indiscriminate arrest and killing of herdsmen by security agents led them to arm themselves and engage in banditry.

    He said: “We are happy with your coming to visit us right in our hideouts. We the Fulani have challenges which government should look into, including construction of roads, education, infrastructure and social living conditions.

    “Again, indiscriminate arrest by security agencies and extortion by members of SARS, as well the attitude of the Hausa in the rural communities, who refused to coexist with the Fulani, requires we all sit down and iron out our differences.”

    The state government also acceded to the swap arrangement by offering to release those arrested.

    Speaking on efforts to implement the terms of the agreement, the governor said those in detention in Katsina and Kano states had already been brought back to Katsina as the first step in the release process.

    He said: “They can talk to them now. But what we are saying is that we have hundreds of people being detained for ransom, so we want these people back. It is easier for them to bring them back than we bringing them back because all of them are detained in Zamfara.”

    Latest reports indicate that the swap agreement has begun with daily exchange of releases from both parties.

    Remediation efforts by government

    Government plans to reconstruct and reintegrate repentant bandits and herdsmen were unfolded during the dialogue meetings where the governor insisted that with the return of peace in the areas, development activities and the provision of needed infrastructure like roads, education and commerce would no longer be delayed.

    He said: “If there is peace, most of the things they requested are things we have already started under the first amnesty programme. So, if peace returns to the areas we have visited so far, we assure that developmental projects will continue to come.

    “It is most important. You can see the large turnout of Fulani community leaders, those leaving in the forest and those living on the fringes of the forest. And for them to agree to come here, all of them, including the farming community, to discuss and talk peace, that is the most important thing.

    “So, if they agree together in harmony because this is the foundation, we are starting with the bottom up approach. With the communities, the neighbours living peacefully with one  another, we can transit to local government and state levels.”

    “So, I do believe that we are on the right course, and we will follow up on all the promises we made to them, especially regarding those that have been detained for years without being charged to court. Why are you detaining people for years without going to court and without granting them bail?

    “We intend definitely to bring them out on bail and hand them over to their respective communities and watch developments in the next one month in these areas.’’

  • Fayemi, Wike’s newfound friendship set tongues wagging

    There is no gainsaying the fact that recent weeks have been challenging for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The opposition party has been battling with cold since one of its  pillar of strength , perceived financier and governor of Rivers State, Nyesom Wike, sneezed.

    The party has suffered one sleepless night after the other since the Rivers State governor stormed out of the venue of the presidential primaries of the party from which Alhaji Atiku Abubakar emerged the presidential candidate of the PDP in the build-up to the 2019 general elections. Since then, he has taken various other actions that left the minders of the party worried.

    For instance, in the aftermath of the National Assembly elections where Hon. Kingsley Chinda, the candidate he and other party chieftains supported for the minority leader’s seat in the House of Representatives lost to Hon. Ndidi Elumelu, Wike roundly condemned the panel set up by the party to investigate the ‘coup’ against the party, describing it as corrupt.

    Then came the dismissal of Atiku’s petition in the case he filed at the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal against Buhari’s re-election. While the leaders and chieftains of PDP kicked against the judgment, Wike openly congratulated Buhari. Wike’s move sparked anger in PDP’s camp as chieftains of the party called his loyalty to question.

    In the midst of these came the rapport the Rivers State governor developed with his Ekiti State counterpart, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, since Fayemi took his stand on Wike’s side in the latter’s alleged demolition of a mosque in Port Harcourt. Fayemi has since followed this up with a visit to Wike in Port Harcourt where he also commissioned projects.

    The development has left many wondering if Fayemi’s actions were impelled by his position as the Chairman of Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) or a prelude to an agenda that is yet to unfold. The more curious observers are even asking if Fayemi is the one anointed to midwife Wike’s final parting of ways with the PDP as  is being speculated in some quarters.