Author: The Nation

  • In Sudan, U.S. policies paved the way for war

    In Sudan, U.S. policies paved the way for war

    By Justin Lynch

    Fighting in Sudan began on April 15 after years of tension between the country’s two power brokers: Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the country’s de facto leader and head of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), and Gen. Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, widely known as Hemeti, who leads the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF). Running street battles started in Khartoum and spread across the country. Residents report that low-flying airplanes strafe the ground. Reports of horrendous human rights violations are starting to emerge.

    Fighting in Darfur resulted in the deaths of three aid workers with the World Food Programme. Markets in Darfur have reportedly been burned down. United Nations and NGO compounds have been invaded and looted across the country. The European Union’s ambassador to Khartoum was assaulted in his home by soldiers.

    Sudan is facing a state collapse similar to Yemen’s. The SAF launched an intense bombing campaign in Khartoum and may soon take the upper hand in the capital thanks to their superior air power. The air force has been a decisive element in Sudan’s wars, especially beginning in 2003, when the SAF and the precursor to the RSF, the janjaweed, fought on the same side during the war in Darfur.

    The power of Sudan’s air force is why RSF operations in the early hours of the conflict focused on taking control of airports across the country so SAF air operations would be grounded. It has only partially worked. However, it may take weeks to dislodge the RSF from residential buildings in Khartoum that they have converted into military installations. At the same time, it will be difficult to defeat the RSF in their tribal homeland of Darfur, especially with their ability to mobilize soldiers from neighboring Chad. Sudan’s descent into a full-scale civil war appears more likely by the hour.

    Read Also: Sudan crisis: Egypt refuses 700 stranded Nigerians passage

    What may emerge out of a civil war is a conflict that also sucks in the entire region and some global powers. Egyptian soldiers who were training with the SAF were arrested by the RSF in the early hours of the conflict. Diplomats fear that Cairo may be preparing to support the SAF. There are reports of tribal mobilization along the border of Chad and Sudan, the traditional homeland of Hemeti. At least part of the RSF’s information operation has been based in the United Arab Emirates.

    The UAE has been a key ally for Hemeti during the former’s war in Libya and Yemen. The UAE also benefits from financial ties to Hemeti’s businesses. Global Witness reports that the UAE has also been a key supplier of military equipment to the RSF. Russian Wagner Group mercenaries trained RSF troops and had officials stationed inside some of their bases. To halt the conflict, the leaders of South Sudan, Djibouti, and Kenya have offered to mediate.

    Perhaps the only powers that have a limited ability to shape events in Sudan are the United States and its Western allies. To try to prevent the bleak outlook of state disintegration in Sudan, the U.S. government is working with Arab states—namely Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE—but these U.S. allies are on opposing sides in Sudan. However, Western diplomats have told me they understand that a return to the pre-April 15 status quo is becoming increasingly unlikely as the fighting continues. The absence of U.S. influence comes just four years after a high point for Washington’s hopes in Sudan.

    Months of protests in early 2019 led to a military coup against former dictator Omar al-Bashir. It appeared that three decades of U.S. policy to support democracy could finally bear fruit. But the United States and other Western nations pressured civilian protesters and the military to form a transitional government. The eventual transitional constitution meant that elections were scheduled to take place in 2022.

    If there was a moment when hope for democracy was lost in Sudan, it was when this transitional constitution was agreed to. The military was allowed to run the country for the first part of the transition. “We still have not achieved what we are fighting for,” Sara Abdelgalil, then a spokesperson for the Sudanese Professionals Association, which helped organize the protests, told Foreign Policy in 2019. “Omar al-Bashir is not there, but the regime itself is still there. Objective one has not been achieved. Objective two has not been achieved, which is a civilian government. It’s like having a diversion in the middle of your journey.”

    Burhan was the head of state and was trusted with following through on his promise of democracy.

    Immediately when the transitional period began, it was apparent that Western hopes for democracy were far-fetched.

    I interviewed the new civilian prime minister, Abdalla Hamdok, in a house that was given to him by a prominent Sudanese family because Burhan and the military initially refused to even give him a place to stay. The core elements of Sudan’s protest movement in 2019, Sudan’s labor unions, lost power due to infighting. Civilian political parties squabbled over power. Reforms that Hamdok wanted to make were blocked by Burhan and Hemeti. The illusion of any civilian authority ended in 2021, when Hamdok was removed in a military coup. The military’s promise to hand over power to civilians proved hollow. The U.S.-backed transition revealed itself as fundamentally flawed.

    Perhaps the greatest example of U.S. delusions was Washington’s insistence on calling Sudan’s transition “civilian-led.” There was nothing about Sudan’s transition that was civilian-led. The 2019 transitional constitution laid out that the military would lead for the first 21 months of the transition, followed by civilians for the next 18 months.

    Although Hamdok was a civilian prime minister, it was a mostly powerless job. Still, the U.S. government insisted on this phrase, even when the military handover date to civilians was repeatedly delayed. U.S. officials told me that they knew the term was more aspirational than descriptive. But the linguistic acrobatics Washington employed suggested officials believed that they could simply call Sudan a democracy and it would become one.

    It’s not clear if the U.S. or Western governments could have prevented the 2021 coup against Hamdok. The transitional constitution that was backed by the United States was a bad deal. However, the ensuing U.S. and Western policies in Sudan directly contributed to the violence that we see today. It is a story of Western peacebuilding and its limits.

    Sudan’s feuding generals bear primary responsibility for the current fighting in Sudan. But the precipitating event of the current war in Sudan was a reconciliation agreement and security sector reform plan that was pushed by the United States and the U.N. mission in Sudan. Immediately after the coup against Hamdok, the United States and the U.N. revitalized the plan. It meant returning to a version of the failed 2019 constitution and trusting the military leaders to keep their promises.

    The basic idea of the security sector reform was to unify the SAF and RSF into a single army. It is difficult to estimate each force’s size. The SAF have around 100,000 soldiers, while the RSF have a smaller standing army of anywhere between 30,000 and 50,000 fighters but a large reserve force because they can mobilize tribal allies.

    Negotiations were held for months trying to get the two sides to agree on a path forward. The problem was that neither Burhan nor Hemeti wanted to give up the power that he’d accrued. The plan became a pressure cooker. “It became a real shit show with all the participants being real amateurs,” a Western diplomat in Khartoum told me after one of the negotiation workshops between the SAF and RSF. “Diplomats here and headquarters think one-dimensionally.”

    The outcome that we see of the plan was predictable, in part because it is a repeat of history. The peacemaking effort was a reproduction of agreements that were made in South Sudan in 2013 and 2016. Those also led to civil wars.

    In his excellent book When Peace Kills Politics, Sharath Srinivasan details how international peacemaking in Sudan and South Sudan has contributed to these types of civil wars. “[P]eacemaking—because of how its ways of working inevitably collide with the politics of a civil war—can risk reproducing logics of violence,” he writes.

    The security sector reform in Sudan, as it has elsewhere, created a competition that incentivized Hemeti and Burhan to build up their forces. It also meant that both men would have to be placed under civilian control, which was in neither’s interest. The generals publicly committed to reform and democracy, but it seems the only people who believed them were U.S. and U.N. officials.

    Diplomats have told me that they face limited tools to stop the violence in Sudan. The United States and other nations are promoting a humanitarian cease-fire that allows civilians to seek safety and collect food, but it has not been fully honored so far. Putting pressure on Egypt and the UAE would be critical to avoid a regional conflict and to press for a humanitarian cease-fire so civilians can escape. An intense effort to evacuate U.S. citizens may come soon. But once the current crisis is over, there needs to be a reckoning that U.S. and Western policy has not only failed to bring democracy but contributed to Sudan’s collapse.

    It’s not clear if Washington is ready. Once fighting began on April 15, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken repeated U.S. delusions on Sudan: “This is a real opportunity to finally carry forward the civilian-led transition.”

    •This article was first published in www.foreignpolicy.com

  • Kogi governorship: Melaye’s antecedents leave kinsmen in dilemma

    Kogi governorship: Melaye’s antecedents leave kinsmen in dilemma

    As Kogi residents prepare to elect a new governor on November 11, the Okun (Yoruba) people in the Kogi West Senatorial District are in a dilemma over the candidate to adopt between their son and candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Senator Dino Melaye, and the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Ahmed Usman-Ododo.
    It ordinarily would have been a straightforward decision for them since their son is in the race, except that they are not impressed with the attitude and carriage of the former member of the National Assembly, – especially during his time as a member of the House of Representatives.
    Okun leaders are said not to be too comfortable with the candidacy of Melaye on account of what one of them termed his embarrassing attitude during his time in both chambers of the National Assembly as he engaged his counterparts in the hallowed chambers in physical combat on many occasions, while his escapades as a senator, particularly his dramatic engagements with law enforcement agents, is still leaving a sour taste in their mouths.

    Read Also: Breaking: Masked policemen whisk away Senator Dino Melaye


    “Considering the undignifying ways he conducted himself first as a member of the House of Representatives and then as a senator, we are worried about the kind of governor he would make if he becomes one. Yet many of them feel that his emergence as the candidate of PDP is the best opportunity we have as a people to produce the state’s governor for the first time,” a prominent Okun leader said.
    He added: “There is no Igala candidate in the leading parties and that leaves us with Ododo as the only option to Melaye. But Ododo is an Igbira man from Kogi Central like the outgoing governor. Voting him in would mean that the Igbira would be occupying the governorship seat for 16 years while the Igala had ruled the state since 1999 before Yahaya Bello ascended the seat in circumstances occasioned by the sudden death of former Governor Abubakar Audu after winning the governorship election in 2016.”
    The Okun leader also recalled that Melaye failed to fulfill some of the promises he made to them to secure their votes in the elections he won previously and there are fears that he may not be a governor that keeps his promises.
    “But we are meeting and consulting as the election draws near, praying that God will guide us on the path to tread in the next dispensation,” he said.

  • Giovanni Di Lorenzo

    Giovanni Di Lorenzo

    Euro 2020 champion with Italy, a Knight of the Italian Republic and now Serie A winner with Napoli, captain Di Lorenzo’s success came relatively late in his football career after climbing from the lower reaches of the game to its very summit.

    In 2017 Di Lorenzo, who will turn 30 in August, was playing with Matera, a team on the sole of the Italian boot and firmly in the boondocks of third-tier Serie C. Five years later and he has started every Serie A and Champions League match in a remarkable season for Italy’s best team, netting four times and providing six assists from right-back.

  • Osun APC: Hope rekindled?

    Osun APC: Hope rekindled?

    On Monday, May 1, 2023, the immediate past governor of Osun State, Alhaji Adegboyega Oyetola inaugurated “an 11-man committee to stimulate, revamp, restructure and reposition the All Progressives Congress (APC), Osun State Chapter”. Nigerians wish the Professor Isaac Adewole-led Committee well in the onerous tasks ahead.

    That said, there’s a Yoruba adage, which says: ‘Bi omode ba subu, yio wo iwaju, bi agbalagba ba subu, yio wo ehin’ (Upon falling, a youngster looks ahead – for help; but an elder looks back – for the cause. For Osun APC, it can only look back with a view to unraveling what has led the party to this sorry pass and use the results therefrom to prepare a political broth in agreement with the dreams of its founding fathers. Already, accusations and counter-accusations have started flying all over the place like loose papers, with the Speaker of the Osun State House of Assembly, Timothy Owoeye, setting the stage for what to expect in the days ahead. Hear ‘Mr. Speaker’ at the inauguration: “Some of our party members went to Ibadan to hold conspiracy meetings with PDP. We know that and at the appropriate time, we will expose them.” With this somewhat startling revelation, one can only hope that the panel would remain true to its mission. Thankfully, the erudite professor has vowed that it would “propose ideas and strategies to heal” its members’ “wounds as a progressive family and usher in a new era for the APC in Osun State.” So, Nigerians wait to see how it goes!

    Across the ages, genuine reconciliation has been found to be associated with three factors: genuine fact-finding, vertical and horizontal reconciliation and sacrificial humility from concerned parties, or factions. With the painted scenario, Osun APC seems to have been given a unique second chance; and it will need the second chance for that matter! What remains is to take the fullest advantage of the emergence of a vigorous political party that will start giving others sleepless nights, because, ceteris paribus, Osun APC will be the party to beat in the next four years; and Adewole’s Committee has a big role to play in this, going forward!

    Now to the meat of the matter! There is a critical issue of social trust that can be traced back to the social capital of the APC as a political party. Unfortunately, the social capital is, as we speak, in tatters. The social trust is also lean. So, Nigerians have to begin by calibrating the measure of social trust, no matter how small and no matter how little! These days, when we hear the name, ‘Osun APC’, what readily comes to mind are figures of conflictual personalities, a situation that has so far made reconciliation more difficult! What is wrong ab initio is that strange bedfellows came together to form APC as a party out of convenience. Nothing tested! Nothing affirmed! Characters and pedigrees were never verified! The progressive portion of the mix is a different kettle of fish entirely: it tries to hold on to all that appears appealing to the masses. In the end, it stands for nothing. It confuses itself and those who religiously follow it, thinking it is for everybody when indeed it is for nobody but itself; nothing but an indecisive idealism!

    Read Also: Osun: ‘Oyetola never took any bank loan while in office’

    This brings us to the composition of the party supporters which is in dire need of a critical examination. There are those who are there merely as bandwagon effects. There are those who love the founders of the party who they hold and treat as gods. There are those who are swayed by the idealism of the party. And there are those who have nothing to allude to. They are just caught in the vortex of change. Apparently, these categories of people create waves in the society but, when such waves are misread or misunderstood, they dovetail into other things. For instance, ‘The Osun Progressives’, aka TOP, allegedly professed to have helped the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) to install Ademola Adeleke as the governor of Osun in 2022. Since its own version of the internal wrangling could not be resolved; and, since it reportedly preferred to have somebody else rather than the will of the party, what transpired could only be defined as antiparty will; and it is wrong in political participation!

    For the other side, the slogans, ‘awa la wa n’be’ (we are in power and in control) and ‘a o gbe e sile mo’ (we are no longer relinquishing power) predispositions are antidemocratic. As such, they should be dealt with as unacceptable slogans – if and where they exist – by the managers and/or handlers of the party in the state.

    Taken together, the tragic truth is that Osun APC has become a fertile ground for political tutelage. The party, as it is, is troubled, with members deeply divided along only-God-knows-why lines? Confidence is at sea and only a genuine reconciliation can heal its wounds. All things considered, the question is: is the Adewole-led Committee up to the task?

    Let no one be deceived, the political situation today in Osun is in a faux pas; meaning, it could change tomorrow! Therefore, let those who are rejoicing at the current travails of Osun APC watch it! Those who are hoping that it is dead have got themselves set up for a shocker, for the party will not only bounce back stronger but also possess the attributes of a conquering party without prisoners. So it was a few years ago! So it will be in the next few years ad infinitum! This is the only outcome that will justify the dissipation of the party ab initio. The emergence of a stronger Osun APC will reveal that it must have learnt its lessons and has adjusted accordingly. Of course, that makes it a living party. That’s taken for granted that the machinery of intraparty relations is well-oiled and running. If the machinery is oiled, it will run; and all kudos to the managers of the party. 

    Adewole has promised “a credible pathway for reconciliation and rehabilitation of the party structure, administration and activities in Osun State.” In the course of engendering “a more potent” party “in the Omoluabi state” therefore, nothing should deviate from the natural formation of party membership, if Osun APC is not to start dealing with unexpected consequences again. It is not enough to form or rebuild a political party, the best and the most important thing is the avoidance of antiparty and ‘I-follow-Paul-I-follow-Apollos’ tendencies, two situations that have so far brought Osun APC to its knees.

    According to Albert Speer, a Minister in Adolf Hitler’s government, “there is a special trap for every holder of power … His favour is so desirable to his subordinates that they will sue for it by every means possible. Servility becomes endemic among his entourage who compete amongst themselves in their show of devotion. This in turn exercises a sway upon the ruler, who becomes corrupted in his turn. The key to the quality of the man in power is how he reacts to this situation. Only few can withstand the temptation to sycophancy”. That’s not all! A political system that makes one work loyally for a party without any reasonable form of rewards is equivalent to misconstruing ‘foot soldiers’ for ‘food soldiers.’ Certainly, it is not good for democracy, especially Nigeria’s fledgling democracy!

    May the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world, grant us peace in Osun State!

    •Komolafe wrote in from Ijebu-Jesa, Osun State, Nigeria (ijebujesa@yahoo.co.uk)

  • Man City owners buy Brazilian club Bahia

    Man City owners buy Brazilian club Bahia

    City Football Group, the United Arab Emirates-controlled company that owns Manchester City, finalized a deal Thursday to buy a majority stake in Brazilian club Bahia, the two sides said.

    The Abu Dhabi company acquired 90 percent of shares in Bahia, said a statement from the club, the most popular in Brazil’s populous northeast.

    The price of the deal was not disclosed. Brazilian media reports said City Football Group (CFG) had agreed to pay one billion reais ($199 million), including money for debt payments, player acquisitions and infrastructure investments.

     “Bahia is exceptional for its size and fan base. It will be the group’s second-biggest club” after Manchester City, said Ferran Soriano, chief executive of CFG.

     “The group sees Bahia and Brazilian football as the biggest growth opportunity in the world. It will be up to us and other clubs to make the league grow as it deserves,” he told a press conference in Salvador, the capital of Bahia state.

  • Ekiti: Oyebanji’s gospel of reconciliation

    Ekiti: Oyebanji’s gospel of reconciliation

    Like the biblical King Solomon, the shrewd ruler of Israel in the days of yore, it appears that Biodun Oyebanji, political scientist and governor of Ekiti, asked God to grant him sufficient wisdom on assuming office on October 16, 2022 to enable him steer the largely agrarian state to lofty heights among its peers.

    His lifestyle has not changed since he moved to the Government House at Oke Bareke in Ado-Ekiti. Not given to ostentatious or bumptious lifestyle, the governor comes across as a simple and humble public servant trying to carefully navigate the difficult ship of the poor state at a time of great expectations from the residents. He appears to be on the right track with his focus on breasting the tape without stumbling in the long distance ahead.

    Homeboy Oyebanji is a symbol of the rustic and hilly enclave that was  previously an amalgam of struggling 120 towns and villages that  battled to put off the yoke of Oyo-Ibadan imperialists, a sub-ethnic group that teamed up to form the famed Pelupelu, a confederation that resisted indigenous colonialism.

    The governor’s dress code conveys an impression of conservatism and frugality. His ankara apparel and other accessories in his costume are affordable to the common folks. Perhaps, the mild difference is his trademark ‘Awo cap’, an elitist symbol of the esteemed Western Nigeria’s mainstream politics. As an ideologue, the governor apparently adorns this common man’s crown as a symbol of his belief in the welfarist, progressive philosophy of ‘life more abundant’ flowing from the consciousness that with him in the saddle, the people of the far-flung Ekiti can draw hope in his administration as another effective solution centre.

    Nobody anticipated the cool and calm mien of the youthful governor who, as a teacher of ‘Military in Politics’ and ‘Foreign Policy’ at the Political Science Department of his alma mater, Ondo State University, Ado-Ekiti (OSUA), later the University of Ado-Ekiti (UNAD) and currently the University of Ado-Ekiti (EKSU), was highly vocal and ebullient.

    Highly sagacious, deep and reflective, the governor seems to know how to handle situations in the ‘civil servant state of Ekiti’ because he knows the people, particularly the key actors, inside out, having lived in the state throughput his years of schooling, community service, the state creation agitation, and political engagements as Chief of Staff, commissioner and Secretary to the State Government (SSG).

    The element of the second course, Foreign Policy, is diplomacy. This seems to be more impactful on him because, through the application of tact and wit, he has invented some problem-solving strategies for tackling emerging political challenges. By consulting widely, listening attentively and conscientiously pro moting a culture of inclusiveness among the people, more indigenes have developed a sense of participation and belonging with his administration. Consequently, many have also developed an emotional attachment to his style of governance.

    Oyebanji has honed his socio-political skills, which are required for contact, productive interaction and meaningful relationship. If the Ikogosi-born administrator attends parties, weddings, funerals and birthdays of indigenes, he is not motivated by sheer festivities; neither does he tries to copy the owambe style of the legendary General from Iyin-Ekiti. It is a grassroots tactic that negates aloofness and social indifference, no doubt. Every social event for the governor has become a platform for widening political consultations and brainstorming on governmental affairs as they affect the communities.

    His visits do not, to many leading lights, convey a feeling of intimidation or a sign of timidity. It is an avenue for effective communication, clarification and reassurance. From this approach flows the perception of accessibility and open door policy rather than remoteness and disdain for subtle dialogue.

    The pattern of openness may also be deliberate. To catch a monkey, you have to behave like a monkey. But Ekiti people are not animals in that mould. They are highly intelligent, strong-willed, brave, bold, courageous and principled. They do not suffer fools gladly. They give, and they expect, respect.

    An average Ekiti town could boast of at least 10 professors in top flight universities at home and abroad. There is hardly an extended family without a PhD holder. Other professionals -lawyers, accountants, bankers, doctors, pharmacists, engineers, and top civil servants – are in countless numbers in the state. A mediocre therefore, does not have a chance with them.

    For a governor to survive in Ekiti, he has to be sensitive to these realities; that he is not better than many indigenes he is privileged to govern, that a single mistake can cost him power, that he has no chance of achieving success if he lacks character.

    Being an Omoluabi, Oyebanji cannot afford to be power drunk. In the process of exercising power, which is ultimately transient, he has not allowed power to intoxicate him. The governor is a son of a teacher and a disciplinarian. He should ordinarily be an embodiment of values and virtues, being a product of a home of culture and etiquette. Certain patterns of childhood upbringing and parental guardian can be influential on adult behaviours.

    His short and long term motive now is to preside over a peaceful and united state, despite the political differences among the indigenes.

    A Yoruba aphorism cautions that two people locked in litigation cannot return to friendship in the aftermath: (A kii ti kootu de wa s’ore). Not for the Ekiti governor, whose personality disposition is now defined by his penchant for reconciliation with aggrieved politicians.

    Read Also: The ‘three in one’ Biodun Oyebanji, and how not to be a governor in Nigeria

    After winning the governorship ticket of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Oyebanji suspended the victory celebration. An experienced politician, he knew that danger was looming. Winning the general election was more important. Therefore, he visited all his rivals at the primary. The strategy worked. Many of them teamed up with him during the poll.

    After defeating candidates of other parties, he also visited them, urging them to put the contest behind them and work with him to make Ekiti a better state.

    But, this week’s reconciliatory move surprised many. His challenger at the pool, Segun Oni, who had pursued his suit against the governor to the Supreme Court, finally lost the case. Oyebanji never mocked him for losing his deposit at the poll. Neither did he roll out the drums to celebrate his judicial victory.

    Instead of firing extra-electoral salvos, the governor hurriedly left the state capital for Ifaki residence of Oni to reopen the peace deal. It was the zenith of statesmanship; an example of politics without bitterness. The former governor could not shut his door.

    So far, the same approach appears to have assisted him in preventing successor-predecessor rivalry that had hallmarked politics in Ekiti State.

    Today, Oyebanji has to manage four strong predecessors, active politicians who are not contemplating retirement – Dr. Kayode Fayemi, Chief Ayodele Fayose, Engineer Oni and Barrister Niyi Adebayo, Minister of Trade and Investment. The political structures in Ekiti land revolve around these gentlemen.

    At the party level, the idea of seeking input from 16 local chapters to governance is salutary. In a presidential system, the power-loaded governor and the President are at liberty to choose their commissioners, ministers and advisers. Already, the governor has appointed fine and time-tested technocrats as commissioners and advisers into core, sensitive and very important ministries.

    But, not claiming to have a monopoly of knowledge, Oyebanji has set up a panel of party elders to draw a list to fill other positions in the State Executive Council. Local government chapters of the party have made recommendations, following screening of the likely appointees.

    There are pros and cons of decentralised search for competent hands. There is intense lobbying. The committee may not compromise the criteria, although the factor of personal preference by few committee members, particularly in their local government areas, cannot also be entirely ruled out. It falls within the framework of politics. But generally, there is a pervading feeling that the governor is effectively carrying the party along.

    In the face of daunting challenges of governance, the governor has hit the ground running, even with the State Executive Council not yet fully filled.

    Oyebanji is doing his best by fighting the infrastructure battle. Roads are being constructed. The tempo should be sustained. He will be remembered for the projects.

    In the area of tending Federal Government roads, there is a deficit in Ekiti. It is believed that under incoming President Bola Tinubu, the governor should be able to lobby the appropriate federal quarters to attract democratic dividends to the Fountain of Knowledge.

    Oyebanji has started well. One can, therefore, pray that the end will be better, which is more important than the beginning. May he end well.

  • Presidency: AA moves to withdraw petition against Tinubu, APC, others

    Presidency: AA moves to withdraw petition against Tinubu, APC, others

    • Tribunal to hear motion on Monday

    The Action Alliance (AA) has applied to withdraw its petition filed at the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) against the outcome of the last presidential election. The party filed a motion to that effect on May 3. The motion is listed as the first issue to be treated by the PEPC during its inaugural sitting on May 8. Listed as respondents to the petition, marked: CA/PEPC/01/2023 are the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), the All Progressives Congress (APC), Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Hamza Al-Mustapha.
    According to the court’s schedule for Monday, the four other petitions have been listed for pre-hearing session. The four petitions are by the Action Peoples Party (APP), marked: CA/PEPC/02/2023; Peter Obi & Labour Party (LP) marked: CA/PEPC/03/2023; Allied Peoples Movement (APM) marked: CA/PEPC/04/2023, and Atiku Abubakar & the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) marked: CA/PEPC/05/2023. The AA, in its petition, claimed that its presidential candidate, Solomon Okanigbuan, was excluded from participating in the election, a ground, it argued, was sufficient to void the February 25 presidential election.

    Read Also: The Spiral Effect of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s (BAT) Presidential Victory on Lagos and Environs


    The APC and Tinubu, in their separate responses, quarried the competence of the petition which was filed by a faction of the party led by Adekunle Omo-Aje. They argued that the complaint on which the petition is based, which is nomination, is pre-election matter which could not be raised post-election. The respondents also contend that the issue about which faction has the power to field candidate for the party was an internal affair on which the court lacked jurisdiction. APC argued that Al-Mustapha, a former Chief Security Officer to the late Gen. Sani Abacha, was the candidate of the AA, adding that he participated in the election and scored 14,542 votes.
    The party added that there was no evidence that the AA conducted a valid primary from which Okanigbuan emerged as a candidate, noting that Al-Mustapha was recognised by INEC as a candidate. The APC stated that Okanigbuan was not nominated and sponsored by the AA as its candidate to contest the presidential elections, adding the party “was not and could not have been excluded from the election as it participated in the presidential election with the 4th respondent (Al-Mustapha) as its candidate” who scored 14,542 votes.

  • Giovanni Simeone

    Giovanni Simeone

    Argentina’s Simeone has spent most of the season as little more than relief from the bench for Osimhen, but his role as super-sub has been a big part to Napoli’s outstanding season. The 27-year-old was one of three arrivals with the season already under way in August, alongside Tanguy Ndombele and Giacomo Raspadori, and he has struck some crucial goals from the bench.

    It was his header which earned Napoli the dramatic 2-1 win at AC Milan which officially announced their title bid, and after a glut of goals while Osimhen was injured in the autumn then he clattered in the last-gasp winner against fierce rivals Roma in January – a big moment in Napoli’s season.

  • WasteXchange marks one year anniversary

    WasteXchange marks one year anniversary

    Timilehin Babatope

    Waste X Change in partnership with Lagos Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) led senior staff to the clean-up and adoption of Oniru Beach, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    The event was organized by the Waste X Change organization to celebrate their one year anniversary and also to sensitise the residents of the community on how to convert waste into a source of income.

    Speaking to the press on the sidelines, the Waste X Change Co-founder, Mrs Oluwatoyin Fashola charged individuals and corporate organizations, to take responsibility for the environment through waste sorting at source and not wait for the government, to drive the effort towards a cleaner environment.

    She urged residents to come together and make a difference, by leaving an enduring legacy of a people-friendly environment, for improved living and economic prosperity, adding that beach clean-up was the first step in ensuring that coastal areas were clean.

    Read Also: Lagos urges private sector to drive innovations in sustainable energy

    In her address, the convener of the event, Mrs Oluwatoyin, disclosed that the organization is focused on the best practices and creating opportunities that stimulate cleaner environment, empowerment, and sustainable development. The objective, according to her, was to care for life outside water and underwater, as well as empower people through the recycling value chain.

    The Special Adviser to the Governor of Lagos State on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Investments Mrs Sholape Hammond encouraged the residents of the community to adopt the use of plastic policy, also urging Lagosians to commit to waste sorting at source, to limit plastic pollution.

  • Osun PDP: Fresh controversy as Adeleke’s man emerges chairman

    Osun PDP: Fresh controversy as Adeleke’s man emerges chairman

    Sunday Bisi, former Director-General of Governor Ademola Adeleke’s campaign organization, has emerged as the chairman of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Osun State. This has sparked fresh controversy as some leaders and chieftains of the party cry foul. Assistant Editor, ‘Dare Odufowokan, reports.

    In spite of the crisis trailing its congress and the litigations pending in court, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Osun State last Wednesday, announced the election of Sunday Bisi, its former acting chairman, as the substantive chairman of the party in the state. The new party boss is also the former Director-General of Governor Ademola Adeleke’s campaign organization during the 2023 gubernatorial election in Osun State.

    But if leaders and members of the party within and outside the state were of the opinions that the emergence of Bisi, an ally of Governor Adeleke, would end the lingering crisis rocking the PDP in the state and strengthen it, they must have been mistaken as the just concluded state congress has sparked fresh controversy within the party with many leaders and chieftains of the party rejecting the emergence of the new state executive committee members.

    Checks by The Nation revealed that some interest groups within the party are scared that Governor Adeleke and his allies have plans to take over the structures of the PDP in Osun state to the exclusion of other interest groups. “What played out is worrisome. We have never experienced this type of dictatorship within our party sicne 1998 when we started. The governor and his family simply handpicked state party leaders for us,” a source said.

    Before Wednesday’s election, Akindele Adekunle has been acting as the caretaker chairman of the Osun PDP. Plans to elect a new executive committee for the party in the state ran into trouble when some suspended members of the party had approached the court, seeking to annul the ward and local government congresses conducted earlier by the party and stop the state congress. The court restrained PDP from conducting the congresses pending the determination of the suit.

    Despite the restraining orders by the court, the party conducted Ward congress in 118 wards and 30 local government areas of the state. Consequently, a faction of the party led by former governorship aspirant, Prince Dotun Babayemi, also approached to court to nullify the ward and local government congresses conducted by the leadership of the party against restraining orders. They claimed they could not participate in the congresses as they were unable to purchase forms.

    Controversial election

    Bisi was elected at the state congress of the party held at the Osogbo Township Stadium on Wednesday. Governor Ademola Adeleke was also present at the congress as party delegates from across the 30 local government areas of the state elect new leaders of the party in the state. But some party leaders including Prince Babayemi and many others chieftains of his faction of the party are accusing the governor of excluding them from the congress.

    There are also some members of the party who are insisting that the congresses were held in defiance to court others and as such, the outcomes will not stand. To these party leaders who insist they will not accept Bisi’s emergence, it is dangerous for the PDP in Osun state to be indulging in acts that can threaten its chances in future elections. “The current actions are capable of jeopardizing our chances as a party. We should not be disobeying court orders,” our source added.

    At the congress contrary to expectations, Bisi emerged through affirmation alongside about thirty-eight new state executives of the party who were all unopposed at the congresses chaired by Dr. Samuel Omotosho from Ekiti State. There was no actual voting. Before the day, not less than two chieftains of the party have indicated interest to challenge Bisi for the seat in spite open preference allegedly shown Bisi by Governor Adeleke and his group within the party.

    Chieftains of the party who had shown interest in the chairmanship seat include Bisi, a former Executive Assistant to ex-governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola, Funmiso Babarinde, a Zonal Youth Coordinator, Seyi Bamidele and ex-state Secretary, Yinka Adeojo. In the run up to the state congress, all the chairmanship aspirants have expressed their determination to run the race to the very end, reportedly rejecting overtures that they step down for Bisi.

    “Bisi emerged through brute suppression of the ambition of other aspirants. Many of them are now accusing the leadership of the party of excluding them from the process. How do you claim a consensus when some aspirants are saying they never agreed to step down? Some say they were not even consulted on the plan for consensus. It is not only chairmanship aspirants that are complaining, some other aspirants for other offices are lamenting too,” a source added.

    Chieftains of the party who emerged as state executives after the now controversial state congress are; Yakubu Idowu as deputy chairman, Bola Ajao who got re-elected as Secretary, Taye Ambali as Treasurer, Toba Alalade as Auditor) Alice Otunola as Women leader, Ayodeji Areola as Publicity Secretary, Gbenga Idowu as Youth leader among others.

    Weeks before the congress was held one of the chairmanship aspirants, Babarinde, had accused the caretaker committee leadership of the party in the state of sharing positions among loyalists of Governor Adeleke and alienating other interest groups in the party fold. He made the allegation after a stakeholders’ meeting was conveyed by the leadership of the party in the state to discuss the planned congress and other issues.

    “To the dismay of the party members across the state, the Caretaker Committee called only a few members, while so many top echelons of the party, including former governor, BOT members and an array of former party executives were excluded from the meeting, where a lot of issues affecting the party were discussed. I am bothered because if the current arrangement, where only a clique is allowed to apportion offices to both qualified and non-qualified people for party offices, it will not augur well in the future.

    “Only loyalists of the governor, Senator Ademola Adeleke were given forms. The Zoning basket of the party was never discussed at any fora. The State Working Committee offices that have been domiciled in Osun Central and West Senatorial Districts in the last eight years for two consecutive terms, were still retained in those places, which is not right with the spirit of zoning in the PDP,” Babarinde alleged.

    Respite from the court? State Congress, Dr Samuel Omotoso from Ekiti State insisted that the congress was free and fair and as such, the outcome is a reflection of the wishes of the members of the party in the state. He applauded delegates for conducting themselves peacefully and urged them to give all their supports to the new leadership of the party. He denied any imposition of candidate during the congress.

    Amidst claims that the congress that produced Bisi and his co executive members was held contrary to the court order stopping it, respite came the way of Governor Adeleke and his group when the Osun State High Court sitting in Osogbo dismissed the application brought before it by some chieftains of the ruling party in the state for the cancellation of the ward, local and stoppage state congresses of the PDP in the state.

    The court had at the last sitting fixed May 2 to rule on an application by aggrieved members of the party seeking to set aside the PDP ward and local government area congresses earlier conducted by the Omotosho led committee on April 18 and 19 respectively. Justice Ayo Oyebiyi had heard the application filed by eight members of the party led by Segun Odekunmi against the PDP and its Caretaker Chairman, Akindele Adekunle.

    Justice Oyebiyi had earlier restrained the PDP from forging ahead with the conduct of the proposed congresses pending the determination of a suit before the court bordering on the suspension of some party members. However, in his judgement on Tuesday, Oyebiyi said there was no nexus between the reliefs sought by the applicants in the originating summons and the application for injunction and therefore, dismissed the application.

    With the development, supporters of Governor Adeleke and Bisi have been saying there is not legal hurdle against the new state executive council again. But the prosecution counsel, Edmond Biriomoni noted that the court has given its verdict and they are going to consult with the plaintiff and chart the way forward. “After this judgement, we are going to test it at the upper court. Justice is two way things, not just for the plaintiffs but also the defendants and court. We cannot allow flagrant disobedience of court to fly, we are going to defend it,” he insisted.

    While Governor Ademola Adeleke was giving his address, he appealed to all party members to support the new leadership of the PDP in the state. The governor said the elected leaders of the party will work with his government and he tasked PDP members to accept the emergence of the new executives in the interest of the ruling party. “Unity is very important. We need all of us to join hands together and move PDP from strength to strength.

    “Be assured that your government is working, dividend of democracy is here and is here to stay,” the governor said. Party sources said the governor’s decision to insist that the new leadership of the PDP in Osun state emerges by consensus is to prevent further division within the party. He is said to have reached out to all the aspirants for discussion contrary to claims by some people that he unilaterally decided who gets what position at the congress.

    Fresh troubles

    In his acceptance speech, the new chairman, Bisi also sought the cooperation of all party chieftains and members. He assured that he will deliver a united party that will support the governor to concentrate on governance. He also promised to pursue the reconciliation of all aggrieved members of the party as he desires to further strengthen the PDP in the state. He appealed to aggrieved party members to join hands together with the new executives to move the party forward in the state.

    “I know what it takes to lead a party into government, I have done it before and I will do it again by the grace of God. I am going to unite the party more. verybody will be on the same page under my leadership. When you have a united party, then the governor will be able to concentrate, and there won’t be any distractions, I will ensure that and bring everybody into the party so that we will be able to move the state forward,” the new chairman said.

    However, it appears some of the aspirants and their supporters are not ready to accept the emergence of Bisi as the new chairman of the party without a fight. Checks by The Nation revealed that many more members of the party are now aggrieved following what they described as attempts by Governor Adeleke and his group to constantly deny other groups within the party of inclusion in party activities and benefits.

    Many of them have vowed to continue to resist all forms of marginalization in the party. Babarinde, while reacting to the outcome of the congresses, alleged that so many party members were alienated from the exercise. “Osun PDP has not learned from the past mistakes. I am not pleased with the situation we found ourselves in as a party and how the congress was conducted. I believe the party must move forward and be well-positioned to assist the government.

    “As an aspirant for the post of the chairmanship of Osun PDP, I must note and for record’s sake stress that the alienation of so many party members, the court process, and the non-involvement of so many stakeholders leave so much to be desired. It is unfortunate that we have learned nothing from our history as a people and past concerns,” he said.