Category: Politics

  • Soludo on slippery  political terrain

    Soludo on slippery political terrain

    In 2011, former Central Bank Governor Charles Soludo joined the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Few months ago, he defected to the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA). Now, the renowned economist is having romance with the Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM). Assistant Editor AUGUSTINE AVWODE examines the political trajectory of the technocrat-turned politician.

     

     

     

    Former Central Bank Governor Charles Soludo is an accomplished intellectual. He became a Professor of Economics at the age of 36 years. He is a successful technocrat. But he has not been able to enact the same feat in politics.

    Soludo joined the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in 2010. Few months ago, he defected to the All Progressives Grand Allliance (APGA). Now, sources say that he is holding consultations with the top chieftains of the newly registered Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM).

    He became a public officer when former President Olusegun Obasanjo appointed him as his the Chief Economic Adviser and Chief Executive of the National Planning Commission (NPC). He served in that capacity between July 2003 and May 2004. Before that assignment, he had served as the Executive Director of the African Institute for Applied Economics (AIAE), Chairman of Queens Computerworld Limited, and consultant to many international organisations.

    Soludo was appointed as the Central Bank governor in May 2004. He introduced a lot of reforms. His legacy was the banks’ recapitalisation, which has prevented distress in the sector.

     

    Foray into politics

     

    Before his tenure as the CBN governor, expired in May 2009, Soludo had indicated his interest in politics.

    When he eventually left as the nation’s number one banker, he pitched his tent with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), eight months to the February 6, 2010 Anambra State governorship election. He was favoured to pick the ticket of the party. And he did. But his victory generated controversy. Many aggrieved politicians left the party for the opposition parties in Anambra State.

    The PDP gave Soludo the support he needed. Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, who was the Vice President then, was the Coordinator of the PDP Campaign Committee. Other members of the committee were the Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, Delta State Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan, former Kogi State Governor Ibrahim Idris, Bauchi State Governor Alhaji Isa Yuguda, former Oyo State Governor Adebayo Alao-Akala, Enugu State Governor Sullivan Chime, Ebonyi State Governor Martins Elechi and former Imo State Governor Ikedi Ohakim.

    During the electioneering, a confident Soludo advised Governor Peter Obi to start preparing his handover note because he would definitely leave Anambra Government House. Soludo was sure he would defeat him.

    Unfortunately, that confidence was like a balloon filled with hot air and resting on blades of grasses. It was soon shattered. The party failed to live up to expectation at the poll. The rest is history.

    Senator Andy Uba, who was governor of the state for less than a month in 2007, defected to the Labour Party (LP). Others openly vowed to work against the interest of the party. The PDP went into the election in acrimony. It was weakened by crisis. Soludo came third at the election, trailing Obi and Senator Chris Ngige of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN). It was a traumatic period for a high flying Soludo. He became a failed politician. That was how his first political ambition hit the rocks.

     

    Shattered dream

     

    But Soludo is always optimistic. He is always full of hope for a brighter political future. He returned to his shell. Few months ago, he returned to the drawing board. He joined the governorship race. But he was disqualified by the APGA Screening Committee headed by Alhaji Tayo Sowumi.

    Soludo’s calculation was defective.To forestall a repeat of the 2010 experience, he was advised to pitch his tent with APGA, giving the fact that Governor Peter Obi was on his second term in office. There were unsubstantiated claims that he got some encouragement from the seat of power in Abuja. He subsequently defected to the APGA. That was early August. His arrival coincided with the reconciliation of Governor Obi with the National Chairman of the party, Chief Victor Umeh.

    But, in a letter he wrote to PDP National Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, on July 17, 2013, Soludo said: “This is to convey my resignation as a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) with effect from today. Let me use this opportunity to thank the party for the opportunity given to me to serve it in some capacities.

    “It has been a long process of taking this decision; it has taken months, equally doing the necessary consultations among my people, which dates back to January 2, 2013, and this is where my people belong. There is an overwhelming demand by the people of Anambra State for me to remain engaged in the political process and, after all the consultations, I come to the conclusion that there is need for that.

    “Also, there is a peculiar demand from the people for me to run for thegovernorship of the state in November this year to build on what our governor, Mr. Peter Obi, has done already with his predecessor, and I found out that there is need also to take Anambra to a greater height. We need continuity and consolidation on what Obi and his predecessors had done in the state. So, APGA is a party that is a mass movement; it lives in the consciousness of the people”.

    The Soludo aura immediately rubbed off on the political party. Many even claimed that he was brought into the party as a compromise candidate between the two warring chieftains.

    But those who had thought that his new move would help his cause were dead wrong. Few days after he defected to the APGA, and with the party’s primary election just around the corner, another aspirant surfaced. This time, a business associate of the governor and executive director of Fidelity Bank, Willie Obiano. His emergence immediately sent bad signals to other aspirants.

    About 20 days after he defected to the APGA, Soludo picked the nomination form. But he was disqualified. The party’s screening panel said at the conclusion of the panel’s sitting that six of aspirants failed to scale through the test. He said seven scaled through. The unsuccessful aspirants are Emmanuel Nweke, Ogbuefi Tony Nnaechetta, Chinedu Francis Idigo, Dr. Chike Obidigbo, Oseloka Obaze and Soludo.

    The successful aspirants areHon. Chukwuemeka Emmanuel Nwogbo, Paul Odenigbo, Hon. Uche Lillian Ekwunife, Obiano, John Nwosu, John Okechukwu Emeka and Nwachi Patrick Obianwu. It was alleged that those disqualified were guilty of non-presentation of voters and party membership cards, lack of evidence of financial strength to execute the campaign, invalid certificate and their inability to submit tax clearance.

    Obiano secured the APGA ticket, to the surprise of Soludo, who cried foul.

    `

    A new search begins

     

    But it cannot be said to be totally over for the renowned economist. Sources said that he is reaching out to the chieftains of the PDM. The party may however, not be able to meet the deadline set by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). Soludo’s recent visit to former Vice PresidentAtiku Abubakar, who is the perceived facilitator of the new party, lent much credence to the speculation that he is PDM bound.

    For Soludo, the search for another political identity and pursuit of the elusive dream continue. His political trajectory promises to be a case study for students of politics.

     

  • PDP’s frantic search for peace

    PDP’s frantic search for peace

    The crisis-ridden Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is thirsty for unity. But the reconciliatory moves by the party elders have not restored harmony. Assistant Editor AUGUSTINE AVWODE reports.

    For the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), this is a trying period. Unity and peace have been elusive. Since the dramatic split of the party in Abuja, efforts to ‘heal’ the wound have not succeeded. The wound continues to fester. Will the party pull through or will it go under? Either way, the situation in the PDP is terrifying. The elders of the party have been busy in their efforts to find a way out of the self-inflicted crises. At the risk of seeing the party they had toiled so hard to build crashing into smithereens, some of the influential party leaders intervened in the hope of reversing its predictable march to the precipice.

    Peace moves

    PDP, which has been battling with discontent and sundry grievances within its ranks, set up a 30-man National Reconciliation Committee in July. Headed by Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson, it was saddled with the onerous task of “harmonising all interests and to achieve genuine reconciliation across board”. Setting up of the committee was the most unambiguous admission that the party was in dire need of unity and peace. The National Chairman, Alhaji Bamabaga Tukur, rode into the office with a promise to reconcile all the warring factions and reposition the party for the challenges of the 2015 general elections.

    But his reconciliation efforts failed to yield the desired result. The Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Chief Tony Anenih, later took it upon himself to try his luck at reconciling the various opposing interest groups. Although he got some applause, it was obviously not far reaching. Hence, the need for the Governor Dickson Committee. After the initial opposition by a section of the party, the committee was accepted

    But, in a twist of irony, the committee was yet to finish its job, when a revolt occurred at the party’s Special Convention in Abuja last month. Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar led seven governors of the party, chieftains and other stakeholders to form a faction.

    The magnitude and complexity of the problem facing the party forced former President Olusegun Obasanjo to lead other top leaders of the party, which include former Head of State General Ibrahim Babangida, Anenih, former chairmen Col. Ahmadu Ali and Chief Barnabas Gemade, to embark on a peacemaking venture.

    Conspiracy theory

    The leaders’ spirited efforts to bring reconciliation may fail. This is because of a conspiracy theory being spawned by a section of the party. Those behind it believe that the crisis was carefully scripted and handed over to the dissenting G5 governors to execute. A chieftain of the party from the Southsouth told The Nation on condition of anonymity, that the 2015 presidential ticket is the major cause of the crisis. He doubted if Obasanjo and his group would be able to record any breakthrough now that it has been understood by the main party that the factional PDP wantedTukur out to get the ticket for the North.

    “The understanding, from this side, is that they are only particular about the 2015 ticket. And we also think that they have already convinced the man who is leading the reconciliation team. To us, they are simply working from the answer to the question. I can tell you categorigally that if the President says today that the will not run in 2015, whether Tukur leaves or not, there will be peace and not just peace in the party, the insurgency in some parts of the North will also abate;” he said.

    Reminded that the crisis rocking the party is multifarious, the source maintained that they all have the same goal and objective, which is that power must return to the North.

    “It doesn’t matter, all the problems you are talking about have the same objective – return power to the North. And this is the reason why I think Obasanjo will be the last person to be able to bring peace and true reconciliation to the party.

    “Look at who is who in the team. only Anenih could be said to be on this side, but even then, you heard his comments. He was obviously overwhelmed in the discussion that he could come out to admit that there was some truth in the agitation by the revolting governors.

    “Did they not boast before that ‘they will help to kill the PDP and bury it?’ So, these things that are playing out today had been well scripted out. Imagine the President calling a meeting of the party’s stakeholders with the intention of presenting a mid-term report. The same Obasanjo shunned it and went to Jigawa to sing the praises of the governor to high heavens.”

    Political scientist and Executive Secretary of “Never Again,” Mallam Moyo Jaji, described Obasanjo’s efforts as mere “grandstanding”. He argued that the former president is an interested party. “I think what former President Obasanjo is doing is mere grandstanding. He was one of those the governors visited when they were touring the country, probably telling them their plans. So, I can say he is privy to all these developments in the party. He cannot be an arbiter in a matter in which he is an interested party.

    “He is known to be the promoter of the Lamido/Amaechi ticket. Look at the conditions given to President Jonathan. they are unacceptable. As for me, I cannot accept them and I can say nobody will accept them.

    “The problems that the party is facing are fundamental. They are not the type of things you just paper over. It won’t work. Take the issue of the gentleman’s agreement, that Jonathan entered into with some leaders of the party and reportedly announced it overseas when he travelled that he would do only one term. But then, we also know that he has been cleared already by the court and the Constitution also permits him. So, they are fundamental issues. To me, I can tell you that PDP is dead. We are seeing the end of the party. As they say, the party is as dead as dodo,” he said.

    Obasanjo’s first meeting with the warring factions, it would be recalled, was put off ostensibly because of the perception that he is part of the problem.

    No retreat, no surrender

    Notwithstanding the efforts being made by elders of the party, the two groups; the main PDP and the factional PDP, are consolidating their positions. Three cases have been instituted in various courts across the country in respect of the matter. While the main stream PDP is frantically trying to whip the Alhaji Kawu Baraje’s faction into line, the ‘New’ PDP, is doing everything possible to legalise its status, including asking the court to remove Tukur.

    As a show of its determination, the group went ahead to hire a building in Abuja as its headquarters. But in a counter move, the place was sealed up on Saturday by security forces.

    The conditions given by the Baraje-led faction include Tukur’s resignation as chairman of the party, the need for Jonathan to forget seeking re-election in 2015, the resolution of the crisis plaguing the Nigeria Governors (NGF) and an end to the harassment of governors by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    On the other hand, the Tukur group implored the elders to stop the Baraje faction and the rest to desist from parading themselves as a parallel PDP National Working Committee; subject themselves to the constitution of PDP; and allow the party leadership to resolve all issues raised by the governors.

    With the sealing off of the office of the Baraje group, it has further put a dent on the peace moves by the elders of the party.

    Refelecting on the crisis buffeting PDP, Chairman of the Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC), Dr Tanko Yinusa told The Nation that crises in all parties in the country would be greatly reduced if the parties adhere strictly to their internal rules and regulations.

    “As a body that is responsible to all political parties in the country, I can only advised us to adhere to our internal rules and regulation and help in minimising conflicts of this nature”, he said.

    As for the PDP, it is a make or mar momenent. If the on-going peace initiative fails, the PDP may be stoking the fire that could consume it.

  • ‘I will commit suicide than joining PDP’

    ‘I will commit suicide than joining PDP’

    Human rights activist and lawyer Festus Keyamo is a senatorial aspirant on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Delta Central District. He spoke with WALE AJETUNMOBI on his plans for the zone.

     

     

    What is your mission in politics?

    It is no news again that we have declared for the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Delta State. And the reason is because we understand the need for all the progressive forces in the country to come together. We also realise the need for a strong coalition to confront the menace of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). That is why we think that, whatever reservation we may have as individuals about certain individuals, who are also coming into the APC; the most important thing for us is to bury our differences as opposition parties to the PDP and come together to fight the PDP.

    And I am sure you know that I am even the last convert, the last convert because, all the so-called radicals have all gone into politics, including my late boss, Chief Gani Fawehinmi. But I have since kept away from politics because I felt that, perhaps, I could still make a huge difference as a private person. I have tried my best as a private person and I am sure you have followed the course of my struggle for sometimes.

    So, I have a strong conviction going into politics because I have seen even the limitations I have as a private person. I know that I will have a bigger voice if I have a bigger platform to express myself. I am sure you saw recently that the senators did not even know the power they have over the appointment of Service Chiefs; it took my effort to go to court and it was a four-year legal battle that culminated into a judgment in my favour, that in fact, the President cannot appoint the Service Chiefs without the concurrence of the Senate. But they, themselves, did not know the extent of their power; all of these I did as a private person, not as a senator. Recently, I sent a memo to the National Assembly about how to speed up corruption trials and constitutional amendment. It was a very detailed suggestion on how to amend the Constitution. But I was doing all of these as a private person. So you can see that this is not an overnight brainwave, that I have woken up overnight and said I want to be a senator. No.

    There are other highly qualified aspirants on the field…

    Permit me to say, and with the greatest respect to other aspirants, there is no single aspirant in Delta Central, that comes one mile near to what I have achieved in promoting constitutional democracy. Not one of them.

    So, if you are talking about somebody, who is a square peg in a square hole or a round peg in a round hole, please, it cannot be anybody but myself for this job. And they all agreed, if you ask all of them. Even the supporters of the other parties, they agreed that Keyamo is the best for this job, ‘but…’ they will now bring other things… ‘he has been a lawyer and he has been doing well…leave this for politicians…’

    But the question I ask is this: in the last 20 years or so, I have grown up in the eyes of the public; everybody can account for everywhere I have been and every position I have taken. You may like me or hate; you may detest me, but you cannot deny the fact that, for the last 20 years, I have spoken up my mind on every issue. So, I am not hidden; it will be a surprise, if I take a position in the public and somebody says na Keyamo dey talk this? It is because they know the position I would normally take. Now, do you want to vote for people, who you don’t even know where they stand on issues? Look at all the aspirants, you cannot say of any of them that you know where they stand on any issue. Not one. And I am serious about this; not one.

    What are your programmes for the people in your senatorial district?

    I have released a six-page document and I passed it round to everybody. Even your newspaper, The Nation, has used it. I am the only person that has done so. The six-page document is on why I want to be in the Senate and what I intend to do. I have talked about the consumers’ rights protection bill I intend to propose; I have talked about corporate manslaughter bill that the late Senator Ewherido was pursuing before he died, that I intend to continue. I have talked about even the Aladja Steel Complex, what I intend to do as a senator to make sure that I touch the right button to even revive it. I also talked about this judgment I got on the part of the Senate and I want to make sure that they implement that judgment and to make sure that they exercise the right power.

    I have also said that I will be the first senator in the history of Nigeria, and I am saying this on tape and you know I will do it, to publish my salary and allowances. I will be the first to run a very transparent tenure. Every three months, I will publish my activities in the Senate. It would be an innovation that every quarter, I will be publishing my activities in the Senate to my constituents and Nigerians. Those are the types of things I want to do differently because, the normal question to ask is: ‘ what are you doing differently?’ but that exactly is the type of innovation I want to bring into the senate. I want to plead; for many years, The Nation’s editorial slant has always been: let good people come out to run. That is the totality of all your editorials, that we do not deserve the leaders we have; but we keep lamenting that nobody wants to take the plunge. People are saying I am going into murky waters of politics; I am sure many people believe I am a mad person now.

    They would say: ‘ you have done so well as a lawyer, you have reached your height… what are you doing here?’ But I asked a simple, which I have been asking for the past one year when I made up my mind, I have not gotten an answer. The simple question is: if people who are successful in their individual professions like us should remain where they are, who should run for public office? Nobody has provided an answer.

    Does it mean you will jettison your governorship ambition?

    Absolutely not. Governorship is in 2015, this is 2013. There is a vacancy in the Senate. So, 2015 is still faraway. But then, it has afforded me an opportunity to write an examination for people to see how much I can handle public office. If I did not do well, they can easily tell me to sit at home. But this time, I will have less to talk and more to do. If I win the Senate seat, my work would speak for me more than my rhetoric this time. Because it would now be a situation of, here is how I can do it. So, I will not talk too much again. If I am running as a private person, I have to talk and talk, and beg people to convince them that I can also handle public office. But if I run for the Senate now, I would do less talking and more work, for my work will speak for myself.

    Why APC and not PDP or other parties?

    I have said it before, that if the PDP is the last party on earth, then I would commit suicide. If they say for me to continue to live, that I must join the PDP, I will rather commit suicide. The PDP is an amalgam of the most undemocratic forces I have seen on earth, where 16 is more than 19 in the arithmetic of the party; where five people are more than 27 people in Rivers State House of Assembly to impeach a governor. It is only in Africa, and in Nigeria, it is only in the PDP that you can find that kind of arithmetic. I will not be part of that arithmetic because to be part of that arithmetic, I will have to go back to Primary One and I don’t want to go back to Primary One.

     

    How do you intend to win people in DPP, where the late Senator Ewerido belonged, over to the APC?

    I think many of them realise that if you are serious opposition in this country now, you have to be in APC. That is the truth of the matter; there is no gainsaying it. That is why you see people like us, hard converts, going into politics going into APC. It is only coalition of serious-minded opposition now. If DPP is an opposition to the PDP in Delta State, and they know they are serious, they know, too, that the only place they should come to is APC. You can see many of them are coming over to the APC now. With very much respect to the leaders of the DPP in Delta State, we know that it is only a matter of time for all them to be in the APC. It can’t be too long.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Anambra NNPP gets governorship candidate

    A businessman, Prince Leonard Uchendu, has emerged as the gover

    norship candidate of the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP) for the

    November 16, governorship election in Anambra State.

    Uchendu, who was the sole aspirant in the primary election held at the party’s secretariat, Awka, polled more than 95 per cent of the votes to emerge as the candidate.

    The National Chairman of the NNPP, Dr. Boniface Aniebonam, who spoke through the party’s National Secretary, Major Gilbert Agbo (rtd) before the election, told the delegates from the local government areas that, although Uchendu was the only candidate cleared by the Screening Committee, he should be subjected to acceptability test by the party.

    In his acceptance speech, Uchendu thanked the leadership and the party members for the confidence reposed in him and promised not to disappoint them and the people of Anambra State. He promised to make job creation, sound and affordable education and health delivery system and security his focus. He also promised to embark on massive rural and infrastructure development across the 21 local government areas to check rural/urban migration.

    The exercise was monitored by officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

     

     

    Urhobo leaders endorse Dafinone for Senate

    Prominent Urhobo leaders have endorsed Chief Ede Dafinone for

    the Senate in the Delta Central District. They identified poor quality

    of education, poor healthcare delivery, inadequate and inconsistent power supply, low level of employment opportunities, inadequate housing and poor security of life and property as problems affecting the Delta Central Senatorial District.

    ‘Our children must be properly equipped to make contributions to the wider society. They have the right to go to school, get meaningful employment, raise their families, buy their own homes and live without fear. We must give them these basic rights, and it is only through good governance and effective representation that we can achieve this’ the leaders said.

    In a statement issued in Olomu, Ughelli South Local Government Area by the President of Urhobo Development Forum, Chief Julius Oshevire, the leaders said that Chief Ede Dafinone would protect the people’s rights through professional representation, sustainable economic development, quality education, job creation, improved healthcare services and poverty alleviation.

    ‘He is a democrat, with a firm belief in the supremacy of the will and the choice of the majority. He is a child of privileged background. He is committed to using his vantage position to improving on the quality of our environment and our fellow human resources.

    Emphasizing that Dafinone would bring his professional knowledge and experience to bear on a wide range of public policy issues and topics, the leaders said as a senator, he would focus on the regional impact of legislation and policies, routinely communicating with individuals, business representatives, universities, communities and interest groups in Delta Central.

    PDP crisis embarrassing, says chieftain

    Lagos State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chairman Capt. Tunji Shelle (rtd) has reflected on the crisis rocking the ruling party, saying that it is embarrassing.

    He called for an end to the logjam, which he said, could create obsatacles on the way of victory in future elections.

    The politician said observed that the crisis got to a peak at a criticap time when the opposition has also become more vibrant in the country.

    Shelle said in a statement that the crisis can be successfully managed because the aggrieved chieftains have not defected from the party.

    He said: “The news of the parallel NWC is embarrassing to me as a member of the party and I believe every stakeholder in the party should feel concerned by this unfortunate development. I am, however, inclined to appeal to the aggrieved members to allow truce, especially as some notable leaders of the party have risen up to the occasion, with a view to resolving the acrimony”.

    The politician advised the warring chieftains to resort to the internal mechanism of the party to resolve their grievances.

    Shelle added: “Indeed, the fact that the aggrieved persons have not decamped out of the party, but created a parallel NWC, shows that they are still passionate about the party, even as their actions may have been too spontaneous, radical and threatening to the integrity of the party.

     

    Ekiti governorship aspirant unfolds agenda

    Ahead of the next year’s governorship election in Ekiti State, an aspirant

    on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Ambassador

    Dare Bejide, has unfolded his agenda, saying economic development will be his priority.

    Bejide spoke at a dinner organised in his honour by friends and associates in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory.

    The former ambassador to Canada promised to empower the indigenes by promoting the local content policy.

    He said: “As part of government efforts to boost job opportunities and reduce poverty, all government contractors will be mandated to employ the indigenes. No contractor shall bring into the state any material for any construction or any project from other states unless such materials are not available in the state.

    “These requirements shall be mandatory and verified at the point of tender for such contracts and also at the point of payment by the Ministry of Finance. We shall introduce Local Content Compliance Unit at the Cabinet Office and the Ministry of Finance.” Bejide promised to promote agriculture and make it an income-yeilding business in the agrarian state.

    He added:“There will be a separate department in the Ministry of Agriculture to undertake financial management and effective utilisation of funds allocated, encourage our farmers to do away with outdated peasant system of agriculture and assist them to embrace simple, cheap and modern agricultural implements to enhance their productivity and provision of highly subsidised inputs including farm tools, chemicals and pest control, fertilizers, improved seedlings, fingerlings and livestock breeds.”

    He noted that various farm produces would be bought by the government at competitive prices to prevent wastages and loss of revenues by the farmers.

    Bejide, described as a “home boy” because of his closeness to the generality of the people of the state, said that he would use his international exposure to attract huge foreign direct investments into the state.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Anambra NNPP gets  governorship candidate

    Anambra NNPP gets governorship candidate

    A businessman, Prince Leonard Uchendu, has emerged as the governorship candidate of the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP) for the

    November 16, governorship election in Anambra State.

    Uchendu, who was the sole aspirant in the primary election held at the party’s secretariat, Awka, polled more than 95 per cent of the votes to emerge as the candidate.

    The National Chairman of the NNPP, Dr. Boniface Aniebonam, who spoke through the party’s National Secretary, Major Gilbert Agbo (rtd) before the election, told the delegates from the local government areas that, although Uchendu was the only candidate cleared by the Screening Committee, he should be subjected to acceptability test by the party.

    In his acceptance speech, Uchendu thanked the leadership and the party members for the confidence reposed in him and promised not to disappoint them and the people of Anambra State. He promised to make job creation, sound and affordable education and health delivery system and security his focus. He also promised to embark on massive rural and infrastructure development across the 21 local government areas to check rural/urban migration.

    The exercise was monitored by officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

     

     

    Urhobo leaders endorse Dafinone for Senate

    Prominent Urhobo leaders have endorsed Chief Ede Dafinone for

    the Senate in the Delta Central District. They identified poor quality

    of education, poor healthcare delivery, inadequate and inconsistent power supply, low level of employment opportunities, inadequate housing and poor security of life and property as problems affecting the Delta Central Senatorial District.

    ‘Our children must be properly equipped to make contributions to the wider society. They have the right to go to school, get meaningful employment, raise their families, buy their own homes and live without fear. We must give them these basic rights, and it is only through good governance and effective representation that we can achieve this’ the leaders said.

    In a statement issued in Olomu, Ughelli South Local Government Area by the President of Urhobo Development Forum, Chief Julius Oshevire, the leaders said that Chief Ede Dafinone would protect the people’s rights through professional representation, sustainable economic development, quality education, job creation, improved healthcare services and poverty alleviation.

    ‘He is a democrat, with a firm belief in the supremacy of the will and the choice of the majority. He is a child of privileged background. He is committed to using his vantage position to improving on the quality of our environment and our fellow human resources.

    Emphasizing that Dafinone would bring his professional knowledge and experience to bear on a wide range of public policy issues and topics, the leaders said as a senator, he would focus on the regional impact of legislation and policies, routinely communicating with individuals, business representatives, universities, communities and interest groups in Delta Central.

    PDP crisis embarrassing, says chieftain

    Lagos State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chairman Capt. Tunji Shelle (rtd) has reflected on the crisis rocking the ruling party, saying that it is embarrassing.

    He called for an end to the logjam, which he said, could create obsatacles on the way of victory in future elections.

    The politician said observed that the crisis got to a peak at a criticap time when the opposition has also become more vibrant in the country.

    Shelle said in a statement that the crisis can be successfully managed because the aggrieved chieftains have not defected from the party.

    He said: “The news of the parallel NWC is embarrassing to me as a member of the party and I believe every stakeholder in the party should feel concerned by this unfortunate development. I am, however, inclined to appeal to the aggrieved members to allow truce, especially as some notable leaders of the party have risen up to the occasion, with a view to resolving the acrimony”.

    The politician advised the warring chieftains to resort to the internal mechanism of the party to resolve their grievances.

    Shelle added: “Indeed, the fact that the aggrieved persons have not decamped out of the party, but created a parallel NWC, shows that they are still passionate about the party, even as their actions may have been too spontaneous, radical and threatening to the integrity of the party.

     

    Ekiti governorship aspirant unfolds agenda

    Ahead of the next year’s governorship election in Ekiti State, an aspirant

    on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Ambassador

    Dare Bejide, has unfolded his agenda, saying economic development will be his priority.

    Bejide spoke at a dinner organised in his honour by friends and associates in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory.

    The former ambassador to Canada promised to empower the indigenes by promoting the local content policy.

    He said: “As part of government efforts to boost job opportunities and reduce poverty, all government contractors will be mandated to employ the indigenes. No contractor shall bring into the state any material for any construction or any project from other states unless such materials are not available in the state.

    “These requirements shall be mandatory and verified at the point of tender for such contracts and also at the point of payment by the Ministry of Finance. We shall introduce Local Content Compliance Unit at the Cabinet Office and the Ministry of Finance.” Bejide promised to promote agriculture and make it an income-yeilding business in the agrarian state.

    He added:“There will be a separate department in the Ministry of Agriculture to undertake financial management and effective utilisation of funds allocated, encourage our farmers to do away with outdated peasant system of agriculture and assist them to embrace simple, cheap and modern agricultural implements to enhance their productivity and provision of highly subsidised inputs including farm tools, chemicals and pest control, fertilizers, improved seedlings, fingerlings and livestock breeds.”

    He noted that various farm produces would be bought by the government at competitive prices to prevent wastages and loss of revenues by the farmers.

    Bejide, described as a “home boy” because of his closeness to the generality of the people of the state, said that he would use his international exposure to attract huge foreign direct investments into the state.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • 2015: What is Atiku up to?

    2015: What is Atiku up to?

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar is on the prowl. Can he sustain the onslaught against the mainstream Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and ride to the Presidency on the back of the crisis tearing apart the ruling party? Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU revisits Atiku’s metamorphosis and the prospects and constraints of his struggle for presidential power. 

    Since the Turaki Adamawa, Alhaji Atiku Abubakr, placed his hand on the political plough, he has not looked back. The former vice president has remained a major factor. From his lip, stories of triumphs and turbulence on the sliding political field ooze out. For him, life has not been a bed of roses. It has been full of ups and downs. But throughout his sojourn in politics, he has been a consummate politician, great mobiliser, master strategist and crowd puller.

    Atiku is today perceived as the arrowhead of the opposition in the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). He rode to that status of an internal opposition leader on the back of President Goodluck Jonathan’s abysmal performance in office and Alhaji Bamanga Tukur’s over-bearing posture as the national chairman. But his presidential ambition is also common knowledge. Thus, critics point out that Atiku is gathering forces, ahead of 2015.

    His ambition to rule the country ambition had hit the rock four times. In the aborted Third Republic, he was projected by his mentor, the late General Sheu Yar’Adua, the founder of the Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM). That was when the Military leader, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida (rtd), excluded him and other key politicians from the race. At the Jos convention of the proscribed Social Democratic Party (SDP), he stepped down for the late Chief Moshood Abiola, who emerged as the flag bearer.

    In 2003, many governors served as campaign managers for Atiku. They believed that, if he contested, he would beat his boss, Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, (rtd), thereby saving them from persistent persecution. But the former Vice President failed to seize the moment. At midnight, he directed his supporters, who were in the majority, to endorse Obasanjo,

    In 2007, he tried his luck again. He was more determined. However, some circumstances forced him to defect from the PDP to the defunct Action Congress (AC), where he contested as the sole aspirant. But he was defeated in the severely flawed presidential election by the late Alhaji Umaru Yar’ Adua, the younger brother of his deceased leader, Gen. Yar’ Adua.

    Also, in 2011, Atiku picked up the gauntlet. He was on the firing line again. After returning to the PDP, he entered the ring with President Goodluck Jonathan, who was deputy governor of Bayelsa State, when he was the number two citizen. At the regional level, he beat General Babangida (rtd) at the screening organised for the Northern aspirants. But the regional support collapsed at the Eagles Squares, Abuja, during the subsequent presidential primaries. Unlike 2003, when he was the man to beat, he had become a big elephant who lacked the speed of a lion. He lost to Dr. Jonathan, who wielded the power of incumbency.

    To discerning observers, the former Vice President is on the offensive again. Sources said that he is putting his hat in the race at a critical point in national history. Democracy is on the edge and the President’s poor performance has compelled critics to make a case for genuine transformational leader. The North is agitating for power shift, based on an inexplicable agreement on presidential zoning between President Jonathan and few Northern leaders, who are yet to be known. The ruling party is in turmoil, torn apart by acrimony, intrigues, politics of exclusion and power game, ahead of the next elections.

    The civil war in the PDP, according to analysts, is not an ideological war. It is an extreme self-seeking war being fought with a missionary zeal by the antagonistic gladiators to halt their imminent slide into political oblivion. Since Tukur became the chairman, the party has not had a moment of respite. As the ally and staunch supporter of the President, he is perceived as a foe by forces plotting to abort his second term ambition. The chairman, who may have been acting the presidential script, has tighten the noose against the President’s perceived enemies in the party.

    However, when the party split at its recent rancorous national convention in Abuja, another opportunity opened for Atiku. The former Vice President, seven governors and other aggrieved chieftains were united by their hostility to the President and national chairman over the alleged irregularities that marred the national congress. Up came Atiku as the arrowhead of the Kawu Baraje’s faction of the PDP. Reminiscent of the manner he successfully led the anti-third term campaign, Atiku has been firing salvos at the PDP leadership, accusing it of dictatorship, violation of the party constitution and lack of democratic credential.

    During the planning for the convention, his supporters have transformed the PDM into a political party. Confronted with the allegation of anti-party activities, he defended himself, clarifying that, although his supporters formed the party, he is still a chieftain of the PDP. Many PDP stalwarts were not convinced by the explanation. The PDM national chairman, Bashir Yusuf, is a close associate and campaign manager for Atiku Campaign Organisation. The PDP Board of Trustees (BoT) Chairman, Chief Tony Anenih, a founding member of the PDP, cried foul, saying that Atiku could not single handedly transformed the political group into a political party without wide consultation and collective endorsement of the surviving members.

    Many agree that Atiku is always adorning his thinking cap. The Adamawa politician has always stayed glued to the drawing board. Like his boss, he has the reputation for anticipating challenges problem-solving. However, some of his associates believe that he had taken some steps in the past that cast doubt on his right judgment. This, they also point out, may be the only difference between him and Gen. Yar’Adua.

    Atiku was one of the disciples of the great political wizard, strategist and mobiliser, Yar’Adua, son of the late Alhaji Musa Yar’Adua, former Minister of Lagos Affairs. Yar’Adua had served briefly as the Federal Commissioner for Transport before he became the Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters in Obasanjo Administration. Atiku, the political son of the Tafida Katsina became the inheritor and beneficiary of the solid political machinery, PDM, the most outstanding and enduring political cult in the country. His main goal is to be enthroned in the nation’s apex political life. For him, there is no alternative path to self-actualisation. For seven years, that is, between 1999 and 2006, he was bidding for his time. His followers perceived him as the man of the future. But when that future came, certain circumstances made the realisation of the goal much more elusive.

    Atiku was at daggers drawn with Obasanjo, who occupied a position of strength as a President with power of incumbency. If he had seized the storm in 2003, when it was evident that he had the support of the governors, who controlled the party structures and the bulk of delegates, the story would have been different. Former Governors James Ibori of Delta State, and his Abia and Adamawa counterparts, Dr. Orji Kalu and Alhaji Boni Haruna, who were in regular contact with other governors, waited endlessly for a directive from the former Vice President to swing the pendulum of victory towards his direction. Obasanjo came down from his Olympian height to prostrate for Atiku to let him secure the ticket. Atiku gave his nod. That inaction and error of judgment became his undoing.

    Without parading a chain of degrees from reputable universities, Atiku, the quintessential custom officer, reached the top of his career before he retired as a Deputy Director of Customs. He had built a network across the country, cutting across the entrenched aristocrats, traditional rulers, and political class. But whether he can reenact the political feats of Yar’Adua is a subject of debate.

    The late Gen. Yar’Adua had three legacies. His organisational wizardry was legendary. He was able to gather and sustain a lot of ambitious politicians under the same roof, with the sole motive of acquiring power. Even the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the founder of the Action Group (AG) and Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN), could not penetrate all the geo-political zones. Indisputably, for many years, Yar’Adua’s PDM has retained its national outlook and refused to be overtaken by the tremors of time.

    Also, when the members of the PDP found themselves in different parties, the bond of unity was not severed. From time to time, they have remained conscious of their political root. What seems to have made the PDM to fill the public consciousness is that the group is not rebellious to progressive and welfarist politics.

    From the onset, Etiku was an integral member of the PDM kitchen cabinet, a dependable ally of Yar’Adua and confidant at the birth of the Peoples Front of Nigeria (PFN). He was not in the dark when it was resolved that the political machinery should join the defunct SDP, one of the two parties decreed into existence by Babangida. In fact, Yar’Adua was already on the fast lane to the Aso Rock when the presidential primaries was truncated by the military. At that time, the banning and unbanning of politicians characterised the dubious transition programme.

    Yar’Adua was instrumental to the rise of Alhaji Baba Gana Kingibe. But he later fell out with the seasoned diplomat. The late General was never taken unawares. He was an exponent of “Plan B”. He saw the handwriting on the wall. Therefore, he decided to groom Atiku, his loyal associate, for the number one job. Thus, after he was banned from the race, he prepared Atiku for the contest. He faced Kingibe and Abiola at the Jos Convention. In those days, the embattled politicians were involved in a lot of horse trading. To defeat Kingibe, Atiku was asked to step down for Abiola at the shadow poll.

    But deep gulf later ensued between the Tafida Katsina and Aare Ona Kankanfo of Yorubaland. The bone of contention was Abiola’s refusal to accept Atiku as his running mate, contrary to Yar’Adua’s calculation. The 14 SDP state chairmen made it impossible by throwing their weight behind Kingibe. The loss of the two slots-Presidency and Vice Presidency-pained Yar’Adua to the marrows. The only option left for him was to gain the control of the party by mustering strength to install Chief Tony Anenih as the SDP national chairman. It is an irony of political life that both Anenih and Atiku, who harmoniously defended the PDP’s interest at that time now divided by the power games of the post-Yar’Adua period.

    After the annulment of the history 1993 presidential election, politicians were in disarray. Yar’Adua wanted to bounce back. Atiku was part of that scramble for power as a member of the PDM in the 1994 constitutional conference set up by the late Head of State, Gen. Sani Abacha. Along with Yar’Adua, he pursued the goal of setting a disengagement day for the military. Yar’Adua later died in mysterious circumstances in the prison, following his conviction over a phantom coup. After his demise, the bereaved PDM members started to look up to Atiku, the successor to the vacant stool of his mentor.

    When Abacha died, the members of the PDM decided to participate in the transition programme of Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar. The group became the engine room and most formidable caucus in the PDP. It parading seasoned politicians, including Chief Sunday Afolabi, Chief Anenih, Prof. Ango Abdullahi, Senator Jibril Martins-Kuye, Alhaji Lawal kaita, Chief dapo Sarunmi, Chief Olorunfunmi Basorun, Chief Yomi Edu, Senator Rashidi Ladoja, Senator Tony Adefuye, Mrs. Onikepo Oshodi, Mrs. Titilayo Ajanaku, and Alhaji Abubakar Rimi.

    In 1999, Atiku dumped his presidential ambition. When he vied in 1993, it was not his personal ambition. It was Yar’Adua’s ambition in disguise. He returned to Adamawa and emerged as the governor-elect. Obasanjo, the President-elect, was just floating in the PDP. He had no root. He emerged based on three factors. The North had reluctantly conceded the Presidency to the Southwest. Some Northern elements believed that, when he was the military Head of State, he did not work against the interest of the region. Also, the military wanted to remain as a factor and power broker. No other Yoruba man could be trusted, since Chief Olu Falae refused to join the PDP.

    Obasanjo did not have any blue-print. He had no premonition of his recall for higher service. He was the candidate of the people that wanted to fill the gap. The PDM members-Atiku, Afolabi, Sarunmi and Edu-were part of the numerous delegations asking him to return to power. Obasanjo had a nightmare selecting a running mate. Four names were presented to him-Rimi, Bamanga Tukur, Prof. Abdullahi and Atiku. He settled for Atiku because of the PDM’s influence.

    As the Vice President, Atiku was the de facto President. He was the Controlling Minister of the Economy. To get things done, politicians and others must pass through Atiku route. A former minister, who alerted the President to the danger of allowing his deputy to have sweeping powers, was sacked from the cabinet. The Vice President was also acutely popular among the majority of the governors. Thus, in 2003, many of them urged him to displace Obasanjo. The President was sweating profusely at the primaries. He prostrated before Atiku before earning re-nomination. At that point too, Atiku ceased to be the apple of Obasanjo’s eye.

    The Vice President was accused of corruption and disloyalty. He became a nominal figure in the government with no duties to perform. It was clear that he would not be allowed to participate in a free and fair primaries in the PDP. The government even made frantic efforts to halt his presidential ambition in another party, but Atiku ran to the court for security and survival. He became the arrowhead of the opposition as the presidential candidate of the defunct Action Congress (AC) in 2007.

    The former Vice President enjoyed tremendous goodwill as the AC presidential candidate. However, after the election, he returned to the PDP. The move, said sources, embarrassed the AC leadership. Other PDP defectors, including Kaita and Ghali Umar Naa’ba, fired salvos at the party, saying that it was not different from the PDP.

    But Atiku also took other steps. He ran to Abeokuta to make peace with his estranged boss, Obasanjo. It was to be a secret fence-mending meeting. But, coming out of the meeting, an embarrassed Atiku was accosted by many reporters. The former President yelled at his visitor. Irked by the turn of events, former Abia State Governor Kalu chided Atiku for the wrong step. The reconciliation was not fruitful. It did not lead to any renewal of contact. When the former Vice President indicated unfolded his plan to contest for the Presidency in 2011, Obasanjo laughed mischievously. “I dey laugh o”, he said. It was loaded with meanings. Indeed, Obasanjo joined forces with President Jonathan to abort Atiku’s dream. When Atiku was tearing the record of the President at the primaries, Obasanjo stood up and whispered some words into the President’s ears. Atiku lost.

    As the polity prepares for the 2015, what is Atiku’s chance, if he joins the presidential race? His associates confide that he has been hosting a lot of brain-storming sessions with many stakeholders, since he walked out of the Abuja convention. He is investing heavily in political research. Since he is not getting younger, he believes that 2015 offers a rare opportunity.

    Since he went back to the PDP, the former Vice President has not been able to wield much influence like before. Recently, he fought to prevent his exclusion from the delegates’ list to the convention. His right as the former PDP Vice President was restored, following the intervention of the PDP national secretariat.

    If he joins the race in the PDP, if the party does not totally disintegrate, the same forces that aborted his ambition in 2011 may do the same again in 2015. At Ibadan, Obasanjo had harsh words for his former deputy. He said it would have been dangerous for the country for him to hand over to him. If there is reconciliation in the divided ruling party and Atiku and his forces return to the fold, there is no assurance that he will beat the incumbent President at the primaries. Party sources even predict a bitter feud between Atiku and Obasanjo’s men-Governors Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto State), Musa Kwakwanso (Kano), Muazu Aliyu (Niger), Muritala Nyako (Adamawa) and Sule Lamido (Jigawa)- during the presidential primaries. Based on Obasanjo’s influence, the Northern governors may opt for Lamido or another aspirant.

    However, Atiku may emerge as the flag bearer of the PDM, if he defects to the party. Sources said that he may have deliberately supported the balkanisation of the PDP to weaken it, ahead of the next elections. But how far can the PDM go? “This PDM is not the old PDM”, said Anenih, who asked Atiku to retrace his steps. If he goes for the presidential poll as the PDM candidate, his sphere of influence may become narrow across the six geo-political zones.

    If Atiku seeks alliance with the All Progressives Congress (APC), the chieftains of the defunct AC in the fold may be weary. Many of them have described him as an inconsistent politician, who jumped the ship after losing the presidential election. Also, it is not likely that the party will jettison Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) and other aspirants in favour of the former Vice President.

  • Why Tukur cannot resign, by Metuh

    Why Tukur cannot resign, by Metuh

    The National Publicity Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Olisah Metuh, spoke with reporters in Lagos on the protracted crises and efforts to reconcile the Kawu Baraje’s faction with the mainstream PDP. EMMANUEL OLADESU was there.

    How is the leadership of your party responding to the protracted crises rocking the fold?

    The present crisis rocking the PDP has shown clearly that we do not have a credible opposition in the country. There’s no viable opposition. Definitely, we have issues and few challenges. The issues have been PDP and about PDP resolve our differences and we still fight our interest on a common front. Whatever opposition is minimal and insignificant and that of ineffective whatsoever. What the crises had shown is that there is no viable opposition in Nigerian politics. They have no effect on the political setting at the national level, except in some local government areas and states.

    We are a big party. We had challenges, in terms of the interpretation of the constitution, procedure to run the party, ideas like people believing this is what we should be doing. We appreciate that some colleagues, the governors want internal democracy. The National Chairman is committed and the NWC is totally committed to internal democracy in the party. But it depends on the description of internal democracy. Internal democracy and entrenching free and fair mechanism does not mean complete opposition to the party.

    There is nowhere in the entire world that a party that has a government at the centre will start to fight the government at the center. As custodians of the party constitution, as people who are at the helms of ensuring, we are committed to makingthe organs of the party to work effectively. We cannot stand by opposing the government that we have at the centre; the President and the elected people we have, especially when we believe the President is doing well. So, we have no reason being at loggerheads.

    We have gone to court. In the court, the so-called faction was restrained from parading itself. Their officers were stopped from parading themselves as elected people, especially when they claimed they were elected on 30th of August. If you are elected as the chairman and the secretary on 30th of August, how come on 31st August at Eagle Square, they sat down to participate in our own convention. It is difficult to comprehend what they are saying. That’s why we went to court for complete interpretation. We would put them on notice so that we can argue that case because what we are saying is very straight forward. The judge now says the status given should be maintained.

    They should stop parading themselves, stop any activity and they should not open any office. Any other thing the do will be in contempt of the court and luckily, the have been served yesterday evening. We believe going by the pronouncement of the court, they will not involve in any activity. What we asked for is not what the court granted us.

    Once is then shocked, surprised and astonished when we opened the paper, we started seeing the court refuses application. What is the court refusing when it granted status-quo ante belum? That is exactly what we wanted and it means they cannot take any step. So because we are big, we end up having such problem of mis-interpretation. These are the problems we have politically as a party

    How far has the elders gone in resolving the dead lock in the current crises rocking the party?

    The truth is that our party welcome intervention of our former President and former Chairman of the Board of Trustee, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo and other elders on the attempt to resolve the challenges and crises that we have. That is why our chairman and our governors have been attending the peace meeting. We have noted that they gave the impression that the party is not in support of the peace initiatives by the elders. It is very far from the truth. If we oppose to it their is no way our chairman, the chairman of PDP Governors Forum will be attending those meetings. We have given the peace move our blessing, we have hope they will be able to achieve it.

    While we hope that these issues will be resolve, our chairman has set the agenda in statement and in speech that we are not oppose to resolution of these crises but it does not make us a weaker party. There are options and we would be waiting for any eventuality. The PDP remain strong and the party will be strong and as our chairman stated, whatever happened, we are willing and able to pilot the affairs of this party with loyal, committed and dedicated party members and we believe that with what we have seen of commitment of our members that we would continue to win elections and very importantly, we will win the 2015 election.

    The key demand for peace by the break-away governors is that President Goodluck Jonathan should drop his ambition to run for 2015. What is your view?

    I believe personally, that their demand is undemocratic. To be talking about someone’s ambition or give him condition like, is like saying that you should forget your ambition. That is undemocratic. It is not fair. You cannot deny him his constitutional right, except there is a pronouncement by the court or the constitution is against his ambition.

    There is no way you can tell any man that is responsible and respected citizen, you cannot decide for him about his rights, especially when he is yet to make up his mind. It is completely in his own purview to decide whether to run or not. For anybody to give it as a condition, the person is not fair, as a matter of right. We frowned at such condition. Peace move should be hinged on things that are attainable.

    It was alleged that those of you that were brought back into the party’s NEC are to work for President Jonathan’s ambition. What do you have to say to this?

    I am working for the success of his administration. I have nothing to be ashamed of this. I am in support of the President to achieve the mandate we have given him. If and when he decides to run, my job, as an elected official of the party, would be to ensure an enabling environment for competitors and, whoever the party brings up, we’ll support him. Whoever wins the primaries, we’ll support him at the election.

    The fact that you are part of the opposition at the national level does not mean some people are not against them in their states. So, people should be careful about how this issue is handle otherwise, we’ll continue to have opposition down to the local government level, and to the family level too. It should not be played up.

    The aggrieved chieftains also want Alhaji Bamanga Tukur to resign. What is your view?

    You cannot just come out and say Bamanga Tukur should go like that. There are mechanisms for achieving that. You cannot say the national chairman of a ruling party should go like that. If you have anything against his person, you need to wait for mid-term convention and you give the man a vote of no confidence by voting him out.

    Otherwise, the fact that he is working with the President manifests an obvious inclination to support the President elected by his party to administer the affairs of the country. Those calling for his removal are being unfair. They should tell us what they want and not that Tukur should go because he is supporting the President in the administration of the country. Every President in the history of this country had worked with his party’s national chairman. Why should Tukur be an exception? Former Presidents of this country have worked with their party’s chairmen and the National Working Committee of their party and the governors at the state level are being supported by the state chairmen and the state executive committee of the party. Why is it now that there is a condition that Tukur should go? Is it because of his support for President Jonathan? It is undemocratic, it is unfair and un-political for anybody to give that condition. We should try and resolve our problems with things that are tenable, practicable and things that we can achieve.

    Some said that Tukur had been expelled…

    On Tukur’s membership, let us not go into the details of whether Tukur was expelled as a member or not. Any member of our party, if he is very much aware, would remember that, in 2006 and 2007, we had the Ekwueme Reconciliatory Panel that gave blanket amnesty to all members of this great party. Whatever happened in this party in the pre-2006 and 2007 periods, the Ekwueme Panel had pardoned everybody and restored them to their original positions, prior to that crises. Anybody that is knowledgeable about the history of our party and is truthful will stop talking about whether Tukur was expelld in the past or not. I am not aware of it and it is immaterial to me because all that happened in the party before setting up the Ekwueme Panel had been overtaken by the recommendations of that panel.

    Is the President interested in running in 2015? I want you to clear air on this.

    This is something that requires comment and one thing we should be honest with is that one should make a reasonable and honest answer.

    This question would have been directed to Reuben Abati and Doyin Okupe, who speaks for the President. I am not the presidential spokesman. I speak for the PDP. But being the President and the leader of the party, he might be interested. I can only speak for the party; I cannot speak for the President. You know where to draw the line.

    It has been alleged that President Jonathan did sign a one term agreement with the governors…

    We should be honest here. Is there any recording, any tape or video recording that shows that President Jonathan, when he was campaigning, he said he would run for one term? Has he ever said so?

  • WHAT 1999 CONSTITUTION SAYS

    68.-(1) A member of the Senate or of the House of Representatives shall vacate his seat in the House of which he is a member if-

    (g) being a person whose election to the House was sponsored by a political party, he becomes a member of another political party before the expiration of the period for which that House was elected.

    Provided that his membership of the letter party is not as a result of a division in the political party of which he was previously a member or of a merger of two or more political parties or factions by one of which he was previously sponsored; or

  • 2015: Dickson and Jonathan’s new strategies

    2015: Dickson and Jonathan’s new strategies

    Mike Odiegwu in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, explores President Goodluck Jonathan’s 2015 new strategies including Governor Seriake Dickson’s efforts in pushing the cause through regional integration

    The drumbeats of 2015 are warlike. Voices wafting from a charged political battlefield which politicians have suddenly turned Nigeria into are reverberating with anger, disappointment and sometimes assurances.

    While most Nigerians, including the progressives, who came together to form the All Progressive Congress (APC) are disappointed at the failures of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as concretised by rising poverty level, unemployment, insecurity, corruption and many others, the leadership of PDP maintains there is no vacancy in Aso Rock, the seat of federal government.

    Ahead of 2015, the PDP itself is fraught with problems. Informed observers believe that President Goodluck Jonathan is at the centre of the  confusion in the party. His undeclared ambition to retain the juiciest political seat in the country is the reason for the controversies.

    By all indications, those who think that Jonathan will not emerge the presidential candidate of PDP in 2015 are wasting their time. It is a done deal and the array of Jonathan’s foot soldiers are clearing the coast to actualise this ambition. The President’s body language is also speaking volumes of his ambition.

    All the legal hurdles that could have debarred PDP from fielding Jonathan had been removed. The court had declared him fit and qualified to contest in a judgement that put paid to the fears that he might lose the party’s ticket on constitutional grounds.

    The big question

    The challenge, however, is: How will PDP sell Jonathan to Nigerians in 2015? In 2011, Jonathan rode to power on a national goodwill. Youths, elders, children, right groups, democratic organisations, media houses and even the progressives rose in his defence. He was a household name and was viewed as the Messiah that would take the country to the promised land.

    But the goodwill has fast diminished. From the breath of fresh air that was expected when he assumed power, Jonathan has been accused of forcing people to breath the polluted air of corruption, insecurity and poverty.

    The Presidency has consistently maintained that such allegations are the handiwork of opposition leaders who have turned blind eyes to laudable programmes and projects of the Jonathan’s administration in the areas of infrastructure and free and fair elections.

    In fact, the foot soldiers of the President, especially the Governor of Bayelsa State, Mr. Seriake Dickson, are working assiduously to ensure that Nigerians love Jonathan again.

    Their thinking

    They are plotting, scheming and re-strategising to convince PDP, particularly the founding fathers of the party in the North, that Jonathan should be allowed to fly the flag of the party again.

    To relaunch the Otuoke-born President, Dickson and his team are battling to form and consolidate new and existing groups as platforms to positively speak in unison on every issue concerning Jonathan.

    They believe that when notable regional groups take a stand for Jonathan, other negative views will be dwarfed and relegated to the background. The groups, they argue, will also use their influence to mobilise support for the President in 2015.

    South-South caucus of PDP meets in Asaba

    Such idea of rescuing the dwindling fortunes of Jonathan came to the fore in Asaba, Delta State, when South-South caucus of the PDP met recently and passed a vote of confidence in Jonathan.

    In attendance at the meeting were political office holders at national and state levels, senators and members of the House of Representatives, zonal and national officers of the party and governors from the South-South geopolitical zone.

    There were also other marathon meetings involving leaders, including governors from the regions where issues of Jonathan’s reelection was discussed. Dickson is alleged to be the brain behind all the meetings.

    The Enugu Assembly

    Before the Asaba meetings, Dickson had arranged a gathering of governors of the South-East and South-South zones at the Government House, Enugu, on July 7.

    The governors, who rose from the forum, resolved to continue to support the transformation agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan. The governors released a three-point communique which was read by Governor Peter Obi of Anambra State, who is also the Chairman, South-East Governors’ Forum.

    In the communique, the governors announced their appreciation of  President Jonathan’s performance so far and praised Jonathan’s mid-term report.

    But the quest for zonal unity ahead of 2015 by Jonathan’s foot soldiers was defeated as three governors refused to turn up for the meeting. Governors Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers), Owelle Rochas Anayo Okorocha (Imo), and Adams Oshiohmole (Edo), neither attended the gathering nor sent representatives.

    Shifting attention to the INC

    The relentless Dickson turned his attention to the two major groups in the Ijaw nation – the Ijaw National Congress and the Ijaw Youth Council. Analysts believe that while the governor of the only homogeneous Ijaw state successfully reconstituted the leadership of INC with persons who are loyal to the 2015 agenda, he has so far been unable to replicate the feat in the IYC.

    It was obvious that officials of the state government influenced the elections into the vacant positions of INC. All the persons whose names appeared in a list of government candidates circulated among the delegates prior to the elections, emerged victorious.

    At the end of the election, a former Senator, Chief Tare Sekibo, who topped the alleged list of government candidates, was elected the president of the organisation amidst protest by persons not in the good books of the government.

    In his acceptance speech, Sekibo, who hails from Okirika, Rivers State, the home of Dame Patience, wife of President Jonathan, had vowed to pursue the collective interest of the Ijaw nation.

    Few weeks after the election, the objective of the new INC became very clear. Dickson, through his Commissioner for Culture and Ijaw National Affairs, Dr. Felix Tuodolor, assembled the elders at the Ijaw House for an emergency meeting.

    In a heated session, the elders took turns to condemn what they referred to as consistent attacks on their son, Jonathan, by other groups, especially from the North.

    The elders, who held discussions that lasted for over four hours from 3am to 7pm, resolved to meet with the Arewa Consultative Forum, Ohaneze Ndiigbo and the Oodua Peoples Congress from the South-West to resolve areas of differences.

    They believed that reasoning with other ethnic groups would give their geopolitical zone a second chance at the presidency in 2015. They were of the opinion that consulting with other ethnic groups would lead to an agreement that would allow Jonathan a second term in office.

    They were worried that the tirades launched against Jonathan and the present negative mood of some important sections of the country would work against Jonathan in 2015.

    One of the leaders, Chief Thompson Okorotie, submitted that Jonathan deserved a second term in office. But he said there must be ethnic harmony to guarantee a second term for the President.

    So, Prof. Alagoa’s suggestion that the elders should form a group to meet with Arewa and Ndiigbo was adopted by other elders.

    Tuodolor, the convener of the forum, said the Ijaw Nation had yet to meet its collective aspirations despite its strategic importance to the country.

    IYC imbroglio

    Having secured the support of INC, Dickson and other Jonathan’s foot soldiers took the campaign for ethnic harmony to the IYC, the youth wing of INC. Their scheme to control the body and perhaps plant their stooges ahead of 2015 allegedly stirred controversies that split IYC into two factions.

    Dickson lobbied and won the hosting right of the IYC elections, a move considered contrary to the provisions of the constitution that established the youth body.

    According to the constitution of IYC, Bayelsa is not qualified to host the elections since the presidency of the council was zoned to it.

    But pundits argue that Dickson’s desire to keep tab on the conduct of the elections informed his decision to demand that the aspect of the constitution should be waived to grant him the right.

    The overtures of Jonathan’s foot soldiers and other unresolved disagreements created disaffections among members of IYC and led to the emergence of factions.

    The development got messier when two electoral committees were formed for the same election. While one committee had scheduled election for August 10, the other faction picked August 8 for the same exercise.

    The confusion created fear of violence in the region and compelled INC to wade into the crisis by first postponing the elections indefinitely.

    But the Government of Bayelsa State quickly denied having anointed candidates for the elections.

    Birth of ‘South-East, South-South Traditional Rulers Forum’

    Beyond the plots to control Regional Governors Fora, INC and IYC, Jonathan’s foot soldiers have continued in their quest for regional integration. They swayed traditional rulers from the South-South and South-East geopolitical zones to gather in Yenagoa for a meeting.

    Most of them were told that the gathering was aimed at integrating them into a forum called the South-East and South-South Traditional Rulers Forum. But when they eventually gathered,  the inauguration was suddenly turned into an endorsement party for Jonathan.

    Many of the traditional rulers took turns to praise Jonathan and later threw their weight behind him for 2015. There were unconfirmed reports that one of them left the venue of the programme in a hurry, lamenting that the reason for the meeting had been defeated.

    “We were not invited to come and endorse Jonathan. What is happening here is deceptive”, he was quoted as saying.

    Other community leaders, however, insisted in their different remarks that they would support Jonathan’s second term in 2015. According to them, Jonathan had provided effective  leadership despite the challenges confronting the country.

    The Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade and Ghom Ghom, Jos, HRM Da Buba Gyang described the President as one of the best leaders to have ruled the country.

    Oni, who was represented by the General-Secretary of the Council of Yoruba Monarchs, Oba Aderemi Adedapo, said:  “Dr. Jonathan’s emergence as President of the country was a fulfilment of Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s prediction that an Ijaw man would rule this country some day in the future.

    In his remarks, Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu called on Nigerians to give Jonathan a second chance. He argued that there was no time the President pledged to serve a single term alone.

    But Gyang urged political class to ascribe constitutional role to the traditional rulers to enable them contribute to decision-making in the country.

    Those in attendance were the Sultan of Sokoto, represented by the Shehu of Borno, Alhaji Abubakar El-Kanemi, President-General of Ohaneze Ndigbo Worldwide, Nnachi Enwo-Igariwey and former Governors of Bayelsa and Imo States, Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha and Ikedi Ohakim.

    They all expressed delight at the formation of the Forum, stressing that it would cement the bond of unity between the zones and promote stability in the country.

    Addressing the forum, Jonathan who was represented by Dickson, urged them to partner with other stakeholders in the ongoing effort to build an egalitarian and prosperous Nigeria.

    The main problem

    By all indications, analysts believe it will take more than regional integration to make Nigerians love Jonathan again. They said he must tackle corruption, guarantee security, provide employment and ensure uninterrupted power supply within the period left in his current tenure.

    If he fails to do these satisfactorily, there are indications that many Nigerians will run to APC which they now see as PDP’s viable alternative.

  • Between Mimiko and Daniel

    Long before he joined the Labour Party (LP) from the PDP a few weeks ago, former Governor of Ogun State, Gbenga Daniel, was known to be a regular visitor to the Ondo State Government House in Akure, the state capital. Daniel and his host, Governor Olusegun Mimiko, have allegedly been engaged in series of talks on how to whittle down the influence of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (now APC) in the South-West.

    According to sources, the two men are determined to field ‘strong candidates’ to challenge APC candidates in all the South-West states in the 2015 election. Unconfirmed speculations also have it that LP has provided its platform for Senator Iyiola Omisore to contest the Osun State governorship election coming up next year, just in case the former senator is not fielded by his party, PDP.