Secretary to Anambra State Government, Oseoloka Obaze, has finally confirmed speculations that he would be contesting the 2014 Anambra governorship race. At a public function recently, the SSG was reported to have disclosed that his desire to succeed Governor Peter Obi is in line with the aspiration of the people of Anambra North Senatorial Zone to produce the next governor of the state. But the big question remains whether Obi would throw his weight behind his trusted aide when crunch time comes.
Category: Politics
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‘Why Igbo presidency is impossible in 2015’
Dr. Eddie Mbadiwe, is a member of the House of Representatives for Ideato North/South constituency, Imo State. He spoke with Sunday Oguntola on the nagging APGA crisis and the Igbo presidency project, among others.
As the leader of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) in the House, how do you feel about the current crisis in the party?
I am worried about the crisis because APGA by philosophy is a progressive party. The crisis is very bad for our party and our people but I believe that with time, may be this crisis will be resolved. People shouldn’t believe that they are right all the time. They need to make concession at times because at the end of the day, the society is bigger than any of us. We should be thinking of what is best for our community and our people but we are not doing that at the moment.
I came from England to run for this election. I would have joined the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) but I believe that PDP cannot move this country forward because there is no philosophy. It is like a cabal who want to see what they can get for themselves. This is not what politics is all about.
Politics is about service to the society buy PDP is a party where people are only after what they can get from the system. That is why I support the merger of some of the opposition parties into All Progressives Congress (APC). I am not saying that they are different human beings; they are the same Nigerians but let’s have some different philosophies that define where we are going.
PDP doesn’t know where they are going, but APC will give more stability to this country. There are too many political parties in Nigeria to have any meaningful opposition; the other parties have to merge in order to have a more formidable platform to go for power. The way they are fragmented at the moment, they can never get power, so the merger is good for the country.
But your party announced it is not involved in the merger, so which APGA do you belong to?
There are factions in APGA at the moment. There is the Governor Peter Obi’s APGA, which does not believe in the merger. I think that the national chairman made a statement that APGA will not surrender its certificate which means that they are not ready to merge. There is Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State who believes in APC and held a rally recently to say that APGA Imo or APGA Rochas is now APC. I am with my governor. If Ojukwu had not died, there wouldn’t have been this split in APGA. The major cause of the split was the fact that Ojukwu, who had been the rallying point, is dead. If Ojukwu had not died, I am sure APGA in the next election would have got about four states and that will give us a leverage to grow, but as the party is at the moment, if I tell you that APGA will win Anambra election, I am not being realistic because you must unite first to be able to win. So, the crisis is very bad for our people.
How do you assess APGA government in Imo State?
The government is doing very well. I travelled home some weeks ago and the road infrastructure being put in place is wonderful but the government needs to publicise what it is doing.
What is your view on local government autonomy and internal democracy among political parties?
There is no internal democracy in all the political parties in the country; it is a major problem which must be addressed. Local government election in Nigeria is a charade. Each governor wins all the seats. Is that possible? It is not possible, and that is why I am appealing to the National Assembly to have the courage to domicile all the elections in INEC.
The state electoral commissions should be scrapped because it is a waste of time and resources. All they are doing is what the governors ask them to do. They should be completely dissolved. We cannot grow as a country if people have no confidence in the electoral process.
We need to muster courage to address this fundamental issue by scrapping all the State Electoral Commissions and put all elections under INEC. I am not saying that INEC is an angel but their performance in the last election was more credible than it used to be. It is getting better and I believe it I’ll be better in future elections.
Will you vote for local government autonomy?
For me, I will vote for autonomy of the local governments. But it has both merit and demerits. Grating autonomy to the local governments may make the federal government too strong and may defeat the federal structure we have. The federal government may use the local government to subvert the state; it is an issue that has to be looked into critically, but there is need for the local governments to have direct allocation. In some states, the governors seize the money and give them what they feel like giving them. It requires a lot of courage; we need to do those things that are in the interest of the people.
How do you react to the ongoing constitutional amendment process by the National Assembly?
There are quite some issues that need urgent attention; like the local government autonomy, dissolution of state electoral commissions and state creation. Anybody that takes a critical look at this country will know that we don’t need more states though there is inequality at the moment. The south east is the only zone with five states, the rest of the zones have six states. If people want to be true and objective, the southeast should have one more state to balance the spread. Apart from the southeast, there should no more states because they are not bringing any progress. We only have increased number of sirens and convoys and this is the money we can put into education. But the South East needs to agree in principle.
Why is the amended budget yet to be signed?
I wish I know the cause of the delay in signing the budget. I am worried because we are already in June and this is a budget that is supposed to start operating in January. All the speed we used in passing the budget and the gains have been lost. There is so much suffering in the land and I think we have a duty to look at the budget again and pass the final budget so that the nation can move forward.
How realistic is the Igbo presidency project?
You don’t become President by wishing it, nobody gives you power; you have to take it. The Igbo have to organise themselves and come out with one voice. When election starts, you will have between 50-60 Igbos running. In that kind of scenario, who is going to be president? The other groups will exploit the situation. Let us first of all organise ourselves, unite and talk to other Nigerians, make friends with them. It is not a matter of saying it is our turn, such things don’t happen in politics. You have to get it by negotiations and persuasion. You have to convince other groups that other zones have had it, we have not had it, we should get it. You have to look at structures to know which party is more likely to produce the president and you ask within that structure. In fact, that is one of the reasons I didn’t join the PDP.
The PDP has no regard for the Igbos. The highest Igbo man in PDP currently is the National Publicity Secretary, what is that in terms of party structure? The presidency will come naturally but it may not come in 2015 but it will come.
Can rotational presidency get Ndigbo the slot?
Rotational presidency is a recipe for disaster. What you will enthrone by that is mediocrity. I believe the president should be produced on the basis of excellence. Let the best person run this country. You must be well-equipped to be able to run a country like Nigeria. If you put a mediocre just because you are rotating, we will continue to slide. Let’s elect presidents based on what the person has to offer and not on the basis of where they come from.
What is your score card in the House?
I was very actively involved in the election of the current Speaker of the House of Representatives and I think we made the right decision because Tambuwal has shown that the trust we placed in him is not misplaced.
The very first thing I did in the House was to sponsor a motion to censor and punish GSM providers for poor quality of service. The next motion I sponsored was an amendment of the Universal Basic Education (UBE) Act to make education compulsory up to SS3 because the major problem we have in this country is illiteracy. That bill has gone through the second reading and public hearing and will soon become law. If we have it as law and government ensures the enforcement of this law, we will have a different country in the next 15years. People will understand themselves better and the issue of Boko Haram will be a thing of the past because nobody will say that western education is sin. I have awarded over 15 university scholarships and will award more this year.
We have been able to get jobs for at least 10 graduates, empowered some youths to make them self-reliant by giving them tricycles. We built community centres, dug boreholes and also got a major road which links Okigwe-Nnewi rehabilitated.
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The changing political landscape
The winner in the current bid by three of the major political parties to merge into one formidable force can only be the people, the voting public. If the registration id succeeds, there would be a real choice in 2015. It could force the hands of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at throwing some dividends at the people. It would also force candidates of both parties to come up with some issues and, for once, it could be payback time.
As things stand today, the allies are stronger in many parts of the country. In the Northwest, the tendency that started to manifest at the last election has come full circle. Clearly, the governors, representing the dominant tendencies in Jigawa, Sokoto, Kano and Kebbi States, all currently controlled by the PDP, have spoken eloquently.
Their voices have not been muffled. Alhaji Sule Lamido of Jigawa was not stingy in declaring how the voting at the Nigerian Governors Forum went. He named the nine PDP governors who voted against Jonah Jang, the president’s choice who also got the backing of the party establishment. The governors dared Jang and Tukur and, when the party attempted to bare a non-existent fang, they threatened to prove that politics remains a game of numbers. The suspension of Wamakko had to be rescinded shamefacedly.
It is a forerunner of what to expect in the days ahead. The Northwest is dead against a second-term Jonathan presidency and has shown that it would throw everything into the battle.
This is coming after the northeast had demonstrated that it would go with any other party but PDP. A political history of the region which follows its traditional history indicates that PDP may have lost its hold forever.
In 1999, the Northern opposition party All Peoples Party won in Borno, Yobe and Gombe States. The PDP won in the rest. Earlier, in 1991, the Social Democratic Party (SDP) was victorious at the polls in Borno, Yobe and Taraba States, while the National Republican Convention (NRC) was consoled with control of Bauchi and Adamawa. In the Second Republic, the Great Nigeria Peoples Party (GNPP) controlled Borno (now Borno and Yobe) and Gongola (now Adamawa and Taraba States), leaving Bauchi (now Bauchi and Gombe).
The upcoming All Progressives Congress (APC), if it plans well and devices a winning formula, is poised to benefit from the anti-PDP feelings in the two far Northern states, more so in the Northeast where the people are naturally progressive. A division in the conservative bloc would therefore be a blessing to the new party.
Unless there is an earthquake before 2015, the doors to the Southwest are shut against Jonathan and his party. The region is the bedrock of progressive politics and merely strayed from the line for a while following a perception that the Alliance for Democracy, and later the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) are too narrow to pose any threat to the national ruling party.
The PDP remains dominant in the Northcentral, Southsouth and the Southeast. However, the APC is waxing stronger in the Northcentral with the support it has in Niger and Kwara States. The weal leadership being provided by Jonah Jang in Plateau makes it vulnerable.
At no point in the contemporary political history of Nigeria is the opposition party in a strong position to displace the ruling party than the APC is now. Contrary to the sentiments expressed by President Jonathan that the party should win in 23 states in the general elections of 2015, the party is certainly much weaker today than it was in 2011. Then, many voted along lines dictated by sectarian values. He won even in the Southwest. But, with some unguarded utterances from him and failure to perform to the expectation of the people, it is very unlikely that he would benefit from such primordial sentiments this time.
My interest in the direction victory would go in 2015 stems from the need to cure the polity of the dangerous ailment, impunity. True, it could be said that most of those on the political scene today were raised together. However, it has been shown that the environment means much in politics. Whoever emerges a leader in the Southwest, for example, is moved to shout the Awo slogan and thus influenced by the tradition. This is so in the current dispensation.
I am convinced that a displacement of the PDP from the centre could only promote development as the succeeding administration would realise that the same treatment could be meted to it by the electorate if it fails the test.
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Still on Ekweremadu and Enugu governorship
The last seems not to have been heard on the controversy surrounding the zoning of the 2015 governorship in Enugu State to the Nsukka zone.
A few weeks ago, Governor Sullivan Chime stirred the hornet nest when he declared that it was the turn of the Nsukka zone to produce the governor in 2015. But the Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, rumoured to be interested in taking over from Chime has denied knowledge of the zoning policy.
And just a few days ago, a pressure group, Greater Awgu Forum, said it is the urn of the zone (not Nsukka) to produce the next governor. Ekweremadu hails from Greater Agwu. It remains to be seen how this controversy will be resolved.
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Is Oghiadome warming up for Edo governorship?
By virtue of his position as the Chief of Staff to President Goodluck Jonathan, there is no doubt that Oghiadome is a major political force in Edo State. Latest report indicates that the former deputy governor is allegedly interested in succeeding Governor Adams Oshiomhole, when the latter’s tenure expires.
However, the COS has remained coy on this rumour, prefering to concentrate on his present duties at the seat of power.
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Mogaji: Her politics, battles and triumphs
Statesmen, politicians, government officials and other eminent Nigerians have been paying tributes to the departed market leader and politician , Alhaja Abibat Mogaji, who passed on recently at 96. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU writes on the involvement of the Amazon in the Southwest and national politics.
In the fifties, women participation in politics was limited to attending rallies, campaigns and voting. Only few women were fielded as candidates for elections. But among the prominent women leaders who mobilised for political action was the late Alhaja Abibat Mogaji, who passed on last week in Lagos at 96.
She was a relentless market activist, woman of substance, philanthropist, and promoter of Islam. But the deceased President of Market Men and Women Association of Nigeria also made her marks in politics. She was in the class of women politician like the late Mrs. Olayinka Rosiji, the leader of the Action Group (AG) Women Association and the late Mrs. Jolubu Kolade, a leader of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) women’s wing. The market matriarch was also a close associate of Mrs. Hannah Dideolu Awolowo, the widow of the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo.
Alhaja Mogaji was a consummate politician. Yet, she played her politics without expecting any exceptional personal reward. She paid her financial dues to the coffers of the AG and UPN, unlike nowadays payment of party dues is old-fashioned. She also organised the market women into “political cells” across the old local councils, thereby making it easy for the parties to mobilise them under her indisputable leadership. For over 60 years, Mogaji was the voice of women in Lagos. She used her platform, the market association for interest articulation andf aggregation.
Three years ago, the Yeyeoba of Lagos, Ikirun and Kweme, was appointed as the Chairman of Lagos State Market Development Board. The appointment by Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN) crowned her involvement and service to the members of this strategic community who account for her pre-eminence in the metropolis. On her wheel chair, she spoke as the market ambassador and endowed the office with visibility. Throughout, she acted as an effective bridge builder between the government and the masses.
“All market men and women are important and government should carry them along,” she said at her inauguration by the former Head of Service, Alhaji Yakubu Balogun, who presented her with the certificate of appointment, amid applause by other board members.
Throughout her market career, her leadership was never disputed. Not only has she articulated the views and interests of traders, her name has been synonymous with Lagos market, its pride, beauty and varieties, its challenges and pains, its prospects and pitfalls. It is a no mean feat that she has led the organisation without betraying the group’s objectives and without abusing her exalted office.
During the colonial period, Alhaja Mogaji had shown that promise of leadership as a kid trader and an apprentice learning at the feet of Madam Pelewura, a successful and influential trader. She was not afraid of the rain and scourging sun, the devastating threat to hawking, and the discomfort associated with buying and selling in the city. She was faithful to her boss to the end, making her to earn her trust and receive her blessing. Mogaji achieved her freedom after serving her boss with loyalty, honestly, principle and faith.
Immediately, she built on that time-tested trading reputation. When she started her own business, she became a household name in Lagos, mentoring young leaders and organising them into associations and societies for interest articulation and aggregation. She taught the principles of profitable trading, diversification of commercial ventures and traditional debt recovering in her informal School of Commerce. She also exposed many traders to variety trading, the value of hard-work, customers relations and confidence building, lending and borrowing with dignity and keeping of promise.
Alhaja Mogaji achieved fame by dint of nets-work, self-sacrifice and commitment to the goals of life. She is a focused trader and employer of labour in the informal setting. Many who came to her as trading apprentices later became so intimate with her and she treated them like blood relations. She was also a strict disciplinarian. As a parent, she groomed people without sparing the rod to spoil the child.
But, early in life too, her human face, human heart and milk of human kindness came to the fore. She became a philanthropist, channeling resources to the poor and needy. Her house became the rallying point and refuge for widows, homeless and other artisans and peasants who needed succor. Many youths became graduates on her unsung scholarship. Numerous others were aided to be up their businesses. Although an advocate of religious harmony, the devoted Muslim was a frontline defender of the faith who sponsored many religious activities in the media.
Unknown to many, Alhaja Mogaji is also a politician. The Amazon was active in the hey days of party supremacy and hierarchical discipline when party followers paid dues as financial members, when political consensus received majority endorsement, when leaders were credible, and when government was responsible and accountable. She had joined the Action Group (AG) in the fifties, mobilising support for the leader, Awolowo, during campaigns. She was an active member of the AG Women Association led by the late Mrs Rosiji, mother of the late Chief Ayotunde Rosiji, prominent Egba politician and celebrated National Secretary of AG, until the split in the party at the Jos Conference in 1962. She printed banners and posters for the AG politicians for free and steered women to endorse Awo and other candidates at the polls.
Paradoxically, Lagos, her main base, was firmly under the control of the National Council of Nigerian Citizens (NCNC) led by the late Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, who had become a parliamentarian in Ibadan. But, when the AG seized the storm, Alhaja Mogaji played a prominent role in securing the bloc vote of women for the new party in Lagos. Her mobilisation prowess, despite her lack of formal education, puzzled the NCNCers like Otunba TOS Benson, Chief Adeniran Ogunsanya, Alhaji S. A. Adewale (‘the boy is good’) , Dr Ibiyinka Olorunnimbe, Chief Adeleke Adedoyin, and Prince Adeyinka Oyekan, who later became the Oba of Lagos. Through her political activities, she became intimate with Mrs. HID Awolowo.
When the late Alhaji Ganiyu Dawodu wanted to replace Bashorun J. K. Randle as a councilor in the Lagos City council, Mogaji was one of the eminent Lagosians who campaigned for him, despite the stiff opposition by the equally powerful Lagosians in the NCNC, who objected to the ambition of the “political lad” in the fifties. Dawodu later became the chairman of the council after independence.
During the military rule, she was a force to reckon with. When the prices of food jumped up in Lagos, the first military Head of State, Gen. Thomas Aguiyi-Ironsi, pleaded with her to appeal to the traders. But she also demanded for social amenities for the people from the government. Reflecting on the incident, Ironsi’s secretary, Ambassador Hamzat Ahmadu, who paid a condolence visit to the family, said: “The former Head of State sent me to her to appeal to her to reduce the price of foodstuff, which she did. She did not leave it at that. She called me and said, my son, I have done my part. What about the General. I said he will do his part.”
Her lack of education may have robbed of cabinet appointments in Lagos State during the long period of military rule and during the Second Republic. Alhaja Mogaji was among the top women leaders who rallied women behind Alhaji Lateef Jakande for governorship of Lagos in 1979, when he defeated Prince Ladega Adele, and 1983, when he defeated Hakeem Habeeb.
Her services to the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN), even at the centre, was legendary. An Awoist, she played a prominent role in the crisis resolution agenda of the AG and UPN under Awolowo. She accompanied Mrs. Awolowo to Offa, Kwara State, on a historic peace mission mooted by the leaders the UPN to reconcile the late Chief Josiah Sunday Olawoyin and Senator Cornelius Adebayo, following the crisis that broke out after the 1982 governorship primaries. Then, Awo and Jakande supported the governorship ambition of Olawoyin, the Asiwaju of Offa, while former Governor Bola Ige of old Oyo State and Senator Abraham Adesanya backed Adebayo. It was not easy for Olawoyin to let go, especially when there were indications that UPN would ride on the back of the protracted crisis between Senator Olusola Saraki and Governor Adamu Attah to power. He felt that he should be the candidate, in view of his past contributions to the progressive fold. Twice was the shadow election held, and Adebayo won on all counts.
To prevent the escalation of the intra-party crisis in the Kwara State UPN, the duo of Mrs. Awolowo and Mogaji left Lagos for Offa to pacify Olawoyin. As the Yeyeoba of Ife later recalled, the woman recorded success where men had failed.
Mama Mogaji was not lettered, but when the elite deserted Awo in the days of political tribulation in the First Republic, she rejected overtures from Chief Ladoke Akintola, leader of ‘Demo Party’ and controversial Premier, to defect from the AG. Throughout the period that Awo was in jail, she was always present at Ikenne home of the leader for the yearly birthday celebrations. She was a pillar of support for Mama Awo and other oppressed progressive leaders under the honour of the United Progressive Grand Alliance (UPGA).
Three years ago, she reviewed her political life during her birthday at her Alausa, Ikeja residence. She said: “I have seen it all. I have interacted with Zik, Balewa, Sardauna, Ironsi and Gowon. I have played my role and served my people. all I have been saying is that market women and the masses should be catered for”. The remarks were reminiscent of her farewell address to former military President Ibrahim Babangida, during the commissioning of the Third Mainland Bridge, Lagos. Mogaji said: “Ibrahim and Maryam, as you are going to Abuja, you should not forget Lagos. You should not forget us because you have been part of us”.
Mogaji was also a “June 12” crusader. An apostle of justice, she had decried the criminal annulment of the historic election won by the late Chief Moshood Abiola. In fact, she went to appeal to Babangida in Abuja to rescind his decision on the cancellation of the results.
Mama Awo and her compatriot, Mama Mogaji have weighed down by the burden of old age. In their old age, they were only dictating the tune on wheel chairs, although their powers of ideas and mental recall remained intact. Reflecting on that inevitable limitation at the twilight of life, Mrs. Awolowo, who is ever fond of her friend, said that the early tolls and deep political involvement later, actually sapped their energy. At private level, she also bore the vicissitudes of life with philosophical calmness.
Under Tinubu Administration, there were allegations that some traders had converted their market shops to residence by sleeping overnight there. Government threatened to deal with the culprits. Drastic measures were proposed to curb their desecration of the markets. It was Mogaji who brokered peace between the government and aggrieved market women.
In 2011, the women leader also endorsed Fashola for a second term, ahead of the party’s endorsement. During her birthday, which was attended by the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) leaders-Chief Bisi Akande, Alhaji Olatunji Hamzat, Prince Tajudeen Olusi, and prince Abiodun Ogunleye, she raised up the hand of the governor. Turning to former Governor Bola Tinubu, Mogaji, she said in Yoruba: “I was here in this house when you said that you have discovered the best man to take over from you. You have spent eight years. Fashola will also spend eight years”.
In appreciation of her contributions to the socio-economic and political development of the country, Mogaji was bestowed with the national honour of “Member of the Order of Federal Republic” (MFR) and Commander of the order of the Federal Republic (CFC) by the Federal Government. In addition, Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo, and Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, gave her a honorary doctorate degrees.
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‘Pdp can’t restore Nigeria’s fortune’
Former Aviation Minister Femi Fani-Kayode recently dumped the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the All Progressives Congress (APC). In this interview, he explains the reasons behind his action to AUGUSTINE AVWODE.
You have joined the All Progressives Congress (APC). What informed your decision?
There were a number of issues. As far I am concerned, the most important thing is that we need to ensure that this country is set on the right track and that the fortune of Nigeria must be restored. And I have lost confidence in the ability of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to restore the fortune of Nigeria. I know what was in the kitty and what we left while we were in power up to 2007. I know what has happened in the last five years. It has been a disaster. Whether we are talking about the economic situation, or talking about the security situation or you are talking about unity in Nigeria. Today, you have greater divisions in terms of tribes, regions and religion than any other time in our history, except, perhaps, just before the civil war. That is something I find very frightening and I don’t want to be among those who are pretending that all is well, and that we don’t need a change. I think it is time for us to join hands with the progressives as they try to move Nigeria forward. And there are many progressives within the PDP, who are too frightened to come out, but after a while, you will find them. They will break ranks with the cult that the PDP has become and they will come and join the forces that are trying to effect a change in 2015.
Would you say the breaking of ranks is already happening in the PDP given recent developments in the party?
Yes, of course. If you look at what happened during the Nigerian Governors Forum (NGF), that is an indication of things to come. How could you have a situation where 35 people held an election and one got 19 votes while the other had 15 votes and the person with 15 votes claimed victory. This was a secret ballot that was filmed, it was free and fair, these are all distinguished and honourable men and a winner emerged. But all of a sudden, the person that lost told the whole world that he won, split the NGF into two and got the backing of Mr. President. That is the logic of the party. That is the way it operates and the only way for that matter. It operates like a cult than a political party. For me, that was the final straw. I just have to publicly part ways with it and let the world know that I cannot be part of a group of people that behave in such a way.
You have described the PDP as a sinking ship. Is this an insider’s unbiased assessment or just pure exaggeration?
It is not an exaggeration. It is actually an understatement, if you want to know the truth. The situation is worse than a sinking ship. I don’t have to insult anybody or be disrespectful to anybody but I believe that we should all follow our minds wherever we want to go. If you have a conviction to do anything, you must be courageous enough to go ahead and do it. If you are comfortable with what is happening in the PDP, by all means stay. I feel strongly convinced to leave the PDP and I think it would be most irresponsible of me to participate with a group of people who cannot even acknowledge that they have lost an election. For me, that is what has happened in the NGF election. Besides, look at what they have done to former President Obasanjo and so many other leaders within the party. They have marginalized them, humiliated them and they no longer listen to them. Just a few people are running the show, and I think that is not the way forward. And that is the precise reason why I left. It is not an exaggeration, I can assure you. There is serious trouble in the party. And I can tell you that up to eight of their governors, today, that I have interacted with, are very unhappy with the party leadership and what is going on there. And once President Goodluck Jonathan emerges the flag bearer of the party, whether by election or selection, because I am aware they want to change the rules, something that happened only in Nazi Germany and only happened in Communist China, where you don’t have primaries in an election. You just select, that is what they want to do now. I am sure when that happens, or when President Jonathan emerges, it will spark a revolt in the PDP and will make more people come over to the APC.
What would you say is the attraction in the APC that you have chosen to pitch your tent with it?
First of all, I have always been part of the wider APC family. The reason why I joined the government at the centre was because of former President Olusegun Obasanjo and not because of PDP. It was the late Chief Bola Ige that asked me to come back from exile in Ghana to participate and eventually, joined the government which I did. And again, I believe that Obasanjo needed to be supported because he was doing a good job. But, if you look at my antecedent before then, I learnt at the feet of people like Prof. Adebayo Williams, all the real people that could be considered as the great progressive stars. Throughout the years of National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), I was one of those who were really supportive of the struggle. I was very involved with that and that is where I am coming from. For me, it was a strange thing to be with Obasanjo, anyway, but I thought that he was doing a good job and needed to be supported and I have done my time with him. I believe he is a wonderful man, but I believe that now we have to move on. We left government in 2007, that was about five years ago, and we have our choices to make now and so you go by your choice. I think that the fortunes of Nigeria would be better served in the hands of progressives represented by people like Asiwaju Tinubu, General Buhari and other people, too many to mention.
Would you tell us some of your experiences while in government?
Well, so many experiences. While I was in Public Affairs, I learnt a lot. It was a very difficult job. Then, I was interacting with your colleagues everyday. For me, it was the most difficult job I have ever done in my life because I made so many enemies simply because I was standing in defence of a man that I believed was doing a good job. Curiously, even old friends, misunderstood me. But those who knew where I was coming from, knew I was just doing my job and I wanted to do it properly, that was it. When I became a minister, I learnt a lot on the job. I was minister of two separate ministries – Culture and Tourism and Aviation. Now, let me say this, to be in government, if you want to be serious about it, it is a very difficult thing. You have to get up very early in the morning, we worked extremely hard, and because we had a good President, who was virtually a workaholic, you cannot but be up and doing. And having left government, I believe I have paid my dues to the PDP and it is time for me to now feel free and try to do what I believe is right for this country. PDP is no longer what it was; PDP has derailed totally and we all must join hands to save this country.
You probably heard of the mid-term report, especially by the President Jonathan Administration. He asked Nigerians to assess him based on their own scheme. If you were to assess the administration’s performance, how would you score it?
It has been a dismal failure. That is number one. Anybody that is celebrating, I mean I saw what I would describe as a show of shame on the night the PDP gathered and they were clapping for themselves, they were all saying the President should stay on and whatever. The truth is that, Herod, the night before Rome started burning, clapped for himself. Czar Nicholas of Russia, the night before the Russian Revolution, clapped for himself. This thing happens all the time. In Nazi Germany, Hitler clapped for himself, up until the time when the Russians knocked on the Bunker, and he had to kill himself. The most important thing is to appreciate is that, never expect a ruling party that has lost touch with reality and is delusional, to score itself in an equitable and in a fair way. They will give themselves, if it is out of 100, they will give themselves 110 over 100. But I challenge them to tell us what they have done to improve on what happened up till 2007. Every single sector has degenerated since 2007. The fact and figure are there to prove what I am saying. First, 80 per cent graduate unemployment and 70 percent of Nigerians are living below the poverty line. In terms of power generation, we were into 4,500 megawatts daily in 2007, today, we are lower than that. Foreign Reserves in 2007 was US$47 billion, today we have about US$45 billion. It has not progressed in spite of the crude oil sales. Excess Crude Account, in 2007, we had US$24 billion, today we have just US$7 billion. We talk about foreign debt, it was zero foreign debt. It was paid off from US&30 billion to US$zero in eight years. Today, we are now back in debts to the tune of US$9 billion and we are still borrowing. The economy is not growing as much as it was in 2007. They are claiming five or six per cent, fine. Then, it was growing at about 8 or 9 per cent. It is the same Ministry of Finance; she would confirm what I am telling you. So, what are they celebrating? Four or five years later, we have gone backwards, we have not progress. Now, if you want to tell me you have progress, look at your foundations and tell me how you have built on it. They had a legacy, a foundation, which was quite a solid one in 2007. Whether you like Obasanjo or not, his performance, was a pretty good one, the records speak for itself. Did they build on it? The answer is no. Everything has degenerated since then and I believe we need a change. The PDP’s ambition to rule Nigeria in 2015 is like an iceberg approaching the tropics; the closer it gets, the more it melts. They are not going anywhere. They will be removed in 2015. You know why? Because God loves Nigeria and he alone determines the fate of the country. Not any individual or money or power from the Villa or who you know or what you have. And He will show them that He alone is God.
If you were to look into the future, what does the Nigeria political future hold?
If President Jonathan continues post-2015, Nigeria will be worse off than the Republic of Zaire within a year and we will never recover from it again. This will be in terms of the economy, in terms of security, in terms of safety, Nigeria will be worse off. Already, under his watch, more civilians, innocent people that is, have been killed than any other time in our history, apart from the civil war. About 6,000 people have been killed in the last two years by Boko Haram. And up until a year ago, he was saying that they were Nigerians whom he could not hurt. Up until three months ago, he set up a committee to dialogue with people who were determined to establish a Muslim fundamentalist state in Nigeria and had actually taken over part of our country and he was still trying to give them amnesty. Of course, they told him they were not interested in amnesty. It is only now that he realised that he has to be hard with them. He declared a state of emergency in part of the North, which I think is the right thing to do, but it is far too little and far too late. We cannot leave Nigeria in the hand of those who are not sensitive to our security situation and under whose watch many are being slaughtered on a daily basis, under whose watch the North has been literally on fire, and under whose watch Christians and Muslims are now very suspicious of one another, under whose watch the economy is crumbling by the day and we have so many people that are unemployed and suffering in our country. We must not allow that to continue to happen. If it happens after 2015, it may become irrevocable.
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2014: Anambra North plans consensus candidacy
GOVERNORSHIP aspirants from Anambra North Senatorial Zone may have agreed to step down for one of them to enable the zone win the forth coming governorship election. The zone is yet to rule the state since its creation.
The decision was reached at a meeting attended by eight out of the 17 aspirants from the zone. Those at the meeting were Mr Oseloka Obaze (APGA); Dr. Chike Obidigbo (APGA); Alex Obiogbolu (PDP); Nnamdi Ekweogwu (PDP); Mr Chinedu Idigo (APGA), Paul Odenigbo and Dr. Emma Okafor.
In their separate speeches after the event, the eight aspirants announced their readiness to work harmoniously with anyone that emerges as the anionted consensus candidate of the zone even as all indications point to the man with sound education home and abroad.
The chairman of Oluna Adagbe , Peoples Asssembly, Chief Shedrack Anakwue said each of the parties would present a candidate each, but the Oluna Adagbe has picked one of candidates comnsidered to be the best material and his name written and kept in a sealed envelop. He handed over a sealed envelope to the chairman of Anambra north traditional rulers council and chairman of Oluna Adagbe traditional rulers, Igwe Rowland Odegbo for keeps until the envelop would be opened.
Anakwue said the aspirants have agreed to step down and endorse a consensus candidates at party primaries in the People Democratic Party (PDP); All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA) and All Progres-sives Congress (APC), with a view to ensuring that the zone produces the next governor of Anambra State.
The Secretary of the Technical Committee, of the Oluna Adagbe Peoples Assembly, Hon. Nchekwube Anthony, has released its result of screening for the most credible candidate to be voted for in Anambra North in all the political parties at Geogold Hotel, Awka.
He said that the aspirants took the decision after meeting with the Technical Committee so as to ensure that at least one aspirants emerges victorious in each of the three major political parties in the country, which would make it possible for one of them to win the said governorship election.
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INEC and challenges of new constituencies
Constituency delimitation is part of the agenda by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) ahead of the 2015 general elections. AUGUSTINE AVWODE examines the imperative, challenges and prospects of the plan.
With a growing political consciousness among Nigerians,the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has a huge responsibility on its shoulders. Nigerians, more than ever, are demanding for free, fair and credible elections. This is a reality that is not lost on the electoral umpire. The 2015 general elections, remain a veritable opportunity to test INEC’s preparedness to give Nigerians something to cheer in the conduct of elections.
Only last week, INEC chairman Prof Attahiru Jega, reiterated this reality by pledging, almost for the umpteenth time, that the body will conduct free and credible elections in 2015. The INEC boss spoke when he received in audience, the top management team of the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN), which was led by its Acting Director-General, Dr. Samson Shuaibu. The team had gone to INEC to explore areas of cooperation and collaboration in the next election.
In Jega’s words: “We at INEC are aware of the enormous responsibilities that have been placed on our hands to produce a framework and deepen democracy in our country. We have been doing our best in that regard and we have benefited tremendously from the participation of all stakeholders and it is the partnership of all stakeholders with INEC that was responsible for the achievements recorded in the 2011 elections.
“Since the 2011 elections, we have been doing our best to fine tune the procedures to engage all the stakeholders and ensure that we keep on improving the process. Our determination is to ensure that the 2015 elections remain much better than that of 2011,” Jega said.
Part of the efforts to “fine tune the procedures” that will, ultimately, deliver a credible electoral contest in 2015, is the plan by INEC to embark on constituency delimitation. The objective is to create a fair balance of the voting population.
Imperative of constituency delimitation
In mid-March, INEC held discussions with representatives of about 20 political parties on its plan to embark on the delimitation of constituencies in the country ahead of the 2015 general elections.
Jega told his audience in his opening remarks that the commission had already worked out a plan for the exercise, and that it would strive to achieve it before the 2015 polls.
“We have worked out a plan for the delimitation of constituencies, which we shall strive to do before the 2015 elections”, he told the gathering
As a demonstration of its determination to carry out the exercise, INEC in collaboration with some government agencies, organized a two-day retreat in early May for stakeholders in Nigeria at the Nike Lake Hotel, Enugu.
All things considered, a review of the existing delimitation structure, has become necessary because of demographic changes. After the Enugu retreat, INEC issued a communiqué in which it tried to justify the necessity for the plan.
The commission noted that the current delimitation structure was done 17 years ago and that it was carried out by the defunct National Electoral Commission of Nigeria (NECON) in 1996, under a military regime. Besides, the commission is statutorily empowered to conduct delimitation of constituencies after 10 years, or after a census. Also, the growth in population and demographic shifts warrants a review of constituencies.
It argued that the current constituency structure has been severely criticised for “manifesting features that are at variance with international best practices, including mal-apportionments and other inequalities that challenge, in a fundamental manner, the principle of equal representation”.
It pressed its position further by saying that “if the principle of one man, one-vote in a single member representative system, such as ours is to be indeed enthroned in our democratic culture, conscious and deliberate effort must be made to review the constituencies in order to eliminate, or at least reduce to a minimum level, the current imbalances that have been noticed”.
The commission therefore agreed, at the retreat, that “to avoid the criticisms that have continued to dog the current delimitation, it would be wise and prudent to consider such good practices as administrative and traditional boundaries, cultural affinity, natural frontiers and physical features.”
Challenges
Desirable as it is, embarking on new constituency delimitation has its challenges. Jega, at the said retreat, admitted that the exercise would certainly face some challenges. He, however, assured that notwithstanding the challenges involved in the exercise, the electoral body would go ahead with it, for the sake of its positive effects in the development of the nation’s democracy.
“There is no doubt that constituency delimitation, or review of electoral constituencies, is difficult and challenging. But given its importance in expanding the scope of popular participation in representative democracy, and in strengthening good democratic governance, strenuous efforts have to be made to overcome the anticipated challenges.
“It is possible to successfully review and delimit electoral constituencies, as the experience of some of our sister African countries reveals. The commission is, therefore, determined to partner with all stakeholders to execute a transparent, rational and impartial delimitation of electoral constituencies”, he assured.
Already, the electoral body has agreed to use the 2006 census figures for the exercise. It was one of the major recommendations at the end of retreat. But one of the major challenges INEC is sure to face is skepticism on the part of the public and tendency to manipulate the process by political actors. As if anticipating these challenges, the retreat agreed, that, to successfully carry out the exercise, “the commission must continually engage with stakeholders, with a view to building confidence and mutual trust and disabusing mindsets, likely to be imbibed by key stakeholders, particularly, politicians who have vested interests in the exercise.”
Furthermore, INEC would have to ensure that the criteria for the exercise are “rational, transparent, impartial and non-partisan” while it “continues to carry its stakeholders along through continuous briefings, enlightenment, consultations, and voter education and public hearings”.
Speaking with The Nation on Tuesday, former Governor of old Kaduna State Alhaji Balarabe Musa said the major challenge the electoral body would face is that of convincing Nigerians that the exercise would be credible and justice driven.
“My first question is does it has the powers to do that, if yes, then it should go ahead. If it is the duty of another body to do it, it should do so faithfully. So, whether INEC or another body, it should do it faithfully; without regard to favouring anybody.
“It should ensure that the delimitation process is transparent from the begining to the end and be subject to scrutiny by all stakeholders. Now, I want to also say that the commission must emphasise the importance of the exercise to the electorate, because, it is what will give all of us what we want, which is one-man-one vote.
“It is only when there is the principle of equality, that the exercise can fully give expression to our desire to improve our electoral fortunes”, he said.
Lagos lawyer Chief Fred Agbaje agreed with the commission, that it was expected to conduct a review of constituencies after every general election or after any census in the country. “You know that our population is growing so rapidly, most of those who were 17 years in 2011 are now 18 years plus. There are also, movements across the country. Generally, it is desirable and we should encourage it. But then, there are likely to be challenges. There may be lack of cooperation from the public. And this will be basically as a result of lack of enough education about the issue at stake. So, people will see it as opportunity to inflict all sorts of political injury on our young democracy. There is also the possibility of it being hijacked by the political class for their own end? On the other hand, it could be hijacked by the politicians to maintain the status quo ”, he said.
Lagos State Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) Publicity Secretary Joe Ogbokwe said he is in support of the plan and believed, too, that many Nigerians would be in support of it, “only to the extent that it does not jeopardize 2015, and the realisation of a free and fair election. INEC must be prepared to do a clean and clear job.
“If you ask me, I will say that is the duty they owe Nigerians; to give us a free, fair and credible election. And if it will not serve that purpose, count me and all Nigerians out. So, from the word go, the commission must start by embarking on massive education and mobilization, if it hopes to succeed”, he said.
Prospects
The prospect of a successful delimitation of constituencies is high as long as it enjoys the support of critical stakeholders. With the attendance of the last retreat in Enugu by the leadership of the National Assembly; Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs); representatives of the National Population Commission (NPC); National Bureau of Statistics (NBS); Office of the Surveyor-General of the Federation (OSGF); National Space Research and Development Agency (BCDA); Nigerian Postal Service (NIPOST); and experts from the academia, there is high hope.
It has been observed that, one of the major flaws with previous efforts at review of constituency delimitation, has been inadequate engagement with major and critical stakeholders. But Jega assured participants at the Enugu retreat, that the commission’s new Delimitation Plan of Action, has provided for a robust programme of stakeholder sensitisation and engagement.
As part of the confidence building and sensitisation agenda with critical stakeholders, the commission held a three-day retreat in Sokoto in April with the Senate and House Committees on INEC. Coming just a month after the parley with party chieftains in Abuja, the Sokoto retreat provided another opportunity to review the existing constituencies.
The commission, Jega assured participants, will pursue the project with the same and even higher determination that has seen it overcome obstacles in the past.
“Certainly, we in the Commission will be the first to admit that the route has been tortuous and arduous but we have attended to the challenges with courage, determination, focus, honesty and sincerity of purpose.
“Indeed, it is all these (focus, courage, sincerity and transparency) and more, that we as a Commission are committed to bringing to this project in order to ensure a successful and generally acceptable review of electoral constituencies.
“We will seek your input into proposals for reviews of guidelines and procedures, strategies for citizen sensitization and mobilization for effective participation in elections, strategies for continuous voter registration, plans for constituency delimitation, and so on.”
But whether the commission will match its words with action, and so give Nigerians cause to smile when the 2015 elections are held and done, is left to be seen.
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‘Jonathan owes North apology’
The President of the Arewa Youth Consultative Forum, Mallam Yerima Shettima, has asked President Goodluck Jonathan to apologise to the North for the insults being hurled at the region, particularly, on the Hausa/Fulani people by his kinsmen in the Niger Delta.
Shettima reminded the President that more than half of the 22 million votes won by him in the 2011 presidential election, came from the region.
He told our correspondent that the Niger Delta people are portraying President Jonathan as an Ijaw President, and not Nigeria’s President. According to him, neither the votes of the Ijaw people alone nor the entire Niger Delta region, could make him president.
“The unguarded utterances of the President’s kinsmen is over heating the polity and Mr President had seen nothing wrong in that, let alone calling them to order. Could the President’s silence be taken as a tactical approval of his people derogatory remarks on the North”, he asked.
On June 12, the youth leader said: “It is still relevant because it is the collective struggle of the Nigerian people. It remains the sacrifice Nigerians have made to bring about democracy.
“It was a day when all Nigerians came out irrespective of our ethnic differences,irrespective of our religious differences and cast our votes without any iota of doubt in our minds because we asked for change. At the end of it all, some group of persons killed that dream for Nigerians. June 12 however, symbolises a lot of things for Nigeria. Abiola was one side of it.
“ We will continue to celebrate June 12, because it is not just all about the late Chief MKO Abiola alone. That’s where people make mistakes. It’s about Nigerians. He was a factor but that date remains the symbol of unity.
“The leaders of today did not make any sacrifice and were never involved in the struggle for the enthronement of true democracy, hence they are abusing power. That explains what we are currently experiencing in Nigeria today.
“We have achieved civilian rule but not democracy. The battle for the realisation of June 12 only stoke the fire of Nigeria’s ambiguous adventure to democracy. Until the convocation of a Sovereign National Conference (SNC), Nigeria is still far from reaching her democratic destination.
“To have a united Nigeria, all the issues must be discussed and resolved,otherwise, we would all be consumed one day. But many of those in power do not believe that it is the way out of the myriad of problems because they are enjoying the system and they want the status quo to continue”.
Yerima said the SNC will create an opportunity for us to address our fundamental issues.