Category: Politics

  • Can Mimiko weather the storm of litigation?

    Can Mimiko weather the storm of litigation?

    The Ondo State governorship contest has moved from the ballot box to the court room. Correspondent DAMISI OJO writes on the litigation and the challenges that will confront Governor Olusegun Mimiko, if he survives the legal hurdles.

     

    Five months after, the October 20, 2012 governorship election is inconclusive in Ondo State.

    Five political parties – Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), Accord Party (AP) and People for Democratic Change (PDC), initially filed petitions before the State Election Tribunal sitting in Akure to contest the victory of Governor Olusegun Mimiko at the poll.

    They complained that the election was rigged in favour of the Labour Party (LP) candidate.

    However, before the pre-hearing stage, the petitions of the CPC, Accord and PDC were struck out on technical ground by the tribunal, chaired by Justice A. Kaka. But the tribunal has to contend with the petitions of ACN, its candidate, Olurotimi Akeredolu (SAN) and that of his PDP counterpart, Chief Olusola Oke.

    Akeredolu has closed his case after presenting huge documentary evidence to back his claim that the poll was characterised by massive rigging..

    Akeredolu brought 80 witnesses to testify that the election was manipulated in favour of the governor.

    Already, witnesses called by PDP’s candidate, Oke, have been appearing since last week to fault the same election.

    Later, the tribunal will give its judgment on whether Mimiko actually won the election or not.

    But there is no vacuum in the exalted office. On February 24, Mimiko took the oath of office administered by the Chief Judge, Justice Olasehinde Kumuyi for a second term in office.

    The governor excited listed his achievements in the last four years, promising to build on them in his second term.

    However, many people have disputed the achievements. They say that Mimiko has not fully justified the confidence reposed in him by the people.

    According to the Coordinator of the Movement for Good Governance and Ethical Leadership (MGGEL), Mr. Kunle Bello, Mimiko’s stay in power for a second term may be short-lived.

    He hinged his claim on the fact that the LP administration is unpopular, stressing that it did not win the last governorship election.

    Bello asked Mimiko to reflect on what he promised in 2009 and how he had failed to fulfil the promises.

    The coordinator said the promise to create jobs has become a tall dream, adding that the Arigidi Tomato Paste Industry, Okeluse Cement factory, Olokola Free Trade Zone, Okitipupa Oil Mill, Oluwa Glass Industry and other companies owned by the state are in distress.

    He said that unemployment had soared in the state because these companies have been on their knees.

    The spokesman of the PDP in the state, Mr. Ayo Fadaka, shared this sentiment.

    Fadaka said the fortunes of the state have continued to dwindle since February, 2009 when the present government came on board.

    He said: “The present government has been celebrating the management of the economy of the state from credit to debit.”

    A political analyst, John Olaoye, described the past four years of LP administration as retrogressive and traumatic for the masses.

    He said many projects were abandoned, lamenting that industries that should provide jobs for the army of unemployed indigenes are moribund

    Olaoye complained that the government had embarked on projects that have no impact on the citizenry. He said the huge amount of money being allocated to the state regularly was being wasted on frivolities.

    “Ondo is an oil-producing state. Therefore, the people are full of expectation. Today, unemployed youths have become ‘Okada’ riders.

    “The road networks in the state are in bad shape.Many roads are in deplorable condition.”

    Observers pointed out that within the past four years, there was no road construction; not a single kilometer built on a virgin land, except mending and patching in few areas.

    Besides, there are some abandoned projects initiated by former Governor Olusegun Agagu, which his successor has not completed.

    Mimiko is conscious of these lapses. He has promised to take governance closer to the people in the next four years. He has assured the people of a better deal.

    Mimiko said: “We will ensure the completion of all outstanding projects; we will also unveil a new stream of programme that would improve the quality of our people”.

    The governor said his administration would focus on job creation through innovative and durable programmes that would engender sustainable livelihood.

    He said the government would undertake a 30 MW independent power project in Ore to provide electricity. Mimiko said this will attract investors to the state.

    On the controversial international events centre, ‘The Dome’, Mimiko promised to deliver the project this year as part of efforts to boost tourism.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Agbaso: Why they want to shove me aside

    Agbaso: Why they want to shove me aside

    Imo State Deputy Governor Jude Agbaso is fighting the political battle of his life. He is being probed by the House of Assembly for alleged bribery. In this interview, Agbaso explains the circumstances leading to his travails. He describes himself as victim of a high level political intrigues ahead of the 2015 governorship election. Deputy Editor, Nation’s Capital, YOMI ODUNUGA, met him.

     

    Is it true that you have resigned as thedeputy governor, following the allegation of corrupt practices leveled against you by a contractor?

    It has become absolutely necessary that I speak to the people of Imo State who freely, a little less than two years ago, gave me their mandate that ushered me in as the deputy governor. I owe them a duty at this point in time and in the history of our state to let them know what has actually transpired. It is a known fact that the media is awash with stories of the goings on in Imo State. First, let me start by addressing the issue of the resignation of the deputy governor of Imo State. Let me put it on record and very categorical too that at no time have I contemplated resigning as the deputy governor of Imo State. As I stated earlier, the mandate was freely and massively given me by the people of this state. So, I never resigned, I never intend to resign and I will continue to serve the people of Imo State until the mandate they give me elapses.

    So, why is the impeachment axe dangling over your head and what do you have to say about the controversy surrounding the payment of N458 million into your account as alleged by the contractor?

    On the allegation that I am being impeached by the Imo State House of Assembly bothering on the issue or allegation that I received a bribe to the tune of N458 million., I want to also seize this opportunity to state that at no time did I demand N458 million or any sum of money from any contractor whatsoever in Imo State. And at no time did the contractor, Joseph Dina of JPRO, pay me the cumulative sum of N458 million. Let me tell you how the whole thing started. JPRO is the contractor that is working on the present day Sam Mbakwe Road. I never knew the construction company or the owners of the company. They are a company that was introduced to the state by Governor Rochas Okorocha who gave the permission for a contract of the magnitude of N1.5 billion. Thereafter, when I was away on a trip to India, the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Works, apply for the final approval of the job so that the governor would give the final approval for the job of N1.5 billion. This was communicated to the governor who gave the approval but went beyond that to give approval for the payment of N1.5 billion to the contractor via the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Works. Incidentally, his approval was communicated to the Commissioner of Finance who, instead of routing the money through the coffers of the Ministry of Works for onward certification and raising of vouchers to pay to the construction company after due processes would have been fulfilled, the money was routed through the office of the Accountant-General and paid directly to the contractor. So, at no pint did I give approval for the payment of the money. At no point did I communicate the approval for the payment of the money. At no point did I pay the money to the contractor. So, the question that comes to mind is: why would this contractor pay me N458 million? For doing what?

    When you met the contractor at the House of Assembly during the probe, did you confront him?

    I heard from him when I went to House that he paid me the money in anticipation of the jobs that I will offer to him in the local government. I was the commissioner in the Ministry of Works and the commissioner in the Ministry of Works never issues jobs in the local government areas. The chairmen of the Local Government Areas issue jobs. I never issue any job, till date, any job in any local government. So, how could this contractor have paid me in anticipation of something I wasn’t in a position to do? Anyhow, to cut the long story short, how could he have said that I conveyed instructions to him via SMS through his phone in the month of April and June 2012, stating the company, the account number and the bank to pay the sum of N235 million and N133 million? I state here also, categorically, and the record can be retrieved from the telecommunications service provider for the phone I use, that at no point did I convey to this man, Joseph Dina, via SMS to pay me, to any account or any bank, any sum of money whatsoever. So, his story is completely false and ludicrous. It is intended to malign my person. Since they said the money had been paid to the bank, I think the onus is to call on the investigative agents to look at this account. N458m is not N458,000 and cannot vanish into thin air. They should look for the money there. It must be there. If it is not there, they can put a tracer on the money. It can be traced to the last account that it went into. With forensics, they can follow the trail of that money into the pockets of who took the money. But my dear people of Imo State, I state here one more time, I never asked for the money, I never received the money and I do not have any thing to do with it.

    If you now deny any complicity in the bribery allegation, why would you think anybody would link you to something as damaging as this?

    This whole thing stems from the various players’ agitation as to the situation in 2015. I have heard stories about speculations about who runs in 2015 and who does not. I know there is subsisting agreement, which is in the public domain in Imo State, between my elder brother who happens to be a politician, Chief Martin Agbaso, and our dear governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha, to hand over to the people of Owerri Zone by 2015. I have heard that this has everything to do with it. But I can tell you it has nothing to do with the person of the deputy governor as we speak. And I think that, sooner rather than later, this whole story would be unraveled. Let me state that I have maintained a robust, cordial relationship with His Excellency Owelle Rochas Okorocha.

    You have linked the current crisis to the pact on 2015 in Imo State. Can you expatiate?

    My brother has spoken about the agreement between them, that the governor would hand over to the people of Owerri Zone in 2015. The governor had spoken of the one term agreement to hand over to the people of Owerri in 2015. Why it is overheating the system in 2013 is what I couldn’t answer. I am caught in the web between these powerful political players in the state.

    When you were invited by the House of Assembly, what were the questions asked and how did you respond to those questions?

    The questions centered on the allegations that I talked about and I also gave the same answers that I just highlighted earlier. I stated, in very clear terms, that at no time was I offered any money by the contractor through any bank account through any means.

    Has the governor called you to listen to your own part of the story?

    I had spoken with the governor in the presence of the entire Imo State exco on this allegation and we talked about it. I expressed my innocence.

    What did the governor say?

    He said he believed that I am innocent and that, if the House seeks to investigate, then, the House should be allowed to investigate the matter.

    We learnt that you have not been to your office this week, how true is that?

    I am not aware that my office has been locked. I was in my office on Friday and it was not locked.

    How true is it that the governor has decided to intervene on the matter by calling on the House to stop the impeachment move against you?

    I am not also aware of that. There is conflicting information emanating from all angles. This one you have said is totally strange to me.

    Would you say the House has given you the benefit of fair hearing by preparing the ground for an impeachment motion against you?

    It appears to me that the House is not prepared to give me fair hearing.

    Are you still part of APGA or APC?

    I was elected under the platform of APGA. The APC is in the future. We have not got there yet. When it becomes a party, we will know who is APC and who is APGA.

     

  • ‘Obi’s performance will work for APGA’

    ‘Obi’s performance will work for APGA’

    All Progressives Grand Allinance (APGA) chieftain in Anambra State Chief Jude Emecheta has said the performance of Governor Peter Obi will play a pivotal role in the proposed November 16 governorship election in the state.

    Emecheta told reporters after attending a stakeholders’ meeting in Awka, the state capital, that the governor has added value to the party, assuring that the party will reap the benefits at the polls.

    The party chieftain said Obi, who is the APGA’s deputy leader, is eminently qualified to succeed the late Chukwuemeka Ojukwu as the party leader.

    He said: “Ojukwu remains the party’s spiritual leader while Obi is the physical leader of APGA in the absence of Ojukwu. By November 2013, a new APGA governor will emerge in the state to replace Obi, despite the gang up against the party.

    “Anybody saying that APGA has crisis in Anambra State will have himself to blame when the time comes because what happened last week during the rally to commemorate Ojukwu’s first remembrance was an eye opener.

    “Other parties still have the right to dream, but the works of Obi in Anambra State will do the campaigns for anybody who will succeed him. Right now, there is no strong party to compete with the APGA in Anambra. What is happening in the party is just pure restructuring; we need to inject fresh blood into the system.’’

    Emecheta clarified that Governor Obi has not endorsed anybody to replace him, contrary to the speculations. He assured that the governor will always insist on fairness and equity.

    It had been speculated that Governor Obi had endorsed the Minister of Aviation, mrs. Stella Oduah, as the APGA candidate. But Emecheta said that nobody, including Obi, has notified the party about any endorsement.

    He stressed:“Obi has not endorsed Oduah for the election. We have not been told. I do not believe it is true. Oduah is a PDP member and the governor is in APGA. If our governor should endorse anybody, the person should be a member of APGA and not any other party. I believe it is one of such rumours again”.

     

  • Group counsels Nigeria on anti-graft war

    Group counsels Nigeria on anti-graft war

    A non-governmental body, the Group Against Money Laundering in West Africa (GIABA), has commended Ghana’s anti-corruption war.  The group said Nigeria should learn from the war against against corruption, money laundering and terrorism financing by the Ghanaian government.

    In a statement in Lagos, GIABA said Nigeria has a long way to go in its crusade against fraud.

    GIABA official, Muhammed Usman, who signed the statement, said: Nigeria made a political commitment to address its deficiencies within one year. Nigeria’s efforts were reviewed in February 2011 and found not to fully conform to international standards.

    “Since then, Nigeria has made significant efforts and taken steps towards improving its position, including criminalisation of the full range of predicate offences for money laundering and the passage of the Money Laundering ACT 2012.

    “The enactment of the Anti-Terrorism Act marks a turning point in the implementation of a robust counter terrorism measures in the country”.

    However, the group advised Nigeria to emulate the way Ghana had achieved a leap in the anti-corruption war.

     

  • Dabiri-Erewa decries  violence against women

    Dabiri-Erewa decries violence against women

    House of Representatives member Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa has called for the elimination of all forms of violence against women. She said that, as the world marks the International Women’s Day, people should reflect on the pivotal roles of women in the family and nation-building.

    In a statement in Abuja, Dabiri- Erewa bemoaned the increasing violence against women in the country.

    She said: “It is quite gladdening that the House of Representatives has taken a major step in this regard by passing a bill to eliminate all forms of violence against persons.

    “The Bill sponsored by me prescribes a life imprisonment for rape and a minimum of 20 year-jail term for anyone involved or an accomplice in gang rape. The bill also seeks compensation for victims of rape. It also deals with the domestic violence, political violence, harmful traditional practices, and protection of widows”

    Dabiri-Erewa said the bill also criminalises rape, gang rape, female circumcision, domestic and political violence, acid attacks and injury to the widows.

    The lawmaker expressed optimism that the bill would soon be passed by the Senate and subsequently signed into law by the President.

  • Filani: Why crisis persists in Southwest PDP

    Filani: Why crisis persists in Southwest PDP

    What are the current challenges facing the People Democratic Party (PDP) in Southwest?

    Many challenges are facing the PDP in the Southwest; the challenges of unity, the challenges of how to win back the states that were taken away from us by the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), the challenges of reconciliation among our members, the challenge of ensuring that our members here in this region hammonised so that we can have electoral value. These are the challenges we are having in the Southwest PDP.

    How do you intend to solve them?

    We will take these challenges one by one and solve it. We are ready to rearrange, reconstruct, reeducate, rebuild, and reconcile our members.

    In Ogun State, there is the allegation that the Senator Femi Odujirin faction, which is loyal to former President Olusegun Obasanjo, is not yet ready to reconcile with the party’s state executive committee led by Bayo Dayo. What are you doing to make sure that they close ranks?

    I am not aware that some people are not ready to work with one other. I am only aware of the general idea of disunity and conflict, which is common to every state in the Southwest. Arising from the meeting we held recently with all the state chairmen, I discovered that the executive that came on board by the order of the court in Ogun state, I mean the Dayo-led executive, is making a good effort to unite the party in Ogun State. We are ready to assist, encourage and to ensure that any of the six states, which is ready to bring every member on board, receive our cooperation at the zonal level.I am aware that the Dayo-led executive is ready to open up to all and sundry in Ogun State.

    Recently, people loyal to former President Olusegun Obasanjo have been shove aside from leadership positions at the federal and regional level. Is the former leader now being left in the cold?

    I don’t know who is loyal and who is disloyal. What I know is that everybody in Yoruba land sees Baba Obasanjo as the father of all. I think it is the people that are saying they are more loyal to him than others, not baba saying that some people are not loyal to him. For instance, when we were appointed, he was the first person I called. After our inaugural meeting, I took the new executive to him and we have been having affairs with him to ensure that we have a coordinated executive in Ogun State. No executive was recognised by the national leadership in Ogun State before. There were two parallel executives. I think the former Southwest executive tried its best to harmonise the house, but they failed. There was a court judgment and there was order that arose from that judgment. The order we are talking about recognised the new executive, I mean Bayo Dayo-led executive. Nobody can disrespect Obasanjo. He was the President; he was a leader of the party as the President, he was the Chairman of the Board of Trustees (BOT) of the party. Nobody who can weed such a person away. I think what baba has achieved politically, no other person had achieved it in the past, not even Awolowo the great. The President holds Obasanjo in high esteem. Bamanga Tukur, under who I serve as the Special Adviser, Mobilization and Contact, hold him in high esteem.

    Why is Obasanjo no more enjoying cordial relationship with the Presidency?

    I am not aware that he is not enjoying a cordial relationship with the Presidency. But on the contrary, if you check the newspapers’ report on his birthday, President Jonathan described Obasanjo as a true democrat who loves Nigeria.

    How far can you go in resolving the personality clashes between Bode George in Lagos and other chieftains like Wahab, Ogunlewe, Obanikoro and others?

    The concern of the party is that, since 1999, we have not been able to make headway in Lagos. There are complaints about the leadership, lack of patriotism, betrayal, and other complaints. We want to resolve all these complaints so that we can win Lagos. Let me tell you that you don’t reconcile by elimination.

    What has the PDP Federal Government done for Lagos that will make Lagosians vote for the party?

    They have done a lot for Lagos. I am not in a position to speak for the federal government, but I know the federal governmen,t which is a product of PDP, has done a lot in terms of collaborating with the Lagos State government. Most of these projects that you are seeing are as a result of the collaboration between the two of them. I may not be able to go to details now,. but may be, when you see the representative of the federal government, they will be able to tell you what they have done together. But all I know is that Lagos has benefited a lot from the federal government.

    What is the position of your committee on the electoral litigation involving your party and the Labor Party in Ondo State?

    Our party will do everything within its power to ensure that we do not betray the trust the Ondo people have in us. All we need is the cooperation of the people of Ondo State.

    How can PDP really fight Labour Party in Ondo State when there is a perceived cordial relationship between the President and the governor?

    I don’t know, but I would have loved you to say the governor and the party. I want to assure you that the PDP, either at the national, state or zonal, is solidly behind our governorship candidate in Ondo State.

    Why has it become so difficult for Ayo Fayose and Segun Oni to work harmoniously in Ekiti State?

    I don’t know. We don’t have problems with our party in Ekiti state. We did not lose election in Ekiti State, but the tribunal judge, for one technical reason or the other, annulled the election of Segun Oni. Before Oni came to power, Fayose believed that he was short-changed. But I want to assure that all hands are on deck to ensure that our leaders in Ekiti State come together under our big umbrella so that we can reunite and fight the people who took the power from us. So, those of us that are leaders and elders are going to unite everybody and not only Fayose and Oni, but all the leaders and members to ensure that in 2014, when the next election comes up, we regain our lost glory in Ekiti.

    Will zoning play any role in the choice of the governorship candidate in Ekiti State?

    In accordance with the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the PDP, we are obliged to ensure that there are some rotations in the selection of the people for offices. The two governors that were produced by the PDP were from different zones; one from the North and the other from the Central. The South is now agitating that it wants to produce the governor. There is nothing wrong in that because we need to balance up the selection of the flag bearer of the party in the state. But our attention should be on how to win and ensure that there is the continuation of governance. The most important thing is to ensure that there is cooperation, unity and harmony. I do not want to take position on this issue now. When you look at the ACN, they do not have pre-election problem like we have and that is an advantage to them because they will not expose their candidate. The pre-primary campaigns round the state before the general election consume a lot of money than the real election. You will discover that you have been exhausted by the primaries and attracted emnity. So, we need to democratically select candidates without going to primaries, especially in the Southwest. The rigour of primaries is too much. But for now, nobody can do anything in that regard because it is the provision of our party’s constitution that says we should conduct primaries.

    Now that the North is clamoring for power shift in 2015, don’t you think that the crisis will engulf your party and lead to its defeat in 2015?

    Which North is asking for power shift? When you talk of power shift, I am not opposed to it because a lot of things have to be put into consideration. Let us first ask ourselves if the President is qualified to contest constitutionally or not? That is the basic question. If he is qualified to contest, why are we now saying he should abandon his constitutional right? Secondly, there is the provision in our constitution that says that whosoever that wants to contest is free to do so. When you read some comments in the papers, it is as if the President wants to commit an illegality. They forget that it is his constitutional right. The court has even passed judgment that the President has the right to contest. So, what else?

    Could you shed light on the pact between the President and some northern governors before he became the President?

    I am not aware of any pact. If there was any pact at all, I do not see it having any effect on him. There are political discussions that can enhance one’s chance, which does not in any way affect the issue on the table. Everybody is shifting the opportunity to himself. Is there any particular person who can be the beneficiary of that pact?

    Why are the President and the PDP governors fighting?

    They are not fighting.

    Why did the President mount pressure on the party leadership to set up the PDP Governors’ Forum?

    If the PDP, which at its inception had 27 governors, now has 23 governors, don’t you think there was one thing they should have done earlier so that they could speak with one voice? The ACN and other opposition parties are like the ostrich. The 6 of them go to everywhere together. Governors under the various parties can have fora where they deliberate on the way forward for their respective parties. You always see the ACN governors together all the time and that is the beauty of politics. Even, if only to exchange ideas and have uniformity of governance, they need to have a forum.

    But why is the PDP trying to sideline Amechi, the Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum and at the same time promoting a PDP governors’ forum led by Akpbio?

    Amaechi is one of them. There is no way they can neutralise him. Can you tell me the conflict between Amaechi and Akpabio? Amaechi cannot be the chairman of the governors’ forum and as the same time be the chairman of the PDP governors’ forum. It is the speculation from the enemy of our great party. Amaechi is one of us, no one is fighting him.

    When is the by-congress going to be held to fill the vacant positions in the PDP NEC vacated by Oyinlola and Oni?

    The party will determine that. The CWC, which is the highest administrative bodyof the party and the national executive of the party will determine that.

    Is APC not a threat to your party?

    That is a very interesting question. I do not see the APC as a strong opposition party. It is just a combination of some governors who want to compete with PDP governors. The minor parties will regret it. There are six ACN governors out of 10 governors in the party; the remaining four governors are from different parties. If we conduct an opinion poll in the six Southwest states, do you think they will support the amalgamation? It is just a means of expanding the ACN by its leaders so that people will stop calling ACN a regional party. They just want to give themselves a national outlook. Okorocha was in the PDP before and he wanted to be the President. He has joined the APC and Obi who knows how they formed this party with Ojukwu said he is not going. Even within the ANPP that joined them, there are divisions. Not all the ANPP members want to be in support of the amalgamation. Now what ideology do they share in common? CPC is collection of the people who want to make Buhari the President. In the process, they succeeded in producing just only one governor and the governor left the PDP because he did not win the primary. So, these are the people that are there. Ibikunle Amosun was in PDP before. He was a senator in PDP. The amalgamation is the wish of these governors and not their membership. CPC has just only one state. In that state, the majortiy of the House of Assembly members are in the PDP.

    If the performance of President Jonathan is a factor that will shape the 2015 elections, do you think he can garner votes as he garnered them in 2011?

    He will garner more. You know the man had experienced a lot of distractions. They are sufficient to submerge him, but because of his nature, he has been able to suppress them. If he had not had the kind of spirit he had, he would have been dislocated. Here is somebody who finished one year of his predecessor and he was just newly elected, they have not given him any opportunity to express himself. But I like him because he is always undaunted. He pursues the agenda of economic revival. The records are there for every Nigerian who cares to know that Nigeria has continued to move progressively. We have all reasons to support and stabilise President Jonathan in 2015. You cannot compare what we have now with the economy that was in place before now. If you read his programme and speeches very well, you will discover that he is trying to ensure that the economy is built on a solid rock. You can see that in the way he is collaborating with the private sector.

  • ‘Why PDP can’t dislodge CPC in Nasarawa’

    ‘Why PDP can’t dislodge CPC in Nasarawa’

    Nasarawa State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain Mr. Emmanuel Bako has said that the party may find it difficult to dislodge the ruling Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) from power in the next general elections.

    He said that PDP can only bounce back, if its internal crises are resolved.

    The former Commissioner for Planning in Doma Administration lamented that the protracted crises had taken their tolls on the troubled chapter. He warned that its persistence may spell doom for the party in 2015.

    Bako, who spoke with our correspondent on the phone, said the party lacked a crisis-resolution mechanism.

    He added: “If they continue to turn a deaf ear to the warning, the CPC will take the advantage to dominate the political landscape in the state.

    “The party will continue to be in disarray and CPC will continue to rule. If your enemies know your weaknesses , they will take advantage of that to deal with you. If we don’t want to lose again, we must resolve the crises.

    “There was no congress in the party. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) wrote to the national secretariat that there was no congress in Nasarawa State and nine other states.

    “We cannot move the party forward and remain an indivisible entity to be able to deliver by 2015, if we remain like this. If we can put our house in order now, we may capture Lafia Government House in 2015, but if we fail to do so, it will lead to the end of the party in the state”.

     

  • Boko Haram and politics of amnesty

    Boko Haram and politics of amnesty

    Mixed reactions by politicians, lawyers and rights activists have trailed the clamour for amnesty for the members of the Boko Haram sect by the northern leaders. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU captures their optimisms and reservations.

    Should the Federal Government grant amnesty to the members of the Boko Haram sect? There is no agreement on this vexed issue. Many Nigerians have supported the recommendation by the prominent northern leaders, including the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Saa’d Abubakar, that the Federal Government should end the carnage in the region through amnesty to the rebellious sect. But other stakeholders have called for caution, saying that it is wrong to reward murder with an unearned pardon.

    Those who opposed the extention of the amnesty to the sect said that, unlike the Niger Delta militants, who protested against the environmental denigration of the oil-producing states, the Boko Haram sect members are not known. Besides, they believe that the claims of the invincible group are neither valid, justifiable nor verifiable.

    In Damaturu, Yobe State capital, President Goodluck Jonathan apparently ruled out the possibility of holding dialogue with unidentified people. It is another way of asking the sect members to remove their masks. However, those who perceive the amnesty as a likely solution to the killings have submitted that the option should be explored for the sake of peace and security.

    A political scientist, Prof. Kunle Ajayi, who reflected on the grievous security situation in the country, submitted that the amnesty should be given a trial. He urged the government to embrace the reality that it lacks the power to overcome the current predicament. “I believe the agitation for amnesty is a welcome development, particularly if it will translate into the laying down of arms by the sect and giving peace a chance”, he added.

    But Ajayi, who teaches at the Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti, emphasisded that the politics of the amnesty should be investigated. He feared that the agitation may be borne out of the desire by the North to achieve ethnic balancing in the amnesty policy. The university don warned that amnesty may therefore, translate to national resource allocation by another means. Noting that a lot of money has gone into the amnesty programme and ex-militants are enjoying foreign training to the envy of the other geo-political zones, he said that “the fear is that, before long, other militants such as the Oodua Peoples Congress and Bakassi Boys may request for amnesty”.

    “All the same, I support the amnesty for Boko Haram sect as it will make them come to the open for camping and registration as it was done for the Niger Delta militants. This way, their identities will be known”, he maintained.

    Former National Chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) Chief Victor Umeh aligned with the pro-amnesty stakeholders. Although he doubted how the government will identify the sect members, he said any method that can bring peace to the troubled nation should be encouraged. “It is an amorphous organisation. They have used their tactics to wreak havoc on the country. I don’t know how they can come out. Government should investigate them, if they can be identified. If they are sincere, it should be pursued as an option to avoid the waste of lives and resources”, Umeh added.

    House of Representatives member Hon. Morouf Akinderu-Fatai is ambivalent about the advice by the northern leaders. He called for a wholistic approach to the security challenge, urging caution against resolving intransigency through amnesty. In his view, the government and elite have failed to uncover the den of the troublers of the national peace. The legislator said, although all possibilities should be explored, not all the routes will lead to the solution.

    “We must encourage those of them that decides to retrace their steps and come forward. However, we should be careful to avoid the kind of situation in the Southsouth whereby young men in the creeks were regarded as militants, thereby encouraging corruption”, he submitted.

    Like Ajayi, the legislator alluded to the challenge of granting amnesty to faceless rebellious youths whose demands are offensive to the commonsense. Akinderu-Fatai re-echoed the national question, saying that the Boko Haram threat has made its resolution more compelling. He pointed out that the sect’s onslaught has implications for national unity. “We must sit to discuss, if we really want to be together and design how we want to govern ourselves”, the legislator added.

    This line of thought is supported by the Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) chieftain, Mr. Kunle Famoriyo. He lamented that certain people are encouraging people to behead innocent Nigerians without provocation and justification and go scot free. “How do we bring back to life those who have been wasted senselessly under whatever guise”, queried Famoriyo, who said that the murderous sect should not be treated with kid gloves. Stressing that criminals should be made to face the wrath of the law, he said, since Boko Haram members are not licensed to kill, they deserve no amnesty.

    To Comrade Joe Igbokwe, Lagos State Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) Publicity Secretary, amnesty is being politicised in the country. He opposed the North’s suggestion, saying that it is counter-productive to reward crime with special favours. In his opinion, the sect members are murderers and international terrorists waging an inexplicable war against their fatherland. “We may be setting a dangerous precedence. Such groups may rise up tomorrow, murder many people as possible, and before you know it, their people will be asking for amnesty, citing previous ones as templates.

    “But, if the Federal Government feels hopeless and helpless in dealing with the insurgency, if they do not know what to do any longer and granting amnesty remains their last card, let them do it to stop this carnage. But what happens to the victims of Boko Haram? Will they just go home to lick their wounds? Would they be compensated?”, he queried.

    The Publicity Secretary of Afenifere, Mr. Yinka Odumakin, shares these views. He described the amnesty programme as a big scam, which gave rise to a number of emergency billionaire-thugs in the Niger Delta. He said granting pardon to killers is unimaginable, adding that the amnesty being proposed may amount to another freeloads to criminals. He said, even if dialogue is contemplated, the those who have killed innocent people should be brought to book. “We must combine dialogue and law enforcement, but the most enduring thing is to use the resources given to the thugs in the creeks to build infrastructure and create an enabling environment for economic opportunities for the impoverished people. We need to invest seriously in social security”, he added.

    A psychologist, Dr. Soji Aremu, said that, since amnesty is a state pardon for taking arms against a state by those who have been convicted by the law court, the prerogative can only be extended to the Boko Haram sect, if it shows remorse. “The question is: have Boko Haramists shown remorse? Have they laid down their arms and ammunitions against the state? Have they restituted the serial killings of innocent children and foreigners?.

    “So, asking for amnesty is putting the cat before the horse. It is a misplaced call in the context of the crime committed by the sect. Amnesty presupposes a change of mind not to take arms against the state again. It is on that condition that amnesty can be given and there after, members of the sect will be rehabilitated”, he stressed.

    Observers believe that no calamity of enormous proportion has befallen the fledgling nation-state more than the horror unleashed by the dreadful sect, since the end of the civil war in 1970. Many lives and property have been destroyed. Targets of the attacks include government officials and buildings, traditional rulers, police and military formations, and church worshippers. The invincible agitators’ projected demands are inexplicable and indefensible

    Many have argued that the political undertone of the curious war by the bombers may have been inadvertently ignored. Also, it is curious that the sponsors of these destructive have escaped the detective lenses of the intelligence agents. Critics have also submitted that the failed attempts at curbing the activities of the sect have created a hollow in the record of President Jonathan in the critical area of national security. At a time, there was confusion in the government as the Commander-In-Chief cried out that Boko Haram had invaded the Federal Executive Council (FEC).

    In recent times, Boko Haram sect decided to raised the hope of Nigerians about ceasefire. A faction of the group announced that it was tired of killing. But two weeks after, the hope was dashed. More callous killings were reported. The camouflage surrender only paved the way for more panic in the North. Soon, the faceless fighters started to demand for the release of their members who are in detention.

    According to analysts, an important component of the amnesty being suggested by the northern leaders is dialogue. Stakeholders who have objected to dialogue insist that the approach is defeatist. Their argument is that dialogue with similar organisations in many African and Asian countries have never yielded the expected dividends. Others have canvassed the option of daring the arsonists by tracking them down and bringing them to justice.

    Government has exercised caution in its response to this emergency. Apart from rejecting the pressure to label the members of the sect as terrorists, President Goodluck Jonathan has not relented in urging the sect to embrace peace. . This approach, many agree, is conciliatory. Ajayi said that dialogue may also be explored for the purpose of unveiling the power brokers sustaining the onslaught, the strength of the sect, the identity of its financiers, arms suppliers, links with terrorist organisations and the real motivation for the affront.

    However, dialogue has limitation and it requires more political and professional skills. Although Aremu described it as the language of democracy, he warned against its misuse. Supporting him, Igbokwe said that the option smacked of timidity.

    Ajayi however, reminded the anti-amnesty crusaders that dialogue is critical to crisis resolution and peace making. He recalled that peace returned to the troubled Niger Delta, following the dialogue between the government and the militants. “ Dialogue with the sect will enable the government to know the real grievances of the sect, the reasons behind their actions and what can be done to appease it and elicit from them solution possibilities. It will also bring the two sides to a negotiating table. The advantage is that it will make the government to know the actual members and leaders of the group, who cannot ordinarily be disclosed under normal situation”, he explained.

    Ajayi urged the government to shun the fear of being labeled “ a government that hold talks with terrorists” by foreign powers. He said that the expected dividend of peace overrides the stigmitisation that may follow the dialogue.

    Another human rights activist, Lanre Suraj, advised the President to employ all the constitutional and legitimate means to ensure security. He said dialogue is not bad, if it is properly managed. “Dialogue with any disgruntled stakeholder is in the collective interest of the system. This is not limited to Boko Haram. If every war and conflict ends with a dialogue or discussion, why not avert the cost of a violent conflict and start embarking on the resolution of the disagreement with dialogue? This is better”, Suraj added.

    Igbokwe disagreed. “They have murdered children, mothers, fathers and youths for a cause that is not only laughable, but stupid. To engage them in a dialogue is to celebrate criminality”, he said, maintaining that other groups may spring up to terrorise the trembling country. He said government should come out to tell anxious Nigerians that the dialogue and amnesty are the last options.

    Former Rector of Lagos State Polytechnic, Olawumi Gasper, said it would be a sad day in Nigeria when government officials sit with faceless people carrying dangerous weapons and threatening the collective peace of the society. He urged the President to rise up to the occasion as the Commander-In-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces.”The nation requires a sound and effective local and community intelligence framework. This should further be complemented by military action. Our actions must be non-political, brutal and forceful within a short span of three months, with all the borders closed during the operation period. We must commence these military actions before the beginning of political activities leading to the next presidential election,” he said.

  • Ogun PDP crisis deepens

    The crisis rocking the Ogun State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has escalated as the pro-Obasanjo faction led by Senator Dipo Odujinrin has distanced itself from the activities of the Adebayo Dayo-led executive committee.

    Although Dayo, an engineer, has waved the olive branch to the faction, reconciliation nhas not taken place.

    The faction is said to be irked by the victory rally held at Ijebu-Igbo by the Dayo executive committee, where a party chieftain, Prince Buruji Kashamu, warned party members to be wary of “gerontocratic politicians masquerading as elder statesmen.”

    Since the court affirmed Dayo as the authentic party chairman, the other faction has been meeting, but its members have shunned the party activities organised by the state executive committee.

    The party chairman, sources said, has appealed to the Southwest Caretaker Chairman of the party, Chief Isola Filani, to broker peace between his exco and Obasanjo camp.

    Kashamu had fired salvos at the old PDP chieftains in Ogun State, saying that they should yield the space to younger elements and serve as their advisers.

    Sources said that he was reacting to Obasanjo’s warning to the party to beware of money bags, who he said, were bent on deceiving the people with the view of depriving them of a better future.

    Kashamu said that it was laughable that Obasanjo could denounce those he described as money-bag politicians, wondering whether they were not the ones that made him politically.

    “Was it not moneybag politicians that bankrolled his elections the first and second time? Was it not the same people he hobnobbed with when it was convenient for him to wrest the party structure from the immediate past administration in the state? Was it not the same set of people that he used to work for his candidate in the governorship election? This is the sort of inconsistency that Presidential spokesman Reuben Abati recently noted concerning Obasanjo,” he said.

    He noted that is a wise thing to re -unite the PDP family, but said that the former President should not pontificate on the re -union or how it should take place.

    Kashamu said: “it was not in Obasanjo’s place to set the parameters for such because he has continually shown his bias for imposition, do-or-die politics, injustice and illegalities – the very issues at the roots of the Ogun PDP crisis.