Category: Politics

  • New twist in an unending crisis

    New twist in an unending crisis

    Assistant Editor, Dare Odufowokan, takes a fresh look at APGA crisis 

    To say the All Progresives Grand Alliance (APGA) is synonymous with crisis is to say the obvious. The party has been bedeviled by internal wrangling and supremacy battles of all sorts.

    Following the Supreme Court ruling, which upheld the expulsion of Chekwas Okorie, APGA’s founding National Chairman, from the party, it was widely expected that peace will return to the embattled political party. The death and burial of Chief Odumegwu Ojukwu, national leader of the party, shortly after, was even believed to have united the feuding factions within the party.

    But such assumptions turned out to be far-fetched as a faction of the party recently got an Enugu State High Court presided over by the state Chief Judge, Justice Innocent Umezulike, to order Chief Victor Umeh to stop parading himself as national chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

    And as Nigerians were still wondering what the implications of such an order will be, the two governors elected on the platform of the party decided to return the party to the ways of crisis when they openly disagreed on the level of the party’s involvement in the formation of the new All Peoples Congress (APC).

    While Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State had led representatives of the party to enter into a merger agreement with three other leading political parties in the country, a faction of the party loyal to Governor Peter Obi of Anambra State disassociated itself from the merger.

    This latest development confirmed earlier suspicions that, on the issue of how to move the party forward and the issue of 2015, the two APGA governors do not agree.

    According to party sources, in spite of several denials of any animosity between them by both camps, “Not even the burial of Ikemba could make them come to an agreement on anything. That explains why the two states had separate programmes for the burial ceremony,’ a source said.

    And if members of the party thought the Obi/Okorocha fight and the struggle by Umeh to revalidate his leadership of the party is all they will have to cope with, they must have been further traumatized by the return of erstwhile national chairman, Chekwas Okorie, to lay claims to the party’s chairmanship position.

    Speaking during the week, and surrounded by some foundation members of the party, Okorie said it was wrong for anybody to say he is out of the party. He said he is determined more than ever before to bring sanity to the party following the nullification of Umeh’s claim to the leadership of the party.

    He said the judgement is a confirmation of his position that Umeh is illegally occupying the position of national chairman of APGA. He urged members of the party to give peace a chance and be prepared for a new beginning in the party.

    The curious thing about the renewed discord in the party is that the open involvement of the two governors left no one to mediate between the warring factions. Before now, Governor Obi has been championing the struggle to return APGA to the path of peace.

    Although one of his aides, Sylvester Nwobu-Alor, is one of the eggheads of the anti-Umeh movement, Obi outwardly gave impression that he was in support of the Umeh-led APGA. All that seem to have come to an end since the announcement of APC.

    Also, there is fear that last minute efforts for reconciliation in the party may have failed especially with the return of Okorie, which has further compounded the situation.

    And for Umeh, it is not as if all is over. Some APGA leaders in the South East have risen in his support, urging him to appeal the judgement all the way. Rising from a meeting in Awka, the party chieftains said Umeh remains the national chairman of the party.

    The party-men, while affirming to be the grassroots leaders of APGA in the southeast, said Umeh’s leadership of the party is still acceptable at all levels within and outside the region.

    They dissociates themselves from all activities aimed at removing him from office and called on members of the party to remain supportive of what they called the authentic APGA under Umeh’s leadership. They described majority of the anti-Umeh elements as people long expelled from the party.

    The face-off between Okorocha and Obi further blossomed on Wednesday when the Imo state governor accused Obi and his group of anti-party activities. He said the current crisis in the party is caused by some APGA leaders whose loyalty is to the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Okorocha said that the authentic APGA and not PDP’s APGA is involved in the arrangement. He made the statements while fielding questions from journalists at the end of a meeting of opposition governors in Abuja. According to him, irrespective of the hues and cries by some members of the party, the fact remains that the authentic APGA is in the merger.

    “Let me say emphatically that APGA is in the merger talk and we have our little challenges we are trying to sort out about who are the actual APGA-APGA and PDP’s APGA.

    “The APGA-APGA is already in the merger and I also want to say emphatically that if the CPC which ought to have been a regional party, the ANPP and ACN have agreed to come together for a bigger mega party, APGA should not be an exception.”

    Okorocha further said that the merger must be seen as a collective responsibility of all progressive parties to form a formidable party that can stand the test of time come 2015 and beyond.

    “At the end of the merger meetings, you will see that APGA is in the merger. We are fully in the merger,” he said.

    And on the same day, the Governor Obi-led faction of the party issued a statement describing Okorocha’s  statements as “ridiculous and unfortunate”.

    Given the complexity of the current crisis within the embattled party, questions are being asked as to whether the erstwhile darling political platform of the southeast geo-political zone can once again rise from the ashes of these hard times.

     

  • Polity, Politics  and Politicians

    Polity, Politics and Politicians

    THE turf is, no doubt, tough. For more than four years now, I have used this platform to comment on the political environment, the politicians who parade themselves as leaders and the nature of politics in the country. Of central concern to me is how the activities of those who seized or happened on power underdevelop Nigeria. I have raised issues with the Visionless Vision 20:2020.

    Questions have been asked here about the principles that inform actions of those in power and reasons for the loud silence from the general public. Commentaries, reports and investigations on critical national issues have formed the fulcrum of my activities in the past 25 years. And, I believe it is time to look back, serve the menu in a different dish and see if the soul of the country can be stirred thereby.

    This is the main reason for the compilation of my articles and the launching coming up on Tuesday. Throughout my period of reporting politics, dating back to The Nigerian Economist days, the same questions have been repeatedly asked and they are still relevant today. What is the political turf made of? Who are the major and fringe players? What is the mode of recruitment? What are the motives for actions taken by the rulers?

    Elections present special challenges to reporters and politicians. When you are striking a balance, you please nobody. When, based on objective analysis, you come to the conclusion that the pendulum would swing in a particular direction, the other camp raises the alarm. You could only have been bought over. With the loser, you could never win.

    During the period that I have been privileged to stand in the gap for the people, the powerless and dispossessed, I have, many times, received insults. Been hounded about and exposed to danger. I covered riots and wars. Yes, I was in Liberia, but was lucky to have survived. In a country where men in power see themselves as the law, criticisms are regarded as sacrilege. This has never deterred me from talking to power. The attendant angry responses were many.

    These scenes are covered in The Nigerian Political Turf: Polity, Politics, Politicians, due to be presented to mark my years in journalism. It is indeed a first volume of a work that even a careful selection could have reduced to about 1,000 pages. The 362 pages represent a forerunner to a more powerful second volume that will be released by His grace next year.

    The underlying philosophy is that, if Nigeria must change for the better, the discerning section of the public must rise to the challenges of the moment, we must work to free our country from vampires who have held it hostage. And, where we see men who have contributed positively to the change movement, we need to acknowledge them. This is done in the present volume and more will come in the second part.

    To underscore this, Dr. Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State will be on hand to deal with the theme of the book. He is billed to speak on Nigerian Polity, politics and Politicians: The perspective of an active participant. All patriots and nationalists have been invited to come around to reason together. It is a platform for discussion and sharing ideas.

    It is time to revisit what when wrong in past Republics and transition schemes. How did General Ibrahim Babangida impact on the polity? How and when did the promise fade? What impact did his ban on oldbreed politicians and the attempt to breed a new leave on the turf? What informed the endless IBB, Abacha transition schemes? What about the interim arrangement. How was the house built and why did it crumble within three short months?

    The most important task before us as a people is to ask: What is the way out. Dr. Fayemi has the charge to lead this discussion and provide us with food for thought as we prepare for a very uncertain future. It cannot be the end of the debate. It cannot foreclose further discussions, but, with dignitaries with Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Alhaji Aminu Tambuwal, Governors Fayemi, Uduaghan, Fashola, Amaechi, Gaidam, among others, there is no doubt that the outcome would advance the course of progress and advancement.

    The future is here. We all must put our hands on deck to save a sinking shape. I am, overall, convinced that the future will be brighter than the past.

     

    • This article was first published on August 5, 2012.

  • The North, Igbos,Jonathan and 2015 duel

    The North, Igbos,Jonathan and 2015 duel

    The shape of things to come

    A  Goodluck  Jonathan presidency beyond 2015 will defer a potential Igbo presidency to 2027 or, more realistically, 2039. It’s blatantly clear that President Jonathan will not handover the presidential seal to an Igbo man either in 2015 or 2019. Anyone who entertains the notion that he is thus disposed is in a delusionary state.

    Rational people who place stock by reality now accept that the upcoming presidential contest will be a straight battle between the Ijaw nation, superbly and preferentially led by President Jonathan, and the North, led by no one at the moment. The authentic power broker, sitting pretty in the middle, is the West, occasionally rancorous but strategically led by Senator Ahmed Bola Tinubu. Who leads the East in this political coliseum?

    President Jonathan will need to sustain the broad coalition that propelled him to victory in 2011 in order to retain the presidency in 2015. This means that he must count on the seven Northern states that he carried in 2011 plus five Western states, five Eastern states to add to his six South-South states to prevail again. The margin for error is razor-thin, given the constitutional requirements. The 19 northern states gave Jonathan over 8.3 million votes or 37.1% of the total votes allocated to him in 2011 (I will return to the comprehensive figures presently).

    This reality, augmented by demography and a Boko Haram-altered realpolitik, exposes President Jonathan’s electoral indebtedness in degrees. The North is first in line for his reciprocal support – a gesture that, some might argue, carries greater credibility than the intellectually feeble and anti-democratic politics of “zoning” or arbitrary power-concession. The debt he owes to the North must be repaid. And it will take precedence over all others. The only question is: which presidential election cycle – 2015 or 2019? Thereafter, both the East and the West will have a competing claim to the presidency. And no thoughtful Nigerian will bet on the East prevailing in that competition, given the customary chaos that often defines its politics. So, it could be a man or woman from the West in 2023 or 2027. It will, then, take a national wave of pity to deliver the presidency to the East in 2039 – in the unlikely event that there occurs a national awakening whereby an Igbo cause is recognised as worthy of national sympathy.

    Consider a different scenario, decoupled from the People’s Democratic Party’s internal arrangements. If the proposed merger of the main opposition parties were to deliver the presidency to the North with a Vice President from the West in 2015, we might, to all intents and purposes, have a president from the West in 2023. This presents a genuinely viable prospect for 2015. CPC or its successor in title will simply need to repeat its solid performance in the twelve states it won during the 2011 presidential cycle. It will need to add Adamawa and Nasarawa states to its column – a task it could easily accomplish in the predicted conditions of 2015. A switch of support by ACN from PDP to CPC will give the alliance 20 states, excluding Edo State, which will most unlikely go against Jonathan, but including Ondo State, which will remain dependably progressive. Again, fortune will befall the West because its political leadership is smart and possesses a first class understanding of the dynamics of Nigerian politics. No sane and fair minded Nigerian will begrudge them.

    The Igbo scenario is rather more complicated, abetted by the indifference of a fiercely self-reliant but disillusioned population which has grown to see all central governments as fundamentally anti-Igbo and its own leaders as merchants of self-interest. Unlike the West, where there exists a viable and confident opposition to the centre, the new conservative politics of the East is generally pro-Jonathan, with a residual sceptical and progressive elements operating at the fringes. To this extent, therefore, its path to the presidency is extremely circumscribed. The All Progressives Grand Alliance could be the vehicle that contains the essential ingredients for a cross-Niger coalition. But APGA controls only two states and is currently under the ruinous grip of its own internal contradictions. Within the PDP itself, it’s inconceivable that any candidate who stands against President Jonathan in a contest for the Igbo delegates votes will fare any better than former Vice President Atiku Abubakar in the 2011 presidential primaries – unless there is a radical shift in emphasis to Igbo-specific priorities.

    By the way, I respectfully disagree with those who insist that a General Babangida candidacy during the PDP presidential primaries would have fared better against President Jonathan. They’ve either ignored or underestimated the depth and poisonous quality of the anti-North conspiracy, led shamelessly and aggressively by some northerners, over the weeks and days prior to the Convention of January 13, 2011. The conspirators, particularly many northern governors, wanted something which neither Babangida nor Atiku could give to them. They also had a fear which neither Babangida nor Atiku inspired or threatened. If the animus towards Atiku by certain northern politicians was at all a factor, then, in quantitative terms, it made a difference of perhaps 10 percentage points to the outcome – and this is the most generous assumption. Jonathan would still have prevailed by a little less than the crushing 77% he scored.

     

    Bowling for idealism and democracy

    And this brings me to a personal declaration: I am entitled to speak on this matter not just because I am a bona fide citizen and a progressive Igbo man, but because I have paid my dues and earned the right to take a stand.

    The PDP presidential primaries dawned only 6 months after I took oath of office as a senator representing Ebonyi Central Senatorial District, having spent the previous three and a half years in court battles to claim my mandate – a story for another occasion. I witnessed, from the front-row, how the weeks prior to the primary election exposed the disarray and total absence of a centre of gravity in Igbo politics. To quote the late Bashoroun MKO Abiola, “We are damaged!”

    I have, since June 2010, been constant and consistent in defending President Jonathan’s right to contest the presidential election. Not only has our constitution conferred on him that fundamental right, but the personal sacrifice which he was called upon to make was grossly unfair and unjustified. With what explanation would he return to the Ijaw people? With what logic would he make them see the wisdom in walking away from the presidency – an office to which they may never have another opportunity to lay a claim for at least a generation? And the only lesson he could glean from history was a sobering and dissuasive one: the last man to voluntarily relinquish the top office in Nigeria ended up flirting with poverty and ultimately wound up in jail. When he was rehabilitated and restored to the presidency, he squandered a fortune stolen from public coffers in a failed bid to make himself a life president. No, President Jonathan could not walk away from that office. No honest Nigerian in similar circumstances could. It was hypocritical on the part of those who condemned him for exercising his democratic and constitutional right, regardless of whatever understanding that allegedly existed. As the Roman philosopher, Markus Cicero, wisely observed, an obligation to do the impossible is no obligation at all. I still argue for his right to contest in 2015 and every true democrat should respect his decision in that connection.

    Having defended President Jonathan’s right to contest, however, I found the courage that flowed from my convictions and voted for Alhaji Atiku Abubakar during the 2011 primary election because, firstly, he was astonishingly persuasive through the force of his manifesto and the power of his argument; secondly, that was the only path to a potential Igbo presidency in 2015 or 2019. Atiku scored only 23 delegates votes to Jonathan’s 423 in the South East. Thirdly, I took the view that I was a participant in a process that ought to be defined by democratic principles; motivated by the very same principles that compelled me to defend the President’s right to contest the election. I was therefore resistant to the entrenched PDP tyranny of corralling everyone to play a minor role in the coronation of a candidate. This was not naive. Rather, I took my one step where a million steps needed to be taken. Those who failed, those who were truly naive, were those who, when called to a duty greater than service to self, failed to take their one step. Igbos must recognise that only those who dare to lose greatly can achieve greatly and that power concedes absolutely nothing without a demand.

     

    Planning for oblivion

    The prevailing attraction to readymade power testifies to a growing political culture of self-sabotage, individual greed and the absence of foresight among many in the Igbo community. It’s a clear path to political oblivion.

    The West presents a sharp contrast to this attitude. When a Yoruba man had presidential power thrust on him in 1999, Yoruba people, rightly suspicious of the machinations that brought about that state of affairs, contemptuously delivered a crushing defeat to the PDP in the West, coalesced around the Action for Democracy as a deliberate measure in asserting their regional autonomy and projecting a unique vision of their proud place in Nigeria. When they were duped and almost crippled in 2003, they took the hard knock with exemplary courage, returned to the drawing board and rebounded in a most spectacular fashion in 2011. Thus, Senator Tinubu, the national leader of ACN, emerged as the most significant power broker in this nation since the era of military hegemony. But in order to lead this renaissance, Lagos State paid a particularly heavy political price. The leadership of the West remained resolute, understood the task at hand, and had a winning strategy and foresight. If the West continues in this manner, it will ultimately become the dominant force in Nigerian democratic power play for a generation to come.

     

    A fractured north

    No northern Muslim presidential candidate of any major political party can ever again count on the 19 northern states as a monolithic electoral route to power. Those days are gone. It’s now clear, thanks in equal measure to a massive shift in generational consciousness and the Boko Haram insurgency, that peripheral northern states such as Plateau, Taraba and Benue would almost always consider their positions very carefully. In between these three, Kogi and Kwara states present a required further study and the next presidential election cycle will furnish additional information to reach a more considered conclusion. (But it is instructive to note that in Kogi and Kwara states – 2 of only 4 states under northern Muslim governors won by Jonathan – Jonathan beat Buhari by 72% and 66% of the votes allocated, respectively).

    The flip sides of these three states are best represented by three core northern states such as Kano, Sokoto and Zamfara. During the PDP presidential primaries, Atiku won these states handily. He defeated Jonathan by 252 votes to 60. Jonathan returned the favour in Benue, Plateau and Taraba states where he prevailed by 204 votes to Atiku’s 36. Viewed in the context that the votes from these three states alone accounted for more than 31% of the total votes cast for Atiku in an election involving 36 states and the FCT, it’s easy to appreciate how extraordinary this history in fast motion really is.

    Now, make no mistake, it’s something of a miracle that Atiku scored any votes at all, given the hyper-manipulation and highwire conspiracy that attended the exercise. His performance in the three states in question is arguably a measure of the strength of the cultural and religious affinity he shares with that category of voters. His abysmal performance in states with Christian majorities speaks to the opposite conclusion. Katsina State was an aberration – the exception that proved the rule.

    In the presidential election, President Jonathan won 7 northern states and General Buhari won 12. It’s a matter of little surprise that the states that lined up for Jonathan included Benue, Plateau, Taraba, Kogi and Kwara states. The cases of Adamawa and Nasarawa require a separate examination but the preliminary conclusion is that, in addition to local peculiarities, the outcomes were undoubtedly affected by duplicitous INEC.

    But the broader statistics bear an even more significant revelation. Buhari accumulated some 12.2 million votes but in none of 16 southern states did he score up to 4% of the votes. The singular exception was Oyo State where he scored 11%. This means that even if the North had given him 50 million votes, he would still not have had the mandate of the Nigerian people, either constitutionally or morally. On the other hand, Jonathan was allocated nearly 3.4 million votes in the North-West, over 3.1 million in the North-Central and over 1.8 million in the North-East. The votes allocated to Jonathan in the South are breathtaking: over 6.1 million in the South-South, nearly 5 million in the South-East and 2.8 million in the South-West (Jonathan lost Osun State altogether by 37.14% to Mallam Nuhu Ribadu). And here is the ace: in the 12 northern states which Jonathan lost to Buhari, he still managed to score more than 30% in many of them except in Kano, Borno and Bauchi where he could not break above 18%. This is a powerful lesson to those claiming, rather unwisely, that the North, on itself alone, can win the presidency.

    The converse is, in fact, more probable: if the South could stick together, they could realistically peel away majorities in Plateau, Taraba and Benue states. They would then rely on Kwara, Kaduna, Nasarawa and Kogi for a quarter or more of the votes to meet the constitutional requirements. Central power would then be brokered between the East, West, Middle Belt and South-South. But this is as much a fantasy as it is dangerous. It’s neither a pragmatic outlook nor is it an alliance that would retain sufficient oxygen to thrive and endure. I will leave a full examination of this point for a separate treatise.

    Suffice it to say that when an Ijaw man waltzes into northern Nigeria and plays high politics to this devastating effect, then it calls for a deep reflection and a certain analytical truth in order to decipher the trend and the message, both hidden and obvious.

    Regardless of whatever variables you may wish to take into consideration (including, undoubtedly, rigging, electoral corruption and a disgraceful INEC), the new science of the politics of the North is evolving, and its implications for Nigerian politics are seismic.

     

    The triumph of Ijaw nation

    Since the execution of Ken Saro-Wiwa on 10 November, 1995, the people of the Niger Delta generally, and the Ijaw nation particularly, have upped their game and have played an absolute blinder in the crucible of Nigerian politics. More than any other minority group in historical and contemporary Nigerian politics, they articulated a coherent case of injustice and exploitation that was as persuasive as it was compelling. Consequently, they have, unequivocally, emerged as the supreme advocates for minority rights. Admittedly, bullets and bombs might have aided the cause but those were, arguably, the desperate measures that arose from desperate circumstances.

    Ambitious for their people, the vanguard of Ijaw nation saw their moment and seized it with excellent advocacy of group interest. The Niger Delta political movement has expanded the democratic discourse and enhanced its space in Nigeria. Their demands, be it in connection with resource control or control of the prime political office in the land, have always appeared legitimate and just. Whether their tone was strident or measured, they have had a consistent and unified message. Their plights and their aspirations were heard in foreign capitals across the globe. Occasionally, their causes were even adjudicated at the highest levels of the United States’ judicature, with unprecedented success. Their political operation was so smooth it almost legitimised the violent militant component.

     

    No measure for measure

    The Ijaw people are unrelenting. Their current sleek, forceful and cacophonous “operation 2015” has driven some senior northern politicians to distraction, some to secret endorsement of the President’s 2015 ambition from far away foreign capitals, and the Igbos to acquiescent silence. Many Nigerians have been utterly astonished by some of the public utterances coming from respected figures from northern Nigeria. In reacting to the notorious meeting in Lagos by Ijaw people to endorse President Jonathan for 2015, a senior northern politician quipped: “Who has the strength to clinch power if not the north…?” Such an outburst telegraphs precisely the sort of arrogance that infuriates the rest of greater Nigeria. Notwithstanding that this statement was made by a retired military officer, betraying the imperialistic instincts of his generation, it echoes a pattern of thought that constitutes an impediment to the North regaining the full confidence of Nigerians, south of the Niger.

    Southern progressives who are rooting for the socio-political success of a new North want to see a sharp-edged leadership and a thoroughly articulated strategy to lift this benighted nation and the North with it. Aggressive rhetoric or playing the bluff and counter-bluff game will not cut muster. This Federal Republic is not going to break-up any time soon, or any time at all. Threats, belligerence, disrespectful or dismissive language or pinning for the resurrection of dead leaders merely betray the instincts we need to transcend. The old simple ways must yield to the sophisticated complexities of today. These are serious times ovulating serious issues that require serious people’s attention – and the North has produced some of the sharpest political minds in our history.

    If there is any redeeming counter-argument here, however, it is to the effect that these men are to be applauded for exposing the courage of their convictions. They are preferable to the cloak-and-dagger types, operating in silhouettes, pledging unalloyed support in English to Jonathan but condemning him behind his back in Hausa. This is the dark season of the long knives. Only courageous men can play in the open.

    The fortunes of the North are undergoing the severest retrenchment since the constitutional conference of 1957. Poverty and general degradation have taken a stranglehold. Politically, depending on how its main actors play the impending political innings, the North stands a realistic chance of being struck out of the park for more than a generation. Between the hammer of Boko Haram and the anvil of mounting anti-North prejudice, our brethren on the Sahelian fringe may very well crack. Such an outcome would not be a northern disaster; it would be a national catastrophe.

    Politically, there is a way out and a path forward. Let the East and the North collaborate and draw up a solid national plan for peace, development and aggressive anti-corruption crusade, articulated with patriotic zeal, carrying a persuasive force and passion for a united Nigeria steeped in social justice. This, quite frankly, is the urgent prerogative of the political moment for both regions. The organising principle of such a plan must not be founded solely on the capture of power. It must be headlined and concluded with a revolutionary manifesto for Nigeria and Nigerians.

     

    Friendship forged in blood

    No tribe in Nigeria has a better, albeit incomplete, knowledge of the people of northern Nigeria than do the Igbo tribe. I have travelled extensively and lived nomadically in northern Nigeria and, to my amazement, found Igbo people in their droves in the most unlikely nooks and remotest crannies of the region. Many had become acculturated, even while retaining their fundamental Christian indoctrination. Among the Kanuris of Borno State, I found the most honourable, decent, generous, spiritually devoted and patriotic Nigerians. And this is precisely why the Boko Haram phenomenon, with its roots in this noble warrior land of the Kanem, is utterly bewildering.

    The Igbos must not only raise their collective voices but must be at the forefront in condemning the atrocities of Boko Haram; but we must do so without holding the generality of northern Muslims liable for the excesses of a small criminal bunch. Igbos have, predictably, suffered immense losses. But, as the violence soars, as the casket counts escalate and a repetition of the ugly history of abandoned property looms, let us remain constant in our covenant with the Lord. This moment calls for the strength of our example. Let us respond by channelling the flow of our kin’s blood to a purpose greater than ourselves, greater than retribution and, certainly, greater than the warped aspirations of those who seek to murder us.

    To those baying for vengeance, let’s recommend recourse to their Bibles. Let us not listen to those who think we ought to be governed by lust for bloody revenge, and who believe this to be a sign of strength. We must remember that nothing is so praiseworthy, nor so clearly shows a great and noble soul, as clemency and readiness to forgive. Therefore, even as they have maimed our hearts, let us heal theirs’ and keep them whole for God’s immutable justice and vengeance. He will execute His anger with great rebuke, they will reap His grapes of wrath, and they will know that He is the Lord when He shall lay the fury of His judgment upon them. It’s our duty to ensure that the New Testament does not fall silent in this time of strife.

    For it has become an open season on northern Nigerian Muslims these days. An indiscriminate wave of anti-North prejudice has seized the air. To read or listen to some of the hateful slurs spewed against northern Nigerian Muslims is to witness a diminution of one’s very own humanity. It’s imperative that we confront and prevail against the nihilistic terrorist barbarians. But it’s even more important that we remain healed and whole as a nation afterwards.

    The North/East political friendship was forged in pursuit of enlightened self-interest and in the crimson tide of blood. Recall the late 1950s, the First Republic and, more consequentially, the momentous events of 1978, eight short years following the end of the Civil War and not that long after the pogrom, when these patriots came together and conspired to take the helm of democratic restoration on October 1, 1979. And it is the very constituent nature of that administration that made possible the amnesty granted to Dim Odumegwu Ojukwu in 1982, to the effusive ecstasy of the Igbos at that time. Of course, legitimate criticisms of the Shagari-Ekwueme administration abound, and I take those into full account. I will not be detained by the conspiracy theory which speculates that the 1983 coup d’état was executed by northern military leaders principally to avert the possibility of an Igbo man’s ascent to the presidency on October 1, 1987.

    It is time to embark on the great and purposeful task of reconstructing that friendship. The stakes are high for both sides. It’s the only alliance that has the real possibility of delivering an Igbo presidency.

    The East gave President Jonathan nearly five million votes in the last presidential election or 22.23% of the 22,495,187 votes recorded for him. The votes of dispersed Igbo people are non-ascertainable. This is nearly double the effort of the West. The President might have won without carrying the West but, certainly, not without the East. Right now, Igbos have as powerful a political bargaining tool as they have had at any point since the advent of the fourth republic. It’s time to play that joker. Smartly.

     

    Conclusion

    In the broad sweep of history, 2015 would be seen as the year that defined the politics of modern Nigeria and its democracy for the next half century. Those who caution that this is not the appropriate time to discuss the politics of 2015 are being disingenuous. Yes, it is, perhaps, not the time to launch candidacies or open campaign offices, but it sure as hell is the time to engage on the potential dynamics of 2015 – not the apocalyptic year of disintegration but the year for the realisation or strengthening of democratic solidarities and the reciprocity principle.

    Let us engage. East and North. If we struggled and failed, history’s verdict would be less than harsh. After all, if President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua had lived, he would right now be in the second year of the second tenure of his presidency which would probably have given way to a James Ibori presidency in 2015. That in turn would have terminated in 2023, leading to another northern presidency all the way to 2031. But the Igbo marginalisation is not, apparently, ordained by God. The fault, Ndigbo, is not in our stars….

     

     

    Senator Emmanuel Onwe is the Director of Operations, National and Diaspora, Njiko Igbo dronwe67@rocketmail.com

     

  • Okorocha, Ohakim and Imo probe fever

    Okorocha, Ohakim and Imo probe fever

    Recently, Governor Rochas Okorocha set up some probe panels to look at the books of former Governor Ikedi Ohakim’s administration. Since then the crossfire has become more intense by the day, reports Okodili Ndidi in Owerri

    Two years into Governor Rochas Okorocha’s administration, just when everybody, especially the opposition, has gone to sleep after licking the wounds of the last elections, when the political scene was almost healed of the bruises caused by power shift in the state, the war drum has been sounded for another fierce battle, and the state is suddenly agog with cry of justice, spurred by vengeful anger.

    The governor, who had resisted earlier calls and pressure to probe his predecessor, suddenly okayed an intensive probe of all financial dealings of the immediate past administration, with a view to putting the past governor and other indicted government officials, to trial.

    Much as this move has been applauded and condemned, depending on the side of the divide the analysts belong, some questions have remained pertinent: What is the state government set to achieve with the probe? Can the government remain focused while the probe lasts? Does it have the political will to take the fight to an end? Will it not via off the rescue mission track and at the end will the state be better for it?

    However, given the clamour and widespread agitation by Imo people for a probe of the Ikedi Ohakim’s administration, the state government, apparently like every other responsible institution, has little or no choice than to concede to the demands of the people and punish those that allegedly impoverished the state.

    Although Ohakim and his team appeared not to be troubled by the brewing storm, The Nation’s findings revealed that political associates and close friends of the ex-governor are warming up for a possible showdown with the state government, dusting files and searching for possible loopholes in the financial dealings of the current administration that it can leverage on.

    In the last two months, more than four groups, including professional bodies, have joined the call for the probe of the previous administration. While some of them hinged their agitation on the need to punish offenders and thereby entrench accountability in public service, others were merely pursuing vendetta. The situation reveals that for a long time to come, the political scene will be dominated by the politics of probe.

    Already, the state government has set up three probe panels, aside from the Accounts Reconciliation Committee headed by the deputy governor, Sir Jude Agbaso, to look into the financial dealings of the previous administration.

    But addressing members of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) recently during a rally in the state, Ohakim told a mammoth crowd of supporters that he was not afraid of the plan by the state government to probe his tenure in office. He insisted that due process was religiously followed in all financial dealings during his tenure.

    However, his claim was contradicted by the first report submitted by the Accounts Reconciliation Committee, which said that the Ohakim-led administration allegedly spent over N62 billion on ‘dubious’ transactions and non- existent projects.

    The committee revealed that the same administration and the local governments received a total of N420, 215,108,265 during its tenure in addition to N18.5 billion bond proceeds out of which N5.1 billion was utilized.

    The 23-page report also sighted discrepancy in N1.594 billion JAAC proceeds to the LGAs, payment of N1.1 billion to DDB under various vouchers, N110 million and N414,555,608.55 to the same company and transfer of N6.514,550,000 from Skye Bank to Zenith Bank  Plc.

    The report, however, noted that the only projects credited to the Ohakim-led administration, were the new governor’s office building, Governor’s Lodge Abuja, uncompleted Ahiajoku Convention Centre and the uncompleted traditional rulers’ parliament.

    Also backing the call for the probe is the State House of Assembly. The Speaker, Rt. Hon Benjamin Uwajumogu, said the move will sanitise the polity and deter others from plundering state resources.

    However, a media assistant to the former governor, Dr Ethelbert Okere, described the composition of the committee and its report as ridiculous. ‘In less than 24 hours after Okorocha announced the setting up of three judicial panels to probe his predecessor, he released a report indicting the same fellow he wants the panel to probe”.

    He added, “It is a clear insult to the eminent jurists heading those panels. The governor was merely telling them to go and rubber stamp what he has just released. We wait and see if those respected judges will take such an insult and go ahead with that assignment,” he said.

    In the last few weeks, several groups have called for Ohakim’s probe. One of such groups was the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), which barricaded all major roads in the state capital in solidarity for the ongoing probe. Following in a quick succession was the Joint Action Group (JAG). This group made up of artisans and market women, gave Okorocha an ultimatum to probe Ohakim or risk mass revolution.

    Describing the activity as another wild goose chase, a political analyst, Nze John Ufomba, noted that, “out of all the past corrupt leaders in the country who were purportedly probed, how many of them were convicted? The case of Imo won’t be an exemption. The governor should concentrate on the duty of rescuing the state from years of wanton embezzlement.

    According to him, ‘some of those calling for the head of Ohakim, are on a course of vengeance, most of them were denied contracts or other forms of government patronages.’

    Although startling and mind-boggling fraud have already been allegedly unearthed by some of the probe committees in their preliminary findings, Ohakim’s foot soldiers are still stuck to their guns as they battle frantically to exonerate their principal, by harping on alleged short comings of Okorocha’s administration.

    Recently, in what appeared like the case of the hunter becoming the hunted, Okorocha’s Commissioner for Finance and the State Accountant General, were recently arrested by the EFCC for an alleged N40 billion  scam, a situation that helped Ohakim’s sympathisers to sustain the pressure.

    In his comment, the South-East Zonal Chairman of Campaign for Democracy (CD), Uzor A Uzor, doubted if the probe would yield positive result. He argued that such probes in other states of the federation, were merely a waste of time and resources as those indicted are still walking the streets, flaunting their ill-gotten wealth.

    He however said if the governor wants to continue with the probe, ‘he should extend it to the tenure of Chief Achike Udenwa’s wasteful eight years, where over N600 billion  was collected from the federal allocation with nothing to show for it.’

    The Acting National President of the Civil Liberties Organisation (CLO), Comrade Uche Durueke, said, “although on assumption of office, Okorocha said he was not going to probe Ohakim, but I don’t have anything against the probe, but I think he is probing him because of the various petitions against the state government by the Association of Local Government of Nigeria (ALGON), over the Local Government Allocation, but it was not wrong because the people have the right to know how their resources are spent”.

    Durueke, however, insisted that, the “probe should not be turned into witch hunting. Ohakim should be given the opportunity of fair hearing”.

    Imo State Secretary of ALGON, Hon Enyinna Onuegbu, however, alleged that “ the probe was only aimed at beclouding the ongoing EFCC investigation over the large scale misappropriation of Imo LGA funds since 2011 till date, which is over N90 billion”.

    As the crossfire continues, observers said it is part of the unfolding political under-currents that will characterize the politics of 2015 in in Imo State. Observers also say will ultimately clip Ohakim’s political wings and those of his associates.

     

  • 2015 and the return  of Yar’Adua’s men

    2015 and the return of Yar’Adua’s men

    Assistant Editor, Dare Odufowokan takes a look at the ongoing reforms in People’s Democratic Movement and wonders whether the platform created by the late General Shehu Yar’Adua is still relevant.

     

     

    Citing the need to protect the common interest of its members, leaders of the Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM), the political machinery of the late General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, are currently leaving no stone unturned in their determination to revive the movement ahead of the 2015 general election in the country.

    Sources said the group, which recently elected new officials to pilot its affairs and lead the way in its quest for total revival, has received the support of some leaders of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to re-position itself so as to once again be able to influence decision making in the party.

    Expectedly, the development is causing some leaders of the ruling party to shiver. Sources within the party said speculations are rife that the rejuvenated PDM is designed to checkmate any re-election plot by President Goodluck Jonathan ahead of the 2015 presidential race.

    ”Consequently, plots are already being hatched to stop the ongoing move by PDM leaders to regroup their members within and outside the party. There is already an allegation that the revival of the group will contravene the latest move by the PDP to outlaw caucus and factions within its rank. The idea is to stop the revival of the group because it can cause serious damage to the unity of the PDP,” a southwest executive committee member of the party said in Lagos.

    But when asked whether the revival of the association will contravene any rule of the PDP, a leader of the group, Mallam Shehu Garba, said there is no rule of the PDP that forbids the revival of the PDM.

    “PDM is not a caucus; it is only an interest group within PDP. It is just a situation where people with common interest decide to come together to protect their common interest,” he explained.

    Among the pioneer members who have sensed the need to renew acquaintance with the movement are former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, Chief Anthony Anenih, Alhaji Lawal Kaita, Ambassador Yahaya Kwande, Chief Dubem Onyia, Prince Tonye Princewill, Dame Titi Ajanaku, Professor Ango Abdullahi, Professor Aborishade, Alhaji Kabiru Sa’idu and Dr Faruq Abdulaziz, just to mention a few.

    It would be recalled that the PDM was the most influential component of the PDP at the formation of the party in 1998. Parading political heavyweights which included former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, former works minister, Tony Anenih, amongst others, the group was so strong that it was regarded as the engine room of the party for years.

    Its influence, however, diminished over the years as the party gradually subsumed it. Although some members of the group continued to play crucial roles in the party and the successive governments it formed since the return to democracy, the cohesion and unity for which the PDM became a household name, was no longer visible amongst its members.

    As witnessed during the 2007, 2011 and lately, 2015 general elections, it became difficult for the group to take common position on issues. Members openly disagreed on political issues and the group’s place within the ruling party was no longer assured.

    The situation got so bad that some PDM members left the PDP and pitched their tents in other political parties thereby leaving their associates behind. Although some of such deserters like Atiku did return to the PDP years later, sources said the division among the group was yet to be healed.

    “It is this division caused over the years by various issues and actions that we are out to put behind us with the formal revival of the group. PDM was never dead. It is an organisation built in the minds of its members. We never for one day forgot our common platform, but the truth was that the movement was no longer in a position to protect our interest within and outside the ruling party,” a member of the group told The Nation.

    However, questions are now being raised on the ongoing discussions between the group’s contact and mobilisation committee and some politicians as well as politicial groups outside the PDP.

    “There is need for decorum within the political space and that we intend to see to. Our party will not condone such anti-party activities. There is no way these people will claim to be PDP members and they will be hobnobbing politically with various groups and people opposed to the aims and aspiration of the PDP. We are not unaware of their antics,” our source said.

    But the PDM debunked such allegation, saying its committee is only discussing with organisations of like-minds with a view to finding ways of solving some pressing national problems. In a communique signed by Bashir Yusuf Ibrahim, Prince Tonye Princewill and Murtala Shehu Musa Yar’adua, PDM further fuelled the controversy surrounding its revival when it said Nigerians are tired of things being done the same way for too long.

    “The Movement resolved to open discussions with the organisations of like-minds, with a view to finding common grounds on issues of principle, policy and strategy in order to move the Nigerian project to the next level.

    ‘These discussions must be open, transparent and above all, in the best interest of the peace, unity, stability and economic progress of Nigeria and Nigerians as a whole. The era of business as usual should be dead and gone.

    ‘Politicians must begin to do things differently henceforth in order to save Nigeria from imminent collapse. Nigerians are sick and tired of more of the same and are clamouring for change, a change which they deserve,” the group said.

    The group’s position on the alliance among some of Nigeria’s opposition political parties is also fuelling suspicion that there may be more to its revival than the public is yet to be told. Coming just short of endorsing the newly formed All Peoples Congress (APC), the PDM urged it to provide a credible alternative to Nigerians.

    “The movement received briefing on the ongoing merger talks among opposition political parties in the country and commended the opposition for its resolve to give Nigerians an alternative political platform. We call on all opposition political parties and organisations across the country to close ranks in order to provide Nigerians with a clear choice between conservative and progressive ideologies.

    “While we are gladdened by the development, we implore the opposition to define its own identity based on progressive ideology, with clear and contrasting policies and programs capable of pulling Nigeria out of the current state of despoliation, despair and debasement. Telling Nigerians how bad things are simply won’t suffice. Clear and practical solutions are what Nigerians need.

    ‘PDM is developing a clear roadmap for the entrenchment of profound national social, political and economic reforms which will lead to creating jobs, steady power supply, improved security, transparent and credible elections and bring corruption in all its manifestations to an end,’ the group said.

    During the week, the PDM announced the formation of two new organs, a National Elders Committee and a National Caucus. Members of both are to be announced soon alongside those of State Coordinators, Youth and Women Leaders for the 36 States of the Federation and the FCT.

    The group also presented a new zonal, state, senatorial and local government area management structure across the country. According to the new leadership of the group, all the new structures are to take effect immediately.

    From the current look of things, it is unclear whether the PDM simply wants to reclaim its former position within the PDP as a power bloc or it is actually out to do more than just that ahead of the 2015 general election.

    Some close observers wonder if a new political party is about to be born from the current reform efforts. It is just a matter of time before a clearer picture emerges.

     

  • The battle for the soul of APGA

    The battle for the soul of APGA

    Associate Editor, Sam Egburonu, reports that Governor Rochas Okorocha’s current efforts to lead All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) in the merger bid of the progressives has exposed the deep crisis threatening to strangulate the party

     

    Since Wednesday, February 7, 2013, when the leaders of the new mega party, All Progressives Congress (APC), announced its arrival, all has not been well in the camp of one of the named participating parties, the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

    The internal crisis within the party, which has been discreetly managed by its leaders, could no longer be hidden, following open disagreement of some of its leaders over the party’s involvement in the mega party.

    Announcing the arrival of the much awaited mega party, its founding leaders, after a meeting in Lagos, said the foundation participants in the grand merger of the country’s opposition parties and the formation of All Progressives Congress (APC) include the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) and All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

    Following the presence and active participation of Governor Rochas Okorocha at the meeting where the merger and the arrival of the new party were announced, close observers had no reason to  suspect that his party, APGA, would deny being part of the merger.

    So, both supporters of APGA and other interested Nigerians cold not but express their shock, when some other leaders of APGA, shortly after the arrival of APC, denied their involvement, alleging that the party never mandated Okorocha and Senator Annie Okonkwo to represent the party in the merger negotiations.

    In a statement signed by Tim Menakaya, a member of APGA’s Board of Trustees, the complaining leaders of APGA said, ‘Our attention has been drawn to a press conference by a group of 10 governors, including Owelle Rochas Okorocha of Imo State, after meeting in Lagos, endorsing a “merger of some opposition parties in Nigeria.”

    ‘While we are not against the establishment of a mega opposition party, we believe that the issue of merger of political parties is a very serious matter that needs adequate consultations before a governor participates and makes public statement. We wish to state after due consultations with most party members, that we were never invited, consulted or informed about any political parties merger.

    ‘We wish to make it clear that we have nothing against the formation of any mega opposition party, but we categorically state that All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), has never participated in any merger talk with any political party and is therefore not in the merger. We were never consulted by anybody before such statement of our involvement was issued.

    “The National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting of the Party was held in July, 2012 and various stakeholders’ meetings have equally been held in the last one year. In all these meetings, the issue of merger with other political parties was never discussed. For one of our governors to participate in a meeting where the merger of opposition parties was endorsed is ridiculous and unfortunate…

    “For the avoidance of doubt, we wish to reiterate that the issue of merger with other political parties is not on the agenda of All Progressives Grand Alliance, APGA for now. Our concern at the moment is to restructure, nurture and build a strong APGA capable of winning elections across the states of Nigeria.”

    Menakaya, in the statement, said the decision was reached after consultations with some APGA leaders, including Governor Peter Obi of Anambra State, Ambassador Bianca Ojukwu, Ambassador Frank Nchita Ogbuewu, the 2011 APGA Governorship Candidate, Ebonyi State and Former Minister of Culture and Tourism, Chief Reagam Ufomba, the 2011 APGA Governorship Candidate, Abia State, Obiora Obiegue, the 2011 APGA Governorship Candidate, Enugu State and Prof. Dora Akunyili, Former Minister of Information and Communications, who contested for a Senate seat on the ticket of the party in 2011, among others.

    ACN’s National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, reacting to APGA’s published disclaimer of the APC, said in a statement issued in Abuja that the new party “has absolute respect for the rights of individuals or groups on whether or not to associate within a democracy.”

    The statement explained how APGA was included in the list of parties that consummated the merger thus: ‘We recognise the person and status of Gov. Rochas Okorocha, who as Imo Governor has been a great player and figure in Nigerian political landscape, as well as Senator Annie Okonkwo, a seasoned politician and respectable lawmaker.

    “We believe in their representation that APGA is interested in the merger, hence we worked with them in good faith. They participated effectively and positively in the meeting of all governors of the parties concerned and in the meetings of the merger committees of the parties, leading to the communique released by all the governors endorsing the merger and the one by the merger committees announcing the formation of the APC.”

    The statement also said, “going by the statement signed on behalf of some APGA members by Dr. Tim Menakaya, the APC had come to the full realisation that there is dissent in the rank and file of the party (APGA).

    “In spite of this, and since democracy is about choice, alignments and re-alignments hinged on the fundamentals of individual freedom of association, we respect their position, and will like to describe as unfortunate whatever misconception the purported full involvement of APGA in the merger may have generated.

    “We also assure APGA that we are willing to work with the party whenever it normalises its internal process and is ready to join the platform. We all remain brethren within the Nigerian family and our doors remain open, in the spirit of the new party,”

    Explaining, however, that it is not only parties that can join APC, ACN said progressive individuals and groups are welcomed to the fold of the new party.

    “On this basis, therefore, individuals such as the Imo State Governor and others of like minds are still considered members of the APC,” the party said.

    The Nation learnt that various stakeholders, following up on the development, have been meeting to straighten the position of APGA on the merger arrangement, even as concerned elders of APGA have desperately launched reconciliation meetings to save the obvious split.

    A source close to the embattled leadership of APGA lamented that the merger matter coincided with the Enugu High Court ruling that, according to him, ‘makes it difficult for Chief Victor Umeh-led National Executive to handle the matter as it would have done. I regret the situation because if care is not taken, we may lose out completely. I think someone is making a mistake somewhere,” the source said.

    Efforts to speak with the members of the Umeh- led executive on this matter failed as they insisted that they are currently concerned with the need to upturn the judgement that sacked it. But it is obvious that every member is worried over the development.

    An elder of the party, who refused to be named ‘in order not to jeopardise the ongoing reconciliation process, said during the week that most members of the party would ordinarily like to be part of the merger, ‘but they are worried that APGA may be swallowed up and if we have to do that, everybody must be sure that our interest is well taken care of. That is why we are worried that many of us were not part of the negotiation in the first place.”

    The source also alleged that most of the people opposed to Okorocha in this matter are ‘agents of President Goodluck Jonathan and the People’s Democratic Party. So, as you can see, we are worried because it has become obvious that many interest groups are interested in swallowing up APGA ahead 2015. That is why we have to be careful and take care of our house before it is too late. We are on it now,’ he said.

    The criticisms building up against Okorocha notwithstanding, The Nation gathered that he is not likely to change his mind on the matter, even though some insiders said part of the reconciliation meetings in APGA today are geared towards convincing Okorocha to withdraw from the planned merger bid.

    Prince Eze Madumere, the Chief of Staff to Governor Rochas Okorocha, for example, told The Nation in a telephone chat during the week that the merger is the solution to the country’s political problem. According to him, “The merger is for real. It’s obviously the long awaited solution to the political problems of Nigeria. To effectively challenge PDP and snatch power away from it, we need a very strong party and this is what All Progressives Congress is poised to offer. I do not see why all well-meaning Nigerians should not support this bold move.”

    Asked if it is true that the leadership of All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) were not carried along, Madumere said, “As you know, my principal, Governor Rochas Okorocha, has clearly explained the situation. He has made it clear that the real APGA is neither complaining or claiming not to have been carried along. It is the PDP-APGA that is complaining. And let me tell you, when the progressives want to move forward, they would not need the approval of those opposed to positive change.”

     

  • Ondo 2015: Parties prepare for parliamentary  polls

    Ondo 2015: Parties prepare for parliamentary polls

    Four months after the governorship election in Ondo State, the three main political parties-Labour Party (LP), Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN)-are warming up for the next parliamentary elections. Correspondent LEKE AKEREDOLU examines their chances at the polls. 

    The next general elections will hold in Ondo State in 2015. But the political parties have started mobilisation, ahead of the electioneering.

    Four political parties, the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Accord Party (AP) and the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) are presently challenging the victory of Governor Segun Mimiko at the State Electoral Petition Tribunal. The opposition parties are warming up again to slug it out with the ruling Labour Party (LP) at the parliamentary elections.

    As they fight the legal battle, they also oil their machineries at the grassroots. In Ondo State, the parties are competing for the three seats in the Senate, eight House of Representatives slots and 26 seats in the House of Assembly.

    During the 2011 elections, LP won 25 out of the 26 seats in the Assembly. PDP had one seat. Also, while the LP won seven seats out of the eight seats in the House of Representatives, PDP won one seat. LP won the three senatorial seats.

    However, ahead of the 2012 governorship election, Senator Ajayi Boroffice from Ondo North District and House of Representatives member Ifedayo Abegunde from Akure South/North Constituency defected to the ACN. The two politicians were governorship aspirants, but they stepped down for Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN).

    The senators and House of Representatives members have not openly declared their ambitions to recontest, Even though none of the serving legislators, but underground consultations among politicians are in progress. This is to be expected, given the tradition of Nigerian politicians to seek for second terms in office.

    A member of the House of Representatives from Akoko Southwest/Akoko Southeast, Hon. Debo Ologunagba, recently held an empowerment programme in his constituency. At the ceremony, some youths emerged to endorse him for another term. He was amused by the endorsement. Since then, he has been oiling his campaign machinery.

    Ologunagba’s challenger is the son of the former Ondo State governor, Otunba Gboyega Adefarati, who has informed his political associates that he would vie for the parliamentary seat. In 2011, he had indicated his interest in the slot, but luck did not smile on him.

    The young politician delivered his community (Akungba Akoko) for his party, the ACN, in the October 20, 2012 governorship election.

    There may also be a political drama in the Central Senatorial District. The battle for the House of Representatives seat will be fierce. Sources said that Abegunde is scheming to retain the seat for the ACN. But LP is raising a candidate to dislodge him. Party sources said one of the state legislators from Akure has been anointed for the job.

    “I can tell you that Hon. Ade Adeniyi, who is a member of the House of Assembly, is interested in the seat and he has the backing of the party”, added the source.

    However, he will face Mr Deji Falae, a lawyer and commissioner, and the governor’s Chief Protocol Officer, Dayo Awude, at the primaries.

    Deji, son of the former Secretary to the Government of the Federation [SGF], Chief Olu Falae, had vied for the position in 2011. He could not make it. But he was also used the appoinment to compensate his father for endorsing him.

    The senatorial race will also be a stiff competition. Senator Ayo Akinyelure, who is representing Ondo Central at the Upper Chamber, contested the seat against the PDP candidate, Senator Gbenga Ogunniya, and the ACN flagbear, Dr. Michael Akintade.

    Ogunniya was among the few PDP leaders who endorsed Mimiko for a second term. Many believe that he may not aspire again because it may be difficult for him to secure the ticket.

    Akintade who came third during the last elections, left the country for the United States after the polls. ACN, sources said, is preparing to raise another candidate to fight for the seat.

    Senator Boroffice from Ondo North is yet to declare his interest in the senatorial race. But his associates said that he is interested in retaining the seat for the ACN.

    Boroffice, the Asiwaju of Akokoland, may have to wrest for the seat with the candidate of LP candidate. Already, a Prince from Owo local government, ‘Nekan Olateru-Olagbegi who was the party senatorial candidate for 2007 general elections, has embarked on secret consultation to contest the seat again.

    But the race will not be a walk over for the prince. The former Commissioner for Finance in Adefarati Administration, Chief Segun Ojo, may slug it out with Olateru-Olagbegi.

    Segun Ojo was among the prominent politicians who helped governor Mimiko to win the 2007 and 2012 governorship elections. Although he left the party for the ACN, he returned to the fold before the October 20, 2012 election. The former commissioner his now seeking for Mimiko’s blessing for the ticket.

    Another politician who may also join the race is Dr. Olu Agunloye. The former Minister of Power and Steel vied for the ticket in 2011. He lost to Boroffice. Later, he joined the ACN to contest the governorship. He again lost to Akeredolu. After that, he retuned to the LP. When contacted on phone, the former Special Assistant to the slain Justice Minister, Chief Bola Ige, said it is too early to talk about the 2015 general elections. He said that he would remain silent on his future plans. But sources said that he is already holding consultations with stakeholders in his district.

    There have been speculations that the Special Adviser to President Goodluck Jonathan on Niger Delta Affairs, Mr. Kingsley Kuku, is interested in the Ondo South senatorial ticket. He is a chieftain of the PDP.

    Kuku, an Ese-Odo born politician, played a crucial role in the emergence of the party’s governorship candidate, Chief Olusola Oke, who lost to Mimiko in the last election. The presidential adviser is solidly behind the embattled PDP State Executive Committee led by Mr. Ebenezer Alabi. But it is uncertain whether Kuku is siding with Oke, who is locked in a war of attriction with his erstwhile Director of Campaigns, Dr. Dare Bada, over the way he ran his governorship campaigns.

    Apart from Kuku, who had confided in some of his followers about his aspiration, no PDP chieftain has shown interest. The Ijaw politician may likely contest the position againt the LP Senator Boluwaji Kunlere, who is seeking re-election. .

    In 2011, Kunlere defeated the former governor, Dr. Olusegun Agagu, who was the PDP candidate in the South District.

    Kunlere, an LP chieftain, is relying on the power of incumbency to retain the seat.

  • ‘Igbo can produce first APC President’

    ‘Igbo can produce first APC President’

    Senator Annie Okonkwo has said that Igbo will back the new party, All Progressives Congress (APC), in the next general elections. He dismissed the insinuation that the involvement of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) in the merger talks did not command the blessing of the party leadership.

    He told our correspondent in Lagos that participation of Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha, who is a leader of the party, has given credibility to the party’s involvement in the exercise.

    Okonkwo said the APC will install a progressive administration that will rescue the country from total anarchy.

    He said APC is on a rescue mission to halt the corrupt and inept PDP administration at the centre.

    Okonkwo said: “It is very clear why the merger deal was brokered. It has become very important and urgent to salvage the country from the claws of insecurity, collapse of infrastructure, the rising profile of unemployment and the continuous drifting of the country to one party state.”

    Anambra State government had criticised the merger, saying it does not have its backing. Also, APGA Board of Trustees (BoT) member, Dr. Tim Menakaya, also faulted the identification of Governor Okorocha and Senator Okonkwo with the process.

    Defending the presence of the APGA leaders, Senator Okonkwo maintained that Okorocha’s presence was overwhelmingly applauded by the party hierarchy.

    He added: “Governor Okorocha is a leader of the party; you have to follow what the leaders of your party say. Practically, the only way an Igbo man can become the President of this country is through this merger and we are in support of it.”

    Okonkwo said that the position of the Anambra State government did not come as a surprise because it was already fraternising with the ruling party.

    He said: “Governor Peter Obi is already in alliance with the PDP. So, we are not surprised by the position of the government. Those who think the merger would not work were not facing the reality on ground because it was not arrived at on selfish or personal ground.

    “It was concluded based on the overwhelming support of Nigerians to save this country because the ruling party has run short of management ideas”.

    In reaction to the statement by APGA Deputy National Chairman Uche Ejike that the merger is a union of strange bedfellows that would collapse in the next six months, Okonkwo explained that every result available indicated that the merger would sweep of the ruling party from power.

    He observed that the Igbo were going to benefit more in the union and urged all progressive minded people to keep hope alive in the All Progressives Congress (APC) because through it they would rule the country.

    “We are democrats and would not do anything to undermine democracy that will assuage all the segments of the country. All those who are not supporting the merger from the Igbo extraction are enemies of the Igbo people. Let me state it again, that this is the platform through which an Igbo man can become president of this country,” he said.

  • 2015: PDP, APC  have equal chances

    2015: PDP, APC have equal chances

    Those who had dreamt of making Nigeria a one-party state must now come to terms with the reality of its impossibility. Not anymore with the emergence of the All Progressives Congress (APC). About four years ago, former National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chief Vincent Ogbulafor had predicted that the party would rule the country for 60 years. He predicted that Nigeria will become a one-party state. Ogbulafor also said that Nigeria needed a one-party system of government to ensure stability and progress, stressing that it was only the PDP that could make it possible.

    But speaking with The Nation, the national chairman of the National Conscience Party (NCP), Dr Yunusa Tanko, said the dream of a one-party state has been aborted. He said the opposition and the ruling party have an equal chance of forming the government at the centre in 2015.

    “We now know that the tendency to foist a one-party state on Nigeria has been broken. Those who think that they can rule Nigeria for ever must have a re-think. The truth is that the PDP is sure to be depleted; all progressives whose parties were deregistered and others who have been sitting on the fence will now team up with the APC and I can tell you, Nigerians are wiser now.

    “They will not allow any party to continue to rule them with impunity again. The level of impunity has been too much and Nigerians are sure to, with the coming of APC, halt the plan by the PDP to rule this country for the next 60 years. If the truth must be told, for now, the PDP and the ACP both has an equal chance of forming the next government at the centre”, he said.

    Also, the National Publicity Secretary of the Conference of Nigeria Political Parties (CNPP), Osita Okechukwu, said the political equation has changed, adding that it is a straight contest between the APC and the PDP.

    “The birth of APC has redefined the political landscape in Nigeria. I can tell you that the electoral battle of 2015 is now between PDP and APC. It is illusory now for anybody in the PDP to still think that the party can rule Nigeria for 60 years. The inability of the opposition parties to come together in the past probably accounted for that way of thinking. But things have change and nobody will be able to make Nigeria a one-party state.

    “Right now, we are calling on all Nigerians to join the new mega party because it is a mass movement . There is an urgent need for all progressives to join hand in the process that could prevent the dangerous slide of Nigeria into a failed state. We want them to do this so as to ensure the safety of our fledgling democracy”.

    Following the landslide victory of the PDP in the 2003 general elections, especially the unexpected in-road it made into the Southwest and a repeat performance in 2007, Ogbulafor concluded that Nigeria was heading for a one party state where the opposition have no say.

    The PDP chieftain said: “Some time ago, I used to read in the newspapers that the umbrella of the PDP is torn. Each time I read that, I would laugh and then say to myself that the umbrella is still strong and very intact and ready to accommodate more people. The PDP is a party for all and it is set to rule Nigeria for the next 60 years. I don’t care if Nigeria becomes a one-party state. We can do it and the PDP can contain all,” were his words.

    Ogbulafor’s perception of the political situation in the country then, was a place where the opposition has not the slightest opportunity of challenging it. As a result, the ruling party was at liberty to continue in governance for as long as it wanted.

    What started then as a mere desire to expand its coast and establish a comfortable majority over other parties by the PDP led to the emasculation of the opposition parties.

    However, Yunusa said: “One-party state is no longer feasible in Nigeria, not with the emergence of the APC. The equation has changed”.

  • Kano youths endorse lawmaker for governorship

    Kano youths endorse lawmaker for governorship

    A partisan group, ‘Kawu Dala Sumaila Organisation’, has endorsed a House of Representatives member, Alhaji Kawu Sumaila, for the governorship in Kano State. Members of the group have presented him to the former Kano State governor, Malam Ibrahim Shekarau. They pledged their support for the formation of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The group said the party will dislodge the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Following the birth of the new party, the Two parties in the merger, the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), held rallies in Kano to celebrate the merger.

    The CPC held its rally at the Murtala Muhammed Library Complex. It was attended by party chieftains from the 44 local council areas . The ANPP cmembers converged on Shekarau’s residence.

    At the rally, the group asked cthe former governor to support the federal legislator, saying that he will reposition the state, if elected as governor.

    The youths argued Sumaila, who has been a federal legislator since 1999, has the experience and capability to govern the state on the platform of the APC.

    The youths maintained that the state has been facing serious security challenges in the past two years.

    They said the security challenge has prevented investors from coming to the state.

    The group said the state government has failed to solve the problems of water shortage and unemployment.

    Kano State CPC leader Alhaji Usman Alhaji, who is the former National Secretary of the defunct National Republican Convention (NRC), said the merger will end the domination of the polity by the PDP.

    Also, Usman said APC will provide good leadership, foster accountability and prevent corruption in governance.