Tag: ACN

  • ACN alleges plot by Kwara to crackdown on members

    ACN alleges plot by Kwara to crackdown on members

    •PDP: defectors ’re not our members

    THE Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) yesterday raised the alarm over what it called an imminent crackdown on its members in Kwara State following the defection of members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN) into its fold.

    In a statement in Akure, Ondo State by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party expressed concern over the “sabre-rattling and provocative” statements that have been emanating from the PDP government controlled organs in the state before, during and after the defection of their former loyalists to the ACN.

    It has become fashionable for the PDP-controlled government in Kwara State to find in the ACN a ready scape goat for its maladministration, incompetence, profligacy and anti -people policies which have totally alienated the long suffering people from their under performing government, the party explained.

    According to the party, it is no longer a secret that Kwara State government is owing its workers several months of unpaid salaries.However, in its usual penchant for looking for a scape goat for its shortcomings, the state government has perfected plans to arrest and detain ACN chieftains whenever the workers go on strike as if the workers need to be instigated by anyone to demand their legitimate rights.

    To keen watchers of Kwara State politics, this will not come as a surprise as the ACN was also held responsible for the violent protest that greeted the ban of commercial motorcyclists in the state recently, and a strident call was made for the arrest of ACN chieftains when the representatives of the government were booed and pelted with missiles at the Muslim Praying Ground last August, the party added.

    The profligacy, scandalous massive deductions by the government of funds meant for local government councils, incompetence, cronyism and anti -people policies of the government has brought such untold hardship to the people and left the state under developed that the people are left with no choice than to leave the sinking PDP in droves and embrace ACN, the party explained.

    It went on: “For a government that has repeatedly proclaimed to the world that the opposition is dead in the state, the recent massive defection of its former loyalists was bound to jolt and send it to overdrive especially given the quality of the political giants that left to join” the ACN such as:

    “Chief James Ayeni, the first Chairman of Irepodun Local Government and a three-time Commissioner, the most recent tenure being under former governor Bukola Saraki himself.

    “Mr. Jide Usman, an engineer and two term Chairman of Ifelodun Local Government Council, the biggest local government council in the state.

    “Abiodun Dada, a lawyer and former Auditor of the PDP in Ekiti Local Government Area”.

    “Hon Ayo Idowu, a member the Kwara State House of Assmbly (2007-2011).

    “Chief J. S. Adedoyin, a former Director of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs and a grassroots politician.

    “Akinmade Yahaya Abolarin, a lawyer and former Legal Adviser of ACPN.

    “Alhaji Issa Raji (alias Kingibe of Kwara State), a former member of Kwara State Independent Electoral Commission.

    “Mr Teju Titiloye, former member, Governing Council College of Education, Kotongora

    “B. A. Atolagbe, a lawyer and former supervisory councillor, Irepodun Local Government council and former member, Kwara State Scholarship Board and Olanrewaju Shuaibu arguably the most redoubtable grassroots politician in Irepodun Local Government Area, the party concluded.

    But the Kwara State chapter of the PDP described the allegation as tissues of lies and propaganda.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Mas’ud Adebimpe, the party said, those the ACN paraded as defectors were never PDP members but impersonators.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, all those claiming to have defected are either members of ACN or ACPN. The only party acceptable to the people in the state is PDP”.

    The Peoples Democratic Party is undoubtedly formidable and on ground in Kwara State, it does not need to force people into its ever increasing fold, Adebimpe said.

  • Fear of ACN grips PDP in Kwara

    Fear of ACN grips PDP in Kwara

    Should the spate of defections to the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) by members of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and other political parties in Kwara State continue, the PDP, in particular, may be in for serious misfortune. This is the current fear being nursed by many PDP chieftains.

    Recently, the expansive Latara Hall, Ajase-Ipo Road, Ilorin played host to scores of defectors, ACN supporters and loyalists from within and other neighbouring ACN states.

    It was an occasion for the celebration of the defection of some members of the PDP, Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN) and Accord to ACN.

    The defectors claimed they were leaving a “retrogressive and oppressive” PDP in the state to the progressive party, ACN.

    Notable among the defectors are former PDP deputy governorship candidate in the 1999 election, Barrister Akinmade Yahaya Abolarin; former Commissioner and a leading light in the Saraki political dynasty, Chief James Ayeni, and a former PDP chieftain and ex-chairman of Ifelodun Local Government, Engineer Jide Usman.

    ACN national publicity secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed; the party’s governorship candidate in the 2011 election, Mohammed Dele Belgore (SAN); representatives of Osun and Ogun state governors among others, were also on hand to receive the defectors at the colourful ceremony in the state capital.

    Spokesperson of the defectors, Prince Shuaib Olanrewaju premised their defection on what he described thus: “The reason for our defection is premised on the fact that the state was among the original twelve states created since 1967, having nothing in terms of human capital and social transformation to justify the age of its existence. When we all joined hands with the PDP in the last year poll to deliver the state to the party, our expectation was that the good people of the state would be rewarded with good dividends of democracy.

    “Unfortunately, unemployment, poverty and fraudulent political promises occasioned by the PDP’s bad leadership have become the order of the day. All around us, you find mortuaries of wreckage inflicted by PDP in the state. During the past nine or more years, we all have been running a political race, the spectators (the electorate) have been looking on (though not impotently). Our state is like a patient whose condition is daily deteriorating.

    “There is the need for the state to be delivered from the hands of PDP that has constituted itself to a political demon and clog in the wheel of progress of the state. In order to achieve this political deliverance, it becomes imperative for all the progressive elements to join forces to fight these political oppressors and chase them away from governance. We promise to form a solid followership for the ACN to engender meaningful development in the state. We are declaring for the ACN today; we shall cooperate with the party from the ward, local, state to national levels to ensure the party’s victory in the 2013 local government election in the state and the national elections in 2015.”

    Prince Kolawole added that “here and there, there are evidences of total falling out of the common people with the irresponsible government of PDP. We all know that this state is dead broke. We do know it too, we had to accept that it is so because workers’ salaries are not paid when due and few weeks ago, the National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE) threatened to go on strike over non-payment of their salaries and other entitlements.”

    The ACN spokesman accused the PDP-led Federal Government of incapable of proffering solution to the nation’s problems.

    He posited that the PDP-led government’s ineptitude had resulted in the alarming rate of youth unemployment, epileptic power supply and general infrastructural decay.

    Maintaining that the PDP government had failed Nigerians, the Mohammed threw jibes at the party’s leadership for its spirited effort to defend President Goodluck Jonathan’s aide, Dr Doyin Okupe, over allegation of contract scandal levelled against him by the Benue State government

    The PDP, Mohammed insisted, had never been truthful to Nigerians on any national issue, citing the “many lies the PDP government churned out to Nigerians on the illness of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua.”

    He added that Nigerians deserved to know the exact situation of the health status of the first lady, Dame Patience Jonathan.

    Lamenting what he called lack of development and dearth of infrastructure in Kwara State, Mohammed said that the PDP-led government in the state was in no way different from the PDP government at the centre, adding: “The PDP at the national level is not performing, so you cannot expect anything different at the state level.”

    In his remarks, Belgore advised Kwarans to stop “suffering in silence” by teaming up with the ACN to sweep PDP away in the next general elections.

    Belgore added: “ACN remains the only viable alternative to PDP and the party that genuinely has the interest of the masses at heart. It is becoming clearer that PDP has absolute nothing to offer. Kwara in 2012 is worst than it was last year. People are coming in droves to ACN and there is a lot more than what you are seeing. This decamping, you will keep seeing more as we go along. My charge to Kwarans is for them to defend their right, support the party that will protect their interest and advance their cause and development. It is no point suffering. Support ACN and we will rout that evil called PDP out of our state.

    “This is not the Kwara state of my dream with these PDP people in power. What I’m seeing is a state of nightmares. It might be the dream of a few selfish people that are bent on plundering the state for their own personal gains, but it is certainly not my dream state and that of majority of Kwarans.”

     

  • Poll: ACN, NCP pledge better government for Ondo people

    Poll: ACN, NCP pledge better government for Ondo people

     

    The govenorship candidate of the Action Congress of Nigeria in Ondo State, Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu, on Saturday said there was need for the state to return the South West mainstream politics to enhance regional intergration.

    Addressing journalists in Lagos, Akerodolu, a former President of the Nigeria Bar Association, said the reintegration would benefit the state the more.

    “We never said that every state in the South-West must belong to the ACN but in the case of Ondo, we must work to make it a part of the region for its benefit.

    “Ondo cannot afford to be a weakling among the six states making up the region. With regional intergration, states will be able to raise more funds together than individually for projects that will benefit its people,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted Akeredolu as saying to journalists.

    He noted that the only way for positive change in Nigeria was for regions to grow at their pace, adding, “we will fight for Ondo to be part of the integration.”

    Akeredolu hinged his optimism of winning the election to “the clamour of the people for positive change”, saying the people of the state deserve a new government that would show greater concern for their plight.

    “The rural areas in Ondo have been neglected totally for too long, my government will open up all the rural areas in Ondo,” he pledged.

    On allegation that he was hand-picked as the candidate of the ACN, Akeredolu said: “I was not hand-picked by anybody. The process that produced my candidature cannot be faulted.”

    He also debunked allegations that the ACN was planning to rig the poll, insisting that it had no machinery with which to do so.

    NAN reports that the briefing was attended by ACN National Publicity secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the governorship running mate, Mr. Paul Akintelure and Mr. Dele Aleke, the former Lagos State commissioner for information and strategy

    Meanwhile, the National Conscience Party (NCP), has launched its campaign in Akure with a pledge to address the issue of poverty in the state if elected on October 20.

    The National Chairman of the party, Dr. Yinusa Tanko, made the pledge while declaring open the party’s secretariat on Hospital Road, Akure on Saturday.

     

     

  • ‘Ondo people want change’

    ‘Ondo people want change’

    What has been the response of the people to your aspiration since you started your campaigns?

    The response, by my own assessment, has been wonderful; it is very encouraging. With the massive reception, I am convinced that the people of Ondo State are truly yearning for a change.

    You said the people want a change. But many people have continued to endorse the incumbent.

    When you talk about endorsement by individuals, this does not in any way translate to votes. When you talk about what you read in newspapers, these are bought articles. These are articles that are skewed towards a particular candidate. This does not bother me; my concern is about what happens in the field. I talked to the people and I got their feelings.

    Two deputy governorship candidates are coming from the Akoko, which is part of your senatorial district, does this not suggest that you have no hope there?

    Let’s wait and see what will happen, but I can assure you that ACN will sweep the votes in Akoko, notwithstanding that two deputy governorship candidates are from the area. By the way, who are these deputies, is it the one picked by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), a weightless candidate; or is it Ali Olanusi, the old and tired horse that would be changed before the election? I can assure that the people of Akoko are not looking for deputy, what they are looking for is governor. The people are happy that ACN zoned the governor to the North. So I am very sure that my people in Akoko would naturally prefer having a governor from their senatorial district to having a deputy that carries no authority to do anything for them.

    Your manner of emergence has created acrimony. How is your party containing this?

    It is a well-known fact that all primaries throw up what could be called opposition. Every political party has devised what they consider the best option to pick their candidate; ACN is no exception. So, I don’t see what ACN has done that is not right or that is not democratic. Having submitted yourself to a process, you cannot approbate and reprobate. Everybody was part of the process. But because of the number (of aspirants), we are bound to have people who would probably not agree with the decision and who were never party men, who were only in the party to pursue their personal ambition, and would want to pull back when this personal ambition is not realisable. All we can do is to wish them well. Ambition can make people do many reprehensible things. It can make you lose your party, it can make you lose your ideology, and it can make you lose everything. The party has been reaching out to many of them and a good number of them are now with us, they have reconciled with the party and are working hard on the field to ensure our victory. Those that are yet to return, we wish them good luck wherever they go, but we are sure that, sooner than later, they will return to us.

    What is the nature of the reconciliation?

    A lot of reconciliation has been done. That is why I said that what we have done really is that immediately after the exercise, a lot of meetings were held where aggrieved aspirants were reconciled with the party and a lot of them now are in support of my candidacy. Yes, one or two decided to opt out. That is not something that is strange; it happens everywhere, it happens every time. When I say everywhere, I am not saying all over the world, what I am saying is that it happens everywhere in Nigeria. If out of about 27 aspirants, about two or three decided to go, I don’t think we have done badly. So, reconciliation has been done, we have gone round, if one or two people are still sitting on the fence, we will continue to talk to them.

    Are you saying for instance, that Dr. Tunji Abayomi, who was very bitter, is now supportive of your candidacy?

    I don’t know of Dr. Tunji Abayomi being bitter. He is my respected egbon (senior), a highly principled man, who is never out for personal ambition, but the collective good of our people all the time; he is a chronic party loyalist. What he did was to express his feelings; he didn’t do this to bring down the roof of the house. He made it known clearly that he was opposed to a few things the party did, but at the end of the day, he is with us, a true democrat and a strong party man. It was right of him to say he felt hurt by the decision of the party. I concede that to him. He is a true progressive, of course, he cannot be in any other place except among the progressives and we are matching on together.

    How true is the report that you did not register in Ondo State?

    Anybody can say whatever he or she likes. I don’t have to be registered in Ondo State. It is not a legal requirement for me to contest election. They can say whatever they like. It is part of Labour Party propaganda. All I can say is that I am a registered voter at Ijebu II Ward 5 in Owo.

    Violence has suddenly crept into the election process with reported clashes involving the three main political parties. Is this not of concern to you?

    I am concerned about violence, but I’m not surprised. Even before now, I had raised the alarm that Governor Olusegun Mimiko is keeping a ‘thugdom.’ His own idea is that he would get this thing (election) by force. But I make bold to tell the governor himself and his party that they are fooling themselves. We would win this election fair and squarely, in spite of the thugs he is breeding. His thugs are all over the state. What is however of greater concern to me is that we have never had a fair deal from the Police. Not until when the DIG (Deputy Inspector-General of Police) came and held a stakeholders meeting, my belief was that that meeting would have put things in its proper stead, but after he left, the incidents that happened thereafter have continued to show us that the Police Command here is biased and is willing to do the bidding of Governor Mimiko and his party. The Police Command here is under the influence of Labour, whether it is monetary influence or whatever it is, but it can be otherwise anyway. The Police have been bought; it has demonstrated a total bias. We urge the Inspector-General of Police to look at the case of the Ondo State Command and do a surgical operation. The command that is parading the likes of Tunji Fadairo who has been in and out over five times, cannot be trusted. The police have showed tremendous bias that, if care and urgent steps are not taken, might increase violence in the state. Because when people cannot find protection in the police, they might protect themselves and the leaders would not be in control of such situations. I have been preaching to our supporters to remain calm, not to be violent but if they are faced with a police that is now an arm of Labour Party, then they may have no choice than to protect themselves. One day, they may react and they may not be under my control.

    But the police have openly indicted your party as the aggressor?

    You don’t expect anything different from people who have shown bias. What do you expect the police that is under heavy monetary influence to say? They are writing a script for Labour; the (Police) Commissioner is a Labour (Party), his deputy, Tunji Fadairo is a Labour (Party) person, everybody knows, so they are writing a script for Labour. On the day of the incident, all of us were in joyous mood, having elected our candidate, so you don’t expect us to be unruly. If Labour Party men had not driven into our convoy, nothing would have happened.

    The important message to the police is that it would do well to remain unbiased. They should know that we are not people that are afraid, we leave our fate in their hands, we leave our protection for them, but if they fail to do so, we will protect ourselves.

    Would a resort to self-help not lead us to the type of crisis we witnessed in 1983?

    I don’t know where it would lead us to. We are in 2012, we cannot go back to 1983, but all I know is that if the Police refuse to protect us, we will protect ourselves. When the DIG came, he appealed to all the political parties to conduct their affairs in a peaceful manner, he appealed to the police not to be biased, but, unfortunately, all his appeal fell on deaf ears as unfolding violent events have now shown.

    How far has the incumbent administration provided a level playing ground for all?

    We are not expecting the incumbent governor to provide a level playing ground because he is not interested in it; what we expect is a police that is unbiased, a police that should and must not take side. It is the police that should give a level playing ground to everybody, if there is any attack, the police should do its lawful duty by arresting whoever is involved. So, I never expect this government to give a level playing ground; that is a suicidal expectation.

    But people say the previous administration of Dr. Olusegun Agagu gave a level playing field; they wonder why the same cannot be expected from Dr. Mimiko.

    You can’t talk about Dr. Agagu and compare him with Dr. Mimiko. Agagu is an urbane gentleman. Agagu is not someone you can compare to Mimiko. Mimiko believes in thuggery, he lives on it, his life depends on it, and his electoral aspiration depends on it. Agagu is a disciplined democrat, he allowed campaigns, he allowed billboards to be erected, he allowed posters to be pasted, and he allowed a level playing ground for all the parties. It is not the same thing with Mimiko, who is the exact opposite of Agagu when it comes to democratic tolerance. But he has to be very careful because these thugs he is rearing would sooner than later turn on him, so he has to be very careful.

    But it sounds incredible that you are saying all that about Mimiko, the same man you defended four years ago at the election tribunal?

    When you talked about defending him, remember that I am a lawyer. If I were convinced that there were election malpractices and they bring the matter to me, I would prosecute the case. But I will not support thuggery. The matter that went to court was not for me to defend his thuggery. All I was there to do was to plead his case that his votes were manipulated, that votes were not cast and there were multiple thumb printing. All these we successfully proved. But if the case was pleaded that he used thugs, I won’t go there to defend him. I guessed he probably did not use thugs because Agagu gave him a level playing ground to operate.

    Some observers have adjudged Mimiko as doing well; why change a winning horse?

    I don’t know if that is your own judgment. Anybody who says Mimiko has performed well must be seeing governance through a jaundiced eye. Mimiko has done nothing. What you see are cosmetic projects. If you want to say he has performed well, go to our local areas, go into the interior, not a single life-supporting or promoting project is there. When you travel round the state and you go to the interior, you will weep for the people of this state. No light in the whole of the Southern Senatorial District, most communities in the state are not accessible, most of our farmers are living in abject poverty. The fact that he is asphalting and building fountains in Akure is not a measure of good performance. Here is a man who in his four years has not commissioned any tangible project except markets, which are supposed to be local government affairs, here is a man who, four years down the lane, has not employed one teacher, yet we have schools where you have over 100 pupils in a class, we have schools of about 2000 students with only two English teachers. Here is a man who, in his four years, no industry built by him or by private investors has been commissioned.

    But the same man has been endorsed by prominent Yoruba leaders?

    Chief Ayo Adebayo and co. were park-lane politicians, they never knew how the works were being done on the field. What Chief Adebanjo and co. are doing is that they are still fighting a war that has ended. Their support for Mimiko has no scientific base. It is simply, ‘yes this is ACN being led by Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, so we oppose him, no more no less. A party being led by Tinubu and headed by Baba Bisi Akande is an offshoot of Bola Ige, our enemy, therefore we must oppose it, and we must never allow any good thing to be seen in Yoruba land that has to do with Bola Ige.’

    What they are saying is that in life and death, we are against Bola Ige. My appeal is that that battle should have ended with the death of Chief Bola Ige, let all of us match together for the greater interest and development of Yoruba-land. The Yoruba will forge ahead with or without them, it is in their own interest to return to the fold, they cannot be against Yoruba interest.

    Are you saying they are misleading the people?

    With due respect to them, they are generals without troops, so they have no one to mislead.

  • Adamawa: ACN worried over ‘ploy to frustrate’ it right to appeal

    Adamawa: ACN worried over ‘ploy to frustrate’ it right to appeal

    •Party urges NJC to intervene

     

    The Action Congress of Nigeria has (ACN) yesterday expressed concern over what it sees as a deliberate ploy to deny it right to justice and frustrate its right of appeal in the Adamawa Governorship Election Tribunal by the Court of Appeal.

    In a statement in Abuja by its National Publicity Secretary Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party described as curious and worrisome, the fact that as of today the 19th of September (yesterday) a mere three days before the appeal becomes statute barred, the Court of Appeal has neither constituted a panel nor fixed a date for the hearing of the appeal.

    Mindful of Section 285(7) of the Constitution as amended, which says that an appeal from a decision of an Election tribunal or court shall be heard and disposed of within 60 days from the date of the delivery of the judgement of the Tribunal, the party filed and served all processes within the time stipulated by law and by the 5th of September 2012, that is 14 days ago, the Appeal was ripe for hearing.

    Concerned by the silence from the Court of Appeal despite this, two separate letters of reminder were addressed to the Acting President of the Court of Appeal , all to no avail, the party explained.

    In the opinion of the party, the only logical conclusion for this bizarre conduct of the Court of Appeal in this matter is that it deliberately wants to deny the party and its candidate the right to be heard, as it is the law now that once an election petition appeal even without any fault of the Petitioner/ Appellant cannot be heard and determined within 60 days from the date of the delivery of the Tribunal’s judgement -in this case by the 22nd of September 2012- such a petition has ceased to exist and by implication becomes statute barred.

    Nerves are already severely frayed in the country today and the Court of Appeal is advised not to use the excuse of the expiration of 60 days to deny the party and its candidate the right to justice as this will be an invitation to chaos and further erosion of the confidence of the people in Judiciary, which at the moment is not enjoying any rave review, the party warned.

    The party, therefore, calls on the National Judicial Council to prevail on the Court of Appeal not to lend itself to an act of electoral injustice by the forcible imposition of a contrived time lapse on its appeal and proceed immediately to constitute a panel and fix a date for the hearing of the appeal before the expiration of the 60 days allowed by law.

  • Ashafa: no disunity among ACN senators

    Ashafa: no disunity among ACN senators

    THE Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) senator representing Lagos East, Gbenga Ashafa, yesterday debunked the rumour that there is a cold war among the party’s senators.

    In a statement in Lagos, the lawmaker said ACN senators remained united and committed to effective representation of the party.

    He said the party’s lawmakers would also ensure that government policies impact positively on the people they represent at the National Assembly.

    Ashafa explained that the rumour was part of some publications that some ACN senators were behind the alleged removal of George Akume as Senate Minority Leader.

    The lawmaker explained that as the Secretary of the ACN Senators’ Caucus Forum, he attended regular meetings where national issues were discussed for the unity of the senators.

    He said: “This is a forum that brings together a group of extremely patriotic individuals that have the unique privilege to be elected by the good people of Nigeria to serve.

    “As we meet regularly, issues affecting the lives of common Nigerians have been our focal point. I can’t recall anytime personal issues became an agenda or item for discussion.”

  • ACN’s quest for Internally Generated Revenue (IGR)

    ACN’s quest for Internally Generated Revenue (IGR)

    One of the basic responsibilities of a citizen is payment of taxes. Classical Athenian democracy divided responsibilities within the state. Citizens enjoyed participation-direct democracy while slaves and non-citizens did most of the work. But by the time of Pericles, citizens not only participated in decision making but also paid taxes and defended the state under the pressure and example of Sparta. Military service became one of the hallmarks of citizenship. When representative democracy became the norm, taxation became the rite of passage of citizenship. The United States arguably the oldest democracy in the world was founded on representation and taxation. The 13 American colonies rebelled against King George of England III because he imposed onerous taxes on the people without their being represented in government. Since then taxation has become a necessary condition of citizenship.

    In Nigeria, the history of taxation dates back to as far back as the 14thCentury in the Hausa states. By the time Usman Dan Fodio took over and established the Caliphate of Sokoto, he was able to systemize a form of taxation which still exist till today. This was the Jangali-(Cattletax) and also poll tax on farmers. These taxes became the nucleus of the so called “Native treasuries” or Beit-el-mal during the heydays of the indirect rule system of Sir Fredrick Lugard and Sir Richmond Palmer. This system was extended to Yoruba land with the fulcrum around which a native treasury was built. Attempt to extend the system into the acephalous societies of Igbo and Ibibio met with resistance and rebellion. Even in Yoruba land revolts in Okeho and Iseyin in 1916 and a much bigger revolt in Egbaland in 1918 followed the imposition of taxes. The levying of taxes succeeded without problem in the Islamic North, but in the non-Muslim areas of the North, it was rebellion all the way. This long introduction is necessary to prove that people in Nigeria except in the Muslim North do not like paying taxes. The Tiv area throughout colonial times and after, was up in arms against the regional government partly because of the people’s opposition to taxes.

    The Action Group government in Western Nigeria lost the federal election in 1954 because it was portrayed as a tax and spend party. The Agbekoya revolt of the late 1960s was a tax revolt by farmers who felt they were not getting anything in form of development for the taxes they were paying. The revolt did not end until those taxes were abolished.

    I examined a PhD thesis in the University of Ibadan some years ago and the conclusion of the student was that we have not witnessed a people’s revolt in recent times because people in the villages and on the farms are more or less excluded from paying taxes. The import of this conclusion is that government must move gingerly in imposing taxes on the poor people particularly, in the villages and yet before people can become stakeholders and take interest in their government, they must at least pay taxes. One of the reasons why the elite has gotten away with rampant corruption and thievery is because the money being stolen is not tax money but commissions and corporate tax skimmed off the petroleum industry.

    If taxes have to be imposed, they would have to be restricted to the cities and municipalities but not the villages. This is why IGR involving direct taxation would have to be restricted to the cities only. In most countries of the world it is easier to collect revenues through consumer tax-value added tax (VAT) because most people do not even realize that they are being taxed when they pay VAT. It is a pity that VAT in Nigeria is collected by the federal government. In a federation, VAT should be state tax. Imagine if Lagos can get all the VAT collected in the state, it would not have to levy the present onerous land use charge it imposes on all and sundry. It is this land use charge that the ACN states having seen how it has boosted the IGR of Lagos to N20 billion a month now want to extend to all of them. Whether they would succeed is a moot question. Edo State saw this being used by the PDP against Adams Oshiomhole in the last election which he handily won. But there may be problems introducing land use tax outside Lagos. I am in support of it. But it must be done in such a way that old people and people living in their homes would not pay much and that the bulk of the taxes would be paid by corporate bodies, industries, institutions and houses rented out. But everybody should pay something perhaps graduated from as low as one thousand to one hundred thousand.

    Now that we are talking about constitutional review, this is the time the VAT collected in states should belong to where it is collected rather than first sending in it to Abuja and later distributing it to all the states. This should be a case for constitutional review. The ACN leaders outside Lagos where the land use charge has succeeded must educate the people before levying them. Success in Lagos of the levy does not automatically guarantee its success in all the states under the ACN administrations. It is safer to impose a state VAT in addition to the federal tax than a land use levy which may elicit some opposition.

  • LP members join ACN in Ondo community

    LP members join ACN in Ondo community

    Over 500 leaders and members of the ruling Labour Party (LP) in Akoko Southeast Local Government Area of Ondo State yesterday defected to the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).

    They were led by a chieftain of the ruling party, Mr. Yakubu Balogun, who accused the LP administration of deceit.

    The defectors were received at Ipe-Akoko by a former commissioner and ACN chieftain, Mr. Solagbade Amodeni.

    At the event, ACN Chairman in Akoko Southeast, Mr. Omoware Ajayi, said the defectors have equal rights as old members.

    They defied the rain to demonstrate their loyalty to ACN.

    Ajayi urged the defectors to work for the victory of the party and its candidate, Mr. Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN).

    The politician congratulated the new ACN members for their decision, adding that they would not regret it.

    A chieftain of ACN in the United Kingdom (UK), Mr. Bolaji Odidi, yesterday urged party members across the state, particularly in Igbokoda, the headquarters of Ilaje Local Government Area, to vote massively for Akeredolu.

    Odidi spoke at a reception for him in Igbokoda when he met with leaders and members of the party in Ward 3 of the local government.

    The politician hailed the former Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) President, saying he is the best candidate in the governorship race.

    A ward chairman, Mr Tope Omoyele, hailed Odidi for leaving his UK base to join other stakeholders at home to rally support for Akeredolu.

    He said Odidi has turned around the fortunes of the party in Igbokoda through his generosity.

    Omoyele, who is a former PDP Youth Leader, said Igbokoda is a “no-go area” for other political parties.

    He added that instead of losing out, the residents joined ACN because it believed the party would win the election on October 20.

  • Osun ACN congratulates monarch

    Osun ACN congratulates monarch

    The Osun State Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) has congratulated the Akirun of Ikirun, Oba Rauf Olayiwola Olawale, the Adedeji II, on the conferment of a national award of the Member of the Federal Republic (MFR) on him by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The party’s state Chairman, Elder Adelowo Adebiyi, sent the congratulatory message to the monarch.

    He noted that the monarch deserved the honour because of his landmark achievements as a reputable banker and community leader.

    The ACN chairman described Oba Olawale as an unusual personality who has remained committed to the development of his domain since he ascended the throne of his forefathers over two decades ago.

    Acknowledging the roles of the monarch to the growth of the state, Adebiyi said he is also a lover of his people and community.

    The politician added that Oba Olawale is a quintessential leader whose love and support for the ruling party in the state is second to none.

  • Group backs ACN candidate

    group, Agbajowopo Omo Yoruba Movement Group (AOYMG), has said it is supporting Ondo State Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) governorship candidate, Mr. Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN), to win the October 20 election.

    The group said it would work for the success of the party’s standard bearer because ACN is the only political party that projects the agenda of the Yoruba nation.
    In a statement in Akure, the state capital, by its Chairman, Ayodele Falomo, and Secretary, Favour Ajulo, the group said it has constituted a mobilisation team for the success of the ACN candidate.

    The statement reads: “We believe that your party with its candidate is the best to work with in achieving our goals for the Yoruba race. We have examined other candidates and gone through their profiles and manifestos. Your candidate remains the best among them.”

    It noted that ACN is the only political party that has progressive ideas and is interested in developing the Southwest, like the late Obafemi Awolowo did during his reign in the defunct Western Region.

    The group said it supported the Southwest Integration Agenda championed by ACN and other Yoruba progressive leaders.It noted that several development projects have been executed in Lagos, Ekiti, Osun, Ogun, and Oyo states.

    The group said: “We are tired of main stream politics. Our son was President for eight years, but the Yoruba race was only retrogressing. We are happy that a political party like ACN is championing how the Southwest can experience rapid development, like the late Awolowo, Adekunle Ajasin, Bola Ige did during their administrations.”