Tag: ACPN

  • ACPN seeks sanctions over alleged illegal drug distribution in public hospitals

    ACPN seeks sanctions over alleged illegal drug distribution in public hospitals

    The Association of Community Pharmacists of Nigeria (ACPN) has raised the alarm over what it described as widespread illegal drug distribution practices in several federal hospitals, calling on the Federal Government to investigate and sanction those involved.

    The association accused some pharmaceutical companies and their superintendent pharmacists of violating existing laws by running unregistered pharmacy operations within Federal Health institutions (FHIs), often with the consent of hospital managements and regulatory bodies.

    The association urged President Bola Tinubu to direct the Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare to address the alleged irregularities, warning that the current situation is jeopardising patient care and public confidence.

    In a statement on Friday, the National Chairman of the association, Pharm. Ezeh Igwekamma, criticised the Federal Ministry of Health for allegedly allowing private pharmacy operators to dominate drug distribution under what he described as a questionable Public–Private Partnership (PPP) arrangements and a breach of public trust. 

    According to him, experiments such as the Medipool model created systemic loopholes and undermined the Drug Revolving Fund (DRF) mechanism established under Decree 43 of 1989 (now Cap 252 LFN 2004).

    Read Also: ACPN’s career advancement proposal for pharmacists gains international adoption

    Igwekamma noted that the DRF, when properly managed by pharmacists, has proven effective in ensuring steady drug supply and financial sustainability, citing the National Orthopaedic Hospital, Igbobi, as a model where the pharmacy department built a ₦200 million facility in 2014 without disrupting the fund’s operations.

    He lamented that the success of such pharmacist-led initiatives is now being eroded by irregular PPP arrangements in hospitals including UCH Ibadan, UDUTH Sokoto, AKTH Kano, National Hospital Abuja, NAUTH Nnewi, JUTH Jos, and several Federal Medical Centres.

    Citing the Public Procurement Act 2007, which requires transparent and competitive tendering processes, the body accused the hospitals and their private partners of violating sections of the Pharmacy Council of Nigeria (PCN) Act 2022, which prohibit private pharmacies from operating inside public facilities and mandate that all pharmacies must be duly registered and under the control of a superintendent pharmacist.

    According to Igwekamma, more than 20 pharmacy premises currently operating under PPP models are unregistered, with one company in Lagos allegedly taking over the pharmacy unit of a major teaching hospital while invoking the names of senior officials to justify its activities.

    The association warned superintendent pharmacists whose licences are being used to legitimise such operations to regularise their status by the end of 2025 or face disciplinary actions. 

    It said further sanctions may follow under the Consumer Protection and Trade Malpractices Act.

    Igwekamma reaffirmed ACPN’s commitment to ethical practice, local drug production, and protection of DRF funds, stressing that transparent procurement and adherence to Good Pharmacy Practice are key to national drug security.

    “We must restore legality and professionalism to Nigeria’s drug distribution system. The health of our people depends on it,” he stressed.

  • World Pharmacists Day: ACPN seeks FG’s recognition of community pharmacies as PHCs

    World Pharmacists Day: ACPN seeks FG’s recognition of community pharmacies as PHCs

    The Association of Community Pharmacists of Nigeria (ACPN) has urged the Federal Government to officially designate community pharmacies as Primary Health Care (PHC) centres across the country.

    National Chairman of ACPN, Pharm. Ambrose Ezeh, made the call on Thursday at the association’s secretariat during a press briefing to mark the 2025 World Pharmacists Day with the theme: “Think Health, Think Pharmacist.”

    Ezeh said pharmacists remain trusted health professionals, providing vital services ranging from medication expertise, disease management support, health counselling, and public health advocacy.

    “Pharmacists are often the first point of contact for patients, making them essential in the healthcare system,” he said. “Their accessibility and willingness to provide free consultations enable them to counsel patients on medication safety, potential side effects, drug interactions, and adherence strategies.”

    He noted that community pharmacists contribute significantly to public health through vaccination campaigns, health screenings, and chronic disease management. They also play a role in policy advocacy, telepharmacy services for remote areas, and collaborations with other healthcare providers to create integrated care plans.

    On the need for reforms, Ezeh stressed the importance of value-based care and urged government to integrate pharmacists more strategically into the nation’s health system.

    Read Also: World Pharmacists Day: Consultants underscore collaboration in health system

    As part of the celebrations, ACPN unveiled an initiative tagged “Pharmacy Forward: Performance, Collaboration, and Health Transformation” aimed at standardising career progression ratings for community pharmacists both nationally and globally.

    Ezeh unveiled a new career advancement scheme in community pharmacy practice, introducing five progression bands designed to standardise growth and professionalism in the sector. 

    The bands include Community Pharmacist, Senior Community Pharmacist, Community Pharmacist Specialist, Community Pharmacist Senior Specialist, and Community Pharmacist Consultant.

    He explained that the scheme is designed to enhance professional knowledge, promote continuous improvement, and foster collaboration, while improving patient outcomes.

    “The benefits of this initiative will lead to improved health outcomes for the populace,” he added, stressing ACPN’s commitment to advancing the role of pharmacists in Nigeria’s health sector.

    Ezeh concluded by urging all pharmacists to use the 2025 World Pharmacists Day to showcase their collective impact and advocate for recognition of community pharmacies as vital components of primary healthcare delivery in Nigeria.

  • ACPN urges Tinubu to end marginalisation of non-physician professionals, misuse of strikes

    ACPN urges Tinubu to end marginalisation of non-physician professionals, misuse of strikes

    The Association of Community Pharmacists of Nigeria (ACPN) has appealed to President Bola Tinubu to urgently address what it described as the escalating misuse of strike actions and the systemic marginalisation of non-physician professionals in Nigeria’s health and education sectors.

    In an open letter titled “Call These Bluffs in National Interest”, signed by National Chairman Pharm. Ambrose Igwekamma Ezeh and National Secretary Pharm. Omokhafe Ashore, the ACPN, cited recent developments at the University of Calabar (UNICAL), where physician-lecturers reportedly went on strike over the selection of a new Vice Chancellor.

    The group also pointed to a similar situation at Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK), where physicians allegedly protested the appointment of a Vice Chancellor without a medical background, even though the statutory qualification for the role is a Ph.D., not a medical degree.

    The ACPN accused physician-led unions, particularly the Medical and Dental Consultants Association of Nigeria (MDCAN), of weaponising industrial actions to pressure the government into making decisions that favour doctors, often in violation of established rules and procedures.

    The association warned that this trend is being emboldened by the continued appointment of physicians to key ministerial positions, calling on President Tinubu to intervene in the national interest and ensure equity and professionalism across all sectors.

    “The Federal Ministry of Education, under a most inexperienced leadership, is systematically promoting a flurry of Universities of Medicine while insisting that only physicians can serve as Vice Chancellors,” the letter stated.

    The ACPN criticised what it described as a culture of blackmail among physician groups who go on strike whenever Ph.D. requirements for academic leadership positions are enforced, arguing that many physicians hold fellowships rather than academic doctorates.

    Turning to the health sector, the pharmacists lamented what they described as decades of exclusion and poor management of Federal Health Institutions (FHIs).

    They alleged that since 1985, only physicians have been appointed as Chief Medical Directors (CMDs) of FHIs based on a narrow interpretation of the term ‘medically qualified’, to the detriment of other healthcare professionals.

    “Most CMDs are part-time academics but enjoy full-time leadership roles at hospitals, an abuse of public service rules,” the group argued.

    It also referenced the 2023 law passed by the National Assembly without a public hearing, which mandates that only those registered with the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) can be appointed as MD/CEOs of Federal Medical Centres.

    The association said these policies have led to institutional failure, pointing to a recent electricity crisis in which many FHIs was left without power due to unpaid bills.

    “None of the CEOs could devise sustainable alternatives. This is why we need trained hospital administrators to manage our hospital system, as was the case before 1995,” they said.

    The community pharmacists also cited a case at the Irrua Specialist Hospital, where a senior pharmacist was allegedly punished for offering lawful advice on how drug revolving funds (DRFs) should be managed.

    The pharmacist was reassigned to a rural outpost while a less senior colleague was installed in his place.

    When the matter was escalated, the ACPN claimed, the Federal Ministry of Health sent an investigation team dominated by physicians, who unsurprisingly cleared the CEO.

    According to the ACPN, such incidents are now common across FHIs, where DRF schemes are often mismanaged, and pharmacists’ roles are deliberately undermined.

    On broader health policy issues, the pharmacists pointed to the nation’s weak primary healthcare and health insurance systems.

    They accused the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA) of sidelining community pharmacists despite their global recognition during the COVID-19 immunisation drive.

    “Despite our success, the agency refused to engage us meaningfully, and the FMOH ignored our complaints,” the group said.

    Read Also: Afenifere hails Tinubu for kick-starting Lagos-Calabar coastal highway, other key projects

    The ACPN also questioned the recent approval of MEDIPOOL, a government procurement initiative for medical supplies, without proper consultation with pharmaceutical stakeholders.

    It called for the establishment of a Federal Drug Management Agency to ensure that drugs are procured and distributed efficiently, as outlined in the National Drug Distribution Guidelines of 2015.

    The ACPN warned that Nigeria’s ambition to achieve Universal Health Coverage (UHC) remains a mirage, as the key pillars, health insurance, primary care, and access to drugs, are sabotaged by poor policy and entrenched interests.

    “The time to act is now, you must stop the incomprehensible dominance of an overpampered group of civil servants. National growth will continue to suffer unless this imbalance is corrected,” the association urged President Tinubu.

    They further warned that continued marginalisation of health workers and academic professionals outside the medical field is discouraging the next generation from entering those professions, adding, “Nobody wants to be an underdog anymore”.

    The ACPN called for a shift in government appointments, urging the President to ensure merit-based, multidisciplinary leadership in both the education and health sectors.

  • ACPN calls for urgent investigation into National Health Insurance System

    ACPN calls for urgent investigation into National Health Insurance System

    Pharmacists under the aegis of the Association of Community Pharmacists of Nigeria (ACPN) have called on the Federal Government to urgently investigate the activities of the National Health Insurance System (NHIS). They argue that the current structure benefits only a select few instead of the broader population. ACPN National Chairman, Pharm. Wale Oladigbolu, made this plea in Lagos during a press briefing ahead of the association’s 43rd Annual National Conference. The conference, themed “Advancing Community Pharmacy Practice through Innovation and Collaboration,” is scheduled to take place from July 22 to July 27, 2024, at the International Conference Centre, University of Ibadan, Oyo State.

    Oladigbolu compared the national health insurance issue to “people suffering amidst plenty,” asserting that a well-managed system could address significant health challenges in Nigeria and ensure affordable healthcare access for all. He lamented the poor coverage, with less than five per cent of the population enrolled, of which four per cent are public servants and only 1 per cent are in private service.

    “The reality of health insurance in Nigeria is quite dismal,” Oladigbolu said. “The system, copied from successful models in other countries, was not adapted to suit all parties in the industry.” He criticised the fee-for-drug payment model under capitation as economically unsustainable, citing the inefficiency of paying for 1,000 patients monthly regardless of actual treatment numbers. Furthermore, he highlighted that facilities without pharmacists are being compensated for drugs, denying patients the necessary oversight. Oladigbolu called on the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Consumer Protection Council to address these issues, emphasising that dispensing medicines without a pharmacist’s oversight is a disservice to patients. He noted that despite legal requirements for drugs to be sold or dispensed in registered premises, the NHIS is paying unregistered facilities.

    Read Also: A decade of excellence in teachers’ recognition

    Pharm. Grace Ikani, Chairman of the Conference Planning Committee (CPC), emphasised the importance of innovation in making a difference, noting that embracing new technologies can offer digital health solutions for communities. “The world is evolving, and technology is essential for modern pharmacy practice,” she said. She also highlighted the need for collaborative efforts among various healthcare professionals to ensure an effective healthcare system.

  • ACPN congratulates Buhari, pushes for government of national unity

    The Allied Congress Party of Nigeria ( ACPN ) wants President Muhammadu Buhari to put in place a government of national unity that will bring on board stakeholders in the Nigerian project especially those who have something positive to offer the nation.

    The party also asked the Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to accept defeat in the Presidential election and see the victory of President Buhari as the will of the Nigerian people or channel his grievances to the appropriate quarters without threatening the security of the nation.

    National Chairman of the party, Alhaji Ganiyu O. Galadima said in a statement in Abuja that the party believe that the President’s victory was well deserved and commended the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), security agencies, political parties and all Nigerians for giving peace a chance before, during and after the announcement of results.

    The ACPN was one of the political parties that adopted President Buhari as its candidate and massively mobilised for his re-election before the exercise took place.

    Galadima said: “President Muhammadu Buhari’s Victory is a well deserved one, considering his popularity, acceptance across board and his performances in the last three and half years. We as a party had expressed our support for him even before the election and we thank God that our support did not go in vain.

    “We, therefore, urge Alhaji Atiku Abubakar of the PDP to see Buhari’s victory as the will of the majority of Nigerians. The people have spoken. We expect him as a democrat to concede defeat and move on, bearing in mind that it is God that gives power.

    “We also believe that Alhaji Abubakar and his party have rights to challenge the outcome but we advise that such should be done in a peaceful manner without putting the security of Nigeria and Nigerians at risk.”

    The ACPN asked the President-elect “to do everything possible to unite the country, possibly by forming a government of National Unity which will bring on board all the stakeholders that have something to offer the nation.

    “We believe that President Buhari should do more on the area of insecurity beyond the North-east. Energy should be deployed to ensure that the Nation’s economy is revamped and the Social Safety net should be improved upon to better the lives of Nigerians especially the elderly and the unemployed.”

  • Update: Ezekwesili resigns from ACPN

    Former presidential candidate of the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria, ACPN, Obiageli Ezekwesili has officially resigned from the party.

    The former minister of education said she has returned ACPN membership card, its flag and all other items in her possession to the party.

    She disclosed this in her speech titled: “A sacrifice for a new political order” delivered at a press conference on Monday in Abuja.

    The former minister, in a charged atmosphere in Nicon Luxury Hotel, said she was wrong to believe that the party’s value aligned with hers.

    Mrs. Ezekwesili also said the leadership of the party demonstrated in deeds that they did not believe in her advocacy for a cleaner politics.

    She said: “Let me take a moment to address what appears to be an error of judgement that made me run on the platform of the quality of people that ACPN turned out to harbor. As you know, until I decided to run for President last October, I was not a politician but strictly a public policy expert.

    “I have always believed that the brand of politics we practice in this country is perverse and unappealing to me.

    “I knew that along the way I will face tests of my values, but I didn’t expect it so soon and not from the party members who had assured me privately and publicly that they were on the same page with me. In truth, our values were poles apart.

    “I cannot do anything that contradicts my eternal values. For someone who was running for office with a promise to fix our politics, getting mired in the mud of transactional anti-people politics would have represented a quick fall. God forbid! I had to live my values; I had to follow my truth. And I am proud I did.

    “The ACPN leadership demonstrated in deeds that they did not believe in my advocacy for a cleaner politics. They were not really interested in being a vehicle to break the bad politics championed by the #APCPDP. In fact, the ACPN leadership began to act like a junior sibling to the twin #APCPDP party.

    “The only thing I now owe the ACPN is a total and immediate separation from their camp. I have earlier today returned my ACPN membership card, party flag and other paraphernalia in order to signpost my complete separation.”

    Mrs. Ezekwesili explained that she withdrew from the presidential race because of the desperation of the leadership of ACPN to get money from her foreign contacts.

    The former minister said she wasn’t surprised that her former party endorsed President Muhammadu Buhari few hours after she quit the presidential race.

    “You all saw how they demonstrated their preferred brand of politics by endorsing the ruling APC in a classic somersault. Deceptive politics of transactions at its worst! God forbade that I should be in any way participate in such.

    “Their actions last week did not surprise me one bit. My relationship with the ACPN became problematic once they faced the reality of my modest financial means that I had transparently disclosed to them from the beginning. Their mistake was that they harboured two wrong assumptions about me.

    “First, they assumed that I was one of those who served in government and had a stash of looted public funds hidden somewhere to expend on the elections. When they realised that was not the case, they made a second wrong assumption by believing that I would be willing to go and obtain foreign cash to prosecute my campaign,” she said.

    Mrs. Ezekwesili said her immediate commitment is to help build a coalition.

    According to her, the way to continue the fight for Nigeria was for a coalition of alternatives to come together and end the poverty escalating reign of the All Progressives Congress and the Peoples Democratic Party in two weeks.

    She said: “I have always advocated for credible alternatives coming together to take on the failed ruling class. You may have seen videos online where I told ACPN leaders that a coalition with other parties was the best route in this election whether I end up as the consensus candidate or not.

    “My immediate commitment is to help in any way possible to build this coalition. Since the suspension of my campaign, I have taken actions to reach out to six of the key alternative candidates and sought the involvement of one of our most respected elders in getting them to the place of sacrificial leadership required to ensure a workable consensus from among them.

    “Citizens wish to see them make this sacrifice, and my sincere charge to the alternatives is to do all it takes to form a coalition of the willing with one strong candidate that will bear the mandate of those who seek good governance for Nigeria.”

    She added that her campaign was able to gather N48 million, spent N45 million with a balance of N3 million.
  • Real reasons I left ACPN, by Ezekwesili

    Former Minister of Education Dr Obiageli Ezekwesili has explained why she withdrew from the presidential race on the platform of the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria ( ACPN).

    The party, she alleged, refused to embrace the new political values and mindset aimed at dislodging the dominance of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    She said she sacrificed her presidential ambition to protect the values of transformational leadership she holds dear.

    Ezekwesili, in a statement on Friday from Cabo, Mexico where she is attending Albert Einstein’s Genius100 Visionaries meeting, also accused the party of engaging in “transactional politics.”

    Titled “No amount of lies can stop the emergence of a new political mindset and order”, the former World Bank Vice President, in the statement, said “Some hours ago, I arrived far flung Cabo in Mexico where our Albert Einstein’s Genius100 Visionaries meeting is holding. I was delighted to read reactions of real patriots to my announcement that I have decided to withdraw from the 2019 presidential race and end my membership of the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN).

    “I have also seen the reaction of ACPN leadership to my decision. Fortunately, they have divinely helped me by making the Nigerian public now fully understand why I had to swiftly depart from their midst.

    “How could I upon realising the divergence of values and vision with the leadership of the party continue to stand on such a political platform?

    “My abiding vision has been to mobilise citizens to disrupt the old order politics of APC/PDP.

    “Nigeria and Nigerians deserve a new order of ethical, competent and capable leadership. I had earlier assumed the ACPN was aligned with me to offer that, until it proved otherwise.”

    She went on: “The values and vision divergence with the party was a key factor that triggered my withdrawal from the presidential race on their ticket prompting me to dissociate immediately in order to help build a coalition for Good Governance.

    “It is why I was instant in sacrificing my candidacy to uphold my values by withdrawing.”

    She faulted ACPN’s decision to endorse President Muhammadu Buhari following her withdrawal from the race, saying it reflects the “political entrepreneurship” mindset of the party.

    According to her: “The party’s decision to immediately today endorse the candidate of APC, which was announced by my erstwhile VP candidate who is also the Chairman of ACPN was their classic political entrepreneurship in full display for Nigerians to see. It is instructive.

    “The party leadership’s transactional approach to politics began to manifest in their attitude following after the convention that adopted me as their presidential candidate.

    “All who know me can attest that I detest transactional mindset. I would have none of such and therefore extremely delighted to part ways after a tumultuous three months of hoping that the ACPN leadership would elevate to the new values of disruptive politics that one had desired for and preached within the party.”

    Read Also: INEC, ACPN kick as Ezekwesili ends presidential aspiration

    On allegations she cornered funds raised for the campaign, the former Minister said: “I want Nigerians to know that there is no iota of truth in any of them.

    “Everything ACPN wrote or said of the campaign donations is fabrication and outright lies. Our campaign was conducted with the highest level of transparency and accountability with impeccable evidence.

    “I know and can guarantee that at all times because these standards firmly underpin my commitment to lasting values and professionalism.

    “Only those who desperately wish to believe falsehoods would lend any credence to such puerile accusations by the leadership of ACPN.

    “Only those who pretend ignorance of my legendary and uncompromising passion for accountability would give heed to such baseless statement.”

    She promised to address a world press conference upon arrival in Nigeria to offer further insights into the intrigues that trailed her presidential bid.

  • INEC, ACPN kick as Ezekwesili ends presidential aspiration

    Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN), the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), the Buhari Campaign Organisation (BMO) are picking holes in Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili’s decision to end her presidential aspiration few days to the election, report Tony Akowe,Vincent Ikuomola and Gbenga Omokhunu, Abuja.

    Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN) presidential candidate Oby Ezekwesili yesterday incurred the wrath of her party, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and others yesterday.

    INEC rejected the withdrawal, noting that it was done outside the window of opportunity granted to political parties contesting in the 16th February 2019 presidential poll.

    73 candidates were listed for the election which is just 21 days away.

    Besides, the commission said her withdrawal contravenes Section 35 of the Electoral Act 2010 as amended, which stipulated that a candidate can only withdraw from election 45 days to the poll.

    Ezekweaili declared her intention to run for president last October.

    The Chief Press Secretary to INEC Chairman Prof Mahmood Yakubu, Mr. Rotimi Oyekanmi, said her decision was also outside the commission’s timetable and schedule of activities for the general polls.

    He said: “It is impossible for any presidential candidate to withdraw from the race now. According to the Timetable and Schedule of Activities for the 2019 General Elections, the last day for withdrawal by candidates or replacement of withdrawn candidates by political parties was 17th November, 2018 for Presidential and National Assembly Elections.

    “Therefore, the deadline for Ezekwesili or any candidate in that category to withdraw or be replaced has passed.”

    Her party also disowned her, saying she merely wanted to use the party platform and ticket to lobby her way into a ministerial appointment in the next political dispensation.

    The party also announced that it was endorsing President Muhammadu Buhari as its candidate for the February 16 Presidential election following the withdrawal of its candidate from the race without consultation with the leadership of the party.

    The party’s National Chairman, who also doubles as the Vice Presidential candidate, Alhaji Ganiyu Galadima, also said Mrs. Ezekwesili should come and render account of the money she received while flying the party’s flag.

    The party threatened to sue her if she refused to return all the party material and donations she received within the little time she was in the party.

    The former minister yesterday morning announced her withdrawal from the presidential race to devote her time in building a coalition that would the defeat the All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Galadima said the former minister did not inform the party of her decision before making it public. He accused Ezekwesili of not showing any seriousness in her campaign.

    ”The reason for calling this press conference is to let the world know about the presidential aspiration of Dr. Oby Ezekwesili, which in actual fact, is not the truth.

    ”I have been put into confidence by one of her aide named Iyinoluwa Aboyeji that she only wanted to use the platform of the ACPN to negotiate to be Nigeria’s finance minister.

    ”This is why she does not deem fit to inform the party whose mandate she is holding. If you observe, Dr. Oby Ezekwesili is the only presidential candidate who was so militant in her campaign without any tangible thing on ground to indicate any seriousness in the prosecution of her campaign.

    ”No campaign secretariat, billboard or great commitment on ground to indicate any seriousness. It is on this ground that the ACPN is withdrawing support for her presidential aspiration and endorsing the second term bid of President Muhammadu Buhari to take Nigeria to the next level. We may take her to court during her brief sojourn.

    ”She must return whatever money she collected from people on behalf of the party, because whatever is given to her belongs to the party. Don’t forget that at the end of the day, as a party, we must render account to INEC, this is mandatory and it is in the Electoral Act.

    ”We want to use this medium to tell her that we are not unaware of the various accounts that herself and her personal aide have opened to generate funds.

    “We are aware that monies were coming to her in droves but we didn’t know the successes of this funds, she should please come and render account to us.

    ”She should please come and render account to us and to come and give back to the party all that belongs to it, because without the party, nobody will give her any fund or donate anything to her,” he said.

    Ezekwesili had said in a statement that her decision was the outcome of “extensive consultations with leaders from various walks of life across the country over the past few days. I deem it necessary for me to focus on helping to build a veritable coalition to ensure a viable alternative to the #APCPDP in the forthcoming elections.

    “It is my ardent belief that this broad coalition for a viable alternative has now become more than ever before, an urgent mission for and on behalf of Nigerian citizens. I have therefore chosen to lead the way in demonstrating the much needed patriotic sacrifice for our national revival and redirection.

    “I wish to state that over the past three months, I have been in private, but extended talks with other candidates to birth a coalition that would allow Nigerians to exercise their choice without feeling helplessly encumbered by the evil twins of #APCPDP.

    “While the deliberations continued, I never hesitated for a moment in my willingness and determination to sacrifice my candidacy in order to facilitate the emergence of the envisaged strong and viable alternative that Nigerians could identify with in our collective search for a new beginning.

    “My commitment to this promising political recalibration has been consistent and in consonance with my agreement, at the request of candidates under the Presidential Aspirants Coming Together (PACT) arrangement in 2018, when I consented to supervise the internal selection process as an outside observer passionate about building an alternative force.

    “However, despite resistance from the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria on these and other issues, I have decided that it is now necessary to show by action and example my determination on this issue by stepping down my candidacy so as to focus squarely on building the coalition to a logical conclusion.

    Read also: Police to ban vigilance groups on election days in Kwara

    “We have no right to allow citizens give in to despair. We will #Fight4Naija together and prove to all that the mess, which the political class has now become, should not be allowed to destroy our spirits and nation. We are also determined to ensure that the message keeps resonating that our beloved country deserves better, and that we will get the best that we deserve.

    “From last year, when I joined the presidential race, I made it clear to Nigerians that the country has always had a 20-year cycle of change – 1959, 1979, and 1999. As such, 2019 begins another 20-year cycle, and together with all Nigerians of good will, I stand ready to play my part to ensure that we do not miss this golden opportunity to sing a new song.”

     

    Galadima’s allegations

    baseless, says Ezekwesili

     

    Ezekwesili described allegation by Galadima that she was never really serious about her presidential ambition as baseless.

    In an interview with News Agency of Nigeria, her media aide, Mr Uzoma Ubabukoh, said Galadima’s claim that she was contesting to negotiate to be Minister of Finance was a figment of his imagination.

    She claimed she withdrew from the race after due consultations with Nigerians at home and in the Diaspora.

    Ezekwesili added that her decision to quit the race was informed by the need to help and build a coalition to stop the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from winning.

    She said neither APC nor PDP could provide the kind of governance needed to reposition the country.

    Few hours after Ezekwesili’s withdrawal from the race, Galadima called a news conference, saying Ezekwesili had not shown the commitment to be President from the beginning.

    He alleged that the former minister was just in the race to negotiate to be Minister of Finance and that she had kept the party in the dark about her real intention.

    Galadima added that the candidate had used the platform of the party to get funds from donors, which she had not spent to show commitment to her ambition.

    He said the candidate’s decision to withdraw from the race was taken to sacrifice her personal interests for the country’s interest.

    “All these allegations are figment of his imagination. They are baseless. The decision to withdraw from the race is in the interest of the nation. It should be the nation first before anything,” Ubabukoh said.

    He said it was curious that Galadima, less than three hours after Ezekwesili’s withdrawal, endorsed Buhari and added that the action showed the ACPN Chairman had long had a personal agenda and never believed in the idea to disrupt the status quo in country.

     

    BMO: she lacks capacity

    to understand politics

     

    The Buhari Media Organisation (BMO) has said the sudden decision of former minister of education to pull out of the presidential race barely 23 days to the election is a clear indication that she lacks the capacity to understand the dynamics of Nigerian politics.

    The group said the former minister must explain to Nigerians her real intention of joining the presidential race when she knew she had to capacity and intention to see the election through.

    In a statement signed by Chairman Niyi Akinsiju and Secretary Cassidy Madueke, the group commended the ACPN on whose platform she was running for the Presidency for endorsing President Muhammadu Buhari for a second term in office.

    The group said: “We are not surprised that she has opted out of the race because it was clearly out of her depth as a pseudo- activist and opportunist without real political clout and pedigree.

    “Just like her former party acknowledged, the short-lived stint she had as a presidential candidate showed that she had nothing substantial to offer or contribute to political discourse beyond on-line rants and thoughtless invectives

    “And because some of these invectives are often retweeted or liked by some of her 836,000  twitter followers, she began to delude herself as an alternative to a President that has a track record of integrity, consistency in patriotism, honesty and performance to prove his status as a true statesman and leader.

    “Her forays into the real world of politics on the streets even saw Nigerians chanting Sai Buhari during one of her rare campaign outings.

    “So it would be ideal for Ezekwesili to take a second look at the situation and throw her weight behind the President’s re-election bid rather than embarking  on another hopeless exercise of  building a coalition  against President Buhari that so far failed woefully.”

    On ACPN’s decision to support President Buhari as its Presidential candidate, the group described it as a realisation of the values represented by the President and his efforts at putting the country firmly on the path to greatness.

    It added that the party leaders including Ezekwesili’s erstwhile running mate Ganiyu Galadima have, through their action, shown that there is still honour among members of the political class in our great country.

    The group said: “The party knows that there is no viable alternative to a President that has in only three and half years turned Nigeria into a large construction site after completing dozens of infrastructure project that were fraudulently abandoned by previous governments with impunity

    “We don’t take this endorsement lightly as ACPN leaders could have offered to trade off their support for the type of filthy lucre that some portfolio political parties under a shadowy coalition got by endorsing a Presidential candidate that is not getting  favourable support from even his home  state of Adamawa, let alone from across the country.”

    BMO said it was particularly elated that Galadima, who is also the party’s National Chairman, said he and his colleagues were joining the President to take the country to the next level and assured them that they would not be disappointed.

    The pro-Buhari group also urged undecided Nigerians to take a cue from ACPN and reject plans by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to stage a return to power at the centre and get another chance to create economic mess and social chaos among the people.

     

    Planned coalition is

    impossible, says DG VON

     

    Voice of Nigeria (VON) Director-General Osita Okechukwu described the step taken by the presidential candidate of the ACPN as expected.

    He said Ezekwesili’s planned collation to dislodge the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Poeples Democracy Party (PDP) would fail.

    Okechukwu said the former Minister of Education belongs to a missionary political party not aiming to win power.

    The VON boss said: “What Oby Ezekwesili doesn’t know is that in democracy like this. The successful ones are multiparty system with two dominant political parties. And that two party system. Her political party is regarded as missionary party. This is what the missionary parties do.

    “She did not do anything different from a missionary party. I do not know the coalition that she is going to build that will dislodge the All Progressives Congress (APC), or the Poeples Democracy Party (PDP). It is not possible. If you go to Britain, it is a multiparty system with two dominant political parties. In the United States of American (USA), it is a multiparty system with two dominant political party. Go to Pakistan, it is the same thing. Brazil, India, they are all the same.

    “If she had said that, she is going to build a coalition with the PDP, I would have said that she is trying to win political power. But since she singled out the two dominate political parties, then she is still taking missionary. She is missionary more than political.

    “She did not do anything that is strange. But I congratulate her for her stand on making the society better. And that is what President Muhammadu Buhari is saying. He is investing on food production, adequate electricity supply, modern transportation, construction of federal roads. What all the missionary parties are saying is what President Muhammadu Buhari is doing.”

  • BMO to Ezekwesili: You lack capacity to understand Nigerian politics

    The Buhari Media Organisation (BMO) has said that the sudden decision of former Minister of Education to pull out of the Presidential race barely 23 days to the election is a clear indication that she lacks the capacity to understand the dynamics of Nigerian politics.

    The group said the former Minister owe Nigerians serious explanation about her real intention of joining the presidential race when she knew she had to capacity and intention to see the election through.

    In a statement signed by Chairman Niyi Akinsiju and Secretary Cassidy Madueke, the group commended the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN) on whose platform she was running for the Presidency for endorsing President Muhammadu Buhari for a second term in office.

    The group said: “We are not surprised that she has opted out of the race because it was clearly out of her depth as a pseudo-activist and opportunist without real political clout and pedigree.

    Read Also: Galadima’s allegations baseless, says Ezekwesili

    “Just like her former party acknowledged, the short-lived stint she had as a presidential candidate showed that she had nothing substantial to offer or contribute to political discourse beyond on-line rants and thoughtless invectives

    “And because some of these invectives are often retweeted or liked by some of her 836,000 twitter followers, she began to delude herself as an alternative to a President that has a track record of integrity, consistency in patriotism, honesty and performance to prove his status as a true statesman and leader.

    “Her forays into the real world of politics on the streets even saw Nigerians chanting Sai Buhari during one of her rare campaign outings.

    “So it would be ideal for Ezekwesili to take a second look at the situation and throw her weight behind the President’s re-election bid rather than embarking on another hopeless exercise of building a coalition against President Buhari that so far failed woefully”.

    On ACPN’s decision to support President Buhari as its Presidential candidate, the group described it as a realisation of the values represented by the President and his efforts at putting the country firmly on the path to greatness.
    It added that the party leaders including Ezekwesili’s erstwhile running mate Ganiyu Galadima have, through their action, shown that there is still honour among members of the political class in our great country.

    BMO said it was particularly elated that Galadima who is also the party’s National Chairman said he and his colleagues are joining the President to take the country to the next level and assured them that they would not be disappointed.

    The pro-Buhari group also urged undecided Nigerians to take a cue from ACPN and reject plans by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to stage a return to power at the centre and get another chance to create economic mess and social chaos among the people.

  • Galadima’s allegations baseless, says Ezekwesili

    Dr Obiageli Ezekwesili, the Presidential Candidate of Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN). has described allegation by the National Chairman of the party, Alhaji Abdul-Ganiyu Galadima that she was never really serious about her presidential ambition as baseless.

    In an interview with News Agency of Nigeria, her media aide, Mr Uzoma Ubabukoh, in Lagos, on Thursday, said Galadima’s claim that she was contesting to negotiate to be Minister of Finance was a figment of his imagination.

    Galadima was Ezekwesili’s running-mate until she announced her withdrawal from the race early on Thursday.

    She claimed she withdrew from the race after due consultations with Nigerians at home and in the Diaspora.

    Ezekwesili added that her decision to quit the race was informed by the need to help and build a coalition to stop the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from winning.

    She said neither APC nor PDP could provide the kind of governance needed to reposition the country.

    Few hours after Ezekwesili’s withdrawal from the race, Galadima called a news conference, saying Ezekwesili had not shown the commitment to be President from the beginning.

    He alleged that the former minister was just in the race to negotiate to be Minister of Finance and that she had kept the party in the dark about her real intention.

    Galadima added that the candidate had used the platform of the party to get funds from donors, which she had not spent to show commitment to her ambition.

    The ACPN chairman said having realised that Ezekwesili did not represent the interest of the party, the party was endorsing President Muhammadu Buhari for re-election.

    Reacting to the allegations, Ubabukoh said Galadima’s claims were baseless.

    Read Also:  INEC rejects Ezekwesili’s withdrawal

    He said the candidate’s decision to withdraw from the race was taken to sacrifice her personal interests for the country’s interest.

    “All these allegations are figment of his imagination. They are baseless. The decision to withdraw from the race is in the interest of the nation. It should be the nation first before anything,” Ubabukoh said.

    He said it was curious that Galadima, less than three hours after Ezekwesili’s withdrawal, endorsed Buhari and added that the action showed the ACPN Chairman had long had a personal agenda and never believed in the idea to disrupt the status quo in country.

    Ubabukoh said Ezekwesili would soon address a news conference where she would provide details about her withdrawal from the presidential race.