Tag: Alhaji Atiku Abubakar

  • APC lacks internal democracy, says Atiku

    APC lacks internal democracy, says Atiku

    … INEC boss: Deficiency to conduct primaries by political parties is our challenge

     

    Ex- Vice President and Chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar Tuesday disclosed that for the ruling party to succeed it must work together with the Legislature and the Executive.

    Abubakar said the party has failed to organize statutory meetings for the organs of the party adding that saying that lack of internal democracy has made APC and other political parties “undemocratic.”

    He said this at the 2nd Inter Party Advisory Council of Nigeria (IPAC) annual conference yesterday in Abuja, which centered on internal party democracy: A recipe to a sustainable democracy in Nigeria.

    Abubakar while speaking purposely called the attention of the APC Deputy National Chairman (North), Shaibu Lawal, who represented the party’s National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, to take notice of his words.

    He said internal party democracy and electoral reforms are necessary to ensure that the people’s always finds expression in governance.

    His words: “For a number of years now we have had political parties, even governing ones, which hardly hold meetings of their important organs, including those meant for the democratic selection of their leadership, or even constitute institutions prescribed in their Constitution.

    “In the absence of those meetings and elections, their existing leadership, often under the direction of the Executive at the state or federal level, fills the void. That’s not party building but party bullying. And it’s certainly not a way to democratize parties and aggregate their members’ opinions, interests and aspirations.

    “This means that efforts to deepen Nigeria’s democracy must include efforts at democratizing our political parties. The institutionalization of democracy in our internal party processes will help us deepen democracy in Nigeria. Leaders are more likely to tolerate opposition from citizens and other parties if they tolerate it within their own party.

    “That in order for the APC to succeed as a party in government and for our democracy to endure, the Party, the Legislature and the Executive must work in concert. They should not see one another as a competitor or rival. That law-making for the overall good of our country requires that the Legislature has the autonomy to discharge its legislative and oversight functions

    “In 2009, at a national conference on consensus-building for electoral reform, I said among other things, that:

    “We must have a genuine reform of the electoral system in order to enable us to freely choose those who will govern us … Only genuine reform will be the incentive for political parties, especially the strong ones, to allow internal party democracy.  Without it political godfathers will continue to impose candidates since the votes of the people will not be allowed to count and such leaders would not be accountable to the people.”

    “I made similar statements several other times, including in submissions to the National Assembly committees on Constitutional Amendment and the Justice Uwais Committee on Electoral Reform.

    I recall these only to stress that the issue of internal democracy in our political parties has been with us for a long time, indeed since the restoration of civilian rule in 1999.

    In long-established democracies those statements would seem trite. But I recognize that our democracy is young, and our parties are also rather young. As a result they are still wrestling with issues of party building, party structures, internal democracy and the nature of the relationship between parties and members, parties and legislatures and parties and government as well as among parties themselves.

    “We had a very long period of authoritarian rule in Nigeria, ending in 1999. The legacy of that period is still with us as can be seen in our various governance institutions. Indeed even elements of that authoritarian past still wield power and influence in our country as we try to transition from that legacy. Also the structure of our economy is such that the state remains the most important source of economic opportunity. This heightens the struggle for state power and helps to shape the relationship between parties and members, among parties and among the various arms of government.

    “It is, therefore, a huge challenge to democratize governance and the political parties in our country. But, as the theme of this conference makes clear, internal democracy in our political parties is very important for the parties, their members and for the country. The absence of internal democracy in our parties is a major reason why our democracy remains fragile and why the quality of leadership that we produce has not matched our expectations and the challenges facing us as a nation. It is also one of the reasons why it has been very difficult to hold leaders to account. Internal party democracy is important enough that it was one of the areas addressed by the Electoral Reform Committee headed by Justice Mohammed Lawal Uwais many years ago.

    “But we know that power wielders hardly voluntarily enlarge the democratic space. That is why I’ve often opined that internal party democracy will only come with genuine electoral reforms in the country. Such reforms, broadly along the Justice Uwais Committee Recommendations, which will further strengthen the independence of INEC and ensure that votes count, will encourage parties to field popular candidates in elections. And that in turn will encourage parties to allow internal democracy so members have the freedom to choose and express their opinions. Thus the role of godfathers and executive intrusion in the affairs of parties and elections will be diminished.

    In my view, there is a close relationship between democracy within political parties and democracy within the nation.  Put simply you cannot give what you don’t have. You cannot build democracy on a substructure of dictatorship and intolerance. A political party that constricts the freedom of its members cannot really offer freedom to the citizens of the nation. Democracy is not just an idea; is a cultural practice.

    “For a number of years now we have had political parties, even governing ones, which hardly hold meetings of their important organs, including those meant for the democratic selection of their leadership, or even constitute institutions prescribed in their Constitution. In the absence of those meetings and elections, their existing leadership, often under the direction of the Executive at the state or federal level, fill the void. That’s not party building but party bullying. And it’s certainly not a way to democratize parties and aggregate their members’ opinions, interests and aspirations.

    This means that efforts to deepen Nigeria’s democracy must include efforts at democratizing our political parties. The institutionalization of democracy in our internal party processes will help us deepen democracy in Nigeria. Leaders are more likely to tolerate opposition from citizens and other parties if they tolerate it within their own party.

    “The lack of internal democracy in political parties is one of the reasons for the fraught relationships among parties and their elected representatives and the legislature and the executive.  The loyalty of some in the legislature and executive lies not with the party but with a godfather who sponsored them, and the godfather may even be in a rival political party. Such anomalies will reduce if internal democracy flourishes in our political parties and by extension the wider society.

    “The selection of leaders in a democracy is a serious business because so many other things ride on it. Whenever we get it wrong the nation or a part thereof suffers. We must strive to get it right most of the time. And it is the voters who should freely make that determination. I therefore thank the IPAC for organizing this conference and for inviting me to chair it,” he noted

    The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Prof. Mahmoud Yakubu, who was the keynote speaker at the event, expressed disappointment that the challenges faced by the commission is that most political parties do not conduct primaries.

    Yakubu reaffirmed that the electoral empire under his leadership has recorded major success in the recent time, assuring that the body will not hesitate to deregister ineffective political party if need be.

    He urged the political parties who have right to conduct party primaries to also give women and People Living with disabilities opportunity to stand for election.

    He assured that his leadership will continue to be courageous and always be on the side of Nigerians, saying that the commission would never err or fail Nigerians, “whoever wins at the ballot box becomes the person so elected.”

    While thanking the IPAC for organizing the occasion, the INEC chairman urged all political parties to learn how to work together to promote democracy in Nigeria, saying “the commission has been meeting with all political parties to see that democracy is maintained.”

    Yakubu said: “Parties are critical to our democracy. As at last week 103 application are in INEC office, I am sure we have received more now for registration. As political parties we will be guided by the provisions of the law and any association that is qualified to be registered as a political party will be so registered.

    “Many political parties do not conduct primaries and this is sad and it is a challenge for INEC.”

    The National Chairman of IPAC, Muhammad Nalado urged political parties to embrace internal democracy so as to grow politically and economically while calling them to support IPAC’s activities.

    Nalado called for more peaceful coexistence among political parties under IPAC.

    Bauchi State Governor Barr. Muhammad Abubakar was presented an award for allowing democracy to thrive in his state.

    Responding to the award, the governor said the recognition will spur him to do better to develop the state.

     

  • Don’t lose faith in Nigeria, Atiku tells workers

    Don’t lose faith in Nigeria, Atiku tells workers

    Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar has urged Nigerian workers not to lose faith in the ability of the nation under the leadership of President Buhari to surmount these odds.
    In his May Day message to Nigerian workers, the former Vice President also proposed a fairer deal for workers in order to reduce the frequency of strikes in the country, which he regrets takes a heavy toll on the economy.
    He said that notwithstanding the huge challenges the country and its people are facing, it will take the support of everyone working in tandem with the Buhari administration to lift the economy out of the doldrums.
    “President Buhari alone cannot turnaround the fortunes of the country. It requires everyone – elected and appointed officials, the legislature and the judiciary, the public and private sectors and ordinary Nigerians – working together in faith and commitment to bring about the desired change”, he said
    The APC chieftain argued that President Buhari’s anti-corruption crusade when combined with curbing wastages and profligacy will free much-needed resources to jumpstart the economy by investing in infrastructure and high jobs yielding sectors especially agriculture as proposed by the government.
    He reminded the workers that the envisaged better deal for them is intrinsically tied to increased productivity.
    “With dwindling revenue from oil, it has become imperative for us to bake a bigger cake that will be big enough for all partakers. To achieve this, we need to be more creative as a government and more productive as a people.”
    He maintained that observed that improved conditions of service for workers would help to reduce corruption and fraud among employees, pointing out that it is impossible to convince workers to make sacrifices while the public office holders live a life that is inconsistent with the economic realities of Nigeria.
    “We all need to make sacrifices in line with the realities of the time. It is not enough to ask workers to make sacrifices while public office holders are ostensibly immune from it. Such a situation promotes industrial disharmony,” he said.

  • Atiku ‘ll get APC’s presidential ticket, says aide

    A former Vice President and a presidential aspirant in the All Progressive Congress (APC), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, will emerge as the party’s presidential candidate, his media aide, Mr. Garba Shehu, has said.

    Shehu, who addressed reporters yesterday at the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) secretariat in Abuja, said  APC presidential aspirants had been reduced to two.

    He said on December 10, his principal would emerge as the party’s standard- bearer.

    Shehu said Atiku would not play do-or-die politics, adding that he would respect the outcome of the primaries.

    The APC presidential aspirant said yesterday in Abuja that Nigerians were in for hard times, as more might lose their jobs, following the devaluation of the naira by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    He said in a statement, titled: “CBN’s desperate measures- Nigerians should not face desperate times” that the new measure by the CBN had the potential of affecting small and medium scale businesses, especially those that relied on foreign exchange.

    Atiku accused the government of engaging in frivolous spending, careless borrowing and poor savings, noting that “this extravagance and inability to put enough away to absorb and cushion potential shocks in global oil price fluctuations show a high level of negligence and lack of vision.”

    His words: “Excessive government borrowing and higher bond repayment prices with higher interest rates have also contributed to the present problem.

    “CBN needs to fine-tune its policies such that while targeting currency speculators on the one hand, we can boost investors’ confidence on the other to forestall capital flight.

    “Most importantly, we need to intervene on behalf of SMEs, whose operations require foreign expenditure, to ensure that people can keep their jobs. We cannot afford to worsen the already bad unemployment rate.”

  • APC ticket: All aspirants must agree on consensus, says Atiku

    FORMER Vice President and a presidential aspirant of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, has said any decision by the leadership of the party to adopt the consensus option in picking its presidential candidate must be based on an agreement by all the aspirants.

    Speaking to journalists after his visit to the Lagos State House of Assembly to solicit for the support of the lawmakers for his presidential ambition, the former Nigeria’s number two man said: “You cannot force consensus down the throat of people who are not willing, so it depends on how the party handles it. For now, the party has handled it in a very responsible and mature manner. It has requested for aspirants to explore the option of consensus, if they find that it is something that is workable, fine, if not, then they can subject them to primaries.”

    Earlier, Abubakar had held a closed-door meeting with the lawmakers which lasted about an hour.

    Describing the entry of Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Aminu Tambuwal, into the APC presidential race as a welcome development, the former VP added, “His entry is legitimate; as far as democracy is concerned, the more the merrier. I do not see any problem his entry is likely to bring as far as the selecting or electing a presidential candidate for the party is concerned.”

    On the security situation in his home state, Adamawa, Atiku commended the resolve of people of the state to resist Boko Haram, saying, “We have recovered two local governments from them through our own vigilantes and local hunters. I mean these are not invisible group, but unfortunately the armed forces have failed to contain them, so we have to defend ourselves.

    “The federal government has consistently lost ground and they have not been able to recover not even  an inch of the lost territories since the crisis started; I think the government has not done well.”

    The former Vice President condemned the performance of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the ongoing distribution of Permanent Voters Cards (PVC), noting, “The exercise has not been conducted efficiently. I have always believed that INEC is not an independent body to conduct our elections, because everybody in INEC, from top to bottom is appointed by the ruling party, so how can they be independent. I think for us to have an independent INEC, we must also have an independent body to appoint all these officials.”