Tag: All Progressives Congress

  • Buhari’s insistence on transparency is laudable – Senator Abe

    A governorship aspirant on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State, Senator Magnus Abe, has stated that President Muhammadu Buhari’s dogged fight against corruption in Nigeria and his insistence on transparency in governance are laudable.

    He also congratulated President Buhari on the third anniversary of his administration and the leadership of both chambers of the National Assembly and other Nigerians, as the country marked this year’s Democracy Day.

    Abe, who represents Rivers Southeast Senatorial District, on Tuesday in a statement by his Spokesperson, Parry Benson, commended President Buhari for his efforts so far in ensuring the full clean-up of impacted Ogoni environment.

    Read Also: Democracy Day: Lawmaker lauds Buhari

    He also praised the President for the commencement of the Bonny-Bodo Road project in Rivers state and the ongoing reconstruction of the East-West Road, which when completed would ameliorate the plight of the people of Rivers and other states in the Niger Delta. 

    Abe, a former Secretary to the Rivers State Government (SSG), assured the APC-led Federal Government of the continued support of the people of Rivers Southeast senatorial district and Rivers state in general to the people-oriented policies and programmes of the Buhari-led administration. 

  • IPAC Chairman lauds Buhari’s achievements, speech

    The National Chairman, Inter Party Advisory Council (IPAC), Muhammed Nalado, has commended the achievements of President Muhammadu Buhari led-All Progressives Congress (APC) administration as read in his democracy day speech.

    Nalado, in an interview with Our Reporter  in Abuja on Tuesday, said that the achievements listed in Buhari’s speech were verifiable and that Nigerians could judge them.

    He said that the fight against corruption by the Buhari-led administration had helped to correct a lot of wrong practices in the country, adding that it had brought the country back on track.

    “In the area of security, even though we still have insecurity challenge, this administration has been able to reduce it, though government can still do more to protect Nigerians.

    “The insecurity in the North east has reduced and the numbers of road blocks across the country have reduced.

    “Our foreign reserve has also increased. Many children are now benefiting from the Home Grown School Feeding Programme. I believe in what Buhari said he has done.’’

    He said that government policy on diversification had also helped many Nigerians to go back to farming unlike before that the country’s economy relied solely on oil revenue.

    Nalado also said that Nigerians have course to celebrate democracy day, saying the sustained long years of democracy was an evidence that politicians and democratic governments were back on track, in spite of contrary opinions.

    “If you look back at the level of development, you will see we have achieved dividends of democracy than under military regime.

    “Our education sector under the democratic government has improved and road construction across the country is increasing.

    “The most important dividend we are enjoining now is the freedom; freedom of speech and association, which we couldn’t enjoy under the military era.

    The IPAC Chairman advised Nigerians to engage the government in positive criticism that would further strengthen the country’s democracy, security of lives and economic growth.

    “I believe citizens need to support the government and criticize objectively.

    “I also want to advise Nigerians to use this democracy day to reflect on ways to do things in positive and united ways to improve the situation of the country.’’

  • Ekiti 2018: APC slams Jonathan for warning Buhari not to rig poll

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has said former President Goodluck Jonathan was not fit to demand for the conduct of a credible governorship poll on July 14.

    The party said Jonathan lacked the moral justification to advise President Muhammadu Buhari to resist the temptation to deploy instruments of coercion in favour of his party (APC) at the governorship election.

    It also criticized Jonathan for describing the Ado-Ekiti flyover built by Governor Ayo Fayose at the whopping cost of N17b as the best of its type in Nigeria is a slap on the faces of Ekiti people and reasonable
    Nigerians in general.

    The former President was in Ado-Ekiti at the weekend to commission Fajuyi-Ojumose flyover in the state capital where he described the project as the best in Nigeria.

    The APC Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatunbosun, in a statement on Monday accused Jonathan of affront, hypocrisy and dishonesty in his call on President Buhari to ensure free governorship election on July 14.

    Read Also: ’Tinubu’s panel saves APC from implosion’

    He said: “We had thought that Jonathan would behave like a true statesman and apologise to Ekiti people over the criminal taking over of government he supervised in 2014 when he unleashed soldiers, DSS and police to chase away opposition to the bush while several opposition leaders were illegally clamped into detention to disenfranchise the opposition party in the election that returned his stooge to power.

    “We condemn this unconscionable conduct by the former President who unleashed a horrendous electoral heist on Ekiti people, but who now turns around to demand for free and fair poll he could not give.

    “His endorsement of Fayose after he had put Ekiti State in N56b debts and workers owed between six and 10 months’ salary arrears while Ekiti State remained at where it was in 2014 in infrastructure development is also unfortunate.

    “Ekiti people will not be deceived and defrauded again after 2014 criminal takeover of government supervised by Jonathan, as Ekiti people and workers in particular live in hunger over unpaid salaries, and they have vowed to give their votes to our party with records of achievements and honesty in running a transparent government.”

    Olatunbosun alleged that the cost of the flyover which was awarded N5.9 billion was jerked up to N17 billion, an act he insisted Jonathan should condemn rather than praising.

    Olatunbosun added: “It is unfortunate and irresponsible to hide under partisanship to lend support for a clear case of fraud in the 800m one-lane flyover built on a dry land at a whopping cost of N17b as if the former President never supervised the construction of better flyovers at lower rates when he was president.

    “Even though Fayose at various times had claimed that the flyover at Fajuyi and Ojumose stretch of the state capital is 1.3km and 1.5km, the truth is that that stretch of road is 800m and it cannot stand the standard of a better flyover in Kuto, Abeokuta, Ogun State, built at a lower cost by Governor Ibikunle Amosun, but unfortunately the former President gave a stamp of approval to a clear case of fraud in a flyover that was first awarded at the cost of N5.9b without the Tenders Board’s approval but later reviewed upward single-handedly by the governor to its present cost of N17b.

    “It is also immoral to praise Fayose for diverting bailout, Paris Club refund and Budget Support Facility, all approved to pay workers’ salaries, to build a flyover at over-bloated cost of N17b awarded to Fayose’s friends’ companies outside the state after deceiving contractors of Ekiti origin during his campaigns to patronize them exclusively for all his projects.”

  • ‘Hold Okorocha responsible for breakdown of law and order’

    Stakeholders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Imo State have asked security agents in the country to hold the state governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha responsible for any breakdown of law and order that may occur in the state as a result of the current political situation in the state.
    Operating under the auspices of Imo APC stakeholders Forum, the stakeholders in a statement signed by Dr. TOE Ekechi and Hon. Kingsley Ononuju accused the governor of wasting tax payers money to organize protest against the National Organising Secretary, Senator Osita Izunaso and the conduct of congresses.
    In the statement, the Forum said, “We wish to draw the attention of security agencies ‎and the general public to the spate of senseless protests which we believe are being sponsored by the governor of Imo State in his desperate bid to blackmail the Imo State stakeholders particularly Distinguished Senator Osita Izunaso, the National Organizing Secretary of our great party.
    “We particularly draw attention to the sponsored protests of 17th and 23rd instant at APC party headquarters and SGF office respectively by hired miscreants against our coalition and Senator Osita Izunaso in particular.
    “It is shameful that the governor of Imo State can tow this path of dishonour by procuring the services of of helpless and hapless youths from Nasarawa State to foment trouble and embarrass the party. From the conduct of the so called “protesters” it was self evident that they did not even know why their services were procured.
    “The governor must therefore be called to order by well meaning Nigerians. We wish to warn that the continued sustenance of such senseless protests with Imo tax payers’ money portends very grave danger. The governor must be held fully responsible for any break down of law and order or loss of life if not now, by May 29, 2019 when his tenure surely would have expired.”
  • Ambode’s blooming

    Governor Akinwumi Ambode looms admirably as the All Progressives Congress (APC)’s only effectual governor perhaps. He isn’t a complete administrator. Not yet. But he is on the path to becoming a leader Nigeria could be proud of.

    This is the point at which pro-APC cyber rats and pulp-maggots chew on cud, to summon angst they do not feel, in defense of the governor. It is what ‘mad money’ and ‘unearned largesse’ does to you. But that is a discussion for another day.

    Today, I simply wish to commend Ambode for his rare display of vision and spunk, at Lagos State University (LASU)’s 22nd convocation.

    Ambode’s adoption of Fuad Adetoro Ogunsanya resonates as an inspiring physical and mental caress; it induces hope.

    There is a sense of dignity and humaneness in the governor’s action. For the first time ever, since he assumed the mantle of leadership in Lagos, I see in Ambode the making of a matured, charismatic leader. Ambode apparently understands the value of scholarship and youth empowerment, to Nigeria’s progressive enterprise.

    Unlike his peer in the southeast, who cavorts and splurges state treasury on perverts created by DSTV/Multichoice’s Big Brother Naija (BBN), Ambode would not squander Lagos’ coffers on the likes of BBN’s Anto, who impersonally ‘f…ks a lot of niggas’ for sport, or Teddy A, whose moral compass led him to ‘appreciate’ Bambam, a pastor’s daughter, by having sex with her in a public toilet, soon after fellow inmates’ Miracle and Nina’s depraved sex,

    The likes of Fuad, not the BBN rat pack, should be celebrated. Had Ambode not taken the initiative to honour him by adopting him and giving him a scholarship, the brilliant dude would simply fade unnoticed, in a society maddened by filth and institutionalised mediocrity.

    Fuad graduated as LASU’s overall best student with a Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA) of 4.78 in Business Administration. In appreciation, Ambode gave him N5 million, and pledged to sponsor his postgraduate studies in any school across the world.

    ”The Lagos State government does not generally give scholarship anymore, but your story is too compelling and is a reflection of my own story. I will adopt and sponsor you anywhere you want to go for your Masters. I will personally be responsible for it.

    “In addition, for emerging the overall best student, I will give you N5 million. An occasion as this deserves serious attention as the education of our youths is paramount to us,” said Ambode.

    Such doggedness and genius should not go to waste thus Ambode rewarded Fuad for his tenacity, despite the health challenges that delayed his education.

    In his valedictory speech, Fuad narrated how an affliction of cataract in both eyes, affected his performance in the Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE).

    The 24-year-old, who lost his father in 2015, said he had to do a second surgery to remove the defect when the first failed before he was able to make his ‘O’ Level papers.

    He “wanted to study Accounting,” LASU but at the period, “the course was not accredited and Business Administration was available.

    “Today, see where that impromptu decision has brought me,” he said. It has earned him the ‘fatherhood’ and goodwill of a Lagos governor.

    Yes, Ambode deserves applause for spending out of his purse in honour of LASU’s finest but Lagos deserves more progressive forms of humaneness and visionary policies from the incumbent governor. His developmental initiatives at LASU are commendable likewise his commitment to revolutionise the coastal city’s infrastructure.

    Some of his efforts are however, hindered by poor management and supervision, probably his underlings. None of the street lights along old Lagos-Abeokuta expressway is functioning at the moment. From defunct Mobil filling station/Mr. Biggs, Abule Egba to AMJE/Ajegunle, Lagos is cast in perpetual darkness. Some of the bypasses and link roads are also in need of Ambode’s intervention.

    The Adetola bypass that connects Ijaiye/Jankara road to Olaniyi street is a pedestrian/motorist’s nightmare; the heavily cratered road has destroyed several vehicle wheels and shock absorbers.

    Even as nearby streets and roads are rehabilitated, Adetola, Jankara, Agbado-Crossing roads remain severely potholed and abandoned. These become serious blemishes on Ambode’s infrastructure regeneration drive.

    Notwithstanding, Ambode’s fervour to improve Lagos’ infrastructure is praiseworthy. He should also pay good mind to facility issues in Lagos schools and hospitals. The services are dire, in bad taste.

    Ambode’s Lagos State Employment Trustfund (LSETF) initiative is impressive but he should monitor the process to prevent underlings from sullying it with favouritism, poor supervision and other negative externalities, like the desertion of recipients/participants to Microfinance loan sharks.

    It is not the intent of this writer to demean the value of Ambode’s administration, I simply wish that he understands that some parts of Lagos stew in government neglect despite his appreciable strides.

    His work will resonate at higher decibels if he could focus on the areas currently neglected by his administration. I could publish a list of such areas in a sequel to this write-up, if he wants.

    This is not a veiled plea for patronage; I do not seek an audience with Ambode. I simply need him to rise to the task of fostering a Lagos, where facilities match those that he enjoys on his several trips abroad. Only then can he truly become a governor worth celebrating and a leader to treasure.

    Comparing him to his colleagues in APC and PDP is akin to smearing him with cow dung. I would rather compare him to ace administrators at home and abroad, when the progressive in him fully matures.

    As Ambode evolves, Lagos hopes to progressively unfurl – across all sectors – to his nurturant touch.

    Someday, post-2019 perhaps, Ogun State too, among others, would enjoy the rare boon of a visionary, brilliant governor – until then, the townships and human elements will die a slow, unnatural death, in the hands of mediocre, underperforming governors.

     

     

  • ‘Rivers APC do not need to rig to kick Wike out’

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State, Chief Eze Chukwuemeka Eze, has stated that members of the main opposition party in the state do not need to rig to kick Governor Nyesom Wike of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) out of Government House, Port Harcourt next year.

    He also described as most unfortunate, disgraceful, misguided, witch-hunting, vicious, incredible, wicked, unacceptable and sad that Wike could set aside N500 million of Rivers state’s funds to sponsor smear campaign against the Commander of Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (F-SARS) in Rivers State, Mr. Akin Fakorede, an Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP).

    Eze noted that the Rivers governor was showing desperation to remove Fakorede, after his failed attempts through the failed #endSARS campaign to blackmail the Rivers commander of F-SARS.

    He stated that members of APC in Rivers would not fold their arms and leave a professional police officer, who is desirous of a better Rivers state, to be run down by a misguided governor.

    Read Also: Wike is enjoying immunity, says Fed Govt

    The APC chieftain said: “For Wike to budget such a whopping N500 million for a programme to run down an innocent police officer, who is doing his work diligently and satisfactorily for the people of Rivers State, at a period when Wike can neither pay the salaries of the civil servants in the state nor the pensions of our retired civil servants, is really unfortunate. Rivers governor is also unable to create jobs or engage any of the thousands of unemployed Rivers youths.

    “Wike, after sponsoring series of campaign of calumny against Fakorede, he has gone further to place advertisements on the front and inside pages of major national newspapers to sustain the blackmail against the Rivers commander of F-SARS.”

    Eze also lauded the Inspector-General of Police (IGP),  Ibrahim Idris, for exonerating Fakorede of all the allegations levelled against him and for authorising the police officer to sue Wike and the Rivers government over the false, malicious and libelous publications against him.

    He added that the Rivers governor is well known for his notoriety for rigging elections and felt that everybody would do the same thing.

    The APC chieftain urged Wike to apologise to the Rivers commander of F-SARS, retract the damaging advertisements and pay the N2 billion damages.

  • Obasanjo visits Fasoranti, seeks support.

    Former President, Olusegun Obasanjo, on Monday visited the leader of the pan-Yoruba socio-political organisation, Afenifere, Pa. Reuben Fasoranti in Akure, the Ondo state capital.

    He was accompanied by his close ally, Otunba Oyewole Fasawe and Ayo Osuntokun.

    Obasanjo said it is a must to rescue the country from the hands of the All Progressives Congress, (APC), led federal government come 2019.

    Obasanjo who was visiting Afenifere for the first time in 20 years, said he was in Akure, the Ondo state capital to pay homage to the leader of the the group, Fasoranti.

    He commended Afenifere for standing by their belief, saying “you have been talking about the interest of Yoruba, while I have been talking about the interest of Nigeria. Our paths crossed.  Our priority is now one. If we did not repair this country, it will be disastrous.”

    Read Also: Again, Obasanjo laments pervasive insecurity in Nigeria

    Obasanjo, recalled how he was rejected by the group while seeking their support in the past, said ” I remember visiting Pa Abraham Adesanya thrice in Lagos before the election and I was asked to join Afenifere and Alliance for Democracy (AD) then,  but I told them that AD was cul-de-sac.

    “Pa Abraham told me if I join, things will change but I refused to join them. I went back the second time but they refused to work for my emergence.

    “I went there again the third time but Afenifere maintained their stand, they refused to vote for me but I secured my votes outside Yorubaland, though they supported me in 2003 for my re-election”.

    Fasoranti commended Obasanjo for his efforts at building a better country.

    He expressed his dissatisfaction with the state of affairs in the country, noting that the country is not being run properly.

    According to him “we are in full support of all the letters written by Obasanjo to President Muhamadu Buhari on the state of the nation. We are dissatisfied with the state of affairs in the country. The country is not being run properly.”

    Fasoranti said Afenifere was in support of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Social Democratic Party (SDP) and ADC.

    He said “It will be the joy of everybody to present a formidable team to confront the evil government that is there now.”

    Present at the meeting were Basorun Sehinde Arogbofa, Kole Omololu, Sola Ebiseni , Chief Akin Omosebi , Femi Aluko among others.

  • 2019: Okorocha battles ‘allied forces’ in Imo

    Following the dramatic changes in the political fortunes of the various gladiators in the ongoing power tussle within the Imo State chapter of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Dare Odufowokan, Assistant Editor, examines the immediate and future consequences of the outcomes of the elective ward and local government congresses held across the state recently.

    BEFORE now, Governor Rochas Okorocha bestrode the political firmament of his homes state of Imo like a colossus. To many within and outside the Southeastern state, he was not just like any other governor in the country, he was more of an Emperor-governor who has his people where he wants them politically. According to Erastus Mike-Merah, an Owerri-based pro-democracy rights campaigner, it was a common parlance in the state to say ‘Imo is Okorocha and Okorocha is Imo.”

    But all that was before the commencement of the just concluded congresses of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state. It started like a rude joke when news started filtering in that the ‘Allied Forces’, the new coalition of individuals and groups opposed to the governor’s administration in the state, may have found a way to floor Okorocha’s Rescue Mission camp finally.

    The news generated heated debate as supporters of the governor swore he was unbeatable and that the membership of the much talked about Allied Forces in the state is not strong enough politically to grab the structure of the ruling party from the firm hold of the governor. This was just as those with sympathy for the opposition vowed that Okorocha will have no answer to the political gimmick to be employed against him by those seeking his political retirement in 2019.

    The argument raged back and forth. “It was actually a moment of serious apprehension for the people of Imo State. Even people with little or no interest in politics got interested in what was going on. Talks about a possible demystification of Okorocha wasn’t something anybody within the state will ignore. That was how larger than life he was among his people,” Mike-Merah said.

    However, by the time the dust raised by the ward and local government congresses of the party in Owelle Okorocha’s state cleared, there was little or no doubt left that he has been politically curtailed by the Allied Forces group given the outcome of the two congresses and the unexpected inability of the governor to get help from neither the national leadership of his party nor the presidency during what many pundits have come to term as the political battle of his life.

    “Governor Okorocha today is fighting for his political future. Those opposed to his politicos and style are doing everything possible to frustrate his plans for 2019. That is actually what is playing out. It is not really a crisis within the ruling party here in Imo State. It is a power tussle between two prominent groups within the party namely the Governor’s Rescue Mission camp and the opposition Allied Forces. Largely, members of the party are mere onlookers and will align with the winners as usual.

    “The struggle is about who governs Imo from 2019. The struggle is about whether Okorocha should go from Government House to the senate in 2019. The struggle is about who should call the shots within the ruling APC henceforth. It is a battle that has pitched Okorocha against some of the leading lights of politics in the state including the National Organising Secretary of the APC, Senator Osita Izunaso.

    “The governor, in his bid to retain what many observers within and outside the ruling APC have described as ‘absolute control’ of the party, has also, by his own submissions on many occasions, declared that he is at war with serving Senators Hope Uzodimma and Ben Uwajumogu, APC governorship aspirant, Senator Ifeanyi Araraume, as well as former Governors Ikedi Ohakim and Achike Udenwa. That is the true state of things in Imo State,” Mike-Merah explained.

     

    Going into oblivion?

    So humbling were the outcome of the APC congresses in the state for the Rescue Mission camp that leaders of the ruling party on Thursday warned that Okorocha risks being suspended or expelled from the party if he continues with what they described as “activities capable of destabilizing the party ahead of the 2019 general elections.”

    But his supporters say some ‘mischievous’ politicians are merely exaggerating the events of the past two weeks in the state to gain political mileage. According to Okey Apugo, a former state official of the Progressives Peoples Alliance (PPA) in Imo, “the coalition of Okorocha haters calling themselves Allied Forces in Imo today are not capable of subduing the political influence of the governor in the nearest future.

    “Imo politics is not just about what some people rush to the television or newspaper to tell the public. We know our leaders and these jesters calling themselves Allied Forces are not among them. The only reason for their coming together is to take over Imo state again and rip us off as they’ve done in the past. We know them and we will always reject them. Okorocha will come out of this current blackmail and backstabbing stronger,” he added.

    On the contrary, prominent leaders of the party insist that they have made Okorocha politically irrelevant in the state following his inability to manipulate the party congresses in his favour this time. They said they are not after the governor but are determined to rescue the party from imminent collapse in the state. Okorocha, according to them, was leading the APC to electoral defeat in the state and something needed to be done.

    Dr. Theo Ekechi, former Information Commissioner in the state and one of the leading lights of the Allied Forces, while speaking after a close-door meeting with the APC national leadership on Thursday in Abuja, said the stakeholders had overwhelming evidences against Okorocha. This, he said, had made it impossible for the governor to get attention from any quarter in the state and in the South-East region.

    “There have been wide jubilation in Imo because we have rescued the party from Okorocha, we have made it impossible for him to get help from anywhere. He cannot run to any political figure in the state because none is with him, he cannot approach any clergyman in the state. In his desperation, he ran to Sokoto, Daura and even to the Vice President, but help has refused to come,” he said.

    Asked by The Nation to explain where himself and other prominent stakeholders in the party are determined to hijack the APC from Okorocha ahead f the 2019 elections, Ekechi, while saying nobody except the governor, is interested in hijacking or pocketing the party in the state, said Rochas’ actions and inaction was responsible for the problems facing the party in the state and the South-East generally.

    Beyond intra-party politics, Ekechi alleged that the state was being mismanaged under Okorocha, adding that the governor was running the state like a personal estate. He said it was for these reasons and many more that concerned Imo elders rose up to help the APC before things get out of hand. “And everybody who cares to tell the governor to check himself automatically become and enemy of his administration,” he added.

    More trouble from Abuja

    And rather than offer the embattled Governor some respite from its national headquarter, the APC, through its National Working Committee (NWC) added to Okorocha’s headache when it warned the governor against transferring the frustration emanating from his mismanaged relationship with his people on the party’s national leadership. It was so bad that the National Publicity Secretary of the party, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, accused the Imo helmsman of being malicious.

    “With due respect, Governor Okorocha is being malicious and unfair to the NWC. If he has mismanaged his relationship with his own people, in a way that they now constitute an encumbrance to him, he should not transfer his frustration to the NWC. It is certainly not right to set fire to the village because you want to kill a rat. If Okorocha has any specific grievances, he should come forward with them rather than making this generalised accusations,” Abdullahi said.

    The NWC was reacting to an earlier threat by Okorocha to expose some NWC members. The governor had accused the APC national chairman of lying, adding that “this means the party lied that they have gotten the result. Everything there looks funny, it looks like some kind of mischievous connivance of people trying to make up things, cook up stories and tell people that this is how I lie.” He further accused the NWC of conducting the congresses for themselves rather than ensuring the promotion of the party.

    Okorocha alleged that as a result of the vested interest of the NWC in the congresses, the whole process have been messed up. “The secretary of the appeal panel came to the national secretariat and she was interviewed where she said there was no congress in Imo State, adding that there was even no material not to talk about congress being held. She stated that those who submitted the result sheet should tell the security agencies how they conducted the congress and got the result sheet.

    “I see the chairman as a man of integrity, and he must be very careful not to allow this Imo State matter remove his integrity in this country, because as he’s aging, he should not to allow this to dent his political image as history would not write well about him. For him to come out publicly to tell the world that there was congress when there was no congress and that he has received result sheet when they have not seen result sheet, that is not good for our party.”

    But Abuja based lawyer, Anthony Chyma, says the NWC was unfair in its treatment of Okorocha’s complaints and called on the party to retrace its steps. He said Abdullahi’s statement was most uncharitable considering the contribution of Okorocha to the APC. “As a publicity secretary of the party, he should have come by way of amenable statement and not aggravating the situation. Okorocha, is the current governor and has all the information on issues bedevilling the party.”

    According to him, Okorocha’s claim that no ward congress held in the state was vindicated by the Police which recently paraded four suspects arrested in an Abuja hotel for allegedly stealing APC congress materials meant for the state. He said investigation also revealed a link to a serving Senator from Imo State being part of the plot to cart away ward congress results sheets, LGA results sheets and delegates nomination forms from Imo State.

    “It amounts to bias to castigate the governor in such a manner and leave the party open to unnecessary bashing. It does not speak well of the office of the national publicity secretary and generally the entire party. It’s shocking to hear the image maker of the APC resort to tarnishing the image which he should be protecting. His bias as a national officer is tantamount to hard sell,” he said.

     

    How Okorocha fell

    Just before the commencement of the congresses, Okorocha had boldly told those opposed to him to perish the thought of taking over the party from him. The governor, aside other issues, drew the ire of many of his party chieftains following indications that he plans to install his son in-law, Uche Nwosu, as his successor come 2019. Not a few APC chieftains in the state have publicly rejected the idea. But Okorocha has been boasting that he will have his way effortlessly.

    At the initial stage, it appeared as if the Governor has the support of the state leadership of the party in his plot to install Nwosu. Of course, the House of Assembly was tacitly part of the move, and he flaunted their loyalty at will. But a face-off between Okorocha and APC state chairman, Hillary Eke, over the hosting of first Imo APC stakeholders’ meeting in Owerri, the state capital, last month, exposed the crack Okorocha’s political family.

    Consequently, the governor and most of his loyalists, including members of the state assembly and commissioners, boycotted the stakeholders’ meeting just as the state leadership of the party decided to discontinue all political alliances with the governor’s camp. Expectedly, tension rose and the ground was prepared for a political showdown between Okorocha’s Rescue Mission group and the then emerging Allied Forces group.

    “That Okorocha lost the support of Hillary Eke and most of the other state officials of the party was a costly error. That was the beginning of what we are seeing today. He mismanaged his relationship with them as many of them accused him of being rude and uncouth in his manners towards them. The state chairman, according to sources tried to avoid the rift, but Okorocha was overconfident in his handling of their complaints before the bubble burst,” Mike-Merah said.

    A governorship aspirant, Senator Ifeanyi Araraume, added that “all well-meaning citizens” in Imo State are in agreement to stop Okorocha from further destroying the state. “From the political class to the academic, from professionals to the clergy, the traditional institutions and even artisans in Imo State are in agreement, beyond partisan, sectional, religious and cultural boundaries to stop Okorocha from further destroying the state economically, politically, amd culturally.

    “In the last couple of months, Governor Okorocha has been raining abuses on every political leader of note in the state, including his predecessors, dead or alive. It is worth pointing out that by his statement, the governor has admitted that he is at war with the entire political class in the state. For instance, his inclusion of his two immediate predecessors, Governors Ikedi Ohakim and Achike Udenwa, as being members of a certain coalition that intends to distract him is a clear demonstration of this.

    “Added to this is the fact that he is at loggerheads with his deputy and the two senators in his party. It was perhaps for want of proper language that the governor resorted to the use of the word coalition.  But even a fresh man in a political science class knows that the word coalition is a clear misnomer in the present circumstances in Imo State.” Political observers say Okorocha, unknowingly or carelessly, bit more than he could chew by fighting too many political titans at the same time.

    “How on earth will one politician in Imo State, even if he is the governor, engage in political battles with Ararume, Ohakim, Udenwa, Izunaso, Eke, Madumere, Uzodinma, Uwajumogu, Ekechi, Church leaders, royal fathers, youth groups and many other groups and individuals, at the same time barely a year to the next general election and expect to win them all? Not forgetting that he has the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its chieftains to grapple with,’ a party leader told The Nation.

    The congresses

    The above was the political scenario within the ruling APC in Imo State as at May 5, 2018, when the party held its congress in all the wards across the country. And by the time the exercise ended in the state, with the state leadership of the party declaring the congress successful, Okorocha had no choice but to raise alarm, alleging that materials especially the result sheets meant for the exercise could not be found.

    The Governor alleged that the national organising secretary of the party, Osita Izunaso, and secretary of the convention committee, Senator Ben Uwajumogu, had connived with the chairman of the state congress committee, Ini Okorie, to hijack the congress materials, thus not allowing the exercise to hold as expected. But Eke and Uwajimogu stated that the Ward Congress in the state was conducted and concluded successfully and peacefully on Saturday, May 5, 2018, in the 305 wards of the state.

    Sensing danger, Okorocha ran all the way to Daura in Katsina State to seek help from President Muhammadu Buhari. While there, he alleged that his opposition to the tenure elongation of the APC National Working Committee (NWC), might have irked Oyegun, leading to his attempt to frustrate and truncate his political future using the ongoing congresses of the party.

    To further ensure that he got justice, the governor approached the appeal committee of the party, seeking the cancellation of the ward congress held in his state. But the committee, in its report dated May 10, said the governor lacked the locus standi to file any petition asking for a cancellation of the exercise because “the persons who would have the right to petition over the conduct of the ward congress elections are those qualified to contest the congress having purchased the forms.”

    The Abubakar Tutare-led committee held that “the petitions were written by unqualified persons and therefore would be construed as lacking the locus standi/basis to bring in any petitions.” The report effectively put paid to all hopes of Okorocha’s camp getting its members elected as ward officials of the party in the state. Not to be deterred, the governor shifted his gaze to the local government congress held a week later.

    But at the end of the process, he again lamented that the process was hijacked and manipulated to keep his supporters out of contention. While the state executive committee of the party once again declared the successful completion of the congress across the state, Okorocha and his men were left wondering where the votes were cast. Again, he accused the national leadership of the party of aiding and abetting those who want to end his political career.

    “Let me intimate you of the happenings in my state. Only yesterday, I learnt of the party’s office gutted by fire. I think this is as a result of agitation or what has been happening in the state as a result of the purported congress which was meant to hold in the state last Saturday. I have informed the public that there was no congress whatsoever in Imo State, rather, the materials for the congress were missing and it was traced to the house of the APC National Organising Secretary of our party,” he lamented.

    And at the time of filing in this report, the party in the state was preparing to hold its state congress where a new leadership will be elected to run the affairs of the party. This is an election Okorocha, according to his close aides, has dreamt of for so long. “He badly wanted Eke and his co-executives out of the state secretariat of the APC and he looked forward to booting them out at this state congress,” a party source said.

    But it is obvious Okorocha will have no say when the decisions as to who will be elected into the new state executive committee of the APC in the state are taken. This is because not one of the elected delegates, who will decide the fates of the contestants, is from his embattled political family. The consequences of this political development, according to pundits, are huge and frightening, especially to the Rescue Mission group within Imo APC.

     

    Still hopeful?

    Meanwhile, Okorocha is still assuring his supporters that the NWC of the party will still look into the issues arising from the ward and local government congresses. In a recent statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Sam Onwuemeodo, the governor said “with the unfolding scenario and incontrovertible evidences, Nigerians have seen that sensitive materials meant for ward congresses of the party in Imo were stolen, which stopped the exercise from taking place on Saturday, May 5, 2018.”

    The governor alleged that the National Chairman of APC, Chief John Oyegun, had told Nigerians that the local government congresses of the party would be on hold, pending the outcome of the report of the Appeal Panel on Imo ward congresses. “And since that public statement by the national chairman, he has not made any additional statement to that effect or any other statement in the contrary. So, all the rumours being posted on the social media on the conduct of local government congress in the state are neither here nor there,” the statement said.

    Similarly, lawmakers in the state have also assured the governor of their continued support for him in his current political travail. The Speaker, Acho Ihim, called on the national leadership of APC to reschedule ward and local government congress in the state. He said there was no election in the state as earlier reported, adding that the lawmakers were on the same page with Okorocha.

    “The shenanigans that we saw last Saturday can never be taken for congresses and we are taking this very seriously. We are here to reconfirm the fact that there was no ward congress in Imo and to demand that an announcement be made for a new date for the ward and local government congresses. As such, we demand that a constituted statement and announcement be made about the congresses that did not hold, the new date should be announced,” he said.

    The speaker, who led 23 other legislators from the state to a meeting with the national chairman of the party, said it was critical to revisit the congresses before talks on state congress could commence. He said that such talk would ensure peace and unity in the state. He, however, said that the governor had done so well, adding that there would not have been APC in the Southeast without him.

    On the allegation that Okorocha wanted his son in-law as his successor, the speaker said “the governor as a person has his preferences, I have mine too and we all do, and as such, whoever you want to endorse, you can endorse. For me and the governor, we have endorsed Nwosu, his son in-law, but when the primaries come, Imo people will decide if it will be another candidate. It doesn’t imply that at the moment, you can’t do your own. Endorsement is not a special thing.”

    As things stand currently, it is obvious that the last is yet to be heard about the political upheaval threatening the very essence of Okorocha’s life after office. And as pundits continue to ponder on the effects of the crisis on the electoral fortunes of the APC, not only in Imo State, but in the entire Southeast zone, the political gladiators, sadly, appear unwilling to sheath their swords just yet.

  • Now, Osun needs industries – APC guber aspirant

    Ayoade Afolabi Lawal, an engineer, is a governorship aspirant on the platform of All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun State. He spoke about his plans for the state in an encounter with Assistant Editor, Dare Odufowokan

    A GUBERNATORIAL aspirant on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun State, Ayoade Afolabi Lawal, has said the decision to serve his people and community is more of divine call. The youthful politician added that his governorship aspiration is borne out of the resolve to make a mark by moving Osun State to the next level. The current administration under Governor Rauf Aregbesola, he said, has tried its best though there is need to make certain corrections in some areas.

    “The current government has embarked on aggressive infrastructural development and the next stage is to attract real investors to the state so that we will reap the benefits of Governor Aregbesola’s investment in infrastructure. And with my knowledge as an engineer, the state of the living spring will wear a new look during my regime as a governor,” Ayoade, who insisted that the APC remains the party to beat in the election, said.

    The Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife trained engineer harped on the need to attract investors to the state and galvanize the “use of metal and wood to set the state on the path of industrial progress”. Speaking to The Nation in Lagos, he promised to turn the state to another industrial centre, stressing that Osun now possesses the capacity to rival Lagos in industrial advancement, if the right man is given the chance to lead the state.

    An indigene of Iwo, Lawal added that his educational background, experiences as a Chemical Engineer with frontline oil companies in Nigeria, has undoubtedly amplified his determination to engage the youths of the state positively, hence the reason he seeks the support of all and sundry in the state towards the actualisation of his gubernatorial ambition.

    He explained that aside industries, which he intend to attract to the state in droves, Osun has a lot of tourism potentials that can be turned into instant goldmines. “As a state blessed with numerous world recognised tourist centres, I will leverage on our culture and tourism endowments to boost economic growth and accelerated entrepreneurial independence amongst the youths.

    “My political ambition is defined by my willingness to help the poor and the needy in order to bring happiness to the greatest numbers of Osun people. This clarion call, to my surprise, was  endorsed by majority of the leaders of my darling party, the APC. My main focus is industrialisation and it will be implemented in sectors like agriculture, education, security, health and others.

    “Building of agro allied companies to increase the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the state and enable people to have access to quality food will be prioritised. Redefining the youths by setting up meaningful employment through agriculture will help us to put a stop to vices in the state. These are some of my lofty ideas which I believe are doable by God’s grace and with the support of people of Osun State,” he added.

    “My government will support farming fully as we will introduce modern farming equipment to the state. Nigeria as a whole needs to go back to farming because that is our traditional way of life that can improve our resources. We should stop depending on oil money to move and take our nation higher. Farming can also give a state and its people good wealth and development.

    Let us remember that the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo was a successful farmer and most of our leaders in Nigeria today benefited from his free education in the old western region. So, I will not handle agriculture with levity when I become the governor. We will also increase our agricultural production capacity. At the same time, we will attract industries to create jobs for the youths and boost the Internal Generated Revenue (IGR) of Osun State,” he explained.

    Speaking further on his ambition, Lawal said ”I’m the right man to succeed Ogbeni Aregbesola as governor of Osun State and I believe the masses of our dear state will vote for me because of my experience and the many meaningful projects APC-led administration have done  in the state. I may not have held any political office before now, but I have the conscience of a good leader.”

    He submitted that with the efforts put into governance by the current APC administration under Aregbesola, the party remains the darling of the good people of Osun State who are still yearning for more dividends of good governance and democracy. “Under my watch, all men and women will have a voice in decision making as I’m going to run an all-inclusive regime”.

    In his mid-forties, Lawal says he fits the bill of those calling for younger persons in government but he was quick to add that experience is needed in governance whether the person is young or old. He added that he has a very cordial relationship with the incumbent governor, Ogbeni Aregbesola, who he described as a fantastic engineer as shown by his aggressive replacement of rotten infrastructure in the state.

    He praised Aregbesola for laying the foundation for the subsequent development of the state, saying the governor showed an unusual enthusiasm for development. “I am optimistic that the challenges in Osun State are temporary. But most people don’t look at future but only at what they want to benefit at the present. The benefits of some of the APC projects in the state are not immediate but they will have a long lasting impact on the people.

    “If we are to be realistic with ourselves, our state has witnessed massive development during Ogbeni’s two terms in office. I am sure we are going to see more before the end of his tenure. This is the legacy I want to build on if elected as the next governor of our dear state. I have no doubt in my mind that with the laudable achievements of the current administration, APC will win the next election,” Lawal noted.

    Lawal added that when he assumes office as governor, he will be going to schools to teach basic science subjects once weekly so as to understand the mental ability of the pupils and also organise needed trainings for teachers in the state. He added that he will make sure basic education is back fully in Osun State. “I will pay the teachers well and promptly while also encouraging them to always teach the students the way we were taught in the olden days,” he vowed.

  • Fears over 2019 elections

    Stakeholders are expressing fears over the outcome of 2019 General Elections. Associate Editor, Sam Egburonu, reports on some of the issues eliciting concerns

    AS the 2019 General Elections draw near, more Nigerians have expressed fears over the likely outcome of the exercise. While some observers and stakeholders wonder if the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) would allow the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to conduct free and fair general elections, others expressed fear that the elections may either be marred by voter apathy or be rigged through surreptitious use of technology, among others.

    Just this week’s Wednesday, the National Chairman of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Prince Uche Secondus, expressed misgivings over INEC’s willingness to conduct free and fair election in 2019.

    Speaking when the United Nations assessment team paid the leading opposition party a courtesy call, in Abuja, Secondus said what President Muhammadu Buhari-led All Progressives Congress (APC) government owes Nigeria is to conduct free and fair elections.

    He pointed out that free and fair election would only guarantee the unity of the country, adding that the 2019 election would make and mar the togetherness of the nation.

    “This visit is timely because of the unfolding event in our country and the political situation; I believe this is the time for intervention.

    “We have fears since APC came on board, if election is not in their favour, there is a rerun.

    “There must be election that is free and fair and when there is no free and fair election it breeds crisis and we are witnessing what is happening in Kenya.

    “What is happening in the West should happen here. There is a great fear whether INEC will conduct free and fair election. Free and fair election will guarantee the unity of this country and we are afraid if INEC will conduct a free and fair election.

    “Take this to New York for all the necessary actions required. Election is coming in 2019; the election that will make and mar the nation. What this government owes this nation is to conduct free and fair election. The National Assembly and the judiciary are important arms of the government, but the judiciary is not respected.”

    The leader of the team, Mr. Serge G. Kubwimana, had said earlier that they were meeting with political parties to form assessment on how to support them ahead of next year’s general elections.

    Voter apathy

    Besides the fear of influence of the ruling party on the electoral umpire, another fear that has been expressed is the fear of likely voters’ apathy. Just last week, the Anambra State Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) Dr. Nkwachukwu Orji, said the major headache the commission faces in the state is voter apathy.

    The fear, according to some sources has led to speculation that INEC’s verification exercise is aimed at de-registering some political parties.

    Speaking during the stakeholders meeting with leaders of political parties in Anambra State at the INEC headquarters in Awka, Orji said the commission had no power to deregister any duly registered party as that was not part of the mandate of the commission.

    He said the exercise was “primarily for administrative purposes which included verification of the authenticity of the existence of the various political parties in the state.”

    On the preparation for the general elections in 2019 in the state, Orji said the Commission had already commenced stocktaking of all equipment and other infrastructure, including the smart card readers, vehicles, among others.

    As he puts it: “We are riding on the back of the last governorship election in the state in activating the process.

    “The equipment tested so far indicated that most of them are in good condition,” he said.

    Describing voter apathy as a major challenge of the electoral process in the state, he attributed it to “irregularities in previous elections.”

    Our investigation shows that the fear of possible voter apathy is not limited to Anambra. In fact, there is fear that in some states where violence has reigned for some time now, voters may shy away from the exercise, except more concrete arrangement are made to reassure the people of their safety.

    Electronic rigging

    Another fear which even INEC has admitted is the fear of possible attempt to employ electronic tools and modern technology to rig the election.

    Early this year, the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, openly expressed fear over the increasing incidence of election meddling through the use of technology in many countries.

    He said there was the need for African countries to tackle it in order to protect democracy.

    He made the call at the opening ceremony of a conference attended by the Electoral Management Bodies of the ECOWAS member countries and the South African Development Community member states.

    Speaking at the event titled, ‘Opportunities and Challenges in the Use of Technology in Elections: Experiences from West and Southern Africa,’ Yakubu said “Given the high stakes of conducting elections in developing countries, electoral commissions must understandably be worried about the twin issues of communication and security, especially in situations where data reside with and is directly transmitted to the tallying centres through offshore vendors rather than exclusively controlled within national boundaries by election monitoring bodies.

    “In addition, we have to contend with the disturbing but rapidly increasing incidence of election meddling through the deployment of counter-technology on a global scale by state and non-state actors.”

    He however said that since technology had come to stay, election management bodies must learn to use it for the benefit of the people.

    Allocation of polling units

    Another fear that has generated controversy is allegation that INEC may have concluded plans to allocate more polling units in some selected areas as a smart way of rigging the 2019 elections.

    Responding to the allegation, Rotimi L. Oyekanmi, the Chief Press Secretary to INEC Chairman, said such reports not only misrepresent the facts and intentions of INEC in its bid to respond to legitimate demands of the citizens of Nigeria, but also made unwarranted insinuations capable of creating confusion in the minds of the general public.

    The elections are a few months away.