Tag: Aluko

  • I’m not safe, Aluko tells IG

    I’m not safe, Aluko tells IG

    Former Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ekiti State Temitope Aluko has called on the Inspector General of Police, Solomon Arase, to protect him.

    At a briefing in Lagos yesterday, he said Governor Ayodele Fayose was trying to harm him.

    His words: “I have not fled the country. The army council sacked its officers as a result of the investigation. It is unfortunate that the civilian actors/beneficiaries of the Ekitigate are not only walking the street freely, but also threatening my person and family.”

    Aluko said what happened in the June 21 2014 governorship election was gross abuse of power, illegality, harassment and intimidation.

    “This is a call on the Attorney General of the Federation not to allow all these to be swept under the carpet in view of recent happenings.  The far reaching effect and implication on our electoral process and procedure are obvious.”

    He maintained that the allegation by a former Speaker of the House of Assembly that he prostrated before Fayose was a blackmail.

    “I never prostrated for Fayose.  Dele Olugbemi will do anything for the governor. After all, he is his appointee. Please note that I understand Fayose and I understand the system.

    “I can tell you that Olugbemi’s press statement was compose by Fayose and delivered to Olugbemi though his media aide,” he said.

  • Ex-Ekiti Speaker: I took Aluko to beg Fayose

    Ex-Ekiti Speaker: I took Aluko to beg Fayose

    Former Speaker of the Ekiti State House of Assembly Dele Olugbemi has “revealed” how he took the embattled former Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Temitope Aluko to Governor Ayodele Fayose on Sunday.

    He said: “It was a lie that the governor stage-managed the reconciliatory meeting.

    Aluko and I prostrated for Fayose three times to beg him to forgive him (Aluko).”

    Olugbemi said he was surprised that Aluko could address the media yesterday and deny that he willingly attended the meeting and that he spoke to the press under duress.

    His words: “The existing cordial relationship between Aluko and I brought us to a discussion that eventually led to last Sunday’s meeting.

    “Aluko cannot deny that he re-affirmed that the governor remained his mentor, leader and father, that all his previous actions were the devil’s work and that he was under spiritual attack when he was saying all those things against Fayose.

    “Even when the governor told him to sit down, he prostrated and I also prostrated to him beg.

    “The governor asked Aluko four questions: if he knew the implication of coming to him; why he behaved in that manner; how old he was and if he wanted the reconciliation to be total or partial.

    “Aluko replied that he knew the consequence of coming to him and that if he did not want total reconciliation, he would not come to see him.

    “At this point, Aluko stood up again, saying my mentor, my leader, my egbon. I am your boy, you know, I am your boy.  Whatever step I have taken before now, forgive me.  Aluko and I prostrated again.”

    Narrating how the meeting was arranged and held, Olugbemi said: “Before we agreed to meet in Lagos, I first suggested that the meeting should take place in the Government House after the wedding of Fayose’s niece but Aluko said he was not too comfortable with the arrangement because of fear that he might be arrested.”

  • Credibility crisis over Fayose/Aluko ‘reconciliation’

    Credibility crisis over Fayose/Aluko ‘reconciliation’

    The last may not have been heard on the matter between Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose and his erstwhile ally and confidant, Dr. Temitope Aluko. Nigerians were shocked to see the duo together on television on Monday, after their purported reconciliation, where the latter reportedly pleaded for forgiveness. Less than 24 hours later, Aluko recanted, saying the media appearance was stage-managed to give the impression that his disagreement with Fayose was over. Correspondent ODUNAYO OGUNMOLA examines the latest drama in the Fayose/Aluko saga and its implications. 

    Two months after he made a startling revelation about how the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) used the military to rig the June 21, 2014 governorship election that brought Governor Ayodele Fayose in for a second term in Ekiti State, Dr. Temitope Aluko shocked Nigerians with Monday’s purported reconciliation with the man he vilified, pilloried and attacked as a felon.

    Not a few Nigerians were surprised that Aluko, former Secretary of the PDP in Ekiti, could make such a 360 degree turnaround. The general feeling was one of shock and disbelief, when the news went viral on the internet that the former university lecturer had gone crawling back to Fayose. Like his earth-shaking exposé on the alleged rigging, a bemused nation received Aluko’s reported return to Fayose “under the cover of darkness” with glee and contempt.

    Aluko’s outburst live on national television had been generally regarded as the confession of a penitent heart. After carrying out some investigations, the army had retired some of its officers implicated in the sage. It was also on the strength of Aluko’s revelations that some Ekiti State Government officials, including the Commissioner for Finance, Toyin Ojo; House of Assembly member Afolabi Akanni and former Special Adviser on Revenue Matters, Ropo Ogunjobi, were arrested by the Department of State Services (DSS).

    According to sources, the infamous Ekiti election drama was facilitated by the former factional Speaker of the House of Assembly, Dele Olugbemi. Both Fayose and Aluko were said to have “settled their differences” at the posh Eko Hotel in Lagos and subsequently spoke to reporters after holding the closed-door meeting. A video recording of the Lagos reconciliation meeting made the rounds on social media on Monday, showing both Fayose and Aluko addressing reporters, with the latter saying he is back to the political family he deserted few months ago.

    But, just as the Nigerian public was beginning to digest the import of the ‘reconciliation’, Aluko, in response to a press statement attributed to Fayose’s Special Assistant on Public Communication and New Media, Lere Olayinka, made another u-turn, claiming that the so-called reconciliation was stage-managed by the Fayose camp.

    Aluko said: “I did not collect any money from Fayose, I was invited to a meeting by well-meaning Nigerians and I felt it was imperative to honour such a meeting, but I was surprised to see reporters around.

    “I did not beg Fayose. he approached me and it was out of courtesy that I honoured Ekiti leaders who wanted peace to reign in Ekiti, contrary to the lies being spread by the mouthpiece of Ekiti State Governor, Lere Olayinka, that the former scribe of Ekiti PDP, Dr. Temitope Aluko has requested for the forgiveness of Governor Ayo Fayose for his past misdeeds.

    “Dr Tope Aluko has come forward in strong terms to rubbish the hypocrisy of Lere Olayinka with his distortion of facts about the reconciliation process describing the spread of lies about his ‘repentance’ over his controversial position on Ekitigate as calculated.

    “He condemned Governor Ayo Fayose and his paid agents as cowards who only wanted sympathy through the back door describing their pranks as “the joke of the century”.

    “I knew Fayose, he is a chameleon and I also knew that he must have devised all these arrangements to further assassinate my character and that was why I was meticulous by not speaking with the Press.

    “Like I said yesterday (Monday), I won’t dignify that boy called Lere Layinka and I won’t join issues with him but the public should know that it was peace they claim they wanted and now that they have indicated their insincerity, it therefore means the battle continues until there shall be a victor and a vanquished.”

    In the statement, Olayinka said Aluko’s reconciliation with Fayose is a vindication of his (Olayinka’s) claims that the former secretary of the party has no integrity. Olayinka, who claimed he was speaking in his personal capacity and not as a spokesperson to the governor, said: “Being the person that faced Aluko on television interviews where he told all the lies that he told against Governor Fayose and the people of Ekiti State, I am constrained to make my position known on this new development.

    “Even though Governor Fayose, being someone with large heart may not be too happy that I am making this statement, but as one of the major dramatis personae in the whole saga, my conscience won’t allow me to just keep silent after all the pains and confusion caused by Aluko.

    “I did say on Channels Television that giving the right situation or after Aluko must have concluded his scamming of the APC and its gullible leaders, he will return to Governor Fayose and recant everything that he had said.

    “Today, I have been vindicated because Aluko has done just that and I wonder how he will feel when he comes face to face with the people that he has destroyed. I wonder how he will feel when he comes face to face with those fine military officers that he went to Kaduna to lie against and made them to lose their jobs.

    “Also, I wonder how those who funded him will be feeling now, having failed to listen when I was consistently saying that they were being duped. I wonder how the Department of State Services (DSS) men who took Aluko’s lies and acted on them by invading the State House of Assembly will feel now that they have integrity problem because of what he (Aluko) made them to do.

    “However, I salute my boss, Governor Fayose, for once again displaying his statesmanship because only a statesman with a large heart can hold the hands of someone like TKO Aluko after all that he did to pull down his government.”

    Against this background, people are reading different meanings to the issue. Those who sympathise with Aluko, cite last week Wednesday’s (March 30) press conference in Ado Ekiti, where he declared that Fayose was afraid of his shadows over his revelations. On that day, Aluko’s supporters and government’s loyalists led by one of Fayose’s aide and a former local government chairman almost clashed at the Old Governor’s Office. Fayose’s supporters had stormed the venue of the press conference when they got wind of Aluko’s presence, but fortunately he had left the place.

    Before Aluko recanted, the Ekiti PDP had reacted, dismissing the his purported reconciliation with the governor as a non-issue. In a press statement, the party rejected the idea of Aluko returning to the fold. According to its Publicity Secretary, Jackson Adebayo, the party said Aluko is not wanted in its fold and that whatever transpired between him and Fayose was a personal and would not alter the decision to expel him expulsion from the party.

    Adebayo said: “As far as the PDP in Ekiti State was concerned, Aluko has been expelled and he remained expelled. After collaborating with the APC to cause the confusion in the state, I can say it categorically that Aluko is not welcomed in the PDP in Ekiti State.

    “Perhaps, he is targeting the next convention of the party so that he can perpetrate another treacherous act, but I can tell Nigerians, especially our teeming members and supporters in Ekiti State that even though we respect our leader, Governor Fayose and we trust his judgment, a treacherous man like TKO Aluko is not welcomed in the PDP.”

    The latest development on the issue has however thrown many observers off-balance. Many observers in Ekiti believe that the latest twist in the tale is part of a grand design by Fayose to ‘finish’ Aluko politically. Others say the whole episode has put a question mark on Aluko’s credibility. But, one thing is certain: Nigerians would hear more on this matter in the days to come.

    Aluko and Fayose parted ways after the latter failed to appoint former as the Chief of Staff as previously agreed. Rather, Fayose appointed the former Director-General of his campaign organisation, Dipo Anisulowo, as his Chief of Staff. But, Aluko would have none of that; he accused the governor of abusing the party constitution by allegedly taking many decisions without carrying the State Working Committee (SWC) along.

    The crisis between the two dramatic personae continued to fester with subsequent steps taken by the wily governor. Analysts are of the view that Fayose capitalised on the first opportunity that came along after the election to consolidate his hold on the party structure in the state. For instance, with the elevation of the former state Chairman, Makanjuola Ogundipe, to party’s Chairman in the Southwest, the state chapter was expected to fill the vacancy. Fayose did not beat about the bush, but utilised the chance to put one of his followers, Idowu Faleye, on the saddle, as the acting Chairman.

    But, Aluko and other SWC members saw it an imposition. In May last year, Aluko and other SWC members loyal to him ‘forced’ Faleye to tender his resignation and appointed former Vice Chairman (Ekiti North), Tunde Olatunde, as the acting Chairman, a move which embarrassed Fayose.

    In the midst of the leadership crisis, the tenancy of the state party secretariat expired and a dude cheque was issued to the owner of the building, Ropo Adesanya, who is a former chairman of the state chapter. Angered by the fact that the cheque bounced when he went to cash the money, Adesanya, who had since defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC), dragged the PDP to an Ado Ekiti Chief Magistrate’s Court where the case is still pending.

    Fayose later restored Faleye to his post and engineered the suspension of Aluko and three other SWC members; Olatunde, Mrs. Busola Oyebode (Women Leader) and Tunji Olanrewaju (Auditor). A disciplinary committee was later set up which recommended the expulsion of the quartet; a recommendation that was expressly carried out by the Faleye-led faction, backed by the Elders’ Committee.

    Aluko and the SWC members loyal to him filed a suit at an Ado Ekiti High Court to challenge their expulsion, but the case is still pending. Aluko bid his time to fight back and the opportunity came with the inauguration of January 12 of a Military Board of Inquiry into the misconduct of soldiers, who allegedly participated in the famed Ekitigate.

    He traveled to Kaduna, venue of the sitting, to give evidence before the Maj.-Gen. Adeniyi Oyebade-led panel and tendered documents on the involvement of officers and men of the Nigerian Army in the rigging of Ekiti governorship poll. His appearance before the panel sent shock waves back home as he reportedly tendered documents that revealed how soldiers gave ‘undue’ advantage to PDP at the poll.

    As if that was not enough, Aluko shocked many Nigerians when he appeared on a live programme on Channels Television on Sunday, January 31, and made startling revelations on how the governorship poll was rigged in favour of Fayose. Before appearing on the programme, Aluko had earlier in the same day addressed reporters in Abuja on the issue and the news was already been in the public domain. But, the live programme was the icing of the cake.

    Aluko alleged that former President Jonathan released a total sum of $37 million (about N4.7 billion) to influence Fayose’s victory both at the PDP primary election and the main governorship election. He also revealed that the party at a strategy meeting held in Aso Rock Villa convinced Jonathan to release a huge sum of money and order the military and other security agencies to cooperate with the PDP to ensure that the party wins the governorship poll.

  • Fayose, Aluko draw battle line as ‘truce’ crashes

    Fayose, Aluko draw battle line as ‘truce’ crashes

    •Says no reconciliation with governor
    •Govt files mandamus for arrest

    Did the embattled whistleblower on the last Ekiti State governorship election, Dr. Tope Aluko and Governor Ayo Fayose really reconcile on Sunday in Lagos?

    Contrary to what the world was made to believe, the “raging feud” between the duo is far from being over.

    Aluko, who described the reconciliation between him and Fayose as a “joke of the Century”, insisted that he never begged for forgiveness from the governor as being peddled in some quarters.

    He accused Fayose’s Special Assistant on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka of “hypocrisy, distortion of facts and spreading lies” on the “reconciliation process”.

    At a briefing in Lagos, Aluko said he was under duress to admit to a reconciliation, which was aimed at tarnishing his integrity.

    He said he went to Eko Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos on Sunday to honour an invitation by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leadership to address some issues affecting the state.

    Aluko said he went to the meeting with his wife, adding that he was shocked to see the governor walk into the meeting. He noted that he accepted to be at the meeting because he was invited by two senior members of the party.

    His words: “I need not recall the drama and face-off that ensued between Fayose and I at the meeting. At a point, my wife barged into the meeting to inform me of the presence of reporters.

    “I became enraged and decided to leave the place but I noticed the governor rushing after me downstairs in a Gestapo manner.

    “My wife was fidgeting and almost crying and suddenly I could not find her around me. I realised that I need to obey Fayose’s instruction to face the press because of my family’s safety.”

    The former PDP scribe said he still stand by his words. “I have earlier told Nigerians about the manipulation of the 2014 governorship election and I still stand by all I said.

    “You will notice the several counter allegations by Fayose and his media team that none of them has refuted all I have said. Rather the attack has been on the messenger and not the message. I will like to apologise to Nigerians that perhaps, accepting the invitation was a tactical error.

    “I will also like you to know that I am dealing with a master fraudster who is always full of mischief. You will all recollect how he announced the purported death of Afolabi Akanni; the purported arrest of four members of the House of Assembly.

    “I need to emphasise that all that transpired at Eko Hotel on that day was an organised propaganda/drama to stain my image and malign my personal integrity and I believe it would be a good script for Nollywood,” he said.

    Aluko also spoke on his Twitter handle where he posted two tweets on what really transpired in Lagos.

    In a tweet posted on Monday, he said:  “I did not collect any money from Fayose. I was invited to a meeting by well meaning Nigerians and I felt it was imperative to honour such a meeting but I was surprised to see reporters around.”

    In another tweet posted yesterday, the PDP chieftain described the governor as a “chameleon”, adding that the reconciliation was staged to assassinate his character.

    Aluko declared that the battle line is now drawn and will continue until there is a victor and a vanquished.

    He said: “I did not beg Fayose, he approached me and it was courteous that I honored Ekiti leaders who wanted peace to reign in Ekiti, contrary to the lies being spread by Fayose’s mouthpiece Lere Olayinka.

    “I have come forward in strong terms to rubbish Olayinka’s hypocrisy with his distortion of facts about the reconciliation process. The spread of lies about my ‘repentance’ is calculated.

    “Fayose and his paid agents are cowards who only want sympathy through the back door. Their pranks can only be described as ‘the joke of the century’.

    “I know Fayose well. He is a chameleon and I also know that he must have devised all these arrangements to further assassinate my character and that was why I was meticulous by not speaking to the press.

    “Like I said  on Monday, I won’t dignify Olayinka with a response and I won’t join issues with him but the public should know that it was peace they claim they wanted and now that they have indicated their insincerity, it therefore means the battle continues until there is a victor and a vanquished.”

    The government has said the case of perjury against Aluko would go on in court.

    Addressing a briefing in Ado-Ekiti yesterday, the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Owoseni Ajayi, said the state has filed a mandamus in the court to compel Aluko’s arrest.

    This, he said, became necessary, following the failure of the Commissioner of Police and the Inspector General of Police to arrest Aluko, following an arrest warrant ordered by an Ado-Ekiti Chief Magistrate’s Court.

    Ajayi alleged that the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami,  has not done enough to advise the Federal Government to obey court orders.

    The commissioner claimed that despite the warrant of arrest slammed on him, Aluko still goes about with military and police escorts.

    Ajayi said: “The apology of Aluko to Governor Fayose was personal. We can’t because of this interventionist apology collapse all our cases, government is not run that way.

    “We can’t abandon our responsibilities as a state just because someone

    apologised to our governor on a case already in court. They are not fresh cases and we will pursue it to a logical conclusion,” he said.

    APC: reconciliation changes nothing

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has said that the purported truce between Governor Ayo Fayose and Dr Tope Aluko will not alter anything on the revelations on the probe of the June 21, 2014 governorship election fraud.

    It maintained that the meeting between Fayose and Aluko won’t affect the credibility of the evidence Aluko forwarded to the military on the alleged rigging of the 2014 governorship poll.

    The APC denied luring Aluko to lie against Fayose and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), saying what transpired in Lagos over the weekend was an internal affair of the umbrella party and that the opposition had no hand in it.

    The truce report has started generating ripples among Nigerians, with Fayose’s media aide, Lere Olayinka, dismissing the army probe as a charade.

    But APC Publicity Secretary Taiwo Olatunbosun said in a statement yesterday that the reported truce between Fayose and Aluko would not alter anything in the revelations at the probe panel.

    He said it was mischievous to insinuate that Aluko was lured by the APC to lie against Fayose and the military officers who were dismissed after they were found guilty by the Army probe panel.

    Dismissing allegations that Aluko was lured by APC to implicate Fayose and the soldiers, Olatunbosun explained:

    “This is purely an internal matter within PDP and so APC has no hand in it. The reported meeting between Fayose and Aluko brokered by PDP leaders has proven conclusively that the latter is a full member of PDP.

    “It is that recognition by PDP that made its leaders to invite the duo to a peace meeting, and contrary to Olayinka’s insinuation, it is on record that Aluko had always insisted that his revelation at the probe panel was in response to APC’s petition against him on the controversial election in which he had to make restitution through confession to clear his conscience.”

    He added: “It is mischievous to insinuate that Aluko’s reconciliation with Fayose will hurt the credibility of the probe panel. We must note that Aluko swore to an oath before making his testimony at the probe panel, and so his statement remains sacrosanct till the last is heard on the matter to ensure justice in the resolution of Ekitigate.”

    He also warned Olayinka against attempt to discredit the entire probe process by saying that the military relied on Aluko’s lie to dismiss its top officers.

  • Bruce hails Aluko after MOTM Display

    Bruce hails Aluko after MOTM Display

    Hull City coach, Steve Bruce has lavished praise on Sone Aluko, noting that he was outstanding in his side’s 4-0 thrashing of Bristol City in the Championship on Saturday.

    The Nigeria international had made a name for himself at the KC Stadium when he initially joined the club from Rangers in Scotland but has struggled to replicate those performances after picking up an Achilles injury.

    The 27-year-old Aluko scored his third goal of the season and notched an assist in the huge victory over Peter Odemwingie’s Bristol City.

    “We all know that Sone was terrific for six months when he first arrived here before having a horrible Achilles problem that effectively kept him out for 12 months,” said Bruce to Hull City’s official website.

    “He was then trying to play catch-up in the Premier League and he found it a bit of a struggle.

    “But we all know the ability he has got and when he’s good, like he was in this one, he makes the team play. He was terrific.”

    Sone Aluko has appeared 27 times for The Tigers in all competitions this season and has accumulated 1,195 minutes of game time.

  • Aluko: we allowed Fayemi, Bamidele win their wards

    Aluko: we allowed Fayemi, Bamidele win their wards

    More facts have emerged on what happened during the June 21, 2014 governorship election in Ekiti State.

    Embattled whistleblower Temitope Aluko claimed that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) released N200,000 per unit to be shared to voters on election day.

    The PDP chieftain claimed that N50,000 was released to the wards of the two other main contenders, former Governor Kayode Fayemi of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and Opeyemi Bamidele then of the  Labour Party (LP), “to weaken the PDP there for strategic reasons”.

    Speaking to reporters in Ado-Ekiti yesterday, Aluko said Fayemi and Bamidele were “allowed” to win their wards to “make the charade appear real” and in view of the post-election litigations that would follow.

    He said he sacrificed his ward to fulfill Fayose’s alleged electoral conspiracy and coup against the people.

    The state has 2,195 polling units and 177 wards and elections were conducted there in the 2014 governorship election.

    Aluko was reacting to the statement credited to Fayose’s media aide Lere Olayinka that he (Aluko) failed to win his unit and ward and hence lacks any electoral value.

    The state PDP scribe, who hails from the same ward as Bamidele and former Governor Adeniyi Adebayo, said they had agreed at a PDP strategy meeting not to tamper with results from Fayemi’s and Bamidele’s wards so that Fayose would have effective grounds to prove his case at the Election Petition Tribunal.

    According to him, he has in his possession a post-election strategic document, which he promised to reveal to the public, if Fayose wants him to do so.

    “I have more details that would shock the world,” he said.

    Aluko said: “I have my facts and figures which I will release one after the other.

    “I have documents to show all those who collected money and those who signed for the money collected.

    “Nigerians should just wait. They have not seen anything yet on the election fraud.

    “My attention was drawn as to why I lost my ward during the poll.

    “But I want it on record that losing my ward was part of the post-election strategy because we were aware that  Fayemi would go to court after losing the election.

    “Being the leader of the Fayose’s political army, we both agreed that we should allow Fayemi and Bamidele to win in their wards, because you are all aware that these are the only two candidates that could take us up.

    “It was a way of having genuine reasons in court that made me lose my ward.

    “That was why we distributed N200,000 per polling  unit during the election, but we only gave N50,000 to the polling units of our opponents and this formed part of our argument at the tribunal.”

    Aluko dismissed the allegation that he collected millions of Naira from the APC to bring down Fayose’s government.

    “I cannot collect money from the party which wrote petitions against me.

    “I remain a PDP member. It was petitions from the APC that led me to police, DSS and EFCC detentions for 26 days after I revealed how the election was rigged”.

    He denied involvement in the alleged plot to arrest 11 members of the House of Assembly.

    The PDP chieftain described the lawmakers’ allegation as another “attention-seeking gimmick” from the governor.

    Aluko concluded: “I know Fayose’s strategy, he is only seeking attention. If you get to Ado-Ekiti now, all the lawmakers are moving around freely.

    “I don’t know what their intentions are. They are heating up the polity and threatening people around, including me.

    “I am not afraid of them and I am ready for them anytime, any day.”

  • What I told DSS, police, by Aluko

    What I told DSS, police, by Aluko

    The whistleblower on the alleged rigging of the June 21, 2014 governorship election in Ekiti State, Dr. Tope Aluko, yesterday appeared in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, reliving his encounter with security and anti-graft agencies.

    The embattled Secretary of the state Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) said he spent 12 days in the Department of State Services (DSS) custody, five days with the police and another five days with Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) operatives.

    Aluko said Governor Ayo Fayose was running from his shadow, following his (Aluko’s) startling revelations that the election which produced him (Fayose) as the winner  was rigged.

    The former university don, on a Channels Television programme, POLITICS TODAY, on January 31, giving details of how the Goodluck Jonathan administration deployed $37 million and security forces to rig the poll.

    He said since his revelation, Fayose had been gripped by fear.

     Aluko said he volunteered oral, documentary and electronic evidence to security agencies on how the election was manipulated.

    Addressing a briefing in Ado-Ekiti, Aluko said he remains the PDP secretary  as he and other aggrieved State Working Committee (SWC) members have filed a suit against their purported removal by a faction loyal to Fayose.

    He noted that the petition which landed him in custody was written by the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Aluko denied betraying Fayose, maintaining that the governor can never deny that the election was not rigged.

    He said: ”The APC sent the petition to the DSS, police and EFCC.

    “I was shocked when the government said I’m Judas. The government is the Judas because it betrayed me.

    “I am still a member of the PDP. It was the APC which sent the petition .

    “During the interrogations, I was asked so many questions and I answered truthfully.

     “I gave them the answers, because I said I wanted to do restitution and that is what I’ve done.

    “So if Lere (Olayinka) is now saying that somebody is a Judas.   It is Lere that is the Judas. I know what transpired between  Lere and I but I won’t say it here.

    “If Governor Fayose is running away from his shadow that is his problem.

    “The security operatives  did not maltreat me and I don’t know if they would  charge me to court, because I’m actually on bail.

    “I don’t know if they will invite me again. If they do, I will go. I have said all I have to say on Channels Television and my mind is free.

    “ I worked for Fayose. We did everything together, he cannot deny it.

    “And if he is now talking about glorifying somebody and calling me Judas, he is the Judas.”

  • Govt to Aluko: you are a Judas

    Govt to Aluko: you are a Judas

    The Ekiti State Government has accused the poll fraud whistleblower, Dr. Tope Aluko, of making millions from the All Progressives Congress (APC) in a bid to remove Governor Ayo Fayose.

    It accused Aluko of feeding the police and the Department of State Services (DSS) with lies that the Peoples Democratic Party  (PDP) stockpiled arms during the June 21, 2014 election.

    Fayose’s Special Assistant on Public Communications and New Media Lere Olayinka, in a statement yesterday labelled Aluko as a “Judas”, who he said would soon be dumped by his “principals”.

    He said it was laughable that someone who was expelled from the PDP is still claiming to be a member.

    “Can Aluko be a member of PDP by force even when PDP has said he is not wanted?”

    The statement reads: “Aluko and his likes can continue to run from pillar to post. All their efforts will come to naught. Like the Biblical Judas, we will all live to see how those treating him like their man Friday  will dump him.

    Describing Aluko’s claims as “ talks from a demented mind”, Olayinka said Nigerians must ask him why he was unable to deliver his polling unit in Iyin-Ekiti to the PDP, if indeed he was the arrowhead of the rigging.

    “Aluko can continue with his journey of political perfidy. He can keep running while enjoying the proceeds of his political 419. But like the Biblical Judas, he can only run; he will be caught by his deeds one day.”

  • How we rigged Ekiti polls with $35m, by Aluko

    How we rigged Ekiti polls with $35m, by Aluko

    Contoversy over the June 21,2014 Ekiti governorship election is still raging almost two years after. A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Dr.Tope Aluko, who played a key role in the victory of Mr. Ayodele Fayose as governor, is divulging what his party did to compromise the integrity of the poll. He spoke at the weekend on Channels Television.

    On the Strike Force

     

    In fact senator Iyiola was very right. It was not a scheduled meeting. They were just in the middle of Ayo Fayose’s room. The strike teams were a mixture of DSS (Department of State Security), the military and MOPOL (Mobile Police). Yes, that’s about all.

    Aluko presented documents purportedly showing names and ranks of the strike team and the people they were supposed to hit.

    Not as in to kill but to just demoralise them; detain them, so that once you take out the opposition leaders and you take out the cash, they wanted to give their supporters, then that would be all. That was the agreement we had then. There were 44 teams, made up of about 11 per truck (Hilux vans) and they were supposed to have a contact person there. A contact person was somebody in the PDP that was supposed to show them where the opposition leaders. Before that time in May, we had 64 people coming together.

    They brought in 1040 soldiers under the leadership of Brig Momoh and then a strong politician too, who somebody identified as Ubah but not Senator Ubah (Andy), brought in from Enugu another 400 (soldiers). With that, we had more than enough to cage the whole opposition in the state. What we did was to block all the routes leading into the state and to block all the APC-controlled areas.

     

    Developments before

    the election

     

    Let me tell you what happened. There was a small riot in mid-May in Iyin-Ekiti, my home town. And I think Governor Fayemi called in the military from Akure to quell the riot. And it was at that point that we realised that our plans were not going to work out well, because we did not have the control of the military. That was when we petitioned the former GOC so that he would be taken away from Akure and he was replaced him with a more amenable GOC in Brig-Gen. Momoh. That decision was taken at the last security meeting. It was there that the then President told Minimah, the former Defence chief, with others in attendance that Ayo Fayose would stand in for him. He said Áyo Fayose would stand in for me in Ekiti politics.’ He didn’t sy more than that, but of course to all the military men as the C-in-C; that they had to provide an amenable Brigade Commander to join the DSS personnel that were brought in from outside the state. Now, when you look at the strike team, we had 44 teams. In fact, all the van that organised for the 44-member strike team members were actually parked in my place, in my house. I was the party secretary and the chief returning officer, as well as the chairman of security and intelligence and also the co-ordinator of the campaign.

    By Wednesday (June 18, 2014), the strike team members were distributed to the 16 local government areas and each council had an anchorage, who was a key leader in the PDP. All this you can see in the slide.

    The slides showed the residence of some leaders and how the military laid the siege

    Explaining…..Those were the routes that were blocked. They were about 10 and when you looked at those special polling units, we are not talking about all polling units in a ward. It’s either high volume polling units or polling units that were very weak or those that they must operate on. And when you come down, you’ll see that the man that was the contact person is now the current speaker; that’s Pastor Kola Oluwawole. He was PRO (Public Relations Officer) in my own SWC (State Working Committee) and the state PRO then. He was the one that co-ordinated that.  And then when you look at the other people there with their numbers, they were the ones that were manning the routes and taking care of the team. Let’s go now to where we have the team. Let’s go to the residences, we’ll call it the anchorage.

    In some local governments depending on the size, those are the key residences where they were anchored, where their welfare was taken care of. You notice that those people in charge, one is now a senator, one is a commissioner and one is a member of House of Reps, somebody has moved out.

    We had them in their anchorages three days before. They had targets that they were supposed to destroy. They went to houses of APC members and the people who were disgruntled with us. They were in PDP then but we didn’t want to take any chances.  So, they were also visited  as opposition members and they were harassed. At times, they were arrested and kept in special detention camps in primary schools or friendly police stations till Sunday morning. The strike force members operated till Sunday morning. And by Sunday morning when there was no opposition in sight again We told members of the team that they should keep any cash found on the opposition leaders.

     

    On whether INEC

    manipulated the process

     

    Answer: No, no, no no. INEC was not manipulated? INEC was settled. I don’t want to go into the issue of INEC.

     

    On why he won’t

    discuss INEC role

     

    No, because we’re talking about Ekitigate. Okay let me tell you what happened. INEC was the second option. INEC was the second option because by May in Abuja, we had given N1 billion to INEC for the two states, for the two states. And it was not Jega. Jega was not involved. Jega was not involved? It was to ensure that the returning officers from FUTA were our own. And I can give you the names of the two people who coordinated it. One was Oluwawole and the other was Adekanbi. They had to look for amenable returning officers from FUO.

     

    On the integrity

    of lecturers

     

    You are just saying that. They didn’t even know what was happening. The funding came for the primaries. It came from Ifeanyi Ubah who we met at the NNPC Towers in Abuja. He gave us $2 million on behalf of Mr. President. It was in cash and not too clean. $100 bills and he (Ubah) said that they had to retain 300,000 as courier fees for those people in the presidency.

     

    On the implication of

    mentioning peoples names

     

    Because I have to tell the truth and because I was there. I was privy to the process. I was there at the NNNP Towers. I was there with the Rt. Hon. Femi Bamisile. He gave the money in cash, less $300, 0000. And we now took the cash to Prince and princess into his house and he put it in his wardrobe. And he said we should go down to Ekiti for the primaries, to get them ready for the primaries. I was the head of the team, the head of the pro-primaries. That is the funding..(points to slide). You can see that that is the funding, that is Ekiti East and you can see that that is Ayodele Fayose’s signature. Let the slide go down.

     

    On how much was

    spent on the election

     

    It was $35 million and it came in January, not June 17. I was privy to all the arrangements. Obanikoro was just the courier. It came in from the former National Security Adviser Sambo Dasuki. The money was given from the former NSA in cash and by a courier. Because we asked for security and we asked for funds and Mr. President said everything would be made available. We had a meeting on Thursday, Wednesday, or Thursday. I think Wednesday 18th or so. And that is the money given out to the strike team. It was N1 million per van per day and they worked for three days, that is N132 million. And then for those people that blocked the road,  it was N4 million for the period and we’re talking about 16 local governments, making it N64 million.

     

     On the involvement

    of Hon Kareem Abisodun

     

    He was at the meeting thatwas attended by Koli. But, he was more of a personal friend to… If he says he was part of the security meeting, that’s a different thing. He wasn’t at the security meeting but he was at the meeting in Ekiti, in Spotless Hotel. Or Koli had lied about his presence?  If I’m saying he was there and Koli said he was there. I don’t have any issue with Hon Kareem. I’m just telling the truth to the whole world so that we’ll know how to manage our democracy.

     

    Implications of blowing the whistle

     

    Because I was part of it does that mean I shouldn’t have any proper legacy that I’ll leave to my children? Why should I be afraid? Have we not done it?

  • Aluko has no credibility, says Fayose’s aide

    Aluko has no credibility, says Fayose’s aide

    Special Assistant to the Governor on Information & New Media, Mr. Lere Olayinka, also featured on Channels Television to counter Dr. Tope Aluko’s claims on how the June 21 governorship election in Ekiti State was compromised. He believes both Aluko and his testimonies are only fit for the trash can.

    Special Assistant to the Governor on Information & New Media, Mr. Lere Olayinka, also featured on Channels Television to counter Dr. Tope Aluko’s claims on how the June 21 governorship election in Ekiti State was compromised. He believes both Aluko and his testimonies are only fit for the trash can.

    On Aluko’s revelation

     

    I’m not surprised by what my brother, I used to call him former leader, has said because of his kind of person that I know. When you know someone that is of unstable character, whatever he says, you won’t be surprised. Because you know somebody who was a lecturer in a university, who was involved in admission racketeering, who was involved in issuing certificates, selling certificates to students. He was eased out of the system by the administration of Prof Dipo Kolawole for offences like that. So, if he comes here to say some of these things, you’ll just laugh it off. And he has said it all by himself that he’s here to say all of these things because Governor Fayose did not make him Chief of Staff. He started the whole story and ended it by himself, because the implication is that if Fayose had made him Chief of Staff, he wouldn’t be here saying all of this and if today he receives a phone call from Governor Fayose saying Mr. T. K. Aluko, you have been appointed as Chief of Staff, he will rush to this TV station and say ‘everything I’ve said before, I didn’t say it again.’

     

    On the veracity of

    Aluko’s claim

     

    You see, you can believe personalities and people if they have integrity. Listen, if somebody of his status deposes to an affidavit, appears before a court or tribunal on November 12, 2014, he gave evidence that the election that brought in Governor Fayose was free, fair, credible and transparent. He did that on oath and now, he has come here to say something else, you can excuse him because he’s angry. He has come here to ventilate his anger and everybody is free to be angry. He is angry because he was not made Chief of Staff. So, if he was not made Chief of Staff, I’m also computer literate, I can type names, put signatures and bring the documents here. Anybody can do that. If you want to run an election, won’t you have the names of your party leaders from your local government, from the wards, the polling units, won’t you have their names? So, if you have their names… I’ve seen the documents. He listed the names of the party leaders in the various wards. So, what is wrong in that? You see, this person who is here (pointing at Aluko), like I said, he said it all; ‘I’m here because Fayose did not make me Chief of Staff. If he had made me Chief of Staff, I would,’ probably he would be the person sitting here defending the governor.

     

    On Aluko’s credibility and the weight of his allegations

     

    Which facts has he brought? Is there any election that you don’t fund? It depends on the amount.  Is there any election in Nigeria, in the whole world that is not funded? In the election of… What I’m saying is Governor Fayose’s election was funded just the same way former Governor Fayemi’s election was funded. Where the funds came from is what I will not be able to discuss. They have come here to say that…you see Aso Rock, Aso Villa is not where every Tom, Dick and Harry will go to, because I can also come here. Mr. T.K.O. Aluko, during the primaries, he has said so many things, I have read about him. Honestly there are so many things I shouldn’t be saying here, but I have to say it here, because I met Prince Dayo Adeyeye before the PDP primaries. He was the secretary of the PDP. He collected money from Dayo Adeyeye. He collected money from almost all the aspirants. What I’m saying is this. This man who is seated here is not a witness of truth. I was with Prince Ayo Adeyeye before the primaries, I didn’t work with Fayose. I was among the people who also advised Governor Fayose not to make him (Aluko) Chief of Staff, because I know his character. Immediately after the election, the people of Ekiti, including traditional rulers and community leaders, told the governor that this person you want to appoint your Chief of Staff, will destroy your government. He’s not a stable character. I was there. Is he not exhibiting the character of an unstable person now? If he had been made Chief of Staff, he wouldn’t be here saying all these.

     

    On allegations that

    $35 million was spent

    to fund the election

     

    How would anybody say that…is it possible? $35 million is about N5 billion. Because he read in the papers about two three days ago that certain funds were traced to the account of Obanikoro’s son, he quickly jumped at it. You see this my brother here – I call him my former leader – has come here to confess  that he has  committed a crime. You see, in Nigeria we should begin to reason beyond party sentiments. Now, he has come to say that, ‘I went to the tribunal to lie on oath. That is perjury, an offence that attracts three years imprisonment. If President Buhari is going to demonstrate to Nigerians that his fight against corruption is not along party lines, this man – seated here  – should be arrested as he steps out of this studio. Since he has come here to confess that he rigged Governor Fayose to become governor. There was no $35 million to spend. It is a lie! You see, in every election, money must be spent. People must donate money to fund elections. Governor Fayose’s friends, associates, brothers, sisters, family, everbody, including his enemies, including artisans in Ekiti donated money to his campaign and I also donated money.

     

    On the implication of some

    military personnel by a

    board of inquiry over

    alleged compromise

     

    Let me tell you one thing.  The military panel was set up to investigate the role of military officers in Ekiti, Osun, Akwa Ibom, Rivers, including presidential elections. Those who have been sanctioned, can you tell me categorically that they were sanctioned on the basis of their involvement in Ekiti? We don’t even know whether their sanction was because of their involvement in Rivers. It was an inquiry into Ekiti, Osun, Rivers and Akwa Ibom. On January 14, this year, the state government wrote to the military to demand for the certified true copy of the report. Today is January 31, we don’t have that report. We don’t have it. Do you have it? Do you have the full report? There is a difference between the summary of a report and the full report. The same way the summary you’re talking about, the press was also briefed.