Tag: Amaechi

  • 2027: Ohanaeze knocks Amaechi over attack on INEC chairman

    2027: Ohanaeze knocks Amaechi over attack on INEC chairman

    Youth wing of apex Igbo socio-cultural organisation, Ohanaeze Ndigbo Youth Council Worldwide, has tackled former Minister of Transportation, Chibuike Amaechi, over his attack on the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof Mahmood Yakubu.

    Amaechi had, while appearing on Channels Television, accused Mahmood of frustrating the registration of new political parties.

    He also described him as shameless and in the mould of former INEC chairman, Prof Maurice Iwu.

    Amaechi did not spare former President Goodluck Jonathan, accusing him of trying to scuttle the zoning arrangement in the country.

     Reacting, the national president of Ohanaeze Ndigbo Youth Council Worldwide, Mazi Okwu Nnabuike, said the likes of Amaechi should be hiding their faces in shame.

    Okwu said, having brought calamity upon the country by their actions in the past, Amaechi had no morality to criticise either Yakubu or the current President Bola Tinubu administration.

    The Ohanaeze Youths President said it was strange that Yakubu, who has overseen one of the best elections in the country, could come under such attacks from Amaechi.

    “It appears that Amaechi and his likes have forgotten that under Prof Mahmood Yakubu, sitting governors lost elections in 2023. While some could not go to the senate, sitting governors have even lost re-election bids.

    “These are things that used to be rare in Nigeria’s electoral process, but under Yakubu, Nigerians now know that anybody can lose an election.

    “It is also evident that most of the elections conducted by the commission were validated by the courts, except those that had issues of nominations arising from their political parties.

    “How else does Amaechi rate performance, except the fact that his preferred presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, did not win,” Okwu queried.

    Read Also: Group faults Amaechi over comments on Tinubu’s govt

    He went further to say that Yakubu had performed his predecessors in office since the return of the country’s democracy in 1999, stressing that “he deserves accolades and encouragement from Nigerians of goodwill; what the commission needs is strengthened legislation to perfect the strategies put on the ground already.”

    On the issues of the 2027 election, Okwu also lambasted Amaechi for putting himself forward to get the ticket of the African Democratic Congress, ADC.

    He described the former Rivers governor as a hypocrite and urged the promoters of the opposition coalition to be mindful of him.

    “This is the same man who said he worked against Jonathan because of zoning, yet he wants to position himself to get the presidential ticket of the ADC, whereas he is from the same South-South as Jonathan.

    “If he is an apostle of equity and zoning as he claimed, why is he not supporting an Igbo man to emerge as the presidential candidate of the ADC, considering that down South, only the South-East has not occupied the seat since 1999.

    “How do you trust a man who tells you he is an Igbo man today, and then tomorrow, he will turn around to say it was all politics?

    “It is glaring that we are dealing with a desperado, whose only anger is that President Tinubu defeated him during the APC presidential primary.

    “He is not in the coalition to protect the interest of the masses, except that of his inordinate ambition and quest for power.

    “Nigerians must say No to Amaechi and his likes; we have had enough deceit; Nigerians are wiser now. Amaechi should retire to his community,” Okwu declared.

  • Group faults Amaechi over comments on Tinubu’s govt

    Group faults Amaechi over comments on Tinubu’s govt

    …urges FG to take action

    The Grassroots Mobilisation Initiative (GMI) has condemned recent remarks made by former Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, describing them as “reckless, inflammatory, and a veiled call to violence.”

    Amaechi had reportedly suggested that the only way to prevent President Bola Ahmed Tinubu from returning to power in 2027 was for Nigerians to “take their fate into their own hands.”

    He further alleged that fewer than 100,000 elites are plundering the country’s wealth while 200 million Nigerians continue to suffer, implying a potential uprising against the ruling class.

    In a statement issued on Friday, the national coordinator of GMI, Samaila Musa, described Amaechi’s comments as “deeply troubling,” warning that they pose a grave threat to the peace and stability of the country.

    The group also urged Nigerian citizens, especially the youth, to resist any calls to violence, stressing that meaningful change can only be achieved through peaceful means and civic engagement.

    Musa said, “Amaechi’s rhetoric is alarming and reminiscent of dangerous historical precedents that have led to violence and bloodshed. By suggesting that citizens should engage in confrontation with the elite, he is essentially advocating for chaos and disorder.

    “The implication that Nigerians should emulate the actions of citizens in other countries, such as Bangladesh, Peru, or Chile, disregards the unique socio-political context of Nigeria. Our nation has a history of violence that must not be reignited by the careless words of a frustrated political figure who has held significant positions of power.

    “The Grassroots Mobilisation Initiative (GMI) firmly rebukes Amaechi’s statement that revolutions cannot occur without bloodshed. This notion is not only misguided but also a direct invitation to violence. We must remind Amaechi of the responsibilities that come with his previous roles in government.

    Read Also: Group launches taskforce to end gender based violence in Enugu

    “As a former minister, he had the opportunity to contribute to nation-building and social cohesion, yet he now chooses to incite division and discord. Such behaviour is unbecoming of a leader and is detrimental to the progress of our society.

    “It is disheartening to witness a former leader, who has benefited from the very system he now criticises, resort to inflammatory language. His comments reflect a profound misunderstanding of the power dynamics in Nigeria and a dangerous underestimation of the consequences of his words.”

    He urged Amaechi to reconsider his stance and engage in constructive dialogue rather than inciting violence among the populace.

    He added, “In light of these provocative statements, The Grassroots Mobilisation Initiative (GMI) calls upon the federal government to take immediate action against Amaechi. It is unacceptable for a former leader to incite the populace to violence and chaos.

    “His incitement to violence cannot be overlooked, and we believe that his arrest is necessary to prevent potential unrest. It is crucial for leaders to promote peace, unity, and constructive discourse, especially in a country that has faced numerous challenges in its quest for stability and progress.

    “Our strength lies not in conflict but in our ability to come together as a united front against corruption and misgovernance, both of which Amaechi represents. Let us channel our frustrations into peaceful advocacy for change rather than succumbing to the dangerous allure of violence. The future of Nigeria depends on our collective ability to engage in dialogue and pursue justice through peaceful means.

    “The Grassroots Mobilisation Initiative (GMI) stands firmly against the incitement of violence and calls for responsible leadership. We demand that Rotimi Amaechi retract his statements and recognise the weight of his influence on the youth of Nigeria. It is time for all leaders to prioritise the well-being of our nation over personal ambitions and to foster an environment of peace and unity.”

  • Atiku, el-Rufai, Amaechi and All Democratic Alliance

    Atiku, el-Rufai, Amaechi and All Democratic Alliance

    After waiting for months for the other shoe to drop, the opposition coalition movement has finally proposed a new party altogether in their iron determination to dethrone President Bola Tinubu. He is their main target. Led by the implacable former vice president Atiku Abubakar and seconded by the equally agitated former governors Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State and Nasir el-Rufai of Kaduna State, what was initially planned as a merger or coalition of parties has become an independent, stand-alone, political organisation, the All Democratic Alliance (ADA). Last month, they had been undecided whether to throw in their lot with an existing party, which would have been less burdensome to their finances and their suspect organisational skills, or to bite the bullet and start afresh, a tantalising but nervy prospect. They toyed with the idea of committing to the Social Democratic Party (SDP), in which the feisty Mallam el-Rufai briefly cavorted and beckoned on his mates to join, or attaching themselves to the African Democratic Congress (ADC), which they saw as less controversial and more amenable to their designs. None seemed to fit the bill, it turned out. And given the fact that they had all along flirted with a Plan B, they have now decided to burn their bridges. It is henceforth forward march into the unknown.

    The main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was the natural and special purpose vehicle choice for the brains behind the aborted coalition to execute their 2027 goals. But that former ruling behemoth saw through their schemes and was loth to be turned into an appendage by the footloose Alhaji Atiku. Angry and impatient, Alhaji Atiku and company stormed out and began fishing for new lovers, first trying out the SDP, and then the ADC, before finally berthing at the unregistered ADA. But ADA and its leaders are not in the clear yet. The party will probably be registered, especially going by how toxic the new party’s leaders have turned Nigerian politics and preemptively accused the electoral commission and other agencies of government of bias and conspiracy against the opposition. After registration, the party’s leadership structure will have to be resolved amongst dozens of potential leaders and rhetoricians with large egos. And finally, the leaders must confront and surmount the main hurdle almost certain to shake the party to its core, to wit, the contest to pick the standard-bearers for the next presidential election.

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    The new party, when registered, will boast the presence of political heavyweights and flyweights like former Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate and ex-Anambra governor, Peter Obi, former House of Representatives speaker and ex-Sokoto State governor, Aminu Tambuwal; former All Progressives Congress (APC) national chairman and ex-Edo State governor, John Oyegun; former Internal Affairs minister and ex-Osun State governor, Rauf Aregbesola; former Justice minister Abubakar Malami; former Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Babachir David Lawal; former PDP chairman Uche Secondus; and Osita Chidoka and Nnenna Ukeje. As notable as these gentlemen are, they certainly do not possess the numerical strength or ideological force to win any presidential election. They will of course hope that they could constitute the seed of the party, and that more recognisable names and aggrieved politicians will eventually defect to the party once the coast seems clear. But if at any time they see that ADA seemed to have been conceived only to drive the presidential ambition of Alhaji Atiku, they will think twice. Some defectors may already seem committed to the ADA idea, seeing how much they loath President Tinubu and are willing to sacrifice anything to see the president deposed, but others may become extremely wary of being used as tools to drive Alhaji Atiku’s obsessive agenda. Their reluctance will appear to be well-founded. For, at the moment, the general consensus is that a southerner must contest the next presidential election against President Tinubu, if it came to that, since the election might quickly transform into a North-South struggle in the face of what many fear is the looming imposition of northern hegemony driven partly by herdsmen attacks.

    The new party will also contend with how to determine its financial and administrative fulcrum. If Alhaji Atiku is not convinced beyond a shadow of doubt that he is the potential and undisputed candidate of the party in the next poll, he will be chary of spending as much as is needed to turn the party into an immovable force. Party leaders will then have to decide how to raise funds from external forces, perhaps businessmen with a grudge against the government. But even here, given how some top business leaders miscalculated in the 2023 poll and have gone the extra mile to rectify their errors, few moneymen will be eager to put the wrong foot forward again. If Alhaji Atiku hedges his financial bet, Mr Obi, who is naturally stingy, will do worse. No one of any heft in the new party will be so forward in frittering away his funds on a gamble they cannot quite convince themselves would be worth their while. Alhaji Atiku may have mooted the idea of a joint ticket with Mr Obi, but the new party will face the horrible conundrum of determining whether the vacillating Mr Obi as running mate, assuming he really joins and remains in the party, would pull as much weight as he did in 2023. Despite the reigning permutations centred on Atiku/Obi, the opportunistic duo of Mr Amaechi and Mallam el-Rufai will wait in the wings and hope that circumstances and political exigencies will force ADA to rethink their presidential ticket away from the anticipated serial contender.

    The PDP may have survived the Alhaji Atiku scare, for he had at first seemed determined to once again foist himself on the party’s presidential ticket, with all the attendant drawbacks and unworkable permutations, but it may face the fresh danger of being overtaken in terms of ranking by ADA. The new party will, however, make heavy weather of beating the PDP to the tape, considering that it is neither a coalition nor a merger, and so does not have any state under its control. Mallam el-Rufai may have boasted that the next election is not about which party has the highest number of governors in its kitty, insisting that the poll is about the electorate, but he knows in his heart that he is simply posturing. APC stood a chance of winning in 2015 because it had a number of governors on its side and also attracted a few more before the polls. More, it was truly a coalition of powerful parties and individuals, a prospect ADA can only dream of. It is unlikely that in the months ahead ADA will really become a coalition of parties. Its newness, which is strictly limited to its name and structure and organs, not its old and jaded leaders, will, therefore, be a disadvantage. Worse, if its presidential ticket is what they think it already appears to be, there will be no excitement anywhere, not even among voters.

    In the end, ADA may very well turn out to be a damp squib. It has so many things going against it than for it. It will be delusional to hope it can really compete with the ruling behemoth, or outpace the second ranked and still solid PDP. It can hope to be the new LP in 2027, for the old LP has become a hors de combat; but to aspire to be more when they are encumbered by bitter and vengeful leaders instead of ideological puritans and savvy, altruistic administrators is pure hallucination. ADA is starting on an old and dirty slate; once they are registered as expected, they must produce altruists and ideologues and nationalists capable of rethinking and rebranding Nigeria. So far, the names associated with the party reflect ethnic opportunists and promoters of religious and regional exceptionalism more than anything else. Such an amalgam will not win a presidential election; they will foul it.

  • 2027: Atiku, El-Rufai, Amaechi move to register ADA

    2027: Atiku, El-Rufai, Amaechi move to register ADA

    • Amaechi’s loyalist writes INEC seeks approval
    • Mark, Obi, Malami, Aregbesola among promoters
    • It’s psychological warfare on Nigerians, says Keyamo

    Opposition leaders led by former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, former Transportation Minister Rotimi Amaechi and the immediate past Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai have finally called off their fraternization with the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and African Democratic Congress (ADC) ahead of the 2027 election.

    The group, Nigeria National Coalition Group (NNCG), yesterday opted to go solo by applying to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for registration as a new party.

    All Democratic Alliance (ADA), as it wants to be known, has as its protem Chairman Chief Akin Anderson Rickets, Chairman of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) when Amaechi was Minister of Transportation.

    Other notable politicians said to be part of ADA are Peter Obi, Aminu Tambuwal, John Oyegun, Rauf Aregbesola, Abubakar Malami, Babachir Lawal, Uche Secondus, Osita Chidoka and Nnenna Ukeje.

    The decision to seek registration as a party was reached at a meeting in Abuja on Thursday.

    INEC acknowledged receipt of the application yesterday.

    Aviation and Aerospace Development Minister Festus Keyamo mocked the party’s promoters for their inability to forge the coalition they had set out to do initially.

     “This is just a simple application for party registration. There is nothing like a ‘coalition’ here,” Keyamo said on X.

    “It is an unnecessary hype the promoters have been struggling to create all along. It is just a psychological warfare on Nigerians – a weak attempt at mass appeal,” he said.

    Rickets, a former commissioner for Information in Cross River State, in a letter attached to the registration application form, said: “We respectfully write to the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, requesting the registration of our association, the All Democratic Alliance, ADA, as a political party.

    “This is sequel to the decision taken by the Nigerian National Coalition Group to sponsor our association for full registration.

    “The name of the party shall be All Democratic Alliance with ADA as our acronym and ‘Justice for All’ as our slogan.

    “The National Secretariat of the party is as stated at the bottom of the association’s letterhead used in this application.

    “We have also herewith attached our logo describing in details the symbolism of our party colours and their configuration and the corn (Maize).

    “We have further attached our manifesto encompassing details of our party ideology, and our constitution providing the legal framework that defines our identity, structures and organisation, regulates our affairs and guides our actions in alignment with Section 40 and 222 of the Constitution, Section 75 of the Electoral Act (2022) and global democratic principles and objectives.

    “Please find attached the following documents: our party flag depicting our name, acronym and slogan, manifesto, constitution and minutes of meeting.

    “While we eagerly await further action from the commission on the next step forward towards attaining our desired goal, please accept the consideration of our highest respect.”

    Amaechi and Dr Umar Ardo who was Special Adviser on Research and Strategy to Vice President Atiku Abubakar during the Obasanjo Presidency, in a joint statement traced the formation of the group to a May 6, 2025 meeting in Abuja.

    That meeting, according to them, laid the groundwork for the NNCG which is now seeking transformation into ADA.

    On Thursday, the group approved a manifesto, logo, party constitution and choice of A.D.A.’s protem national chairman and national secretary.

    Picked as protem national secretary was a former member of the House of Representatives from Awe/Doma/Keana in Nasarawa State, Abdullahi Musa Elayo.

    The group said it would now begin to mobilise prominent opposition figures under its banner towards altering Nigeria’s political landscape ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    Read Also: Tinubu: every Nigerian will feel impact of good governance

    The next steps that the interim leadership is now working on include opening a national secretariat, new offices and bank account and commencement of effort to operate within the framework of the party’s newly approved constitution and in accordance with the 2022 Electoral Act.

    Members of the new political party see themselves as game-changers with clear intentions of consolidating support from disillusioned voters and disgruntled elements across various existing parties, including the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) which is currently battling internal rifts and leadership disputes.

    “This development is a bold response to the loud yearning by Nigerians for a credible third force,” said Dr. Umar Ardo, Secretary of the Platform Committee, in a brief chat after the meeting.

    Keyamo: Where’s the coalition?

    Keyamo, reacting to the registration application, said: “This is just a simple application for party registration. There is nothing like a ‘coalition’ here.

    “It is an unnecessary hype the promoters have been struggling to create all along; it is just a psychological warfare on Nigerians – a weak attempt at mass appeal.

    “No recognised existing political party or parties are part of this. If they are thinking of recreating what the APC did in 2013, then this is nothing but a pedestrian joke; a complete mockery of that seismic political coalition that birthed APC in 2013.

    “A few individuals exercising their constitutional right to form a new political party cannot be described as a ‘coalition’ or even a ‘merger’. This is not different from several political associations springing up every day for the same purpose.

    “After all the razzmatazz, it boils down to the fact that a new political party is just attempting registration by a few Nigerians; it is a disappointing anti-climax to all the preceding pomp and pageantry.”

     INEC’s conditions for party registration

    Under the Guidelines for the Registration of new political parties issued by INEC in 2014, a political association intending to register as a political party shall first apply to the commission for the Guidelines and Regulations.

    The application must be made on the commission’s FORM PAI in 50 copies and shall be accompanied by documents showing, among others, the name of the proposed party, the names, signatures and addresses of the chairman and secretary of the association filling the form, evidence of payment of the prescribed non-refundable administrative fee of N1 million in bank draft  to the commission and 50 copies of the association’s draft constitution and manifesto.

    Upon the receipt of the application, INEC is required to verify the claims contained therein such as whether the membership contravenes any of the provisions of the guidelines; whether the association has officers in at least 24 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory.

    Registration will be confirmed if the commission is satisfied that the association has fulfilled all the conditions prescribed by the 1999 Constitution (as amended), the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended) and the guidelines.

    But where the commission is not satisfied, registration is denied.

    Amaechi recently accused the commission of blocking the registration of new political parties.

  • Atiku, el-Rufai, Amaechi coalition seeks to register new party

    Atiku, el-Rufai, Amaechi coalition seeks to register new party

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has reportedly received a formal request from a group known as the Nigeria Nation Coalition Group for the registration of a new party to wrest power from President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in 2027.

    Sources said the request is contained in a letter dated June 19 received by the Commission on Friday, June 20.

    Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar;  former Kaduna Governor Nasir ElRufai; former Rivers Governor, Rotimi Amaechi; former Anambra Governor, Peter Obi and several others have been locked in discussions on how to form a coalition to challenge the President in 2027.

    The group is said to be seeking to register the new party under the name All Democratic Alliance(ADA). 

    Section 75 of the 2022 Electoral Act provides that a request for the registration of a political party shall be submitted to the commission not later than 12 months before the next general election.

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    The act also provides modalities, which include fulfilling certain constitutional provisions and guidelines set out by the Commission, while also saying that the Commission should issue an acknowledgement letter upon recieving the request, while also notifying the proponents within 90 days stating reasons for non registration. 

    The letter to the Commission is reportedly signed by one Chief Akin Tickets as Protem National Chairman. 

    It was also gathered the coalition may have opted for the registration of a new political party rather than using any of the existing parties platform to actualize their agenda 

    The source also said that the request contained the acronym of the party, it’s slogan, logo  manifesto, constitution and ideology of the new party. 

    The letter titled “Application for registration as a political party reads: “We respectfully write to the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, requesting the registration of our association, the All Democratic Alliance, (ADA) , as a political party.

    “This is sequel to the decision taken by the Nigerian National Coalition Group to sponsor our association for full registration.

    “The name of the party shall be All Democratic Alliance with ADA as our acronym and ‘Justice for All’ as our slogan.

    “The National Secretariat of the party is as stated at the bottom of the association’s letterhead used in this application.

    “We have also herewith attached our logo describing in details the symbolism of our party colours and their configuration and the corn (Maize).

    “We have further attached our manifesto encompassing details of our party ideology, and our constitution providing the legal framework that defines our identity, structures and organisation, regulates our affairs and guides our actions in alignment with Section 40 and 222 of the Constitution, Section 75 of the Electoral Act (2022) and global democratic principles and objectives.

    “Please find attached the following documents: our party flag depicting our name, acronym and slogan, manifesto, constitution and minutes of meeting.

    “While we eagerly await further action from the commission on the next step forward towards attaining our desired goal, please accept the consideration of our highest respect.”

    It was also gathered that the decision to register the new party was reached following a report of a committee headed by Amaechi

    National Commissioner and Chairman, Information and Voter Education Committee, Sam Olumekun told The Nation as of the moment, there are over 100 letters of intent with the commission. 

    He said the first stage is to submit a letter of intent, adding that groups wishing to be registered as political parties must first meet the criteria for registration before submitting a formal application for registration

    According to him: “The truth is that we have so many letters of intent presently and none of them is an application yet. They must first meet the criteria before submitting a letter of intent.”

  • Amaechi’s peculiar hunger

    Amaechi’s peculiar hunger

    Rotimi Amaechi’s peculiar hunger sucks.  It makes him talk a lot of rot.

    Nyesom Wike, at his belligerent best, mocked: how would Ameachi not be hungry? Speaker for eight years; governor for another eight; minister for yet another eight: 24 unbroken years, from 1999 to 2003!

    Why would Baby Rotimi not screech, His Bristling Majesty, the Ezenwo, pressed, if you removed that “feeder”?  Gofment pikin, as they would say in the pidgin high street!

    Why does Amaechi’s political naïveté upbraid Karma for Siminalayi Fubara, Wike’s embattled successor, who now skins Wike — at least, pre-Rivers emergency rule — as Wike himself had skinned Amaechi, his predecessor?

    Why does Amaechi’s loose talks ennoble Wike, even at his most combative form?

    Amaechi also brags: he didn’t support APC candidate (now President) Bola Tinubu — and that he told him so, to his face — because of “capacity”!  Pray, what capacity?

    Make no mistake: Amaechi was a fine governor of Rivers. His avant-garde public primary and secondary schools, complete with tartan tracks for healthy school sports, was uncommon brilliance and people-first service.

    As a minister too, he brought infectious passion to his rail modernization mandate. That plan was not new: it was the comprehensive rail revamp of the dying years of the Olusegun Obasanjo presidency.

    Yet, Amaechi’s passion and the sheer grit of his principal, President Muhammadu Buhari, brought it new life; the same parallel grit that got the Dangote Refinery over the line, which made the Tinubu-era removal of fuel subsidy less foreboding, because of the twinkling possibilities of local refining in pump price moderation.

    Still, who is Amaechi to talk of “capacity”, when Tinubu is the subject?

    First, the policy front.  Peter Odili, Rivers governor (1999-2007) when Amaechi was Speaker of the Rivers legislature, was Governor Tinubu’s peer: Tinubu was Lagos governor, the same time Odili was Rivers’.

    Odili was of the federal ruling party, PDP.  Tinubu was from the opposition: the defunct Alliance for Democracy (AD), from with he carved out AC, in time for the 2007 polls.

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    Despite Tinubu lumbering under a comatose AD — and the constant strafing from Obasanjo and his PDP, being the sole survivor among the South West AD governors from 2003 — which of two showed more “capacity”: Odili or Tinubu?

    The one, despite PDP’s famed “federal might”, was content to milk Rivers’ oil wealth, via thumping derivation from the central purse, with little or no value-added. 

    The other birthed a completely new economy, in IT-powered revenue mobilization and capture, that propelled the Lagos economy alone to be stronger than any economy in West Africa, except Nigeria’s.

    While the Tinubu Lagos order pushed the high engineering that eventually saved Victoria Island, and gifted Eko Atlantic City as gilt-edged bonus, Amaechi, as governor couldn’t even carry through his Okrika beachfront renewal project — “over the dead body” of Okrika girl and former First Lady, Patience Fika Jonathan.

    To those who love to brag that Wike had no godfather, Mama Peace, in the Jonathan court, was the mighty godmother that pushed Wike to the Rivers governorship; and rendered Ameachi a politically displaced person (PDP) in Rivers, even after he had junked PDP, as APC’s high-flying Transport minister.

    Besides, Amaechi’s urban rail, years after he let office, is still only a hanging dream. The Lagos urban rail, brewed during the Tinubu years, is already on, with Blue and Red lines done and dusted, work starting on the Green line, the Blue line on the brink of extension to Okokomaiko from Mile 2, and talks buzzing on the Purple line, from the Redeemed Camp in Ogun State to Ojo, in Lagos.

    Capacity!  So, what pre-presidential capacity was Amaechi talking about?

    Then, to politics, which is even starker!

    Pre-1999 from 1993, when Amaechi’s political ancestors were still hedging their bets, not deciding if the war against the political military wasn’t class suicide — democracy be damned! — Tinubu threw himself, and everything he had, into the fray.

    Even after anti-democracy forces had gained ascendancy, from the panicky, military-rigged transition, it was this same Tinubu that bided his time and eventually chased them all away: first from his native South West from 2007; then from Abuja, in 2015.

    Did Amaechi ever think he was as pivotal to the APC alliance and eventual merger, as Buhari and Tinubu, the most senior partners? Did he ever think, colourful court rumours aside, that Buhari would junk his partner, and pick Amaechi as his successor, even within the democratic framework?

    Believe that, you believe anything! 

    Besides, as the Odili Rivers house is sundered — witness Amaechi, Wike and Fubara, pulling in different directions — the Tinubu Lagos house still stands, though a little frayed at the edges too.  Yet, Amaechi blabs “capacity”!

    This same conceit pushes Amaechi to another wild goose chase: the Atiku-el-Rufai-Amaechi gang-up, simply because they all declared themselves tired of power Siberia!

    This though, comes with a caveat — or two.

    Court commentators and avid meddlers have hardly been fair to el-Rufai, on his post-2023 poll blues. Even if el-Rufai was dumped by the president, must they always rub it in? If they can’t make new friends for the president, must they mint him new foes?

    The president himself, for good or for ill, will answer for his harsh surgical policies.  He campaigned as a “progressive”.  But his ultra-right economic policies — business first, the people much later — paints him as a pragmatist, now powered by neo-liberalism.

    Even then Tinubu, warts and all, still towers above these three in the so-called “capacity” — policies or politics.

    Abubakar Atiku is fated to political self-destruct.  He’s only in for what he can get out.  As Obasanjo’s Vice President, he made himself president of vice to upstage his boss.

    As part of APC, he scurried off immediately he couldn’t land the presidential ticket. 

    At a critical juncture of North-South power-sharing in 2023, he chose self over PDP, his party; and self over the North, his region.  By that, he near-completely smashed PDP in the South.  That party may never recover from that setback. 

    His blind power ardour is yet again leading him to familiar doom in 2027.  The grim logic is simple: if you’re not there for anyone, why should anyone be there for you?

    El-Rufai’s self-nemesis is emotional retardation.  As acute is he is — one of the most brilliant minds of his generation, North or South — he’s emotionally stunted. 

    That explains his tragic presumptions: as rushing to declare himself SDP — but thinking deeply about it much later! — just to spite real or phantom APC foes.

    It’s this deluded company that Amaechi joins, in strutting naïveté, to further shatter his mystique. 

    Well, he comes with a rich resume!  Who would shun his ruling APC Abuja presidential glory, to join the Umuahia inauguration of LP Abia Governor, Alex Otti, just to make the point he is sulking, over an election lost and won?

    Politics might be a leveller, where everyone is free to brag. But for Amaechi, comparing himself to Tinubu on “capacity”, is raw conceit that shows nothing but full emptiness!

    Again, colourful pidgin has the last word — and laugh: capacity kee you dia!

  • Soyinka, Amaechi and APC presidential primary

    Soyinka, Amaechi and APC presidential primary

    Speaking at the 60th birthday celebration of former Rivers State governor and ex-Transportation minister, Rotimi Amaechi, Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka was expansively humorous. In praising Mr Amaechi’s manner of pursuing his presidential ambition, the laureate said the former minister’s intransigence reminded him of the stubborn refusal of President Bola Tinubu (as Lagos State governor) to yield to ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo’s political and financial pressures to abandon the creation of 37 extra local governments in Lagos. The laureate said he derived ‘rascally pleasure’ in seeing Mr Amaechi stubbornly refusing to drop out of the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential primary in June 2022 when nearly every other aspirant was dropping out of the race. In a delicate, and perhaps eerie, extrapolation of that intransigence some three years ago, Mr Amaechi has sustained his adamancy and opposition to the same Bola Tinubu who defeated him in that race and went on to win the presidency the following year.

    The bigger story of the 2022 primary is not of course the intransigence of any of the aspirants, or the concessions of the curious handful. What defined the primary and swung the votes was the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) primary conducted barely a week earlier on May 29, 2022, over which former Rivers State governor Nyesom Wike has continued to have an axe to grind with PDP leaders and electors who jettisoned his aspiration in favour of former vice president Atiku Abubakar. Unknown to him, instead of confining themselves to their party’s rotational principles, they anticipated the victory of APC’s Bola Tinubu in the ruling party’s primary a week later and were anxious to secure the services of a champion who could fight for the crown and give a good account of himself. They imagined that Mr Wike, had he emerged the PDP candidate, would be eaten raw by Bola Tinubu. So they gambled on the APC outcome by preemptively securing for themselves a deep pocket champion.

    Meanwhile, APC leaders and electors who had spent weeks pussyfooting around Aso Villa and gallivanting between powerful interest groups around the country and APC governed states were greatly consternated by the PDP’s deft anticipation and calculations. Instead of leaving the primary to chance, in a sort of ‘may the best man win’, they borrowed logic from the PDP and resolved to secure a champion who could ‘outstrategise and outspend’ Alhaji Atiku. Mr Amaechi’s recalcitrance and Mr Wike’s fulminations meant nothing to the PDP and APC overlords. They faced a historic election, and they were sure that rather than engage in fancy footwork, they needed to put their best feet forward. And they did so, with brutal efficiency and ‘devil may care’ frankness. Had the PDP sustained their realpolitik to the campaigns, with Alhaji Atiku opting for the most savage and unfeeling methods to prosecute his election, probably his last, he would have found the ultimate weapon, financial or political, to placate the aggrieved Peter Obi, and unite the party behind him. In the end, he could not rejig the party’s formula for holding political offices, and then followed up by spitting on the political grave of the enraged Mr Wike.

    Read Also: No fight between Ooni and I, says Alaafin

    On the other side of the aisle, the more astute and unassuming candidate Tinubu, who had been humiliated and humbled for more than two years before his party’s primary and thus had no airs about him, did everything possible, political and financial, to mollify his APC opponents. Those who held out against his blandishments or mollification were then isolated and neutralised. The APC and PDP candidates thus went into the 2023 presidential election with contrasting styles, thereby losing or winning the poll even before the first ballot was cast. Despite the clumsy and hugely disruptive intrusion of the Labour Party’s Peter Obi, which turned the election into a three-horse race, it was all but clear who the voters and the dithering presidency thought was the frontrunner. Their inability to cut that frontrunner to size was not due to a lack of effort as it was due to a lack of tactical brilliance. Once he became the front runner and sensed it, and knowing that the country’s political dynamics favoured a southern candidate, he pushed his luck, said many a gaffe, but managed to prevent himself from propounding anything that would scare anybody. His refrain at every campaign stop was simple, almost inelegant, but decidedly poignant and provocative, embellishing the country’s political dictionary and arresting the people’s wandering and often jejune thoughts.

    And candidate Bola Tinubu won. Of all the footnotes of the 2023 presidential race, Mr Amaechi’s was the least significant. That of Mr Wike, which saw him carve a significant slice of the votes from Alhaji Atiku, was far more impactful, second only to the seismic electoral effect the unreflective Mr Obi brought upon the poll. Next time, in the face of Nigeria’s notoriously compromised pollsters whose predictions are always way off the mark, pundits should scrutinise the primaries to find clues as to the underlying dynamics capable of tilting the outcome of any general election. They will find, in the kitchen midden of the primaries, enough clues as to who will win, sometimes by a huge margin in the event of a two-horse race. They should never allow themselves to be distracted by the wailings and moaning of the Amaechis and Wikes, as crucial as they sometimes pretend to be.

  • Amaechi and politics of birthday

    Amaechi and politics of birthday

    The greatest miracle is the creation, particularly of human beings, in the image of God. Birth is an extraordinary event, which science cannot totally unravel. Its divine nature makes birthday a compelling anniversary.

    Thus, many people, especially politicians, usually package remarkable activities to mark their special days.

    For them, it may be a day to make certain statements before assembled guests, who are their fans, associates, admirers and spectators. For critics of lavish birthdays which mirror ostentatious lifestyles, birthday may as well pale into attention-seeking and attention-getting schemes, and a sort of defense mechanism.

    It could also be fittingly designed for ventilation of grievances, as recently witnessed by friends of the eminent politician, Rotimi Amaechi, former transportation minister. When the former governor of oil-rich and crisis-ridden Rivers State rolled out the drums for his 60th birthday in Abuja, he also drummed support for coalition ahead of 2027.

    Between now and the next general election, birthdays of political gladiators may follow the same pattern.

    These milestones: 25 as jubilee celebration, 50 as silver and 60 as diamond are significant events because the history of political actors is also, in part, synonymous with the history of their impact, positive and negative, on communities, states, regions or zones, and countries.

    If the party leaders enter the septuagenarian, octogenarian and nonagenarian club, in the light pf the fact that executive stress is concomitant with political life, there is much joy. Yet, few manage to attain a century, thereby making an exceptional celebration more captivating.

    Prayers for the celebrators by the celebrants are effusive. Lectures, visit to orphanages, book presentations, and empowerment programmes are common features nowadays. On their birthdays, leaders like to make some important statements that may make media headlines the following day. An example was Chief Obafemi Awolowo, who said what he was celebrating, at 77, was the imminence of his transition to eternal life. He said he would continue to serve after his departure.

    It was in difference to the the prayer of the Psalmist: teach us to number our days, so we can put our hearts in the path of wisdom. This is stock taking, and it is critical to consolidation and preparation for the reality of an end in the transcient world.

    Barely a year after, the sage passed on.

    The many perspectives about birthdays are shared by those who are inclined to celebrate. It is a day of thanksgiving and honour for the sacredness of human soul, which only God can decree into existence. Birthday then, is a celebration of procreation, generativity, breakthroughs and survival. 

    To parents of celebrators, it is a celebration of family extension. It may also be the celebration of feats, academic success and marriage, parenthood and work.

    Many new generation Christians have now added a new dimension to it. To them, birthday is a celebration of new birth and salvation; a mark of being born again. Some converts now change their date of birth to the day they made a decision to shun the world and all its evils to embrace Christ.

    Indeed, birthdays become a day of resolutions for the faithful who intend to make a clean break from the sordid past and chart a new course of history.

    Yet, it is for many a festival of worldliness, show off and vanity; a display of wealth, connections, networks and status.

    For the weaker sex, it is an avenue or platform for subtle private accumulation. It is an occasional trading opportunity, whereby the husband sponsors the ceremony, with the celebrator-wife receiving multiple gifts and smiling to the banks. It is even common these days for ladies to openly announce their impending birthdays on WhatsApp page, accompanied by the display of account numbers. The commercial message is clear.

    In the ancient Roman society, birthday became a day of bravado, ego and assassination; a celebration of power and brute force. John the baptist was the casualty. He was imprisoned by Herod Antipas because he condemned the monarch for divorcing his wife and marrying Herodias.

    During the king’s birthday, Herodias’ daughter, Salome, performed a dance that pleased the monarch, who promised her anything she desired. Apparently in excitement, Salome consulted her mother, who prompted her to request for John’s head on a platter.

    According to the biblical account, Herod, despite his distress, fulfilled his promise and had John beheaded in prison. His head was brought on a platter to Salome, who gave it to her mother.

    Read Also: Atiku, Amaechi, El-Rufai desperately united for power, says APC

    In contemporary Nigeria, for some top politicians, birthday is an avenue for political mobilisation. In this generation, only two leaders – Awolowo and Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, President of Nigeria, have had the unique privilege of hosting the world for their birthdays. Others try to mimick them occasionally in varying degrees, but theirs are unable to surpass the Tinubu crowd.

    The charismatic Zik could not even rival Awo in that spectacular planning and organisation of socio-political event. Interestingly, Awo challenged his arch-rival to a duel by allowing the take off of his newspaper, The Nigerian Tribune, to coincide with Zik’s birthday on November 16, 1949. It was possible that Awo was trying to make a point.

    When he was in jail, Awo’s disciples never missed his birthday. All newspapers were filled with congratulatory adverts by admirers on March 6. Except those outside the country, all Awoists would throng Lagos, Ibadan or Ikenne for the annual festival, obviously the major political event of the day in the country.

    Before cutting the cake, Awo, with his jewel of inestimable value, Yeyeoba HID, beside him, would thunder. His well researched speech would dwell on the state of the nation and remain a reference point in socio-economic and political commentary.

    Even, after his passage, Awo Foundation continued to celebrate the birthday, which was later sparsely attended by scartered Awoists whose strife and rancour had polarised Afenifere, the pan-Yoruba socio-political group, up to now.

    Like Awo, President Tinubu’s birthday, from when he was governor of Lagos, has always attracted the cream of the society, cutting across the political class, government functionaries, diplomatic corps, business community, academia, pro-democracy forces, clergy and laity, traditional institution, and the media. In actual fact, no elite of the progressive bent, and even friends in the conservative camp, distinguished and influential member of the society would want to be left out in the informal census. After the national anthem, the next is : ‘On your mandate we stand,’ sung by fanatical supporters.

    The highlights of the spectacular gathering, usually organised by Prof. Yemi Osinbajo (SAN) and other disciples ‘in those days,’ were the colloquium and the panel of discussants who usually dissent a given problem and proffer solutions. It is usually an enriching engagement and reunion of associates from far and near, with the Amazon, First Lady Senator Oluremi, resplendent in moderate colourful attires, playing the role of host at the reception.

    It appeared that a week ago, Amaechi attempted to raise his birthday as platform to draw attention and  mobilise for his current pre-occupation – coalition, the subject matter that has polarised the polity ahead of 2027.

    The coalition jointly spearheaded by him, Atiku Abubakar who he opposed in 2015 and 2019 presidential polls; Peter Obi of Labour Party (LP), Nasir El-Rufai and other co-travellers who are still hiding their faces.

    The snag is that why coalition or alliance talks that had prospects in the past were based on the activities of like-minded political parties, groups, organisations, the current effort is motivated by aggrieved individuals who were left in the cold after the setting up of the cabinet by the President. They are retracing their steps and seeking collaboration with elements they once disowned and derided during past electioneering. While some angry politicians try to acknowledge Asiwaju Tinubu’s feats, they now cleverly assert that the benefits end in private pockets.

    The former Rivers State House of Assembly Speaker, one-time governor and ex-minister, who was in power for uninterrupted 24 years, told what  his successor as governor, Nyesom Wike, described as lies when he said that he was hungry. The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) minister said it was a wrong way to celebrate birthday.

    That remark, coming from him, never resonated with the public that sustained him with huge resources while in power between 1999 and 2023.

  • My take on PDP, 2027 elections, Amaechi, Fubara, by Wike

    My take on PDP, 2027 elections, Amaechi, Fubara, by Wike

    Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister Nyesom Wike yesterday made his position known on many national issues, such as the crisis in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the 2027 presidential election and the crisis between him and suspended Rivers State Governor Siminalayi Fubara.

    Fielding questions from a group of journalists on a special television programme in Abuja, Wike pledged to lead President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s 2027 reelection campaign in Rivers State.

    He reacted to the “I am hungry” comment by his predecessor and immediate past Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi.

    Amaechi made the remark last week during his 60th birthday celebration.

    On the 2027 election, Wike said: “I am not a liability. I am an asset, whether you agree or not. I will ensure that President Tinubu wins a second term, and I will lead the campaign in Rivers.”

    The minister offered a challenge to the coalition forces, saying: “Let them form their coalition and start from Rivers. We’ll be waiting.”

    He recalled that he was instrumental in making the PDP a dominant political force in the country, adding that he has the right to support any candidate of his choice.

    Wike rejected the allegations of anti-party activities by PDP Board of Trustees (BoT) member Chief Bode George and Amaechi, saying he remains a political “asset,” and not a liability.

    He stressed:  “I built PDP into a political force. I did not play anti-party politics in 2023.”

    Wike defended his legacy in the PDP, arguing that his efforts in Rivers and across the country made the party gain national relevance.

    READ ALSO; Top 10 oldest churches in Nigeria

    He said: “Bode George said PDP gave me a national profile, and I agree. But the party doesn’t make you win elections; it is your commitment that does.

    “Ask Bode George what PDP has achieved in Lagos since 1999.

    “I have campaigned, built, and defended the party to make it a strong political force.”

    Wike dismissed George’s remarks about the recent sealing of the PDP’s national secretariat by the FCT authorities due to unpaid ground rent.

    He said: “If an elderly man has no job, he should sit at home and read his newspapers.”

    The minister also rejected George’s advice that he should pay the rent as a PDP chieftain, stressing that neither he nor the PDP could pay it because the building was not registered in their names.

    He stressed: “I cannot pay because it is not in my name. They cannot pay because it is not in their name.”

    Wike said his support for President Tinubu in 2023 was based on principles of equity, justice, and fairness.

    He insisted that the PDP leadership violated the internal agreement to support a Southern presidential candidate.

    Wike said: “In 2023, I said I wouldn’t support Atiku Abubakar because it was wrong to have both the presidential candidate and the national chairman come from the North. I stood on that principle.

    “If I were playing anti-party, how come Rivers State delivered the PDP governorship, Senate, and House of Representatives seats 100 per cent?”

    Wike said other PDP leaders, including George, quietly supported the Labour Party (LP), wondering why he had remained the target of criticism.

    Recalling his warning to George about his support for the LP candidate, he said: “I told George, Obi couldn’t win, and I was right.”

    ‘Amaechi hungry for power’

    Wike took a swipe at Amaechi over his comment that he became hungry due to the worsening economic conditions.

    Amaechi had said: “We’re all hungry, all of us are. If you’re not hungry, I am. For us, the opposition, if you want us to remove the man in power, we can remove him from this power.”

    However, the FCT minister said Amaechi is claiming to be hungry because he is no more in power.

    He said: “Amaechi is not hungry for food; he is hungry for power. He was Speaker from 1999 to 2007, governor from 2007 to 2015, and minister from 2015 to 2023. He never talked about hunger until now.”

    Wike accused Amaechi of attempting to manipulate public sentiment, saying: “From 1999 to 2023, he was in power. He is only angry because he can’t stay out of power. He trivialises national hardship and makes it about himself.”

    The minister also chided Amaechi over his call for the removal of the President, saying that such language is reminiscent of a dictatorship and akin to a military coup.

    Wike said: “I don’t know how a man will choose his 60th birthday to tell lies. It’s unfortunate. Of all time, it’s your 60th birthday, when people are celebrating you, that you chose to tell lies to Nigerians. You are hungry.

    “Let us tell ourselves this. He was Speaker from 1999 to 2007, and if anybody knows, he was the most pompous Speaker. Then, he was reading law in London as a Speaker from 1999 to 2007. He became a governor – 2007 to 2015;  he was still reading law in London. Eight years as Speaker of the Rivers State Assembly, eight years as governor – he never talked about hunger.

    “He became a minister from 2015 to 2023, eight years, super minister of transportation, where you are borrowing money for Afreximbank, he didn’t talk about hunger.

    “Two years, you have left office – ‘I’m in coalition because I’m hungry’. You’re only hungry for power. And that shows failure on his part. How do you look at this? How do you insult Nigerians?

    “How do you trivialise the issue of hunger or poverty? Why do you do that? You’re insulting Nigerians. You join Atiku, you join El-Rufai because you are hungry. Have you not insulted Nigerians? It’s just that you can’t stay out of power. That’s hunger. You can’t stay out of power. How would a man who served from 1999 to 2023 stand before Nigerians, who presided over billions of naira…

    “This was the same man who, on national television, told Nigerians he doesn’t like money. Meanwhile, the dollar was showing…; you are carrying dollars, and you are telling Nigerians you don’t like money. What kind of country is this? And we are listening to that.

    “And you said, he is influential? What is influence? You know, we overrate people. When he was governor in 2015, he couldn’t produce a successor.

    “He couldn’t give his candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, a common 25 per cent. He was a sitting minister in 2019 – no president had ever moved with soldiers the way he came with soldiers. He said he produced the governor. He couldn’t produce a candidate.

    “Again, in 2023, he came, okay, this time around, I’m going to support Atiku in the PDP. Thank God, we did not support the PDP. If I supported PDP and they won, you would have taken the glory, but we say, okay, we will not support PDP. They failed. They didn’t even get 10 per cent. So, what is his influence?

    “Look, I thank God he is in a coalition. I’ve told Nigerians. I don’t like this talking, talking, talking. Let this coalition form a team.

    “When you say you will remove, they should start from their home to remove him by making sure the President loses the election.

    “How could somebody come out on national television and tell Nigerians: ‘If we want to remove the President, we can.’ Is it a military coup? The word removal means dictatorship in the military.

    “You only use the word ‘remove’ when there’s a coup. I would have thought he would say: ‘We will vote him out.’

    “Let’s see how he plans to remove the president. Is it through election or some other means?”

    Wike clarified his earlier position on backing out of the PDP agreement, saying that he never accused Oyo State Governor Seyi Makinde of wrongdoing.

    He said: “I never accused Makinde of breaking promises. I only said agreements reached by the G5 were broken.”

    The minister recently vacated about 5,000 land titles in Abuja for unpaid fees, of which one of these plots belongs to George.

    He said: “Bode George is number 3092 on the list. His land was listed for not paying fees for 10 years. At his level? At his level?”

    ‘I weep over betrayal by Fubara’

    Wike said he is moved to tears whenever he reflects on the “betrayal” by suspended Governor Siminalayi Fubara.

    The minister said Fubara offered himself as a “tool” for those who wanted to fight him when they could not do so directly.

    He said although he played a major role in his emergence as governor, Fubara “betrayed” him by working with those who wanted his downfall.

    Wike likened the situation to a son who connived with armed robbers to rob his father.

    He said the resolution of the Rivers crisis rests with Fubara, adding that he is ready for reconciliation if the suspended governor wants “genuine peace”.

    Wike said: “He (Fubara) gave himself as a tool for those who could not fight me directly. Sometimes, when I go back in my quiet moment, I play the video of the speeches of the governor — what he said and did to me, I weep. Was it necessary?

    “This is somebody who brought you, gave you food and everything. Then, you became a tool for his enemies to fight him. We are all humans. When people say there should be peace… Nobody said there should not be peace.

    “How will you feel? You know what you passed through by sending your son to school and making him a human being.

    “All of a sudden, your son came in with other people, armed with a gun to shoot you. Is it something that you will just forget?

    “I have told people who do not understand what betrayal means that they may be betrayed 10 times more than this. That is my prayer.

    “I have said I want peace, but you must show that the peace you want is genuine, and you must have taken steps.”

    Wike said he was at a loss as to why Fubara was talking about an ongoing peace process in Rivers.

    He said Fubara came to him with Governors Dapo Abiodun (Ogun) and Francis Nwifuru (Ebonyi) and an elder of the APC to discuss peace.

    He said since then, he has not seen the suspended governor and he is not aware that he is meeting with the elders in the state and lawmakers.

    ‘I derive joy stepping on toes of big men’

    Wike said he derives joy from stepping on the toes of ‘big men,’ warning that property owners in Abuja who are yet to pay their ground rent must do so or face the music.

    He insisted that the PDP must pay the ground rent for its secretariat in the FCT.

    The FCT authorities had published the details of 9,000 debtors in newspapers, asking them to pay their ground rents to avoid the risk of forfeiture.

    The administration subsequently announced on May 23 that it would take possession of about 5,000 affected properties owing ground rents between 10 and 43 years.

    Wike said his predecessors in the FCT, including Bauchi State Governor Bala Mohammed, lacked the courage to compel political bigwigs who own structures in the nation’s capital to pay their annual ground rent.

    He said: “Look at what we are doing differently. People have said that FCT was not working. Now, it is working, which means I’m doing things that they refused to do.

    “I found out that most of them didn’t have the courage to annoy people, to step on toes, but I take joy when I step on the toes of big men; those who say nothing will happen, but I say something will happen. It makes me happy.

    “All they want me to do is to make decisions against only poor people, saying nothing will happen to them (powerful people).

    “But I say something will happen. That is why we are making results. If you don’t do the right thing, too bad. I don’t care.”

  • Atiku, Amaechi, El-Rufai desperately united for power – APC

    Atiku, Amaechi, El-Rufai desperately united for power – APC

    The trio of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, former Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi and former Kaduna Governor Malam Nasiru El-Rufai came under attack by the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) over the allegation that President Bola Tinubu-led APC administration has weaponised poverty.

    The three opposition leaders at the weekend during the 60th birthday ceremony of Amaechi in Abuja accused Tinubu of failing to eradicate the scourge of poverty in the last two years of his administration.

    Describing the allegation as baseless, APC National Publicity Secretary, Felix Morka in a statement in Abuja on Monday asked the trio to close their eyes in shame for their failure to achieve same feat during a quarter of a century in power.

    Morka noted that instead of focusing on the birthday the trio, whom he described as “leading displaced rent-seekers”, they condescended into showcasing their frenzied desperation to grab power purely for their self aggrandizement.

    According to Morka: “These three individuals have occupied Nigeria’s highest political offices between 1999 and 2023, either as Vice President, Governors, or Ministers, among other important positions. In all 24 years, the trio, individually or collectively, could not and did not eradicate poverty in their states or the country. They did not even attempt to address, let alone tackle, the structural challenges and distortions that stifled the economy and worsened poverty over the years.

    “Rather, they reveled in mindless rent-seeking behavior, sold national assets to their cronies for mere pittance, engaged in corrupt and wasteful expenditures in their states, and relentlessly sponsored state violence against their own people.

    “Take the case of Amaechi, the celebrant, who served for an unbroken total of 24 years – eight years as Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly, eight years as Governor of Rivers State, and eight years as Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. That’s about a quarter of a century of freeloading by Amaechi on state resources, with absolutely no record of attempting to combat poverty in his Rivers State or the country.

    “When Amaechi declared, “I am hungry,” he must mean, and must be understood to mean, that he is hungry and desperate to return to his felt entitled dependency on state resources and patronage.

    “That he is hungry barely two years out of office simply underscores the depth of the self-serving motivations of Amaechi and his coalition partners in their quest for power for selfish exploitation, and not for the interest of the people.”

    READ ALSO: Wike’s camp clashes with Fubara on reconciliation

    The ruling party noted that the allegation by Amaechi and his cohorts was informed by the loss of grip on the economy which they have fleeced on for years.

    “Accustomed to fleecing the economy, they are now compelled by Tinubu’s unprecedented reforms to adapt to a new reality where hard work, productivity, and innovation are rewarded. Their criticisms of President Tinubu’s reforms are decidedly self-serving, driven by a desperate quest for power to satiate their voracious rent-seeking appetite, which has long stifled and denied progress to the economy.

    “On contrary, it was the failure of previous administrations, particularly 16 years of PDP administrations, to allow the Naira to find its real value that created the economic conditions of poverty that the present administration is now addressing.

    “The erstwhile artificially overvalued Naira stifled local production, encouraged import dependency, and exacerbated poverty. Ironically, Atiku and Peter Obi, who are now vociferously criticizing President Tinubu’s policies, amassed their wealth from the very import-dependent system they are desperately trying to preserve.”

    Going down the historical lane, APC recalled “Atiku, a former Custom Officer, and Obi, a successful importer, reaped enormous benefits from the old system. Their criticisms reek of special interest masqueraded as concern for the people. By allowing market forces to determine the Naira’s value, the administration is taking necessary bold steps to catalyze economic growth, incentivize investment, boost competitiveness, and alleviate poverty.”

    The party commended President Tinubu’s resilience in demonstrating political will to tackle structural barriers to the country’s economic growth and development far more than any other President in Nigeria’s modern history.

    “By his bold economic reforms, President Tinubu is systematically building the most potent bulwark against poverty and positioning the economy to deliver sustained and sustainable growth and prosperity for all Nigerians.

    “The criticisms variously levelled by Amaechi, Atiku, El-Rufai and Peter Obi mask a shameless attempt to perpetuate and cling to the old rent-seeking economy that enriched them at the expense of the Nigerian people.

    “As beneficiaries of the corrupt and inefficient economic system, they are discomforted that Tinubu’s reforms are dismantling the insidious and permissive system that enabled and sustained their reckless plunder and exploitation of the economy.”

    The ruling party however noted that Nigerians in productive sectors are reaping the benefits of reforms that have increased opportunities and income.

    “Entrepreneurs, farmers, and service providers are thriving, while rent-seekers like Amaechi and his coalition partners are left seething with rage at the disruption of their ability to milk the system for personal gain as before.

    “The removal of fuel subsidy has been a game-changer. It ended massive corruption that plagued the fuel subsidy enterprise, eliminated perennial shortages and queues at petrol stations, and has sparked a surge in investments in the oil and gas and other sectors of the economy, further expanding opportunities for businesses and individuals.

    “The harmonization of multiple exchange rates has further bolstered Nigeria’s competitiveness in the global market for goods and capital. With increased revenue, the federal, state, and local governments are now investing more in critical infrastructure, education, health, security, and social welfare.

    “Importantly, states that previously struggled to pay N30,000 minimum wage are now paying a significantly higher minimum wage of N70,000 per month. This is a testament to the administration’s commitment to improving the welfare of Nigerians.

    “The President’s reforms are dawning a new day for Nigeria, now witnessing economic transformation never before seen in our country’s history, driven by proper pricing of the Naira and fuel, and steadily transitioning the country from a consumption-laden to a production-oriented economic powerhouse.

    “Our trade balances are seeing a drastic improvement, with a sharp decline in imports and a steep rise in exports, reporting impressive trade surpluses and economic growth rate of 4.6 percent in the last quarter of 2024, representing the highest growth rate in a decade, amid significant decline in global price of crude oil.

    ‘This turnaround is a direct testament to the government’s steadfast efforts to promote local production, entrepreneurship, and economic diversification, ultimately paving the way for a more sustainable, resilient, and prosperous economy.

    “Indications of a steadily rebounding economy are now manifest in all sectors of the economy. Local industries are booming, and our reliance on imports is plummeting. The Dangote Refinery is revolutionizing the market with its products in Nigeria, while manufacturers in the South East are producing top-notch products in unprecedented quantities, generating thousands of jobs and stimulating economic growth. This progress is a monumental step towards achieving food security, industrialization, and sustainable economic growth.

    “President Tinubu has genuinely prioritized the best interest of Nigerians over any political electoral calculation. The administration’s reforms may have transient higher cost of living implications challenges, but they are indispensable to securing a more sustainable economy that rewards hard work, innovation, and entrepreneurship.”

    The party assured Nigerians that the President is on course, and will not be distracted by the selfish partisan rambling of some hardened political opportunists and economic exploiters only bent on preserving the old inefficient and permissive economic system that fed them at the expense of the common good of all.

    “The best strategic interest of our economy and the good people of Nigeria must continue to trump any and all political or electoral calculations.”