Tag: Anambra

  • APC decries destruction of its  billboards, posters in Anambra

    APC decries destruction of its billboards, posters in Anambra

    The Anambra State chapter of the All Progressive Congress (APC) yesterday decried the destruction of the posters and billboards of its candidate, Dr Tony Nwoye, by suspected political miscreants ahead of the November 18 governorship election.

    The party said no amount of intimidation, blackmail, mudslinging by the opposition would stop it from winning the election.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Awka, the state capital, Chairman of the Campaign Committee and Deputy Director General of Tony Nwoye Campaign Organisation Chief Azuka Okwuosa said the party would not retaliate the as a law abiding party.

    Also, the Director General of the campaign organisation, Chief Osita Ezenwa said the organisation did not believe in propaganda but in issue-based campaign.

    He described Nwoye as a grassroots politician and a mobiliser who was loved by the people, adding that the people would vote for Nwoye and not his party.

    Okwuosa said APC had no cause to rig the election, as being speculated.

    The campaign chief noted that it was the fear of the unknown by the opposition in the state especially the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

  • Anambra guber candidate decries monetary inducement in politics

    Anambra guber candidate decries monetary inducement in politics

    Mr Chris Nweke, the candidate of African Peoples Party (APP) in the Nov. 18 Anambra Governorship election, has urged the electorate to shun monetary inducement in their voting decisions.

    Nweke told newsmen on Tuesday in Awka that big parties were polluting the political space with display of so much money.

    He said that he would win the election in spite of his underdog status, noting that neither money nor god-father syndrome but practicable manifestos would decide the election.

    Nweke said he had a well-articulated programme for the development of the state, adding that he was not into politics to make money, but to work for the interest and development of the state.

    The candidate appealed to the electorate to ignore his rivals who had no people-oriented programmes and deceived people with money to vote for APP for good dividends of democracy.

    “I represent a new hope in surmounting these hurdles against development and have resolved to match my opponents with my political goodwill.

    “I will also channel all efforts and resources towards re-orientating and grooming our people, especially youths to work for progress of our state.

    “The electorate should be focused, look into the antecedent of the governorship candidates, identify and judge among them who have the charisma to take Anambra to the next level.

    “They should not look at money used to induce voters during the election, they should vote wisely for our state to be better,” Nweke said.

    He said the education sector would be improved and strengthened with adequate funding and qualified personnel.

    The candidate added that his administration would stick by the internationally agreed standard of 26 per cent allocation to education.

    The APP candidate said that if elected, he would announce free and compulsory education for all children from the cradle to JSS 3 class.

    Nweke urged the people to support and vote him as a governor to realise his ambition of building a peaceful and prosperous state.

    NAN

  • INEC involved in 419 cases – Chairman

    INEC involved in 419 cases – Chairman

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Tuesday, said that it had been involved in 419 court cases over election matters from 2016 to date.

    Chairman of the commission, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, said this in an interactive session with a group of civil society organizations, under the umbrella of the Situation Room, on Tuesday, in Abuja.

    “Between 2016 and 2017, till this week, we have appeared for 419 cases in four different courts; so, I will say that in the last two years INEC has been dragged to court 419 times.

    “Conversely, 187 of them are at Federal and state high courts while 141 are at the Court of Appeal. Sixty-one of them are at the Supreme Court and two at the Industrial Court,’’ he said.

    Yakubu said that the political atmosphere in Anambra was quite peaceful as compared to recent elections, adding that “up till today, we have no case in court on the nomination of any candidate’’.

    He said that though the situation was unusual, it was rarely amazing in the context of litigation since the 2015 general elections.

    The chairman said that 37 political parties were participating in the Nov. 18 Anambra governorship election which was a record for any governorship election in the country.

    He said that INEC monitored all the political party’s primaries and that 35 of them complied with the rules except for two that changed their candidates after the primaries, which was not allowed.

    He said that Anambra had 21 local government areas, with 326 wards, 468 polling units, 724 voting points and 2,154,738 registered voters, including 203,681 new registrants.

    Yakubu said that INEC had printed Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) for all registered voters in the state, and that the cards would be delivered on Saturday to the state so that the process of collection could commence.

    He said that arrangement had been made for collection of the PVCs at the ward level so that it would be closer to the polling units.

    The chairman said that INEC had delivered all the non-sensitive materials to Anambra, down to the local government areas.

    He said that logistics were okay because the infrastructure in the state was reasonably good as there was no part of the state that could not be reached in 30 minutes.

    He said that the commission was confident with the security arrangement on ground, explaining that “we have engaged with the security agents and we want the deployment to follow the needs of the commission’’.

    Yakubu said that INEC had made provision for hand-held magnifying glasses for albinos as requested by the Albino Foundation to help them see the party logos.

    He added that all funds had been provided and remitted to the state for the conduct of the election.

    Yakubu reassured indigenes of Anambra of early commencement of election, adding that the commission had made provision for ad hoc staff to stay the night at the polling areas.

    Earlier, the Convener of Situation Room, Mr Clement Nwankwo, said the meeting was organised in order to clear the concerns of civil society organisations regarding the election.

    Nwankwo said that CSOs were concerned with the safety of the electoral materials, ad hoc staff and the people.

    He urged INEC to allow the CSOs to have access to monitor the collation centres to enhance the credibility of the final results that would be announced.

    He advised the commission to continue to monitor the ballot paper to prevent some political parties conniving with the printers to omit their names or party’s logo to cook up legal cases.

    Nwankwo also urged political parties to abide by the rules and regulations of the commission in order to have a free and fair election. (NAN)

  • Gov. Obiano reiterates commitment to youths’ empowerment

    Gov. Obiano reiterates commitment to youths’ empowerment

    Gov. Willie Obiano of Anambra has reiterated his resolve to empower the youths through skills acquisition, which he also said would reduce crimes and boost national growth.

    Obiano spoke on Tuesday at the 2017 2nd Synod of Cathedral Church of St. Silas, Ihiala in Ihiala Local Government Area of Anambra.

    The synod with the theme: “Whom Shall I Send, And Who Will Go for Us’’, was attended by Anglican clergymen, lay faithful and invited government officials.

    Obiano said that his vision was that every youth should be meaningful engaged in order to reduce the involvement of youths in anti-social activities and criminality.

    “Before I became governor, security situation was bad; several youths were seen idle on the streets.“But today, I have tackled insecurity by engaging the youths imeaningfully in different skills and agriculture.

    “We are doing this to transform the lives of our youths positively,” he said.

    Earlier, the Anglican Bishop of Ihiala Diocese, Rt. Rev. Israel Okoye, expressed regrets that some politicians only empower youths by engaging them as thugs.

    Okoye noted that such negative conduct of politicians would hamper the future of youths and the nation.

    “I am not satisfied with the style of some politicians who have deviated from positive things, but engage the youths as thugs and also engage in campaign of calumny..

    “Many youths are lured into criminality because of unemployment, while some politicians cash in on the unemployment situation to engage them as thugs,” he said.

    Okoye said the Diocese plans to establish the “All Saints Skills Acquisition and Invention Centre”, for the training of youths on various skills.

    The Anglican Bishop of Awka, Most Rev. Alexander Ibezim, who also spoke, urged Obiano to sustain the security apparatus that he put in place.

    He said that the improved security had promoted investments, especially in the agricultural sector.

    NAN

  • Anambra to pay accumulated leave allowances in November – Obiano

    Anambra to pay accumulated leave allowances in November – Obiano

    The Anambra Government says it will pay the accumulated arrears of leave allowances owed its workers in November, 2017.

    A statement made available in Awka on Tuesday stated that Gov. Willie Obiano made the promise at the inauguration of Queens Convent Secondary School, Ifite-Awka, in Awka South Local Government Area.

    “You will start receiving your leave allowances from Nov. 10, 2017. This is to enable you enjoy the Christmas celebration like other Nigerians,’’ he said.

    The governor further announced that every worker would receive a bag of rice among other benefits before the Christmas.

    “Next year, there will be general increment in salaries of Anambra workers. We are doing all these to promote the welfare of workers in the state,’’ he said.

    Obiano said that the first and second batch of promotion of workers in the state would soon be released.

    He said that teachers and other civil servants would equally get their due benefits alongside other workers.

    The governor said that he would not relent in his fight against malpractice and other social ills, which according to him, has crippled the education system.

    “The primary and secondary schools are basic foundations which determine the future of people and the society and we must get it right for our nation to develop,’’ he said.

    Obiano explained that the essence of handing over schools to missions in Anambra was to give proper orientation and re-orientation to the younger generation.

    He said that previous generations embraced corruption and impunity due to lack of proper orientation.

    “Mission schools will instill morals and effective standard of living. Those trained by missionaries have morally-defined characters that depict excellence and high level of virtue.

    “I will continue to provide every facility that will encourage learning,’’ the governor added.

    He appealed to private individuals to invest in education in order to sustain the tempo of learning in the state.

    The Anglican Bishop of Awka Diocese, Most Rev. Alexander Ibezim, said that the essence of establishing the school was to ensure proper moral upbringing of the youths.

    NAN

  • UPP, APDA call for fair play in Anambra election

    UPP, APDA call for fair play in Anambra election

    Dr Sylvster Igwilo, Chairman of United Progressives Party ( UPP ) in Anambra said that the party was confident of winning the Nov. 18 governorship election in the state if every stakeholder play by the rules.

    Igwilo made this known in Awka on Sunday that the party’s candidate, Chief Osita Chidoka was the most qualified from the array of candidates in the race.

    He said Chidoka had better plans for the people of the state and have been addressing issues that bordered on the common man in his campaigns.

    Igwilo warned other parties to comply with the efforts aimed at minimising irregularities during and after the Nov. 18 governorship election.

    “My party is quite prepared for this election, we know it is not going to be easy and as you know, UPP has the most credible candidates among all others in the race.

    “Chidoka is well known and accepted by the people, a former Minister and FRSC Corps Marshal who is interested in the state and how to put back on track economic prosperity and sustainable development.’’

    Igwilo said the Independent National Electoral Commission ( INEC ) was doing well compared to the previous years in terms of preparation for elections.

    According to him, if things are to go by the assurances INEC has given, then the election would be free and fair.

    “My appeal is that other party chairmen should play by the rules, their agents should be properly identified with passport to enable us know who is who.

    “There are some people that are not serious about this election. they are just interested in what they will get through sharp practices,” he said.

    Also speaking, Mrs Adaeze Okafor, candidate of the Advanced People Democratic Alliance ( APDA ) raised alarm at what she described as increasing monetary cost of the election.

    Okafor said it was as if the election was a do-or-die affairs from the way some candidates of the big parties were going about in their campaigns.

    According to her, candidates and their supporters should see election as opportunity to serve and not avenues for amassing wealth.

    She noted that some of the issues raised in the campaigns so far had not addressed the wellbeing of the ordinary people of Anambra but an attack on persons.

    “Issues are not addressed in the campaigns, they have not said how they are going to build the people and make their lives better.

    “The role of money in this election is becoming too much, some parties have set a lot of money aside to pay for votes.

    “Other candidates are throwing money around in the market places as if their lives depend on the election.’’

    She called on the INEC to restrict people from going close to the electorate during voting and to stop votes buying.

    NAN

  • ‘Obiano spent N44bn on 101 inherited projects’

    ‘Obiano spent N44bn on 101 inherited projects’

    Mr Mark Okoye, the Anambra Commissioner for Economic Planning and Budget, has said that the Gov. Willie Obiano’s administration had spent N44 billion on projects inherited from his predecessor.

    Okoye made this known in Awka on Friday that Obiano, who assumed office on March 17, 2014 inherited 101 projects from the former Gov. Peter Obi’s administration out of which 51 have been completed.

    He said it was not true to say that the current government in Anambra was not doing anything on capital projects.

    “N44 billion has been spent on inherited projects, there are 101 of them and 51 of them have been completed.

    “Another N30 billion was spent on projects initiated by this administration and are at various stages of completion. It will be unfair to say that we have not done anything on infrastructure.

    “You cannot keep the over 48, 000 civil servants both at the state and local government levels hungry because you want to build infrastructure alone,” he said.

    The commissioner said Obiano deserved second term because “he had done noble’’ by ensuring that the economy of Anambra remained viable and did not go into recession.

    He said there had been steady increase in the Gross Domestic Product ( GDP ) of Anambra since the inception of Obiano administration which he attributed to the economic policy direction of the governor.

    Okoye said that it was not true that the government had spent over N400 billion cumulatively in the budget proposal from 2014 till date.

    He said the total expenditure for the period was about N270 billion as budget implementation for any fiscal year had not exceeded 65 per cent.

    “There has been steady growth in our state economy.

    “In 2013, our GDP was N2.8 trillion, in 2014 when this administration came in, it was about N3.2 trillion; it rose to about N3.7 trillion in 2015 and to N3.8 trillion in 2016; it means Anambra did not go into recession.

    “This is possible because of the economic policy implemented by the Willie Obiano’s administration through his developmental agenda.

    “A budget is essentially a proposal which is sent to the legislature for approval and if accepted it subjected to implementation.

    “Implementation is driven by revenue which is sourced internally and externally, and in these years, maximum budget implementation was 65 per cent and if you discount 35 per cent from that figure you will see that the total expenditure is between N260 billion and N270 billion.

    “Half of that expenditure goes into recurrent expenditure like payment of salaries, gratuities and pensions. About 120, 000 school children between primary one and primary three are being fed daily by the government.

    “We are not where we want to be yet, but we are on the right path,” he said.

    Okoye said the ongoing Anambra International Trade Fair was a good testimony of the productive capacity of Anambra as it was featuring largely locally made goods.

    “You can see the effect of what we are doing in the trade fair where most of the products on exhibition are locally made, they are harvested, processed and package in Anambra State and it was not like that four years ago.

    “You will agree with me that if re-elected, Gov. Obiano will transform the fortunes of Anambra beyond imagination in the next four years.

    “Our people will be happy because they would have seen that state economy had been fully diversified from oil,” he said.

    NAN

  • Anambra’s imperial majesty?

    The mood at the arena was simply eclectic. Only a sea of heads was discernible, as humans milled around. They came in their numbers, like all such politically conceived gatherings are, consisting of all sorts: party men and women, youths with no clearly defined allegiance, traditional rulers and their spouses, presidents-general of various communities, civil servants directed to report for ‘duty’ at the venue, in spite of the day being a nationally recognized public holiday, and perhaps much more important, a hired crowd of countryside folks, for whom the availability of free ride, and a stipend of N3,000 was an almost irresistible bargain at these austere times.

    The venue was the Alex Ekwueme Square, more renowned for its deplorable conditions, which sharply contrasts with the iconic image of the man whose name it bears.

    It was Monday, October 2, and the governor of Anambra State, His Excellency, Willie Obiano, had chosen that date to flag-off his quest to rule the state for another term of four years.

    Amid the clanging of cymbals, frenzied drumming and general merriment, ndi Anambra everywhere and other persons who were watching the spectacle on live television broadcast waited with anxiety to listen to the governor reel out not just his scorecards, but also promises of what ‘democracy dividends’ would accrue should providence be gracious enough to gift him another tenure.

    Around high noon, the moment came. And to herald his appearance on the podium (as has become customary), Obiano’s Special Assistant, SA on Flute, a craggy middle-aged fellow from his native Aguleri community went to work. From across the mountain of loudspeakers strategically placed around the arena, the shrill echoes of the flutist waltzed forth, extolling the one who had transmuted from *Akpokuedike* Aguleri to *Akpokuedike* Global, conqueror of the Anambra political firmament.

    Just as the spirits hearken to the summons of the *surugede* dance, Governor Obiano sprang to his feet, took a few giddy steps, swirled around like an infernal being, before staggering forward like an Abriba war general, leaving the audience pondering if he was merely reacting to the flutist’s call, or some other stimuli.

    Finally, he came face to face with a horde of microphones which he had to speak to. The words rang out in staccato:  “The chairman of the campaign organization, Her Excellency, the Governor of Anambra State, my wife…”

    Pronto, a cold chill descended upon the hitherto boisterous crowd. Did their governor just cede his executive office to his wife, or could it have been an inadvertent slip? Some more implacable citizens in the crowd rationalized that should the reference to his wife be a mistake, they were certain, however, that naming her chairman of the campaign organization wasn’t. Rather, it seemed like a devious move to downscale the importance of former national chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Chief Victor Umeh, who the governor had earlier named the Director General of the 87-member campaign committee on August 3.

    Yet, while Governor Obiano’s adulation of his wife as “the Executive Governor of Anambra State” might seem preposterous to other Nigerians, ndi Anambra and close watchers of affairs in the state are not in doubt that the governor truly wields and shares power with his spouse.

    At many state functions, including the one in review, the state’s deputy governor, the affable Dr. Nkem Okeke, is often not allowed to speak, while Mrs Obiano shares the limelight with her husband.

    Indeed, besides maintaining an office complex from which she operates, right inside Government House, Mrs Ebelechukwu Veronica Obiano can, to all intents and purposes be said to be the de facto governor of the state, leaving her husband with a de jure status.

    For one, she is known to have a convoy which trumps that of the deputy governor; routinely flies on chattered aircraft to her many trips to Abuja, the nation’s capital and other cities, and generally lives off the state, in the costliest and choicest hotels within and outside the country.

    For those who worry over the funding for her ostentatious tastes, they may have to make do with the allegation by a member of the Anambra State House of Assembly, Hon. Onyebuchi Offor, that Governor Obiano pockets a princely sum of N1.45 billion monthly as security vote. Till date, there has been no official reaction disproving the charge.

    But were the Anambra First Family’s ‘sin’ centred around only finances, not many ndi Anambra would have seriously minded. Rather, it is Madam Excellency’s obtrusive conduct that reeks and irks ndi Anambra who pride themselves as “the Light of the Nation.”

    As a matter of fact, in her October 2 speech, instead of focusing on serious matters of state, Mrs Obiano elected to dwell on banalities.  Added to her intemperate disposition, which has seen her publicly slap drivers and aides, many fear that Her Excellency’s acerbic tongue might in the long run do her husband in, much in the same way as former First Lady, Patience Jonathan’s cantankerous electioneering drove a wedge between her husband and several of his erstwhile admirers.

    Consider this. On April 10, Mrs Obiano had visited Ukpor community, home town of the Speaker of the state’s legislature, and engaged in a shouting match with some indigenes.

    Trouble was said to have started after Mrs Obiano claimed that the administration built the Nkwo Oha market in the community – a lie which an APGA chieftain who hails from Ukpor openly repudiated.

    Despite adorning an APGA uniform, Chief Osigwe Aghochukwu had shouted, “Madam, it is a lie”.

    Shocked by the seeming impudence, Mrs Obiano allegedly walked up to Aghochukwu and dared him to repeat his assertion, and he promptly did by insisting, “I said it is a lie”.

    Casting executive decorum aside, the governor’s wife upbraided the man, calling him “a devil in APGA uniform”.

    For a woman who largely turned out in long ankara gowns, with a Catholic scapular always around her neck back in 2013 during the campaign that brought her husband into office, Osodieme Obiano appears to have turned full cycle: from the meek Sister Ebele next door, to Anambra’s Imperial Majesty, before whom all else, including her husband, the governor must kowtow.

     

    • Hon. Ogene, was deputy chairman, Media and Public Affairs, in the House of Representatives, Abuja.
  • Anambra: The case for Obiano

    Someone brought to the office a video clip of Tony Nwoye campaigning. Since  the man is the APC candidate in the November 18 Anambra governorship election,  the urge to view  his message was overpowering, especially as he had been  rather taciturn since the contentious primary election that threw him up as his party’s candidate.

    What was his governorship ambition all about? Decked out in a dark suit, a cordless microphone appeared glued to his lips. “Willie Obiano is a thief,” shouted Tony Nwoye. He mouthed this abuse for the second and third times. Like a repeater station, the voice of an unseen fellow echoed his foul words. A few of his listeners clapped. In a minute the  clip ended. What an anti-climax, I thought.

    Tony Nwoye’s  sacrilegious tongue apart, there was the more serious tenor of malicious prejudice in this unsubstantiated accusation. Was his fulmination the sum total of the APC’s manifesto? One assumed that, in soliciting for political endorsement, effort must be made to portray the candidate as deserving of support. Did the outpouring of invectives ever solve any society’s problems? I immediately reckoned with the link between Tony Nwoye’s diatribe and the standard fare of the PDP in Anambra State, that has converted into a fine art the usage of the social media for mendacious effusions.

    We will return to these aberrant behaviours. In the meantime, an introduction of Chinua Achebe  integrity is important. When Abuja toyed with investing the distinguished novelist with a national honour, he struck a resounding blow for the oppressed, and demonstrated that real Ndigbo never put forward their conscience for sale.

    In a letter addressed to President Obasanjo and dated October 15, 2004, Achebe said inter alia: “I write this letter with a very heavy heart. For some time now I have watched events in Nigeria with alarm and dismay. I have watched particularly the chaos in my own state of Anambra where a small clique of renegades, openly boasting its connections in high places, seems determined to turn my homeland into a bankrupt and lawless fiefdom. I am appalled by the brazenness of this clique and the silence, if not connivance, of the Presidency…

    “Nigeria’s condition today under your watch is, however, too dangerous for silence. I must register my disappointment and protest by declining to accept the high honour awarded me in the 2004 Honours List.”

    Well, Anambra has come a long way since the heady days of PDP’s governance of the state. Therefore, Governor Willie Obiano was able to deliver this proclamation last year:  “Ndi Anambra, when I assumed office with my team on March 17, 2014, we took over a state that had no landmark infrastructure and no clear-cut strategic vision for the future. And perhaps more importantly, we met a state that was heavily traumatized by violent armed robbery, kidnapping, child-trafficking and endless cases of drug-related crimes. This crime-ridden scenario discouraged investments and successfully cut off the state from the grid of modern development. Ladies and gentlemen, my  team and I inherited a state with an average ambition but through strategic refocusing and a commitment to excellence, we have repositioned Anambra among Nigeria’s leading states today!”

    Now, Obiano is seeking re-election, to consolidate his administration’s legacy. The imminent governorship election means that the elephant’s carcass lies prostrate on the ground, and everybody has reached for their knife, to cut themselves a helping of its meat. Not surprisingly, there are more than 30 candidates primed for the contest. Of course, most of them are in it for keeping up appearances. But Oseloka Obaze and Tony Nwoye, PDP and the APC candidates respectively,  deserve some attention, if only because they are of parties with some grounding in Nigerian politics.

    You expected these dudes to say in concrete terms what they would do differently if they attained the political power they are hankering for. Governor Obiano has restored the peace and stability of an Anambra State previously reduced to a criminal fiefdom, as  Achebe put it. He has transformed Awka into a real capital city. He has attracted investments both local and foreign. He has revolutionized agriculture in the state. He is taking particularly good care of government employees and retirees, paying their salaries and pensions and gratuities promptly and regularly. He has given back to Ndigbo their pride.

    Now it is the place of those challenging Governor Obiano for Anambra’s governorship to, at least, have the good sense to state what they intend to do differently to further improve the lot of the people. Instead they are throwing curses and falsehoods about like confetti. If Tony Nwoye knows no better than to excoriate Anambra’s Number One Citizen, Oseloka Obaze, given the fact that he worked under Governor Obiano, should restrain the lying excesses of his campaign loudspeakers.

    Perhaps, he has bounded himself up a dilemma, knowing that the world knows that he would not be in politics today had Peter Obi not commandeered him godfather-like into the gambit. Even Peter Obi himself knows that the world knows that his self-imposed objective of dethroning Governor Obiano is nothing to do with principles. Otherwise, they would not aggregate and deploy mudslingers and quasi-journalists in the demeaning fixation with interminable lies on the Internet, the newspapers and frequency modulated wavebands.

    I recently met with Anyanwu (Mrs.) Bianca Ojukwu who professed an inability to get over Peter Obi’s betrayal of APGA because it was in front of her eyes that he solemnly vowed before her husband, Dim Ojukwu that he would forever keep the APGA flag flying.

    How should Ndi Anambra respond to the contingency of their salvaged state being handed over to the political party on whose watch cultists thrived and Barrister Barnabas Igwe and his pregnant wife, Barrister Abigail Igwe were murdered and mutilated? Isn’t the prospect of the return of those that abducted a siting governor and turned Anambra into a bankrupt and lawless fiefdom too hazardous to contemplate?

    What is there to say to the traitorous, the folks that see public office as an exclusive club only for the initiated, who have no time to appreciate that governance is about the welfare of the people rather than a religion of rules and protocols?

    The good news is that Anambra’s choice in the impending ballot is unambiguous.

    Ndi Anambra knows the antecedents of the candidates and the sleight of hand masquerading as god-fatherism. They know those with bloodstained hands and others whose “good morning” should inevitably induce a retirement for the night. They know that it is anathema to ditch General Odumegwu-Ojukwu’s party and settle for an alternative that grudgingly ceded to our people a miserable seven percent of democracy’s dividends.

    They understand that the equitably arranged zoning principle that should see the governorship in  Anambra South in 2022 will be irredeemably compromised if unprincipled conspirators and recidivists forced the hardworking Willie Obiano from office. Those, blessed reader, are the reasons I will cast my vote for Governor Willie Obiano on election morning.

  • Anambra Polls: Buhari backs Nwoye, to attend rally

    Anambra Polls: Buhari backs Nwoye, to attend rally

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday received the Anambra State gubernatorial candidate for All Progressive Congress (APC),Tony Nwoye at the Presidential Villa.
    The President assured that he would personally make out time to attend the final campaign rally scheduled for November 2017.The Independent National Electoral Commission(INEC) has scheduled November 18, 2017 for the governorship polls in which 37 candidates are to slug it out.

    Bauchi State Governor, Muhammed Abubakar, led Nwoye to the Presidential Villa.

    He said, “I am the chairman of the national campaign Council of the APC for the Anambra governorship election that will be taking place on 18th of November this year.

    “We have had our primaries and we have settled all the appeals, we have done reconciliations. It is therefore time to present to the father of the nation, the President of Nigeria, the candidate of the APC in Anambra state, Tony Nwoye.

    “The President received us very well and has promised us that he will personally grace the grand finale of the campaign in Anambra state”.

    Nwoye who spoke to State House correspondents after the meeting with Buhari, alleged that funds meant for the local government areas were being siphoned by the current governor, Willie Obiano who is also seeking re-election.

    According to the Anambra APC candidate, if he clinches power, one of his core mandate would be to ensure a transparent leadership.

    “I am not God but based on the parameters and the indices of the Anambra political terrain and based in the campaigns that we have done so far, I am confident that by God’s grace, because God gives power, we are going to win”.

    Asked what new initiative his administration would bring to the state if he clinches power from Obiano, he said,If elected, Anambra people should expect a transparent government that would bring all the people to an enviable height.

    “We will alleviate poverty. Our local government funds are being siphoned every month since this current administration took over. Many key areas like agriculture and others are paid lip services. I will give them special attention if elected. We are going to take governance to the grassroot people,”he said.

    On threats by IPOB to boycott the elections, he explained, “we are not afraid of the threat. Our youths are unemployed, people are wailing and crying. These are the symptoms of what you are seeing now. Our people are seeing reasons why there should be elections.

    “Some of them who may have been brain washed, we are engaging them to see reasons why they should allow people to elect people whom they want to lead them.” he said