Tag: APC

  • APC clears Lagos Assembly polls

    THE Lagos State  All Progressives Congress (APC) has won all the 40 seats declared by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for the Lagos State House of Assembly election held on Saturday.

    The party won Lagos Mainland House of Assembly Constituencies I and II, defeating the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The Returning Officer for Lagos Mainland I Constituency, Dr. Adetoun Adenuga, added that the APC candidate, Mr. Ajani Owolabi, polled 17, 239 to defeat his closest rival from the PDP, Mr. Shakiru Agunbiade, who scored 3, 568 votes.

    The Returning Officer of Lagos Mainland House of Assembly Constituency II, Dr. Adetola Odubajo, declared the APC candidate Moshood Oshun as winner with 8,896 votes to defeat the PDP candidate, Kehinde Oyenuga, who got 3, 259 votes.

    The party also clinched the two seats in Epe constituencies 1 and 2. INEC declared Abiodun Tobun and M. Oluwadahunsi Ogunkelu, candidates of the APC, as winner of Epe I and II state constituency election.

    The Returning Officer for Epe Constituency I, Dr Aaron Adeoye from the University of Lagos, made the declaration at about 3.30am, yesterday at INEC Office Collation Centre in Epe.

    He said Tobun emerged winner with 19,028 votes, to defeat Mrs. Elizabeth Oluwatoyin, candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), who polled 2,540 votes.

    Dr. Adelaja Odukoya, the returning officer for Constituency 2, declared Ogunkelu as the winner with 16,227 votes to defeat his closed opponent, Mrs. Dolapo Ibrahim-Sadiq, who scored 3,765 votes.

    INEC returning officers similarly declared APC candidates winners for Badagry Constituencies 1 and 2.

    Setonji David, the incumbent APC legislator, was declared winner of Badagry Constituency 2. Ibrahim Layode also of APC was re-elected for the Badagry Constituency 1.

    Declaring the election results at the INEC Collation Centre in Ibereko, the Returning Officer for Badagry Constituency 1, Mrs. Bosede Abiodun, announced that Setonji polled 14,533 votes to beat PDP’s Alani Ajose, who scored 5,209 votes.

    Mr. Kareem Bestoyin from the Department of Social Science, University of Lagos and the Returning Officer of Badagry Constituency 2, declared Ibrahim Layode of APC as winner.

    Layode polled 12,098 votes, to beat Gbenga Fayemi of the PDP, who scored 3,030 votes.

    The total number of votes cast was 20,854 votes, with 1,534 votes rejected. Valid votes were 19,320.

    APC also won Somolu 1 and 2 constituencies. INEC declared Hon. Rotimi Olowo of APC, winner of Somolu 1, Constituency in the Lagos State House of Assembly. Prof. Adebayo Otitoloju, the Returning Officer for the constituency, made the declaration at INEC Collation Centre in Somolu, Lagos yesterday.

    Otitoloju said Olowo secured 16, 007 votes to beat his closest opponent, Mr. Olawale Akanni of the PDP, who got 2,651 votes. According to him, 18 political parties contested for the Somolu 1 Constituency seat.

    Also, at the Somolu II Constituency, Abiru Rotimi of the APC emerged the winner with 23,444 votes. The Returning Officer, Dr. Idowu Taiwo said Abiru beat Mr. Babatunde Aleshinloye-Williams of the PDP, who polled 7,221 votes. Taiwo said 17 others also participated in the election.

    Nollywood star, Desmond Elliot, candidate of the APC, was also declared winner of the Surulere 1 state Constituency election. The Returning Officer, Dr. Bolajoko Dixon-Ogbechi from the University of Lagos, made the declaration yesterday, at the Surulere Local Government Collation Centre in Lagos.

    She said Elliot emerged winner with 15,357 votes. Mr. Benjamin Olasunkanmi, candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), came second with 3,628 votes.

    APC similarly won the Lagos Island House of Assembly Constituencies 1 and 2. Prof. Olaniyi Okedele of the University of Lagos, declared Wasiu Sanni of APC winner in Constituency 1, with 18,305 votes to beat his closest rival, Oluwaseun Dosunmu of the PDP, who scored 1,821 votes.

    Total number of votes cast in the election was 21,237, with 914 void votes and 20, 323 valid votes.

    In Constituency 2, Prof. Solomon Akinboye of University of Lagos and the Returning Officer of Lagos Island House of Assembly Constituency 2 declared Olarenwaju Afinni of APC the winner. Akinboye said a total of 19,121 votes were cast with 868 votes rejected and 18,253 votes valid.

    He said Olarenwaju Afinni polled 16,010 votes, followed by Sanni Ismail of the PDP, who scored 2,096 votes.

    In Agege, APC won the two seats available. Speaker of the House Mudashiru Obasa won his Agege Constituency 1, with 17,434 votes to beat his closest rival, Tahid Muade of the PDP, who scored 4,743 votes.

    Another APC candidate, Oluyinka Ogundimu won Constituency 2, polling 19, 489 votes. He beat Adebiyi Olanrewaju of the PDP, who scored 3,479 votes, according to the result declared by Mr. Anthony Adebayo, an Associate Professor of the University of Lagos and the Returning Officer.

     

  • Kano APC leads in 8 LGAs, PDP 2

    The All Progressives Congress (APC), in Kano state is now leading in eight out of the ten Local Government councils, with PDP having two as announced at the INEC collation centre in Kano.

    Dr. Shehu Usman-Yahaya, collation officer for Governorship election said in Madobi Local Government Area (LGA), the All Progressives Congress (APC) has Scored 24,491, and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) scored 24,309 votes.

    He added that the People’s Redemption Party (PRP) candidate which came third in the race in Makoda, Alhaji Salihu Sagir-Takai had also scored 425 votes.

    Also, the returning officer for Makoda Local Government Area, Prof. Aliyu Suleiman said that the APC candidate, Dr. Abdullahi Ganduje has scored 22,788, and PDP candidate, Alhaji Abba Kabir scored 9,253.

    According to Suleiman, the PRP candidate has scored 761 votes.

    In Bebeji LGA, the collation and Returning officer for the Governorship election, Prof. Ibrahim Barde announced that the APC candidate has scored 17,418, and PDP scored 18,533 while PRP got 788 votes.

    Dr. Mohammed Yusha’u, the Returning Officer for Kunchi LGA for gubernatorial election said the APC candidate had garned 16,159, while PDP got 13,171, with PRP having scored 270 votes .

    In Danbatta LGA, the Returning Officer Prof. Abubakar salisu, announced that the APC candidate led with 24,686, defeating the PDP candidate who scored 18,696, leaving PDP to struggle with 2,793.

    In Karaye,LGA, the returning officer, Prof.Bello ldris Tijani,announced that the APC scored18,770,beat the PDP candidate who got 17,163,while PRP managed with 383 votes.

    In Kibiya LGA,the returning officer,Prof. Isa Garba said that PDP got 17,373,leaving APC with 15,760,while PRP was left with 250 votes.

    While in Albasu LGA,the APC garnered 25,358 votes,PDP got 17,373,with PRP having 347 votes,as announced by the returning officer,Prof Mustafa Bichi.

    In Garko LGA,the returning officer,Prof.Abdulsam and Umar Jibiya, announced that APC scored 16,952,while PDP has12,295 votes,as PRP scored 4,204 votes.

  • Gov poll: APC in early lead in Nasarawa

    Governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress ( APC ) in Nasarawa State Mr. Abdullahi Sule is leading the results of Saturday’s Governorship elections declared so far by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    The results from three local government areas of the state so far collated by the State Returning Officer, Prof. Abdullahi Bala showed APC in clear lead.

    The APC candidate is followed by David Ombugadu of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Mr Labaran Maku of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

    Read Also: APC wins two House of Assembly seats in Mushin

    Mr Auwal Ibrahim, Returning Officer for Wamba Local Government Area said APC polled 15,706 votes; PDP scored 9,333, while APGA polled 1,772 votes.

    Similarly in Keana Local Government Area, the Returning Officer, Aisha Bello, announced that APC scored 11,759 votes, PDP got 6,579, while APGA came third having polled 2,869 votes.

    According to Awe Local Government Returning Officer, Imam Akwyede, APC polled 29,443 votes with the PDP coming a distant second scoring 9,228, while APGA polled a total 1,801 votes.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that more results were being expected as the collation centre had gone on break

  • APC floors Saraki in his LG

    All Progressives Congress (APC) has floored the Senate President Bukola Saraki in his Ilorin West local government area.

    Collating Officer for Ilorin West council in the governorship and House of Assembly elections Prof Gbadebo Olaoye said APC candidate Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq polled 55, 287 while his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) counterpart Razak Atunwa scored 25,583.

    APC also won in Pategi local government area with 18, 109 and PDP 2,578. Others are Kaiama APC- 14,829, PDP- 3,386 and Ekiti local government area APC polled 7,938 while scored 3,950.

  • PDP guber candidate loses LG to APC in Kwara

    The Governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Kwara, Hon. Razak Atunwa lost the governorship election in his Asa local government to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The Chief Collation Officer for the governorship election, Prof. Liman Sanusi, announced the result for Asa Local Government Area at the collation center in INEC office, Ilorin on Sunday.

    Sanusi, who is the Vice Chancellor of the Federal University, Lafia said AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq of the APC polled 16,246 to defeat Atunwa who scored 8,963 votes.

    In Ogbondorok/Reke Ward, APC got 781 votes as against 213 votes polled by PDP, while in About/Owode Ward, AbdulRazaq polled 925 votes and Atunwa got 421 votes.

    APC scored 344 votes in Okeso Ward to defeat PDP with 239 votes while in Laduba Ward, APC polled 1,243 as against 362 votes garnered by APC.

    In Afon Ward, AbdulRazaq got 1,384 as against Atunwa’s 569, while APC scored 1,297 votes in Oja Ward as against 472 votes PDP scored.

    APC also won in Budo-Efo with 1,195 votes as against 874 votes scored by PDP.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that already results from 11 local governments have been announced.

    The local governments are Asa, Oke Ero, Oyun, Offa, Irepodun, Isin, Ifelodun, Moro, Edu, Ilorin South, Ilorin East.

    NAN reports that APC was leading in the 11 local governments so far declared.

    Results from four local governments of Ilorin West, Kaiama, Baruten,and Patigi were being awaited.

  • Ogun: Anxiety as results from seven LGAs arrive INEC office

    Anxiety mounts at the 2019 General Elections State Collation Centre within the State Headquarters of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in Magbon, Abeokuta, as results for the Saturday governorship election in Ogun State have started arriving in bits from the 20 Local Government Areas (LGAs) preparatory to their being announced.

    Many within and outside the INEC Office are anxious to get the results first from the Commission, to authenticate or disprove what they were picking from unauthorised quarters.

    Already, results from seven Local Governments have arrived the collation centre and in no time, they would be announced one after the other by the respective LGA Returning Officers.

    At least 40 political parties fielded candidates for the 2019 gubernatorial poll in the state but the major contenders have remained the quartet of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Peoples Democratic Party(PDP), Allied People’s Movement (APM) and African Democratic Congress (ADC).

    Feelers from the field across the state’s 20 LGAs indicated that Prince Adedapo Abiodun of the APC, is leading the pack of contestants and is most predicted to coast home to victory.

    Abiodun, a successful entrepreneur, real estate player and Oil magnate appeared to have dominated the Ogun East, his Senatorial district in his performance while also making an audacious presence in both Ogun Central with the help of party leaders and chieftains like former Governor Olusegun Osoba and Ogun West, the constituency of his running mate, Engr. Noimot Salako – Oyedele.

    Other major contenders are Senator Buruji Kashamu (PDP), Governor Ibikunle Amosun’s preferred candidate; Hon. Abdulkabir Adekunle Akinlade(APM) and Prince Gboyega Nasir Isiaka (ADC), a third time contestant and each time, on a different political platform.

  • APC wins Abaji Chairmanship elections

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has declared the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Abdulraman Ajiya, as the winner of Abaji Area Council in Saturday’s chairmanship race.

    Prof. Simon Malaka, the INEC Returning Officer, who announced the result, said Ajiya, the incumbent chairman, scored the highest votes of 13,442 to defeat his closest rival, Alhaji Muhammad Ashafa, of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) who polled 10,473 votes.

    He said that “Abdulraman Ajiya of the APC having satisfied the requirements of the law and having the highest number of votes is hereby declared the winner and is returned elected.”

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the election was conducted peacefully and the result was announced in the presence of party agents and security personnel

  • APC set to win 23 seats in Edo

    The All Progressives Congress in Edo State is in clear lead to take majority of the 24 available seats in the State House of Assembly.

    Results from various wards across the state put the APC ahead while the Peoples Democratic Party lagged behind.

    In 2015, the APC won 21 seats while the PDP won three seats.

    The results declared so far are far cry from the results of the February 23rd Presidential and National Assembly Elections.

    In some areas monitored by our reporter, there were low voters turnout while voters came out in large numbers in some localities.

    At Fugar, headquarters of Estako Central local government, materials arrived at 7:45am and voting started at 8am.

    Hon Johnson Oghuma, the lawmaker representing Estako Central in the House of Representatives who voted at Unit six Ward two told reporters he expected large turnout of voters.

    From the results collated from the polling units as at the time of filing this report, it was gathered that the APC will win 23 seats while the PDP may win only one seat in Esan North East Constituency one.

  • Five injured in Delta as APC, PDP exchange blames over shootings

    Sporadic shootings, voter apathy, yesterday, marred the governorship and state house of assembly elections in Delta State.

    The shootings took place in Ugba Primary School, Onicha Olona, Aniocha north local government area between loyalists of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and All Progressives Congress (APC) over the eligibility of some Hausa/Fulani voters.

    Trouble started when APC leaders said they were registered voters and must vote just as PDP loyalists disagreed that they are imported from Asaba, capital of Delta State, and could not vote.

    The tussle resulted in sporadic gunshots by some group loyal to one of the political parties just as the loyalists of the opposition party responded, leading to over five people critically injured and receiving treatment at an undisclosed hospital. The ward has four units with eight voting points.

    Confirming the development, former Speaker, Delta State House of Assembly, Victor Ochei, said the Hausa boys were registered voters as far back as seven years ago.

    But Commissioner for Tourism, Hon Emmanuel Basim Chinye, disagreed that the APC loyalists started the shooting to make the eight units uncomfortable to PDP loyalists.

    Meanwhile, violence was also recorded in some other areas of the state, especially at a polling unit in Afiesere community, Ughelli north local government area.

    Sources said skirmishes broke out following moves by agents of one of the political parties to sway eligible voters into voting their party.

    The Nation gathered that two APC supporters were badly injured and later hospitalised.

    In Ika south local government area, Dr Cairo Ojuigboh, Delta State APC presidential spokesman, said “PDP raided RAC centres and escaped with card readers but were stopped from loading them.”

    He accused the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) of dishonesty for allowing voting without card readers.

    Shortly after casting his votes at about 8:40am, at unit 03 of Ward 02 in Owa-Alero, in Ika north east local

    government area, the Delta State governor and candidate of the People’s Democratic Party, Ifeanyi Okowa, said “I will emerge victorious at the end of the day. We have partnered well with Deltans in the last four years, and I am convinced that they will vote for me. But the only thing is those planning to disrupt the election with thugs from Edo State, but God will not allow that to happen.”

  • Are the things that differentiate APC and PDP stronger than the things that unite them? [Post-elections reflections through a “Q and A” approach]

    Q: So, are the things that differentiate the victorious APC from the defeated PDP stronger than the things that unite them as ruling class political parties?

    A: I don’t think so since the things that unite all ruling class parties in Africa and the developing word tend to be stronger than the things that separate them. However, asking this question first before we have asked and responded to questions about the differentiating and unifying things themselves is like putting the cart before the horse or like starting a story at its end rather than at its beginning. There is also this fact: politics in the poor, crisis-ridden countries of our continent and the world is often like warfare and for this reason, the horse must come before the cart, otherwise we will never make our way out of the “war zone” of our politics and econmomy.

    Q: Very well then, let’s proceed as you suggest. What’s the “horse” here? Or more appropriately, what are the “horses” here if we make a distinction between the things that differentiate the APC and the PDP and the things that unite them. Can we take them one by one starting with the differentiating factors between the two parties?

    A: I agree with you completely, especially because both the campaigns and the results of the general elections this year have clarified differences between the two parties far beyond any of our past general elections since the return to civilian rule in 1999. Basically, the ruling party, the APC, has emerged as a center-right, populist and “nationalist” party while the PDP, as the main or indeed only opposition party, has done everything possible to confirm its right-wing, pro-business and pro-imperialist leanings. Not only did Atiku and the PDP do and say everything necessary to indicate that their administration would be a very business-friendly one, they also signified to the world of international finance and global capitalism that under their rule, Nigeria would overnight become a place where it is both good and profitable to do business. To demonstrate his utter seriousness on this point, Atiku loudly and clamorously declared that even at the cost of his life, he would once and for all privatize and sell off NNPC. And as if all these were not enough, Atiku and the PDP openly invited the US and the European Union to impose travel bans and economic sanctions against any Nigerians that worked to prevent them from winning the elections by unfair means. Dear compatriot, if you were surprised that Atiku, who had been unable for a long time to obtain a travel visa to the US finally succeeded in doing so during the campaigns, look no further for an explanation than these Atiku-PDP decisive embrace of old-style pro-capitalist and pro-imperialist agendas…

    Q: Wait a minute, wait a minute! Are you saying that APC itself is not pro-capitalist, pro-imperialist and pro-privatization? When APC took over from PDP as the ruling party, did it not continue massive privatization of national assets and public enterprises and utilities as a matter of both ideology and policy? Isn’t it for mostly sentimental reasons that Buhari is still reluctant to sell off NNPC? Aren’t leading members of his administration or his party like Raji Fashola and Nassir El Rufai, aggressively pro-privatization? What…

    A: You’re right, you’re right and all these things that you say about Buhari and the APC are true or correct. But don’t ignore or underestimate the important differences, the consequential distinctions between the Right and the Centre-Right, especially in the context of the desperate or even needless tragic conditions for the vast majority in a country like ours and indeed in all the developing nations and regions of the world in which the promise, the dream of transforming the national economy into a middle-income economy more or less permanently remains a dream while the few wealthy get wealthier and wealthier and the poor get poorer and poorer. There is no certainty, definitely no absolute certainty that things would get better under a center-right party like the APC because this depends on many other factors beside ideology. But I believe that it is very crucial that all Nigerians know and take note of this emergent differentiation between the APC and the PDP. Think of it this way, compatriots: no leading political party in our entire post-independence political history has been as vigorously and even as militantly pro-business and pro-imperialist as the PDP under Atiku Abubakar…

    Q: Well, okay, you’ve made your point effectively. But how many Nigerians are aware of and really care about this difference in ideology and policy between APC and PDP? And isn’t there a continuum rather than a clean division between the Right and the Center-Right? At any rate, I think that the most important difference between the APC and the PDP in the elections this year is the fact that, for the most part, the solid base of APC is now in the North while conversely, the solid base of the PDP is now in the South. Isn’t that the case? It seems to me that when the APC emerged as a very broad coalition with an impressive national spread in 2014, its main promise was that it was, at last, forging an organic and consequential identity of political interests between the North and the South, especially in relation to the ethical and ideological imperative of the interests of the poor of both regions. That seems to be gone now, no?

    A: Well, I am not sure that it is gone for good, gone forever. Please, don’t leave out of account the massively crucial fact that Buhari especially but also the party, fell far short of their promises, their campaign manifestos. In essence, they had a three-point manifesto, both in the 2015 and 2019 elections: security; the economy; the fight against corruption. On the first two – security and the economy – Buhari and the APC performed woefully, so much so that it was nothing short of an outrageous presumption to present these two objectives again as their rallying points in 2019. On security alone, Buhari’s performance between 2015-2019 is quite possibly the worst performance of any Nigerian head of state to date! And on the third leg of their three-legged manifesto – the war against corruption – at best the verdict is mixed and at worst, another failure of the president and his party. Those inclined to give Buhari a passing grade for the war on corruption claim that at the very least, the arrant impunity of corruption during the PDP years is now gone, possibly forever. But I say, not yet and I give the examples of Mainagate and the case of Buhari’s first SGF, Babachir David Lawal and I say, not so fast, impunity of corruption is still very much with us! All the same, I think we should not be over-hasty in pronouncing the end of North-South populist unity under the reign of Buhari’s APC. If the party succeeds in decisively curbing corruption and the recovered loot is put to effect substantial amelioration of the woeful conditions of the poor of the South and the North, then the promise of Buhari’s second coming of 2015 might be revived. At any rate, what I am emphasizing here is a claim that one of the most important differences between the APC and the PDP is a perception, beginning in 2015, that Buhari and his party portend a unity of the North and the South that is based on the identity of the social and economic interests of the poor of both regions in their tens of millions. If that has now been exposed by the 2019 general elections as a mere dream as far from fulfillment now as in 2015, the cause for this is precisely the fact that the things that unite the APC and the PDP are much stronger than the things that differentiate them.

    Q: Ah, I can’t wait to hear what you have to say on that point – the things that unite these two bitterly opposed ruling class parties. But before we get to that juncture in this conversation, I would like you to address the specific issue of the increased antipathy towards Buhari and the APC in the three zonal regions of the South-west, the South-south and, especially, the South-east. Does this not indicate a return to the historically big and divisive contention between the South and the North under a charismatic leader whose return to power was premised on, precisely, bringing the North and the South closer together?

    A: Yes, unquestionably, it does, it does. Here, we have to be very frank: Buhari is a man, a politician, who is (now) greatly feared and perhaps even despised in many parts of the South. In this respect, it is an understatement to say that his administration has recorded a great failure in security matters; he actually scares the living daylight out of millions of people in many parts of the South – and parts of the North too. How many people in the South would you ask whether or not Buhari is coldly and calculatedly partisan in the destructive clashes between herders and farmers, and how many would tell you, point blank, that the President is an inveterate partisan of the herders? Most, if not everyone that you ask! Of course, the herder-farmer conflicts have a greater complexity than the issue of Buhari’s partisanship, but because he is also known to exhibit strong and undisguised parochial and sectionalist sentiments and ideas in other areas of our national life, the herder-farmer standoff has taken the dimension of a specter for all the other failures of the president and his party. This can be extended to his big electoral problems in the South-east and the South-south: the widespread feelings of marginalization and second-class citizenship in both regional zones of the country had been there long before Buhari’s rise to power. However, they have grown immensely under Buhari – at the same time that his charisma has not failed to produce discernible effects in both regions! Indeed, this point provides us with a way to perceive how and why the things that unite the APC and the PDP are much stronger than the things that separate and differentiate them.

    Q; How so? And what are these things anyway? Please be very concrete in your response to this question.

    A: Well, I was going to invoke some “theoretical” explanations like the collective project of surplus extraction and primitive accumulation as the most powerfully cohering element among all our ruling class political parties and politicians, but I suppose you will deem that not “concrete”, not clear enough! So, let me put the same explanation in a very concrete formulation: as the president, as a senator, as an honorable, and as a very high public officeholder, ask not what you can do for your country; ask, instead, of what your country can give you for your service to “your people” and your country. That is what unites all our ruling class political parties and politicians. And that is what is known in “theoretical” discourse as primitive accumulation as an elemental force. Do you know the word, “tropism” compatriots? I mean tropism as in hydrotropism, phototropism and geotropism? As the common term in all these three phenomena of nature, tropism is the elemental force that drives all living things to, respectively, water, sunlight and places where we feel rooted, where we feel the force of connection to a place, a locality that we do not feel toward any other place in the world.

    Q: Tropism? That is what unites all our ruling class political parties and politicians? And it is stronger than differences over restructuring, over powerful ethnic, regional and religious loyalties and over gender and generational demands for redistribution and restitution?

    A: Yes, compatriots, yes. Except that tropism itself comes with a natural, enlightened self-interest that our ruling class politicians do not have. All living things have a tropism that drives them toward the warmth of sunlight and the slaking of thirst by water. But all living things also know that too much of sunlight, too much of water is harmful and potentially destructive. Have you, compatriots, ever come across a Nigerian ruling class politician who feels and acts on the realization that too much of taking from our collective wealth and national assets is harmful, have you?

    • Biodun Jeyifo bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu