Tag: APC

  • Elections: APC wins 19 states as PDP takes seven

    Elections: APC wins 19 states as PDP takes seven

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday consolidated its hold on the political landscape, winning some Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) strongholds as more governorship election results were announced.

    The party won in Plateau, Benue, Niger, Adamawa and Kebbi states that were held by the PDP. Besides, it retained Nasarawa and Borno states.

    The PDP won in Delta and Cross River states. Its ‘victory’ in Rivers, announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) yesterday – like the one in Akwa Ibom on Sunday – is in dispute.

    Results from Taraba, Abia and Imo states were declared inconclusive by the electoral agency.

    In Adamawa, APC candidate Jibrilla Mohammed Bindow won with 362,329 votes. Markus Gundiri of Social Democratic Party (SDP) with 181,806 came second.

    Mallam Nuhu Ribadu of the PDP came third with 98,917.

    The candidate of the Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM), Dr Ahmed Modibbo, scored 32,985 votes.

    APC candidate Muhammadu Badaru Abubakar won the Jigawa governoship seat. He scored 648,045 votes to beat the PDP candidate, Alhaji Aminu Ibrahim Ringim, who got 479,447 votes.

    Ben Ayade of the PDP won in Cross River State. He defeated Odey Ochicha of the APC with 342,016 to 53, 983. Labour Party candidate Fidelis Ugbo scored 36, 918.

    In Benue State, APC candidate Samuel Ortom polled  422,932  to defeat PDP candidate Terhemen Tarzoor who took 313,878 votes.

    A one-time speaker of the House of Assembly, Simon Lalong, is the Plateau State governor-elect. He polled 564,627 to defeat Senator Gyan Pwajok of the PDR, who scored 520,913 votes.

    Nasarawa State Governor Tanko Al-Makura of the APC retains his seat by defeating  his closest rival and former Minister of Information Labaran Maku of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA). Al Makura polled 309,746 votes to Maku’s 178,983.  PDP candidate Yusuf Agabi polled 119,782.

    Al – Makura said: “My victory is victory for all the people of Nasarawa State. It is victory for all the people that contested with me because by their participation in this exercise they have endured due diligence in the process of democracy and I think they should also be appreciated for having faith in the system to participate in it.

    “I believe all of us are working towards one goal for the purpose of taking this state to the next level for the betterment of the people of the state.”

    APC candidate Abubakar Sani Bello won in Niger State. He scored 593,702 votes against the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate Umar Nasko with 239, 772 votes.

    Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima of APC polled 649,913 to beat Gambo Lawan of  PDP who scored  34,771 votes.

    In Delta State, Senator Ifeanyi Okowa polled 724,680 votes to beat Chief Great Ogboru of Labour Party who won 130,028 votes. Chief O’tega Emerhor of APC garnered 67,825 votes. Okowa won in 21 of the 25 local government areas. Ogboru clinched the remaining four. Kebbi State Governor-elect is Senator Atiku Bagudu, who scored 477,376 votes to defeat PDP candidate Gen. Sarkin Bello, who scored 293,443 votes.

    Former Minister of State for Education and PPD candidate Nyesom Wike was declared winner of the Rivers governorship elections.

    INEC Returning Officer Prof. Faraday Orumwense, said he polled 1,029,102 votes.

    He said Dr. Dakuku Peterside, of the APC scored 124,896 votes. LP candidate Tonye Princewill polled 10,142 votes.

    Election in Emohua, one of the 23 local government areas, was cancelled, having been marred by violence, according to the INEC officer in charge of the area.

    The result showed that the PDP won 25 seats in the House of Assembly elections. The APC won a seat while the exercise was inconclusive in six constituencies.

    INEC yesterday declared as “inconclusive”, the governorship election in Taraba State.

    The commission ordered a rerun in some polling units.

    The candidate of the PDP Darius Dickson Ishaku won in nine local governments areas with 317,198 votes. Hajia Aisha Alhassan of the APC won six local government areas, scoring 262,386 votes.

    The Returning Officer, Prof. Mohammed Kyari, said since the number of cancelled votes was more than the number of the difference in votes (margin) between PDP and APC, there was need to reconduct the election in the affected areas.

    Kyari said: “Since the number of the cancelled votes is more than the difference between the two leading parties, the election in Taraba State is therefore inconclusive.”

    INEC said it cancelled the polls in those areas because of irregularities and pockets of violence.

    The PDP is leading with 54,812 votes. The number of the cancelled votes in all the affected polling units is 127,125.

    INEC said there would be rerun in Donga Local Government Area and some polling units in Chanchanji Ward in Takum “where votes were rejected”.

    The rerun in Donga will hold across the entire 165 polling units, which the PDP earlier claimed to have won.

    INEC also declared the Imo State governorship election inconclusive.

    Returning Officer Prof. Oye Ibidapo- Obe, said APC candidate Rochas Okorocha is leading with 385,071 votes to his PDP rival Emeka Ihedioha with 306,142 votes.

    According to the Returning Officer, the election was declared inconclusive because the total number of votes in areas where election could not hold was higher than the margin between the two leading candidates.

    The APC candidate is ahead with 79,0529 votes. The number of votes in the affected areas is  144,715.

    Prof. Ibidapo-Obe said the results could not be authenticated and a winner declared, until rerun election was held in the places were results were cancelled.

    Then units are scattered across the state with the bulk in six Wards out of the 10 in Oru East local government area.

    In Abia, PDP candidate Okezie Ikpeazu is leading with 248,459. APGA’s Dr Alex Otti has 165,406 votes. The election was declared inconclusive last night by Returning Officer Prof. Benjamin Ozumba.

    Prof Ozumba said there were 179,224 potential voters who wre accredited but could not vote due to various reasons including violence. He said the number is higher than the difference between the leading candidate and the second placed candidate. Ikpeazu is leading Otti with 83,053 votes.

  • This defining moment

    This defining moment

    Far from confirming the claim of the incurably deluded spokesperson for Goodluck Jonathan’s doomed re-election campaign that his principal had conceded defeat out of patriotism rather than because he lost irredeemably, last weekend’s gubernatorial and state assembly elections show dramatically just how diminished, how washed-up the “biggest political party in Africa” has become.

    One of its chieftains, who would later stand trial for criminal embezzlement (he was cleared by the courts) had declared that the PDP would rule Nigeria for 60 years “in the first instance.”

    More recently, as she barged from one campaign stop to another, hurling coarse abuse at her husband’s opponents and inciting rented crowds to stone anyone demanding a change from   the status quo, Dr Jonathan’s wife had stamped her ample personal authority on continuity:  60  years of PDP power, nothing less.

    In the event, the PDP’s reign, which has drawn far more tears than cheers, is mercifully set to expire after just 16 years.

    An obituary notice to that effect, a spoof on the standard Nigerian fare, has been doing the rounds. With due acknowledgement to its anonymous author and high praise for his or her creativity, I quote the epitaph in part:

    “With gratitude to God and total submission to the will of the Nigerian Electorate,  we announce the death of our party, grand party and great-grand party, PDP, on March 30, 2015, after a prolonged illness from corruption, impunity, arrogance, bomb blasts, etc.

    “Funeral services will be held on May 29, 2015, at Eagle Square, Abuja, at 10 a.m”

    To be sure, the reports of the PDP’s death are somewhat exaggerated.   However, persuaded that it has served its time and now faces a bleak future, many of its hardiest denizens are bailing out as if it were a ship on which an outbreak of Ebola fever has just been confirmed.  The PDP, they have now realised, with their own Iyiola Omisore, is nothing without the Presidency.

    Sic transit gloria.

    As things stand now, the APC has, in addition to winning the Presidency, racked up comfortable majorities in both houses of the National Assembly, and all the principal officers of that body will come from its ranks.  It also has some 20 gubernatorial chairs and the same number of state assemblies under its control.

    Not bad for an opposition party that Dr Jonathan’s wife derided endlessly as an “expired drug”’ that has undergone so many name-changes that it might yet call itself “Ebola” — a party against which her husband who was only last week being hailed as a statesman for merely doing the decent thing, re-launched a vile, divisive, money-drenched campaign in a desperate but ultimately futile bid to supplant in Lagos, its stronghold.

    Oba Rilwan Akiolu’s bellicose warning to the Igbo to vote for the APC gubernatorial candidate Akinwunmi Ambode or face the consequences may well have been his answer to Dr Jonathan’s dishonourable campaign. But that is no justification. Whatever happened to noblesse oblige?

    Fears that Nigeria may become a one-party state, what with the rate at which members of the PDP are abandoning ship for the victorious APC bring to memory the aftermath of the 1983 general elections during which the NPN, inebriated with its stolen victories across Nigeria, declared that all other political parties had become “irrelevant.”   Three months later, it was swept into oblivion by the military.

    The APC must not for a moment indulge in such hubris.  Nothing stops the PDP from re-building itself into a strong and credible opposition party the way a decimated Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) under the dynamic and committed leadership of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu had done before the merger that produced the APC

    For one thing, even in those geopolitical zones where it is weakest, the PDP still has some diehard supporters, witness its entrenchment in the South East and South South where the plucky Rochas Okorocha and the much-persecuted but resolute Chibuike Amaechi are the last men standing, its tenacious grip in Ondo, its close run in Lagos, and its comprehensive sweep in all the elections held in Ekiti in the past two weeks.

    At his inauguration last July, Ekiti Governor Ayodele Fayose had in a speech that sounded as if it was an entry in the diary of a mad man, had vowed to drive the ACN not just out of Ekiti but out of Yoruba land and Nigeria.

    A delusion, to be sure; but he seems to have succeeded in driving it out of Ekiti.

    In the June 2014 election that returned Fayose to power after a previous outing remembered mainly for high scandal, arbitrariness, brazen corruption and sophomoric stunts, he won a majority in every local government to defeat the incumbent, Dr Kayode Fayemi.

    We now know, through damning documentary evidence produced by a competent witness, that the victory was procured, not by the so-called stomach infrastructure strategy, but by good old-fashioned skullduggery.

    But the formula Fayose employed to deliver Ekiti to Jonathan in the presidential race, secure the election of three senators, six members of the House of Representatives and 26 members of  the state assembly, all of whom he had personally handpicked, without challenge  – how Fayose constituted Ekiti into a one-party state remains one the best-kept secrets of Nigerian politics.

    Household per household, Ekiti is reputed to have the largest number of holders of advanced degrees not just in Nigeria but in all of Africa, and surely ranks high in the world league for that distinction, if it does not sit at the very top.

    That a delinquent who parades his mother’s infirmity of the most intimate kind in the market square to score a cheap political point can hold them in thrall, pervert all they hold dear and block every recourse to justice and redress, is an affront and a standing rebuke to the learned and highly accomplished people of Ekiti, and the elders who won’t call him to order.

    History will show that Fayose could not have done it without Dr Jonathan’s close collaboration or active connivance.  But how will the Ekiti people explain this tragic turn in their history to their progeny?

    To return to what lies ahead, at this defining moment:  The task before the APC now is to transform a loose coalition into a focused governing party and translate slogan into actuality.  It must deliver change – change that Nigerians can feel and see in their living conditions and in the lives of their children.

    Not change that will occur in a nebulous future, like regular power supply, but change with an immediate impact.

    It cannot be business as usual.  Governance cannot be a jobs-for-the boys scheme.  In this data-driven age, it cannot be an encounter of the unprepared with the unforeseen.

    Public expectations are high.  There is so much do, so much to fix.

    During World War II, one American military unit had this as its motto:  “The difficult task we do right away; the impossible takes a little longer.”

    That is the spirit that should animate the APC as it prepares to take power and guide it throughout its rule.

    This must not be another false dawn.

  • Ha, ase Jimi o tie le!

    Dear reader, please permit Hardball to, this morning, indulge in Reuben Abati’s famous tautology, in the service of his presidential principal: negative triumphalism!

    Ha, ase Jimi o tie le!  Ha, so Jimi is not that tough!

    For much of last week, it was virtual war, with the Olowo Eko, Oba Rilwan Akiolu fatwa; the Igbo taking the umbrage and threatening to vote Jimi Onye-Igbo to call the Oba’s bluff; the Yoruba, first all apologies; but later their own bout of defiance, almost telling the Igbo to go jump into the lagoon (no pun intended!); the Ambode All Progressives Congress (APC) camp in palpable panic, over what had promised an easy enough win, following the bandwagon of their presidential triumph but now becoming a tough call; and the Lagos Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), veteran and perpetual losers in such gubernatorial match-ups, clutching at a virtual gift from the gods to shake off the stupor of their crestfallen supporters, after their presidential loss!

    Lagos, the state proud indigenes and residents love to call city-state, was quaking with electoral war and rumours of war!  Jimi Agbaje himself, the PDP candidate, went virtually berserk, somewhat telling Igbo traders at Trade Fair Complex Lagos to use their votes to drive APC into the Atlantic Ocean, in a savage and irreverent pun of the Akiolu lagoon warning!  No paddy for jungle — on April 11, there would be war, war for the soul of Lagos, and the ultimate electoral determination of its rightful owners!

    Since 1999, Mr. Agbaje has been the most formidable challenger to the Lagos progressive establishment.  For one, it was a very dangerous juncture: a government handing over to another, not an incumbent seeking a second term.  For another, with an ethnically and religiously divisive Jonathan Presidency, bent on driving in inter-ethnic and inter-religious wedges for costly partisan gains, it was the best PDP chance in ages.  What is more?  A party used to fielding political straw-(wo)men had cottoned on to a very credible candidate — who rather colourfully dubbed himself Jay-Kay (his initials) but whose APC opponents derided as Just Kidding!

    But at the end, it was a damp squib, not flattering at all to the JK noise and seeming formidability on facebook and other social media outlets.  Of the 20 officially recognised local governments, JK won only in five, surrendering the remaining 15 to the APC candidate, Akin Ambode, who coined his own Ambo [We’re coming]; and whose delirious supporters, sensing victory as the results trickled in, broke into screams of “Ambo, ati de!” [“We were coming, but now we’re here!]  Though the winning margin was not a gulf, the spread was a rout — ase JK o tie le!  Still, it ended as sport, as JK congratulated the winner, shortly before the official declaration of results.

    Mr. Agbaje must have learnt some hard lessons from this bitterly fought electioneering, with hate campaign and ethnic baiting the central core of PDP’s strategy, even if the candidate himself, aside from a few blunders, sought to stick to issues.

    But the Igbo-Yoruba confrontation, which drove the eventual result, hung on JK’s neck the rather dangerous title of Afonja of Lagos — as in the Afonja of Ilorin case, a toxic metaphor for a person who sides with strangers against his own people’s interest.

    Now that the heat of election is gone, it is time for real reconciliation.  JK may be a keen competitor, who went overboard in the heat of the moment.  But he is a patriot, not a traitor.  Lagos needs every useful pair of hands on deck.

  • APC: Ondo Assembly polls marred by irregularities

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo State has said last Saturday’s House of Assembly election in the state was a bazaar, marred by irregularities and intimidation.

    The party said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has shown its desperation as many undemocratic activities were perpetrated.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Abayomi Adesanya, the APC said: “The election was marred by irregularities, intimidation and violence.

    “The people were intimidated and induced to vote for the PDP.

    “The election didn’t represent the wishes and aspirations of the people as many results were canceled and election materials hijacked.

    “Our people were baited with money ranging from N1,000 to N5,000. Their conscience was tampered with.

    “The April 11 election is far from being free, fair and credible. Governor Olusegun Mimiko was desperate and he employed every illegal means during the election.”

    Adesanya said the PDP turned the election into a war in Ilaje, Idanre, Ese-Odo, Irele, Ifedore, Odigbo, Okitipupa and Owo local governments .

    “The party -with the help of security agencies- fomented troubles in our party’s strongholds.

    “Our agents were beaten and intimidated by PDP thugs, leading to them fleeing their various polling booths .

    One of our members was killed in Ifedore by PDP thugs.”

    The party reasoned that the fact that Ondo is one of the states where violence was recorded as announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is a pointer that the PDP and Mimiko were desperate to win the election at all cost. Our party will challenge the outcome through legal means.”

     

  • Sambo leads Fed Govt’s transition committee

    President Goodluck Jonathan has raised a 17-man transition committee to take stock and prepare a comprehensive handover note for the President-elect, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.

    The panel, which held its inaugural sitting yesterday, is headed by Vice President Namadi Sambo.

    But the presidency is awaiting the transition committee of the All Progressives Congress (APC)/president-elect for what a source described as “constant consultations on key issues.”

    Although the list of the committee was yet to be made public, it was gathered that it was a “compact panel” for efficiency.

    Some members of the committee are the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Senator Anyim Pius Anyim; Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (Northcentral); the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who is also Coordinating Minister for the Economy (Southeast); Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Stephen Oru (Southsouth); Minister of State for Finance, Bashir Yuguda (Northwest); Minister of Police Affairs Mr. Jelili Adesiyan (Southwest); and the Minister of Transport Senator Idris Umar (Northeast).

    Others in the team are the Managing Director of Assets Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON), Mr. Mustafa Chike-Obi; the Director-General and Chief Executive Officer of the Bureau of Public  Enterprises, Mr. Benjamin Ezra Dikki; and some technocrats in government.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the committee’s meeting, Anyim said: “We met to discuss the terms of reference and developed the guidelines for preparing the handover briefs and the committee adjourned to April 20 for a second meeting.

    “After we have collected our own briefs from the MDAs (ministries, departments and agencies) and then put them together, we will then interface with the other committee so that whatever clarification they want, the questions they have, we will be able to address them.”

    On whether he was aware that a committee has already been set up, he said: “Yes, that is normal. Ours is to collect our own hand over briefs, prepare the briefs and prepare the president’s handover notes.

    “The terms of reference of our own committee are to collate relevant information for the hand over briefs from all the MDAs, prepare them and interface with the incoming administration’s transition committee.”

    A reliable source, who spoke in confidence, said: “The President mandated the committee to do a thorough job to enable the administration to take off on time.

    “The government is only awaiting the APC/President-elect’s transition team to compare notes and carry the new government along.”

    The source said the key areas the committee might focus on include the actual state of the economy; assets and liabilities, especially local and foreign debts; the level of privatisation programme; completed and uncompleted projects; multilateral agreements; and the oil industry among others.

    But, there were indications yesterday that the President-elect might meet with APC leaders tomorrow on the transition committee of his incoming administration.

  • APC hails Lagosians

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State has thanked Lagosians for renewing their confidence and trust in the party and its leaders.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Joe Igbokwe, the party said: “Words are not enough to express our gratitude and satisfaction for the boldness and courage displayed by Lagos voters in voting for continuity in the Centre of Excellence.

    “In the face of harassment, intimidation and brigandage from the powers that be, APC lovers showed courageous love to the party and its leaders.

    “APC lovers did not succumb to blatant lies, hate campaigns, politics of the stomach, ethnic and tribal politics and money politics. They were not swayed because they understand what is at stake.

    “They did not see these inducements as low hanging fruits to take advantage of. They were smart, courageous and determined to use the power of votes to sustain the intelligent leadership and governance in Lagos.

    “We have no doubt that the synergy between Abuja and Lagos will add values to the project called Nigeria and make our country to remain credit positive in years to come.”

  • APC lauds Southwest for electing Ambode, Ajimobi, Amosun

    THE All Progressives Congress (APC) has hailed the Southwest geo-political zone for electing its governorship candidates in Lagos, Ogun and Oyo states.

    It added that with the governors’ victory, “time of consolidation has come to the region”.

    Its National Vice Chairman (South-west), Chief Pius Akinyelure, in a message yesterday, congratulated the three governors-elect – Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode (Lagos), Senator Abiola Ajimobi (Oyo) and Senator Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun) – for winning after a good contest.

    The former Executive Director in Mobil Oil Nigeria Plc said the victory of Ambode signalled a season of socio-economic consolidation, which, he said, became necessary due to transformation already going on in the APC-controlled states.

    The party’s victory, Akinyelure noted, “will not have been possible without the support of Southwest, which, he added, stood against poor government and earnestly pushed for regime change in Nigeria”.

    The APC chieftain said a new dawn “has started already in Nigeria”.

    His words: “It is a dawn of political stability and economic progress. Indeed, it is a dawn of new Nigeria, where people’s aspiration and yearning would be realised. It will mark a total break from diverse socio-economic indicators that threaten our indivisibility as a state and as a people in spite of our diversity.

    “It will herald an order of confidence-building and put an end to a culture of impunity that has become entrenched in our country.

    “With your support, we have emerged victorious at the polls. Successfully, we have returned the APC to power in three Southwest states, where governorship elections were conducted.

    “We have also made good progress in all Southwest states during the state legislative elections. We, therefore, thank the people of Southwest for unflinching support they gave our party during the 2015 general elections.”

    Akinyelure assured that the party would make good all its promises, citing that it “has never reneged in all the past promises”.

    He added: “We have been implementing life-transforming policies programmes in all states under the control of our party. Now that our parties have been given another opportunity to rule, the APC will continue to pursue pro-people policies and programmes not just in Southwest, but also in Nigeria.”

    The APC vice chairman expressed concerns over irregularities and malpractices, which, he said, marred the state house of assembly election in Ekiti and Ondo states, adding that the party would seek redress legitimately.

     

  • APC rejects Delta governorship, Assembly polls results

    Delta State All Progressives Congress (APC) has rejected the results last Saturday’s governorship and House of Assembly elections.

    The party called for the cancellation of the results, which it said did not reflect the votes of the electorate.

    APC’s governorship candidate Olorogun O’tega Emerhor addressed reporters yesterday in Warri on the party’s decision to reject the polls results.

    Emerhor, who was in company of his running mate, Chief Thomas Abanum; a member of the party’s Board of Trustees, Chief Frank Kokori and other party leaders, gave details of how the elections were rigged in favour of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The APC candidate described the results as “cooked, fabricated and allocated” to suit only the ruling party.

    He alleged that the PDP worked with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and some security aides to public office holders to rig the elections.

    According to him, the PDP used a new mode of intimidation and vote-buying among the electorate after voting had begun.

    Enerhor said the PDP, in violation of the INEC’s directive that only electronic card readers be used to prevent electoral fraud, ignored the machines in most places.

    The APC candidates said this gave room for the inflation and allocation of illegal results.

    He said the party would soon decide on its next line of actions after consultations.

    Emerhor said: “Recall that at the stakeholders’ meeting organised by INEC days before the elections, I spoke out on the fraud that marred the presidential election, where results were cooked up and written without reference to the electorate. I said INEC returning officers, who connived with the PDP/Labour Party (LP) in their alliance to deliver a whooping 1.4 million votes on March 28, remained in the system.

    “I said unless they were disqualified from the April 11 elections, they would repeat the feat again for the PDP. Of course, as nothing was done, the stage was set for the fraud that took place.

    “A deliberate and well orchestrated mayhem was unleashed by PDP on voters in most parts of Delta North and Central to disrupt proper voting as much as possible. So, PDP’s strong men and their security attaches, working with thugs recruited for this purpose, were deployed to seize result sheets, cart away materials or disrupt voting generally and particularly in APC strongholds.

    “A few local government areas or voting points were spared to serve as points to showcase purported free and fair elections. Even at that, the PDP resorted to vote-buying in such voting points.”

    “The violence and commotion stated above was designed; it was a smokescreen for the real fraud of cooking up figures between the PDP and their INEC accomplices. These figures are then allocated whimsically to the three main contending parties.

    “While it is true that card readers were used only at voting points reserved to showcase proper elections, generally, the use of card readers was not only ignored but results were fabricated 100 per cent. This happened because the state government’s power machinery was brought to bear to seize INEC’s machinery to deliver a pre-ordered voting pattern.”

     

  • APC’s Bindow declared winner of Adamawa guber poll

    Senator Jibrilla Mohammed Bindow of the All Progressives Congress APC was Sunday night declared the winner of the 2015 governorship elections in Adamawa state.

    His opponents, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP and Dr Ahmed Modibbo of the Peoples Democratic Movement, PDM, have called him to congratulate him.

    Bindow scored a total of 362,329 votes to defeat the governorship candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP,) Eng Markus Gundiri who polled 181,806 votes to come second in the race.

    Declaring the results of the elections at collation Centre at General Murtala Memorial College (GMMC) , Yola, the state returning officer, Professor Geoffrey OKogbaa, Vice – Chancellor , Federal University of Wukari Said Bindow won with a wide margin to emerge winner of the 2015 governorship polls.

    Okugbaa therefore declared Bindow as the winner of the April 11 governorship elections in the state.

    “Senator Jibrilla Mohammed Bindow having satisfied the requirement of law and scored the highest numbers of votes is hereby declared the winner of the April 11 elections in Adamawa state,” he said.

    He also declared that the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu scored 98,917 numbers of votes to emerge third position while the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM), DR Ahmed Modibbo scored 32,985 votes to come fourth in the race.

    Okugbaa said the total numbers of votes cast during the elections was 706092 adding that 684050 votes were valid and 22042 votes were rejected.

    However stakeholders had described the governorship polls as peaceful and hitch- free and also commended the Independence National Electoral Commission for improving on the use of card readers in the election.

    Speaking to newsmen on the polls, the secretary of the APC in the state, Abdullahi Bakari said the credit goes to the Adamawa electorates who found APC worthy and voted the party’s candidate to pilot the affairs of the state.

    According to Bakari, the APC governor elect will not disappoint the people adding that he believed that Bindow will make APC proud because he has done it in his constituency as a senator representing the state Northern Senatorial Zone.

    In his response, the Agent of the SDP who gave his name as Audu said the results have spoken , whether anybody like or not the Adamawa people have decided.

    Barrister Shehu, agent of the PDP at the collation centre expressed satisfaction with the conduct of the elections.

    He said if he was not satisfied with the outcome he wouldn’t have appended his signature on the result sheets.

    Meanwhile, Mallam Ribadu and Dr Modibbo have congratulated the governor-elect and wish him well as he settles down to meet the yearnings and aspirations of the people.

    They urged the people to him the necessary support and cooperation to enable face the enormous challenges confronting the state.

     

  • Emulate Buhari, Atiku urges APC governors-elect

    Emulate Buhari, Atiku urges APC governors-elect

    Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, on Monday called on all elected governors on the platform of the All Progressive party, APC, to emulate the exemplary and selfless service the President-elect, General Muhammadu Buhari was poise to provide at the national level for the country.

    Alhaji Atiku Abubakar who made the remark at a news conference addressed by leaders and elders of the APC in Yola, said the election of Senator Jibrilla Bindow has put paid to ethnic and religious politics in Adamawa state.

    The conference which was meant to thank the people of Adamawa state for voting massively for the APC at all levels of government was attended by the governor-elect, Senator Bindow, the APC three Senators-elect, the members of the House of Representatives elected on the APC platform and the 22 members of the state House of Assembly from the party and all party leaders and elders in the state.

    Alhaji Atiku described the momentum and victory of the APC in the state as historic, saying this was the first time in six years that he would be part of the winning team in the state and at the federal level.

    The former Vice President regretted that the state has not been so divided on ethnic and religious lines than now, especially because of the insurgent activities and the political campaigns of some politicians that was wrapped around religion and ethnicity.

    He however said his heart was gladdened that the people overcame the challenge with their uncommon resolve by voting massively for the APC candidates and in particular the emergence of Senator Bindow as the governor-elect.

    The former Vice President urged the governor-elect to put a formidable team together and hit the ground running immediately after his swearing-in, stressing that there is the urgent need to address the myraids of problems facing the people frontally.

    He said besides the challenge of resettling Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs and victims of insurgency, the problems of infrastructural deficit in the areas health, education, roads, and water supply for the people should be addressed for the good of the people.

    Alhaji Atiku also said the election of Senaor Bindow should be a rallying point to strenghten the unity and cohesion of the state and the people and called on all well meaning citizens of the state to cooperate and support the new administration.

    Senator Bindow in his remarks said he was humbled by the massive support and mandate given to him by the people, saying it was made possible by the tireless efforts and support of the party elders and leaders.

    He commended the people for their support and confidence in the APC, and called on his co-contestants to join hands with him to develop the state as he would like to be a governor for all the people of the state irrespective of party, religious or ethnic affiliations.