Tag: APC

  • Oshiomhole on May 29: nobody can postpone Christmas

    Oshiomhole on May 29: nobody can postpone Christmas

    •Governor calls for calm

    Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole has said the May 29 handover date of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) administration to the All Progressives Congress (APC) cannot be postponed.

    The governor said no one can postpone Christmas.

    Oshiomhole spoke at the weekend in Benin, the state capital, when he received some defectors from the PDP.

    He said: “You heard what happened. They said they have postponed the elections. Few days back, they called us to a meeting at the Council of State and we said they should go ahead and do the elections. In any event, we are not the only country with security challenges. Even elections are held in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    “So, whether they postpone the election or not, we won’t fight. They can’t postpone Christmas. I want to appeal to all of you, nobody should be angry because I know you were ready for Saturday’s election. Only a debtor thinks tomorrow is far. Everybody has seen they don’t want elections. They sponsored discussions on television, Jega said INEC was not the issue. So, they came up with security. If they like, let them keep coming up with issues; elections will hold.

    “So, I ask you: just take it easy. These six weeks will cost us more resources and time because we thought we will do the election, get through with it and get on with our lives, but they decided to postpone the election, to prolong it but let me ask you, a child that is due to arrive after nine months, how long can you prevent it from birthing?

    “APC is already in power, by the grace of God. They can postpone the election but they cannot postpone May 29 handover date. Two wrongs don’t make a right. Don’t fight; make peace: We will use the remaining six weeks to mobilise more, pull out more people from the PDP so that Edo State will be 100 per cent for APC.”

    The governor expressed joy and praised the courage of the defectors for dumping the Peoples Democratic Party to pitch tent with the party that is set to bring the much desired change and development to the country and assured them of level playing ground in the All Progressive Congress.

    He said: “I am really grateful to all of you that have joined. You can fool some of the people some of the time but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time. I want to promise you that together, we will continue to build a new digital political soft structure on top of which we can build all the other things.”

    Over 300 PDP members defected to the APC.

    They were led by Chief Sunny Erhengbo; a former PDP House of Representatives aspirant for Ikpoba Okha/Egor, Dr. Friday Omokaro and Edo State Head of Security, Goodluck to Goodluck Campaign Organisation, Mr. Fred Ikhuebor.

     

  • APC candidate lauds Osun Tribunal

    APC candidate lauds Osun Tribunal

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate for Obokun constituency in the Osun State House of Assembly, Olatunbosun Oyintiloye, has said the re-affirmation of Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s re-election victory by the election petition tribunal was another victory for democracy and the people.

    He said the judgment was not only a legal affirmation, but an endorsement of the people’s will.

    The Justice Elizabeth Ikpejime-led tribunal had on Friday dismissed the petition of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate, Iyiola Omisore, challenging the governor’s re-election.

    “The judgment is a victory for democracy and the wish of the people, as all the efforts of the PDP to upturn the tenet of democracy failed.

    “The tribunal judges have to be praised for turning down the alleged financial overture made to them by the petitioners and their display of high integrity has shown that this nation would survive the hurdles we have been subjected to by the federal force.”

  • Nigeria’s risky decision to postpone elections

    Nigeria’s risky decision to postpone elections

    •Boko Haram’s latest victim may just have been Nigeria’s national election

    At least on first glance, it would appear that way. On Saturday evening,  Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) announced its decision to postpone Nigeria’s national election scheduled for February 14th. These elections were widely expected to be Nigeria’s closest electoral contest yet, between the increasingly unpopular Goodluck Jonathan’s People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and retired General Muhammadu Buhari of the All People’s Congress (APC). These elections represent a serious challenge to Jonathan’s PDP, which has won every election since 1999.

    The reason for the delay? According to INEC, Nigeria’s security services say they need at least six weeks to launch a major offensive against the Boko Haram insurgency in the northern part of the country, that they could not guarantee security for the February elections. The new date for the presidential elections is set for March 28th. State elections will be held on April 11th.

    Seriously?

    Boko Haram has been rampaging since 2009, killing tens of thousands of civilians (5,000 in 2014 alone), razing towns, seizing Nigerian territory, threatening and attacking other countries, but now, with less week to go before the presidential elections, the Nigerian military promises to rout the scourge by late March? This is the same military that falsely claimed 200 schoolgirls were released after being kidnapped by Boko Haram. This is the same military that claimed a ceasefire with Boko Haram, only to have Boko Haram deny any such deal. This army reportedly sends soldiers to combat Boko Haram without adequate weapons, and has had soldiers flee in the face of Boko Haram’s assaults.  This military has been guilty of committing human rights abuses against Nigerian citizens in its fight against terrorism. These are the same security forces whose leader said they didn’t need the African Union or the United Nations to help counter the Islamist insurgency.

    But after years of Boko Haram’s carnage, what will the army do in six weeks that they couldn’t do in five years and with a $5 billion security budget? Where was this urgency hiding for the past six years? And why escalate tensions and anger Nigerians who have been eagerly waiting to cast ballots by making this announcement with only a week to go before the polls?

    Hours before the official announcement, Nigerians were protesting in the streets of Abuja. The United States has pleaded repeatedly with Nigeria to not delay the elections. Secretary of State John Kerry even paid Jonathan and Buhari a visit in Lagos last month to urge for peaceful and timely elections. As the Globe and Mail noted, President Jonathan declined to say during Kerry’s visit whether the elections would be held on February 14th, but said the May 29th date for the transfer of power is “sacrosanct”.

    In a press statement, Kerry noted that the U.S. is “deeply disappointed by the decision to postpone the elections” and that “political interference with the Independent National Electoral Commission is unacceptable, and it is critical that the government not use security concerns as a pretext for impeding the democratic process.”

    For months, not surprisingly, members of incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan’s party have publicly been calling for a delay in the polls, but for different reasons, at least publicly. The national security advisor to Goodluck Jonathan, Sambo Dasuki, said last month that elections should be postponed because of what he has cited INEC’s failure to distribute election voting cards to 30 million people. (This is the first election where voting cards are necessary for Nigeria’s 68 million voters to cast ballots.) As The Globe and Mail reported, the idea of a six-week delay had been floated by government officials even last month. Members of Buhari’s opposition party have stated they would not accept any delays in polls. Indeed, it is not surprising that a decision to push back the elections in the name of security, especially under Jonathan who has been seen to be lackadaisical in his approach to Boko Haram, would be perceived as an attempt to sway political momentum in his party’s favor rather than combating the terrorism threat.

    But by citing the military’s demands as the primary reason for the delay, INEC has upped the stakes in what was already perhaps the most heated election in Nigeria’s recent history, and one where few Nigerians have faith in this year’s electoral process, according to a Gallup poll.  Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and largest economy, has bet its own elections on the military, and one that that has given few signs to date that it can be trusted to adequately counter Boko Haram’s violence and protect Nigerian civilians. Unfortunately, perhaps this is a symptom of what happens when military is given more logistical influence over elections than INEC itself, and perhaps an intractable lingering political effect of Nigeria’s history under the rule of military regimes for decades before the return to democracy in 1999. It is hard not to feel that INEC has given the security forces more power over Nigeria’s political affairs than they deserve.

    What happens if the new election date approaches in March and Boko Haram is still a threat? Will there be another call for a postponement? Will the army become more transparent about its efforts? What if the Nigerian military claims it cannot ensure election safety in March? How will Nigeria, a country whose economy has been rocked by the drop in oil prices, fund these ramped up efforts and ensure credible and peaceful elections? Will the May 29th date for the transfer of presidential power still hold firm? Nigerian citizens, Africa, and the world are entitled to concrete answers to these questions.

    In the meantime, it is up to anxious Nigerians on both political sides to remain peaceful over the next six weeks. As I have written before, fair and credible Nigerian elections provide the best way for Nigerians to choose whether to hold their leaders accountable for the government’s failures on Boko Haram.  Though the Nigerian constitution allows for the elections to be postponed, this decision still amounts to a temporary disenfranchisement of tens of millions of Nigerian voters based on ‘hopes” and promises from the military.  It is hard not to see this latest decision, as anything but an needlessly risky gamble, with Nigeria’s democracy at stake.

    Attiah is the Washington Post’s Opinions Deputy Digital Editor. She previously reported for Associated Press while based in Curaçao.

  • APC now biggest party in Nigeria, says women leader

    APC now biggest party in Nigeria, says women leader

    The Southsouth Women’s Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Mrs. Rachael Akpabio, has said the party has become the biggest in Nigeria and Afria.

    Mrs Akpabio, who is also a member of the Presidential Campaign Committee, spoke yesterday at a town hall meeting in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital.

    The event was organised to enlighten women on the need to spread the message of “Change” and support APC’s presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, in the March 28 election.

    She explained that the party’s claims to the number one position was buttressed by the fact that many parties, such as the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), Action for Democracy (AD) and Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) formed the mega party that became APC.

    The women’s leader said APC’s had been swelling with more Nigerians defecting from other parties and joining the progressives.

    The event was attended by a large crowd of women from various parts of the state.

    The wife of Akwa Ibom State APC governorship candidate, Mrs Florence Umana; prominent women leaders, including the Obonganwan Imo Isemin, Obong Rita Akpan and a former local government chairman, Mrs Stella Effiom, attended the meeting.

    They spoke on the need for a peace change in the affairs of the nation.

    Mrs. Akpabio said she was commissioned by the wife of APC presidential candidate, Mrs. Aisha Buhari, to urge women to support her husband.

    The women’s leader said the expected change, which Gen. Buhari’s administration would bring, would affect every aspect of Nigeria’s life positively.

    Top on the list is tackling corruption, which she said had caused the continuous slide of the naira (currently over N200 to $1).

    She educated the women on electoral processes.

    Mrs Akpan urged the women to protect their Permanent Voter’s Cards (PVCs) and avoid selling them to desperate politicians who would resist the imminent change.

    Mrs Akpabio debunked the insinuation that Gen. Buhari would Islamise Nigeria.

    She said: “Look, don’t allow people to confuse you with religion. The cook and driver of Gen. Buhari are Christians; he allows them to go for their Christmas celebrations.

    “He ruled Nigeria by fiat (decrees) while in the military. Yet, he did not legislate Islam as the only religion. How can he do it now in a democracy?”

     

  • Appeal court reserves judgment in APC suit

    The Appeal Court in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, has reserved judgment in the suit by the All Progressives Congress (APC), challenging the election of Governor Ayo Fayose of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The APC urged the court to declare former Governor Kayode Fayemi, winner of the June 21, last year, governorship election.

    The party, in the alternative, also urged the court to order a re-run of the election on the grounds that Fayose was not qualified to stand as a candidate at the poll.

    The five- man panel, led by Justice Abdu Aboki, adjourned after listening to counsel to all parties in the appeal.

    The respondents are PDP, Fayose, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Chief of Army Staff and Inspector General of Police.

    The APC is challenging Fayose’s election on the grounds that he was not qualified to stand election as a candidate by reason of his impeachment from office on October 16, 2006.

    The party also sued the governor for the alleged forgery of academic certificates and violation of the Code of Conduct Rules.

    The Election Petitions Tribunal, led by Justice Mohammed Sirajo, in a judgment delivered in Abuja on December 19, last year, upheld Fayose’s election and dismissed the APC’s petition.

    APC’s counsel Hakeem Afolabi adopted and relied on all briefs filed on behalf of his client, urging the court to allow the appeal and grant all reliefs sought by the appellants.

    Afolabi drew the court’s attention to the striking out of paragraphs 110-120 and 125a of the petition by the lower tribunal, which borders on the qualification of the second respondent (Fayose).

    The APC counsel argued that the reason given by the lower tribunal cannot be accommodated under Section 138 (a) of the Electoral Act.

    He contended that the decision of the tribunal was taken suo moto and that the right to fair hearing of the appellants was breached.

    PDP’s counsel Robert Emukpoeruo argued that not only did the tribunal strike out the paragraphs in contention, it also considered the merit of the complaints of the appellants.

    Fayose’s counsel Yusuf Ali urged the court to dismiss the APC’s appeal.

    Ali argued that the constitution of the panel that recommended Fayose’s impeachment violated constitutional provisions in that it was not set up by either a chief judge or an acting chief judge.

    INEC’s counsel Wilcox Abereton, in adopting his brief of argument, averred that APC’s candidate Kayode Fayemi had conceded defeat, maintaining that the appellant (APC) is no longer entitled to any appearance.

    The Army Chief’s counsel, Abayomi Sadiku, prayed the court to dismiss the appeal. He was seconded by the IG’s counsel, Olusola Oke.

    After listening to the lawyers, Justice Aboki reserved judgment in the appeal.

  • Women, students support Ambode

    Women, students support Ambode

    The Sisters Forum- a coalition of women from various ethnic groups in Lagos, has endorsed the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode.

    Its Executive Director, Mrs. Chinyere Anokwuru, said the decision to endorse Ambode was based on their assessment of his competence and experience.

    “The emergence of Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode as the APC governorship candidate ended our worries on who could match Babatunde Fashola’s achievements.

    “A look into his manifesto revealed that he had sufficient relief-oriented programmes for women. The welfare and economic empowerment of women is uppermost in his heart amongst many others.

    “Mr. Ambode’s credentials are excellent. His pedigree is spotless. He is the new face of leadership, transparency and competence. His intellectual and professional depth have put him on a pedestal that is higher than those of the other candidates.”

    The National Union of Lagos State Students (NULASS) has also declared its support for Ambode.

    At a briefing at the Federal College of Education, Technical, Akoka, Lagos, NULASS president, Abdullahi Mohammed said Ambode has the skills to take over from Governor Fashola.

    The students thanked the governor for the bursary given to them. They praised the Special Assistant to the governor on Youth and Student Affairs, Animashaun Abdul-Akeem, for his efforts at carrying them along.

     

  • ‘Why Lagosians should vote Ambode’

    A group, Akinwunmi Ambode Kommittee of Friends (AA’KOF), has listed reasons why Lagosians should vote for the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, on April 11.

    The body’s spokesman, Elder Cornelius Olopade, who spoke yesterday at the APC rally at Abesan Mini Stadium in Alimosho, Lagos, said the electorate should vote Ambode because he is a tested politician and administrator.

    He said: “Of all the candidates vying for the Lagos governorship seat, Ambode is the most experienced. He is tested and can be trusted.

    “Lagosians need the continuity of good governance. They need the continuity of the dividends of democracy. Ambode will provide these.

    “The National Leader of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola are dynamic politicians, who have set Lagos on the right path. Residents should not allow inexperienced politicians to truncate their good ideals. This is why they should give their mandate to Ambode.”

    The APC Lagos governorship candidate told the surging crowd that he was in politics to make a name.

    Ambode said: “By the time I finish my tenure, I want to leave a legacy of good governance. Our party, APC, is a party with welfarist programmes, which will positively affect the lives of Lagosians. I urge them to vote for me and other APC candidates. They will not regret giving us their mandate.”

  • 3,400 PDP members defect to APC

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has suffered another major blow, as the former chairman of Abaji Area Council, Alhaji Abubakar Ibrahim and 3,400 members of the party in the area have defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Alhaji Abubakar Ibrahim was the first elected chairman of the council. He also contested for a seat for the FCT senatorial election on the platform of the PDP in 2003 but lost to Senator Isa Maina at the party’s primary election.

    Among notable PDP members who defected were the former Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Commissioner, who was also a delegate representing the FCT at last year’s Constitutional Conference, Mr. Musa Salihu, chairman PDP elders of Nuku Sabon Gari Ward, Idris Abdullahi, Samuel Baba, PDP youth leader, Nuku/Sabaon Ward, Labaran Ahmadu, PDP Caucus Leader and Gurdi Ward, among others.

    Speaking on behalf of other decamped persons, Alhaji Ibrahim, said he and some PDP elders, caucus and stalwart of the party decided to join the APC, because of lack of sincerity in the ruling party.

    “For the last three years, Nigerians have been experiencing insecurity in which many lives are lost on daily basis due to activities of the so-called Boko Haram. That alone has been touching my heart, let alone mentioning other challenges which the masses are experiencing. On this account, I and other members of the PDP resolved to join the APC,” he said.

    On his decision to join the APC, the former INEC Commissioner, said he realised when he was in PDP that the mess the country has been plunged into cannot be wiped out by the party, unless by the APC.

    “The ruling PDP have shown me and other members that they are not ready to put things right and if for nothing because of our younger ones. There is need for me to join the APC to ensure that change. At my age, I don’t need anything, but the younger ones coming behind need us to join the progressives to ensure that we leave good legacy for them, “he said.

    Receiving the decamped persons at the Adamu Shuaibu Memorial Town Hall, chairman of the (APC) in the FCT, Alhaji Usman Abdulmalik, said there was no doubt that some prominent individuals of the council were among those that decided to pitch their tent with the APC, even as he added that they must have reasoned very well that things are not going well with the people of this country under the PDP administration.

    He said he was elated with the mass defection of members of the PDP across the 10 wards of the council, saying APC was ever ready to carry them along in line with the party’s constitution to ensure victory at the polls.

    He said: “I know there are some that have benefited from the PDP, but then what is happening under the PDP administration over 15 years is nothing but a repeat of deceit and fake promise which I believe prompted some of these prominent people in Abaji to join the progressives train. And APC shall carry everybody along in whatever decisions we are making to ensure that the APC waxed stronger in the FCT.”

  • APC kicks off campaigns in Edo North

    The All Progressive Congress (APC) has kick-off the general election in Edo North campaign. The chief marketing officer was no other person than the leader of the party in Governor Adams Oshiomhole who flagged off the campaign in Auchi, the senatorial headquarters told the crowd at Ikelebe Sports Arena that the APC is proud of its candidates.

    The governor, who x-rayed the candidates from Akoko Edo, Owan and Etsako, described them as political brands rather than mere products. According to him, “these are tested and trusted persons, the best of the best in Afemailand. So, I want you to support them with your votes and send them to Benin and Abuja as your representatives to help make laws that will benefit our people and Nigerians in general.” The governor subsequently presented the candidates with party flags, urging them to go out there, sell themselves and the party manifesto to win the heart of the electorates.

    The candidates are: Chief Francis Alimikhena, the senatorial candidate for Edo North,  Hon. Phillip Shaibu, who is the out-going Majority Leader in the state House of Assembly and the party’s candidate for the Etsako Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives, and the three candidates who want to represent Etsako in the state House of Assembly. Damian Lawani ( Etsako Central), Kinsley Ugabi (Etsako East), and Gowon Jerry Yakubu (Etsako West). Given the short period for the campaign, the candidates hit the ground running, taking the train to the 32 wards in Etsako.

    The first port of call was the palace of the Otaru of Auchi, Haliru Momoh, Ikelebe 111. Then the Okumagbe of Weppa Wanno,  George Oshiapi Ihiabor where the candidates visited for royal blessings and possibly for endorsement. Led by the party’s state Deputy Chairman, Alhaji Otunba Mogaji, the Okumagbe specifically advised the candidates on the need for issue-driven campaign, instead of those of hate and attacks on personality. He also urged them to key into the Abuja peace accord signed by leaders of political parties. He said he was particularly pleased with the peaceful conduct of the primaries that produced the candidates.

    Alimikhena, a chief,  is from Weppa Wanna. The huge turn out of supporters from the wards was highly intimidating. The village heads, opinion leaders and various interests groups said they were mobilizing their people in support of the APC because of the dividends of democracy enjoyed by their communities.

    They said they were ready to reciprocate the gesture at the polls. Some of those interviewed said the candidates should not to bother to visit their communities for campaigns as the projects executed by the governor would speak for them. They promised to vote for whoever  Oshiomhole and the party present as candidates.

    If the candidates eventually get the endorsement of the people of Etsako after the election, they will all be green horns in the hallowed chambers in Benin and Abuja with the exception of Phillip Shaibu, who is the out-going Majority Leader of the Edo State House of Assembly.

    This son of a pastor, rugged activist and former NANS President (1999 to 2000) is expected to bring to the table a wealth of legislative experience garnered since 2007 in the State House of Assemble where he has distinguished himself as an astute legislator who puts the people ffirst. From Minority Leader in the House, Shaibu has headed some key committees as chairman which included Rules, Business and Government House.

    As a representative of Etsako West Constituency, Shaibu told the people in the wards visited that, in his eight years in the House,  he has executed 42 verifiable projects in his constituency. He has also sponsored 26 bills and moved 109 motions in the House.

  • It’s a plot to derail democracy, say APC senators

    It’s a plot to derail democracy, say APC senators

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) senators yesterday condemned the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for postponing the February 14 and 28 elections.

    Spokesman for the group, Senator Babafemi Ojudu (Ekiti Central), in a statement in Abuja, described the postponement as a “tele-guided plot” by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to derail democracy.

    Ojudu said: “What we are seeing is a desperate and jittery response to the imminent defeat of the PDP. The postponement has shown the helplessness of INEC in the face of a malicious cabal bent on destroying the fabric of democracy.”

    The APC senators said the decision has raised a big credibility question on INEC and the forthcoming elections.

    He added: “This decision is borne out of fear of defeat and malice against the people of Nigeria in the face of the overwhelming support the APC command across the country.”

    He insisted that the PDP leadership in collaboration with INEC have put Nigeria in extremely bad light among the international community.

    The postponement, according to him, “is a diversionary tactic, which undermines the aspirations of Nigerians and dims the hope for change in a country that in the past has seen bitter upheavals due to similar partisan posture of the electoral umpire.”

    He alleged that the INEC has placed itself above the interest of the people, adding that the action of the electoral body runs contrary to the decision of the Council of State.