Tag: APC

  • How security operatives  brutalised 84-yr-old, other APC supporters on eve of Osun poll

    How security operatives brutalised 84-yr-old, other APC supporters on eve of Osun poll

    Pa Joseph Fakayode, an 84-year-old leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun State could not have imagined what befell him on Friday August 8, 2014. That was the eve of the Osun State gubernatorial election.

    For one, the octogenarian was bereaved. He had just lost his 40-year-old daughter; so he was in deep mourning. So, naturally, what he deserved at the point was empathy and that was what a horde of family members, APC supporters and others, who gathered at his residence, No 5, Oduduwa Street, Oke-Ila, Osun State, came to offer him.

    But the security forces, who were deployed in the state on the orders of President Goodluck Jonathan supposedly to enforce peace, thought otherwise. The octogenarian was visited with such savagery you could only expect in a typically vicious military regime.

    The case of the octogenarian was just one of many APC supporters who were brutalised as the security forces went on the rampage on the eve of that poll, which witnessed one of the worst militarisations in the history of elections in Nigeria.

    At every stage of this brutalisation process, the security forces would first send terror into people in the vicinity of their operation with ceaseless bursts of gun fire, then create mayhem by breaking into their targeted residence, and at gun-point, order residents to lie face down on the floor. As this terrorist operation was in progress, other security agents would be screaming orders that anybody who attempted to escape would be killed.

    Shortly before this terrorist attack on Pa Fakayode’s residence, Alhaja Abibat Oladapo aka Mama Nuru, an agent of the APC for Ifedayo Local Government Area of the state, had also come to condole with Pa Fakayode. So it was in her presence that the soldiers came calling.

    The Alhaja had no premonition that she would be a victim of the terror she experienced that night in the hands of the security operatives. As terror swept the entire building and people were screaming for help, an agitated Pa Fakayode came downstairs only to find out that soldiers and other security agents were everywhere pointing guns at the heads of people who had come to sympathise with him over the death of his daughter.

    Before he could say a word, the soldiers ordered him to put both hands on his head and sit on the open ground in the rain like the others.

    The 84-year-old man had no choice. In utter fright, he slowly went down and suffered the humiliation of his life in the hands of Nigerian security agents, who had ostensibly come to keep the peace in an election that the President’s party, the PDP, were obviously desperate to win at all costs.

    Alhaja Abibat Oladapo, who had prepared to perform her civic responsibility for his party in furtherance of democracy in the country on August 9 as an APC agent in the local government, was soon to have a very bitter experience of what the Federal Government’s intentions actually were when they sent soldiers to “keep the peace” in Osun governorship election.

    She had heard Pa Fakayode screaming and as she rushed down to help, she was confronted by a civil defence operative, who cocked and pointed his gun at her. She was terrified. But as she pleaded for mercy, other security operatives rained slaps on her face and head, and in spite of this assault, she summoned the courage to ask: “What crime have we committed to deserve this cruel treatment?”

    “Shut up!”, the civil defence man growled and ordered the Alhaja to sit on the open ground like the others. As she found a place on the ground to sit, security operatives rushed upstairs to Pa Fakayode’s sitting room and vandalised the furniture, after they had forcibly opened the doors and broken into the old man’s flat. One of the DSS operatives in this assault gang was heard shouting in rage: “You stupid people. If you want to die, you will die now. All of you are sheepishly following Aregbesola because he promised you N500. We shall waste your lives here and nothing will happen.”

    To illustrate the political nature of the security operation in Osun before, during and after the election, sources said those who led soldiers and other security operatives to Pa Fakayode’s residence were PDP supporters allegedly led by one Hon. Funmi, a former female PDP member of the Osun State House of Assembly in company of one Segun, a staff of the State House of Assembly and one Bukola , a sanitation officer at the local government. There were five others, three of whom were on motor-bike.

    In all, 38 people were arrested that night from Pa Fakayode’s compound and over a dozen of them were APC polling agents. Others were sympathisers who had come to condole with the old man on the death of his daughter. There were several ladies and young women, including Alhaja Oladapo, and other women leaders of the APC. Between Oke-Ila and Osogbo, where they eventually ended up, some of these women were allegedly assaulted by some of the operatives.

    After this terrorist operation at Pa Fakayode’s residence, the 38 APC supporters were herded into a truck. This process did not end before a heart-breaking event occurred. The 84-year-old Pa Fakayode lost grip and fell helplessly to the ground twice as he attempted to climb into the truck. Alhaja Abibat Oladapo was beside herself with grief watching as Pa Fakayode was being humiliated by the security forces.

    As the convoy took off from the compound, another bizarre event occurred. Three PDP supporters, one Segun, Tosin and Oke, who had led the security squad to Pa Fakayode’s house, followed the convoy on their motor bikes. One of the soldiers, in a fit of rage, pointed his gun at the trio threatening to kill them if they did not stop following. It took a mobile policeman in the squad to dissuade the soldier from shooting, pointing out that the three men were PDP agents who had earlier led the squad to the APC leader’s house to arrest the victims.

    Surprisingly, however, rather than the truck conveying the APC supporters heading for Osogbo at about mid-night, it allegedly diverted and was moving in the wrong direction to Ora, a town 10 kilometers away from Oke-Ila. Alhaja Oladapo became apprehensive and secretly made a phone call to Hon. Abiodun Idowu, one of APC’s leaders in the area. For three hours between midnight and 3am, the whereabouts of these APC leaders and agents were unknown until they birthed at the military facility in Ede.

    In the process, another sad event was said to have occurred. Pa Fakayode, the 84-year-old man, who had allegedly been brutalised in his own compound and made to sit on the ground in the rain, now came under pressure to urinate. He was said to have pleaded with his captors to stop and allow him urinate with some decency and dignity. But the brutishness in such security reportedly ignored the old man’s plea. Now under extreme pressure, the octogenarian took his singlet from under the pyjamas that he wore when he was arrested, made it into the shape of a bowl and urinated into it while the truck was in motion.

    Again, at 11am on August 9 when the election had already started, these APC supporters, who were in varying degrees of fear, humiliation and torture, were conveyed from Ede military facility to Osogbo. On arrival at the DSS Headquarters in Osogbo, they were all allegedly ordered to lie face down on the open ground. Some of the young men and women quickly complied, but Pa Fakayode, who was frail from age and the torture of the events from Oke-Ila through Ede to Osogbo, was slow to comply with the order.

    A security operative went berserk and descended on Pa Fakayode with a horse-whip, which he furiously lashed several times on the head of the old man until a soldier with a human heart, who could not take it anymore, physically brought the assault of the operative to a halt. The soldier then turned to the officer, rebuking him for allegedly maltreating a very old man. But the officer was allegedly unrepentant. “What kind of old man is he?”, he queried the soldier. “Why is he still in politics and supporting Aregbesola? Let him call that Aregbesola to come and rescue him now”, the officer said. Many of the victims who watched this brutish display of inhumanity were said to have burst into tears. The women wailed and the men cursed.

    Before this humiliation of Pa Fakayode, there had been an orgy of alleged beating of men, women and children at the agency’s headquarters as they alighted from the truck that brought them from the military facility in Ede. A boy, identified as Seun, who had complained of cold the previous night in Ede, was slapped several times by a mobile policeman, who allegedly ordered him to remove his clothes and had cold water poured on his naked body; and after the treatment, he was subjected again to kicks with jack boots.

    It was this demonstration of alleged bias of the security forces that led one of the soldiers, who rescued Pa Fakayode from the security officer, to wonder aloud when he asked: “What kind of politics are we playing in this country that we subject even innocent old men to barbaric and wicked treatment?”

    “What was totally inscrutable was that many Osun citizens who were arrested and brutalised by the security forces between August 8 and 9 were either APC leaders or their agents and supporters,” sources said, adding: “The PDP people who were apprehended by vigilant citizens for committing serious electoral fraud and handed over to the Police and DSS officers were promptly released and safely returned to PDP leaders. The Police argued that their release was ordered ‘from above’. On August 8, especially, dozens of APC leaders were arrested throughout the state between 10pm on the eve of the election and 6am on August 9, the day of the governorship election proper. They were randomly picked up in some cases.”

    Citing a pathetic case, the source said a father and his 14-year-old son, Adebayo Kolawole, met at the DSS facility in Osogbo on August 9. The son was picked up at Pa Fakayode’s residence (father and son were tenants of Pa Fakayode), while the father was in another batch of those arrested in the same town. The re-union in detention was heart-rending because  apart from being brutalised, both also had the misfortune of watching how another little boy was manhandled.

    “When those arrested were asked to lie face down on the ground, the boy after a while, raised his head to get some fresh air but in a flash, a Policeman descended on this little boy, beating him black and blue. There was an unwritten code in security detention that you don’t look at officers who are brutalising you. If you tried, you got the beating of your life. This little boy was suspected to be trying to identify the faces of his oppressors. He nearly lost his eyes in the process.

    “As you read this, not a single case has been brought against any of the APC officials and supporters, which in effect means they committed no crime for which they were ruthlessly manhandled, assaulted and brutally humiliated by the very same security forces President Goodluck Jonathan sent to Osun to keep the peace.”

    However, instances were cited in which some noble soldiers and a few exceptional policemen openly expressed disgust at the treatment being meted out to those arrested. One police officer at INEC’s office on seeing the number of old people arrested was said to have wondered aloud: “These old men couldn’t have been thugs. It is wrong to mistreat them simply because they belong to a political party.”

    At the military facility in Ede, one soldier was so compassionate about the age of Pa Fakayode that he was claimed to have removed his cap and offered it to the octogenarian to cover his head in the cold, while the Alhaja, who was arrested with him, removed her head tie to keep the old man warm from the cold. And at the DSS office, another soldier even intervened to stop a DSS officer who repeatedly used horsewhip to lash at the head of the 84-year-old Pa Fakayode.

    Another instance was cited of the level of the brutishness and impunity with which suspected PDP thugs and the security forces manhandled people in Osun over the August 9 election. It was the story of a young man allegedly cut down in his prime in Ilesha. The young man, identified simply as Tolu, had just concluded the naming ceremony of his child and was wheeling back the generator used to the owner when he met his cruel fate; a squad of uniformed people (nobody could determine whether they were PDP thugs or men of the security forces) were also driving past.

    Immediately this armed squad observed that the young man had the Aregbesola campaign vest on, they allegedly opened fire on the poor boy. He was said to have died on the spot.

    Reacting to the gale of arrests on the eve of the Osun poll, however, the spokesperson of DSS, Marilyn Oga, said the agency’s operatives were in Osun to ensure peace, adding that they were only arresting suspected thugs and criminals who were allegedly violating the law and attempting to disrupt the election.

    She said the APC spokesman, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, who was also arrested, was nabbed because he was moving about at the wee hours on the eve of the election. According to Oga, who spoke on a popular television station, the earlier gubernatorial elections in Ondo, Anambra and Ekiti were successfully conducted because security forces were also deployed to maintain peace in those places.

    She defended the agency against the public outrage, which trailed the wearing of hoods by its operatives in the Osun election, saying  it was the normal practice for the operatives to be masked during ‘special operations’ so that they would not be compromised.

    But the APC took the DSS spokesman to task, wondering if Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the former governor of Osun State, Senator Isiaka Adeleke, who was placed virtually on house arrest until he outwitted the security men and slipped away from the soldiers and other security operatives who had surrounded his residence, and other APC leaders and supporters, who were picked up in their homes on the eve of the election, were also criminals.

  • APC: President’s stoppage of #BringBackJonathan hash tag a good step but…

    APC: President’s stoppage of #BringBackJonathan hash tag a good step but…

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has described as a good step, the order by President Goodluck Jonathan for the stoppage of the #BringBackJonathan hash tag.

    It said it is perceived as a mockery of the #BringBackOurGirls hash tag, which has helped to call global attention to the fate of the over 200 girls, who were abducted by Boko Haram insurgents in Chibok, Borno State, almost five months ago.

    In a statement in London yesterday by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, APC, however, said the President made a mockery of his administration and his country by waiting for an international condemnation of the shameless and brazen usurpation of the #BringBackOurGirls hash tag before issuing the directive.

    It said: ‘’Had the US newspaper, Washington Post, not written a stinking editorial decrying the Jonathan administration for appropriating the BringBackOurGirls hash tag for his re-election, the administration would have continued its brazenness without regard to the feelings of the parents of the girls or indeed Nigerians.

    ‘’Again, the administration has waited for a global opprobrium before doing what is right. Recall that it took an international media campaign before the Jonathan administration acknowledged, after 19 days that the Chibok girls were missing in the first instance. Recall also that it took a 17-year-old, Yousafzai Malala, to make the President realise that he should meet the parents of the girls, even if he eventually insulted the grieving parents by inviting them to Abuja instead of going to visit them in their abode.

    “It is important that we don’t make a mockery of our own people, so that we don’t become an object of international mockery.’’

    The party said as belated as the President’s directive on #BringBackJonathan hash tag is, it is a good first step that must be followed by another directive ordering the so-called Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) to stop its rallies that have offended the sensibilities and intelligence of Nigerians.

    It said the noisy and sycophantic rallies held across the nation, ostensibly to collect signatures from Nigerians urging Jonathan to seek re-election, contrast with the challenges facing the nation, which is being dismembered town by town by the terrorist group, Boko Haram.

    ‘’Nigeria is in a state of war, a state of anarchy, a state of loss never witnessed since the end of the unfortunate civil war in 1970. Terrorists are capturing towns after towns and hoisting their flags over the seized territories. Our troops are engaged in an epic battle to ward off the terrorists. Our people are being daily slaughtered by the marauding terrorists, and Ebola is very much here with us.

    ‘’Therefore, this cannot be the time for festivities and celebrations, the type being orchestrated by the government under the TAN banner. The rallies insult the troops, who are battling Boko Haram. The rallies insult Nigerians, who are praying for the unity of the nation in the face of the madness by the marauders. The rallies offend the sensibilities of the families of our citizens, who are being mowed down daily by Boko Haram. They must stop forthwith,’’ APC said.

    The party wondered whether the organisers of the rallies and those who had been mocking the #BringBackOurGirls campaigners knew that Nigerians were not fools, hence could see the deceit, the callousness and the insensitivity of the Jonathan administration in secretly funding the rallies and the anti-BringBackOurGirls campaigns.

    ‘’Really, what makes the President and his backers think he should be brought back? Is it because he is presiding over the dismemberment and humiliation of a once proud nation? Is it because he presides over an administration, which is corrupt. That cannot account for 20 billions dollars in oil money. That cannot successfully prosecute anyone over 1 trillion oil subsidy fraud? Is it because of an unparalleled incompetence, which has led to a massive decay in infrastructure and lack of jobs for our youths? Or is it because he has exposed Nigeria to unprecedented global ridicule?

    ‘’There must be a limit to the desperation of a President to win re-election at all cost. There must be a political price to pay for a President, who would willfully subvert the constitution he swore to uphold. There must be some introspection by a President, who will be jetting around with an alleged sponsor of terrorism. As we have warned before, when a drum is beating too hard, it is about to burst. President Jonathan must take a moment to reflect, to realise that he can only preside over a country that remains whole, not one that has been fractured or bombed out of existence by terrorists,’’ APC said.

  • ‘Ekiti APC lawmakers ‘ll not defect to PDP’

    ‘Ekiti APC lawmakers ‘ll not defect to PDP’

    Hon. Segun Erinle represents Ilejemeje Constituency in the Ekiti State House of Assembly. The All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain, who reflects on the governorship election, contends that the party will bounce back. EMMANUEL OLADESU met him.

    Why was the APC defeated by the PDP during the recent governorship election?

    We may have  lost because the majority of voters were not ready for the revolution  introduced into governance. We believed as a government  that Ekitis needed transformation and, as a result, we needed to put the necessary infrastructure in place, including good roads, renovation of schools, hospitals, tourist centres. But, our people saw governance from a different angle. Despite applauding those policies,  they believed the lies  told by the opposition  party that we were going to sack teachers, civil servants, stop Okada riders from plying the roads. Some were of the opinion that money did not flow, unlike during the previous regimes. Other issues were the militisation of the election process, whereby military personnel deployed were beating and picking up  members of our party on the eve of the election. l was harassed and intimidated while my driver and my  aides were thoroughly beaten for doing nothing. A leader of my party in my constituency was nearly killed harassed and detained. Is that democracy? Do we practice democracy by allowing military men to pick up anybody? You can see that a lot of factors contributed to our loss.

    Are you worried by the development?

    I am worried for two major reasons. If we can work like that  to make Ekiti  State great, to prepare Ekiti  people for a better future, and our people can still vote against us, it is  worrisome. It shows that Ekiti is no longer what it   used to be.  Secondly, l am worried because we fought hard to achieve and sustain  democracy in the last 15 years. l continue to pray that we sustain it.

    Some analysts have said that it was rigging by technology…

    Yes, there may be some elements of truth in such statements, despite my analysis above. l cannot imagine a performing governor losing  in all the 16  local government  areas of the state, despite the general thinking of stomach infrastructure. That type of technology was used in Zimbabwe, which resulted in the re-election of President Robert Mugabe. If  it is true, it means we are yet to hear the last of Ekiti election because we would dig to the root of the problem.  The people’s votes must be respected and counted. We are not just going to sleep and expect things to lie fallow like that.

    What are the lessons you have learned from the episode?

    There are lot of lessons to be learnt from the election . One should value the power of the electorate and secondly, one should not underrate the power of the Federal Government to  use all forces at his disposal to upstage the electoral process. You should not forget the statement made by the Vice President that they would take Ekiti at all cost.

    The APC commands the majority in the House. How are members going to work with the governor?

    We are all Ekitis and the interest ofEkiti is paramount in our mind. If the in-coming government comes with a populist agenda that would benefit our people, we would not hesitate to support the agenda in the interest of our people. Don’t forget, we are the representative of our people and the interest of the people is very paramount in our minds.

    Is it true that some legislators are planning to defect to the PDP?

    I am not aware of  any plan to defect.  l am one of the allies of the Speaker. Hence, it is my belief as a staunch member of the APC and a leader in my own right that the status quo must remain. The party must be united.

    If you compare Ekiti and Osun elections, what would you say?

    APC is popular in Ekiti and Osun. The people love our party. In Ekiti, many complained that their votes did not count.  We knew we will win in Osun. We were not surprised by the outcome of the Osun election, despite the militarisation of the state and the harassment of many APC leaders and supporters.

    What is the difference between Fayemi and Aregbesola?

    Governor Aregbesola, having served in the Tinubu Government in Lagos State, has a lot of experience in grassroots politicking .

    How do you react to the controversy generated by the creation of additional councils?

    The constitution is very clear on the   procedure for creating local governments. Those procedures were followed, hence, the approval by the House of Assembly. We have given the legal backing as mandated by the constitution. We have followed the due process in doing our job with total respect to the constitution and the mandate of the people. Don’t forget, the current government will still exist till October 15.

    Many communities   in the state  did not   support the  location of the headquarters… 

    We want to eat  our cake and have it. Government cannot be perfect. But, we would continue to do our best to serve the interest of people better. I believe and l know that between 80 and 90 per cent of the people are very happy with the government’s position.  l am happy to say we have been able to resolve all issues.

    Some people are saying that the House may threaten Fayose with impeachment… becomes the governor?

    Can that be true? On what ground? Without an impeachable offence? All these are mere rumours. If truly Ekitis have elected him, can we impeach him without  uproar  from the  people? We are all Ekiti. If the governor-lect wants the best for Ekiti, we would support him to move Ekiti forward. l believe the governor-elect should look back and give thanks to God. He should now be able to correct past mistakes.

    What is the way forward for Ekiti?

    We should have a genuine autonomy for the three arms of government. The police and the army should be free from political control. The Inspector-General of Police and the Chief of Army Staff should not be under the control and influence of politicians. People at the helms of governmens of the people and not as masters. A machinery should be put in place to genuinely act as the watchdog. Our government should allow the will of the electorate to prevail in elections.

    Nigeria is our country. We have no other place we can call our home. So, let’s unite to make it great. We should guide against the prediction of Americans that, by 2015, Nigeria as a country would no more exist.  I continue to pray that the PDP does not destroy the country because they have benefitted a lot from the country. We cannot have a one-party state. They should allow the opposition to operate freely to move the country forward.

  • APC, PDP chiefs for King’s College anniversary lecture

    The Chairman, All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, and his counterpart in the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, will tell Nigerians their parties’ vision for education in Nigeria at the King’s College anniversary lecture scheduled to hold Thursday next week at the MUSON Centre, Onikan, Lagos.

    The lecture is one of the week-long programme to commemorate the college’s 105th anniversary.

    Mr Albert Okumagba, Chairman, King’s Week Committee, said in an interview that the lecture was an effort by the King’s College Old Boys’ Association (KCOBA) to bring educational issues to the front burner, especially as the 2015 general elections are near.

    He added that the lecture, which would be chaired by Chief Philip Asiodu, would also have a nine-member panel, including Frank Nweke Jnr’ former minister of information; Pastor Ituah Ighodalo, founder, Trinity House, and Toyosi Akerele.

    “As we run up to the general elections in 2015, this lecture offers a formidable platform for the leading parties to showcase their parties’ vision for education in Nigeria. This is in consonance with our commitment to the unity of Nigeria and our desire to raise the quality of public discourse around key issues as we approach 2015,” Okumagba said.

    Dr Leke Oshunniyi, Vice-President of KCOBA,  added that this is not the first time the school would host both parties. Last year, he said Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos, an APC State, and Governor Liyel Imoke of Cross River, a PDP state, discussed education issues at the Founder’s Day lecture.

    The King’s Week will also feature the Founder’s Day dinner, which Oshunniyi said would be graced by the Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II, an old boy of the college on Saturday September 20.

    The launch of The Centenary Book, a documenting 100 years of the college and the introduction of the Floreat Fund, a N1 billion endowment fund to improve the school will take place during the dinner.

    Other events lined up for the anniversary include a novelty match between KCOBA and Queen’s College Old Girls’ Association on September 17, Jumat Service (September 19), and a thanksgiving service/Annual General Meeting (AGM) on September 21.

     

  • APC, PDP quarrel over missing exhibits

    APC, PDP quarrel over missing exhibits

    LAWYERS  representing the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC) traded words yesterday over missing exhibits as they  inspect materials used for the August 9 Osun State governorship election.

    The lawyers inspected the materials at the INEC state headquarters on Gbongan Road, Osogbo.

    The crisis  started as the commission’s Deputy Director of Electoral Operations, Mr. Azeez Olatunji, announced that  items and electoral materials to be inspected for the day were those of Obokun and Ila-Orangun Local Governments.

    The deputy director, who stated that the PDP  requested to inspect materials of 17 local governments, sought the cooperation of the two parties.

    He listed items to be inspected as ballot papers, election registers, result sheets, adding that if other materials,  such as cubicle and ballot boxes are needed to be inspected, it would be allowed.

    Its Administrative Secretary, Oladipo Oladapo, assured the two parties that the commission would be fair.

    Similarly, the commission’s Legal Adviser, Wiltep Ishaku, who presided over the inspection, told both parties to cooperate with INEC’s officials.

    But it was later discovered that an Exhibit tagged “A” was missing.

    Some lawyers from the APC said the inspection should not continue, but the PDP lawyers pleaded that the exhibit could still be produced.

    The PDP lawyers said the inspection could begin with the available ones.

    The development infuriated the APC lawyers as they maintained their stand that nothing would be done until the exhibit is produced.

    A lawyer from APC Daud Akinloye and another from PDP, Kehinde Adesiyan, exchanged hot words before the INEC Administrative Secretary ordered that the “Exhibit A” should be produced before the beginning of the inspection.

  • Igwe: Nigeria a sick country, says Guild’s chief

    Igwe: Nigeria a sick country, says Guild’s chief

    •’Funeral date to be fixed by monarch’

    The President, Nigeria Guild of Editors (NGE), Mr. Femi Adesina, said yesterday that unless there was change, there would be avoidable deaths like Dimgba Igwe’s.

    He spoke at the deceased’s Lagos home when the management of The Sun visited his widow.

    Adesina attributed Igwe’s death to lack of medical attention, noting that if a surgeon had attended to the deceased early, he would not have bled to death.

    Igwe, who until his death was the vice-chairman of The Sun Group, died after he was knocked down by a hit-and-run driver near Apata Memorial School, Isolo, Lagos while jogging.

    Expressing dissatisfaction that his killer had not been arrested, Adesina dismissed fears that the  late Igwe might have been assassinated.

    He said: “We need to get to the bottom of this. What really happened? How did it happen? We cannot answer these questions unless that driver, who drove recklessly, is apprehended.

    “The security agencies, particularly the police, need to find that person so that we will know why it happened.

    “Fears that it could be assassination are mere conjecture because I doubt that anyone would want Dimgba Igwe dead.

    “I’ve not seen anything to point in that direction because he was a peaceful man. He was not a businessman, just a journalist; a writer, an author.

    “For every crime there is a motive. Unless we find the motive, then, I do not agree that he was assassinated.”

    On the allegation that Igwe was not given medical attention after he was knocked down, Adesina said: “I will not say there was no medical attention. He was attended to, but it was not adequate.

    “When the incident happened, he was first taken to a nearby private hospital. There, they gave him drips and referred him to the General Hospital, Isolo.

    “On getting to the hospital, there was no surgeon on duty, so he was referred to the  General Hospital, Ikeja.

    “So, he was attended to, although it might not be adequate and timely. If they had taken him to a hospital with a surgeon on ground, they would have stopped the bleeding.

    “We may say that he bled to death because medical attention did not reach him early and adequately.

    “It shows that Nigeria is a sick country. Our institutions are sick, including the health sector. We need to change the way things are done in this country.

    “Until that change comes, we are at the mercy of things as this.”

    The NGE president said Igwe’s death left The Sun Publishing Ltd devastated and grief-stricken, noting that his demise was a big and painful loss.

    He went on: “Dimgba Igwe was our friend, mentor and boss. He was like a father because we could discuss other unofficial matters with him.

    “He mentored many people. A lot of people were surprised he was not more than 58 because he was always there for everybody.

    “I urge the family to be strong. They should grieve, they should even mourn; but the Bible tells Christians not to mourn like those without hope.

    “He was a Christian and a devout one. We have comfort that he is with the Lord.

    “For the media, there is no way its history will be complete without mentioning Dimgba Igwe.

    “Fortunately, he reproduced himself in many people who can make up for the vacuum his death will create.”

    Also at the deceased’s home to commiserate with his family were the All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart and Lagos State governorship aspirant, Akin Ambode and Delta State Information Commissioner, Chike Ogeah.

    Ambode said he was touched  because the late Igwe did so much for journalism.

    “What happened to Dimgba Igwe is an indication of the level of decadence in the society. With the way we are incurring deaths, there is much to be done.

    “We cannot have this kind of incident and fold our arms. It could have been anybody. We should pay attention to that fact.

    “I enjoin the police to do more to ensure that his killer is apprehended and brought to justice.”

    Condoling with the widow, Ogeah said Delta State was also grieving because Igwe’s wife is from the state.

    He said Delta would support the family, urging them to seek solace in the fact that Igwe had gone to be with the Lord.

    Said Ogeah: “He was a pastor and he saved souls. The prayer for those of us he left behind is to do the right thing so that we can join him.

    “Dimgba Igwe was a journalist with integrity. I will miss reading his articles because I was always blessed when I read him with all the satire.

    “I don’t know what Mike Awoyinfa will be going through now because they were like Siamese twins.” The New Telegraph Managing Director, Eric Osagie, who said talking about Igwe in past tense was a harrowing experience, described his death as incomprehensible and unfathomable.

    His words: “It is a big dream that I want to wake up and be told it is not true.

    “He was a fine newsman; very analytical, profound and an organiser. He would be sorely missed.

    “Life is transient. We should do all we can as though there is no tomorrow. It can happen to anybody at anytime.

    “It is the shame of a nation that a car would knock somebody down and four hours later, no medical care. They cannot cope with medical emergency.

    “I do not know if the police will ever apprehend the killer because there are no security cameras anywhere.”

    The Nation learnt that no date has been fixed for Igwe’s funeral because the family is awaiting confirmation from his  monarch at Igbere in Bende Local Government Area of Abia State.

  • Oyo APC to INEC: distribute PVCs, register voters

    Oyo APC to INEC: distribute PVCs, register voters

    Oyo State All Progressives Congress (APC) has urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to ensure that voters get their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

    The party’s Director of Publicity and Strategy, Olawale Sadare, who said this in a statement yesterday, also urged INEC to register those eligible.

    APC said INEC was non-committal to assurances it gave that eligible citizens would be able to vote next year.

    The statement reads in part: “As days roll by, Nigerians are becoming increasingly expectant of the days set aside by INEC to choose their next set of leaders. But it seems the commission is not acting in the direction of allowing the people to have their say as it has been the case since 1999.

    “What else could have been responsible for the failure of INEC to distribute permanent voter cards to the people it registered since almost four years ago and get the ones who are eligible to register to do so in a seamless process, if not for deliberate plan to repeat another flawed exercise to the advantage of the usual beneficiaries – PDP?

    “Oyo State was slated to be in the second phase of the twin exercises of distribution of PVCs and continuous voters’ registration. Dates were announced for concerned persons to participate, but most people were disappointed as the exercises were marred by inefficiency and tardiness on the part of INEC. As if that was not enough, remedial plans announced by the commission turned out to be further testimony to INEC’s unpreparedness to discharge its duties as expected while the groaning continues among the citizenry till today.

    “It is recalled that APC was the only political party that mobilised the people across the whole of Oyo State for the exercises since we are not convinced on the need to seek another alternative to citizens’ participation in the electoral process and this explains our cause for worry.

    “For instance, a large chunk of registered voters in wards 2-10 in Egbeda; wards 4, 5, 10 and 12 of Ibadan North; wards 1, 7 and 12 in Ibadan South West; wards 8 and 11 in Ibadan South East as well as many other wards in the state could not get their PVCs. Those to be registered as fresh voters are having difficulties in getting INEC to provide officials and good machines to attend to them.

    “Consequently, we are reiterating our calls on INEC to work against all odds and restore the confidence of all the patriots in the system as the whole world is watching with keen interest.

    “We also demand categorical statement on the fate of those who had to re-register as a result of INEC’s error regarding when they would have their PVCs. In the same vein, we would like to call on genuine stakeholders to do the needful and ensure that all the processes leading to the conduct of free, fair and credible elections in 2015 are transparent and acceptable to all concerned.”

  • ‘We didn’t endorse Kwankwaso’

    Some Kano State All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftains have denied endorsing Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso for the 2015 presidential election.

    In a statement yesterday, signed by Alhaji Musa Umar, Mr Garba Bala and Mallam Muktar Kwaru, the party chieftains said: “Our attention has been drawn to a communiqué issued and signed by Ambassador Kabir Rabiu and Saleh Jelli, which was published in a national newspaper on September 5. In the communiqué, the two signatories claimed that the Elders Committee of Kano State APC has endorsed Kwankwaso for the presidency. This is far from the truth, because of the following reasons.

    “There is no formal elders committee of the APC in Kano State yet. What we have is a committee of leaders of the legacy parties in the persons of Alhaji Bashir Othman Tofa (ANPP), Mallam Musa Gwadabe (ACN) and Mallam Sabo Nanono (CPC), who have no knowledge of such committee.

    “The two signatories of the communiqué are not members of the legacy parties but members of the Kwankwasiyya Group and, therefore, cannot speak for the legacy parties. The leaders of the three legacy parties have not endorsed any presidential candidate, nor have elders of the legacy parties.”

  • Lagos APC shocked

    The Lagos State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has described the late veteran journalist, Dimgba Igwe, as a pace- setter, who played a leading role in charting the course of journalism. It described his death as shocking and a big loss to journalism, “which is in dire need of competent professionals to steer it to greater heights.”

    In a statement by its Lagos State spokesman Joe Igbokwe, APC said it was shocked by the manner the veteran journalist was killed by an errant driver while jogging near his home.

    It sympathised with the family, friends and colleagues of the late journalist and urged that everything should be done to investigate the death.

  • Gombe youths dump PDP for APC

    Gombe youths dump PDP for APC

    The Gombe Youth Vanguard for Change, comprising 400 members, and six other similar groups have dumped the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Leader of the Gombe Youth Vanguard for Change Malam Ibrahim Muhammed said they pulled out of Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo’s campaign because of his “unpopular policies and lack-lustre approach to governance”.

    He said leaders of the groups realised that continued support for the governor was not in the interest of the people, adding: “Governor Dankwambo has continued to remain insensitive to their plight. The people’s efforts to better their lot have defied all solutions due to policies introduced by his administration.

    “There is no concrete road map for transforming the state from its state of decay and humiliation of citizens. Since he assumed office, the governor has continued to show that he is saddled with a task he is ill-prepared for.

    “Residents live in hunger and nothing is being done to alleviate their suffering. The hardship in the state is gradually becoming militarised and we are worried. So, we decided to join the APC, under the leadership of Senator Danjuma Goje, which we believed will bring change in 2015, if the mandate is given to the APC.”