Tag: APC

  • Apc raises alarm over ‘plot’ to rig poll

    Apc raises alarm over ‘plot’ to rig poll

    THE Kayode Fayemi Campaign Organisation yesterday accused the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)  of a plot to rig the  election by placing selected All Progressives Congress (APC) leaders in each of the 16 local governments under house arrest on election day.

    According to the organisation, this is to create fear in the minds of the followers, who may become jittery and decide to stay away from polling units.

    “This plan is to be executed with fake policemen who are currently being recruited and trained by the PDP.

    “Some of these fake policemen trained in Osun and Ondo states are already assigned to the PDP  and Labour Party LP.

    “Decked in fake police uniforms and name-tags, these thugs posing as cops have been providing cover for both the PDP and LP thugs who continue to unleash terror and mayhem on every community the  candidates visit.

    “In the last four weeks, thugs of both the PDP and LP  have wreaked untold havoc on Egbe, Ido-Ile, Okemesi, Aramoko, Ipole-Iloro, Ilupeju, Itaji, Iyin and parts of Ilejemeje Local Government.

    In a statement by its spokesperson, Dimeji Daniels, the organisation added that it has also uncovered plans by the PDP to clone voter’s cards.

    “The PDP agents of rigging have been going about inducing eligible voters to allow them copy the VIN number on their voter’s cards. They plan to clone as many voter’s cards as possible. This criminal act of the PDP agents is more rampant in Ado-Ekiti Local Government which has the highest number of registered voters. Information available to us shows that the PDP already has in its kitty close to 50, 000 fake voter’s cards which it plans to distribute to imported merceneries for use in six local governments on the day of election.”

    The campaign organisation alleged that should the PDP mercenaries not be allowed to use the fake voter’s cards to vote, its thugs would then unleash mayhem at polling units in the six council areas with the aim of forcing the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to declare election inconclusive in those local governments.

    For now, the targetted local governments are Efon, Ijero, Irepodun/Ifelodun, Ikere, Ise/Orun and Moba.

    Their plan is to use federal might to unleash the Army and the Police to help their preferred candidate in the envisaged  supplementary election.

    “We call on the international community to prevail on the PDP to halt its evil plan which is capable of escalating the fragile security situation in the country…”

  • TUC, APC women’s leader, others  to Jonathan: rescue the girls or quit

    TUC, APC women’s leader, others to Jonathan: rescue the girls or quit

    The Rivers State chapter of the Trade Union Congress (TUC) and the Women’s Leader of the state chapter of the All Progressive Congress (APC), Evang. Carol Nagbo, demanded yesterday the resignation of the Goodluck Jonathan administration over the abducted schoolgirls from Chibok, Borno State.

    In separate reactions in Port Harcourt, the state capital, the women’s leader and the TUC Chairman, Chika Onugbu, said the Jonathan administration should take more decisive actions to free the Chibok girls or step down.

    The union leader noted that the deteriorating security situation might lead to a bigger problem, if the government fails to take more serious action to free the schoolgirls and other missing Nigerians.

    He said: “The best option is for this government to step down or resign, because the way things are going, it will become a territorial conflict.  The Jonathan government must be fast on any approach to free the innocent girls.”

    Evang. Nagbo said the abduction of the girls and the delay by the Federal Government to free them from their captors indicated that there was no government in Nigeria.

    The politician said the best way to prove the weakness of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at the national level was to force it to resign.

    According lives to her, any government that cannot protect the lives of its citizens is not worthy to be trusted.

    Evang. Nagbo said: “The Jonathan government has failed the people; Dr Jonathan should resign. We have no government, and we cannot continue to live in shame in our country. It is a disgrace that the future leaders of this country are somewhere shedding the tears of sorrow because their government has failed in its responsibility.”

  • Scores feared dead in attack

    Scores feared dead in attack

    There seems to be no let-up in Boko Haram’s bloody campaign.

    Scores died on Monday night in an attack on Gamboru Ngala town in Borno State, it was learnt yesterday.

    The insurgents reportedly attacked a local market, fired shots into the crowd before entering the town to burn homes and vehicles.

    Gamboru is a town at the Nigeria-Cameroon border. It is the headquarters of Ngala Local Government, which is about 200km from Maiduguri, the capital of the beleaguered state.

    The figure of those killed could not be independently confirmed. Borno Senator Ahmed Zannah said up to 300 were killed in the “12-hour” attack on defenceless villagers.

    The insurgents reportedly had Armored Personnel Carriers (APC) and Rocket Propelled Launchers (RPGs), among other weapons.

    “The attackers stormed the communities in the night when residents were still sleeping, setting ablaze houses and shooting those who tried to escape,” a source said.

    The troops stationed in the village reportedly moved towards the Lake Chad area when they got information that some gunmen were sighted with abducted schoolgirls moving to the area, thereby giving the sect members the opportunity to strike unchallenged.

    Defence Spokesman Brig.-Gen. Chris Olukolade said last night that the military received the alarm raised by Zannah.

    “Aside the initial alarm raised by that source, which is typical of him, we have not been able to make an independent confirmation of an attack.

    “We have deployed troops and have not been able to get any confirmation,” Gen. Olukolade said.

     

  • Rivers APC raises alarm on CP’s transfer

    Rivers APC raises alarm on CP’s transfer

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State has raised the alarm on the plot by the Presidency to transfer the Commissioner of Police, Tunde Ogunsakin.

    Ogunsakin was transferred to the state in February.

    The APC Chairman, Davies Ibiamu Ikanya, said: “We have been informed that arrangements have been concluded by the Presidency and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to redeploy CP Ogunsakin.

    “We will resist the transfer through every legal means available to us.

    “We need peace in Rivers State and the Commissioner of Police has demonstrated that he is a thorough police officer.

    “We do not need another  Joseph Mbu to take us back to the terrible route we survived by the grace of God.”

    The party congratulated Governor Rotimi Amaechi for winning the 2014 Best Governor on Security in Nigeria Award.

    It said: “This is an award well deserved, considering the governor’s giant strides in the area of security.

    “The Port Harcourt that Amaechi inherited was more like a jungle, where the fittest determined the fate of lesser animals.

    “The once glamorous city was ranked among the four most dangerous cities in the world.

    “For Amaechi to have rescued Rivers State from militancy shows that he is ahead of his peers. The award is justified.”

    The APC urged the Federal Government to understudy Amaechi and learn from his methods and tactics.

  • Ngige: I didn’t abuse Yoruba

    Ngige: I didn’t abuse Yoruba

    Senator Chris Ngige (Anambra Central) has debunked a  report in the social media, in which he was “abusing” the Yoruba .

    Ngige was quoted online as saying: “Yoruba people are wicked. I would never have anything to do with them.”

    The All Progressives Congress’ (APC’s) candidate in the November 16, 2013, governorship election in Anambra State described the report as “forged, malicious and untrue”.

    Speaking through his media aide, Okelo Maduklaife, Ngige said the document did not emanate from him, his agents, privies or associates, urging the public to disassociate him from the document.

    In a statement in Awka, the Anambra State capital, he said: “It is a fatal error, which has further reduced these sore political foes as incapable of staying above the belt. We, therefore, urge self-respecting members of the  public to discountenance the verbal poison under reference and avert their mind to what could have necessitated this bad forgery at a time  Ngige has just led his party in Anambra State through organised and transparent congresses to establish a formidable structure in the state  and is making progress at the Election Tribunal to restore the voting rights of Anambra  citizens stolen on November 16, 2013, in exchange for an un-elected Junta.”

     

  • APC: First Lady’s intervention distracting, counter-productive

    APC: First Lady’s intervention distracting, counter-productive

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has decried the melodramatic intervention of First Lady Dame Patience Jonathan in the abduction of over 200 schoolgirls from a secondary school in Chibok, Borno State.

    The party described Mrs Jonathan’s action as distracting, counter-productive and calibrated to scapegoat others with the sole intention of exculpating her husband rather than finding the girls.

    In a statement yesterday in Lagos by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, APC said: “Make no mistake about it, there is nothing wrong in the First Lady, as a woman and the mother of the nation, playing a role in resolving the unfortunate abduction of the girls. But that role must be within the realms of social activism, not in policy making or conduct of state affairs.”

    The party warned that melodrama, highlighted by the shedding of made-for-television crocodile tears, cannot and would not bring the girls back safely to their parents.

    “What will bring them back is a purposeful and sustained effort by the Federal Government, which has hitherto been tentative and lethargic. Therefore, enough of the distracting, absurd and overbearing show that the First Lady has put up in the past few days,” APC said.

    The party advised the First Lady to stop grandstanding and get real by leading a protest of other first ladies from the 36 states from the Eagle Square to Aso Rock to pressure her husband, President Goodluck Jonathan, on whose laps falls the responsibility of leading the nation to find the girls, to act fast.

    It also urged the First Lady to stop apportioning blames at this time so that all efforts can be geared towards finding the girls.

    “Our dear First Lady needs to be told clearly that her husband, the President, is the nation’s Chief Security Officer. Our dear First Lady needs to be informed that because Borno State, where the unfortunate abduction took place, is under a state of emergency, her husband, the President, has automatically assumed all security powers there. It is, therefore, wrong for our dear First Lady to be threatening to march on Borno to ask the governor to produce the girls. That march should be on Aso Rock instead,” APC said.

    The party wondered where the First Lady derived the powers to summon elected and appointed officials to Aso Rock to answer her queries over the missing girls.

    It noted that by doing so, “she is usurping the President’s constitutional role, making him to look weak and ineffective in conducting the affairs of state and also making Nigeria the butt of jokes in the international community”.

    APC said: “The First Lady has summoned the Borno State Police Commissioner; the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) for Chibok; the Borno State Commissioner for Education, the relevant local government chairman, the school principal and the school gatekeeper, among others. Where did she derive the authority or power to issue such summons? Does she know the implication of forcing security officials to divulge, on public television, sensitive information that could even hamper the search for the girls? How can a police commissioner, who is not accountable to the governor of a state, be subject to the First Lady? Where in the Constitution, or any law for that matter, is the role and powers of the First Lady delineated or articulated?”

    The party said if the First Lady would not heed the advice to stop summoning public officials to her executive chambers, then the officials should stop honouring such illegal and unconstitutional summons.

    It also took the First Lady to task over her comments that anytime she comes out, like a masquerade, something happens.

    APC wondered why she did not deem it necessary to have come out in the first few days of the girls’ abduction so that “something would have happened”.

    “Apparently, the First Lady believed, as she revealed on public television and as it has been insinuated in certain quarters, that the girls’ abduction was a ruse aimed at embarrassing her husband, hence neither she nor her husband took the whole tragedy seriously. That explained their delay in acting.

    “Now that the Boko Haram terrorists have claimed responsibility for the abduction and even threatened to sell the girls, the nation hopes that the First Lady and her husband now believe this is no ‘politics’,” it said.

    Also, the APC has condemned the clamour for the release of the names and pictures of the girls by those who are apparently doubting their abduction, including the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) National Women Leader Kema Chikwe.

    The party noted that while publishing the names and pictures of the girls would not facilitate their rescue, it would succeed in stigmatising them for life when eventually they are found and returned home safely.

    “These girls, who are mostly within the age-range of 16-18, are children, and deserve to be protected. Any attempt to publish their names and pictures, as being demanded in certain quarters, will stigmatise them for life, against the backdrop of the sex slavery conditions which many fear they may have been subjected to. Therefore, let us spare them any more trauma than they may have been subjected to already,” APC said.

  • Ondo APC chair preaches unity

    Ondo APC chair preaches unity

    Ondo State All Progressives Congress (APC) Chairman Isaac Kekemeke has said the party’s new leadership will unite factions to build a stronger APC and take over power.

    Speaking to The Nation after meeting with the leadership of the Amalgamated Commercial Motorcycle Riders’ Association of Nigeria (ACOMORAN) in Akure, Kekemeke said: “We will ensure that the APC gets substantial votes during the February 2015 Presidential and National Assembly polls.”

    He said his committee would not be distracted by the antics of two leaders of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and the All Nigeria Peoples Congress (ANPP), who claimed they had formed a parallel executive.

    Kekemeke said: “These two party leaders, who are members of the legacy party, earlier withdrew from the ward and local government congresses because they wanted the party offices to be shared between the legacy parties that formed APC.

    “This request is contrary to the APC’s constitution. They must understand that the APC is a moving train with a distinct ideology, which nobody can hold back or slow down its pace.”

    He urged aggrieved members to forget the past and work together to ensure that the APC takes over power in the state, rather than constituting themselves into a cog in the wheel of progress.

     

    Kekemeke said: “We need them to be part of our present efforts to rebuild the progressive party. If their action is a drama or comic, we have had enough of it. It is now time for action.”

    “If it is an attempt to create division that does not exist for a perceived advantage, either to themselves or another party, they will soon discover to their chagrin that this advantage is not in existence.”

  • Teaching them  how to fish

    Teaching them how to fish

    Senate Minority Whip Ganiyu Olanrewaju Solomon has empowered some youths to set up their own businesses. His gesture, says Lagos State All Progressives Congress (APC) Chairman Chief Henry Ajomale, is a reminder of the nation’s empowerment crisis. Assistant Editor DADA ALADELOKUN reports.

    The event started on a convivial note. But, suddenly,  there was silence. The speaker’s voice quaked, as listeners nodded their heads. Chief Henry Ajomale, Interim Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State, held the microphone, analysing  what remains a pain in the hearts of many Nigerians.

    He struggled to contain his emotions as he bemoaned the fate of the 19 job seekers who died last month  during the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS).

    The Blue-Roof, popular events rendezvous on the sprawling LTV premises in Alausa, Ikeja, was filled. It was a moment for “the lucky ones” – numbering about 800 – who were being empowered with multi-million-naira equipment. The posture was a follow-up to their two-week training in various vocations, to teach them “how to fish.”

    The event was sponsored by Senator Ganiyu Olanrewaju Solomon  the Minority Whip of the Upper Chamber of the National Assembly, representing Lagos West District. He was supported by the Federal Ministry of Youths and Sports.

    Exuding excitement, the youth donned branded T-shirts. With hearty praise-songs for their benefactor, they filled the roomy hall to capacity as early as 9 am, looking into the future with an air of assurance. At some locations in the hall was a spectacle: Loads of the expensive equipment that were later given to them with take-off grants.

    Before Ajomale spoke, Solomon had told the gathering why he took the bold step to rescue the beneficiaries from the brink of despondency with the training that ended on February 25.

    “With the various skills acquired by the youth, they need not continue to worry their heads over the white-collar jobs that are not there. Besides the equipment, we are also giving them some stipends in bank drafts to help them start off without ado,” Solomon said, urging them to be serious in their vocations.

    Sobriety gripped the gathering when he lamented the terror of joblessness in the country, especially among able-bodied youths. An unpleasant noise swept through the crowd in response to Solomon’s outburst on the ill-fated “NIS 19.” Sighs of agony and frustration shook the gathering. After a one-minute silence demanded by the senator for the repose of the late job seekers’ souls, he sought more commitment from the government and other stakeholders in the fight against unemployment, which he warned, was becoming a major threat to lives and property in the land.

    Everyone rose in earth-shaking ovation for the lawmaker. APC chieftain Cardinal James Odunmbaku (Baba Eto); Mr Wale Raji, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Commerce and Industry, who represented Governor Babatunde Fashola; Mrs Risikat Akiyode, who stood in for Fashola’s deputy, Mrs Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire; another APC leader, Bashorun Tajudeen Jaiyesimi; officials of the Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports, among other dignitaries, were not left out.

    Ajomale was effusive in Solomon’s praise for his thoughtful generosity, especially towards the beneficiaries. Urging them to make good use of the gesture, the politician said: “If you teach a person how to fish rather than giving him fish, you are eradicating poverty in his life. This is what our senator is doing and the Federal Government must imbibe it.”

    Fashola had kind words for the senator, saying of the empowerment: “This is a timely intervention in view of the rate of unemployment in the country today.” Orelope-Adefulire also lauded Solomon’s passion for the development of youths and women, adding: “This is a gesture that will complement government’s poverty-reduction efforts and socio-economic rebirth. This will certainly reduce crime rate.”

    The Coordinator, New Renewal Group (NRG), an influential political body in APC, Mr Abiodun Musa, stormed the LTV premises with one of his group’s branded vehicles – loaded with various souvenirs. “This man (Solomon) is not only an asset to his district; he has proved a treasure to our party by exemplifying what it stands for – compassion for the less-privileged. Giving is his life; it is one virtue that all of us, including you, must imbibe,” he told a group of some beneficiaries.

    Pleasant surprise was bold on the faces of the youth when Solomon and the dignitaries stepped out to present the equipment, certificates and the grants to them. On their lips was the tacit exclamation: “So, this can be true!”

    Mojeed Afiz, who learned barbing, got kits to start off; Abayomi Agbelega and Olamide Faniran smiled home with bench grinders; Jude Okoro, dish installation equipment, Halimat Adeleke, shoe-making machine, among others.

    A graduate of Sociology from the Lagos State University (LASU), Ibrahim Adisa, could not contain his joy. He was trained in barbing after his futile effort at securing a white-collar job. “I’m from Alimosho. Youths are the leaders of tomorrow but our government has not proved it to us. I believe posterity will remember the senator for this gesture. I know that soon, I will become an employer of labour,” he said.

    Rashidat Adigun, a graduate of the Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH), was trained in Make-up and Gele. She was happy that the senator fed them during the training and then gave N1,000 each daily for fare. praying for the lawmaker, she said: “I had looked for an opportunity to learn the vocation in many places, but they kept demanding about N100,000 from me, which I couldn’t afford. I thank God that GOS has done it for free.”

    Indeed, it was an outing that was generally adjudged a model in the concerted efforts to bail the nation out of the woods by building the economic base of the citizenry.

  • How to end insurgency, by Tinubu

    How to end insurgency, by Tinubu

    All Progressives Congress (APC) national leader Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu yesterday identified five solutions to the Boko Haram insurgency.

    He said the dreaded sect is the greatest security challenge to Nigerian since the civil war 40 years ago.

    Tinubu said so far, government policy on tackling the problem has been unimaginative and mainly a one dimensional military approach.

    The Goodluck Jonathan administration, he said, implements its own policy half-heartedly; resulting in the sect’s evil spreading geographically, with its operations becoming more complex.

    The former Lagos State governor, in a statement, said government policy needs reform in five important ways.

    First, he said the government must admit its solely military approach is inadequate, as Boko Haram’s challenge has economic, political and social dimensions that have been ignored at Nigeria’s collective national peril.

    Second, he said to address the non-military aspects of the crisis, government needs to reach out to the North, especially those areas most blighted by terrorism.

    Tinubu said that region now suffers severe economic depression, and that he believes only a small minority of people actually support Boko Haram.

    The real problem, Tinubu said, is that most people in the affected areas think ill of the government and are thus indifferent to the fight between government and the sect.

    “Despite Boko Haram’s homicidal ways, the population does not see government as coming to their rescue.

    “They see government as another layer of suffering and oppression. Until government breaks this perception, it will have a hard time breaking the back of Boko Haram,” Tinubu said.

    According to him, the most effective way to counter this impression is through a development plan for the North, under which the government will inaugurate infrastructural development that not only creates a platform for economic growth, but will provide employment for many young men.

    Such legitimate employment, Tinubu said, will lessen the pool of desperate youth from which Boko Haram recruits its foot soldiers.

    “Deplete the numbers of recruits and you diminish the group’s ability to operate. Also, this policy builds goodwill among the people,” Tinubu said, adding that ultimately, it is the people who will defeat Boko Haram when they see government as their ally and true guardian.

    Tinubu’s third solution is the need to refine military operations, which he described as clumsy.

    “The military’s hand has been too heavy and indiscriminate. It has committed abuses against the innocent in its clumsy attempt to pursue Boko Haram. These offenses only increase the pool of disaffected people from which Boko Haram recruits.

    “To be seen as the true protectors of the people, government security forces must restrain themselves so that they do not lash out in frustration against innocent people for the harm Boko Haram has done,” he said.

    The fourth solution, according to Tinubu, is that the government must improve its intelligence-gathering capacity.

    This, he said, is partly a function of the people’s disposition toward government, as their distrust makes them reticent to provide information.

    “All intelligence gathering is first local. There is a lot of sense in the community policing in Western nations where the police is welded to the community and security is every citizen’s business.

    “In our case, I am afraid, security have alienated the locals and in that process shut the door to the floor of useful information about the dangerous gang.”

    Finally, Tinubu said a regional summit is needed as the Boko Haram challenge has a regional dimension. He said elements of terrorism are now trafficked across borders.

    “As the largest nation in West Africa and the nation most affected by this problem, Nigeria has the standing to convene a regional summit to discuss with our neighbors ways to end this problem before it becomes a hot and pressing issue for our neighbors as well,” he said.

    On the abduction of girls from the Government Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State, Tinubu said their disappearance shows a lack of contingent planning by the government.

    He said most major militaries around the world have developed plans for major challenges, adding that it is a terrible lapse that Nigeria’s security apparatus failed to make such plans.

    He also questioned the response on the ground the day the girls were seized, saying such abduction is logistically a major operation that takes planning and execution.

    “How is it that Boko Haram is better at planning and execution than our trained professional security agencies? How could this have taken place without detection and a rapid response?” he asked.

    Tinubu urged President Jonathan to talk to Nigerians on the issue. “The nation is in anguish yet the president has not talked to us directly.

    “Let him make a broadcast to the nation at this time of hurt and pain to assure us, in broad terms, that he has a plan to free our daughters.

    “He did not give us operation details but he needs to more actively and visibly lead the nation at this time,” Tinubu said.

    The APC national leader said he was not seeking to take advantage of the security situation to score a political point.

    “No matter what and no matter who is in office, our security should never sink below to a level where widespread death and destruction can descend on us with impunity…

    “While I have no interest in partisan bickering at the moment, I also cannot allow the mere fact of my political affiliation to silence me on this transcendent issue. All Nigerians have a right and responsibility to let their voice be heard on this matter,” he said.

    Tinubu said many non-Muslims would see Boko Haram as an Islamic assault, but that the sect’s activities make a mockery of his faith.

    “I am Muslim and abhor Boko Haram for it mocks not honors the tenets of my faith. There is nothing Islamic there except that it uses the legitimacy of Islam to lure the ignorant, gullible and hopeless into their sordid trap.

    “Boko Haram exalts violence, not God. It kills Muslim and Christian alike because its faith is not Islam but mayhem and lawlessness,” he said.

    According to him, without the extreme poverty and the great disparity between wealthy and the poor, Boko Haram would be a small fringe movement capable of nothing except petty crime and making periodic noise.

    “Government policy has been ineffectual. If it maintains this present form, government policy will continue to be ineffectual. This means the situation will either remain the same or deteriorate, with the latter being more likely. Either road is impassable if the objective of our trek is a better Nigeria.

    “Some now say parts of Nigeria are ungovernable. I disagree. The issue is not that parts of the nation are ungovernable. The real problem is that the current administration seems incapable of governing these and other areas.

    “No parts of the nation are ungovernable. All sections are amenable to good governance if only good governance were to be had. Trouble commences where there is bad or no governance.

    “This government, by folly or omission, has done too little good. It has lost legitimacy among segments of the population. While it may hold predominant power and money, this government is approaching the point where it is morally spent.

    “This government is a bumbling monument to barren policy and corrupt practices. Given the obvious danger before us, may this government regain sobriety and a sense of purpose equal to the moment and the challenge we face,” Tinubu said.

     

  • Working with Fayemi is building  a new future for Ekiti, says Oni

    Working with Fayemi is building a new future for Ekiti, says Oni

    Former Governor of Ekiti State, Chief Segun Oni, says his decision to join forces with the incumbent governor of the state and candidate of All Progressives Congress (APC) in the June 21 election,  Dr. Kayode Fayemi, is about erecting a new platform for the future of the state.

    The former governor, who welcomed Fayemi to his residence in Ifaki-Ekiti in company of his teeming supporters from the PDP, said the only important thing at this point in Ekiti is the future of the state and the need to build on the gains of the past three and a half years.

    He said: “We are erecting a new platform to view the future and for us, the future is the only important thing that we have to see and defer to. Yes, there are past, but I urge all of us to let the past remain in the past. All sentiments, all prejudice must remain in the past. All decisions, all hopes are going to be about the future.”

    Oni said all well-meaning stakeholders must realize that the June 21 election is greater than personal interests or ambition, but about who is in a better position to give Ekiti a future everyone can be proud.

    “We must ask ourselves who is in a better position to give Ekiti a better future, the kind of future that we want. This is why we are doing this. If you are an Ekiti person, ask yourself who is in a better position to bequeath your children a better future.

    “Tomorrow is greater than today and yesterday. Let us look at our future. I am not talking perfection. I know God is the only one who is perfect. We must not focus on personal interests. Let us think about the future of our children. Tomorrow has started today.”

    Oni said Dr. Fayemi had done well given the scarce resources available to the state, praying God to grant him victory in the governorship election.

    “The Almighty God will grant you honour beyond your projection. This venture will succeed. Your tenure will be a huge success,” the former governor prayed.

    Governor Fayemi who was accompanied by his deputy, Professor Dupe Adelabu, and his wife, Erelu Bisi Fayemi, described the defection of Oni as a lesson that leadership is about sacrifice and foresight.

    Describing Oni as a true leader, Fayemi said the former governor chose to stand on the side of the people, even though it was not materially beneficial to him.

    “What my ‘egbon’ has demonstrated today is that he is a true leader. The ruling party is still in government. He could make demands, but for him, he has demonstrated that he is a man of honour from the Land of Honour, and I know that God will always bless his ways. He has followed his conscience. He has followed his conviction. He has demonstrated that character is important to our value system. We have done everything to follow in those footsteps as Ekiti sons and daughters,” Fayemi said.

    Fayemi said the coming election may not necessarily be about performance as his performance is not in doubt, adding that the election is a decision between right and wrong, light and darkness.

    “His Excellency, Segun Oni has led the way. He has lit the candle. The rest of us who are his followers owe it a duty to start lighting the candle in all the 16 local governments in the state.”

    The governor urged APC members not to regard the hitherto PDP members who defected alongside Segun Oni as new members, but as equal members of a big family.

    “This family is not APC or the new PDP. This party is called Ekiti Progress,” said Fayemi.

    Some of those who joined Oni to receive Governor Fayemi at the former governor’s residence in Ifaki-Ekiti were a former Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Taiwo Olatunbosun, Former Commissioner Kayode Babade, former members of Ekiti House of Assembly, Lai Oke, Femi Adeleye, commissioners in the Oni administration, Abiodun Bamiteko, Mrs. Iyabo Babatunde, former Special Adviser,Policy and Strategy, Mr. Ben Oguntuase, Mrs. Motunde Dayo-Fajuyi, amongst others.