Tag: APC

  • Apc’s membership registration

    Iguess it is right to congratulate the All Progressive Congress (APC) on a successful registration of her members. While any willing defunct member of the legacy parties, the Action Congress of Nigeria, the Congress for Democratic Change, the All Nigeria Political Party and a stump of the All Progressive Grand Alliance, not to talk of the so called New PDP, were entitled to lay claim to membership of the new party, the APC; the recent registration exercise offered an opportunity for the party to separate the wheat from the chaff. APC deserves commendation for that peaceful and well organized exercise, particularly the wisdom in having clusters of members registered around the election polling centers.

    As Newspapers and Television stations showed the pictures of the politically sagacious Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the itinerant politician and former Vice President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, the ultra-conservative ramrod, retired General Muhammadu Buhari, former anti-corruption czar, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu and Governor Rochas Okorocha among several others, with their new party cards, smiling into the cameras; it was evident that President Jonathan and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), are up against a rainbow coalition of political interests. What is now expected is for APC to organize its party conventions from the wards to national level, before dealing with the politically hazardous excise of electing the party’s presidential candidate.

    Regardless of the huge challenges ahead, the maturing of APC as an alternative party to the PDP is fundamental to the stability of our democracy. Of course, this column does not agree to the argument, that, based on the concept of power shift, it is the turn of the northern Nigeria to produce a presidential candidate, considering their near monopoly of that position for decades, since our independence. But with APC seemingly settled to produce a northern presidential candidate, it is hoped that such a candidate will be one that will have electoral appeal beyound the core-north and the south-west regions where the party is strongest. It will be a political quandary for the party’s supporters if a member of the ancien regime or a religious fanatic emerges as the APC’s presidential candidate in 2015.

    While congratulating APC, the party leadership must realize that it has a lot more work to do, to successfully attract majority of non-partisan Nigerians, who are desirous of change, as the party’s political slogan postulates. The reason for the present lack of enthusiasm on the part of such Nigerians to join APC can be attributed to the crisscrossing and cross-carpeting going on across party lines, which has blurred the lines between what the PDP and the APC stands for. Ordinarily, with the PDP’s baggage of under-performance in the past years, despite our nation’s potentials, the APC’s registration exercise should have witnessed a more momentous registration of more members that would have made the 2015 elections a mere canonization exercise. Presently, it is likely that it was substantially members of the legacy parties and few enthusiasts that may have registered. More potential members will be waiting to see the political priorities of the new party.

    So the future of a virile APC as a political movement lies in the party being able to hammer out clear core principles, which must show their uncompromising desire to march the citizens to a new Nigeria. As some friends who consider this column to be an APC sympathizer, mocked me recently; if former President Obasanjo will be the party’s navigator, towards the 2015 elections, then what is the difference between the PDP and the APC? My answer is as I have previously argued regarding the emergence of APC; that, while I wished the new party had gone a different route, the fact that we have two strong political parties in the country, squaring against each other, is a huge leap from where we were. Over time, the pressure arising from the stiff competition between the two political parties will compel the elected officials to give Nigerians a better deal.

    Another lesson from APC’s membership registration exercise is that with astute planning, the twin challenges of census and voter registration exercise, needed for a free and fair election can be surmounted. While no doubt, census and voter registration is a more demanding exercise at a larger scale, than the membership registration exercise of a political party, yet, it shows that with adequate planning and provision of materials, the shame associated with our census and voter registration exercise can be surmounted. Should the requisite authorities deal adequately with our census and voter registration, the issue of rigging of elections will substantially diminish and real democracy will flourish.

    And if we have free and fair elections, the polity will witness more accountability in governance and also issue related election contests. Also, more qualified candidates will emerge. No doubt, many potential candidates for elective positions are scared away from the system, because of the current opacity. Strangely, none of the parties have shown an unmistakable determination to pursue a free and fair election. The common believe out there is that all the parties try to rig elections, believing that if you sit idly bye, the other party, especially the dominate party will continuously rig itself into power. Now that there seems a near parity in muscles between the APC and PDP, it is time to move over to contest of ideas.

    As the APC spring up new innovations, like the recent transparent membership registration exercise, the challenge facing the PDP is to attempt to match them on ideas. The claim by the PDP that APC’s registration exercise is phony, and is in preparation for disputation when the party looses the 2015 elections, is unfounded. What Nigerians earnestly desire is a contest of ideas, not blackmail.

     

  • Why I joined PDP – Shekarau

    Why I joined PDP – Shekarau

    The scramble to take advantage of the ongoing defection of prominent members of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC) has continued to gain momentum among displaced politicians across the nation.

    The latest in the attention-chasing adventure occurred on Monday with the former governor of Kano State, Mallam Ibrahim Shekarau declaring for the PDP at the Yar ‘Adua centre, Abuja.

    Shakarau, who formally announced his decision to join the ruling party, described the APC as a party without a structure.

    Maintaining that the opposition could not be seen or touched, because it had lost its soul, the former Kano governor said he was leaving the APC because the party has become a political fraud.

    In a swift reaction, however, the Interim National Publicity Secretary of the APC, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, could only wish Shekarau well in his new marriage to the PDP.

    In a telephone chat with one of our correspondents on Monday, Mohammed simply said: “We wish Shakarau well in his new marriage.”

    Challenging the leadership of the APC to produce the party’s constitution and manifesto, Shekarau boasted that no intimidation, blackmail, or character assassination would change his vision.

    He said, “Because some people wanted to pocket the party and that was why the constitution of the party had yet to see the light of the day.

    “The soul of the APC is lost. It cannot be touched or seen. APC Constitution is a political fraud. There is no management at any level of APC. This is the issue we raised and this is what we challenged.

    “I did all I could do to salvage the APC with no results. I refused to keep quiet in the face of the shenanigan going on in the APC.

    “Some people want to pocket the party when the constitution of the party cannot be found anywhere on the street of this country. We cannot see ourselves belonging to a platform where we have been made to pocket others.

    “After six months, no structure was found anywhere, we cannot belong to such, where no caricature of management is found. We challenged the leadership of APC to tell us why the constitution and manifesto of the party is not found on the street of Nigeria.

    “There is nowhere in the constitution of the APC that said X and Y are the leaders of the party.

    “Politics is not not only about contesting and winning elections neither is it about getting public offices alone, but a platform to get the people to participate in nation building.

    “As we are stepping into PDP, the party has made some amendments and has looked inward. We are solidly behind the leadership of the party. We will contribute meaningfully to development of the country in general.”

    Shekarau said his decision to dump the APC for the PDP was jointly reached with his supporters in Kano and across the country.

    Also speaking at the occasion, former Governor of Sokoto State, Alhaji Attahiru Bafarawa, said the APC has become the old PDP.

    Bafarawa, who also defected to PDP a few days ago, said he and Shekarau were in the PDP to rebuild the ruling party.

     

  • Bayelsa lawmakers deny defection to APC

    …Urge Jonathan to declare ambition

    Bayelsa State House of Assembly on Monday debunked speculations that 11 of its members have defected to the All Progressive Congress (APC).

    The assembly also called on President Goodluck Jonathan to declare his presidential ambition for 2015.

    The House was jolted by reports that 11 of its 24 members had defected to APC.

    But rising from an emergency meeting at the Assembly Quarters, Yenagoa, the lawmakers flayed the report and insisted that the assembly was intact.

    The Speaker of the House, Mr. Kombowei Benson, said all the lawmakers remained loyal to the Peoples Democratic Party, President Jonathan and the state party Chairman, Col. Sam Inokoba (rtd).

    Benson said they were happy at the transformation agenda of President Jonathan and the restoration programme of the state Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson.

    He said it was baseless to insinuate that lawmakers defected to APC because the former governor of the state, Chief Timipre Sylva, under whose tenure they were elected, had joined the APC.

    He said it was also premature to speculate that some lawmakers were planning to join the APC and use it as a platform to return to the assembly in 2015.

    On why 18 out of the 24 assembly members attended the emergency meeting, the speaker said some members were on medical trips while others obtained permission to stay away.

    “The reports of defection are fallacious. There is no cause for any member to think of defecting to APC. The Bayelsa State House of Assembly is intact,” he said.

     

  • Multiple shares scams: SEC reviews Sterling Registrars’ appeal

    • Lifts suspension on operation

    Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is considering an appeal by Sterling Registrars Limited over the decision of the Administrative Proceedings Committee (APC) to withdraw the share registration company’s operating licence over multiple shares frauds.

    APC, the internal adjudicatory arm of SEC, had withdrawn the licences of Sterling Registrars Limited and Vicad Securities Limited and banned nine capital market operators and directors in a judgment that indicated the companies and the persons engaged in multiple shares frauds.

    A source said Sterling Registrars has filed the appeal with the board of SEC. The board of SEC, according to the source, is considering the appeal.

    Under the adjudicatory process, if the appeal to the board of SEC fails, Sterling Registrars can file an appeal to the Investment and Securities Tribunal (IST) and subsequently to the Court of Appeal.

    The source said that in view of the appeal, SEC has removed suspension on the operating account of the company, paving the way for it to commence operations.

    Also, Sterling Registrars has launched an aggressive crisis management plan to assure its clients about the chances of its appeal and plead with them to retain their share registers with the company.

    One of the corporate clients of Sterling Registrars confirmed that the share registration company has made a representation to it on the ongoing efforts to overturn the withdrawal of licence. The corporate client indicated that the share registration company has also stated that it would be able to handle shareholders’ registers for the meantime pending the full decision on its appeal.

    In cases that evoked the ghosts of the fraudulent practices that were alleged to have contributed to 2008 crash of the stock market, the APC had decided that Sterling Registrars and its staff colluded and allotted shares of Japaul, which were not paid for, to unregistered and fictitious names and subsequently issued cheques for “return money” to some related fictitious names and the cheques were cleared by a staff of Sterling Registrar through the connivance of a staff and account of Quantum Securities.

    In the second case, APC decided that Vicad Securities Limited, which was registered as corporate investment adviser, engaged in fraudulent practices by refusing to honour transaction agreement after collecting N18 million while Resort Savings & Loans engaged in illegal share issue.

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    The judgments in the two cases- SEC vs Sterling Registrars and six others; and SEC vs Vicad Securities Limited and 16 others, were obtained by The Nation.

    In the course of investigations of the case involving Sterling Registrars, the fact emerged that during the initial public offer of Japaul, which opened on September 24, 2007 and closed on October 31, 2007, Sterling Registrar, which acted as registrars to the IPO, was used by a staff-Omodele Teluwo to allot 1.42 million shares to fictitious companies names after the close of the offer. One of the fictitious companies, Kalstead Farms Investment Ltd was only subsequently registered on June 25, 2008.

    According to the findings, none of the aforementioned fictitious companies used by a staff of Sterling Registrars to apply for the shares was listed in the allotment proposal submitted and cleared by Commission. A total of 1.92 million shares were allotted to Kalstead Farms Investment Ltd, which Kalstead did not pay for.

    Sterling Registrars was also discovered to have issued “return money” warrants for the sum of N445, 867.71 in favour of Mr. Akin Ekundayo and N791, 447. 32 in favour of one Aina Folashade Ojuolaope respectively whereas Mr. Akin Ekundayo applied for 20,000 units of Japaul Oil and was fully allotted and thus was not entitled to any “return money” There was no evidence to show that Aina Folashade Ojuolape subscribed for Japaul , thus warranting the issuing to her of the “return money” warrant.

    The “return money” warrants were not forwarded to the recipients but paid into the account of Quantum Securities Ltd by Omodele Teluwo with the connivance of one Ganiyu Akeem of Quantum Securities. They subsequently cleared the return money warrants.

    The APC decided that Sterling Registrars and all other respondents engaged in acts capable of adversely affecting the investing public’s image of and confidence in the capital market. It thus ordered Sterling Registrars to pay a fine of N5 million and a further sum of N5,000 only per day from the day the illegal allotment was made- May 6, 2008) to the date of decision hereof, for its unprofessional conduct and breach of the provisions of Investments and Securities Act (ISA) 2007 and SEC Rules and Regulations made pursuant thereto. It also cancelled the registration of Sterling Registrars.

    Teluwo and Ganiyu were banned for capital market activities 20 years for masterminding and conniving on the shares scam. SEC also blacklisted Kalstead and its chairman-Kayode Teluwo for collusion.

    In the case of Vicad, in addition to the withdrawal of Vicad’s licence, SEC directed the firm to pay a fine of N1 million and a further sum of N5,000 per day from January 21, 2010 up till August 25, 2011. It banned four directors and staff of Vicad for 15 years from engaging in capital market activities and holding directorship in any Nigerian public company for their unprofessional conduct in the transaction.

    The APC also suspended Resort Securities & Trust Limited suspended from taking on new assignments as stockbroker to an offer until it shows evidence of training of its staff who were indicted for negligence.

    Resort Savings and Loans Plc was directed to pay a fine of N1 million and a further sum of N5,000 per day from February 4, 2008 to October 28, 2009 for offering unregistered securities to the public.

    SEC also banned three directors of Resort Savings and Loans including Mr Adeforati Francis, Mr Olayinka Abimbola and Adegbaju Solomon for 15 years from engaging in capital market activities for their unprofessional conduct in the transaction and holding any directorship position in any Nigerian public company during the period of the ban.

  • ‘I was not bribed to defect to APC’

    ‘I was not bribed to defect to APC’

    Hon. Ibrahim Bolomope is a member of the Oyo State House of Assembly from Egbeda Constituency. He defected from the Accord Party to the All Progressives Congress (APC). In this interview with TAYO JOHNSON, he explains that he was not bribed to defect from his former party as being alleged in some circles.

    A month ago, you left the Accord Party for the APC. Why did you defect?

    The reason is based on my past, my beliefs and my conscience. On the floor of the House, I did mention that political parties in Nigeria exist purposely for the masses. The APC has been working for the masses.

    I share the ideas of the APC leaders. For instance, I was privileged to study a paper delivered by SenatorTinubu in London. Most of the issues he raised are issues I have been canvasing.

    Buhari is in the APC. When he was in power, apart from the element of being autocratic because they have military background, I think the government we have had in Nigeria.Buhari has a record of been the first person that headed the Petroleum Trust Fund. He did not commit fraud. He has been holding the same view consistently. You can also consider Governor Adams Oshiomole, who was my President when I was the Chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC). When Tinubu was the governor of Lagos State in 1999, the way he treated labour issues was different. People now see today that Lagos State has become one of the modern states in Nigeria. For 14 years, it has been ruled by a progressive party.

    In Oyo State, Ajimobi has fought the infrastructure battle. He has succeeded in maintaining law and order.

    How do you react to the allegation that yopu were bribed to defect to the APC?

    I didn’t collect a kobo from the APC before I joined them. Nigeria is a country where poverty has eaten deep into the fabric of our system. We have lost our social values.

    Everything revolves around money and corruption. If you write well as a reporter, someone may say that you have been bribed.

    People think everything in this country is about money. The allegation has no basis. When I was elected, I had my vision and mission; to take care of widows and the aged. In my first outing, 1,420 widows benefitted from my empowerment programme. There were 2,644 old people. In Egbeda, 90 per cent of death is caused by malaria. I drew the attention of the government to this fact. My goal is service delivery.

    What is the assurance that you will not go back to the Accord Party?

    I will do everything within my capacity to help the party to achieve its goals and mine too. That is my objective. I want to promote the cause of two party system. Then, I want to draw attention to the suffering of my constituency. The governor is working. He is taking the state to a greater height. Salaries are paid to civil servants regularly. Other social amenities are provided.

    I discovered that Egbeda had 28,630 population, according to the 2006 Census. We have one constituency. As a member of the Accord Party, I took the INEC to court. I demanded for two constituencies. It will be easier for me to fight for my people as a member of the APC.

    How did your former party receive the news of your defection and how did your constituency feel about it?

    I respect the leader of my former party a lot and I will continue to appreciate him. At one level of my constituency more people appreciate him. It is very painful for the Accord Party to lose a legislator to the APC. In politics, a vote counts.

    How will you be able to reconcile with the conflicting interest of other aspirants you will meet in the APC?

    In every party, competition brings crisis. Bu, there is a way of resolving it. The party is supreme. There will be ambitions and aspirants. The party members will decide the fate of the aspirants.

    Can APC take the country to the promised land?

    People think the major problem of Nigeria is corruption. There are other challenges-infrastructure, good education, health, building of firms, power supply, and maintaining them.The question we must ask ourselves is: will our corrupt leaders allow these policies to work? Which party will make the country work? Look at the examoles of good governance in Lagos, Edo, Ekiti, Osun, and Oyo. The answer is the APC.

    As a former labour leader, what is your assesment of the government/labour relations in Oyo State?

    I think the political leaders should understand that the workers are part of the success of this government. Oyo State workers hate cheating and they are people of integrity. Also, to care for the pensioners, to pay salaries regularly are challenges. The government is trying. But, there is the need for improvement.

  • Three more PDP govs heading to APC

    Three more PDP govs heading to APC

    * Senators, Reps also expected to defect

    Three more governors elected on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) are getting ready to defect to the All Progressives Congress (APC) in a fresh wave of defections from the PDP.

    Two of the governors are from the Northwest and the third from the North central.

    More Senators and Representatives are also bidding their time to cross over to the APC, highly placed sources said yesterday in Yola where former Vice President Atiku Abubakar teamed up with the APC mid week.

    At the last count, Governors Rabiu Kwankwaso (Kano), Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto), Murtala Nyako (Adamawa), Ahmed Al-Fatha (Kwara) and Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers) and no fewer than 37 Reps and 11 Senators defected from the PDP to the APC.

    Also numerous state legislators and local government chairmen and councillors in Kwara, Kano, Rivers and Sokoto states defected to the APC.

    It was gathered yesterday that 16 PDP lawmakers in Adamawa will be joining APC later this week.

    Sources said that Alhaji Atiku, Governor Nyako, General Buba Marwa, Marcus Gundiri, Mr. Boss Mustapha have been working the phone from their Yola homes to convince more PDP members to cross to the APC.

    Atiku, in particular, is said to have lined up a number of meetings with PDP bigwigs with a view to wooing them into the APC.

    Some supporters of the immediate past national chairman of the PDP, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur are also said to be contemplating dumping the PDP should the PDP continue to procrastinate the harmonisation of the factions in the party.

    A PDP lawmaker in Adamawa State said yesterday that the party’s new national chairman Adamu Muazu may have been misled by vested interests to ignore the harmonisation.

    The lawmaker said that any attempt to impose Deputy Governor Bala Ngilari as the PDP governorship candidate in the 2015 election will spell doom for the party.

     

     

  • Reps challenge Okonjo-Iweala over N712b debt servicing

    Reps challenge Okonjo-Iweala over N712b debt servicing

    The House of Representatives is appalled by what it sees as the unwillingness of Finance, Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala to make public what it costs the nation to sustain and service its huge borrowings.

    The lawmakers want the Minister to tell Nigerians the exact rate of interest and other service charge that come with the loans.

    Chairman, House Committee on Finance, Abdulmumin Jibrin-led (APC, Kano), in a statement yesterday said leaders should stop comparing the nation’s economy with other countries without taking into consideration the different circumstances of each economy.

    He said that the minister should explain why the cost of borrowing in Nigeria exceeds that of any other country in the world.

    “No one is excited about the celebrated insignificant decline in domestic borrowing. What the people are asking is: borrowing at what cost? What is the cost of these so-called reduced domestic borrowings, how are they serviced? How are the decisions taken?” he said.

    “Beyond that, since the Minister is in the habit of comparing our situation with those of other countries, why would she not tell Nigerians that the cost of our domestic borrowing remains one of the highest in the whole world.

    “In 2011, our domestic debt stock was N5.6trn. It rose to N6.5trn in 2012, and by 2013 it climbed higher to N7.1trn.

    “Domestic borrowing for 2011 stood at N852bn, N744bn in 2012 and N588bn in 2013. For 2014, it is put at N572bn.

    “The cost of servicing the debt was N495bn in 2011. In 2012 it increased to N559bn and jumped to N591bn in 2013. In 2014 a whopping N712bn has been earmarked for debt servicing.”

    The Committee also noted that the rising recurrent expenditure component of the 2014 budget, like previous ones, calls for concern.

    The Committee requested Okonjo-Iweala to furnish it with government’s plans to address the situation in favour of capital expenditure.

    His words:”It does not help to keep laying the blame at the doorsteps of previous administrations or attempt to drag late President Umaru Yar’Adua and President Goodluck Jonathan into the problem.

    “The Minister said cuts have been made in the recurrent expenditure but in what areas and by how much? Our recurrent expenditure in 2011 stood at N2.4trn. In 2012 it rose to N3.4trn and dropped to N2.4trn again in 2013. In 2014 it has risen a little higher to N2.43trn.

    “In acknowledgement of her established reputation as a world-class economist and banker, President Jonathan called her home from the US to help provide direction and improve the economy.

    “Dr. Okonjo-Iweala should let us know if this challenge surpasses her expectation, therefore, she is finding it difficult to cope. It is high time some people in public office stopped believing they possess the monopoly of knowledge.”

     

     

  • APC and  Atiku

    APC and Atiku

    FORMER Vice President Atiku Abubakar has finally dealt what appears to many commentators as his last card by crossing over to the All Progressives Congress (APC). The putative progressive party will no doubt welcome him with open arms, for they are as anxious to denude the ruling party of its spine as they are indifferent to what any critic might say of the sanctity of their ideology. After having once crossed from the PDP to the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), the ancestor of the APC, and then crossed back to the PDP, the combative former vice president has completed his galactic peregrinations. If he attempts to cross to anywhere after this latest foray, it is certain he will have no place in the world’s orbital arrangement.

    The APC has welcomed him. So, too, does Barometer, though not as if it really mattered. He has, however, not given a hint why he is probably Nigeria’s leading political nomad, traversing the nation’s lush grazing fields. Does he have an eye on the presidential race? Some say no. Was that why he enacted a most illustrious consultation across the country’s political zones? Surely, he knows that the APC’s presidential wannabes constitute a long and illustrious list, daunting even to the best and most practical politician in the party or indeed anywhere. Nigerians must hope that when the party dashes ambitions, as it will certainly do, a re-enactment of the famous Mfecane Movement that rocked and roiled Southern Africa in the early 19th century would not be triggered.

  • ‘APC will take over Ondo in 2015’

    ‘APC will take over Ondo in 2015’

    The Interim Committee of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo state yesterday expressed satisfaction with the massive turnout of residents in the state to register for the new party.

    Its Secretary, Prince Olu Adegboro, who spoke with reporters after monitoring the exercise in Akure, the state capital, attributed the turnout to sensitisation embarked upon by the party leaders.

    He said the total numbers of registered APC members after the exercise would be shocking, adding that the party would soon control the state.

    Adegboro said: “The success of this turnout was because our people have been enlightened about what they will gain if they join APC and it is a sign that the people in the State are tired of the present administration.

    “Our people are regretting for allowing Governor Olusegun Mimiko to rule for second term and they have no choice than to join APC.”

    The Special Adviser to Osun state governor on Environment and Sanitation, Hon. Bola Ilori, also echoed the same sentiment.

    Ilori spoke shortly after he registered in his home town Ondo in Ondo West Local Government area of Ondo state.

    He expressed delight over the large turnout of the party faithful for the exercise.

    He said the massive turnout indicated the acceptance of the party in the state, assuring Ondo people will definitely vote for the APC in the next general elections.

    According to Ilori: “If we can have this kind of crowd in the local government where the sitting governor hails from , what do you think will happen in the other towns of the state?”

     

    “I have gone to many places and I saw the enthusiasm of the people. I saw the passion people are showing as they come out to register for our party.”

     

    On the leadership crisis during the harmonisation exercise, the APC chieftain said the leaders and other stakeholders of the party have closed ranks.

     

    According to him: “There is only one party and all of us know that the interest of the party is paramount and supreme and the only way the party can survive is for us to be one and bury whatever the differences we have.”

     

  • APC condemns disruption of membership registration in Rivers

    APC condemns disruption of membership registration in Rivers

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has condemned ALLEGED attacks aimed at disrupting the party’s ongoing membership registration in Rivers state, saying that it represents a shot to the heart of democracy and a breach of the country’s constitution.

    “People’s participation is at the core of democracy, while the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria guarantees the right of citizens to associate with any party of their choice.

    “These deadly attacks hinder people’s participation in democracy and violate the fundamental rights of the affected citizens,’’ the party said in a statement issued in Ilorin by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed yesterday.

    It said the attacks allegedly masterminded by the Grassroots Development Initiative (GDI) and the PDP in Rivers State, was aimed at covering up the glaring rejection of the PDP by the people of the state.

    “We have no doubt that these attacks, during which at least one person was shot dead, would not have been possible without the collusion of the police.

    “Therefore, we appeal to the incoming Commissioner of Police in Rivers to stop the Mbu-era misuse of the police as the enforcement arm of the PDP in the state,’’ APC said.

    The party wondered why the deadly attacks aimed at disrupting its ongoing membership registration would occur only in Rivers when the exercise is going on simultaneously in all the 36 states as well as the Federal Capital Territory.

    “Some partisan analysts and uninformed critics have challenged our directive to our lawmakers in the National Assembly not to cooperate with the Executive until peace returns to Rivers. But are they not surprised that it is only in one state – Rivers – that our membership registration has been disrupted? Is Rivers the only state where we have PDP members?

    “Again, we ask President Goodluck Jonathan to rein in his supporters in Rivers and stop them from setting the state and the country on fire. We urge him to remind his supporters in Rivers, led by his overzealous Minister, Wike, that his ambition is not worth the blood of any Nigerian,’’ it said.

    Detailing some of the attacks by armed and sponsored hoodlums in Rivers, APC said the worst was in Degema, where one Andy was shot dead while six APC supporters suffered bullet wounds; and the party’s Supervisory Committee Chairman for Degema for the registration – former Chairman, Rivers State Civil Service Commission, Mr. Ben Orugbani – escaped death when his house was shattered with bullets in the old Bakana.

    There were also attacks in Phalga Wards 11, 14 and 16, where one Vandam and Noso led 50 other hoodlums to shoot sporadically and hijack the registration materials, handsets and cameras; Ward 9 in Obio/Akpor the ward of Wike, where hoodlums were hired to beat up registration officers and hijack registration materials; and Ward 6 in Woji the area, where Chief Timothy Nsirm, the Terror Executor in charge, led 30 hoodlums who manhandled our supporters and shot one of them, Chibuchi Ogbonda, who is now battling with his life in hospital.

    “The question to ask these hoodlums and their sponsors, including the GDI and the PDP, is why are they worried about people who want to register as APC members if they are indeed convinced that the party (APC) is not on ground as they have claimed? Where in the world are people prevented from joining the party of their choice by hoodlums? What is democracy without the people having the right to associate with any party of their choice?

    “The arrowheads of the GDI and the PDP should be ashamed of themselves for using force to undermine democracy in Rivers, and we call on their masters to immediately put them on a leash and allow peace to reign in Rivers,’’ the party said.