Tag: APC

  • House: no plan to sack Deputy Speaker Ihedioha

    House: no plan to sack Deputy Speaker Ihedioha

    The House of Representatives has said there is no truth in reports that the All Peoples Congress (APC) wants to remove Deputy Speaker Emeka Ihedioha on resumption from the Christmas/New Year break.

    Minority Leader Femi Gbajabiamila, who was reported to be preparing to take over as deputy speaker, has distanced himself from such plan.

    In a statement yesterday by his Personal Research Assistant, Wasiu Olanrewaju-Smart, the Minority leader emphasised that he remained focused on his legislative duties.

    The lawmaker said issues about offices were left to the House as an institution.

    He, however, said Aminu Tambuwal would remain speaker, even if the APC took over the leadership of the House.

    The statement reads: “Gbajabiamila remains focused on his legislative work and has repeatedly said the issue of offices will be resolved by the House as an institution as it is done in other legislatures all over the world. What to him is sancrosanct is that the Office of  the Speaker remains intact.”

    On the purported moves to unseat the deputy speaker, the House has said it had no plan to do such to Ihedioha.

    The House explained that constitutional procedures would be adhered to as the APC prepare to officially take over the leadership of the House.

    The Deputy Chairman, House Committee on Information and Public Affairs, Victor Afam Ogene (APGA, Anambra), described the reports as a deliberate attempt to cause crisis in the House.

    Referring to House rules and the constitution, Ogene said the deputy speaker could only be removed through resignation, impeachment or death.

    According to him, a change in the majority party in the House cannot cause the officer to lose his seat.

    The lawmaker also noted that Ihedioha could retain his seat even he was not a member of the majority party.

    Ogene said: ”Resignation, death or impeachment are the only ways a vacancy can occur in the Office of the Speaker, Deputy Speaker or any other principal officer’s position.”

    The lawmaker cited Order 7 (2) of the House Rules, which states that while those of the majority leadership come from the party with majority members, the minority parties nominate Minority leader, Minority Whip, Deputy Minority Leader and deputy minority whip.

    For a vacancy to occur among presiding officers, like the speaker and deputy speaker, Ogene said the person has to resign or be impeached by two-thirds of members, that is 240 members,

    He said: “The report that the Deputy Speaker will be removed when we resume is the handiwork of fifth columnists, who are trying to cause a crisis among members before resumption.

    “People should not forget that besides political affiliations, we all belong to a group called ‘House Project’, which saw to the emergence of the current House leadership. What will happen is a seamless transfer.

    “As soon as the party with the majority members notifies the speaker that its has the majority, which is the APC, the speaker crosschecks with the House clerk and the change is immediate.”

  • APC chieftain warns PDP against wishful thinking

    APC chieftain warns PDP against wishful thinking

    hieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Oyo State Akinrogun Segun Taiwo has faulted a statement credited to a leader of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the Southwest, Mr Kashamu Buruji.

    The PDP regional leader allegedly said APC Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, was PDP’s and the nation’s No. 1 enemy.

    Taiwo described the statement as “disgusting, full of sound and fury, senseless as well as myopic in thought.”

    The APC chieftain urged Ebonyi State Governor Martins Elechi and others waiting for the APC to break up and President Goodluck Jonathan to continue beyond 2015 to stop building castles in the air.

    He advised them to follow the steps of the former five PDP governors and 37 House of Representatives’ members.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Oyo town, Taiwo urged Dr Jonathan to call his party men to order, exhibit leadership by example by eschewing power intoxication, executive arrogance and intolerance.

    The APC chieftain advised the President to listen to and learn from constructive criticisms in the interest of national stability.

    He said: “It is regrettable that the present PDP-led administration lacks a sense of accountability. The ruling party is bereft of good ideas to manage the country’s resources. Yet, the party’s members and leaders, rather than reflect and cover their heads in shame, go about polluting the environment with odorous comments.

    “Do they think Nigerians are fools? How on earth do they expect Nigerians to vote again an administration that has made sanity, order and human sanctity alien to the land… due to bad leadership?”

    Taiwo, a former special adviser to ex-Oyo State Governor Adebayo Alao-Akala, noted that because human dignity and decent yardsticks for measuring success have been eroded by bad governance, most people have resorted to dubious means of acquiring wealth.

    The APC chieftain wondered why the PDP and the Presidency were desperate to hurt Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, General Muhammadu Buhari and respected progressives in the opposition.

    He said the APC chieftains are political leaders, who have been making tireless efforts to save the country from drifting to chaos.

    Taiwo warned that the antics of the PDP and the Presidency would only make the progressives more popular.

    He said: “Tinubu’s name and personality attract fondness and respect. It is obvious that the APC leader has earned for himself a golden name and immortalised himself in the hearts of the present and future generations.”

    “The sons and daughters of Yorubaland are proud of his achievements. The present and future leaders of the country should emulate these.”

    The APC chieftain challenged Kashamu to present his credentials for public scrutiny.

    He added: “They (PDP leaders) need not be in a haste and jittery. Let them wait to witness the mother of all surprises by the APC. The party has set the pace and is determined to take over leadership to give the people the much-expected visionary leadership…”

     

     

     

     

  • Ekiti APC gets interim executive

    Ekiti APC gets interim executive

    The Interim National Vice-Chairman (Southwest) of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Otunba Adeniyi Adebayo, inaugurated yesterday the Ekiti State APC Interim Executive Committee.

    The ceremony was held in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital.

    The five-man committee is chaired by Chief Olajide Awe.

    Other members are Mr. Abiodun Ogunleye (Secretary); Alhaji Azeez Awolokun (Treasurer); Mrs. Nike Olaosebikan (Public Relations Officer) and Chief Dele Falusi (Organising Secretary).

    The committee will be in office pending the holding of congresses at the ward, local government and state levels, where substantive executives would be elected.

    Governor Kayode Fayemi described the constitution of the committee as “another critical point in the making of a party formed to rescue Nigerians from a journey without maps and a directionless movement”.

    Fayemi said the committee will guide the Registration Committee, which would be sent from the National Secretariat to oversee the registration of members in the next two weeks.

    He said the registration of members was important to strengthen the party and prepare for the governorship poll.

    Fayemi said: “This is critical because the governorship election will hold in June and the earlier this exercise is completed the better for us. We want it wrapped up before the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) blows the whistle in March, which is about 90 days before the election.

    “We are happy that Ekiti State is the first place where the interim executive has been put in place and this EXCO will take charge of the party, pending the holding of congresses at the ward, local government and state levels before the national congress.”

    He expressed satisfaction that the party has successfully integrated members of the three legacy parties that merged into APC.

    Fayemi urged members to work harder to improve the party, adding that

    APC has created unit level in its constitution to give the party grassroots appeal.

    Adebayo described the role of the committee as advisory, urging it to assist the registration panel that will be coming from the party’s national secretariat to succeed in its assignment.

  • Claims of defection unsettles Bayelsa PDP

    Claims of defection unsettles Bayelsa PDP

    •’APC’s claims are laughable’

    There was agitation in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Bayelsa State chapter, yesterday, following reports that two million of its members had defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    PDP leaders were said to be angry that the report mentioned aides to Governor Seriake Dickson among persons, who dumped PDP for APC.

    The Richard Kpodo-led APC on Sunday claimed that two million people, including unnamed aides to Dickson, had joined the party.

    Interim Secretary of the APC Mr. Godwin Sidi said the new members would be received this week after the inauguration of the party’s secretariat.

    He said: “We have over two million supporters in Bayelsa State. If the Bamanga Tukur-led PDP manipulates President Goodluck Jonathan to run in 2015, nobody in Bayelsa will vote for him besides Dickson and a few of his executive council (exco) members. Some of the SAs and commissioners have indicated interest to join the APC.

    “Although we are mindful of black legs trying to infiltrate into the party, we have taken a decision to allow people from other parties join in order to defeat PDP in 2015.

    “Arrangements have been put in place for the APC. My humble self, Kpodo and other members find it expedient to defect to the APC with our supporters.

    “The decision to move to the APC was taken due to the fact that every peace talk within the PDP has failed. We have also found out that PDP is on life support and it will soon die.

    “We do not want to witness such a tragedy in a party we have tried over the years to build.

    “The APC secretariat will be opened this week. We are on ground.”

    But PDP dismissed APC’s claim, describing it as frivolous. It insisted that no exco member could defect to a party that had yet to find its feet in the state.

    PDP Publicity Secretary, Mr. Osom Makbere described Kpodo and his group as a bunch of miscreants and disillusioned persons.

    He said the claim of APC that it had above two million supporters was laughable, considering the state’s population.

  • APC’s burden of reconciliation in Kwara

    APC’s burden of reconciliation in Kwara

    The recent defection of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftains to the progressive camp has imposed new challenges of reconciliation in the Kwara State All Progressives Congress (APC). Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU examines the task before the harmonisation and reconciliation committees in the state.

    The crowd at the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Secretariat, Ilorin, capital of Kwara State, was huge on that historic day. Something strange was about to happen. Some party stalwarts turned up with brooms, the symbol of the All Progressives Congress (APC), and they were not molested. For many party members, it was a moment of suspense.

    But, the cloud of anxiety fizzled out when the leader, Senator Bukola Saraki, arrived at the venue. Accompanied by the governor, Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed, members of the State Executive Council, many lawmakers and other party officers, the former governor broke the news. “We have resolved to join the APC,” he told the gathering. There was wild jubilation. Party chieftains danced to talking drums. Although there were dissenting voices among the few PDP ‘federal politicians’, who objected to the defection, it was evident that the PDP had suddenly become a ghost of itself in Kwara State. The ruling party instantly became a struggling opposition platform facing the prospects of extinction.

    But there are some hurdles for the APC to cross, despite the enlargement of its coast. The defection has polarised the chapter. The sudden re-alignment of the progressive and conservative blocs jolted many out of the delusion that Saraki could seek refuge in a party that is fundamentally opposed to his political ideas and the orientation of his illustrious father, the late Second Republic Senate Leader, Dr. Olusola Saraki. While the APC chieftains from Kwara, including the Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, exuded happiness, the camp of the former governorship candidate, Mr. Dele Belgore (SAN), has demonstrated caution.

    Whenever the APC reconciliation train rolls into Kwara, the old APC members and the defectors will have the opportunity to articulate their concerns and ventilate their grievances before the peace committee led by former Edo State Governor John Odiegie-Oyegun. The committee is busy with a similar task in Kano and Sokoto states.

    Party leaders, who expressed delight at the realignment, agreed that a sort of political adjustment was required on the part of the foes-turned allies. “Both have to accept the reality of compulsory cohabitation for political growth and survival, and the compelling need for the management of the achievement,” said the Southwest APC leader, Otunba Niyi Adebayo.

    The challenge of adaptation, observers point out, relates to the non-negotiable fact that the leadership of the APC may shift from Belgore to Saraki/Ahmed clan, judging by the numerical strength of the defectors to the party. The old and new chieftains must see themselves as members of a family, forgive and forget the past. A PDP defector, Hon. Bolarinwa Bashir, said that, for old and the new members, the Kwara APC is now a joint enterprise, adding that the task before the harmonisation committee is to approach its work with diligence and patriotism.

    For true progressives, it is a new dawn in the Northcentral state. From the days of the foremost leader, the late Chief Sunday Olawoyin, and his compatriots, Alhaji Sule Maito and Chief Bello Ijumu, the progressives have never attained power in the old Kwara axis. They have only operated from the sidelines of power as opposition arrow heads. In a state where politics has been shaped by ethnicity, religion and poverty, the Saraki political dynasty has been a great factor. Although a handful of people in Ilorin, the capital, and majority of the Igbonna and Ebolo ethnic nationalities have always followed the footpaths of Awolowo in politics, their combined efforts have not reduced the growing influence of the strongman, the late Waziri Saraki, since the Second Republic.

    To analysts, the crisis of confidence between the two antagonistic camps in Kwara is not beyond expectation. It is similar to the crisis brewing in Sokoto State between the old and new APC members, led by former Governor Attahiru Bafarawa and Governor Aliyu Wamakko. It is the same trend in Kano State, where the forces loyal to former Governor Ibrahim Shekarau and Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso are at war. But, the point of departure is that, while Wamakko and Kwankwaso are governors, Belgore is a former governorship candidate.

    In Kwara, although Saraki and Belgore have aristocrat backgrounds, they have operated from opposite political camps. Saraki and Belgore were political foes in 2011 during the governorship election. The governor, who had emerged as the undisputed leader of the PDP family, even when his father was still alive, worked for the victory of Ahmed during the governorship contest. It was a bitter contest between Ahmed and Belgore. When the electoral commission declared Ahmed as the governor, Belgore said the poll was rigged.

    The acrimonious relationship continued between Belgore’s men and the PDP in the post-election period. The former Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) flag bearer became the opposition leader in Kwara. He challenged every action and step taken by the governor, saying that they were not in the public interest. During the recent local government polls, Belgore and Saraki’s men clashed. Although the ACN claimed that it won the Ofa Council chairmanship, the state electoral agency declared the PDP candidate as the winner. Hell was let loose. But, the PDP chairman assumed office.

    The dust generated by the controversial council poll had not settled when the news that PDP chieftains were on their way to the APC was broken. The APC interim chairman, Rev. Bunmi Olusona, complained that, during the negotiation with the PDP defectors in Kwara, the chapter was not consulted. Party sources said that this was debatable because many of the negotiations and consultations between the APC and the new PDP were done in a hurry. But, Olusona also rekindled the old rivalry, saying that Saraki, who “oppressed“ the opposition as the governor, has now become the leader of the larger APC family. He also alleged that Ahmed has not lived up to expectation, but he did not tender proofs.

    “The struggle of the progressives in Kwara all these years has been about the liberation of our people from the clique that sees Kwara as a fief and its people some sorts of serfs to be exploited. The dream of winning this struggle is about to be killed through the handover of the APC structure to Bukola Saraki, who is the face of this oppression,” said the interim chairman.

    But, a Kwara politician said at the weekend: “There is no permanent enemy in politics, but permanent interest. Even, Pa Olawoyin and Oloye Saraki embraced politically in the Third Republic.”

    Olusona also took an exception to the alleged remarks of his former counterpart, Ishola Balogun-Fulani of the PDP, who has now defected to the APC, that the APC had no structure before the defection. “This statement has created so much disenchantment,” he fumed. Despite Balogun-Fulani’s denial of the statement, Olusona is still combative as he holds on to the allegation. He made references to the 2011 governorship results to show that the ACN was a party to reckon with. Olusona recalled that while PDP scored 252,803 votes, the ACN had 154,434, adding that, if today another election is conducted, the APC will defeat the PDP.

    According to sources, the pre-defection APC leaders are gripped by the fear of the future. “The number of defectors has overwhelmed the old members. During the party membership registration, the defectors will have an upper hand and they may be in a position to elect party chairmen and other officers at the ward, local government and state levels”, said an APC chieftain from Ilorin.

    Belgore’s followers also fear that, in 2015, Saraki’s group may insist on producing the governorship candidate for the election. The fear is accentuated by the fact that the senatorial seat in Kwara Central may also not be vacant as Saraki is interested in keeping it. Saraki and Belgore are from the same senatorial district. Thus, in the senatorial contest, Belgore has a slim chance. Olusona maintained that the old APC will not accept Saraki’s leadership. Many APC members have dissociated themselves from this remark.

    A party stalwart, who craved for anonymity, cautioned against making inflammatory statements about the defection, instead of applauding the efforts of the interim APC leaders, who have worked tirelessly for the realignment of forces nationwide. He appealed to the aggrieved APC members for understanding. He urged the old and new members to work together in harmony for progress. The chieftain clarified that the majority of the APC members in Kwara are happy about the defection. He described it as part of the strategic processes that will lead to the attainment of federal power by the APC in 2015.

    “We need to make sacrifices. Our national leaders are making sacrifices. We need to make sacrifices too at the state level. Three parties fused to become the APC in Kwara ACN, ANPP and CPC. The old ACN does not make up the APC. Therefore, we should not create division. We know try to make sure that we use this opportunity of defection to soar to progress,” he added.

    Following the defection of the New PDP, the APC Interim Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande, promised a level playing field for all, saying that the APC will be a party of equal founders and joiners. Echoing him, Adebayo said: “Nobody will oppress anybody in the APC. The party will be in control of the party machinery. There is the party constitution and the leadership will emerge by the will of the people.”

    When contacted on the phone, Odigie-Oyegun expressed optimism that all is well in Kwara APC. He said the priority of his committee is the reconciliation of party chieftains in Sokoto and Kano states. He however, said that he is in touch with the Kwara APC leaders. “We have the belief that that challenge can be solved locally in Kwara,” he added.

  • ‘How I was brutalised  by the police in Ibadan’

    ‘How I was brutalised by the police in Ibadan’

    •Command: it was a minor disagreement

    A man, Mr. Hakeem Abidemi Akanni, yesterday narrated how he was allegedly brutalised by mobile policemen stationed at the entrance of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Depot in Apata, Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, on New Year’s Day.

    Akanni urged the Commissioner of Police to investigate the incident.

    Speaking with reporters in Ibadan, he said he and a young man, simply identified as Toyosi, were “beaten up” because they appealed to the policemen to stop beating a 68-year-old man simply identified as Baba Ikotun.

    It was gathered that Baba Ikotun, a retired banker, drew the anger of the policemen when he urinated close to an Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) stationed at the entrance of the NNPC depot.

    Akanni said: “When I saw the policemen beating the old man, I appealed to them to stop. I asked the man what his offence was and he told me he urinated close to the APC. I rebuked the man and told him he allowed himself to be beaten by the policemen despite his old age. One of the policemen heard this statement and ordered that I should be forced to mop the urine with my cloth.

    “I was mercilessly beaten and made to mop up the urine with my cloth. Toyosi and I were later saved by the arrival of the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) in charge of Apata Police Station.”

    Police spokesperson Olabisi Ilobanafor said there was “just a minor disagreement” between the policemen and the people involved.

    She said Baba Ikotun disrespected the police force by urinating close to the APC and urged Nigerians to always respect government organisations, especially law enforcement agencies.

  • ‘APC set for smooth ride in 2015’

    ‘APC set for smooth ride in 2015’

    The Chairman of Itire-Ikate Local Council Development Area (LCDA) in Lagos State, Mr.Hakeeem Bamgbola, has said the All Progressives Congress (APC) will have a smooth ride in the 2015 elections.

    He spoke yesterday in Lagos at the 50th birthday celebration of a chieftain of the APC in Isolo LCDA, Hakeem Adelabu-Soule.

    Bamgbola said the party controls 16 states, adding that based on its performance, after the 2015 elections, it will take over Abuja “because Nigerians want good governance.”

    The Itire-Ikate LCDA boss said the merger of the progressives was a good development for the country, urging them to cooperate to move the nation forward.

    He hailed Governor Babatunde Fashola for turning Lagos State into a Centre of Excellence and for controlling flood in Isolo and other areas.

    Adelabu-Soule enjoined Nigerians to support Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) and other APC leaders to ensure the party wins next year to realise the dream of bringing the dividends of democracy to the doorsteps of everybody.

    He lauded the leaders of the party for their dynamism, saying: “APC will salvage this country from disintegration and bring it at par with other advanced countries in 2015.”

    APC

     

  • APC faults accusation of religious bias

    APC faults accusation of religious bias

    THE Interim National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Lai Mohammed, has faulted the accusation of religious bias in the composition of the party’s Interim Executive Committee.

    Mohammed’s comments followed accusation of religious bias raised in a statement circulated in Abuja yesterday by a former Ambassador to Spain, Mallam Yusuf Mamman and a group, under the aegis of Religious Equity Promotion Council (REPC).

    Mamman and the REPC accused the APC of having Muslim members in the party’s Interim Executive Committee, a situation which they said typified the Muslim Brotherhood Party in Egypt.

    REPC Secretary-General Rev Tanko Garbaand the former ambassador also said the APC was projecting Muslims as its presidential aspirants, saying the party wants to Islamise Nigeria.

    The statement said: “It is not out of the ordinary that members of the Interim Executive Committee of the APC are Muslims. Does it mean that the APC would be the Nigerian version of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood Party?

    “Check this out: the APC leader for the North is General Muhammadu Buhari who is a Muslim; the party leader for the South is Senator Bola Tinubu, a Muslim.

    “The National Chairman, Abdulkareem Bisi Akande, is a Muslim; Deputy National Chairman Aminu Bello Masari is a Muslim; National Secretary Tijani Musa Tumsah; Deputy National Secretary Nasir el-Rufai; and the National Publicity Secretary, Lai Mohammed are Muslims.

    “The National Treasurer, Sadiya Umar Faruq; National Financial Secretary Shuaibu Musa; National Youth Leader Abubakar Lado; National Legal Adviser Muiz Banire; Deputy National Auditor Bala Jubrin and National Woman Leader Sharia Ikeazor (Muslim Convert) are Muslims.

    “Also, the party’s ex-officio members, Muiru Muse and Yemi Sanusi, are Muslims.

    “Does it mean that there are no Christians worthy enough to occupy these executive positions? Where is their sense of religious balancing, if not to deliberately cause religious disharmony in Nigeria.”

    But APC’s spokesman countered that the party, which has its members across the country, cannot afford to imagine any singular religious affiliation.

    Speaking in a telephone chat with The Nation, yesterday, Mohammed explained that of the 25 Interim National Executive Committee membership, 18 are Muslims; 17 are Christians.

    He warned religious bigots and their official sponsors against setting the country on fire through sponsored religious disharmony.

    The APC spokesman said no party in Nigeria can survive on religion, adding that it is stupid to tar the APC with a religious paint when the party has not conducted its national convention.

    “The APC is just six months old after the merger. Our party is a broad-based party from all religions,” Mohammed said.

    He accused the Presidency of sponsoring Yusuf Mamman to denigrate the APC, stressing that “anybody that knows Yusuf Mamman’s history will not be surprised at whatever he says.”

    Cautioning President Goodluck Jonathan not to set Nigeria on fire with religion, Mohammed noted that his (Jonathan’s) association with Mamman was an evidence of the President’s desperation.

    Mohammed said the APC would reflect the nation’s religious diversity during its national convention.

    He promised that during its convention, APC would reflect religious tolerance.

  • APC slams PDP for comments on Fashola

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has condemned the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) comment that the Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola administration is not performing.

    APC said the comment was “diversionary and deceptive”.

    At the Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Lagos PDP, the party’s Chairman, Mr. Tunji Shelle, lauded the “performance” of the President Goodluck Jonathan administration and criticised the Fashola administration.

    In a statement yesterday, APC spokesman Mr. Joe Igbokwe accused Shelle of “sailing against the tide”, adding that the “purported AGM” was held to divert attention from the PDP’s failure at the centre.

    He said it was illogical to praise a central government that was fast losing its grip on the National Assembly, noting that the opposition has a simple majority in the lower legislative chamber with the defection of 37 House of Representatives’ members from PDP to APC.

    Igbokwe alleged that organising such a forum had become Shelle’s trademark since he became the party’s chairman.

    The statement reads: “In his empty speech at the meeting, Shelle left no one in doubt that it was a gathering slated for the special purpose of appeasing Jonathan. The event was specially packaged to sell Jonathan and was not a real AGM for a serious-minded organisation.

    “It was an event paid for by Jonathan and solely for the purpose of telling the world that the President is the best God ever created for Nigeria. The meeting was not a platform for strategic thinking, creative approach to politics or synergistic momentum, but a phantom platform for political idiocy and brigandage.”

    On the allegation of corruption levelled against the Fashola administration, Igbokwe said PDP lacked the moral right to accuse the APC government of financial impropriety.

    He said it was “wishful” for the PDP to think it could curry the sympathy of the Lagos electorate with cheap blackmail, adding that Lagosians know which party serves their interest better.

    Igbokwe said the “ongoing drifting” of the PDP has made a mess of its earlier boast that it would rule the country continuously for five decades.

    He said: “At a time the so-called biggest party in Africa is fighting the biggest battle for survival, Lagos PDP is celebrating falsehood. At a time Shelle’s PDP has become the opposition in the House of Reps in Abuja, Lagos PDP still thinks it has some honour left.

    “At a time a peaceful and bloodless revolution is sweeping Shelle’s PDP away, Lagos PDP has failed to come to terms with the new realities on ground in Nigeria.”

    Foreclosing the possibility of the PDP dislodging the APC in Lagos, Igbokwe asked rhetorically: “Can a blind man lead a man with eyes? Can a car move forward by engaging the reverse gear? Can you fly an aircraft without the engine or aviation fuel? I am told that you can manufacture a thousand lies to cover one truth but the truth still has a way of coming out to torment you?

    “Lagos APC and, indeed, all APC states have shown that they have a clear understanding of how to drive leadership and their works speak for them. Fashola’s legacies in Lagos stand tall for all eyes to see and I am sure that wise Lagosians can see them clearly.”

  • APC to receive 120 defectors in Rivers

    APC to receive 120 defectors in Rivers

    ONE hundred and twenty youths under the People Democratic Movement (PDM) who defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) on January 1 at Elele community will be received tomorrow.

    The leader of APC in Elele community, Ikwerre local government of Rivers State, Elder Chidi Wihioka, said the 120 defectors sent him a letter with their names and phone numbers titled: Our resolution declaring support for Governor Rotimi Amaechi- led APC in the state.

    Wihioka expressed delight that the defectors chose light and promised they will not regret their decision to join the APC.

    He said: “I noticed they were serious when I saw their letter with names and phone numbers. I welcome their decision to join my great party. I will communicate with the leadership of the party in the state.”