Tag: APC

  • APC to Nigerians: be prepared for coming change

    APC to Nigerians: be prepared for coming change

    The All Progressives Congress has assured Nigerians that the party is determined to make sacrifices to reverse the prevailing situation in the country.

    In a statement in Lagos yesterday by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said Nigerians should go into the New Year with an unyielding commitment to be part of ongoing efforts to set the country on the path of growth and development.

    “While wishing all Nigerians a great 2014, we hereby solicit their unalloyed support for our efforts to reshape the country’s political landscape, shake off the heavy yoke imposed on them by their selfish, self-serving and clueless leaders and make the country a source of pride not only to its citizens but to all black people in the world,” it said.

    The APC said the first step in what will be a “tough but final battle to rescue Nigeria from the clutches of rapacious leaders will be to bring the citizenry on board the train of change that is barelling through the country,” and to ensure that elections are free, fair and credible.

    The party said: “As we wrote in the preamble to our manifesto, ‘democracy, to be stable and meaningful, must be anchored on the principle that government derives its powers from the consent of the governed….This means that governments are instituted on the basis of free, fair and credible elections, and are maintained through responsiveness to public opinion.

    “’In addition, the exercise of political authority is rooted in the rule of law. The APC believes in the doctrine of social contract between the leaders and the led; which means that the public office holder is a trustee of the people and that power must be used in the interest of the people rather than in the interest of the public office holder’.”

    It said in order to ensure that as many Nigerians as possible were brought aboard the APC train of change, the party would begin its membership registration drive early this year, targeting in particular the youth, who are indispensable in any effort to bring about change.

    “We ask all those who are yearning for genuine change to seize the moment and embrace the engine of change, which the APC represents Our compatriots, who have lost faith in our dear country because of inefficient and corrupt leadership, can count on us, because we represent committed, transparent and focused leadership,” the APC said.

  • Jonathan: From wasted expectation to heightened hope

    Jonathan: From wasted expectation to heightened hope

    A year ago, President Goodluck Jonathan unfolded his 2013 plan. Today, he has unfolded another plan for this year. But, what has happened between then and now? The challenge is marrying expectation with reality. Many agreed that it was increasingly difficult for the embattled Commander-In-Chief to live up to expectation. This year, will the transformation agenda bear good fruits?

    In his new year message last year, Dr. Jonathan raised the hope of Nigerians. He said that government will improve security and power supply, fight the infrastructure battle, upgrade the national rail network, create jobs and wealth and foster public confidence.

    Beaming a searchlight on the administration, the National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Bisi Akande, described Dr. Jonathan as a kindergarten President. The remarks polarised the polity. Some agreed with the former Osun State governor, pointing out that the President lacked charm and carriage of a leader and the poor achievements of his dull government does not speak for him.

    But, government officials, including the Finance Minister and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, painted a picture of a growing economy. She said the atmosphere is investment-driven. Her evidence is that inflation is kept at bay. Power supply has improved and roads are being rehabilitated.

    The “improved economic climate” projected by the minister has not heralded a high standard of living for citizens. They economic miracle is an achievement on paper without bearing on the life of the people. Two days ago, the Organised Private Sector (OPS) warned that political crises may create more economic hullabaloos. The President has not presided over a peaceful country. Despite the heavy investment, the security situation has not improved.

    The Boko Haram insurgency is insurmountable, although the state of emergency in the three Northeast states of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno has been extended by another six months. There is panic. Terrorism has become a major threat to peaceful living and socio-economic activities. In regions where people are insulated from the menace of Boko Haram, kidnappers and armed robbers are on the prowl. In fact, kidnapping has become a lucrative business in the South. Peace also eluded the polity because of the activities of major actors. The crisis in the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) engulfed the nation. Attention shifted from governance to crisis management.

    The anti-graft war suffered during the year. There was a shallow commitment on the part of the administration. . Alarmed at the trend, House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Tambuwal chided the President for encouraging graft. He lamented that the resolutions of the House on corruption were ignored by the Presidency. There was also a controversy over the handling of the SURE-P Programme. There were allegations that the money ended in the purse of party chieftains. The ordinary citizens were left in the cold.

    Job creation has been a mission impossible, although government claimed that it has facilitated the creation of employment through funding for some creative activities in the agricultural sector. But, experts have argued that the solution to unemployment lies in the activation of the power sector. The revitalisation of the critical sector would have aided the resuscitation of the moribund manufacturing sector. The sector is on its knees. The cost of production has made some of its operators to seek refuge in the neighbouring Ghana and Republic of Benin, where electricity is stable.

    Artisans, peasants and operators of small and medium scale enterprises suffer from power outage. They often resort to the noisy generating sets, spending huge sums on petrol and diesel. Many of them have been forced to close down. Thus, there may be a relationship with soaring unemployment and high crime rate, which the government may have ignored to national peril.

    How can government also create wealth without stable power supply and good roads. In Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), the improved rail network is being felt. Outside the choice city, transportation is still a nightmare. The East/West road may still take a long time to complete, despite reapeated assurances. The piecemeal rehabilitation of federal roads appears to be another cosmetic measure designed to make it appear that the Federal Ministry of Works cares . The Soutnhwest, which has complained of marginalisation with proofs, is unhappy that the Lagos/Ibadan Expressway is still an abandoned construction site, despite the renewal of the road concessioning.

    For over five months last year, the universities were under lock and key, no thanks to the lecturers’ strike. A semester was lost to the industrial dispute. The polytechnic teachers were also on strike. But, they called it off without any agreement with the Federal Government. Now, medical doctors are on warning strike nationwide.

    Will this year be a clean break from the sordid past? The rhetoric is being repeated. President Jonathan has wished Nigerians a happy amalgamation anniversary. The mistake of 1914, in his opinion, is a blessing. He has called for unity in a country divided by the bitter struggle for the Presidency between the North and South. He made allusions to the 2013 budget, avoiding the judgment of failure passed by many federal legislators. He said his administration is focused. But he did not point to any proof. He said that 1.6 million jobs were created last year and that more will be created this year.

    This year, the President promised more funding for education and health sectors. He also promised to cut the cost of governance by reducing frivolous spending on unwarranted foreign trips. He promised housing through mortgage, support for the electoral commission to uphold the sanctity of the ballot box and commitment to the proposed national dialogue to enhance national unity.

    The President has made a lot of promises at a time many doubting Nigerians are weary. His performance this year is critical to the chance of his party at the next year’s poll. Already, the APC has described itself as the government-in-waiting. Will the Presidency and ruling party wake up from their slumber this year? Time will tell.

  • PDP leaders in Sambo’s local govt join APC

    PDP leaders in Sambo’s local govt join APC

    •PDP plans rescue mission

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has suffered another defeat, following the defection of 1,200 of its members from Kaduna North Local Government Area of Kaduna State to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Vice President Namadi Sambo is from Kaduna North Local Government.

    The new members were received by the APC Interim Chairman, Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, at the party’s secretariat on Ali Akilu Road.

    Speaking to reporters after the ceremony, Baba-Ahmed said the defectors asked  for forgiveness for stealing  the party’s  mandate during  elections.

    “We have forgiven them and hope that we shall work to defeat the PDP in 2015

    “The PDP is finished if its members can leave from the vice president’s local government.

    “As of today, the APC members and the defected PDP members are one and the same,” Baba-Ahmed said.

    The PDP has called for a stakeholders’ meeting to stop further defection of its members.

    It met with stakeholders yesterday in the zone at the General Hassan Usman Katsina House with the vice president and National Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh.

    Also at the meeting were former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Ghali Umar Na’Abba and General Sani Abacha’s son, Mohammed Sani Abacha.

    Former PDP Chairman Yaro Audi Makama led some former commissioners to the APC last week.

    It was gathered that more prominent members of the party in the zone would join the APC this month.

    The vice president was reported to have met with stakeholders at the same venue on Monday to find ways of halting further defections.

    Sources at the meeting told The Nation that it was meant also to review the challenges and prospects of PDP and how to win Kano, Sokoto and Zamfara in 2015.

    However, details of the meeting, which lasted for three and half hours, were unknown.

    But Aminu Wali, who led other stakeholders, said the party was discussing with former Kano State Governor Ibrahim Shekarau.

    Wali said: “The delegation felicitated with the vice president on New Year and briefed him on the political situation in Kano.

    “The stakeholders expressed their willingness to develop more strategies and tactics to forge a common front to ensure peaceful political activities and compliance to due process.”

    Metuh said he was in Kaduna on the directive of the national secretariat to assess the situation in Kaduna and other northwestern states.

    He said: “APC is not a party that will take over Nigeria in 2015 and even beyond because the party is built along ethnic, religious lines.

    “It will be impossible for it to win any elections. PDP remains the party for Nigerians, a truly national party.”

  • Oil well dispute: Dickson  visits Rivers community

    Oil well dispute: Dickson visits Rivers community

    Bayelsa State Governor Chief Seriake Dickson yesterday visited Abonnema, part of the communities in Akuku-Toru Local Government in Rivers State, which has been in a long-drawn battle with Bayelsa over oil wells.

    Rivers State Governor, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi, had given the ceding of oil wells in the area to a Nembe community in Bayelsa by the Federal Government as part of the reasons why he dumped the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the All Progressive Congress (APC).

    Dickson was accompanied on the visit by the supervising Minister of Education, Mr. Nyesom Wike, Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Prince Uche Secondus, Rivers State Chairman of PDP, Mr. Felix Obuah, Secretary to Bayelsa State Government, Prof. Edmund Alison Oguru among others.

    Dickson, in a move considered by many people as political, aimed at winning the hearts of the Ijaw speaking Rivers community to President Goodluck Jonathan, fraternised with the aggrieved chiefs and people of the Abonnema community.

    The governor who had paid a similar visit to the people of Buguma early this year, emphasised the need for Ijaw people to unite and build bridges of unity across the country.

    He said the ethnic group must speak in one voice in pursuance of their collective interests.

    A statement signed by the Governor’s Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, said the governor spoke when he paid a courtesy call on the Amayanabo of Abonnema, King Disrael Gbobo Bob-Manuel.

    Dickson expressed gratitude to the people for their show of understanding and maturity in handling the Soku-Oluasiri dispute.

    He said: “The first thing I will like to say is to appreciate you, your chiefs and indeed all the wonderful people of your kingdom for their show of maturity in handling some of the issues that have come between us as brothers.

    “You are all aware of the long-standing unfortunate disagreement between our major Ijaw brothers here and those in the Nembe clan, which dispute as you know predates even the creation of Bayelsa State. It is an unfortunate chapter in our history as Ijaw people.

    But the important thing is when disputes, which are inevitable in the course of human interactions take place, it is important that we have the right frame of mind and show understanding and maturity to move for an amicable settlement.”

    He said in line with his administration’s policy in ensuring peaceful co-existence among the Ijaw, his administration would do everything within its reach to achieve amicable resolution to the dispute.

    He emphasided the need for leaders in the region to close ranks and utilise the resources of Ijaw land to develop the region rather than cause disaffection among its kith and kin.

    He praised the people for complementing government’s efforts through self-help projects in developing their area and upholding the rich Ijaw cultural heritage.

    Dickson saluted them for supporting the transformation agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Replying, Bob-Manuel was quoted by the statement as expressing gratitude to the governor for his visit.

    He noted that the visit would go a long way in strengthening the bonds of unity between the people of Rivers and Bayelsa states.

    On the dispute, the Amanyanabo expressed satisfaction with the way the issue was handled by the President and urged other stakeholders to address the matter dispassionately.

    He used the opportunity to call on the Federal Government to prevail on the Niger Delta Development Commission, (NDDC) to complete ongoing land reclamation which according to him has suffered serious setbacks over the years.

    He said: “We went to the Aso Rock Villa and we had a very fruitful meeting with him. I was not shocked but impressed by his humility, candour and openness and we believe that these issues will be resolved amicably.”

    King Bob-Manuel also called for the resuscitation of a sea port that existed in the-colonial era to boost socio-economic activities and rehabilitation of the only girls secondary school in the area.

  • Gaidam swears in council chairmen

    Gaidam swears in council chairmen

    •Nyako hails election

    Seventeen local government chairmen elected last Saturday in Yobe State yesterday took their oath of office.

    The 17 chairmen and 178 councillors were elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The ceremony, which took place at the new State Cultural Centre, witnessed a huge crowd, which turned out to felicitate with their leaders.

    Governor Ibrahim Gaidam said the smooth conduct of the poll has proved wrong those who spread falsehood about the state’s security situation.

    “It is unfortunate that those who do not wish the state well tried to undermine government’s democratic disposition and respect for the rule of law by disseminating false information on its security situation.

    “It is also an indication that the remarks by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) chairman that the 2015 elections may not hold in states under emergency rule is unfounded and mischievous.”

    The governor described the victory of the APC as an indication that Yobe is home to the APC, adding that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is dead in Yobe State.

    The governor urged the chairmen to ensure that the people enjoy good projects, such as schools, health, good water and farming input.

    He called on the chairmen to obey their oath, by imbibing transparency, accountability and justice.

    Chairman of Gujba Local Government Kyari Batarama, who spoke for his colleagues, promised that they would not let the people down.

    Adamawa State Governor Murtala Nyako yesterday praised the people for the success of Saturday’s local government elections in the state.

    The governor spoke in a statement by his Director of Press and Public Affairs, Malam Ahmed Sajoh, in Yola.

    The governor said the peaceful conduct of the poll had laid to rest doubts about the possibility of conducting the 2015 elections in Yobe, Borno and Adamawa.

    Nyako said: “The massive turn out of voters and the peaceful manner the process was conducted has proved sceptics wrong about the possibility of conducting 2015 election in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states.”

    The statement urged those “Abuja Politicians” to stop misleading the Presidency, INEC and security agencies about the situation in the affected states.

  • From my crystal ball

    It’s been boom time for the practitioners of the futurological art of crystal gazing. Not that there could have been a better season for our hordes of diviners to spew forth all manners of strange brews described as “prophecy” than the countdown to a new year. The cult of Nostradamus has not disappointed with their pronouncement on virtually everything under the sun: from politics to finance, commerce, energy, and security – just name it. It is a measure of the attraction to the undying art that the practice has flourished over the years, more so in our clime.

    And what have they said?

    Common to all is the prognosis of a difficult year ahead, a defining one at that.

    Let me say also that I have done some crystal gazing and therefore share in the general premise that the incoming year has all the elements to make it a defining year. I start with the tectonic shifts in alliances that birthed All Progressives Congress, (APC). If that marked the emergence of an opposition finally poised to wrest power from the arrogant PDP, it is in another respect, a clarion call to battle on several fronts.

    Does anyone see mere coincidence in the so-called industrial scale theft in the oil sector and the financial scorched-earth policy visited on the states for the most part of 2013? I mean the dubious alibi of oil theft, in which the federal government and its fellow-traveller in perfidy, the NNPC, would seek to leave the states enfeebled? Does anyone rule that out as the beginning of the process of weaponisation of the instrument of federal allocation?

    So what to expect in the incoming year?

    Richter-scale level of theft in the oil sector? Full-scale weaponisation of the fiscal instrument in the hands of our rampaging bull in the China shop? More brazen absurdities in the computation of the distributable pool by the NNPC?

    Obdurate states had better beware.

    Here is what the crystal ball shows for the coming months: the states can make all the noise in the world about the cheating game at the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) meetings, nothing would change. The behemoth is not about to budge. Rather, expect the behemoth with a hefty 54 percent to continue to play the thief-catcher with states whose allocations average less than one per cent. That is how it’s always been; and so would be in 2014 and beyond.

    By the way, you don’t expect the federal government with its awesome power of patronage to engage with objectors in its rank and file; it’s a sign of weakness. So, in 2014, it’s fight to finish.

    As an aside, more of state government officials should expect to be unwilling guests of the EFCC. Jigawa and Kano are already in; Rivers, Sokoto, Kwara and possibly Niger should beware. This, the oracle says, is only a dress rehearsal for their war on corruption. As for the stench oozing from their backyards the latest of which came from Stella Oduah’s Aviation House of sleaze, it is supposed to be proof of the administration’s affirmative action that big time impunity pays!

    So what is for the ordinary man on the street in terms of governance in 2014?

    Time again to consult the crystal ball.

    I start with the power sector – a sector that many have come to accept as offering the brightest prospects of a turn-around. Nigerians by now must be wondering what the hoopla was after the successful take-over of the PHCN entities by the private sector. Here again, the problem appears to me as the tendency to confuse the means for the end. No one argues about the fact that the retention of the PHCN in the hand of government is akin to a sentence of death on an already comatose sector. But then, it is also not the same as suggesting that a mere change of ownership is all there is to it to make things happen?

    Now, I must say that the problem is not unknown. Neither is the solution rocket science. The problem is that of under-investment of the past years. The solution is to bridge the service gaps in the shortest possible time. And the way to do that is to invest massively in new technologies and business models to improve on service delivery.

    This is where my crystal ball tells a different story. As far as the prospects of improvement go, 2014 may end up as a disappointment. To start with, the new wonder owners of the power entities haven’t even begun to convince us that they know what the business entails let alone what they need to put in place to turn the sector around. Now, Nigerians are fast finding out the world of difference between abdication and liberalisation – the result of the astounding bad faith and ignorance across the board.

    My crystal ball tells me that 2014 is the year of awakening for all.

    Now to Olusegun Aganga’s so-called auto-policy. If ever a policy was conceived in conceit and ignorance, that policy must be it. What’s the idea if one may dare to ask? To join the league of auto manufacturers? Now, that is supposed to be grand except that in this instance, the minister would rather we start building our houses from the roof.

    You ask: how does a 100 percent hike of auto duty assist Aganga’s phantom auto assemblers in an economy where the existing capacity is next to zero? Where is the infrastructure? Or is it simply about producing some fanciful contraptions that no one would be able to buy? If I may be more specific, where is the infrastructure of credit to make his grand dream sustainable in the long run? Or is Aganga thinking of made-for-government only vehicles? Why the hurry to inflict punitive tariff on car importers in 2014?

    If anyone ever needed evidence of how detached some of our policy makers are from reality, that so-called auto policy is one. Thanks to Olusegun Aganga, our long-suffering middle class will suffer the affliction of paying more for their favourite tokunbo just to satisfy the whims of some high-minded officials. The same is no less true of Aganga’s kinsman in the Agriculture Ministry who has already moved to ban rice import when he cannot even guarantee local sufficiency.

    As for the unprecedented youth unemployment, the ostentation in the midst of ravaging poverty, the corruption in high places, the day of reckoning is certainly near! At least that is what my crystal ball says.

    Happy New Year to all!

  • Afenifere and its new allies

    Afenifere and its new allies

    The pan-Yoruba socio-political group, Afenifere, is fraternising with strange bedfellows, judging by its romance with President Goodluck Jonathan and the Labour Party (LP), ahead of 2015. The regional organisation is now exhibiting a fascination for manistream politics, report EMMANUEL OLADESU and LEKE SALAUDEEN.

    The Yoruba socio-political group, Afenifere, is struggling for relevance. In a desperate bid to halt its journey to the oblivion, the organisation is making friends with elements and groups clearly opposed to its ideological orientation. Unlike the past, Afenifere is now jettisoning its position as a virile opposition bloc. The group is now in love with mainstream politics.

    Recently, leaders of the group visited President Goodluck Jonathan at the Aso Villa, Abuja. The visit was to the embattled President and convey their approval for the proposed national conference. Remarkably, one of the top chieftains of Afenifere, Dr. Femi Okurounmu, chaired the Presidential Advisory Committee on National Dialogue.

    The visit was widely publicised. During the visit, the members of the Afenifere faction under the leadership of the Deputy Leader, Senator Ayo Fasanmi, were also on a road show the Southwest chieftains of the All Progressives Congress (APC), they were working harmoniously with like minds across the six geo-political zones to effect change in 2015. Therefore, while the Fasoranti-led faction is building support for the conservative Federal Government, their estranged colleagues are dedicated to power shift.

    Besides, Afenifere is fraternising with the Labour Party (LP), with a view to adopting it as a veritable political platform. Apart from welcoming into its fold controversial PDP politicians, the group is making frantic efforts to join forces against the APC in the Southwest, where its influence is already ebbing away.

    Between 2003 and now, Afenifere has been in the political wilderness. While the group supported the five Alliance for Democracy (AD) governors, it worked against the second term ambition of former Governor Bola Tinubu of Lagos State. The five governors did not survive the onslaught by the PDP. But, Tinubu survived. In 2007, Afenifere floated the Democratic Peoples Alliance (DPA). In Lagos State, the party had a good governorship candidate, Mr. Jimi Agbaje. But, the old Afenifere warriors lacked the mobilisation prowess.

    Last year, Afenifere struck a deal with the Ondo State LP to spite its members in the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN). Despite the fact that it had become public knowledge that the LP had become an arm of the PDP, the pan-Yoruba group endorsed the party. Now, as the next election draws near, speculations are rife that the associates of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo are preparing to endorse President Jonathan for a second term, despite his poor performance in the last three years.

    Afenifere has a proud history. Under the leadership of the late Chief Adekunle Ajasin and Senator Abraham Adesanya, the group waged war against the military rule. Afenifere leaders were molested, unjustly detained and exiled by the military and yet, they stood their grounds. The late Adesanya narrowly escaped assassination during the struggle. Ironically, the organisation decided to participate in the transition programme hurriedly put together by the military without examining the flawed 1999 Constitution, which has now become an impediment to the federal democracy.

    However, shortly before the restoration of civil rule in 1999, the leaders were locked in a protracted battle. The group was confronted by two crises. On one hand, the late Chief Bola Ige, the deputy leader of the group, parted ways with his colleagues because they rejected him at the D’Rovans, Ibadan and voted for Chief Olu Falae during the AD presidential primaries. Ige joined the Federal Executive Council (FEC) under President Olusegun Obasanjo without consulting with Afenifere. He never came back alive. Also, the late Chief Ganiyu Dawodu and Tinubu parted went their separate ways in Lagos. Efforts to mend fences through the proposed 60:40 formula recommended by a panel headed by Sir Olaniwun Ajayi failed. The grassroots politician, Dawodu, was bitter. He left the AD for PAC. On the eve of the 2003 polls, he directed his supporters to vote for the PDP candidate, the late Mr. Funso Williams.

    It was distressing to Adesanya that he could not get the two sides to agree. The Leader was even accused of shielding Tinubu from the wrath of the group. When Adesanya took ill, he never recovered. Following his death, a leadership crisis broke out in the group. Fasoranti was acting as the leader. But, when he recognised Senator Mojisoluwa Akinfenwa as the AD National Chairman against his compatriot from Osun State, Chief Bisi Akande, the group split into two. The faction rejected Fasoranti’s leadership and pronounced Senator Ayo Fasanmi as the Deputy Leader.

    Despite its achievements, Afenifere’s growth has been retarded by its lack of crisis resolution mechanism. This was evident in the non-resolution of the Ige/Falae, Dawodu/Tinubu, Tinubu/Kofoworola-Bucknor, Akande/Iyiola Omisore, Adebayo Adefarati/Olusegun Mimiko, Akande/Akinfenwa and Adeniyi Adebayo/Adefarati rifts. In fact, between 2003 and 2007, many Afenifere chieftains left the AD for the PDP and plotted the downfall of the party that brought them into limelight.

    Since then, there has been a clash of ego and interests in Yorubaland. While Afenifere’s political influence nosedived in the Southwest, the members of the Fasanmi faction emerged as the dominant political establishment in the region. Tinubu, Akande, Osoba, Adebayo, Fasanmi, Olabiyi Durojaye, Olawale Osun, Rauf Aregbesola, and Kayode Fayemi fought the liberation war in the Southwest, when they sent the PDP packing. But, instead of forging unity, the Fasoranti and Fasanmi groups have continued to work at cross purposes. Efforts by the younger elements who later established the Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) to resolve the protracted crises and reconcile the two factions have also failed.

    Falae, who lamented the lingering crisis, could not proffer solution to it. Speaking in Akure, he recalled that the split in the group, which started in the AD, later extended to the Afenifere. He said the AD governors felt aggrieved when Afenifere set up a committee headed by Prof Bolaji Akinyemi to assess their performance. “The purpose was to make sure that the governors delivered what they promised the electorate. People voted for the Afenifere, not the AD or an individual. All we were doing was to protect the legacy of the group”, he said.

    Falae alleged that the governors also exempted the Afenifere in their second term calculation by deciding that the AD would not field a presidential candidate in 2003 without asking consultation with him as the former candidate. “They entered into a deal with Obasanjo that they would support and campaign for his re-election in 2003, which they did. They (AD governors) lost, with the exemption of Tinubu. After the election that swept them out of power, they couldn’t come back to the fold,” he added.

    But Fasanmi had a contrary opinion. He blamed the crisis on the personal ambition of the leaders of the other group. “We tried to mend fences at a stage, but the ambition of their members in the AD led to the disintegration of the party and the Afenifere. Adesanya singlehandedly picked Fasoranti as the acting leader when he had health challenges. I was elected Afenifere leader after Adesanya’s death.

    “At a stage, we set up a reconciliation committee to bring both factions together. I was the chairman of the group. What we agreed on was that Fasoranti should be the leader and I should be the deputy. That arrangement did not stand the test of time because of the inordinate ambition of the Fasoranti group. I warned them that, if we have to introduce politics into dialogue, we have to be very careful. Fasoranti was my long time friend. We were together at the Action Group national conference in Jos in 1962. Ayo Adebanjo is my friend. I feel sad when people like Fasoranti and Adebanjo are not with us”, he said.

    The Lagos State Chairman of Afenifere, Chief Supo Sonibare, said that “the problem of Afenifere has to do with the dynamics of having core leaders who are not in government and having governors who are effectively heads of government”.

    “At the time of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, he wielded the power of the head of government and leader of the Afenifere simultaneously. When he was no longer the Premier, there was the aspiration of becoming the Prime Minister as the leader of the opposition then.

    “In the present Afenifere, we have leaders who are not in government and governors who are heads of government. The leaders could only use moral persuasion and cannot compel any governor to do their biddings. That dichotomy of power brought about the discord and the split in Afenifere. This division was managed by the late Chief Adesanya. His successor, Chief Fasoranti, presided over meetings without both factions of the Alliance for Democracy (AD) in attendance”, he said.

    The ARG leader, Oshun, said the dispute among the Afenifere leaders manifested in the subversion of the AD. He said some Afenifere declared support for Obasanjo’s second term, adding that the former President supported Akinfenwa for the AD chairmanship.

    “Three years after the 2003 election, we young elements-myself, Ayo Afolabi, Kunle Famoriyo, Yinka Odumakin, Kayode Fayemi, Jimi Agbaje and Dr Adeniji-started meeting and came to the conclusion that we should not allow the dichotomy to continue. We organised a reconciliation meeting at the IITA, Ibadan. Both sides were fully represented. I could remember Akande, Falae, Adebanjo and Niyi Adebayo were present at the meeting. They agreed to sink their differences and work together as a group.

    “Few weeks after, Adebanjo in a press interview, lambasted the former governors over the Afenifere crisis. Thus, the reconciliation floundered again. It was at that point that we younger elements met and decided to float the Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) in isolation of both the Afenifere leaders and the former governors”, he said.

    A recent reconciliation meeting organised by the Fasoranti group in Akure, the Ondo State capital, was boycotted by the ARG. The Oshun group distanced itself from reports that it was involved in a meeting where members of the group reconciled with Afenifere leaders.

    Analysts say reconciliation may still be a long way off. Spirited peace moves by the late Justice Kayode Eso, Bishop Ayo Ladigbolu and Bishop Bolanle Gbonigi to reconcile the two factions have also hit the rock. The obstacle to reconciliation now is the conflict of political interest. The reality is that, despite the fact that leaders on both sides are committed to Yoruba interest, they are now adopting antagonistic approaches.

    Falae said that reconciliation is still possible. “There is no reason we cannot reconcile if the interest of our people is paramount. We the Yorubas don’t count at the centre. We must come together for the sake of our race. If we reconcile, what do we lose? Without reconciliation, we are wasting our time”, he added.

    Fasanmi shared Falae’s view on reconciliation. He recalled what the late Chief Solanke Onasanya, a chieftain of Afenifere, used to say: “When I die and meet Chief Awolowo in heaven, what would I tell him about the Afenifere?” I too have been asking myself the same question. There is nothing impossible. If PDP governors can change their minds and team up with the progressives, I think reconciliation in the Afenifere is possible”.

    Sonibare also said that reconciliation in Afenifere is feasible. “If countries that fought wars were able to reconcile, why not Afenifere factions?”, he queried. However, he identofied the condition for reconciliation. “Reconciliation in Afenifere is possible where both parties go to reconciliation table with open mind”, Sonibare said.

  • Critical issues for Nigeria’s progress

    Critical issues for Nigeria’s progress

    SIR: The axiom is apt: there can be no peace where there is no justice. Yet, President Goodluck Jonathan and supporters care less about justice, but how he will stay 12 years in Aso Rock. The late Nelson Mandela was imprisoned for 27 years, and after gaining freedom, he stepped down after a single presidency term. Egocentricism is killing Nigeria, politically and financially. Jonathan’s conference is a financial fiasco ab initio.

    The All Progressive Congress (APC) is gaining ascendancy. That trend should become even more accentuated as Jonathan takes personal control of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), apparently out of frustration. Too many Nigerians have been systematically frustrated since 1999 till date; it is the turn of Nigeria’s enemies to be frustrated. In order to maximize profit, all well-meaning Nigerians should rise in support of APC for change.

    Positive and sustainable change resides in equity, justice, peace, and stability which rotational presidency among the six geopolitical zones can guarantee for progress. Secondly, giving General Muhammadu Buhari the opportunity to revive his War Against Indiscipline (WAI) is crucial against the level of corruption that has pervaded Nigeria. APC and all well-meaning Nigerians should insist on Buhari’s presidency; he is an epitome of self-discipline and accountability. His experience as a former Head of State, Petroleum Minister, and Finance Minister with optimal performances should not be wasted.

    Providentially also, Buhari has never betrayed any form of religious fanaticism. I urge all APC chieftains to shun politicization of religion; total de-politicization of religion is imperative for social equity and cohesion. Adhere strictly to Nigeria’s constitutional secularity. And, may the NLC, TUC, ASUU, etc. remain forever united and strong. Amen.

    Another political leader whose talents should be seriously tapped is Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. I would propose for him the position of Finance Minister, for sustaining the economy of Lagos State even when the federal government seized the bulk of what Lagos should get from the federation account. Pa Obafemi Awolowo helped to manage Nigeria’s post-war economy, as a Finance Minister without any certificate in accounting or economics; Tinubu will not do less. Both Buhari and Tinubu are not associated with stolen oil wealth; they will be accountable.

    No society can be stable without order. That is a big lesson the emergence of Boko Haram has taught us. Credit should be accorded those who introduced the presidential rotational concept. We should formalize it to rotate among the six geopolitical zones. Northwest should serve a single term of four years (2015-2019) to complement the opportunity that Umaru Musa Yar’Adua had; Jonathan served the remainder plus his own single term which he craved inordinately. South-east should take-over, 2019-2027, even though Jonathan offered that zone plum appointments to secure its unflinching support. But no such advantage is sustainable. If adopted, rotational presidency among the six geopolitical zones can be a stabilizer, as does rotational kingship in many African traditional societies and communities.

    •Pius Oyeniran Abioje, Ph. D,

    University of Ilorin.

  • 1,000 PDP  members, others join Lagos APC

    1,000 PDP members, others join Lagos APC

    About 1,000 members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and chieftains of other political parties in Ikosi-Ejinrin Local Council Development Area (LCDA) of Lagos State defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the weekend.

    They were received by former Commissioner of Health Mr. Leke Pitan; former House of Assembly Speaker Joko Pelumi and the APC Chairman in the council, Elder Lateef Sangosanya.

    One of the defectors, Mr. Segun Ogunsanya, said they dumped the PDP because of the performance of the council Chairman, Prince Olusegun Adetola.

    Lagos APC Vice-Chairman Alhaji Akanni Seriki Bamu urged the defectors to work peacefully with the old members and assured them of a level playing ground.

  • Presidential profanity

    Presidential profanity

    •Jonathan’s habit of attacking political opponents from the sanctuary of churches is crude

    TWICE in 17 days this month, the famed month of goodwill, President Goodluck Jonathan has launched attacks on political opponents from virtual pulpits in the church.

    At the special memorial for Nelson Mandela, the iconic South African president on December 8 at the Aso Villa Chapel in Abuja, President Jonathan dismissed Nigerian politicians as harbouring the “vices of tiny men” rather than the “virtues of great men”, and finished the flourish with a Biblical allusion: “It is probably easier for the camel to pass through the eye of the needle than for a politician to be truly great.”

    Not a few believed the attack was aimed at the often meddlesome former President Olusegun Obasanjo, who, perhaps rattled by it, afterwards made public his own no less scathing 18-page letter, dated December 2.

    Still, at the Mandela memorial, President Jonathan was careful enough to rope in Nigerian politicians across the spectrum: mates in the troubled Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the opposition, particularly the All Progressives Congress (APC) and even past military dictators, dismissing most of Nigeria’s public men and women, past and present, as persons of little minds.

    All such tact vanished from the presidential bazooka on Christmas Day, the peak of the Yuletide season. It was Christmas service at the Cathedral Church of the Advent in Life Camp, Gwarimpa, Abuja, where the Jonathans worshipped.

    Though Jonathan’s attack was still on the eponymous “politician”, the object of the attack was starker: Obasanjo, godfather turning nemesis — “We politicians think that we own this country and are already thinking about next elections, we are doing what we ought not to do; making statements we ought not to make, and “ — now, the real punch — “writing letters we are not supposed to write”! Aside from the president himself, and possibly the controversial missive purported to have issued from Iyabo Obasanjo, the only person who has written any letter of note is Obasanjo himself!

    In fairness, President Jonathan was reacting to the homily of Archbishop of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), Bishop Nicholas Okoh who, in his suit for national peace and harmony, not out of mood with the Yuletide season, tended to equate political dissent with alleged instigation to breach the peace. Nothing can be farther from the truth. Democracy, with its periodic but peaceful change of power, has enough safety valves to take care of political disputes, no matter how vigorous, if all players play by the rule.

    But even with that, President Jonathan ought to have been much more gracious. For good or for ill, he has replied Obasanjo’s letter; and the appropriateness of his response is in the court of public opinion. He ought to have rested it that way.

    To now take to the virtual pulpit and start attacking people was sheer lack of grace. It paints the president as agitated, grumbling, frazzled, ruffled and troubled. That does great harm to the majesty of the presidential office. It also reeks of lack of confidence, class and panache. The Nigerian presidency, the highest symbol of authority in the land, can do without such starkness.

    But that is even on the secular plane. On the spiritual side, hurling political stones from churches is a profanity tantamount to what the Christ himself decried as “my father’s house of worship has become a den of thieves”, a rare occasion of ire from the ever meek and gentle Jesus, as he chased traders and money doublers from the temple. Ironically, Jonathan made an allusion to this episode during his address at that service.

    Let Jonathan confront his opponents on acceptable platforms. The media, seminars, symposia and other platforms are wide enough to contain all contending political voices. But let church authorities too desist from making their sacred grounds available for profanities, not the least presidential ones.

    Both the president and their lords spiritual must remember to keep the house of God holy; and immune from political impurities. The church is not a place to even political scores.