Tag: APC

  • G-7 governors’ defection long overdue – Presidential Aide

    The Special Adviser to the President on Political Affairs, Ahmed Gulak, on Tuesday declared that the defection by some aggrieved governors of the Peoples Democratic Party to the All Progressives Congress (APC) is a welcome development.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, Gulak said their movement is not a threat to the PDP and the Presidency ahead of the 2015 general elections.

    He said the pronouncement by the aggrieved governors would now spur influx of new members to the PDP from other parties.

    Reacting to the defection, he said: “Well, I know that five of them said that they will join the APC. But two later issued statements that they are not part of the arrangement – that is the Governor of Niger and Jigawa States. This is the fact on ground.”

     

     

  • I’m still a member of PDP – Governor Aliyu

    I’m still a member of PDP – Governor Aliyu

    Governor Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu of Niger State has denied media reports purporting that he has dumped the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC), saying he remains a member of the party.

    Aliyu’s Chief Press Secretary, Malam Danladi Ndayebo, said in a statement on Tuesday that his principal was shocked at the announcement of the merger of New PDP and APC even before a final decision was taken on the matter.

    The statement said the governor was not present at the meeting where the merger deal was sealed.

    The governor insisted that talks were still ongoing with President Goodluck Jonathan and would await the outcome of the negotiation before taking a final decision.

    But the Interim Chairman of APC in Niger State, Alhaji Bako Shetima, said his party would accept the governor to the party in the state.

    He said, “We learnt of the development and our party will be ready to accept them into the party. The G-7 governors have been talking with our leaders at the national level. They are welcome. Our doors are open to them.”

    Shetima, however, gave a condition for the acceptance of the governor to APC.

    “We are going to accept him just like every member. He should not expect the party to wave or give him any concession. He is a member like any other member,” he stated.

     

     

  • G-7 governors dump PDP for APC

    G-7 governors dump PDP for APC

    The New Peoples Democratic Party on Tuesday formally merged with the All Progressives Congress.

    Also, the aggrieved seven governors of the PDP have joined the APC.

    A statement to this effect was read by the National Chairman of the nPDP, Alhaji Kawu Baraje, after talks between the faction and APC leaders.

    The statement was signed by the National Chairman of APC, Chief Bisi Akande and Baraje.

    The statement reads: “A meeting of the leadership of APC and the New PDP met this morning at the residence of the Kano State Governor, Dr. Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, in Abuja.

    “After exhaustive deliberations, the two parties agreed to merge in order to rescue our fledgling democracy.”

     

  • We vied against Presidency, says APC

    We vied against Presidency, says APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday said the bungled November 16 Anambra election is neither a contest between APC and All Progressives’ Grand Alliance(APGA) nor a battle between the party and the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) but a struggle between it and the Presidency.

    Interim National Publicity Secretary, Lai Mohammed, said from the beginning, the workings of the Presidency is not to ensure the victory of PDP in Anambra poll but to frustrate and scuttle APC’s chances of winning.

    Mohammed who spoke in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, shortly before delivering the 2013 annual lecture of the Freelance and Independent Broadcasters Association of Nigeria(FIBAN), said this informed why the PDP elected to praise an election in which its candidate was disenfranchised and cheated.

    Mohammed said: “For us in the APC, the matter is very clear. Anambra election is not about APC versus PDP or APGA, it is about APC versus the presidency. Otherwise, how do we explain that PDP, whose candidate was not allowed to vote in that election, will rush to the press and say that the election is free and fair?

    “How do we justify it? In other words, from the beginning for PDP, it was not about winning. They know they could not win. It was about making sure that APC doesn’t win.”

    The APC Publicity Secretary noted that the anomalies of the Anambra polls portended grave danger to democracy and the 2015 elections, saying regardless of how the party mobilised or embarked on membership and supporters drive ahead of future polls, there may be no hope of success if the structure that stymied peaceful, fair and credible polls in Anambra remains in place.

    He said: “no amount of mobilisation or registration you do will help you if the umpire remains INEC. If the treatment you are going to get is the one you got in Anambra. As of today, if the INEC chairman can admit that somebody tried to compromise the register in Idemili North, then, how are we sure any register anywhere is in order.

    “If they can compromise election in Idemili North, so they can do also in Ekiti or Ondo. Actually we should be more concerned about INEC than political parties. Political parties are like football teams, they want to win matches but it is for the referee to ensure that every team follows and obeys the rules.

    “And this is why I think Nigeria has a problem because INEC as we have today, we do not belive it has the integrity to conduct any further(future) election in Nigeria.”

    According to him, the Anambra election is a very important election as it is not just about who is going to be governor of the state but about the rule of law.

    He reckoned that the Anambra fiasco could be a prelude to what might happen in Ekiti and Osun in 2014.

    He said: “We were concerned that every Nigerian, who is eligible to vote, must cast his vote because Anambra election is a dry-run to Ekiti, Osun and 2015. So if we don’t get it right now, it portends trouble for nigeria.”

    And in his lecture titled “Nigeria, 53 years after: problems, possibilities and prospects, Mohammed said Nigeria is faced with serious problems and challenges which are holding it captive and leaving Nigerians in a state of hopelessness.

    According to him, these problems are recurrent in nature following the nation’s leaders’ inability to come to terms with policy formulations – Vision 20:20:20, Millennium Development Goals, Seven Point Agenda of the Yar’ Adua – Jonathan led government among others, and the implementation.

  • Anambra: Achebe’s kinsmen demand fresh election

    Anambra: Achebe’s kinsmen demand fresh election

    One of the suspected architects of the Anambra State governorship election fiasco was ordered remanded in police custody yesterday by a Wuse, Abuja Chief Magistrate’s Court, till December 2.

    Chukwujekwu Okeke, 54, was the official, who allegedly sabotaged the distribution of election materials in Idemili North Local Government Area, on November 16.

    Plans to run a supplementary election in the local government seems doomed, with residents demanding a fresh poll.

    Idemili North, with 173,822, is the local government with the highest number of registered voters. It is also, along with Idemili South, the stronghold of Senator Chris Ngige, the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The failure to conduct election in Idemili North and the other degrees of irregularities forced the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to declare the election as inconclusive.

    INEC has fixed Saturday for a supplementary election, which the APC, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Labour Party (LP) – the three top parties- have vowed to boycott.

    Also yesterday, the people of Ogidi, one of the towns in Idemili North, which is also the home town of the late legendary writer, Prof. Chinua Achebe, kicked against the supplementary election.

    Like the APC, the PDP and the LP, they called for a fresh election.

    Chief Magistrate Usman Shuaibu, ordered that Okeke be remanded till December 2, after he was arraigned on a charge of negligence of duty. This is to enable the police complete their investigation into the matter.

    The accused’s application for bail is also to be considered on that day.

    The prosecutor, Stanley Nwodo, A deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) from the Force CID, said on November 16, the accused unlawfully breached his official duties at Idemili, where he was deployed.

    Nwodo told the court that the accused deliberately withheld the materials designed for the elections, thereby, breaching electoral procedures.

    He urged the court to give the police 14 days to enable them complete investigation into the matter.

    Nwodo said Okeke, who pleaded not guilty, was standing trial on a one-count charge of dereliction of duty, contrary to Section 123 (1) (2) and (3) of the Electoral Act, 2010.

    The counsel to the accused, Mr Daniel Nwogbodo, applied for bail for his client under Section 341 of the Criminal Procedures Code and Section 36(5) of the 1999 Constitution as amended.

    The sections, which highlight bail as a right of a citizen, say that an accused is considered innocent until otherwise proven.

    Nwogbodo told the court that his client was a senior civil servant and a responsible family man who would not jump bail.

    He also said that his client had a health condition (high blood pressure), which started deteriorating in Awka, the Anambra State capital where he was held in police custody before being transferred to the Force CID in Abuja.

    Nwogbodo also told the court that Okeke would not jeopardise police investigation, if granted bail.

    The Ogidi community’s response came in form of a revolt at the Ogidi Town Hall where about 250 persons from the community, were invited by businessman Chief Sam Mendu to plead for votes in the proposed supplementary elections.

    They were invited in the convener’s personal capacity, outside partisan consideration for a “matter of importance” only for invitees to witness the sudden arrival of APGA vehicles.

    The people kicked when Mendu failed to introduce “the matter of importance”, but instead asked the people to prepare for supplementary elections and to vote for APGA which according to him, “is leading in the INEC results so far”.

    Mendu had hardly finished when one of the participants, an elderly man identified as Ogbuefi Ugonwanne, interjected, asking: “Is that why we were invited here?”

    He reportedly picked his walking stick and left the hall. Others followed, leaving the organisers and the party officials confused.

    In town, community leader John Iloabachie described Ogidi people as “principled”. “It is not a question of which party should be voted for or not, because the issue is, whether Ogidi is part of Anambra State; if our community has a right to aspire for leadership and if anybody outside Anambra State working with a few powerful insiders can stop us from voting.”

    “Unfortunately, our son, who organised this meeting under whatever terms, did not think we should address that issue. Instead, he is talking about our community trying to fool itself in an election that has no valid register and which results have been written.”

    Ogidi community was not supplied with polling materials. Some polling booths in the area, like most areas of Idemili North and other local government areas did not receive materials until 3.00pm and when they did, it was without voting materials.

    But Anambra State Governor Peter Obi yesterday declared that there was no rigging in the election.

    Speaking with State House reporters at the Presidential Villa, he maintained that the APGA candidate would win the election, if it is conducted 10 times.

    He said: “Let me tell you, in the election in Anambra State, I can go anywhere as a Christian and tell you there was no issue of rigging. Those who wanted to rig were prevented from rigging and they are crying.

    “Go to the people of Anambra State, if you repeat that election 10 times, they will never win. What are they even talking about; cancellation? The regulation, the rules or the law say, you have to win at least 25 per cent in two-thirds of the local governments and in Anambra’s case, it is 14 local governments. Only APGA can boast of that. We won in 18 local governments.”

    “The nearest, which is PDP, won in nine local governments. APC is in seven.

    “I cannot be part of rigging. I don’t have money to pay for people. You know those who spend money and I am not one of them.”

  • We vied against Presidency, says APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday said the bungled November 16 Anambra election is neither a contest between APC and All Progressives’ Grand Alliance(APGA) nor a battle between the party and the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) but a struggle between it and the Presidency.

    Interim National Publicity Secretary, Lai Mohammed, said from the beginning, the workings of the Presidency is not to ensure the victory of PDP in Anambra poll but to frustrate and scuttle APC’s chances of winning.

    Mohammed who spoke in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, shortly before delivering the 2013 annual lecture of the Freelance and Independent Broadcasters Association of Nigeria(FIBAN), said this informed why the PDP elected to praise an election in which its candidate was disenfranchised and cheated.

    Mohammed said: “For us in the APC, the matter is very clear. Anambra election is not about APC versus PDP or APGA, it is about APC versus the presidency. Otherwise, how do we explain that PDP, whose candidate was not allowed to vote in that election, will rush to the press and say that the election is free and fair?

    “How do we justify it? In other words, from the beginning for PDP, it was not about winning. They know they could not win. It was about making sure that APC doesn’t win.”

    The APC Publicity Secretary noted that the anomalies of the Anambra polls portended grave danger to democracy and the 2015 elections, saying regardless of how the party mobilised or embarked on membership and supporters drive ahead of future polls, there may be no hope of success if the structure that stymied peaceful, fair and credible polls in Anambra remains in place.

    He said: “no amount of mobilisation or registration you do will help you if the umpire remains INEC. If the treatment you are going to get is the one you got in Anambra. As of today, if the INEC chairman can admit that somebody tried to compromise the register in Idemili North, then, how are we sure any register anywhere is in order.

    “If they can compromise election in Idemili North, so they can do also in Ekiti or Ondo. Actually we should be more concerned about INEC than political parties. Political parties are like football teams, they want to win matches but it is for the referee to ensure that every team follows and obeys the rules.

    “And this is why I think Nigeria has a problem because INEC as we have today, we do not belive it has the integrity to conduct any further(future) election in Nigeria.”

    According to him, the Anambra election is a very important election as it is not just about who is going to be governor of the state but about the rule of law.

    He reckoned that the Anambra fiasco could be a prelude to what might happen in Ekiti and Osun in 2014.

    He said: “We were concerned that every Nigerian, who is eligible to vote, must cast his vote because Anambra election is a dry-run to Ekiti, Osun and 2015. So if we don’t get it right now, it portends trouble for nigeria.”

    And in his lecture titled “Nigeria, 53 years after: problems, possibilities and prospects, Mohammed said Nigeria is faced with serious problems and challenges which are holding it captive and leaving Nigerians in a state of hopelessness.

    According to him, these problems are recurrent in nature following the nation’s leaders’ inability to come to terms with policy formulations – Vision 20:20:20, Millennium Development Goals, Seven Point Agenda of the Yar’ Adua – Jonathan led government among others, and the implementation.

  • Niger APC begins recruitment

    All Progressives Congress (APC) in Niger State yesterday began recruitment of members.

    It set up a committee to pacify and assuage the fear of members and achieve reconciliation for its full takeoff.

    This followed the emergence of a splinter group in the state yesterday. The group elected parallel interim executive leaders at another venue when a meeting was in progress at the party secretariat.

    The interim state Chairman, Bako Shettima, said the membership drive, which kicked off at the state level, would be replicated at the senatorial, council and ward levels.

    On the emergence of a splinter group, Shettima said the interim executive came on board in accordance with the template of the party’s constitution.

     

  • CNPP calls for Jega’s resignation

    CNPP calls for Jega’s resignation

    The Conference of Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP) yesterday said the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Atahiru Jega, should resign for bungling the Anambra State poll.

    CNPP said in a statement by its spokesman, Osita Okechukwu, that substantial and incontrovertible evidence showed that the poll was marred by irregularities.

    The statement said CNPP uncovered massive fraud in the votes allocated to candidates, which gave the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) candidate, Willy Obiano, an underserved lead.

    Apparently referring to the insistence of the INEC to conduct a supplementary election on Saturday, CNPP said since Jega still upheld the flawed result despite the substantial and incontrovertible evidence, he should resign.

    The statement reads: “For the avoidance of doubt, besides the mangling of the voter register, the deliberate delay of the arrival of voting materials in the strongholds of the All Progressives Congress (APC), the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Labour Party (LP); the withholding of result sheets and the allocation of 96,569 votes gave the APGA candidate an undeserved lead.

    “Where did INEC manufacture the 96,569 votes from? It posted the Anambra State governorship result as follows:-Total Votes Cast – 429,549; Cancelled Votes -113,113; leaving a difference of 316,436.

    “The electoral body said Mr. Obiano of the APGA got 174,710 to emerge first. Mr. Tony Nwoye of the PDP polled 94,956 to finish second, Mr. Chris Ngige of the APC came third with 92,300 votes, while Mr. Ifeanyi Ubah of the LP came fourth with 37,440.

    “The amazing results tallied 399,406 as the total number of valid votes allocated to the four major candidates. However, bearing in mind that INEC said 429,529 people voted, of which 113,113 were nullified, it means only 316,436 legitimate votes were recorded.

    “The implication is that the number of votes allocated to the four major candidates by the INEC is higher than the total number of valid votes cast during the election. This does not even take into consideration the votes got by the remaining 18 candidates.

    “The total votes allocated to candidates is 413,005. When you subtract 316, 436 from 413,005, you get 96,569. It is our contention that the total votes polled by the APGA candidate was inflated from 78,141 to 174,710 votes, being the preferred candidate, whose double registration is still causing controversy despite INEC sweeping it under the carpet.”

  • 2015: APC will field more women, says women leader

    A ll Progressives Congress (APC) Interim Women Leader Mrs. Sharon Ikeazor yesterday said that the party would honour the “affirmative action on gender balance” by giving opportunities to more women to run for elective offices in 2015.

    She said: “There will be an increase in the number of women aspirants for elections into different offices under the APC. This is why we also need to sensitise the women and train them for political involvement”.

    Mrs. Ikeazor, a lawyer, spoke with reporters in Lagos, shortly before the Town Hall meeting organised by the Southwest APC Women Wing at the Lawn Ground, Lagos Television Complex, Agidingbi, Ikeja. Lagos State Deputy Governor Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire, wife of Lagos State governor, Abimbola, Lagos State APC Women leader Mrs. Adetoun Adediran and wives of 57 council chairmen joined delegates from Lagos, Ogun and Oyo states for the meeting.

    The woman leader urged women to gird their loins for more responsibility, saying that APC would not relegate them to the background.

    Mrs. Ikeazor described 2015 as a decisive year for the APC, stressing that the party would take the country by storm. She said the party has better programmes and competent leaders to navigate the ship of the state to a safe harbour.

    She added: “The chance of the APC in 2015 is very bright. Combining the strength of the ACN, ANPP and CPC, the future is bright. It is the party that will form the next government”.

    Mrs. Ikeazor, however, expressed pessimism about the capacity of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to organise a successful poll. He urged stakeholders to gird their loins for a progressive battle and ponder on the competence of INEC to moderate the electoral process.

    Mrs. Ikeazor lamented that the electoral commission failed to lived up to expectation in Anambra State, adding that the inconclusive election is a national embarrassment.

    She said: “APC will have agencies that will enhance vote protection. Many were denied accreditation to observe the poll in Anambra. In my area, Obosi, no voting took place. APC is now prepared for 2015. We won’t allow a repeat of the Anambra charade in 2015″.

    The politician denied the insinuation that the APC is not strong in the Southeast, stressing that the recent poll showed that the party is popular in the zone.

    She said the ruling party in Anambra State was jittery over Dr. Chris Ngige candidature, adding their its chieftains colluded with the INEC to bungle the election in the APC’s stronghold.

    She added: “When you see the APC candidate and the candidates of other parties, the gap is wide. We are now moving to the Southeast to mobilise women. They have stake in the APC. APGA is a regional party. APC is a national party. APC is for all Nigerians”.

    Mrs. Adediran described the women as the backbone of the APC in the Southwest, urging them never to weaver in spirit. She applauded the performance of the five APC governors in the region, especially their programmes aimed at uplifting women.

    The Lagos APC women leader urged the governments at the state and local government levels to give more appointment to women as compensation for their political labour.

    Mrs. Adediran said: “APC has a better deal for women. As we prepare for future elections, I urge you to continue to give support to the APC governments to deliver more dividends of democracy to the people”.

     

  • APC alleges plot to print Buhari-Amaechi posters

    APC alleges plot to print Buhari-Amaechi posters

    There are plans to cause disaffection in the All Progressives Congress (APC), its leading lights alleged yesterday.

    Their proof: presidential posters of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari and Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi are to be pasted in the North.

    A high-ranking government official is alleged to be the sponsor of the posters as part of a plan to divide the APC.

    The government official contracted the printers in Kaduna to print inciting campaign posters of the Buhari-Amaechi cooked-up ticket.

    It was gathered that one of the workers in the printing firms provided a tip-off, which led to the uncovering of the plot.

    A source, who spoke in confidence, said: “They are printing Buhari-Amaechi posters as president and vice-president for distribution nationwide, especially in the North, by weekend. They are trying to blackmail Buhari and Amaechi to create a crisis within the opposition.

    “The posters have been designed to contain threat warnings to APC leaders to either give the ticket to Buhari-Amaechi team or forget about winning the 2015 poll.

    “Some forces have become jittery following the recent mileage of the APC, especially in the North.

    “They think they can split the APC to achieve their selfish end. But they cannot succeed because the wind of change is certainly blowing across the country.”

    It was gathered that the attention of some APC leaders had been drawn to the plot.

    An APC governor said: “We have heard about their covert plan but Nigerians are no fools; they can read between the lines.

    “The APC is a party of decorum. They (the falsifiers) cannot go far in their desperation to divide us.”

    Governor Amaechi’s Chief of Staff Mr. Tony Okorocha said: “The governor has not told anyone about his political ambition. He is preoccupied with the mandate he is holding in trust till 2015.

    “Nigerians should discountenance posters of the Buhari-Amaechi ticket because some mischief makers are at work.”