Tag: APC

  • Group warns against attacks on Ajimobi

    A forum of All Progressives Congress (APC) in Oyo Federal Constituency known as Movement for Ajimobi’s Agenda for Positive Change, has warned those peddling falsehood and assassinating the character of the state governor, Abiola Ajimobi, to have a re-think.

    This,Forum noted that such clandestine moves are no longer fashionable; adding that the era where politicians and their surrogates a mortgaged peoples’ conscience against good governance has gone forever.”

    Speaking at a sensitisation rally on the performance of the present administration held on Saturday at Idi-Ope area in Oyo town, one of the Forum’s leaders, Chief Ayanyinka Ayankojo who is also the Chairman, Local Government Service Commission expressed displeasure over campaigns of calumny by opposition parties aimed at destabilising the development strides of the state government.

    The achievements, according to Ayankojo, include reconstruction and rehabilitation of roads across the state, security of lives and property, effective and affordable healthcare delivery, upward review of vehicle and housing loans to civil servants, empowerment of youths and  according  the Council of Obas and Chiefs their deserved respect and status.

  • APC condems First Lady’s Korean varsity award

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has described as the height of insensitivity, the decision by First Lady Patience Jonathan to receive an Honorary Doctorate award in South Korea at a time Nigeria’s public universities are shut due to strike.

    Universities teachers’ strike over government’s failure to honour an agreement of funding of the institutions has entered its fourth month.

    In a statement yesterday in Lagos by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the APC said: “if the First Lady and her advisers had been perceptive enough, they would have known that embarking on such a jamboree at this time is an assault on the sensibilities of Nigerians in general, and the students who have been marooned at home for almost four months in particular.

    “In their eagerness to gobble up one spurious award after another, they forgot that if the Hansei University in South Korea had been shut by a strike because the government there has repudiated an agreement it willingly signed with the teachers, the institution would not have been able to give any honorary degree to anyone.

    “A government that is unwilling to spend the nation’s resources on the education of its youth has no qualms about wasting the same resources for a junket by the First Lady and her cheerleaders halfway around the world for what is nothing more than an ego-massaging award,” it said.

    The APC described as “particularly interesting”, the reasons given for the award of the Honorary Doctorate to Dame Patience, which is that “She’s a humanitarian who has dedicated her life to working for the less privileged in Nigeria and Africa especially for women and children.

    “Her vision as the defender of the poor in Nigeria fits into Hansei University’s motto of a practising Christian,” the APC was quoted as saying that “What the university forgot to add is that while the First Lady may have dedicated her life working for the less-privileged in Nigeria, there is no indication that she and her husband are sparing any thought for the poor Nigerian students whose dreams for a better future have been put on hold by the long strike that has paralysed academic activities in public universities,” the party said.

    Mohammed added that “since charity begins at home, the First Lady, as a mother and a ‘humanitarian’, would have done well to rally women to put pressure on the government led by her husband to quickly reach an agreement that will end the long-drawn ASUU strike.

    “It is instructive that the First Lady would rather corral some hapless women to the Eagle Square in Abuja to illegally campaign for her husband, in furtherance of her ‘humanitarian’ gesture, instead of leading a campaign of concerned mothers and ‘humanitarians’ to protest the deadlock in ending the strike in our public universities,” the APC added.

     

  • Abia North APC inaugurates five committees

    Abia North APC inaugurates five committees

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Abia North has inaugurated five committees.

    They are to run the party’s affairs in the five local governments in the senatorial zone until elections are conducted to occupy offices.

    The inauguration of the committees was done after a meeting of the party members from the zone, held on October 11 at Amokwe Item in Bende Local Government.

    The committees were urged to pilot the affairs of the party, pending directives from the state Harmonisation Committee and the national leadership.

    The convener of the meeting and former executive member of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), Dr. Francis Agbeze Egu, on behalf of the South east Leadership, enjoined members of the committees to mobilise support from the grassroots.

    He urged the committee to reach out to former members of the merging parties in their localities, to bring them back to the party to build a formidable force that to defeat the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the forthcoming election.

    He said the meeting was held at the right time to let the people know that APC had come to stay.

    Egu enjoined other stakeholders to do same for the growth of the party.

    He said with the coming of the committees, the party challenge the PDP in elections.

    Egu said Abia indigenes were yearning for a change, adding that APC would not only give them the change, but also a better alternative in 2015.

    According to him, the party would develop Abia State.

    He enjoined the people to hope for a better tomorrow on the platform of the progressives.

  • APC, PDP unite for Ogbara

    Members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have set aside partisan politics as they joined former PDP governorship aspirant in Ogun State, Alhaja Kafilat Ogbara, in a thanksgiving service in Lagos.

    Speaking at the ceremony, Ogbara, said: “All I can say is to thank the Almighty Allah for sparing my life in a fire incidence in Ogun State in February this year. I am also grateful to President Goodluck Jonathan, ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo, Ogun State Governor Senator Ibikunle Amosun and all Nigerians, who stood by me during my six months sojourn abroad”.

    She commended Jonathan and Amosu for their quick response to emergencies in the country. “Governor Amosun, especially, stood by me. I am not a member of the APC, but he stood by me. Those with the fear of God should be made to govern this nation like Amosun. He is an excellent man”, she said.

    Obasanjo, who was represented by Chief Femi Majekodunmi, also expressed gratitude to God for sparing the life of the young politician, while paying glowing tribute to her. Amosun, who was represented by Mrs Funmi Ajayi, said the government will continue to ensure the security of lives, property and safety of her citizens during emergencies.

  • ‘National conference too critical to be left to the flip-flopping Presidency’

    ‘National conference too critical to be left to the flip-flopping Presidency’

    All Progressives Congress (APC) leader and former governor of Lagos explains his postion on the convocation of a national conference by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Since I first made known my initial reaction to President Jonathan’s proposed National Dialogue/Conference, the daggers have been out against me. The paid public relations gangs of the administration and some sympathizers have gone into overdrive in the media and public fora to denounce me for the position I have taken. I thought I ought to enjoy the same right they have exercised by supporting Jonathan’s conference to also reject it and make my reaction known. Unfortunately it does not seem so.

    But I have news for them. I will not take anything I have said back on the proposed National Dialougue by this present administration. I insist that the planned national dialogue is a ‘Greek’ gift and public deception. I say beware of the Greek gift; let us first of all, ask a series of questions.

    The government’s proposal is a walk down a back alley that leads only to a dead end. It has the same empty taste as sitting down to dine after all the food has been eaten and the table cleared.

    I intend to raise fundamental questions/interrogations in the following response. I am known to have always reviewed the message or policy action of government after which I simply proceed to respond to the message and not the messenger. But this time around, my focus and response is to the messenger and not the message essentially. Questioning the messenger and his motives is my mission here as a Nigerian and a political leader. Also in warning against Jonathan’s proposed Conference, I will put forward a few practicable suggestions.

    The core questions to ask here is how credible, reliable and capable is the current President to be able to midwife a critical conference such as this? Will this President be sincere enough to let all the issues that are on the agenda be exhaustively discussed at the conference? Will this President have the guts to implement fully all final resolutions of the conference without fear or favor or any pandering?

    This is an administration that has been known to have flip- flopped on so many critical issues of national importance. President Jonathan was part of two issues of national importance in the recent past; Amnesty and the Uwais Panel on electoral reform. We all know what has happened to these two issues. The Amnesty conceived from inception has been corrupted and hijacked by the President’s clique. It is one of Nigeria’s drain pipes. A slush fund for political expeditions and a conduit to siphon money to the boys.

    The Uwais Panel report gathers dust and suffers from constant cherry picking. What about the much-publicized SURE-P initiative of this administration? Another ill-conceived and fraudulently implemented program of this administration. Billions of naira have so far disappeared into private pockets and the treasury still bleeds. I can go on and on. Is this the leader we want to trust with organizing a National dialogue or is it conference they call it? Where is the capability? Where is the sincerity? Where is the presence of mind?

    Recent Nigerian political history bears me out in this instance. Recall the call for a Sovereign National Conference began in earnest in the latter phase of the political transition programme of military president Ibrahim Babangida. Claiming that it was laying a solid foundation for a democracy that will endure, the regime turned Nigeria into a laboratory for all manner of political stunts.

    Nigerians came to conclude that the regime was pursuing a not-so-hidden agenda of self-perpetuation and called for a Sovereign National conference to replace a transition programme that had clearly lost its momentum and its direction.

    Next door, in Benin Republic, a Sovereign National Conference was being staged to chart a new course for a country that had virtually come to a standstill. Its crisp, bold and purposeful proceedings resonated in Nigeria, and Nigerians yearning for such a conference embraced the Beninoise model.

    The military regime seemed at a point to embrace the concept, too, and even tried to enlist some prominent citizens to translate it into practice. But when it appeared those citizens had taken the regime more seriously than it took itself, the regime scuttled the idea and decreed jail sentences for anyone purporting to stage a national conference.

    Then came the presidential election debacle of June 12, 1993, and with it, renewed calls for a Sovereign National Conference. The election crisis swept out the military regime, but not before it had planted a surrogate, the so-called Interim National Government, a clueless outfit that lasted three months but drove Nigeria to the edge of ruin, until it was overthrown by General Abacha.

    To win public acceptance, Abacha promised to stage a National Conference with “constituent powers.” This was another act of bad faith, for Abacha packed the assembly with his hand-picked nominees. Those who were not his nominees were products of an election that was widely boycotted, persons who could hardly be described as authentic representatives of their constituencies. The conference exercised nothing close to the “constituent powers” Abacha had promised. The five political parties that emerged from the constitutional framework designed by the Assembly all ended up endorsing Abacha as their presidential candidate. Abacha’s death ended the charade. Knowing that Nigerians were no longer prepared to put up with military rule, Abacha’s colleagues hastily put together a constitution to serve as the legal framework for the civilian administration inaugurated in 1999.

    The constitution was not published until it came into effect. It was not debated. Those who took office swore an oath to defend a Constitution they had not seen, and the provisions of which they did not know.

    Soon, it became clear that it was riddled with grave defects. Despite its portentous preface, “We, the People,” it was not a people’s constitution. The people played hardly any role in its writing. It did not reflect their yearnings. Some legal authorities even went so far as to call the document a forgery.

    And so, demands for a Sovereign National Conference broke out afresh, to design a new constitutional order for Nigeria, one anchored on the core principles of federalism and warranted by the preface, “We the People.”

    Then came the Obasanjo’s constitutional review process by the National Assembly in the twilight of his administration. The process came up with 118 recommendations most of which were far reaching and dealt with critical and contentious issues of nationhood. It became ill-fated due to the failure to smuggle in the third term tenure extension provision.The rest as they say, is now history.

    Now, we are about to embark on a similar futile exercise. And here is why. Until some two to three months back, our demands for a sovereign national conference found little sympathy in the Executive and Legislative branches of government, until some three weeks ago when Senate President David Mark, issued a qualified endorsement. Then, in his National Day Broadcast, President Jonathan Goodluck, announced to everyone’s surprise that the Federal Government would indeed sponsor National Conference, at which Nigeria’s ethnic nationalists would discuss and negotiate the terms of continued association.

    Within days, Dr Jonathan named a chairman and members of a committee to advise on modalities for staging the conference and submit a report within one month.

    I, like other well-meaning Nigerians must welcome this shift. It is an admission, at last, that the wide cracks in the national fabric can no longer be papered over, and that the time has come for fresh thinking on fundamental problems, the existence of which has for too long been denied.

    Yet, President Jonathan’s epiphany–if epiphany it is and not an expedient calculated to enhance his 2015 reelection bid – should be subjected to searching questions.

    It is difficult to lay aside the suspicion that his sudden conversion is all about 2015. Otherwise, why the sudden endorsement of a National Conference, not merely in principle, but with a rush toward some form of implementation? What has happened that was not already in play in all those years during which the authorities rejected demands for a National Conference?

    Second, it is also difficult to lay aside the suspicion that the government is now embracing the idea with a view to watering it down, if not smothering it altogether. What its proponents have been canvassing is a Sovereign National Conference organized by the sovereign people of Nigeria, not one staged by the government. Government will figure in that Conference only as a facilitator, not as organizer.

    Many of the ethnic nationalities clamouring for a Sovereign National Conference are contesting nothing less than the legitimacy of the Nigerian State as presently constituted. It cannot be an answer to their misgivings that the Federal Government, the agent of that state, is set to take charge of a Sovereign National Conference designed to chart a new path.

    Third, Dr Jonathan did not indicate whether the Conference will be sovereign or exercise constituent powers. That omission is not reassuring. What Nigerians have been demanding is a Sovereign National Conference whose decisions can only be ratified or rejected by the people in a national referendum. There is no room for a Government White Paper of Blue Paper or Paper of any colour whatsoever in such a scheme.

    Fourth, it must be asked whether this is an opportune moment for the conference, when the ruling party is in disarray, a large portion of the country is convulsed by Boko Haram violence and killings, and permutations over a general election have already taken centre stage in the affairs of the nation two years ahead of schedule.

    Would staging a National Conference in such a setting not overheat the polity? Would it not be better to defer the Conference until after the general elections? There is still so much to do to ensure that the election is free and fair, conforms to the best practices, and represents the true will of the people.

    Though I remain an unrepentant supporter of a genuinely Sovereign National Conference, I am suspicious of this present concoction because it is half- baked and fully deceptive. Government’s sincerity is questionable, the timing is also suspect. Now that this government is sinking in a pool of political and economic hot water of its own making, it seizes hold of the national conference idea as if it were a life jacket.

    This government habitually puts the wrong leg forward. In the face of debilitating terrorist attacks by Boko Haram, kidnappings across the country and a general insecurity, this government wants to open up another political front by hurriedly organizing a national conference rankles the brain.

    This government has not the honesty, foresight, tolerance and objectivity to hold a National Conference of any type. This government is so partisan and parochial it can’t even hold its own party together how dare it even think it can organize a national conference that lives up to its name by being truly representative of all the nation’s constituent parts. At most, all they can conduct is a conference comprised of one section of their party and those shell, artificial civil society groups that purport to reflect the public’s mind yet do nothing but spew government propaganda and get paid good naira for their service. This government cannot hold a National Conference anymore than a comatose man can stand and hold up a candle that the rest of us might see our way to a better Nigeria.

    Before embarking on new public relations ploys to whitewash its tarnished record, the government should treat some long outstanding issues and matters. This government cannot give what it does not have.

    If the conference must be held now, we must return to the spade work already done by the Obasanjo government in the aspect of constitutional review. Let the Jonathan government bring it out, remove the third term toxic component and set up a technical review committee to examine the 118 recommendations therein. We must continue from where we disagreed. Nation building is a progressive work and to totally jettison the considerable spade work already done is to set back the hands of the clock. Time is not on our side.

    Secondly, this government should implement the Uwais recommendations on electoral reforms. That report was the work of imminent Nigerians and it was done after widespread consultations to constituencies far and wide. We all know that our electoral system is broken and unfair. If the President has done nothing to fully implement this corrective report that would fix a system so blatantly broken, why would he implement recommendations of national conference if those recommendations do not suit his narrow purposes? The government should first implement this important work in order to demonstrate to Nigerians that it can hold and honor the outcome of a National dialogue.

    This government should do so to show that it has nothing to hide and is willing to engage in the upcoming electoral contest on a level playing field.

    This government must first show good faith for Nigerians to believe them. President Jonathan is not the man to give Nigerians a true National Conference. He can only give us a “Jonathan conference” as bitter icing on the sour cake his government has become. This government lacks the presence of mind and the decency to implement a national conference.

    This administration has not achieved any tangible transformation because it has no concrete goals. Now it tilts and staggers under the weight of insecurity. Claims of transformation and of building an economy that is robust and institutions of democracy, by the President shows someone who believes fiction is more important than fact and imagination is more genuine than reality. While I would not mind such a person to be a leading figure in our Nollywood film industry, I am frightened that he is the chief resident in Aso Villa.”

    Both in timing and in style, previous administrations adopted the same tricks of National Conference as a framework to structure their agenda to which people presented memoranda and attended plenaries before realising it was a trick.

    This government’s offer of a National Conference is a wingless bird. It will not fly. The advisory committee set up to design a framework and come up with recommendations as to the form, structure and mechanism of the process will soon find out they are on a journey with no destination save the wall of futility.

    Yes, we need to talk. However, we need a national conference that is truly sovereign and not one dictated by the reactionary and regressive elements of the ruling party. This is not the way to clear Nigeria from danger. This is a selfish ploy that will place the nation deeper in darkness and indirection.

    Nigeria is adrift and unless we start a discourse aimed at updating and improving our political economy and its structures, we might wake up one day from a night devoid of dreams because we have turned into a nation devoid of hope.

    However, an imposed national conference by individuals who have shown total disdain for anything nationalistic that does not unduly benefit them and who have demonstrated lack of respect for the opinions of others because they are in “Power” will have little success. It will be an empty and expensive futility with no true dividends for a people wanting their leaders to show them a way out of the pit and not a way deeper into it.

  • Delta : APC alleges use of security, thugs by PDP in bye- election

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has accused the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP)  of using security agents to intimidate voters and prevent voting materials from reaching polling units in opposition strongholds during Saturday’s bye-election in Delta Central Senatorial district.In a statement issued in Lagos on Saturday by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said reports from its agents on the field indicate that armed soldiers and policemen were deployed strategically to intimidate voters.

    Trailers and tankers were also allegedly  used to block the roads leading to opposition strongholds, thereby preventing voting materials from reaching there.”Worst-hit areas are Ughelli North; Udu and Uvwie Local Governments, which are the strongholds of the APC. Also, several Hilux vehicles loaded with armed soldiers were sent to Okpe Local Government Ward 8 Collation Centre since Friday night.

    ”Though materials were moved from the distribution centre to local government headquarters overnight, the PDP, using security agents and thugs, have succeeded in ensuring that the materials are not being ferried to polling units
    in several wards, ” Mohammed stated.

    In Sapele Ward 8, security agents according to APC spokesman   beat up voters even before the start of accreditation, thus scaring them away from polling units. In Udu LG Ward 7, election materials were seized by thugs. These strategies are all aimed at scaring away voters and suppressing votes in opposition strongholds.

    ”In Ughelli South, the INEC official is insisting that 19 booklets of ballot papers and 197 loose sheets (ballot papers) be given to the Jeremy Ward 2 of the Delta State Deputy Governor, even after materials have been shared to all the wards, including Jeremy Ward 2. If the INEC official has his way, the extra materials will be abused by the PDP.

     ”These conditions are not conducive to the conduct of a free, fair and credible elections, and we call on those saddled with providing security for the election to act fast and arrest the trend before it degenerates into violence and disenfranchises voters, ” Mohammed said.
  • 2015: Lagos APC targets 5m votes

    The Lagos State All Progressive Congress (APC) is work ing towards polling five million votes in the 2015 elections.

    The deputy chairman of the party, Alhaji Abiodun Sunmola, disclosed this at the stakeholders meeting of the East Senatorial District held in Maryland, Lagos.

    Sunmola, who is also the senatorial leader, said: “The task before us now is to mobilise the party members and supporters, ahead of 2015 general elections so that the APC would garner, at least, five million out of six million voters registered in Lagos State.”

    He added: “We should mobilise people to come out and vote in 2015. If Lagos APC can poll five out of six million registered voters in the state, it will boost the chances of the party at the centre. Besides, our leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, will have confidence to assert his leadership at the national level.

    “Given the fact that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Lagos State is dead, we should go back to our various wards to mobilise for our great party-APC that is capable of leading the country to the promise land. The task before us all is that we should make sure the APC wins, not only in Lagos State, but also at the centre.

    “To this end, we are setting up a committee that would visit all wards to assess the performance of each ward in the mobilisation drive. We should avoid distraction and divisive tendencies. APC is one family”, he added.

    The Publicity Secretary Mr Tunde Temiomu had earlier told the gathering that the purpose of the meeting was to disseminate information about the new party to the grass-roots.

    Senator Gbenga Ashafa disclosed that the leadership of the party is working out a formula for sharing positions among the legacy parties that formed the APC. We want to avoid acrimony in our party. Every segment will be carried along in the decision making. We want to prove to them that internal democracy reigns in the APC, he said.

    Ashafa urged members to work hard for success in 2015. He pray God to grant both Asiwaju Tinubu and General Muhammadu Buhari the wisdom to lead the party to the promise land.

    A member of the House of Representatives, Hon. Lanre Odubote, recalled that the formation of the APC started the day the House was inaugurated in 2011, when the progressive forces teamed up to elect House officers.

    Odubote buttressed his point by saying that the APC is in the majority in the House today as a result of the crisis rocking the PDP.

    The party scribe, Charles Odugbesan, said, while the restructuring is going on, executives at the ward level have not been dissolved. They would remain till new officers are elected, he said.

    “When the time for congress is ready, it will be announced. We have to accommodate members of the legacy parties in the new executive. Harmonisation Committee will meet very soon and work out formula for sharing offices, Odugbesan added explained.

    Those present at the meeting included Alhaji Sunmola, Senator Ashafa, Hon Odubote, Hon Demorin Kuye, Hon. Gori Ogbara, Alhaji Akanni Seriki, Asipa Kaoli Olusanya, Otunba Fatai Olukoga, Mr Temiomu, Mr Odugbesan, Mr Tunde Badmos, Pa Banire, Hon. Dele Onabokun, Dr Olaseinde, Mrs Folake Shokunbi, Hon Dele Korede, Prince Rotimi Agunsoye, Obafemi Durosinmi, Mr Olusegun Jamiu, Hon Babafemi Durosinmi, Hon S.A. Idowu, Afolabi Sofola, Alhaji Sikiru Banire an Tunde Braimah

  • Governors to Jonathan: call Okonjo-Iweala, NNPC to order

    Governors to Jonathan: call Okonjo-Iweala, NNPC to order

    The All Progressive Congress (APC) governors yesterday urged President Goodluck Jonathan to call the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), to order over the disputed indebtedness to the Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC).

    In a statement titled “FAAC: Dishonesty and NNPC’s unacceptable etiquette,” the progressive governors urged the leadership of the National Assembly to protect the sanctity of the 1999 Constitution.

    The governors said: “Mr. President needs to urgently intervene to protect the image of the Federal Government and safeguard the provisions of the 1999 Constitution. We, therefore, urgently call on Mr. President to call NNPC and the Ministry of Finance to order.

    “We also would like to invite the leadership of the National Assembly to urgently take steps to protect the sanctity of the 1999 Constitution.”

    Besides, the APC asked NNPC to state the amount it credited to the FAAC.

    The governors said: “Our attention was drawn to NNPC’s denial of a N2.3 trillion debt being owed to the Federation Account. The statement, which is credited to Acting Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Ms. Tumini E. Green, is to say the least escapist, dishonest, contradictory and in many respect fraudulent.”

    The governors urged the corporation to say how much it paid into the account of the relevant agencies it referred to.

    They also asked NNPC to state how much it paid as outstanding subsidies.

    The governors said : “The question is how much was the revenue collected by NNPC? How much of it was paid to the Federation Account? How much was paid to the accounts of other relevant government agencies? How much was credited to FAAC? How much was committed to the payment of the so-called outstanding subsidies? What other associated costs of operations and losses were incurred and how much?”

    The governors asked NNPC to explain how much had been realised in oil revenue on monthly basis since January and the other associated cost of operations and losses it incurred.

    The statement noted that while claiming that NNPC does not owe the Federation Account, “taking into account outstanding subsidies and other associated costs of operations and losses”, the NNPC spokesperson claimed that payments have been made consistently into “its Central Bank of Nigeria account”.

    The governors said Green emphatically stated that “not all revenues collected by NNPC are paid directly into the accounts of the Federal Allocation with the Central Bank of Nigeria. Some are paid into the accounts of the relevant government agencies, like the Federal Inland Revenue Services and the Department of Petroleum Resources, with the CBN. But eventually, all these payments are credited to the accounts of FAAC.”

    Section 162(1) of the 1999 Constitution, they said, “is unambiguously clear and it has directed that the Federation shall maintain a special account to be called the Federation Account into which shall be paid all revenues collected by the Government of the Federation, except the proceeds from the personal income tax of the personnel of the armed forces of the Federation, the Nigeria Police Force, the Ministry or department of government charged with responsibility for Foreign Affairs and the residents of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.”

  • Monarch, APC leaders back Ajimobi for second term

    The people of Oyo State have been urged to re-elect Governor Abiola Ajimobi to enable him complete ongoing projects across the state.

    The Aseyin of Iseyin, Oba Abdu-Ganiyu Oloogunebi-Ajinese I, and some All Progressives Congress (APC) leaders made the appeal in Iseyin yesterday at a rally organised by the Forum of Special Assistants in the 33 local governments.

    The monarch said Ajimobi should be supported beyond 2015 because he has performed above expectations, adding that there was need for continuity in governance.

    He said: “Ajimobi beat my imagination in terms of accelerated development. I implore you all to support him beyond 2015 to sustain the peace and development in the state.”

    Two APC leaders Alhaji Lekan Kazeem and Mr. Saheed Adelere described the governor’s achievements in the last two years as unprecedented.

    Kazeem said: “We thought he was only building roads until we saw the Mokola Flyover and other projects springing up in the nook and cranny of the state.

    “We decided to support him for a second term so that the development will continue.”

    Adelere said: “Ajimobi has continued to make a positive impact in the people’s lives. We have never witnessed what we are witnessing today in Oyo State. We will continue to support him and ensure his second term in office.”

  • APC: Power is never served a la carte

    APC: Power is never served a la carte

    President Jonathan looks to me a much more desperate politician than erstwhile President Obasanjo

    Power is never served a la carte’, is a regular refrain of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, former Lagos State governor, and now one of the leading lights of the opposition party, the All Progressives Congress. He should know. He has bruises to show for his many battles against power, i.e entrenched impunity in our country which, like corruption, fights back very ferociously in aid of the status quo of power without responsibility, except to self.  This once led former President Olusegun Obasanjo to make one of his most important statements ever when, at a PDP congress, he said the party existed, or was at best, cohered only by patronage or the expectation of it.  Both the PDP and the incumbent president have shown beyond any doubt that they will brook no opposition nor concede any quarters to the opposition in the titanic 2015 battle. As far as they are concerned, going by what they do and what we hear their militant supporters say, nothing is sacrosanct; not individuals, not the very existence of Nigeria as a united country. Therefore, as you read this, a sitting governor has no Aide de camp, no chief security officer and the Nigeria Police can look askance, like the governor’s security is no longer a concern of theirs even as certified militants bay for his blood. All this because of an alleged ambition they won’t even let him declare. Nor are their members of only a few months back, but now of the New PDP, fairing any better.

    Consisting of seven governors and a number of leading members of the PDP –they have not defected – they must now, like governor Amaechi, no longer sleep. Indeed, if the PDP has its way, not only Baraje and Oyinlola, but also Obasanjo and Atiku will be behind bars while plans are hatched as to how to truly, and manifestly, humble those seven governors who have the temerity to call attention to the Tukur-led crippling political repression in their party.

    I have gone all this length to properly situate what humongous battle lies ahead of those wanting this county to take its rightful place in the comity of nations and not be seen simply as the domicile of corruption and ineptitude because, even with all the make-belief, President Jonathan looks to me a much more desperate politician than erstwhile President Obasanjo. It must be said, in mitigation though, that while he does not look personally desperate he is simply incapable of reining in those who want him to literally commit murder for the sake of 2015.

    Without a doubt, the most at risk are leaders of the APC and, ipso facto, the party itself. A little history will help but space will not allow details.

    For just being considered stubborn and vociferous, a PDP president decreed  that the licence of Orji Uzor Kalu’s Slot Airline be  withdrawn and hundreds of his employers thrown into the unemployment market just as Tinubu, for the same alleged offence, had billions of naira due Lagos State local governments withheld. The minute Buba Marwa was touted as the ANPP presidential candidate, and becoming rather threatening to the Third Term project, it was  time for the EFCC to move against him and get him detained him for weeks in December 2005, on allegations of laundering money for General Abacha.

    On Thursday, 7 September 2006, the Senate heard that an Administrative Panel set up by President Obasanjo had found Atiku guilty of utilising funds in the account of the Petroleum Development Trust Fund for personal use while it said nothing of same funds being used to buy a car for a female acquaintance of the president. All that for opposing the Third Term agenda even if some spurious reasons of an American report were to be given later. In similar circumstances, Freedom Radio was shut down, Africa Independent Television (AIT) was serially embarrassed and intimidated and its transmission equipment near the National Assembly was destroyed because it ran the Senate hearings.

    All these again to forewarn leaders of the APC that they must remain focused amidst intimidation of all types. Lies and all manners of concoctions will be levelled against them individually but they must, for the sake of Nigeria, brace up and be men of principles. It will not only be scare-mongering but bribes will be offered too, in a carrot and stick, double-pronged attack. A good example is what happened to Hon Nairu Dantiye of the ANPP during the Third Term campaigns.  On rejecting his own N50m, he was freshly offered one million dollars in cash, at night on Thursday, 11 May, 2006 , at a hotel in Abuja.  As he told Punch in an interview published on Monday, 15 May, 2006: ‘My price shot up like crude oil about three days ago. It increased from N50m naira to one million dollars’.  But the failure of the offerer to guarantee that he would live long enough to enjoy the loot, which was his counter offer, vitiated the deal. Even oil blocks were offered. This presidency may not be averse to any of these ploys to ensure Jonathan returns in 2015. APC leaders must, therefore, have honourable Alhaji Dantiye at the back of their minds when their own temptations come.

    And one has already come in the latter-day readiness of President Jonathan to approve the convocation of a National Conference. As usual, this is already trending on the wide web and I have had my say too. Below are some of the comments I have already offered.

    My first was a poser to some mails: Must you really put any stock by this Greek gift? Don’t you by any means remember the SAP debates? Didn’t IBB get his required time to plan the never, never transition programme? What about Yar Adua’s Uwais Committee on Electoral Reforms? Where did it lead to? Were this a year ago, when President Jonathan still had PDP intact, I just might have given this a thought. But today, in my view, it is nothing more than a well calculated diversion and one must give it to the Jonathan ‘2015 Think Tank’. The choice of Senator Okunrounmu as Chairman was, for me, the clincher’.

    Critics of my position wrote back and I replied: Please let’s do a reality check, beginning from the basics; the president can only be doing this if he believes it will help him electorally in 2015. Then the following. 1. The Southwest has been most vociferous about a Sovereign National conference and one of its prime demands is fiscal federalism. Let us assume Okunrounmu is dexterous enough to get this. Will it make the Southwest – now with APC governments and most likely to field a strong presidential candidate – prefer Jonathan, as happened in 2011?   2. I believe also, that we can safely assume that the majority of northerners will detest fiscal federalism. Will that decision therefore hurt or help the president in 2015?  In my view, this will serve no more than good photo ops and beautiful newspaper headlines

    An avalanche of views, even a possible agenda for the conference, then came in and I wrote back as follows:  Even on this podium we already have suggestions as to people wanting representatives on the basis of the 774 Local Government Areas, who, of course, must, in their words, not be politicians. Very fine by me. Now you allude to the Southwest Integration effort. Assuming that this were acceptable to everybody in that zone, marshalling it will then bog down the All Progressives Congress and thereby achieve what I personally consider one of the main targets of this ploy – diversion. Of course, the president has already succeeded by diverting attention to the talk show as you are no longer going to hear of such things as the president’s  ‘cluelessness’,  as was previously the case. And how do you approve decisions of a conference which is not sovereign and where the north already has much more than half the numbers in the National Assembly? Why is the president allowing it now with all the raging challenges he faces?  Also, has he decreed the National Assembly out of existence, since he once said it can’t happen as long as that body was in place?

    I concluded my contribution as follows and tried to respond to views that this should, indeed, be an opportunity for ‘pastors’, not politicians, to straighten the cause  of our country:

    I can’t remember how nice it is to be led by the nose.

    Fortunately, even if out of self interest, those politicians we want exempted this time around, are at their best when the government is out to send them on a frolic. I guess they would rather err on the side of caution. They are most unlikely to fall for this presidential trick.

    Enough history, then, for APC leaders.