Tag: Audu

  • JUDITH AUDU  SHOOTS  FIRST  FEATURE FILM,  ‘JUST NOT  MARRIED’

    JUDITH AUDU SHOOTS FIRST FEATURE FILM, ‘JUST NOT MARRIED’

    AFTER several attempts at short films including her award winning advocacy movie, Not Right, Nollywood actress, Judith Audu Foght has hit location for her first full length movie.

    Titled Just not Married, the film, a Judith Audu Productions, is shot in association with Blacreek Pictures, Principal Photography and Asurf Films.

    Written by Lani Aisida, Just not Married tells the story of two brothers who find themselves on opposite paths. While Victor is an ex-con who just got out of prison and is trying to piece his life together, his brother Duke is a brilliant undergraduate determined to see his mum live.

    Duke enlists the help of his two friends in stealing cars by decorating them and pretending to be married. Despite some unforeseen hiccups their operation was pretty successful until greed, violence and distrust sets in.

    Describing the movie as an action-thriller, the actress-turned-producer said; “Our expectations for this movie is high. We hope to come out with a movie that will be a pleasurable and entertaining watch while making strong commentaries on various issues in our society. The movie is not so much about themes but sublime comments while entertaining.”

    The film is produced Judith Audu, Directed by Uduak Obong Patrick, Assistant Director Asurf Oluseyi, DOP Fayo .F. Festus. It stars the likes of Stan Nze, Rotimi Salami, Obutu Roland, Gregory Ojefua, Judith Audu, Perpetua Adefemi, Brutus Richard and Ijeoma Agu among others.

  • APC delegates from 21 councils endorse Audu

    Former Kogi State Governor Abubakar Audu’s ambition to get the ticket of the All Progressives Congress (APC) for this year’s governorship election got a boost at the weekend when the party’s delegates from 21 local government areas endorsed him in Lokoja, the state capital.

    The party’s delegates converged on Audu’s home in the town and endorsed him ahead of the August 29 primary.

    The Deputy Director-General of Prince Audu Campaign Organisation and one-time Commissioner for Water Resources, Salihu Akawu Saidu (aka SAS), said nobody was happy with the situation in the state under the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The spokesman urged the delegates to vote for Audu, who he said was the best candidate among the aspirants.

    On power shift, Saidu said: “We only differ on the strategy to achieve it. Some of them believe that it is anchored on Audu, after serving his remaining four years.”

    An APC chieftain and former commissioner, Hajia Halima Alfa, likened the current situation in Kogi State to the predicament the nation experienced under the last PDP-led Federal Government.

    She said the nation was fed up with the PDP, adding that this was the reason the electorate voted for President Muhammadu Buhari to change the country for the better.

    Hajia Alfa urged APC’s delegates and the electorate to vote for Audu who she described as a man of his word and a “tested and trusted leader”.

    Audu thanked the delegates for endorsing him ahead of the party’s primary and the confidence they had in his ability to make Kogi a better state.

    The former governor, who gave a brief history of the agitation for power shift in the state, said he was the first leader to promise same in 2003.

    A statement yesterday by Abdulmalik Suleiman said Audu noted that this was necessary to ensure peace, justice and equity across the state.

    The former governor promised that if elected, he would make power shift realisable.

    He added: “I will create jobs for the jobless and put the state back on the path of greatness.”

    Dignitaries at the event included a former minister, a senator, former and serving members of the House of Representatives and House of Assembly across the state.

  • Audu, ex-commissioner for APC ticket

    Former Kogi State Governor Prince Abubakar Audu and one of his commissioners, Suleiman Baba Ali, are to contest the All Progressives Congress’ (APC’s) ticket for the November governorship election.

    The duo were at the party’s national secretariat in Abuja yesterday to collect the nomination form.

    Audu said the majority of those in the race were young school leavers, who lacked the experience to take the state out of the woods.

    He said the state does not need anybody who will come and learn on the job, as the task ahead of the next governor is to take the state out of the woods.

    Addressing reporters after collecting the form, Audu lamented that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) government did not put in place any meaningful project in the last 12 years, but allowed the state to deteriorate.

    He said he was contesting to answer the call by the people, who mobilised resources to pay for the expression of interest and nomination form.

    Audu said Aliko Dangote was operating a cement factory in Kogi because studies showed that he could make money from the state, adding: “I will attract more Dangotes to Kogi.”

     

  • Rumpus in Kogi APC over Audu’s gubernatorial ambition

    Rumpus in Kogi APC over Audu’s gubernatorial ambition

    Assistant Editor, Dare Odufowokan, reports that Prince Abubakar Audu’s interest to contest for the All Progressives Congress’ governorship ticket in Kogi State has raised the stakes ahead the October governorship election in the state

    Though it started as a rumour, whispered in hushed tones, as the people of Kogi State prepare for the 2015 gubernatorial ambition scheduled to hold in October, it is now public knowledge that their former governor, Prince Abubakar Audu, is interested in returning to Lugard House to serve in the same capacity for a third time.

    While the news of the ex-governor’s renewed ambition is being received across the state with mixed feelings, it appears his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), may have been thrown into a serious internal squabble as groups within it battle for and against Audu’s ambition.

    Already, there are allegations and counter allegations. While the former governor’s camp accused his critics of ganging up against him for no reason, other governorship aspirants within the party are accusing Audu of plotting to acquire the party’s ticket through undemocratic means.

    “Prince Audu’s ambition is an ill wind that will blow nobody any good. He knows he cannot win the primary election of the APC and he is planning to subvert the process and award the ticket to himself,” a governorship aspirant lamented. But an aide of the former governor debunked such allegations, saying “these people who before now feel the APC cannot achieve anything in Kogi are now shouting. They are confusionists out to distract the party.”

    The Nation learnt that trouble started within the party following Audu’s decision to finally make his ambition public after months of insinuations and indications. Few weeks back, the former governor announced that he would heed the call of the people of the state to again come forward and contest the forthcoming governorship election.

    He spoke at his Ogbonicha country home in Ofu Local Government Area of the state at a civic reception he organised for his party, the APC’s national and state assemblies’ members in the state. Justifying his decision, Audu said the state was his ”baby” which he would not abandon.

    “The voice of men are the voice of God, the people are yearning for me to come back because of my performance between 1999 and 2003. A lot of people have been wallowing in abject poverty with Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in power in the state. A lot of people are dying.  As a matter of fact, Kogi is my baby and if I turn my back against my baby, it means I am an irresponsible father,” he said.

    And as if responding to widespread questions from his critic as to what he is coming back to do, the APC leader said, “I am coming back to salvage; rescue the state and place it back to where I left it in 2003 and even go beyond that.”

    Stiff opposition

    It took little or no time for the public announcement to attract responses from within the party. Expectedly, the first group to reject Audu was the one loyal to the former governor’s arch-rival and fellow party man, Barrister James Ocholi. According to party sources, the group is opposed to Audu because of the running political battle between him and Ocholi.

    “After the successful merger of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) and a faction of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), these two leaders, Audu and Ocholi have been locking horns over who becomes party leader in the state.

    Naturally, members who came from the CPC were sympathetic to Ocholi, while those in the ACN group were sympathetic to Audu. Those who came from other parties either followed Audu’s group or Ocholi’s group. As a result of the situation, the CPC group has Muhammed Mabo as their chairman, while the ACN group picks Alhaji Hadi Amentur as the party chairman.

    But they were later reconciled by the party’s national leaders. Hence, Hadi became the chairman in an election supervised by the officials of the party from the national headquarters without the presence of factions. The division was again brought to limelight again during the primary election to pick candidates for the National Assembly and State Assembly elections as election materials were said to have been hijacked by Audu’s group, led by Dino Melaye,” a party source alleged.

    Beside the Ocholi group, some elders are also opposed to Audu’s ambition for some reasons and they are voicing their rejection of him loudly even as the former governor and his team go about seeking the support of groups and individuals within and outside the party in a bid to ensure the success of his ambition.

    The elders, under the aegis of the All Progressives Elders Vanguard, called on the party and President Muhammadu Buhari to save the party from imminent collapse under the leadership of Audu. They claimed that Audu had hijacked the party machinery to his benefit, warning that the APC would lose the goodwill it enjoyed during the presidential election if Audu was not called to order.

    The elders, in a letter to Buhari, warned that the outcome of the state assembly election could be replicated during the governorship election in 2016 except the former governor is prevailed upon to drop his governorship ambition and also allow the rule of law to take root.

    The elders said the party’s misfortune in the National Assembly election in the state was due to the ambition of the former governor. The party was victorious in the March 28 presidential and National Assembly elections, but performed dismally in the governorship and state assembly polls.

    The letter signed by Isa Sani Omolori, chairman of the APC Elders’ Vanguard, Kogi Central, also accused Audu of being interested only in building structures for his governorship ambition than working for the collective good of the party.

    The letter read in part: “The main problem of the party (APC) in the state is not that of followership but leadership, which zeroes down on former Governor Abubakar Audu, whose dictatorial politics would destroy rather than build the party.

    “What happened at the last national elections was for Audu to put up structures to launch his governorship ambition rather than abide by the party’s constitution and follow due process in the primaries.”

    Another group, Kogi Renewal Group, kicked against Audu’s quest to get the APC governorship ticket.

    The Chairman of the group, Dr. Abubakar Yakubu, told journalists that Kogi needed change but the change the state needed was not the return of Audu to Lugard House.

    The group advised him to canvass support for other aspirants outside Kogi East Senatorial District to become governor in 2016, stressing that Kogi State had been generous with their support for candidates from Kogi East in the last 16 years. To them, Audu’s ambition is against the principle of equity and fairness.

    Alhaji Suleiman Baba Ali, a former health commissioner in the state and APC governorship aspirant, also want his former boss to quit the race. “As I said, I worked in an administration led by Prince Audu, 1999 to 2003. You must give that to him. I have said that every time. Among all the governors we have had in Kogi, his performance is still the best. I’m proud to have been associated with that government.

    But basically, we think this is the time for others to have their hands on governance in Kogi. Those of us who have learnt from him and imbibed good things from him, this is an opportunity for us to do well, while he plays the fatherly role and stays back. He should give advice on how to make Kogi a better state.

    At the same time, he should be able to fight for Kogi at national level so that he can get bigger and better things because of his fatherly role. He may not be able to get these things directly if he is the governor himself. That is the role of the leadership of the party at national level. They should look at it and I believe they are looking at those possibilities,” Ali argued.

    Counter position

    But the Kogi Peoples Assembly (KPA) chided some self acclaimed politicians in the state who it claimed are bent on frustrating the governorship bid of Audu, saying they can’t stop him from returning to Luggard House next year. Speaking to journalists in Abuja over the unfolding political power play ahead of the forthcoming governorship election in the state, the group’s coordinator, Engr. Solomon Adaji, said Audu’s position as the leader of the APC in the state was not contestable.

    Describing critics of Audu’s leadership political status in the party as political neophytes, Adaji specifically condemned the recent statements credited to those he called faceless persons operating under groups against Audu, saying they “are jittery over the unwavering and high status of Prince Abubakar Audu in APC”.

    “Audu represents the agent of change and a gift to any nation like ours which is in desperate need to attain democratic advancement. They had tried in vain to ridicule a man of integrity, honour and prudence; a principled and transparent individual; a revered political colossus, a quintessential achiever”, Adaji noted.

    He described as arrant nonsense suggestions from some quarters that Audu was more interested in building structures for his governorship ambition than working for the collective good of the party. Describing Audu as a shrewd politician, Adaji explained that the former governor does not need to build new political structures to actualise his governorship ambition in the next dispensation.

    He said, “Audu had in place magnificent structure in Kogi State, dating back to 1991, when he ran for the position of the governor of Kogi State under the defunct National Republican Convention (NRC). It was under the same 1991 structure that Audu used in 1999 to emerge victorious as governor of Kogi State under the platform of the defunct All Peoples Party (APP).

    “To put in perspective Audu’s political structure and followership transcends the landscape of Kogi State. As an internationally recognised politician cum business mogul, Audu is not an individual in the political scene of the nation as erroneously expressed by these critics.

    “Audu being a household name in Kogi State, with unprecedented political followers, admirers and supporters across the nooks and crannies in the state will not capitalise on any new structures to win the forthcoming governorship election.

    “Audu has built structures within and around notable political parties across the country, and one of which transformed into the political tsunami, called the All Progressive Congress (APC) today.

    “He single-handedly formed a rainbow alliance with the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) Action Congress (AC) and Movement for the Restoration and Defence of Democracy (MRDD) aimed at rooting out PDP’s misrule in the State”.

    He noted that Kogi State was in a deplorable condition under the present leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) would therefore require a banker of repute in the person of Prince Abubakar to rescue it.

    Another group loyal to Audu, Confluence for Change, responded, saying Prince Audu is the leader of the APC in the state.

    The group said, in a statement signed by its chairman, Isah Ibrahim, that Audu had remained a rallying point for the APC not only in Kogi State but in the North Central zone.

    Also, thousands of youths from the 21 local governments of Kogi State staged a peaceful rally at Murtala Muhammed Bridge on Abuja-Jamata-Lokoja Road in support of the governorship ambition of Prince Audu. The APC Youth Leader, Omale Moses, who led the rally, said since the former governor left office, the state had collapsed socially and economically, adding that they wanted him to come and save the state from bad leadership.

    Also, a chieftain of the party, Alhaji Linco Ocheje, believed that there was neither a division nor a problem in the APC over who would become the governorship candidate. He said Audu and any other party member were constitutionally guaranteed the right to vie for the governorship seat in a free and transparent primary election.

    He likened the Kogi scenario to the contest among Buhari, Atiku Abubakar and Rabiu Kwankwaso during the presidential primary election when people believed that the APC would have scattered but came out stronger at the end.

    A crowded race

    Findings by The Nation revealed that opposition to the former governor’s ambition is not just verbal, as many aspirants are already warming up to wrestle with him for the APC governorship ticket. The primary elections have been fixed for between August 25 and September 15 by INEC.

    Aside Audu, who was the first governor of the state and leader of the APC in the state, there are about ten other aspirant eyeing the APC ticket. The ex-governor was denied a return to Lugard House by Alhaji Ibrahim Idris in 2003. He had contested all subsequent governorship elections in the state but had always lost.

    Pundits say one major factor that may affect his chances this time around, in spite of APC’s seeming good stead to defeat the ruling PDP, is the agitation for power shift from his native Kogi East which has been ruling the state since its creation in 1991. But his handlers believe his popularity and the numerical strength of his zone will deliver the votes for him.

    Other aspirant seeking the party’s ticket include budding political giant, Yahaya Bello, also called “Fair Plus”, which is his business name, according to sources. He is from Kogi Central, a zone highly favoured by proponents of power shift. This factor, coupled with his popularity across the state, especially among the youths, is expected to work in his favour.

    Audu’s arch-rival, James Ocholi, is another strong contender for the APC governorship ticket from the eastern flank of the state. The 55-year-old Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) is a former governorship aspirant on the platform of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) in the state. His closeness to President Muhammadu Buhari is being bandied as a selling point by his supporters.

    Also in the race is Salihu Atawodi. He is a retired Air Vice Marshal. A reckoned politician, he, alongside other ex-PDP chieftains, joined the APC shortly before the general election. Although considered an aspirant of note by many, his critics say he is too new in the party to be trusted with the ticket.

    Other chieftains of the APC said to be keen about contesting the primary election for the party’s governorship ticket are Aliyu Zakari Jiya, Habeeb Yaqeen, Suleiman Babe Ali, Onukaba Adinoyi Ojo, Lanre Ipinmisho, Senator Nurudeen Abatemi-Usman, Rotimi Yaqub Obadofin, former Deputy Governor, Alex Usman Kadiri, Nicholas Yahaya Ugbane and Olusola George Olumoroti.

    Fear, assurance

    Consequent upon the open opposition to Audu’s quest to fly the party’s flag and the crowded race to the primary election, keen watchers of the development are warning of a rancorous contest within the party which may affect its chances at the general election later in the year.

    But the APC chairman in the state, Hadi Amentur, insists there is no division in the party. Amentur is confident that there is no cause for alarm because of his belief that there was no PDP in the state at the moment. He said it was normal and constitutional for any member of the party to aspire to get the party’s ticket for the governorship election.

    According to him, any member of the party can contest any position in the party as long as he or she is a member. Nobody can stop anyone from contesting the governorship ticket. He said the constitution allowed those who wanted to contest to do so through the primary election, stressing that those saying somebody should not contest were only making noise because the party constitution clearly spelt it out.

    “We won three senatorial seats, six House of Representatives and 11 State House of Assembly seats. More seats will be collected through the tribunal. With the poor performance of the PDP, led by Idris Wada, it would be an easy ride for the APC,” he said.

    With such reassuring words from the leadership of the party in the state, one can only wait to see how President Buhari’s party men will manage the situation in the Confluence State ahead of the battle for the  Lugard House.

  • Supporters ask for Audu’s return

    Thousands of supporters of former Kogi State Governor  Abubakar Audu at the weekend besieged Lokoja Township Stadium, asking him to contest the governorship election.

    Led by women and youths under the aegis of the Vision G63 Voice of the Grassroots, they clamoured for Audu’s return to the Lugard House “to rescue Kogi State from economic doldrums and infrastructural decay.”

    The group’s leader, Hajia Amina Musa, said they asked for Audu’s return because they could no longer witness the state falling like a pack of cards.

    She said Kogi had remained stagnant since he left the Government House in 2003, adding that they were worried by the high level of infrastructural decay.

    Hajia Musa noted: “We gather here today, having made up our minds and to show our displeasure over the bad condition of the state and beg Prince Audu to come back and save it from collapse.”

    She said Kogi is the most backward in terms of development, adding that it needs the ex-governor to salvage and rescue it from the misrule of the Peoples Democratic Party.

    The leader enjoined women and youths to be determined to return Audu to power, stressing that he was tested and trusted.

    Audu told the crowd that having finished consultations, he would contest the poll, recalling that during his tenure, civil servants received salaries promptly.

    He promised to create one million jobs in his first six months in office if elected.

    The former governor said he was not out to witch-hunt anyone, noting that nobody offended him.

    He sought forgiveness from anyone he might have offended.

    According to him, “the 12 years of PDP misrule will soon be a thing of the past. When I was the governor from 1999 to 2003, I did not owe civil servants. Those retrenched were reinstated.

    “I will create one million jobs for the unemployed graduates.

    “Your days of suffering are numbered. By this time next year, many of you will have jobs, build houses, buy cars and marry. I have done it before and I will do it  again.”

    A group of Kogi State indigenes resident in Kaduna State under the aegis of the Concerned Kaduna Progressives (CKP) has urged well-meaning individuals from the state to support the aspiration of Prince Audu.

    The Chairman of the body, Alhaji Yusuf Nda Ibrahim, spoke when interacting with reporters in Kaduna at the weekend.

    He said the call became imperative, considering the sorry state Kogi was in, following bad governance.

  • Audu: I’ll partner Buhari on Ajaokuta Steel

    Audu: I’ll partner Buhari on Ajaokuta Steel

    Former Kogi State Governor and All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship aspirant, Prince Abubakar Audu, has promised to partner President Muhammadu Buhari to complete the Ajaokuta Steel Company.

    Audu, who spoke in Abuja, said President Buhari was determined to resuscitate the company.

    The former governor said the President made the pledge during his campaign in the state.

    He noted that only the Buhari administration could make Kogi State realise its dream of completing the steel company because of the President’s honesty and dedication to the nation’s development.

    Audu added that when completed, the steel company would generate jobs for the nation’s teeming youths and create wealth for Kogi State and other parts of the country.

    He said: “We thank God for giving us President Buhari at this challenging time in our history. He will govern the nation with humility, probity and transparency.”

    Audu urged Nigerians to be patient with the President, adding that he remains focus to deliver dividends of democracy.

    On why he is running again, the former governor said the people urged him to rescue the state from the visionless Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which he said had governed the state for 12 years.

  • Audu should forget Lugard House

    When Prince Abubakar Audu governed Kogi State between the years 1991 and 2003, he left an enduring legacy in all facets of human endeavour and other critical infrastructure which are seen in the entire Kogi State, especially Lokoja, the state capital.

    Ex-Gov. Audu’s administration was not without its short comings that still trail his ordinate ambition to return back to Lugard House.

    When Prince Audu came back for a second term in 2003, it’s glaring to the people of Kogi State that magic wand he displayed in his first tenure which benefited  the entire people of Kogi State had waned.

    The present situation affecting the state could be traced back to the previous tenure when he held sway as the chief executive of the state.

    The people of Kogi State look up to electing a vibrant, youthful and energetic and corrupt-free candidate that will ensure Kogi State realises all its full potential of giant developmental progress that the state is lacking currently.

    Kogi State is being ruled by a section of this state and there is total clamour for power to be moved to another section of the state, hence the last election which was conducted in a transparent and credible way has rekindled the hope of other parts of the state.

    The people of Kogi State are yearning for change, to ensure that their state that has not seen physical, economic, social development for the past eight years, would see a new dawn as the people of Kogi State will use their PVCs with the aid of card readers to ensure transparent leaders assume the leadership of the state in the next political dispensation.

    We call on Prince Abubakar Audu to remain a statesman, a leader that would groom young and visionary candidate that would be a source of pride to him and the state in general.

     

    Bala Nayashi

    No 1 Yashi Areas, Lokoja

  • Audu remains Kogi APC leader — Group

    Audu remains Kogi APC leader — Group

    The Confluence for Change  in Kogi State has labelled those questioning the leadership of Prince Abubakar Audu as the leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state as moles.

    The group in a statement issued yesterday in Lokoja stated that the people of the state were aware of the antics of those questioning the former governor’s position as the APC leader in the state.

    It called on the national leadership of the party to ignore calls by the “Kogi East APC Elders forum” for the dissolution of the state executive.

    Convener of the group, Engr. Ibrahim Isah, said those canvassing for the dissolution of the state executive were PDP agents masquerading under different names.

    He said: “The party should be weary of these PDP agents who are now calling themselves Kogi APC Elders Forum, as majority of them joined the party on the eve of the election and are now tarnishing the image of the state leader, Prince Abubakar Audu, and casting aspersions on the state exco with a view to carrying out the script of their paymasters.

    “Most of them only defected to the APC barely two months to the general election. For example, Chief John Odawun was not only a staunch member of the PDP in Kogi State, he served as the party’s state Chairman for nine years and only defected to the APC before the general election. The same thing goes for Dr Alex Kadiri who defected to the APC 38 days to the general election.”

  • Why I lost Kogi governorship seat in 2003 -Audu

    Why I lost Kogi governorship seat in 2003 -Audu

    Former Kogi State governor and leader of the All progressives Congress (APC) in Kogi, Prince Abubakar Audu, in this interview with Tony Akowe in Abuja, speaks on how APC managed to win almost all the positions contested for in the state during the just concluded elections, what Gen. Muhammadu Buhari should do. He also believes that President Goodluck Jonathan deserves a Nobel Peace prize. Excerpts

    During the just concluded general elections, APC won the three senatorial districts and many other National Assembly seats in Kogi State. How were you able to achieve this?

    The secret of success is hard work and that has always been my contention. We worked very hard and time will tell virtually all the stories. People were given the opportunity to compare and contrast between my administration and the successive administration of PDP since I left office. I governed the state between 1999 and 2003 and PDP rigged me out using all manner of forces that have never been seen in any democratic sector. They brought Air Force personnel from Air Force base and the military from barracks in Lokoja which harassed and killed. For the first time, I saw military personnel carrying ballot boxes. That was how they rigged us out in 2003. They brought in a governor that spent nine years and has not commissioned one single project. It is where I left Kogi in 2003 that Kogi is up till this moment. It is not political rhetoric, neither am I praising myself. You can confirm this from any Kogi man. After spending nine years instead of eight years as stated in our constitution, another PDP governor took over and I don’t think he has done much; again, I leave everything to the electorates to judge. This time the electorates said it is time we bring Audu back. If you are a regular visitor to Kogi, at the Kontokafi Bridge, you will see a billboard where the masses are crying, saying ‘where is Audu?’

    We won all our senate seats, we won about six or seven out of the nine Federal House of Representatives seats and out of accredited 400,000 voters in Kogi State for the presidential election, we won almost 300,000 and you know we are not in government in Kogi State; even a councilor, we don’t have because it was a clean sweep but now people have been placed in a position to know the difference between the good, the bad and the ugly, so they have spoken and God in his infinite mercy has exonerated me. That is the secret of the success we achieved in Kogi State because people want me back and they have seen what I did for the four years that I was in the office; they have been given the opportunity to compare and contrast and this is the first step of the 1000km journey and I think by the special grace of God we shall arrive there safely.

    After the victory of General Muhammadu Buhari, there appears to have been a bandwagon effect across Nigeria. How would you describe his victory after three failed trials and getting it at the fourth one?

    In 2003, he got the first shot.  He contested and won but he was rigged out. In 2007 and 2011 they robbed him but in 2015 all the robbers went to sleep and God took control. Everyone knows the kind of person Buhari is; a very disciplined and gentle man, a man who is highly principled, a man of proven integrity. I am not singing his praises but that is exactly how he is and everybody that knows him knows he is like that. The economy of this country has been battered badly; look at unemployment, look at the decay in infrastructure, and look at the security aspect, insurgency, kidnapping and all sorts of notorious things. We need people with experience, people that have the ability, people with the right intellectual capacity to save us; this is why God directed most of the electorates in Nigeria to bring him in. So, we have every reason to thank God and celebrate. Both Muslims and Christians voted for him, even the tradition religious people voted for him; men and women voted for him and that is why he records a landslide victory.

    One of the things that General Buhari has said consistently throughout the campaigns is that there are high expectations from Nigerians, especially the youths, saying he is scared by these expectations from the youth. Now as he prepares to take over government, how would you advice him to go about handling these expectations so that he will not disappoint the youths and Nigerians who have come out to express their confidence in him?

    A square peg in a round hole is not the answer. Have the right people on the right job; people that have been loved and accepted by the people of Nigerians. Secondly, have people of integrity who are not clamouring for a position because of the dividends that comes from it. In my own case for instance, I worked in First Bank Nigeria for over 25 years and I left as an Executive Director. I was General Manager of Standard Chartered Bank in London and New York. I was a training officer in London and I have done all these things and if you compare me as a governor with just a school leaver and someone who is doing that job for the first time, you will know that there is no basis for comparison. This is why it is good to bring technocrats to Nigeria, those who know and have the love of Nigeria and Nigerians at heart and those who will be able to separate the weed from the shaft and I am sure General Buhari is going to do that because during his military rule, when he was Head of State, there was some measure of improvement in virtually all the sectors in Nigeria because of discipline. You can never achieve anything without self discipline. You must be able to enforce discipline on others if you are disciplined yourself and you know that he is a very disciplined man; so once again Nigeria is lucky and Nigeria has taken the right decision to have voted him in and this is the first time after 1999 election that our electoral system has been judged as free, fair and credible and peaceful. That is why there is less acrimony.

    What will be your advice if your party tries to zone principal offices?

    We believe that if we want peace to prevail in Nigeria, the winner takes all should be very minimal and we believe that it should be all embracing government. Every segment of Nigeria should be given a role to play if we want peace. We are not going to run a reclusive government but all embracing government and so far so good; based on newspaper publications you will see that most of the positions that have been shared out so far there has been an even spread even where he didn’t get votes he has given them a position, a very powerful position; all with the view to making sure that at the end of the day, peace prevails and everyone is given a good chance of belonging.

    Sometimes, managing success is more difficult than getting it. How is APC going to manage this success it has achieved?

    It is more difficult to manage money than to make money; just as you said; it is more difficult to manage victory than achieving the victory first. Once you have the right person in position, all these things are no problem. Having the right leadership has always been the problem in this country; people with balanced outlook, people with balanced judgements, people who have the fear of God at the back of their mind and if you talk about that, Buhari will score a very high mark if not the highest mark in the entire country. I try not to over exaggerate; I try not to embark on political rectory but on the fact of the situation.

    We all know that this is Africa and some presidents won’t want to easily relinquish power. Would you commend President Goodluck Jonathan the way he reacted when he saw that it was obvious that he was losing the election and he quickly made a call to the president-elect even before the result finally came out?

    I don’t want to pre-empt what Buhari can do but as far as I am concerned, President Goodluck Jonathan deserves to be recommended for a Nobel Peace prize. You know what has been happening around African countries, you know that once a leader is in a position, he wants to stay put, they won’t like to relinquish the position. Look at what happened in Ivory Coast and other places; in the case of Jonathan, we have seen a lot of maturity and love; he said it is not worth shading any blood for the position of the presidency; how many people in Nigeria, in Africa, in the third world reason that way? They want to perpetuate themselves in power and for the mere fact that he has shown the difference, he deserves a Nobel Peace prize.

    There have been calls for you to come back to rule Kogi State, but many are wondering what you forgot in the Government House that you want to go back and take? Many also believe that you didn’t lose your governorship seat to non-performance. This has been attributed to arrogant disposition in your leadership style. Will you say that you have learnt a lesson that you will take back to office?

    Instead of me learning a lesson, they have learnt a lesson that the accusation heaped on me was unfounded. I will tell you the offence I committed and this is why the Kogi you know in those days is not the Kogi you know today. I have a background of private sector concept efficiency and prudent management of available resources but the people I met in the political arena said no! That this money isn’t meant to develop the state; that it is meant to be shared and I said I don’t have that background and they said if you don’t have that background, we will show you the exit road and we will deal with you and you can’t convince anybody in Nigeria that I am not development-oriented, that I didn’t develop  the state because even the PDP government gave me seven awards out of 12, courtesy of media tour headed by Professor Jerry Gana, the then Minister of Information and National Orientation. I was named as the best performing governor in Nigeria and my own people say they don’t want that; that that wasn’t the purpose of voting for me. All they wanted was for me to bring the money and let them share and I said I won’t subscribe to that, and then they said they will give me a bad name like a dog in order to hang me. So they said once I am sitting on a chair everybody on the floor, some will say before you see me you will crawl on your kneels for 15km and much later when they had seen the differences between the good, the bad and the ugly, they said it is better to have an arrogant performer than a humble failure. In Nigeria if they don’t want you they give you a bad name.

    Experience isn’t something you go to the classroom to read and people have natural ability, if you don’t have that ability, there is no way you can measure up. So, I don’t want to praise myself but I have given the opportunity for people to see and differentiate between me and my other colleagues.

  • Audu should forget about Lugard House

    SIR: When Prince Abubakar Audu governed Kogi State between the years 1991 and 2003, he left an enduring legacy in all facet of human endeavour and other critical infrastructure which is seen in the entire Kogi State, especially Lokoja the state capital.

    When Audu came back for second term in 2003, it was glaring to the people of Kogi State that the magic wand he displayed in his first tenure which benefited  the entire people was lacking. Presently he has been a guest of EFCC.

    The people of Kogi State look up to a vibrant, youthful and energetic candidate that would ensure that the state realize all its full potentials .

    Kogi has been ruled by a section of the state hence the clamour that power should be moved to another section of the state. The last election which was conducted in a transparent and credible way has rekindled the hope of other parts of the state to occupy the Lugard House in the governorship election later in the year.

    The people of Kogi State are yearning for change, to ensure their state that has not seen physical, economic and social development in the past eight years see a new dawn.  This time, the people will use their PVC with the aid of card reader to ensure that a transparent leader assumes the leadership of the state in the next political dispensation.

    We call on Prince Abubakar  Audu to remain a stateman, a leader that would groom young and visionary candidates that would be sources of pride to the him and the state in general.

     

    •  Bala Nayashi,

      Lokoja, Kogi State