Tag: Bode George

  • Fubara, Daniel, Bode George, Gani Adams,others for Freedom Online’s 6th annual lecture

    Fubara, Daniel, Bode George, Gani Adams,others for Freedom Online’s 6th annual lecture

    Governor Siminalayi Fubara of Rivers State will, on Thursday, deliver the 6th yearly lecture of Freedom Online newspaper in Lagos.

    A statement by the Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief of the online newspaper, Gabriel Akinadewo, said: ”While Fubara is the Special Guest Speaker, former Governor of Ogun State and Chairman, Senate Committee on Navy, Otunba Gbenga Daniel, is the keynote Speaker of the lecture with the theme: ‘Nigeria’s Socio-Political Challenges: Whose Fault, Leaders or the Led?’

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    ”The Chairman of the event is former Deputy National Chairman of the People’s Democratic Party  (PDP), Chief Olabode George.

    ”Other personalities billed to grace the lecture are former Police Affairs Minister,  retired Navy Captain Caleb Olubolade (Special Guest of Honour); Aare Onakakanfo of Yorubaland, Iba Gani Adams and former Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, Dr. Dakuku Peterside (Guests of Honour) and Professor Akin Onigbinde, the Executive Secretary, Centre for Policy and Development Studies, Ilepa, Ogun State (Special Guest)

  • Nigeria’s democracy too unitary, says Bode George

    Nigeria’s democracy too unitary, says Bode George

    A Board of Trustees (BoT) member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Olabode George, has described Nigeria’s democracy as too unitary.

    He said power is too concentrated at the centre contrary to the principles of federalism.

    Speaking during a media parley with Giant Women in Media led by Clementina Olomu, George said: “The current constitution is the root of our problems.

    “Every month, states go to Abuja to collect their share of national revenue instead of generating their own.

    “That’s not democracy; it’s a unitary system disguised as federalism. We copied America’s democracy but refused to implement it properly.

    “In the U.S., each state has its own resources, local police, and financial autonomy. Here, everything is controlled from Abuja, which is a recipe for failure.”

    The former PDP deputy national chairman stressed the need for restructuring and equitable distribution of power.

    He urged those in positions of leadership to make an impact as power is transient.

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    George said: “Leadership should be about service, not personal gain. Look at Alexander the Great, he conquered the world but died with nothing.

    “He even ordered that his hands be left outside his coffin to show he was taking nothing with him. Yet here, people hoard wealth as if they can take it to the afterlife.

    “We have both natural and human resources, yet we are struggling. Nothing lasts forever. Power is temporary. Use your leadership to serve, not to loot. People are hungry and angry.

    “A land of plenty should not have starving citizens. If we don’t change course, history will not be kind to us.”

    Highlighting focus areas, he added: “Three things: economic reform, security, and youth empowerment. Fuel prices are crippling businesses while those in the banking sector make billions.

    “If the President truly cares, he should collaborate with financial institutions to stabilise fuel prices.

    “Youth unemployment is another crisis. When I was younger, we had trade centres where people learned carpentry, tailoring, hairdressing, and other skills. Now, nothing. That’s why we have the Yahoo-Yahoo epidemic because the system has failed young people.”

    George hopes the PDP will resolve its internal crisis to provide a formidable opposition.

    “Our party should be in a position to give a good punch – technical knockout punch. There is no organisation, even between husband and wife, where you will not find quarrels.

    “If you are not able to manage it, that’s a measure of your competence or incompetence in the public eye.

    “Wake up. That’s all we can do. As it stands now, the BOT members have made a decision. That’s a good move,” he said.

    George believes the recognition of Sunday Ude-Okoye as the party’s National Secretary is a step towards resolving the crisis.

    He urged Samuel Anyanwu “to calm down” and “let go of the tussle for the sake of party unity”.

  • George to Kekere-Ekun: end judicial rascality in Nigeria

    George to Kekere-Ekun: end judicial rascality in Nigeria

    Former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Olabode George, has urged the Chief Justice of the Federation (CJN), Kudirat Kekere-Ekun, to end judicial rascality in the country. 

    In his letter to the CJN, the retired Commodore said the Judiciary should take its rightful position, reminiscent of the period from 1950s to 1980s.

    The letter reads: “Judgements from some judicial officers are becoming embarrassing to patriotic Nigerians and if care is not taken, may derail this democracy.

    “Judicial rascality has now become the order of the day, especially coming from courts of coordinate jurisdictions.

    “We now have a situation in which a court, which is thousands of miles away from a theatre of partisan conflict, will give a  confusing order and Nigerians will just be wondering what exactly  was going on.

    “Obviously, an appellate court can override the decision of a lower court but I strongly believe that a High Court, federal or state, cannot give a counter order on a case in which it has no jurisdiction against another High Court.

    “Anything short of this will lead to judicial anarchy.

    This is the time for you to urgently call a meeting of the National Judicial Council (NJC) to be attended by judges, from states and federal, to address this anomaly because there are many conflicting judgements from courts of coordinate jurisdiction these days.

    “Nigerians no longer respect judgements from some judicial officers and you see them boldly analysing the faux pas of these judgements on national televisions. Enough is enough.

    “From the 1950s to 1980s, judges were feared because they, to a large extent, never compromised their positions.

    “Those were the glorious years in Nigerian judiciary when Judges were Judges but what do we have today?

    “Judicial chaos, anarchy and confusion to the extent that Nigerians openly say it that some judges are on the payroll of many politicians. It is that bad.

    “In many cases, these Nigerians are right because any judgement should be devoid of ethnic, political, religious and partisan colouration but the reverse is the case these days.

    In many political cases since the advent of this democratic rule in 1999, millions of people believe, and rightly so, that some judges deliver Judgements,not Justice.

    “They recall the glorious days of former Chief Justices of Nigeria, such as Justice Stafford Foster Sutton (1955 – 1958), Justice Adetokunbo Ademola (1958 – 1972), Justice Teslim Olawale Elias (1972 – 1975), Justice Darnley Arthur Alexander (1975 – 1979), Justice Atanda Fatai Williams (1979 – 1983), Justice George Sodeinde Sowemimo (1983 – 1985), Justice Gabriel Ayo Irikefe (1985 – 1987), Justice Muhammed Bello (1987 – 1995), the first Northerner to become Chief Justice of Nigeria, and others.

    “They also remember, with fondness, the era of Justice Belgore, Justice Chukwudifu Oputa, Justice Kayode Eso, Justice Fabiyi and others. These are legal giants who stood their grounds against any form of victimisation or unnecessary manoeuvre from the Executive branch of government. You dared not look at their faces or even try to bribe them.

    ‘So, in the 21st Century, what exactly is the problem of the judiciary in Nigeria that Nigerians no longer respect judgements coming from some courts? Where did we get it wrong? Why is it difficult for the judiciary to assert its control over politicians and political parties? Why are technicalities being used to affirm electoral heists and in the process, undermine the will of the people and silence them? What is the meaning of a ‘typographical error’ when a judgement had already been delivered? 

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    Millions of people will come out on the day of election, queue, collect ballot papers, cast their votes for their preferred candidates, results will be announced and everybody will jubilate only for three, five or seven judges to upturn the popular will of the people. What an affront?

    Pitiably, we now have a situation in which politicians, who did not participate in party primaries, are affirmed by the judiciary as the candidates because of ‘technicalities’.

    “That is why Nigerians strongly believe that some members of the Executive suppress and intimide Judges, just to get favourable judgements.

    Electoral verdict should be the sole responsibility of the electorate but it has now been turned upside down. It is now “government of the judiciary, by the judiciary, for the judiciary”.

    “CJN, democracy should be about the people, exercising their fundamental human rights, not being goaded, as we are presently witnessing. Now, Judges select who should be members of the  House of Representatives, Senators, Governors and even the President. What kind of electoral system are we running that all vices, electoral crimes, defects and manipulations cannot be checked before the general elections?

    “Why is there so much confusion in the system now?

    These are questions Nigerians want urgent answers to during your tenure as the CJN.

    I am sure you will agree with me that politically-motivated judgements, if they don’t affect the country now, will do so in the future. That is why judicial officers must be careful because their rulings can, now or later, undermine the country’s democratic process.

    “As Nigeria’s Number One Judicial Officer, you should be alarmed over the impact of questionable court decisions on the stability of Nigeria’s democracy.

    Judicial institutional strength is the only thing that will bring development in this country. Therefore, the Judiciary must be strong and bold enough to resist pressure from politicians. It does not make any sense for a judge, just to satisfy a political godfather, to turn the law upside down. 

    “Judges must be careful because they have the power of life and death. After God, judges are next, so their judgements must be above board. Because of partisan interests, politicians can put judges under pressure but you must not allow this. Judges must be strong in the interest of building a virile judicial institution.

    “When the Judiciary is compromised, one way or the other, in a democratic system, then democracy is gone.

    Pitiably, in 2024, the belief of Nigerians in the Judiciary is shaken. And this is worrisome because if the people don’t believe in the third arm of government anymore, anarchy looms.

    “Today, many Nigerians point to some corrupt judges who escape unscathed to enjoy their ill-gotten wealth because the system is weak or compromised to do proper investigation.

    “Any order from our courts must be infallible, perfect, faultless and indefective. But, when people begin to question the judgement of a particular court, it shows that there is crisis in the polity. And this is totally unacceptable in Nigeria of 2024.

    “The highly respected Justice Niki Tobi once said: “a Judge by the nature of his position and professional calling, is expected to be straight forward, upright, diligent, consistent and open in whatever he does in court and in other places of human endeavour that he happens to find himself. This is because his character as a Judge is public property”.

    “CJN, sadly, some politicians now use the court as a shield and the highest political bidders are recklessly granted favourable orders.

    “Time to stop judicial rascality in the polity is now.”

  • Bode George takes on Atiku

    Bode George takes on Atiku

    Apart from being eloquent and scholarly, Bode George, former Ondo State military governor and Board of Trustees of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) member, also has the courage of his convictions. Before the last elections, he took on candidate Bola Tinubu with caustic pleasure, advising him to disqualify himself from the 2023 presidential race. Convinced that the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate couldn’t possibly win, Chief George swore he would go on exile should the president take the crown. So, the PDP chieftain never shirks a battle. Now, he has taken on former vice president Atiku Abubakar for being the spoilsport who denied southern aspirants from the presidential race last year when it was obvious he could not win as a northerner. Trust the Lagos-based politician, he will go at Alhaji Atiku hammer and tongs in the coming years, and the former vice president will not have an answer.

    Chief George’s argument is simple. He says: “…In 2027, Atiku will be 81 years, and this is the time for him to embrace the President Joe Biden option of allowing the younger generation to run for the highest office in the land. I have nothing personal against Alhaji Abubakar. He is my friend. But the truth must be told. By 2027, by God’s Grace, I will also be in my 80s. So, what am I looking for in public office as an octogenarian? The same principle should apply to Alhaji Abubakar. We all saw what American President Joe Biden did recently when he stepped down for Kamala Harris to contest the November presidential election…Alhaji Abubakar should do same so that in 2027, the PDP will field a Southerner as presidential candidate.” Chief George needn’t worry. Alhaji Atiku, should he choose to run, will contend with herculean obstacles to take the PDP ticket in 2027. The chances of doing that are very remote, not just because of the formidable array of forces against him in the party, but because of both his age and the inescapable lethargy that goes with it as well as his lack of ideational depth and relevance.

    Almost sarcastically, Chief George dismisses the former vice president’s ambition. He says: “But if Alhaji Abubakar is desperate to contest again, I will advise him as a friend, a party man and brother to wait till 2031. By then, he will be 85 years. As loyal party members, we must continue to respect the PDP constitution. Fair is fair. I joined the PDP in 1998 and I have remained in this party since…The two of us know the principles guiding this party. We should not do anything that will destroy our party and the country. In 2027, the concept of Turn-by-Turn Nigeria Limited must be strictly followed by our party. The PDP must look for a southerner to wrest power from the All Progressives Congress (APC)…So, Nigerians are waiting for us to rescue them in 2027, but a southerner must lead the battle.” Clearly, Alhaji Atiku will not only contend with obdurate insiders, some of them governors interested in the presidency, he will also find himself bruising with insiders uninterested in the hot seat. And they are plenty, some of whom, like Chief George, never migrated from the party but have sustained it out of office since 2015. On the contrary, Alhaji Atiku had twice migrated, demonstrating both his fickleness and obsession. Even now, he is merely waiting in the wings waiting for the opportunity to fight for the ticket and take it by all means, perhaps in a future alliance with the other opportunist in the Labour Party (LP), his soulmate Peter Obi.

    Read Also: CSOs urge Tinubu to avoid repeat of past human rights violations

    Chief George is a political pugilist of the first rank. Alhaji Atiku’s spokesmen will, therefore, be wary of taking him on directly. Paul Ibe, the former vice president’s aide, was even warier in his response to the suggestion that his principal should rest his ambition and find a younger, more electable aspirant to back. “It is about 2025 and 2026 and beyond,” Mr Ibe said tersely. “His (Atiku) concern is about the plight of Nigerians who are literarily going through hell because of the failed trial-and-error policies of this administration. The average citizen, and indeed all Nigerians, need to survive… It is insensitive to talk about 2027 now, when the 2023 mandate has not yielded any tangible benefits to Nigerians.” Mr Ibe is preaching to the converted. Chief George never doubted the circumstances of the people, nor how the economy had pulverised them. All he says is that the PDP will need a southerner as their champion in the next election cycle. And it is precisely the southern candidate issue that Alhaji Atiku and his aides and supporters seem inured to and unwilling to discuss. For him, and unlike Alhaji Atiku and Mr Obi, the last election is history, with a winner emerging in fact and in law. His main concern is the next poll for which he is not willing in any circumstance to contemplate a northern candidate. In other words, in 2023, the dispute was about the PDP’s rotational presidency formula; and in 2027, according to him, it will still be about the same issue. Given the patronising view of Bauchi State governor Bala Mohammed not to contest the presidency if ex-president Goddluck Jonathan showed interest, it seems certain that many PDP leaders are alarmingly not indisposed to another northern candidate. The war in the PDP is just beginning, and it will be marked by many battles, some of them spilling over to the LP also riven by conflict over suspicions of infernal and unpopular merger plans.

    Happily for Chief George, and despite his trenchant views, no one in the PDP has yet accused him of supporting President Tinubu, either directly or indirectly. They know where he stands on the president. More, the vice president’s aides are tongue-tied because they also know where the PDP chieftain stands on the PDP imbroglio. He has been consistent in both his opposition to the president and support for a southern PDP candidate for the presidency. He has not been quite as sympathetic to the president on the issues confronting the administration, but he acknowledges that before the last administration left office the country teetered on the brink as a result of economic mismanagement. And while in his estimation President Tinubu’s policies and measures have been in some respect suspect and even conflicting, he appears convinced that Nigeria would have fared worse under an Atiku presidency. He told a television channel: “If Atiku had won, I would have stayed in my house because I know for real that in future he would collapse. This country would never accept. If he had won that election you think this country would have been stable? Because somebody from the north had just finished eight years, and our own norm is that after the eight years, the presidential candidate must come to the south…”

    While the PDP may be shaping up for a titanic battle, and the LP is mired in the mediocrity of its ambitions and internal dissensions, it would be a mistake for the APC to think it could not be punished for the economic hardship it has brought upon the people. At the moment, President Tinubu is unpopular. Even after the economy has turned the corner as he hopes, the aftershocks of his economic reset agenda and the inconsistencies of some of his policies will leave a lingering and bitter taste in the mouths of many. He has stepped on toes, powerful toes, and has shown he is not beholden to anyone. These attributes may yet prove consequential to his ambition. In his first term, ex-president Muhammadu Buhari ignored powerful voices in the Republic in an admittedly perverse and heedless manner. Had he not rallied late in his first term and grovelled before many of the leading politicians he had initially alienated or humiliated, and had he not resisted the desperate but sensible urge to reform and recalibrate the economy, he would have lost reelection. Chief George may refuse to take issue with the current administration, but it is cold comfort for President Tinubu that in the months ahead his opponents will remain in disarray, and highly-placed critics are a little restrained. However, for now, he can sit back and enjoy Chief George skewering Alhaji Atiku.

  • Bode George to Atiku: you can’t be president in 2027

    Bode George to Atiku: you can’t be president in 2027

    A former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Bode George, says former Vice President Atiku Abubakar must wait till 2031 if he wants to contest for president again.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that Abubakar, the PDP Presidential Candidate in the 2023 general elections, lost to President Bola Tinubu.

    George, in a statement on Wednesday, said that a southerner must occupy the office of the President and Commander in Chief from 2023 to 2031 “because that is the reality of our country, PDP constitution and our polity”.

    “Even in 2027, Atiku will be 81 years and this is the time for him to embrace the President Joe Biden concept of allowing the younger generation to run for the highest office in the land.

    “I have nothing personal against Alhaji Abubakar. He is my friend but the truth must be told. By 2027, by God’s Grace, I will also be in my 80s.

    “So, what am I looking for in public office as an octogenarian? The same principle should apply to Alhaji Abubakar.

    “We all saw what American President, Joe Biden, did recently when he stepped down for Kamala Harris to contest the November presidential election.

    “That is the hallmark of a statesman. Alhaji Abubakar should do same so that in 2027, PDP will field a southerner as presidential candidate,” George, a former military governor of Ondo State, said.

    According to him, the immediate past President Muhammadu Buhari, a northerner from Katsina State ,just left office after ruling for eight years.

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    He said that power at the federal level could not go to the North in 2027 because “that is the reality of our country and our party’s constitution”.

    George said that Section 7, Sub-section 3 (C) of the PDP Constitution stated that zoning and rotation must be maintained for justice, fairness and equity.

    He added: “In our party, this is the right and logical thing to do in the present political circumstances.

    “But if Alhaji Abubakar is desperate to contest again, I will advise him as a friend, a party man and brother to wait till 2031. By then, he will be 85 years.

    “As loyal party members, we must continue to respect PDP Constitution. Fair is fair. I joined the PDP in 1998 and I have remained in this party since.”

    The PDP chieftain said that he was elected National Vice -Chairman (South-West) and later,Deputy- National Chairman and now, a member of the Board of Trustees (BoT) and one of the respected elders and credible voices of our party.

    He said: “I have not defected to any other party. While I was in Wadata Plaza, Alhaji Abubakar was in the Villa as Vice President. So, we know ourselves and the two of us know the principles guiding this party.

    “We should not do anything that will destroy our party and the country. In 2027, the concept of Turn-by-Turn Nigeria Limited must be strictly followed by our party.

    “PDP must look for a southerner to wrest power from the APC because that party of strange bed fellows wants to destroy this country, economically and politically.

    “So, Nigerians are waiting for us to rescue them in 2027 but a southerner must lead the battle,” he said.

    George described as laughable, a report by Abubakar’s media adviser, Mr Paul Ibe, calling him (George) a tribal bigot, over his position on power rotation.

    “I read a report by one of Alhaji Abubakar’s media aides accusing me of tribalism,  I just laughed. My best friend today is a Fulani man, Admiral Murtala Nyako.

    “I was the Director-General of the Umaru Musa Yar’Adua Presidential Campaign Organisation for the 2007 elections. The late president trusted me. So, I cannot be accused of being tribalistic.

    “I also served the military well. My records are there for all to see. But, you know in politics, people can say anything to tarnish your image. Despite that, the truth must be told. What you will not accept, don’t give to others.

    “I can boldly say that I am a detribalised Nigerian and a committed  member of the PDP. I don’t harbour any disdain or hate for Alhaji Abubakar or any other PDP member,” he said.

    George urged every member of the party to” embrace and respect the entrenched principles of zoning and rotation, bestowed on the party by our founding fathers since inception in 1998, “no matter whose ox is gored.

    “The principles explicitly stipulate that, at the end of every eight years, all elective and party offices should change from the northern divide to the southern divide  and vice versa.

    “That is the position which I will continue to champion till thy kingdom come!,” he said.

    (www.nannews.ng)

  • Atiku would have failed as President — Bode George

    Atiku would have failed as President — Bode George

    • Says PDP reconciliation committee can’t go far

    Former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Olabode George,said yesterday that there were chances that  party’s presidential flag bearer in the 2023 election,Alhaji Atiku Abubakar would have failed as president  if he had won at the polls.

    He said Atiku’s  emergence as president in 2023 would have created many problems for the country including unstable polity.

    Fielding questions on Arise Television, George said the PDP is crisis  ridden today because of the choice of Atiku as its presidential candidate at a time the party also had its chairman (Iyorchia Ayu)  from the north.

    “By the time Ayu left, he should have left long before the election. There was an agreement. It was the emergence of Atiku from the north as a presidential candidate that completely disorganised the norm of the party,” he said.

    Continuing, he said: “The moment we interfered with it, manipulating the whole process to satisfy Atiku, that’s where the problem started. For us to pretend as if there was not a problem, we are just wasting time.

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     “Let us stand by the truth because it is only the truth that would liberate you. When we had that election, we divided the party (PDP) into two.”

    He did not see Atiku succeeding as  president under the circumstances.

    His words: “If Atiku had won, I would have stayed in my house because I know for real that  in future he would collapse. This country would never accept.

    “If he had won that election you think this country would have been stable? Because somebody from the north had just finished eight years and our own norm is that after the eight years, the presidential candidate must come to the south. Those who are running around for appointments, we wish them best of luck.”

    He said the PDP has no moral right to query the “nuisances and nuances going on in this country by the people in government.”

    The PDP, according to him,“ got some deeper problems”, with three factions battling for the soul of the party “and it’s not working.”

    He declined his appointment as a member of the Disciplinary Committee set up to sanction  members alleged to have  worked against the party in the 2023 general elections.

    He said he could not work under Chief Tom Ikimi who is the chairman of the committee.

    He said: “I know Tom very well, he met me in this party. The founding fathers handed over to us. So the culture of the party, the do’s and don’ts are with us. So you don’t make me be a member under somebody that I know in terms of hierarchy of the party, and say I should go and serve under him. I made that observation to them. And they said are you going to come, I said no, I’m not.

    “I will not serve under Ikimi. I’m being very frank with myself. How much information or depth does he have concerning our party? You don’t do things like that. It’s an observation and I’ve told the Chairman. At this age, I’m ready to stay home.

    “Just setting up a committee, where will it lead you?”

  • Why PDP will remain in crisis, by George

    Why PDP will remain in crisis, by George

    • NWC suspends Benue SWC

    Former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) National Deputy Chairman Chief Olabode George yesterday said crisis in the main opposition party may persist due to the ambition of certain chieftains.

    He said their “personalised ambition” is tearing the fold apart and constituting an obstacle to genuine reconciliation.

    George said: “Elders of the party have to come into the room to resolve the personalised ambitions of people. That is what is killing our party.”

    The retired commodore said the founding fathers of PDP, led by the late Dr. Alex Ekwueme, put ethnicity and religion aside while laying its foundation.

    George recalled that by dividing Nigeria into six zones and distributing the top six positions in the country among them, the party fostered inclusion and a sense of belonging.

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    The positions are president, vice president, senate president, house of representatives speaker, secretary to the government of federation and national party chairman.

    He feared that holding on to personal ambition may create problems of marginalisation and exclusion.

    George, who also reflected on the state of the nation, urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to restructure the country to foster true federalism.

    He called for state police, saying that if policemen who handled the recent protest were drawn from the environment, they would have spotted the hoodlums, isolated them from legitimate protesters and prevented looting and violence.

    The former military governor of Ondo State also advised Tinubu to speed up economic revitalisation to enable Nigerians to heave a sigh of relief from hardship.

    Georg told reporters in Lagos that the 1999 Constitution is grossly defective, urging the president to accord priority to review.

    He alluded to the 2014 National Conference, which produced a report that can serve as a guide on constitutional amendment.

    George said: “There is a concluded report of the National Conference from former President Goodluck Jonathan sent to former President Muhammadu Buhari. President Tinubu should retrieve it.

    “What is the business of the president with councils in Lagos and Sokoto? States in a federation are not the same.

    “In New York, the Mayor controls the airport. Tinubu should be bold enough to restructure and refix the country.”

    Stressing the need for state police, he added: “Divisional Police Officer (DPO) knows the bad boys in the neighbourhood. He understands the language of the people. Every state police is local. It makes intelligence gathering easier.”

    George attributed the economic stagnation to the past nefarious activities of bank operators, who indulged in round-tripping and abuse of the exchange rate, saying that they should not be spared.

    He urged Central Bank Governor Yemi Cardoso, the son of an accountant, to replicate the efficiency of his illustrious father in the financial system.

    George urged the president to resolve the electricity crisis in the interest of manufacturing, the informal sector and productivity.

    He said: “Nigeria had 18 gas turbines when Obasanjo was in power. Millions of naira are spent on electricity. How can the informal sector survive?”

    NWC suspends Benue SWC after Ortom’s suspension

    The National Executive Committee (NEC) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has dissolved the Benue State Executive Committee chaired by Sir John Ngbede.

    The party, in a letter to the former chairman signed by the National Organising Secretary, Umar Bature, said the dissolution followed the expiration of his tenure.

    Bature also disclosed plans by the national leadership to set up a caretaker committee for the chapter.

    The letter reads: “This is to formally notify you of the expiration of the tenure of the current State Executive Committee of our Party in Benue State, having being elected four  years ago, that is, August 8, 2024.

    “This expiration is due to effluxion of time, pursuant to Section (47) of the Party’s Constitution.

    “Please, note that to avoid creating vacuum, the National Working Committee (NWC) has rescived to constitute a fresh State Caretaker Committee for your State.”

    Last week, the dissolved committee suspended former Governor Samuel Ortom for one month.

    Also, former Benue PDP Publicity Secretary Chief Bemgba Iortyom announced the suspension of Ortom’s predecessor, Senator Gabriel Suswam, from the party.

  • LG autonomy: Let restructuring follow, Bode George tells Tinubu

    LG autonomy: Let restructuring follow, Bode George tells Tinubu

    • Supreme Court judgement a distraction – Makinde

    Following last Thursday’s Supreme Court judgement that granted autonomy to local government areas, a former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Chief Bode George, has called on President Bola Tinubu to ensure a total restructuring of the country.

    George, a former  Chairman of the Nigerian Ports Authority while applauding the Supreme Court judgement said  the only way the country can work is by restructuring it.

     The PDP chieftain in a statement yesterday said:  “Thursday’s Supreme Court judgement stopping State Governments from retaining and using funds meant for the third tier of government – councils – is not only victory for democracy but a big boost for Nigeria’s political and economic development.

     “The apex court was precise and unambiguous in its verdict: Allocations to Local Governments must be paid directly from the Federation Account to councils governed by democratically elected officials.

     “”The judiciary has, once again, proved that it is the last hope of the common man.

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     “I also read President Bola Tinubu’s statement hailing the verdict and talking about restructuring. I want to advise the President that he must go further because what Nigerians want is a complete overhaul of the polity. That is the only way Nigeria can work. Nigerians want total restructuring,” he added.

     Meanwhile, Oyo governor, Seyi Makinde, has described the Supreme Court judgement on local government autonomy as a distraction.

     The governor said this when he hosted the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) executives, led by national president Chief Chris Isiguzo, at the Secretariat, Ibadan.

    He called on his colleagues to focus on productivity rather than being distracted by the Supreme Court judgement.

     He said: “There was a judgement at the Supreme Court, local government autonomy, financial autonomy and I   will still say it,  I think it’s just a distraction.

     “We must face the real issues that we have, and the issue that we have is that we are not producing enough, we are not productive.

     “Whatever it is we are sharing in Abuja, which is what this FAAC is all about or whatever is in Abuja, share it with the local governments, is that our problem?

     “Maybe it is a part of the problem but yes you want to have value for what you want to share, but our real problem is productivity.

     “But now this is going to be the discussion for the next one month when the issue of hunger and anger in the land will still be under the table, it’s a big issue.

    “The federal government is saying we have to import food, it’s a big shame, it’s a big shame on this country that we cannot feed ourselves.

     “And then we are saying we should go back to those things that will allow us to bring confidence back to our people, and to ensure that this country is back on the path of growth and progress.”

  • Why zoning crisis persists in PDP, by George

    Why zoning crisis persists in PDP, by George

    Former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Deputy National Chief Bode George spoke with reporters in Lagos on the first anniversary of the Tinubu administration, the crisis in the opposition party, reconciliation in the Lagos State chapter and other issues. EMMANUEL OLADESU reports.

    What is your assessment of President Bola Tinubu’s in his first year in office?

    In a year’s time, we can assess the methodology and performance of the government. Pitiably, some Nigerians have resorted to a blame game. Let me advise that we have to be careful in this country because Nigeria is not for any individual, group, or region. Nigeria belongs to everybody. Tinubu to come out and tell Nigerians the true position of things in the country,” adding that “this is not the time to play party or regional politics.

    Nigerians have suffered enough and they want fast results. This is the time for Tinubu to rejig his economic team. There are many Nigerians – from the North to the South – who can offer him economic advice that can turn this country around.”

    You said some time last year that former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar should not think of contesting the presidency again. But, a few days ago, he said he would continue to contest. What do you make of that? Our party has the grand norm which is the constitution of the party. The constitution was compiled by the founding fathers of the PDP and Dr. Alex Ekwueme will remain a respectable and responsible state-administrator. When General Abdulsalami Abubakar was going to leave, he asked politicians: What we do to make sure that we have a system that will never allow the military to ever come back to governance? He invited Chief Bola Ige, Jim Nwobodo, Solomon Lar, Adamu Ciroma and some other elders, including Abubakar Rimi, who came up with a brilliant idea. It is not novel because that is the same thing that happened in Switzerland. They divided Nigeria into six geo-political zones. Otherwise, we have the majority tribe and the minority tribe because the problem since 1960 has been the majority tribe will win the election, they have their say and they have their way and the minority tribes are just onlookers. That was the major crisis we had that led us to the coup, counter-coup and eventually the civil war. They divided Nigeria into six geo-political zones that captured both the majority tribes and the minority tribes. And they now came up with the top six positions in the land, president, vice president, Senate president, speaker of the House of Representatives, Secretary to the Government of the Federation and the national chairman of the party. They now said every eight years, all the positions in the Northern Region will come to the southern region and all the positions in the southern region will go to the orthern region and that when they come, it can rotate. The party does not microzone any position. If it comes to the South, they allow the people of the South to compete and if it is going to the North, they allow northerners to compete for the positions. That was very refreshing and that was what kept democracy alive.

    The moment we started tampering with that idea officially against our grand norm was what created the division in PDP. Atiku said if the party micro-zones the presidential ticket to the South-East; no, we don’t micro-zone. So, I want to appeal to him in the interest of millions of Nigerians, let this nation rise. It cost us so much because we were all there when it happened in the build-up to the 2023 general election. Section 7, sub-section 3C of the PDP constitution is very clear that the party must adhere to the zoning and rotation procedures of the party for party positions and elective positions. If you follow what happened at our national convention; the party cannot tell anybody not to contest because that is a fundamental right for every Nigerian who is cleared to vote or be voted for but the party must definitively state that the number one position is going down or up depending on who has held it. Is President Muhammadu Buhari from  Lagos State or Cross River State? He spent eight years in office and you came and said you want the North to continue for another four years. If you put the votes scored by Rabiu Kwankwaso, Peter Obi and Atiku, who will be in the Villa? So, I am praying because one is not getting younger but as long as I live, if we follow the constitution those founding fathers gave us, we will have no problem. But if we start to manipulate it, we will continue to fail. I hope we have learnt our lesson because a divided house will remain a defeated house. We don’t microzone because every zone in the South will compete and whoever wins becomes the party’s choice. Anybody from the North who wants to contest for the party’s presidential ticket in 2027 will not be stopped but the party by its rules must state categorically and emphatically that the position is zoned to the South. That is the responsibility of the managers of the party. If they don’t do that, those fathers who have passed on would be rolling in their graves. I must state that Dr. Ekwueme will remain a very special Nigerian. He conceptualized the meeting and they set up this party. Obasanjo was still in jail at that time but who benefited from that system? Ekwueme contested and he lost a d he never at any occasion raised his voice that he must have it because he was the one that proposed it. That is a civilized behavior, and today, in whatever way you want to Anybody from the North who wants to contest for the party’s presidential ticket in 2027 will not be stopped but the party must state categorically and emphatically that the position is zoned to the South

    What is the update on the reconciliation in the Lagos PDP?

    Even if you invite 99 per cent of the members to come and discuss, there will still be people who will complain. As far as the managers of the party are concerned, I personally did not see any problem among the elders. We heard a meeting here and one of them walked out, pretending that he was having toothache and he never came back.

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    I have served this party and I wanted to retire after the last elections but our people came and said you cannot take us to the middle of the sea and abandon us there.

    That made me to stay on. We are trying not only in  Lagos because once you go to battle and you lose, I want to challenge you go back into our history, any political party that is in power and losses an election, they hardly survive.

    Due to the maturity and the methodology that Ekwueme and his team adopted in establishing this party, it still remains the political Iroko in this country. That is why it still exists.

    I told you the story of how we lost the election. Peter Obi was a member of PDP, Rabiu Kwankwaso was a member and everybody was there but we failed to follow the rules and we paid a big price for it.

    Some of us have not kept quiet on party issues and we are keeping it alive from all the corners. No matter your age, we will bring you in because we are still talking.

    Will zoning not still be a challenge in 2027?

    I heard the former vice-president after a meeting with Peter Obi saying if the party micro-zone’s the presidential position to SouthEast, he will not contest.

    Have we ever micro-zoned? Even the All Progressives Congress (APC) that won the election; I always call them a congregation of strange bird fellows, but you can see what they are doing to unite the party and people are now up in arms, calling on the national chairman to resign. So, we will correct ourselves because the crisis in  Lagos PDP is not a crisis but conflicting interest of individuals looking for positions.

  • Rivers PDP crisis getting out of hands, says George 

    Rivers PDP crisis getting out of hands, says George 

    Former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Olabode George, has said that the Rivers State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) crisis is getting out of hand.

    He called on elders and other stakeholders to immediately intervene in the conflict “before it becomes a national conflagration.”

    Speaking in Lagos, George also warned President Bola Tinubu not to treat with levity the threat by some members of the House of Assembly to impeach Governor Siminalayi Fubara.

    The party elder described oil-bearing Rivers as one of the strongholds of the PDP, insisting that the state belongs to the PDP, adding that nobody should sit on the fence and pretend as if everything is okay.

    Alluding to Section 109 of the 1999 Constitution, George said the PDP lawmakers who defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) have automatically lost their seats “and they are in no position to threaten Governor Fubara. So, their plot to commence impeachment proceedings against the governor is already in vain.

    He said: “Rivers people belong to PDP. Those threatening to impeach the governor are being remote-controlled by some forces. This must stop because if Rivers is set on fire today, that may end this democracy. 

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    “We should remember ‘Operation Wetie’ which started in the defunct Western Region and eventually consumed the nation and ended the First Republic in 1966.

    “All the actors in this crisis in Rivers should avoid actions likely to cause breach of peace and breakdown of law and order in our country.”

    George added: “Members of the Board of Trustees (BoT) of our party should be the elders in the room, act swiftly and nip this crisis in the bud before it consumes everybody.

    “All the gladiators should also think of the collective interests of Nigerians.

    “Whether we are members of PDP, APC or other parties, we should stop issuing provocative statements to increase the tension in Rivers. Any move that can truncate this democracy must be stopped immediately. Enough is enough.”