Tag: candidates

  • Fashola: vote incumbent candidates with track record

    Fashola: vote incumbent candidates with track record

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola has said the track record of incumbent candidates seeking re-election should be the basis upon which Nigerians should cast their votes.

    According to the governor, incumbent candidates had enough time to prove their mettle when they were in office, pointing out that newbies making fresh promises are deceptive.

    Fashola spoke at the inauguration of a network of nine roads in Maidan-Aina-Agiliti area of Mile 12, Kosofe Local Government Area and 18-classroom block in Aiyedire Ajibola Senior High School, Ketu.

    He urged the electorate to reject politicians doling out foreign currencies and other incentives, noting that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was involved in this trend to induce the electorate.

    Challenging President Goodluck Jonathan, Fashola said he had failed in keeping the promises he made in 2011.

    “Has he done the Lagos Airport Road? He is back again promising you this and that. A government that has spent six years should be presenting its track record and achievements, instead of making empty promises again. Beware of them.

    “If you collect dollars, know that you have collected your security, your roads and your infrastructure.

    “It is demeaning, degrading and insulting that anyone who has made promises to come back and offer you money.

    “Tell them your dignity and your vote cannot be bought with naira or dollars.”

    The governor said the road project was evidence that his administration was keeping faith with the slum regeneration and urban renewal plan.

    “I was here in 2007 and this place was taken over by flood. The only source of movement from Kosofe to Maidan was by canoe. You were all very unhappy and asked for culvert and jetty.

    “I said no, since you pay your taxes, I promised to give you a first-class bridge and you have it today. This is for me the value of democracy, where you can hold politicians accountable,” he said.

    He emphasised that all politicians should keep their promises; otherwise they would not be eligible for re-election.

    On the new classroom blocks, he said any government that must discharge its responsibility must do so for the welfare of its children.

    “They must be taught survival skills. Build facilities and prepare them for what they want to do in life.

    “If you work in a place where you cannot be proud to invite children to come and visit you, then there is a problem. It elevates teaching, self esteem and pride of a teacher to say boldly that he is a teacher.

    “Every school will get grant for annual maintenance  All the money that would have been used to build schools and infrastructure, they are sharing it in dollars. Remember that while somebody brought dollar at the last minute, somebody has been under the sun for eight years.”

  • APC defends choice of Ortom, Gemade as candidates

    APC defends choice of Ortom, Gemade as candidates

    Senate Minority Leader George Akume has defended the choice of Dr. Samuel Ortom as the Benue State All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate.

    He described him as a patriot and community man, who is concerned about the plight of the people.

    Akume also justified the choice of Senator Barnabas Gemade as the flag bearer of the  party in Benue District.

    Senator Akume made the disclosure at the flag off of the APC campaigns at the RCM Primary School, Zaki-Biam, Ukum local government area.

    The former governor said, having worked closely with the former Minister of State, Industry, Trade, and Investment, he and other leaders had noticed his passions for development.

    He said, although it was the consensus of the people that the next governor should come from the Minda geopolitical axis,  he subscribed to the position of the late Senator J S Tarka that both the Tor Tiv and Governor should not come from the same lineage at the same time.

    Senator Akume denied claims that he hated a particular group among the Tiv, saying he loved the entire people and cannot discriminate against them.

  • Uba, Okonkwo, Emeka not substituted as PDP’s candidates

    The Court of Appeal, Abuja did not order the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to substitute the names of Chief Chris Uba, Senator Annie Okonkwo and Prince John Emeka as candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for Anambra South, Central and North senatorial districts.

    Counsel to the Ejike Oguebego-led Executive Committee of the PDP in Anambra State, Gordy Uche, said in Abuja on Saturday that contrary to media reports, the issue of who was the party’s candidate was never before the trial court and as such could not have formed part of the issue before the appellate court.

    Some media reports claimed that the Court of Appeal ordered INEC to substitute the names of Uba, Okonkwo and Emeka with that of Senator Andy Uba, Uche Ekwunife and Stella Oduah as the PDP candidates.

    Uche said the background was based on the judgment by Justice Kekemeke of the FCT High Court, in the case between Emma Mbamalu and Chuks Okoye.

    He said Mbamalu and Okoye were not parties in the case and that when  Oguebego learnt of the case and they (Oguebego and Okoye) applied to the court to be joined as interested parties, the court refused to join them, and went ahead with the matter.

    Uche said his clients later approached the same court, presided over by Justice Kekemeke to grant them leave to appeal against the judgment it gave in the case. The judge refused and in his ruling, he went into another issue which was not what was before him, by saying the tenure of Oguebego and his executive had lapsed.

    He went on: “But then, normally and legally judgments bind the parties before it. This Court of Appeal in its judgment tried to take the position now although they were not parties to the suit then, that the suit concerned the PDP in Anambra State, the one before Kekemeke but that is not the law because there were specific parties before Kekemeke and who the court also refused to grant leave to appeal. This judgment has nothing to do with the delegates’ lists.

    “It has nothing to do with the candidates whose name have been sent to INEC and another very important thing you should remember is that these candidates whose names have been submitted to INEC were not parties to either the case before Justice Kekemeke or the appeal before the Court of Appeal, and the Court of Appeal cannot now make an order to remove somebody whose name has already been sent to INEC.

    “You also remember the provision of the Electoral Act that once somebody’s name has been submitted to INEC, that it cannot be substituted or removed even by INEC except the person is dead or he resigns willingly, which is not the situation here.

    “These people whose names have been submitted are not dead, neither have they withdrawn from the race. So there is no way that judgment could be said to operate against these candidates. At worst, with relation to the Anambra State Executive Committee of the party, it brings the parties back to the status quo as if the judgment never existed, it does not mean that the primaries were never conducted or that their names ought to have been submitted in the first place.

    “It is also noteworthy that as at the time the matter was pending at the trial court, the primaries have not been held. So the issue of primaries was not what was before the trial court and cannot now be what is before the appellate court. Because an appeal is merely an appeal from the issues before the trial, so the issue of candidates was never before the trial, the issue was whether the PDP can be allowed to set up a caretaker committee to run the affairs of the state executive committee, whose tenure was still subsisting.

    “In previous decisions of these courts, including the Federal High Court Port Harcourt Division, they have all held that the tenure of the Oguebeho-led executive is still subsisting that the national body does not have the powers to appoint a caretaker committee.

    “So the issue being bandied about that INEC should remove Chris Uba, Prince John Emeka and Senator Annie Okonkwo was never before the Court of Appeal. INEC cannot even go ahead to act, based on that judgment because as at Friday, my clients, Oguebego and Chuks Okoye, have filed an appeal before the Supreme Court and also filed an application for a stay of execution.”

  • Abia electorate urged to vote credible candidates

    Abia electorate urged to vote credible candidates

    Abia South Senatorial candidate of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Chief Chris Nkwonta has urged voters in the state to cast their ballot only for credible people with a good record.

    Nkwonta, who was speaking when members of the Agalaba Youth Movement paid him a courtesy visit his country home, Akwete in Ukwa East Council, warned that if the people failed to vote in the right candidates, they would continue to elect those who have no business occupying political offices.

    “We must be careful in the quality of people we elect to represent us this time around. We need to elect the right people. They have started calling for your votes. Last week, I went to a campaign tour of Ibeme autonomous community in Obingwa local government. I discovered that the community has no electricity. I was moved and started the process of assisting them to get electricity. It was then that the PDP heard what I have done and also came in to assist the community.

    “The question is, why must Chris Nkwonta, a private person from Akwete in Ukwa East Local Government, be the one to discover that Ibeme, a community in a local government that produced a senator, has no electricity? It tells a lot about the type of representation we have had in the last eight years. If there has been no change in the last 8 years, what is the assurance that there will be change if we give them another four years?”

    The APGA senatorial candidate buttressing the need for credible candidates in various political positions from the local government to the federal level called for the election of people who have track records of performance into political offices to reduce the suffering of the masses.

    “If I have empowered many 2000 people through skill acquisition and tertiary education scholarships within my personal capacity, I will do more if I’m elected as a senator. We can’t continue like this. Cast and defend your votes, you won’t be disappointed. “

    In his address, Vice chairman of the Agalaba Youth Movement, Anthony Nnadozie said the Association accessed all the candidates seeking the senatorial seat and discovered that Nkwonta has the best credentials to represent the zone in 2015.

    According to him, “Abia South needs change and would rejoice with a more grassroots oriented representative like Chris Nkwonta in 2015.”

     

  • Of propaganda, issues and candidates

    Of propaganda, issues and candidates

    It was Abraham Lincoln, former President of the United States, who famously said: “Elections belong to the people. It’s their decision. If they decide to turn their back on the fire and burn their behinds, then they will just have to sit on their blisters.”

    The first time I read an advertorial in a newspaper, ‘advising’ the electorate not to vote for a particular presidential candidate, I was appalled at the extent to which some Nigerians had gone just to ‘sell’ their choice candidate in any political party they support.

    Many groups have sprung up to publicly support their preferred candidates and convince people to vote for them. They have been spending large amount of money daily to place adverts in national newspapers, all with the aim of ‘bringing down’ the opponent of their candidates. In the words of Dennis Adonis, voting is a method used to determine which politician was able to brainwash you the most.

    It is popularly said that desperate times require desperate measure. Some Nigerians are literally taking desperate actions in the bid to stop ‘unwanted’ candidates. Notable among these actions is a recently-published advertorial sponsored by Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose, which has been described by Advertising Practitioners Council of Nigeria (APCON) top official, Lolu Akinwunmi, as “unconventional, shocking, and controversial”. According to the National Publicity Secretary of All Progressives Congress, Alhaji Lai Muhammed, the advert “reflected the desperation of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).”

    Leadership is about service. Every candidate should banish thoughts of personal gain, pride and desire to stop opponents and begin to focus on the main issue of delivering the dividends of democracy and proffering solutions to the myriads of challenges plaguing the nation.

    Talking about dividends of democracy, necessity is upon politicians to provide them because the electorate they claim to represent is so desperately for the reward of voting in them party of their choice. Politicians must not resort to mudslinging; this insults the sensibilities of the people.

    So far, prominent issues being reported in the media are propaganda messages and insulting adverts against candidates vying for public offices. We hear such irrelevant words, such as stomach infrastructure, fake certificate, age and suchlike. But in the wake of all of these events and scandals that have trailed the electoral campaign period, the major thrust of the forthcoming elections remains that the welfare of Nigeria and its citizens in the next four years should not be relegated to the background, because it is the most important issue that must be brought to the fore.

    Nigeria is faced with challenges of insecurity, unemployment, corruption and mismanagement, among others things that need to be addressed. Whoever emerges leader should go into office with the interest of Nigerians at heart.

    Candidates and their supporters should desist from the bad attitude of casting aspersions on their opponents. They should start to reflect deeply on the battered state of the country and maybe when they have done that, they can begin to think up ways in which they can help to heal this already bruised nation.

    The electorate must also be careful in order not to be swayed by bogus campaign adverts and empty promises some politicians have employed to get their votes. The fate of the country in the next four years lies in the hands of the electorate. We should insist on voting the candidate that possesses the capability to deliver on his electoral promises. The best man in our opinion regardless of party or who is more powerful to churn out mendacities against another in campaigning, should win the race.

    If we elect a wrong leader, we will be left with no choice but to sit on our blisters.

    May the best man win!

     

    Joanna Olisa, 400-Level Mass Comm., UNILAG

  • Candidates promise good governance

    Candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and Labour Party (LP) Ado-Odo/Ota Local Government Areas of Ogun State have pledged honesty, transparency, total commitment and accountability, if elected.

    Biyi Otegbeye of the SDP, Solomon Orisabiyi, of the LP and Olayiwola Taiwo of the PDP are for contesting for the Senate while Ogunola Babatunde, of the SDP and Tunji Akinosi of the PDP are House of Representatives candidates spoke yesterday at a debate organised by The African Foundation for Environment and Development (AFED), in conjunction with about 40 trade associations and groups in the local government.

    The debate enabled the indigenes to interrogate the candidates on their manifestos for the development of the local government, if elected.

    The chief organiser, who is also AFED Executive Director, Adeshola Afariogun, said the event was meant to expose the candidates to the electorate to enable them vote for the best among them.

    He said the local government was important in Ogun State and in Nigeria because of its industrial estates.

    Afariogun said the local government is the most populous, industrialised and the second most industrialised local government in the country.

    The organiser said AFED was established with a focal point on democracy and good governance.

    He added that the organisation tackled health, environmental and agricultural issues.

    Afariogun said AFED was also concerned local government administration, especially in the implementation of policies and programmes.

    He said the organisation was interested in building effective governance and service delivery at the federal, state and local government levels.

    The aspirants promised to tackle infrastructural deficiency, unemployment, outages, ineffective healthcare system and dwindling educational standard.

  • Campaign finance and candidates’ reporting obligations

    SIR: The Electoral Act 2010 (as amended) makes elaborate provisions for the regulation of the finances of political parties and the electioneering expenditure of candidates and political parties. The provisions range from offences in relation to political party finances, period to be covered by annual report, power to limit contribution to a political party, limitation of elections expenses of candidates, election expenses of political parties, and disclosure by political parties. The Electoral Act by section 91 provided limitations in respect of campaign expenses of candidates running for different positions from the presidency to the councillor.

    It further provided for sanctions for spending above the limitation. A candidate who knowingly acts in contravention of the finance ceilings commits an offence and on conviction is liable. But this seems to be the end of the road in terms of the provisions as no reporting obligation was placed on candidates by the Act – before, during or after the elections. The foregoing raises several posers such as; how will INEC come to the conclusion that a candidate has spent above the ceiling when he is not bound to report? Was the omission of reporting obligations by the legislature a deliberate mischief in the law? This is a great lacuna in a candidate-centric system where the bulk of campaign expenses revolve around the candidate. On the other hand, the Act placed reporting obligations on political parties.

    However, INEC has taken steps to provide reporting obligations for candidates. It relied on S.153 of the Act which states that: “The Commission may, subject to the provisions of this Act, issue regulations, guidelines, or manuals for the purpose of giving effect to the provisions of this Act and for its administration thereof”. INEC has made provisions in the Guidelines and Regulations for Political Parties 2013. The Guidelines deal with the key issues of campaign office, fund raising by candidates and disclosure, books of accounts, anonymous contributions, audited returns.

    INEC has also designed reporting forms for candidates including forms to document costs of electronic and print media, campaign personnel, bill board advertisement, banners, hand bills and posters, door to door campaigns. Others issues to be captured in the forms include costumes, public address system, generators, hiring of vehicles, video coverage and photography, chairs, canopies, tables, branding of vehicles, consumables like food and drinks. Further, podiums, stage platforms, hire of entertainers such as comedians and musicians, venues decorations, dressing are included in the reporting form.

    These are positive developments. The only thing remaining to ensure that the candidates comply with these rules is the political will to enforce same. This is an opportunity for civil society including the media to ensure that the laws are respected. The trend of events after the February elections will show whether INEC will be ready and willing to enforce the guidelines.

     

    • Eze Onyekpere

    Wuse Zone 6, Abuja

  • Candidates to debate again in Abia

    Candidates to debate again in Abia

    After the success of the maiden edition, candidates vying for office in Abia State will take on one another and seek to convince the electorate to vote for them.

    The event, according to its organisers, Modern Communication Limited (MCL), is billed to hold in Umuahia, the capital, and Aba, the commercial nerve, in February.

    It will feature candidates of various parties contesting for various elective positions in the state.

    The General Manager (MCL), Mr. Ogwo Agu at a press briefing, disclosed that the essence of the media chat which would be transmitted live on their terrestrial network stations in Umuahia and Aba.

    He said the effort was part of the company’s social responsibility in providing a platform for the candidates seeking various elective positions in the state to present publicly their programmes.

    He said the programme would also provide the opportunity for the electorate to ask the candidates  questions.

    He also said a team of seasoned media professionals, captains of industry, civil rights activists would be on hand to seek answers from those who lead the state.

    Questions, it was said, will be asked in virtually every sector of the economy.

    Agu added that invitations had been sent to the expected candidates.

    Agu disclosed that the media chat featuring candidates for National Assembly positions from the Umuahia zone would hold on February 6 while that of the Aba zone would hold on February 7.

    He said that the debate sessions for governorship candidates would hold on February 20 and 21 in Umuahia and Aba, expressing the hope that the event would not only serve as any eye opener for the electorate in choosing whom to cast their votes for, but also add value to the building of a healthy democratic process in the state.

    The MCL General Manager who described the maiden edition of the programme as a successful one stated that participation in the exercise which they hope to sustain was free for all the candidates and added that they were acting according to NBC (Nigeria Broadcasting Commission) and INEC election guidelines.

    “Abians want the best in 2015 and we will never look back in giving them the best; that is why we are soliciting the assistance of you journalists, our colleagues from other media to help us make this year’s event worthwhile,” he said.

     

  • Are candidates addressing issues?

    Are candidates addressing issues?

    Is President Goodluck Jonathan utilising effectively the opportunities available to him to ensure that his re-election bid sails through seamlessly? Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI looks at the President’s campaign vis-à-vis that of his main challenger, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari. 

    With the general elections about two weeks away, the campaigns are in full swing. The competition to occupy the moral high ground is intense. This is not unexpected; elections and campaigns are noisy enterprises. But,  the campaign for next month’s general elections is assuming a worrisome dimension because the candidates are not addressing the issues. The two major political parties — the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC) — may have been paying lip service to running an issue-based campaign, but for most part they have been abusing each other and heating up the polity.

     

    Diversionary tactics

    Indeed, the PDP has been criticised by many observers for what have been described as a diversionary tactics; to shift away the focus of the campaign from the burning issues, such as corruption in high places, the insurgency in the Northeast, the inability of the government to rescue abducted Chibok school girls, unemployment and the fate of the power roadmap.

    The APC has been making an effort to focus on issues. Judging from the messages filtering to the public, its campaign appears to be more focused, specifically on the issue of fighting corruption, tackling the insurgency and giving the country a new direction generally.

    The same cannot be said for the ruling PDP. For most part, the party’s campaign has been focused more on the personality of the APC standard bearer, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, than anything else. Initially, it was the allegation of religious bigotry and plan of islamising Nigeria that was on the front burner of the campaign. Later, attention shifted to Buhari’s age, his health and capacity to function in a modern economy. Now, Gen. Buhari and the APC presidential campaign team are being compelled to focus on the issue of the candidate’s educational qualification.

    Besides, the campaign posters, billboards and newspaper advertisements of President Jonathan appear to lack coordination and focus, compared to that of his major opponent in the election. According to experts, the content of the campaign communication materials suggest that they do not pass through a central coordinating authority or clearing house, as expected in a campaign of this nature.

     

    Smear campaign

    In particular, it is generally believed that the advertisement by the Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose last week, suggesting that Buhari could die in office, is politically damaging to the President’s re-election bid. It has been widely condemned as insensitive. The advert suggested that Buhari could die in office, as was the case with three former Nigerian leaders from the Northwest geo-political zone. Two days after the advert appeared in two national dailies, the National Human Rights Commission carpeted Fayose and a Roman Catholic Priest, Rev. Fr. Ejike Mbaka, who had earlier used his pulpit to preach politically partisan messages, saying they contravened provisions of the Electoral Act prohibiting the use of hate speech in campaigns.

    The commission, through its chairman, Dr. Chidi Odinkalu, said the recent advertorial sponsored by Fayose and Mbaka’s comments on candidates constituted hate speeches barred by sections 95 to 102 of the Electoral Act. Odinkalu added: “Father Mbaka has violated the Electoral Act twice with his comments first in favour of President Jonathan and the second in favour of Gen. Buhari. Section 92 to 102 prohibits hate speeches. It prohibits the use of religious places for political campaigns.”

     

    Buhari under attack

    Buhari has come under attack as an ex-military Head of State for seizing power from a democratically-elected government in December 1983. For the PDP, it is perhaps a case of a leopard and its spots. The party, which has been in power since 1999, has been whipping up the politics of fear, harking back to the days of the former army general’s crackdown on corruption and indiscipline. “No matter how many pretty robes you wear, once a tyrant, always a tyrant,” one PDP newspaper advertisement said, with photos of Buhari in military uniform, a dinner jacket and ethnic attire. Others evoked the fear of jailing political opponents or his muzzling of the media during his 20 months in power. Whether the tactic will pays off for the PDP remains to be seen.

    But, for political observers, the standard of the campaign is a worrying development, arguing that it does little to help enhance already shaky confidence in the country’s leaders. “I think it has a negative impact on the political process and citizens aren’t able to see the quality of people running for election,” said Clement Nwankwo, Director of the Policy and Legal Advisory Centre, a pro-democracy group. “What they see are personal attacks, falsehoods and political smearing… that has not elevated the debate,” he noted. For Nwankwo, the APC has fallen into a PDP trap by responding to the claims, instead of rebutting the allegations by continually questioning the government’s achievements.

    Dapo Thomas, a lecturer at the Lagos State University, called it a “gutter campaign” borne out of fear in the PDP that it could lose power for the first time in 16 years.  The electorate may be able to see through it, he suggested, particularly as some of the issues had not been raised on the three previous occasions that Buhari contested the presidential election. “They (the PDP) have seen the writing on the wall,” he added.

    The President committed a monumental blunder at the Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos, when he flagged off his campaign, by not seizing the opportunity to explain to Nigerians the reasons why they have not started feeling the positive impact of his Transformation Agenda and what he intends to do, if re-elected. Rather than focusing on issues, he chose to take a swipe at past administrations, including that of his major opponent, for poorly equipping the military. This is in addition to indicting his generation for failing to do something to contribute to the development of Nigeria. In what seems like a clear failure of anger management for a public figure, the President has been hurling invectives in all directions.

     

    Missing link

    Even, supporters of the President are not happy over the way his re-election campaign is being prosecuted. The mood at the President’s interactive forum with the organized private sector and leaders of professional bodies last Sunday suggests that his re-election bid is losing steam. The impression that assailed many observers at the event is that the problem of the administration is that of poor perception by the public and that the problem is self-inflicted. Some of President Jonathan’s ministers were on hand to reel out achievements of the administration, which are to some extent verifiable. They include the Minister of Finance and the Co-ordinating Minister for the Economy Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Minister of Petroleum Resources Mrs. Diezani Allison-Maduekwe, Minister of Agriculture Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, Minister of Trade and Investment Dr. Olusegun Aganga and Minister of Works Mr. Mike Onolememem. The ministers tried desperately to convince the audience that the administration has posted a scintillating performance in the last four years.

    But, given the achievements that were enumerated, the missing link, as pointed out by the Managing Director of Emzor Pharmaceuticals Limited Mrs. Stella Okoli, is communication. The impression was that those in charge of the government’s publicity are not doing a good job of it. The thrust of the achievements is that the administration has succeeded in diversifying the economy, as the recent rebasing suggested. In his response to the comment, President Jonathan admitted that his administration may not have done enough in terms of publicity. His words: “If I tell you the number of times that my ministers appeared on television to showcase what the administration is doing, you won’t believe it. But, still it doesn’t penetrate. Probably, they are using more of television; we must find a way of doing this, so that people would know what government is doing.”

     

    Lack of articulation

    It was also obvious at the interactive forum, which was well attended by many captains of industries, that the President did not equally live up to his promise of holding such forum with the corporate world as regularly as he had promised. Jonathan acknowledged this by apologizing to the house that he could not sustain the interaction, which was supposed to take place quarterly. The Corporate Forum’s evening with President Jonathan, which also doubled as a fund-raising event, was almost a desperate plea by the ruling party to secure the backing of the private sector. Captains of industries that graced the occasion include Oba Otudeko, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, Mr. Femi Otedola, Mr. Jim Ovia and Mr. Atedo Peterside.

    In terms of their manifestoes and programmes, observers say there is no much difference the PDP and the APC; as they are still preoccupied by what has been described as “infrastructural democracy”, which focuses on the provision of roads, power, education, healthcare, housing and the like. For instance, oil industry operators have taken a swipe at the presidential aspirants, saying that electioneering campaigns are not issue based, but more of mud sliding.

     

    Vote of no confidence

    Some of the operators expressed dissatisfaction that Nigerians are being taken for granted, as the aspirants are not identifying specific policies that will save the oil-dependent Nigerian economy from doom in the light of current realities of sliding oil prices. One of such respondents, the Managing Director/Chief Executive of Frontier Oil and Gas, Mr. Dada Thomas, said, “I’ve watched and listened to all the campaigns by the presidential aspirants in the different regions, and I’ve not seen or heard any issue based campaign from any of them.”

    He added: “Such a development is a shame because what the private sector operators and Nigerians want to hear are: what are the issue, problems and challenges; what are the solutions and what we are going to do from level 1 to level 2; and what is the time bound for effecting these solutions? But they are not saying anything, and are busy attacking their personalities. Is this what Nigerians want to hear, or the aspirants saying that Nigerians do not understand the issues affecting their daily lives?”

    While acknowledging that the campaigns are not issue-based, the President, Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE), Mr. Chikwe Edoziem, noted that the aspirants are playing safe by concentrating more on common place issues that will appeal to the electorates. He said: “Nobody is making any economic comments or in deed any comment on the industry (oil and gas), which is the bedrock of the economy in the light of global developments. Rather, they talk about roads and other basic infrastructures which is taken for granted in other climes that the common man can relate to.”

    Edoziem, however, blamed the trend on lack of understanding, saying, “They (the aspirants) are not saying anything possibly because none of them is well grounded on economic operations, and may want to stick to what they know.” Nevertheless, a confrontation on the economy would become inevitable for all the contestants, especially Buhari and Jonathan, when they square up to each other face-to-face, to tell Nigerians how they intend to implement their party manifestoes.

  • Vote for credible candidates, Abatemi-Usman urges Nigerians

    The Vice Chairman, Senate Committee on Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Nurudeen Abatemi-Usman, has called on eligible voters in the to vote for candidates that will bring about development at all levels of governance, regardless of whatever political parties they belong to.

    According to a statement by his media assistant, Michael Jegede, the senator, representing Kogi Central Senatorial District made the call while addressing the mammoth crowd that came to show him solidarity, upon his arrival in Okene to formally inform members of his constituency that he was  in the Senatorial.

    Abatemi-Usman was among the senators, who recently quit the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as a result of the injustice meted out to them in the last primary election. He has secured the ticket of the Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA) to pursue his second term ambition in the Senate.

    The PPA senatorial candidate in Kogi Central said: “I thank you all for your unflinching support all this while since you gave me the mandate to represent you in the Senate. I have come to let you know that I am still fully involved in the senatorial contest for Kogi Central holding on February 14, 2015. I am now running on a different platform which is the Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA).

    “My dear people, I seek your continued support and I assure you that I will not relent in my pursuit to ensure the sustenance of peace in Ebiraland, where political thuggery and violence will continue to remain a thing of the past. I urge you, and indeed, the entire Nigerians, not to vote for party in the coming election, but to look out for credible candidates that will change things for the better in the interest of the masses, irrespective of the political party on whose ticket they are running in the election.”