Tag: Chief Timipre Sylva

  • To spoil a poll

    To spoil a poll

    The Bayelsa State guber poll conjured the image of the red-blooded male. He is not distinguished by height or girth, although it helps. His distinction lies in the journey of his muscles. When shirtless, his torso is a work of art, as well as his abdominal region. For the well-fed and well-exercised, the red-blooded male presents a picture of primitive warior. Regions of his skin line up like boxes that some call six packs. Each pack tics, throbs and crackles.

    Above that vista of masculine ardour stands an unpredictable visage. It might look coy, retiring, menacing. The eyes may blaze or look fazed. The muscular message below tells the onlooker that the face may be deceptive and, like Shakespeare noted, “there is no art to find the mind’s construction in the face.” Some have faces that explode with violence and the muscles act it. Some have satiny looks but hoist blood and death, and you do not know such men until they are in charge of things.

    Unlike the puny case of Kogi State, you had to be a man in the electoral trenches of Bayelsa. But muscles were not enough. Guns. Bombs. Boats. They fed the red blood.

    They may be cocks, well feathered, cawing in primal rhythms and glowing with machismo. But without weapons, such men are effeminate in the electoral wars of the “Glory of all Lands.”

    When APC candidate Timipre Sylva gave a press briefing last week over the cancelled poll in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area, he gave a hint of the boil in the Bayelsa waters. He said on a number of times, he had to place calls to the security forces to counter the goons ferrying ballot papers and unleashing mayhem. Waxing poetic, he said some of his calls died “like a candle in the wind.” His claim has not been denied. In Ekeremor, the Minister of State for Agriculture, Heineken Lokpobri, had to be rescued by security forces when thugs, apparently for the opposing PDP, barreled into his compound with guns and bombs.

    When the results of Ekeremor Local Government were announced, an APC member rose to protest on live television. The INEC officer motioned him to sit. At the same time the PDP representative also made a counter-claim of violence. The INEC man noted on live television that there was another forum for complaint.

    So, why did the INEC cancel the Southern Ijaw poll, and not Ekeremor, or Nembe or Sagbama? The law of course says an election can be cancelled in cases of violence and over-voting. If the election was cancelled on violence ground in Southern Ijaw, it was unfair to violence to respect it in one place and disrespect it in another. In the law, all violence is created equal, and should be punished accordingly. The law did not prescribe scale of violence.

    The poll also provided a clear irony. The PDP – and Seriake Dickson – was ahead in six of the seven local government results, but he manifested not only anxiety but lawlessness. The snag was that Southern Ijaw could wipe out his lead and give the victory to his opponent, Sylva. He committed two wrongs that, in a normal society, he should have stepped out of the race or/ and be disqualified from the contest.

    One, he visited Southern Ijaw’s capital and also the INEC office. The army, in its press briefing on Saturday, alluded to it, and claimed that his presence ratcheted up the violence in Southern Ijaw. The governor had no problem with the elections holding in his strongholds. When it got to Southern Ijaw, he quilted and turned into a lawless man in government house. He became a retailer of violence.

    Two, the governor also went live on Bayelsa Radio to incite the people of the state against the Federal Government. If Nnamdi Kanu can be called a subversive for invoking Biafra, Seriake Dickson with his imperial swagger and walking stick, was Kanu’s counterpart in government. He provoked tribe, calling the Ijaw nation to rise against the plot by the centre to disenfranchise them. Indeed some people responded and came to the street, especially some women in the colour of mourning clothes. The police had to caution him and remind the people of the state that such a rally contravened the electoral law.

    If Dickson were charged to court today, he would not escape the law. What he did was criminal and in contempt of the tranquil principle of society and the dictates of the Nigerian constitution. He acted the alpha male, the red-blooded goon in official toga. He exhibited the Neanderthal spirit of the ruffian in office. He was a governor as caveman.

    Southern Ijaw, according to the APC, was their stronghold. Sylva claims he has won the election because he believes the votes from that densely populated area could wipe out about 30,000 votes that Dickson had over him in other local governments. In the United States, anytime a Democrat wins a presidential election, he often lags until the California numbers come in. That state can wipe out aggregate votes from the south. That was the scenario APC thought was emerging with Southern Ijaw. Why did the Resident Electoral Officer announce the cancellation instead of the returning officer? The returning officer was not reported sick, captured or fired.

    The new INEC boss must avoid the image incompetent and bumbling umpire with inconclusive elections.

    Elections are not supposed to be deathbeds of innocence or the celebration of red-blooded males. It does no glory to Bayelsa nor to Nigeria that in the 20th century, it’s not the vote of the hand but the hand of violence that determines the victor. It is even worse when the umpire presents itself without evenhandedness. Democracy is not for Thomas Hobbes’ state of nature, or for Nietzsche’s superman. It is for John Locke’s spirit of equity.

    The red-blooded men are good when they guard us and foster our virtues with their strength. “Only the weak are cruel,” noted Leo  Buscaglia, also know as Dr. Love. “Gentleness can only be expected from the strong.” They are not strong when they bully. Playwright Aristophanes moaned the Peloponnesian War and wrote a play in which the women withdrew sexual favours from their men in order to force them to stop violence. The play known as Lysistrata is not only good for Bayelsa but for Nigeria. To rein in the red-blooded male, take away his libido. It worked in Aristophanes in triggering negotiations about war. When a man needs weapons rather than words, he admits he has lost the argument.

    In Bound to Violence, Yambo Ouologuem laments in his novel Africa’s fascination with waste and spoils. In his play, A Streetcar Named Desire, Tennessee Williams turns red-blooded Stanley into a mutant soul and rapist. We don’t want that in our election. But fair is fair. If INEC cancels the polls in one place, it has to do same elsewhere. If it tolerates it in one place as it has done in Yenagoa, Nembe and Ekeremor, its conscience should allow it accept the polls raked in at Southern Ijaw. Democracy fails when it is not fair.

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  • APC sure of winning Bayelsa

    APC sure of winning Bayelsa

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said that it is confident that it will still emerge victorious in the governorship election in Bayelsa state despite the poor performance in the seven local government areas where elections has been concluded.
    Acting National Publicity Secretary of the party, Comrade Timi Frank who expressed the party’s optimism on Thursday, said even though the party lost six of the seven local government where results have been announced so far, it was confident that when the supplementary election is conducted, the APC will emerge victorious.
    Speaking with newsmen in Abuja, Frank said the infighting within the party in the state was largely responsible for the poor performance of the party in six of the seven local government areas where elections have been concluded and results announced by INEC.
    He said that there were issues resulting from the conduct of the governorship primary in the state, pointing out that the governorship candidate of the party should be able to correct the mistakes he made that put the party in the current position.
    He said: “This is the beginning of the battle. The battle is not yet over because we still have a rerun election and we are waiting for INEC to give us a new date. By the grace if god, that local government t is a very big one that has a lot of votes.
    “Yes, we must have lost in the other six local government areas that has been announced. But we are still hopeful that if we come together as a party, we will achieve a lot.
    “I can tell you clearly that the only reason why we lost the local government areas we have lost is because there are internal crisis in Bayelsa and I made this clear before today. Those crisis are still there till today. For example, our governorship candidate has not spoken to me since after the primary election.
    “There are so many people still aggrieved within the party and there are those who don’t have the courage to speak out and that is why we lost in those a areas we lost. If we came together from the beginning as one, if you were united before the election and everyone seems to be happy what happened in Bayelsa would not have happened.
    “However whatever has happened is history today, but I pray that the candidate himself should be able to correct whatever wrong or mistakes he must have made to put our party in this situation. Now that we are expecting a local government that has a very big votes, if we do well to correct our wrongs, I believe that we can still get victory from that local government”.
    Frank who insisted that he was the constitutionally recognized spokesman of the party with the exit of the National Publicity Secretary said the party and indeed Nigerians were not prepared for what happened in Kogi state, but expressed satisfaction with the way the party handled the issue.
    “Sorry to say that we were not prepared for what happened in Kogi State. But as a party, we just had to take a decision. We were also conscious of the fact that who ever the party choose, people will still go to court. So, we can not be stagnant as a party and we had to come up with a decision.
    “Whatever decision was taken, the party consulted widely, spoke with the people of Kogi state, did all our checks before taking the decision that was taken. As a party, we have taken a decision and it is left for people who feel aggrieved to challenge it in the court of law. Whatever such the outcome of such litigations, as a party, we respect the rule of law. We I’ll give the judiciary the opportunity at this point in time to interprete the laws and what ever the court says, as a party, we will abide by it”.
    On who speaks for the party with the exit of Lai Mohammed, Frank said “I can tell you clearly that our party constitution is very clear and for anybody who does not understand the party constitution within the party, as at today, I am the Acting spokesperson of the party.
    “It is very clear that when either the National Chairman, the National Secretary or anybody is not there today, the deputy takes over automatically. This is the principle contained in the party constitution. We have this also existing today in the PDP. You can see that when Mauzu left, Secondus is today acting Chairman of the party.
    “It is not different. Today, Lai Mohammed is not there and so, I am the Acting spokesperson of the party. Any other person issue ing statements for the party is doing so in his personal capacity. But constitutionally, I am the Acting Spokesperson of the party. It is not something I need to lobby of beg somebody within the party for. It is skiing that is meant to be the trend and no by it”.
    On whether he believed that the Buhari government can sustain the N5000 payment to unemployed Nigerians. Comrade Timi Frank said “I can tell you clearly that for the President to come up with this kind of budget, I believe he must have commuted himself to Nigerians and is trying to key into his promises to Nigerians and see how he can turn things around to make sure that whatever promise he has made can really are sustained.
    “He has competent hands. You can see that he has been traveling from one country to another looking for solutions and how Nigeria can really move forward under his leadership. Sustainability is not going to be an issue because he has a team which can deliver.
    “I believe they are going to look for ways of sustaining what he has promised Nigerians. I will only appeal to Nigerians to give him the opportunity to see how he will achieve whatever he must have promised.
    “Let us just give him a chance and be hopeful and trust that Mr. president, known to be somebody who keep to his words, is going to achieve the promise he has made to Nigerians”.

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  • 8, 000 ad hoc staff for Bayelsa guber poll -INEC

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in Bayelsa has said that more than 8, 000 ad hoc staff would be engaged in the Dec.5 governorship election in the state.

    Mr Baritor Kpagih, the state Resident Electoral Commissioner, stated this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Yenagoa on Saturday.

    He said that the commission’s permanent staff would also be actively involved in the conduct of the election.

    “We will involve ad hoc staff, more than 8, 000 of them will be recruited; definitely in election period, most of our permanent staff are always involved.

    “The ad hoc staff have been trained on what they should be doing while on duty; some of them were trained at the local government area headquarters.

    “INEC in Bayelsa is working with the electoral guidelines and we will continue to do our best in ensuring that the governorship election in the state is succesful,’’ he said.

    Miss Chinelo Okoafor, a member of the National Youth Service Corps in Bayelsa, told NAN that she was one of the trainees, saying that she was ready to work in accordance with INEC guidelines.

    “During the training we were taught so many things, I believe we are going to ensure the most credible and acceptable election,’’ she observed.

  • Gunmen abduct Sylva’s cousin

    Krinpere Douglas, a cousin to the All Progressive Congress (APC) governorship candidate in Bayelsa, Chief Timipre Sylva, has been abducted.

    The Nation gathered that Douglas was abducted on Monday by unknown gunmen.

    He was reportedly abducted in the afternoon along the Ogbia-Brass waterways when the gunmen attacked boats conveying him and other Sylva’s supporters to a campaign rally in Brass local government area of the state.

    The state’s Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Asinim Butswat, said the incident has not been officially reported to the police.

    But the Director, Media and Publicity, Sylva/Igiri Campaign Organisation (SICO), Mr. Nathan Egba, confirmed the incident.

    He said Douglas was the only one abducted from the boat after the attack.

    “The victim was coming to the campaign but unfortunately, their boat was attacked by the gunmen who abducted and took him to an unknown destination,” he said.

     

  • I will overcome persecution, says Sylva

    I will overcome persecution, says Sylva

    Former Governor of Bayelsa State, Timipre Sylva on Friday maintained that he will overcome the persecution against him. 

    He is presently facing corruption charges in the court.

    Speaking with State House correspondents after a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, he said that what he is going through is a passing phase that would come to pass.  

    He wondered why his case is being celebrated even though he is not against prosecution if anything tangible was found against him.

    He pointed out that there had been many persons who were invited quietly by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) without being publicized like his own case.  

    According to him, each time he had a case, his photographs would take over the front pages of newspapers the following day.

    On whether he knows where the persecution was coming from, he said he didn’t know. 

    But he said: “If somebody is dancing, someone is beating the drum somewhere.”

    He stressed that he was not the only former governor in the country. 

    “It is really uncalled for the way certain people are trying to celebrate my case above every other case as if mine is the singular case. There have been cases there for a long time.” He added

    He also said that the All Progressives Congress (APC) will come out of the present crisis rocking it at the National Assembly in the choice of leadership positions.

    Those who were thinking that the crisis would lead to the disintegration of the party, he said, were wrong as the party remains resilient  and would emerge stronger after the present crisis.

    According to him, the party will also recapture Bayelsa State government house in the forthcoming governorship election.

  • Sylva’s loyalist languishes in police cell

    Sylva’s loyalist languishes in police cell

    Indications emerged yesterday that Sir Tonye Okio, a loyalist of former Bayelsa State governor, Chief Timipre Sylva, is being detained by the Bayelsa State Police Command.

    Okio, who is also the interim Publicity Secretary of the new Peoples Democratic Party (nPDP) in the state, was initially believed to have been abducted by unknown gunmen in his Abuja home.

    But the police command in a statement by its acting spokesman, Mr. Peter Ogboi, confirmed that Tonye was arrested by the police.

    He said his arrest and detention was part of an investigation into alleged activities of a syndicate, which specialised in spreading seditious information.

    “The suspect, whose colleagues are at large, will be arraigned in court when investigation is completed,” Ogboi said.

    Okio’s travails began shortly after he allegedly published in his Facebook page that a certain Southsouth governor was recently arrested in the United States of America with $5million.

    The publication, which sent rumours flying in Bayelsa, with many linking it to Governor Seriake Dickson, was described by the police as seditious.

    But a group of civil rights activists led by Mr. Doifie Buokoribo, former chief press secretary to Sylva, faulted the claims of the police and demanded release of Okio.

    Doifie accused the police of engaging in illegality. He said there was no longer such offence as sedition in the country’s law.

    “The Nigeria Police should know that the offence of sedition does not exist under Nigerian laws. The courts expunged it in the Second Republic following the celebrated case of Arthur Nwankwo versus the State,” he said.

    Highlighting the circumstances that led to the fate that befell Okio, Doifie said: “Tonye Okio was abducted in Abuja on Saturday morning by men of the Special Investigation Bureau (SIB) of the Nigeria Police and taken to Yenagoa where he is being detained over his alleged comments on Facebook, considered unfavourable to the powers that be.

    “He expressed his views and not those of any social or political affiliation, including Sylva, whom he serves as a media adviser. The abduction and detention of Okio is illegal, unfair and unsympathetic.

    “He accused Governor Dickson of being the mastermind of what he described as grand impunity.”

    On how Okio was arrested, he said: “On October 26, about 15 men, including plain-clothes Special Investigation Bureau (SIB) officials and those attached to the Police Mobile Force (otherwise called kill-and-go police), invaded the Abuja home of Tonye Okio with three vehicles (one Prado sport utility vehicle and two police escort vans) and seized him. Thereafter they took his iPAD, his mobile phones and those of his younger sister.

    “After getting their target, he was taken to the headquarters of the Abuja Command of the Nigeria Police. He stayed with his abductors, who claimed they were arranging a flight to take him to Yenagoa via the Port Harcourt International Airport.

    “When the flight arrangement failed, the police took Tonye by road. They left Abuja about 4pm on Saturday and arrived Yenagoa about 1am on Sunday. He was taken to the State Criminal Investigation Department (CID) of the Nigeria Police where he is being detained illegally.

    “The police authorities claim that Okio will be charged with allegedly writing in his Facebook page that an unnamed Southsouth governor was recently caught in the U.S. with 5 million USD.

    “Tonye has denied the charge. Since his detention, he has been denied access to visitors. Police sources said they have been instructed by Police Commissioner Hillary Opara to deny that Tonye Okio is at the State CID.

    “In addition to the regular police that man the gates of the State CID, the surroundings have been taken over by 10 mobile policemen, apparently because of his high value.

    “If Governor Dickson believes he is the person alleged to have issues of money laundering in the U.S., he should know what to do as a lawyer. Using the police to harass, intimidate and blackmail a political opponent is indecent. Besides, this action amounts to a privatisation of the Nigeria Police.

    “Sir Tonye Okio served as special representative in Abuja to former governor Sylva. He is also the Publicity Secretary of the new Peoples Democratic Party (nPDP) in Bayelsa State.

    “He is a well-known critic of President Goodluck Jonathan over his bad governance, despite that he is from the Ogbia axis of Bayelsa State like Mr. President. It is therefore impossible not to read political meanings to his ordeal. Keeping Tonye in detention ostensibly for social media activism is a national embarrassment. It insults our collective intelligence. Free Tonye now!”

  • I have only three properties in Abuja, says Sylva

    I have only three properties in Abuja, says Sylva

    •They were acquired before I became governor

    •Insists he has nothing to do with 48 choice buildings

    Embattled former governor of Bayelsa State,Chief  Timipre  Sylva ,says he and his wife have only three properties in Abuja and have nothing  to do with the 48 choice buildings the Economic and  Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) said it seized from him last week.

    Chief Sylva, in a statement by his counsel,Benson Ibezia yesterday  ,said he  does not have 48 properties anywhere in the world.

    Ibezia,in the statement said: “ The three properties he has in Abuja had been secured by an order of court granted by F.C.T. High court and the Attorney General of the Federation and EFCC have been duly served since the 27th day of December, 2012.

    “The three properties covered by the order of F.C.T. High Court are properties that

    were legitimately acquired by Chief Timipre Sylva and his wife before he became the Executive Governor of Bayelsa State .

    “ The records are quite clear on these properties as there is no iota of doubt as to the period of their acquisition-moreso as these properties were duly declared by Chief Timipre Sylva on his assumption of office as the Governor of Bayelsa State.

    “It must be observed that we became aware of the interim order of attachment granted to EFCC on 4th day of January, 2013 as same was attached to the court process that was served on us by EFCC on the said 4th January, 2013.

    “It is elementary knowledge of law that a party can only be bound by an order of court upon service of the court order on the party. Chief Timipre Sylva was not aware of the existence of any order of Federal High court against him as none was served on

    him.

    “It is worthy to note that the Attorney General of the Federation and EFCC were duly served with the order of F.C.T. High Court on the 27th day of December, 2012.

    “ Rather than obeying the order of court, EFCC in flagrant disregard to the order of court are taking steps in respect of the properties by writing to the occupants of the properties covered by the order of court. EFCC being a creation of law is expected to be law abiding and are advised to have respect for the order of court of FCT High court of 27th day of December, 2012 regarding the properties covered by the court order.

    “It should also be mentioned that when Chief Timipre Sylva became aware of the sinister plan of EFCC to humiliate him by throwing him out of his house that was bought before he became the Governor of Bayelsa state, we wrote a letter to the

    Attorney General of the Federation and the Chairman of EFCC. Till date both of

    them did not response to the said letters.

    “We seriously frown at the practice of media trial and commendation without getting to the root and substance of the facts. Trials are done in Courts of law and not on the pages of newspapers where the general public is fed with all manner of falsehood, including imaginary 48 houses.”