Tag: Crippled

  • Went to monitor election, crippled by accident

    Went to monitor election, crippled by accident

    A road crash while on election monitoring assignment in Gombe State has left Peter Okosun, a human rights activist, crippled, his family shattered. He needs help from anyone who can give it, VINCENT OHONBAMU reports

    Since the accident, Peter Okosun has been feeling as though the world was crashing down on him. He cannot walk except aided by a pair of crutches, one under each arm. Even then, his movement is laborious and painful. The wounds did not heal properly when he was first taken to hospital. Why? He lacked the money to undergo a comprehensive surgery. His family is a shambles. His wife, a nurse, is buckling under the weight of daily responsibilities. Their children have been withdrawn from school for their serial fees defaults.

    Okosun has no viable means of livelihood, but he would not sit and groan all day. Sometimes he hobbles to motor parks to pray for those about to travel, asking God to spare them what he went through on the road. Moved by pity and also in hopes that God will answer the prayers, they would hand him some small amounts of money. Okosun will hobble back home and hand it over to his hard-working wife. Still, what he brings home is not enough. So sometimes the wife and the children go out to beg.

    Okosun needs N2m for a surgery that will help him walk again, he told The Nation.

    A human rights activist, and coordinator of Pan African Peace Initiative, a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Okosun left his family in 2010 to monitor an election in Gombe State. He neither completed the assignment nor has been able to fend for his family ever since.

    He was lucky, though. Three others in the vehicle he was travelling in died. Okosun came away with very severe wounds that left him unable to walk but which were not properly treated.

    Okosun who hails from Uromi in Esan Northeast Local government area of Edo State said he would welcome death as a relief, but since death will not come, he is now appealing to the general public for donations to enable him carry out the recommended surgery that would enable him regain the use of his legs and lead a normal life again.

    The ghastly accident that crippled him occurred in the course of monitoring elections for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in Gombe State.

    Okosun visited the Correspondents’ Chapel Secretariat of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Gombe to solicit the journalists’ help in publicising his predicament so that help may come from anywhere, including corporate bodies and government.

    Relieving his ordeal, Okosun said he met his fate along Gombe-Dukku Expreeway in August 2010. The NGO he coordinated was accredited by the electoral body to monitor Gombe North Senatorial by-election as an election observer.

    He said they were on their way to Gombe metropolis when their vehicle had a head-on collision with another. The driver and two female colleagues died immediately. It took the intervention of the Nigeria Television Authority (NTA) crew which was following closely behind to get him to the now Federal Teaching Hospital (FTH), Gombe alive, where the doctors battled and administered the preliminary treatment to keep him alive.

    He was discharged since the facility at the time lacked the requisite expertise to make his limbs work. He thereafter went to the University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH) for expert treatment. But the treatment did not hold because he could not afford the required N2m charged at the time.

    Okosun said he wrote to INEC and the Presidency asking for help, considering that he was on national assignment. None responded positively, he said. While the Presidency kept mum, INEC under Professor Attahiru Jega reportedly said election observers were not captured under their insurance scheme.

    Inquiries at the Gombe arm of INEC also confirmed that the commission has no obligations whatsoever to election observers. Has INEC helped Okosun in anyway whatsoever? No. Is the body aware of Okosun’s plight? Yes, our source said, confirming that the ex-human rights activist was indeed in Gombe to observe an election conducted by the commission when the accident happened.

    Okosun is now seeking help wherever he can find it.

    “My children are now withdrawn from school because I cannot afford their school fees and my wife is fast wearing out under the burden of the family responsibility she has now assumed,” he said.

    “Look, the worst part of it all is not just being limp; I feel pains all over my body, especially injured parts and areas around. The pain gets more excruciating by the day; to the extent that moving my body is so laborious, not to talk of trying to do something. As it is now, I would gladly welcome death so that I can rest in peace, but death too has refused to come.

    “The reason I am here (Correspondents’ Chapel of NUJ, Gombe) is to beg you to please help me reach out to INEC, the Presidency, kind-hearted people and groups out there to please come to my aid and help me financially, to at least facilitate my treatment. That is my greatest appeal now,” said Okosun.

    Asked how to reach him, should succour come, Okosun said he could be contacted through Edith Okosun, his wife on 07065553301 or his daughter on 08034574392.

  • PDP… Too crippled to play credibile opposition?

    PDP… Too crippled to play credibile opposition?

    In another four days, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will be in opposition at the federal level and in many states. The party is broken by internal crisis. Many are wondering if it is ready to play credible opposition, writes SUNDAY OGUNTOLA.

    All through last week, the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was enmeshed in one trouble after another. In one day, its National Chairman Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu and Board of Trustees (BoT) Chairman Tony Anenih resigned. The ripple effects of the resignation are expected to be felt this week, as the party prepares for its new role – the opposition.

    For PDP, things have really fallen apart. Sixteen years after ruling the country, it suddenly lost its grip and got dislodged from power. The momumental losses it suffered at the presidential/National Assembly elections on March 28 and the governorship/Houses of Assembly elections on April 11 have left the PDP on the brink. The unfolding developments have shown that the party may not get its bearing in a short while.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) Gen. Muhammadu Buhari polled 15,424,921 votes to defeat incumbent and PDP’s Goodluck Jonathan, who got 12,853,162.

    Expectedly, the presidential defeat orchestrated a major shift in the nation’s political arena. Many states, which the PDP would, easily, have won, started looking the APC’s way. Several alignments and reengineering took place in many states. By the time the governorship and Houses of Assembly elections were held on April 11, the PDP had suffered a devastating reversal of fortunes.

    The presidential loss was defining but the loss of many states hitherto considered PDP strongholds was very debilitating. The party’s governorship candidates lost in Plateau, Benue, Nasarawa, Imo, Borno, Kano, Bauchi, Jigawa Adamawa, Yobe, Katsina, Sokoto, Kaduna, Kebbi, Kwara, Niger and Zamfara.

    Of the 28 contested governorship seats, the APC won 20, leaving only eight for the PDP, which prided itself as the largest political party in Africa. It was a massive tsunami that left the ruling party tumbling from its Olympia height.   On May 29, when the governors-elect are sworn in, the APC will have 22 governors, leaving 14 states for the PDP.

    In the National Assembly, the PDP’s tales of woes could not be stopped. Voters rejected many of the candidates fielded by the party, ostensibly in protest of the imposition of many of them. The protest votes launched the APC to the status of majority party in the Eighth Senate with 64 senators-elect. The PDP could only produce 45 and the Labour Party (LP) settled for one. The development eventually sealed the fate of the PDP in presiding over the next Senate.

    The APC, with a clear majority, looks set to produce the next Senate President and other principal officers of the Upper Chamber. That, again, is a big setback for the PDP, which has produced successive Senate President since 1999.

    In the House of Representatives, the APC also emerged the clear leader, winning 214 federal seats. The PDP settled for only 125. The difference of 89 seats is already huge enough. But the APC might make more hauls when elections are held in the 11 federal constituencies of Jigawa State, where the waiting in the wings to occupy the governorship seat.

    If the APC wins the seats as being projected, it will have 100 representatives more than the PDP. Going by how politics has already played out, the 10 representatives elected on the platforms of the LP, All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) and Accord, might up end defecting to  the APC. This will further entrench the party’s commanding influence in the Green Chamber.

    With 81 lawmakers elected on its platform, the APC swept to victory with the highest membership haul from the Northwest. The PDP could not produce any House of Representatives member from the zone. The Southwest delivered 47 seats for the APC as against PDP’s 20.

    In the Northcentral, the party got 41 seats and left eight for the PDP. In the Northeast, the APC secured 40 seats to PDP’s seven. The PDP’s strongest zone is the Southsouth, where it produced 52 members as against APC’s three. The three seats came from Edo State.

    In 2011, the PDP had 208 lawmakers in the lower chamber of the National Assembly. The defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) produced 70  and the then Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) had 40. The implication is that the APC has a better chance of producing the next Speaker and principal officers of the House of Representatives.

    Since it suffered the unprecedented electoral misfortune, the PDP has been hit by a gale of defections. Its former stalwarts and chieftains have been leaving in droves with their supporters. Even die-hard PDP faithful are beginning to review their membership. Many are upbeat that the party might never survive the next four years.

    Their skepticism is not misplaced. Since the PDP lost its ruling status, it has been confronted by serious in-fighting, intrigue and wrangling. Some of its governors have been vociferous in their condemnation of the party’s National Working Committee (NWC). The NWC members, they contended, did not do enough to lead the party to victory and therefore should quit.

    The party officials, on their part, have countered such claims, insisting the governors, instead, should be held responsible for the party’s dismal performance. Many of them, the NWC members argued, imposed candidates and made it impossible for voters to support them.

    The cat-and-mouse game degenerated to Mu’azu’s resignation as the national chair. Mu’azu, fondly call ‘The Game Changer’, had resisted pressures from many PDP governors to resign for leading the party to defeat. Such move, the former chairman argued, will further polarise the party and leave it dead and buried. His resignation was followed by that of the BoT chair, Chief Anenih, who his admirers often call ‘Mr. Fix it’.

    Though Anenih said his resignation was to pave the way for President Jonathan new role as BoT chairman after leaving office on Friday,  some of the governors who are aversed to the President’s leadership style have vowed to quit and form a new political party.

    The development, political observers say, will further aggravate the crisis in the party, especially when it was discovered that the duo of Mu’azu and Anenih were forced out of office.

    Unsatisfied with Mu’azu’s exit, some PDP governors have renewed their insistence that other members of the NWC and the NEC should follow suit.

    If anything, it (Mu’azu and Anenih’s resignation) leaves a bitter taste in the throat of their supporters and sympathisers, confirming the party’s penchant for changing its top helmsmen at the flimsyest excuse.

     

    Will PDP be able to play opposition politics?

    The blame-game and name-calling among chieftains has left the party in disarray, making many to wonder if it will ever survive and be able to play opposition politics. The thinking is that this is a most unfamiliar terrain for a party that is used to being in power and spoilt by the perks of office. To suddenly find itself on the other side of the divide could be a burden too heavy to bear.

    National Secretary of the LP Kayode Ajulo believes the PDP lacks the wherewithal to assume the role of a viable opposition party.

    Ajulo said: “I must say this with all sense of responsibility that the PDP cannot function well as an opposition party because it lacks the capacity to play such a role in Nigeria.

    “I must say that the characters in the PDP prefer packaged food than going to the kitchen to cook. They like already-made things. So, you can’t expect such people to be in opposition.”

    He said the gale of defections is a clear signal that PDP members cannot be a good opposition. Ajulo explained that those who will play opposition politics must be sacrificial and prepared to put their lives on the lines.

    Senator Chris Ngige (Anambra Central) knows what it takes to be in opposition. According to him, it is never an enviable role to play in any democratic dispensation. Ngige has tasted both sides. He was Anambra State governor under the PDP and  a senator under the APC.

    He said: “I must thank all those who remained steadfast in APC because playing opposition can be frustrating and tempting.

    ‘’Though I was receiving overtures from the ruling Peoples Democratic Party, I rejected them because the principles on which we formed that party have been jettisoned and bastardised.

    “At the amalgamation of some political parties to form the APC, I decided to run for governor but many notable politicians told me that though I am a good candidate, it was better for me not to run because I would never be allowed to win as the forces against me were numerous.

    “However, I insisted on running because God had told me that the APC will form the next Federal Government. Though I did not win the governorship, I was consistently telling our people that the APC was the best bet for Igbo in Nigerian politics.”

    Ngige believes that most PDP members in the Southeast will soon switch over to the APC.

    “I know many of these Igbo contractors cannot play opposition politics and their next move may be to move into the APC,” he said.

    Playing opposition politics requires  men of strong political will to put their lives on the line. Most PDP chieftains, unfortunately, were attracted by the patronage they were getting from the party in the past 16 years. Without such undeserving perks and inducements, it is hard to see many of them sticking out their necks for the party.

    Such strong men must also be willing to stake their resources to oil  party structures across the states without seeking immediate rewards. “That is difficult to imagine among the current crop of leaders parading themselves as PDP chieftains,” Charles Okon, a political analyst said.

    Okon went on: “How many of them will be willing to invest their resources and not expect returns immediately? How many of them will fund the party with their dwindling fortunes and refuse to be bought over by the ruling party? How many will look away from whatever the ruling party have to offer and maintain that the PDP is the only way to go?

    “If we look well, we might not find up to 10 of them in the country. Why? It is because they are used to spending government money to fund the party and its programmes. Without the attraction of government funds, many of them will stay away or switch camps.”

    But to Ahmed Gulak, a former political adviser to the President, the party will cope well with its new-found opposition status.

    He said: “I can assure you that we are ready. Some of us will never decamp. No matter what, we will stay  back and build the party. We will put the ruling party on its toes and ensure that we spotlight all their (APC) mistakes and failures to the nation. It will be tough, but we will do it. We have to, because we have no choice really. There is nowhere else to go but to build the party.”

    Senate President David Mark is also confident the party will do well as an opposition.

    Mark said: “We are going back to the drawing board to do a critical review and fashion out a blue print that would get us out of the woods for good.

    “The role of opposition is strange to us, but it is not a death sentence. We should be ready for the challenges. We are prepared to play a credible opposition. I believe the nation, and indeed Nigerians will be the best for it.”

     

    What future awaits PDP?

    The future appears very bleak for the PDP. Hemmed in by heavy defeats, growing defections and internal bickering, it is clear that a turbulence future awaits the party. Yet, it is in the interest of the fledging democracy for a big party like the PDP to survive and offer credible opposition to put the ruling party on its toes.

    Experts say the party might cave in under heavy yokes and goes into oblivion. They said the PDP must survive before its can stand the  chance of bouncing back. For the distressed party, survival will not come easy. But, therein lies the hope of the PDP, the experts contend.

    Many believe the party needs to consider mergers with smaller parties to regain its intimidating aura. Some governors, who were toying with the idea of pursuing their political future in a new party may have had a rethink, following  the resignation of Mu’azu and Anenih. The new thinking is to consider smaller political groups, associations and parties to strengthen the party.

    PDP’s National Publicity Secretary Olisa Metuh said the option was very much on the table.

    In a statement, Metuh said: “We have a name, tradition and values. Sixteen fruitful years as the guardian of Nigeria’s democracy cannot be nullified by the reason of temporary setback. We shall rise beyond all and regain our rhythm.”

    To also survive, the party needs to embrace reconciliation and embark on internal restructuring.

    Gulak said: “We must purge ourselves and know those who are genuinely for us. The era of assuming those who mill around are PDP members is over. They must be proven and tested over time before we become convinced.”

    For the PDP to purge itself, it must rein in its members who, despite   warnings from the party’s hierachy to shield their sword, continue in the blame-trading game over who and what caused its defeat at the polls.

    Though the future appears uncertain, the PDP must learn how to play opposition politics. How well the party succeeds in doing this will go a long way in determining its survival.

  • Insurgency has crippled Borno State, says SSG

    Insurgency has crippled Borno State, says SSG

    Borno State is grounded by the Boko Haram insurgency, Secretary to the State Government Alhaji Baba Ahmad Jidda said yesterday.

    He asked all political leaders and stakeholders to unite and meet with President Goodluck Jonathan on how to salvage the situation.

    He also urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to postpone the proposed by-election for Jere House of Assembly Constituency.

    Jidda, who made his views known in a statement  in Abuja, said there is urgent need for peace in the state.

    He said he issued the statement in his private capacity having been disturbed by the deteriorating situation.

    The statement  said: “A deep appraisal of the condition prevailing in Borno State at the moment shows a disrupted environment that is in desperate need of peace and restoration.

    “As a result of the insurgency caused by Boko Haram, large swathes of the land in the state is currently inaccessible. Normal governmental, economic, social and political activities have been dislocated, with huge numbers of displaced persons living in refugee camps in Maiduguri, neighbouring states as well as Niger, Chad and Cameroon.

    “The state of emergency is still in force, with its attendant curfews and restrictions on free movement and assembly.

    “The Maiduguri Airport is also closed, limiting access significantly to and out of Borno State. The threat to security of lives and property as a result of the criminal activities of the Boko Haram insurgents is everywhere and indeed the limited peace prevailing in Maiduguri and the few other areas is achieved largely due to alertness and corporation of the Civilian JTF and the security agencies.

    “Moreover, the search and rescue efforts for the abducted Chibok School girls remain on the front burner.

    “The above scenario presents a troubling condition that affects all and sundry in Borno State and the Norteast as a zone.”

    Jidda gave an insight into the biting effects of the insurgency on the citizenry.

    He said: “At this very moment, most parts of Borno State are being occupied by Boko Haram insurgents. Government presence and administration is minimal or non-existent across many parts of the state, with economic, commercial and social services totally subdued. Schools and clinics remain closed.

    “Most settlements in the affected areas in the state have either been deserted or access to them practically impossible, thus majority of the political stakeholders cannot, in real fact reach their constituencies.

    “So, the threat of insecurity affects everybody, irrespective of political differences. The enabling environment for politics and electioneering campaign is simply not obtainable at present in Borno State.”

    The SSG said he was not after political gains, but he felt he had a duty to speak out.

    He added: “At this juncture, it is pertinent to make some clarifications. Even though I remain a member of All Progressives Congress (APC), current SSG in Borno State and  having served the nation in the past as Ambassador of the Federal Republic and SSA to the President, I make this particular call in my individual capacity, as a privileged citizen and elder in Borno State.

    “I, therefore, crave your indulgence not to see my current endeavour from any political standpoint, but one borne out of patriotic interest for the peace and development of Borno State, the Northeast Zone and Nigeria.”

    Jidda begged all stakeholders and political leaders in the state to rise up to the challenge and make representation to the President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan to assist the state.

    He said the immediate priority of the people is peace and not election.

    He added: “As things stand now, the priority of the citizens is the immediate return of peace and restoration of basic social and economic conditions. In the view of many, the thought about politics and pursuit of political interest in this environment appears absurd, callous and morally repulsive.

    “In the light of the foregoing, I hereby make a clarion call on all the leaders and stakeholders of Borno State, regardless of political, religious and ethnic differences, to come together to address the challenge posed by insecurity in the state.

    “ It is a well-known fact that all over the world, when societies are challenged by a consuming crises or epidemic, citizens unite, putting aside partisan and personal differences, to solve problems that threaten the existence of the entire society. It will suffice to mention here the example of the proactive approach adopted by the Federal Government against the spread of the Ebola Virus, which has received national and international commendation. If similar proactive approach had been applied to the insurgency at inception, I strongly believe the escalation of the insurgency would have been curtailed.

    “In the light of this grim scenario, it is absolutely essential for all patriotic citizens of Borno State to rise up in a united spirit to focus and solve the challenges posed by insecurity, which is a real threat to our collective survival. In this regard, it is hereby proposed, first, that a meeting of all stakeholders, elders and statesmen from Borno State, irrespective of sectarian, ethnic and political persuasions, should be convened to review the state of affairs in Borno State.

    “ Second, this group should seek audience with the President of the Federal Republic to present collectively the unbearable conditions imposed on the people of Borno State by these crises, including the agony and pains of the abducted Chibok girls and their parents.

    “Such an approach is expected to specifically open gates for decisively tackling insecurity and its attendant economic and social burdens on our Borno State, the Northeast Zone and Nigeria as a whole. This approach is envisaged to rescue Borno State and return peace to create the essential environment for normal life and politics.

    The SSG also urged INEC to shelve the proposed bye-election for Jere Local Government House of Assembly Constituency.

    He said: “Finally, related to this, is the proposed bye-election for Jere Local Government House of Assembly Constituency. It is imperative to appeal to INEC to postpone forthwith, this bye-election slated for 3rd October 2014. This fervent call is necessary because the environment is not conducive for conducting elections.

    “At the moment, Maiduguri Metropolitan Council and Jere Local Government are full of refugees from Marte, Gwoza, Ngala, Bama and other parts of the state.

    “Once again, I wish to stress that in Borno State today, restoration of peace and normal life should be the essential and urgent concern. Pursuit of personal or partisan interests can wait till peace, law and order are fully obtained.”

  • Crippled, three others remanded in prison for allegedly raping 22-yr-old

    A  cripple and three others have been remanded in prison custody by an Oredo Chief Magistrate Court sitting in Benin City.

    The suspects were allegedly to have of gang-raped a 22 year-old-girl.

    The accused persons, Saturday Enabulele (28), Moses Okoeki (18), Osasumwen Enina (17) and Junior Odubu (20), were also alleged to have on April 13th 2013 at 9 Akugbe Street, Siluko Road, Benin City, beat up the girl, tore her skirt and pants, and fingered her private part and consequently filmed her with a camera phone.

    Apart from filming the victim’s nudity and showing same to people, the prosecution further alleged that the accused persons and others now at large collected the girl’s Nokia handset and a wallet containing the sum of ten thousand naira.

    They pleaded not guilty to the twelve count charge brought against them. The trial Chief Magistrate, Peter Edo Asemota remanded them in prison custody. Hearing was adjourned to May 7th, 2013.