Tag: defeat

  • Ajimobi will defeat Ladoja 10 times more, says Oke-Ogun group

    APC in Oke-Ogun area of Oyo State, Saki West APC Stakeholders Collective, yesterday asserted that Governor Abiola Ajimobi would defeat his closest rival, Sen. Rashidi Ladoja 10 times more should governorship election be repeated.

    While Ajimobi was the APC candidate in the April 11 governorship election, Ladoja was the candidate of the Accord Party. The former defeated Ladoja for the second time in a keenly contested poll. Ladoja has since filed a petition challenging Ajimobi’s election before an election tribunal.

    The group, which includes all APC leaders in Saki West Local Government, said Oyo State people willingly voted for Ajimobi based on his performance and the strong leadership he offered in the last four years, particularly in Oke-Ogun area of the state.

    In a statement issued by its Secretary, Barr. Waheed Lawal yesterday, the group insisted that irrespective of the legal fireworks at the tribunal, Ajimobi’s victory was the victory of the majority of the good people of Oyo State who preferred him to Ladoja at the ballot.

    The statement said the Ajimobi administration would even offer better leadership in its second term in office, given his unprecedented victory.

    The group also pledged to render selfless service to the people of Oke-Ogun, particularly in Saki West Local Government where leadership has changed hands.

  • Jonathan: A hero in defeat

    Jonathan: A hero in defeat

    UNTIL the evening of last Saturday, President Goodluck Jonathan was at the verge of ending his six years in office on a very unpopular note. But a phone call he made to the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, congratulating him for his victory in the election even before counting was concluded, has in the estimation of many Nigerians transformed him into a hero of democracy.

    Before Jonathan’s phone call to Buhari on Saturday, there appeared to be no love lost between the two presidential candidates. Seeing Gen. Buhari as the only threat to Jonathan’s continuation in office as president, his minders embarked on name-calling, mudslinging and, in some instances, outright assassination of Buhari’s character.

    The PDP also conjured all manner of stories aimed at discrediting the General and securing his disqualification from the presidential race. One of them was the claim by the PDP hawks that Gen. Buhari had no secondary school certificate, the minimum educational qualification required of an aspirant to the office of president.

    Buhari, who was accused by the party of not attaching his West African Schools Certificate to the nomination form he submitted to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) as required by law, had responded by saying that his certificate was with the military authorities. Strangely, the military, after initially admitting that they were in possession of Buhari’s records, made a u-turn and declared that they were not in custody of his secondary school certificate.

    Shocked by the response of the institution he considered a part of his primary constituency, Buhari rushed to the secondary school he attended in Katsina to obtain his WASC certificate. But rather than solve the problem, Jonathan’s men turned the move into a veritable source of acrimony, accusing Buhari of forging the certificate he claimed to have obtained from his alma mater.

    The smear campaign against Buhari had begun with the branding of the General as a religious extremist on a mission to Islamise Nigeria. The APC had risen in his defence, wondering why the former head of state, who resisted the pressure mounted on him to take Nigeria into the Organisation of Islamic Countries (OIC), would be tagged an Islamist while his successor, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, who actually dragged Nigeria into the Islamic body, had not been so tagged.

    When that would not wash, they came up with the story that Buhari was sick and was destined for a hospital in the US. At a point, it was even said that the APC presidential candidate had been flown out of the country only for him to be captured live on television in one of his rigorous campaign rallies. Buhari himself said he was fit as a fiddle, but the spokesman of the PDP Presidential Campaign Committee, Femi Fani-Kayode, claimed to know Buhari’s condition better, insisting that he was sick.

    In all this, Jonathan did nothing to call his men to order even though it was clear that they were heating the polity to bursting limits. Rather, he compounded the trend with a campaign strategy that sought to divide the country along ethnic and religious lines as if he was out to fulfill a prediction allegedly made by the US, that Nigeria might break up in 2015.

    Matters came to a head at the venue of the collation of the results of the presidential election on Saturday, when a PDP agent, Elder Godsday Orubebe, appeared from nowhere and nearly truncated the announcement of results. Many had interpreted the scene he created at the venue as merely acting a script written by the President and his associates to subvert the process. The disclosure by former head of state, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar, that President Jonathan had called Gen. Buhari to congratulate him over his victory in the poll, therefore, came as a huge relief not only to concerned Nigerians but the world at large. It instantly defused the tension that had enveloped the polity and effectively killed any prospect of electoral violence.

    The spirit of sportsmanship demonstrated by the President was in spite of the fact that he was on the way to creating an unenviable record as the first sitting president to be defeated in an election in the nation’s history. As he himself would later profess, the act was a fulfillment of his promise to make the votes count by reforming the electoral process, on account of which he appointed Prof. Attahiru Jega, a man widely reputed as forthright and highly principled, as the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in June 2010.

    President Jonathan, an Ijaw man from Bayelsa State, had earlier made history as the first Nigerian president to emerge from a minority ethnic group and the first Nigerian vice-president to be democratically elected. Before he was elected president in 2011, he had occupied the office for two years to serve out the tenure of his principal, the late Alhaji Umaru Yar’Adua, who died after two years in office.

  • Defeat of Jonathan, depression and allied illnesses

    Stranded and alone,” Like my name, I remember this 14 September 1974 newspaper headline any day my mind revisits my days on the LAGOS WEEKEND newspaper. The Lagos Weekend sold an average of 250,000 (eyes 300, 000) copies every Friday. It was about the second biggest sale in the stable of the Daily Times newspaper group, after the Sunday Times, edited by Mrs. Gbolabo Ogunsanwo which must have hit or surpassed the 400,000 or 500,000 mark. These figures should make many of today’s editors green with envy. For it is doubtful if all their daily sale put together exceed 250,000 copies. Yet we have a bigger literate and reading public with more money in the pocket than did the information consumers of those days. Radio, television and the social media may have a hand in this retrogression, no doubt. I believe, however, that the biggest trouble, as Taiwo Obe never tires of saying, is that the journals of today have no firm roots in the market places and, so, are disconnected from the reading public, like fish with no water to swim in.

    This is not a day to debate why some newspapers are thriving while others are collapsing.

    Last Saturday’s Presidential election merely reminded me that success has many fathers, and failure, no father, of the loneliness and depression which may have enveloped not only President Ebele Jonathan and his garrulous wife, Patience, but of many aides and kinsmen who loyally stood by them, and the flight of those fair-weather ones who merely hid under the Presidential canopy to fatten their purses.

    On 14 September 1974, Mr. Clement Okosun, editor of Lagos Weekend, published his weekly column named THE TIME BEFORE THIS with the said headline, Stranded and Alone. He was one of the many editors I worked with in my formative years as a journalist. The list included Mr. Henry Odukomaiya, Mr. George Okoro, Mr. Sola Oluwole, Mr. Sola Odunfa, Prince Tony Momoh, Mr. Angus Okoli and Mr. Clement Okosun.

    Mr. Clement Okosun said he felt “stranded and alone” because, on that day, I left for the university. There were only two of us who produced the Lagos Weekend.

    He was editor, I sub-editor. I doubled as reporter, proof-reader and production editor. Yet we had only Monday and Tuesday to assemble the paper, proof-read and okay on Wednesday, print on Thursday and sell on Friday. I do not know how Mr. Okosun coped after I left. But from the things he said in that article, I still have no doubt that he experienced pain of the soul from my separation from him. His employment of Stranded and Alone may not entirely fit my construction of it in this column. But I see in the frameworks of both common destabilising elements in a person’s life. Mr. Okosun was so attached to me because I made his editorship so easy for him.

    President Jonathan is so attached to power because, through public office, the school boy who had no school shoes and school bag, has become, arguably, one of Nigeria’s wealthiest men. Separation from power must, therefore, bring agony of soul. Mr. Okosun and I had become too attached to each other for him not to feel the pain of my tearing away from him. I may not have felt anything because I was going on adventure and enjoying it. I was later to learn after university, from the experiences of life, that attachment to anything (family, office, work, property, neighborhood, money, power etc), except to ones’ Creator, could be the greatest calamity that could befall a person. It was at this stage of inner experiencing that I began to understand the story of Lot’s wife rendered in the Christian Bible. Many Christians take this story on the face value. Destruction was to befall Sodom and Gomorrah. Lot, a Pius man, was to be spared. He and his family were to flee the town and not look back. In their flight, Lot’s wife remembered the jewelry and other valuables she was leaving behind. She looked back… and immediately became a mould of salt. In my view, this was an allegorical rendition of a story which teaches us not to be attached to anything except our goal, which is the return home to Paradise in the Kingdom the Lord has provided for those people who fulfill the purpose of their creation, namely the perfection of their spirits. No man is appointed a judge over other men in these matters. But all can feel to their fingertips cases or situations of attachment to the wrong things.

    In this regard, President Jonathan, should have seen this humiliating defeat coming a long time ago. He was, in my opinion, attached to power. He must have spent about eight years in the corridors of power in his home state before the then President Olusegun Obasanjo fished him out for his project of succession of Musa Shehu Yar A’dua.

    ayelsa deputy governor Goodluck Ebele Jonathan was to succeed his boss, impeached for financial crimes, at Obasanjo’s behest, as the governor, complexed as vice-President of Nigeria to Yar A’dua’s Presidential ticket. The match-making cabal extracted from Jonathan a promise that he would not lift a finger for the Yar A’dua Presidency, considered a northern Nigeria slot, should anything, including death, happen to the sickly Yar A’dua before he completed two terms of four years each. Yar A’dua died two years into the first term and Jonathan jetissoned the pledge, supported by Constitutionalists who puritanically insisted succession had to follow letters and spirit of the Law. Jonathan thus became Acting President. There was uproar in the north then and when Jonathan made a bid for a full four-year term after completing the remainder of Yar A’dua’s first tenure two years. Obasanjo calmed nerves and sold the north a middle-road agreement in which the north would support Jonathan’s 2011 Presidential bid and Jonathan would pave the way for a northern President in 2015. But, again, in 2015, Jonathan broke the agreement and manipulated himself as a sole Presidential candidate in the party’s presidential primaries.

    Meanwhile, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, leader of one of the opposition parties and, arguably, political leader of the South-West region, galvanised opposition parties into the All Poeples’ Congress (APC) to produce a northern Presidential candidate in General Muhammed Buhari (rtd), a one-time military strongman of Nigeria who, with only two routine houses and less than N1 million in the bank to his credit, arguably holds Nigeria’s record for the INCORRUPTIBLE MAN or MR INCORRUPTIBLE on the contrary Jonathan did not declare his assets or his wife’s in public.

    The Presidential campaign was Nigeria’s fiercest. All the Presidents men who had led or misled him into policies which fattened their estates in the President’s support, even when they knew he could fail against Buhari, urging him to throw or hurl more money at the poverty stricken electorate are now departing from him. Jonathan, afraid and desperate to return to power, hurled and hurled and hurled more money. Encouraging him on were the same people who swallowed the trillions of naira invested in the energy sector with nothing as yet to show for it. They were the same people who got him to borrow trillions of naira to fight the dissident Boko Haram instead of serving of Nigerian’s 774 Local Government Areas, expecting the rag tag army over four years of his tenure to do the job; whereas Nigeria fought a 30th-month civil war with the secessionist Eastern Region and borrowed no single kobo from overseas to fight the war, even when crude oil income was not available to prosecute the war. That cabal got money pumped like water  into practically every security project. In the end, It was foreign troops from Nigeria’s neighbours who helped to liberate Nigeria’s lost local government areas. The stolen girls were not found. No one has been prosecuted for treason. And, as someone remarked, “the myth” of Nigeria’s army in Africa was broken. So bad did Nigerian life become under Jonathan that the Naira, the national currency, crashed abysmally. The President’s men kept telling him these were not his handiwork but a global phenomenon. And they kept lining their pockets. Corruption came to such unbelievable head that Ibrahim Babangida, whose military junta was thought to fuel the corruption machine most, said when he compared his days with Jonathan’s, he must pass as a saint before the judges in history.

    resident Ebele Jonathan promised his party he would not pursue a second tenure ambition. But once he became President in 2011, courtesy of that agreement, he canvassed a constitutional amendment that would replace a four-year term with one of seven years. This, again, was evidence of attachment to power. But he never had his way. Only history and meticulous accountants would be able to ascertain how much money he has flung at voters in this election. I do not see him, in defeat, walking away from office with a broad smile on his face, thankful to the Lord for a wonderful opportunity he has had to be of service to his people. Leaving office grudgingly would mean attachment to office and a forcible tearing away from office by the public will. That would bring nothing but sadness and sadness that may lead the way to depression. President Jonathan would not be alone, downcast and suffering. There would be hundreds of thousands of people, if not millions, who would journey in the same train with him. Many of these people would be those followers of Jonathan who clung to him on ethnic and religious grounds irrespective of visible damage he had wrought on the economy or who stood by, believing that another tenure would bring of unlimited access to the treasury. A state of depression which is likely to follow President’s Jonathan’s defeat informs the choice of depression as the subject of this column today. It should offer an opportunity for self-help to everyone who, “stranded and alone,” finds himself or herself in a state of depression….

    There are two carpenters who gave me an idea of what the face of depression may look like. The first was to help me knock up wood work in the kitchen. I had known him for many years. He came by money easily because he had many clients who liked the finishing of his job. But he spent money as easily as he earned it, believing the morrow would bring yet another haul. Then one day, he received the shocking news of his life: his younger brother had just built a house and moved in. This carpenter was depressed by the news because he had just been sent out of his single room abode by his landlord and was living in a market stall. For months, he locked up his workshop, and depended on the generosity of his clients to keep body and soul together. I managed to persuade him not to weigh his life on another person’s scale. So, he came to the house for the kitchen job. But he couldn’t summon his nerves to work and left.

    The second carpenter came to make ward robes in the rooms. He seemed full of life but wherever he settled to work, he never  kept his lips sealed. He was always talking to himself, complaining about how his extended family was fleecing him of money. Mid-day through the wardrobes, I stopped him from coming to the house. For he looked like someone who may knock the hammer and the nail in the wrong place someday.

    Besides both men, I have been privileged to observe many people whose bodies do not align with their souls. Some of them talk to no one in particular as they walk along on the highway. In buses, some are physically wide awake but do not hear the conductor call their bus-stop. Some are lethagic and feel like doing nothing in life. Some have no appetite, while some overeat. Some people cannot sleep (insomnia) while some people sleep all day (sleep attack). Some people, especially the young, are easily irritable. Some people loose interest or pleasure in almost all activities, including sex. Some people feel guilty or worthless. Energy loss and fatigue may assail some people. Concentration may be difficult in some cases. In some cases, suicidal or negative thoughts may flourish in the soul. At this level, the patient may be subjected to the receipt of auto suggestions from disembodied but earth-bound souls who seek to manifest their desires in the earthly plane by taking possession of any human body whose blood radiations make them vulnerable for such possession. Orthodox medicine would appear not to be familiar with this terrain orthodox doctors simply put the patient to a prolonged sleep to calm the patient. When the patient falls asleep, the invading disembodied soul finds the body unusable and vacates the scene for a while, to return when the patient is awake. The doctor prescribes another round of sleeping drugs, and the vicious cycle continues. In their own practice, traditional medicine doctors who have a calling in this field merely cast the invader away and the patient normalises. Nutritionally, this can also be achieved by recomposing the blood. To elevate its radiations, particularly with green foods and drinks. The recomposition elevates the blood radiation to the point that it cannot be used by a soul other than the inhabitant of that physical body, that is the patient. In the 1980s, Lagos city witnessed the phenomenon of a bearded man who prowled the metropolis picking insane people in the streets and marching them around all day in a long file. He would buy them razor blades, and they would, with them, cut their hair. Public spirited people donated clothes and money. The once insane people became well. It was unfortunate that the health authorities did not seek to understand his art and integrate it into the hospital health care delivery system. In my understanding, what he did amounted to no more than freeing these once insane people from those entities in the beyond which made them playgrounds of  their own pleasures. Many people are subject to auto-suggestion on a middle scale without realising it. People would tell you that something always tells them while on a pedestrian bridge to jump into fast moving traffic below. Sometimes they feel like reaching out for a knife and stabbing themselves. When I teach troubled people how to fight negative auto-suggesting, I let them know that every negative thought they develop is a perversion of a positive thought. When they think negative, they should act the positive end of the continuum.  Example, if one has a serious argument with another, and he receives an auto-suggestion to slap or strike that other person, he could turn the table against negativism by telling the other party… oh we need not quarrel over this matter. “I am sorry about everything”. I have found those three words. “I am sorry” a great healing balm in many situations, even when I am in the right. By the time one has become suffused with positive thinking, the negative auto-suggestions decrease in quantum and frequency. In this season of election block and defeat, those minions of darkness who work with negative auto suggestions will be everywhere instigating quarrels, gun duels, and whatever would not make for the peace of the individual and his or her society.

     

    CAUSES

    here are many possible causes of depression. An underlying feature of them all is sadness. All of us are sad at one time or the other. We may be bereaved, in the heat of divorce, have unresolved emotional issues, be under tension and stress, become financially embarrassed, or our hormones may become unbalanced. Besides this, some drugs, especially recreational substances may cause mind havocs. Mood swings do occur, also from low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) and high blood sugar.

    In the specific case under reference, that is depression arising from election shocks and defeat, politicians and their followers will be imperiled in their health if they do not detach themselves from this event and carry on with their lives. They may become moody, hurtful all day, all night, losing brain chemicals which stabilise the brain. The loss of one of these chemicals, serotonin, has been linked to various states of depression. Depression is a crystal clear word. It means compression or the piling of pressure. The piling is impacted on the mind by forces outside the mind. If forces within the mind cannot match the forces outside, a break down occurs within which rapidly consumes all the nutrient chemicals which keep the brain stable. In the event of these substances not being as rapidly replaced as they are consumed, the brain , too, goes under.

  • The defeat of President Jonathan

    SIR: Few months ago, President Goodluck Jonathan had a fairly good reason to believe he will have a blowout. The opposition at the time seemed to lack proper coordination. There was no threat on the horizon, so the president falsely believed. He was sure the polls would mimic a birthday bash:  Everybody would wish him more years.

    But that was then. The climate has since changed. And so has the prospects of a sustainable Umbrella. Today, Jonathan is an endangered candidate. The hysteria in his camp reflects awareness of his vulnerable condition. It accounts for the rich marvel of this season. Trenchantly surreal, it looks like a drama around a swap of traits: The life long civilian pleads election allergy while his main rival, has managed to tap into the frustration of the alienated majority. With one word offer of CHANGE, the All Progressives Congress (APC) opposition party has provoked a Pavlovian hunger for a new reality in the populace.

    The dread of staring defeat drove President Jonathan to experimentation in costly antics. He decrees a six-week postponement through the instrumentality of the military. He moves house to house, under the cover of darkness, pitching the abominable idea of an interim national government to cajole powerful citizens. He inspires the agitation against the deployment of smart card reader for voter accreditation.

    He sponsors the demonization of Attahiru Jega, Chairman of Independent National Election Commission, as a prelude to supplanting the umpire with a puppet. He embarks on a bribing blitz; dumping dollars everywhere he needs affection. Quite simply, Jonathan has been signaling, erroneously, that he is desperate enough to explore any possibility that might help him retain his grip on power!

    President Jonathan’s last-ditch efforts have proven insufficient to save his doomed campaign. His establishment and resourcing of the Hate Buhari Cottage Industry has not won him more lovers. His tokens of appeasement – especially that masterstroke of a 50 percent reduction in darkness tariff – have not assuaged voter discontent.  But the optimist in Jonathan is not ready for his imminent defeat. He still hopes against hope that he will clinch a second term last March 28.

    Unlike General Muhammadu Buhari, a veteran of three failed presidential quests, President Goodluck Jonathan is a virgin at losing. Jonathan has won every election he has participated in as a contestant since 1999. His 16-year-long winning streak and a name that is widely promoted as the talisman behind his many quantum leaps, from a shoeless pupil to the pinnacle of power, have consolidated the myth of his own invincibility in his mind. But the news of a defeat will shake the foundation of Jonathan’s sense of personal identity. It will devastate him mentally and emotionally. And the wounded loser and his reflexes, at that level, will generate chaos.

    President Jonathan has a docile demeanor; but he is not known to be a man of depth or erudition. His discretion, as a rule, selects consequential options from the extreme end of impropriety. There is a likelihood that, in the potentially volatile hours after the announcement of a Buhari victory, a shell-shocked Jonathan would let an impolitic utterance slip out of him. He may make a panicky move that telegraphs dismissal of the outcome. And any of these is guaranteed to turn one man’s job loss into a national tragedy.

    But President Jonathan has a record of going for broke whenever he senses that the outcome of a democratic process would disadvantage him. Jonathan split the Nigerian Governor’s Forum when his proxy lost a free and fair chairmanship contest to his gadfly, Rotimi Amaechi. President Jonathan recently overran Ekiti State because he needed a crucial foothold in the Southwest. A soldier released a tape that implicated the ruling party.

    President Jonathan has to take a responsible posture. He has to urgently transmit an instruction forbidding any of his allies from making any post-result reaction that doesn’t follow his lead. His followers will be inclined to resist his defeat. They will interpret his defeat as the end of their access to waivers and free meals. Jonathan needs to communicate to them, ahead of time, in the clearest terms, that he will concede. This footnote, which Jonathan can tag on to his narrative, may temper his legacy of a bungled presidency. It is the only way he can win in defeat.

     

    • Emmanuel Uchenna Ugwu

     immaugwu@gmail.com

  • Artistes react to President Jonathan’s defeat candour

    Artistes react to President Jonathan’s defeat candour

    Following Saturday’s electoral defeat of President Goodluck Jonathan by General Muhammadu Buhari, artistes have come out to praise the president for conceding defeat and congratulating his political rival.

    Till the election, Jonathan and Buhari were the two major candidates and supporters of both candidates fought bitter through their campaigns, despite peace accord signed by both parties.

    Afrobeat musician, Seun Kuti, took to his Facebook account to express his pleasure at the president’s action.

    “I believed I had you pegged from the first of January 2012 but today, you sir, surprised me completely. You put Nigerians first,” wrote Seun Kuti who was an antagonist of President Jonathan. He added: “Congratulations, President Goodluck Jonathan. I believe that it’s only in defeat that a man’s true nature comes to the surface.”

    Nollywood actress and producer, Rita Dominic, a staunch supporter of President Jonathan also praised the president’s action, even as she congratulated his opponent.

    Taking to her Twitter account, Dominic wrote: ‘Congratulations to General Muhammadu Buhari. Thanks President Jonathan for conceding honourably. God bless Nigeria.”

    However, Omoni Oboli, Nollywood actor, director/producer, who also devotedly campaigned to have Jonathan re-elected was a bit neutral in her tweet. The actress, whose movie, Being Mrs Elliot, attracted presidential attention at its premiere last year, simply wrote; ‘Congratulations to you all! Nigeria won! God bless Nigeria!”

  • I have no qualms about my defeat, says Babangida Aliyu

    I have no qualms about my defeat, says Babangida Aliyu

    Niger State Governor and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Niger East Senatorial candidate, Dr. Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu has conceded defeat to the Senator-elect for the zone, Barrister David Umaru.

    He was defeated at the last Saturday National Assembly polls by Umaru with over 170,000 votes.

    Aliyu who spoke on Wednesday in Minna before a state executive council meeting said he has been calling the Senator Elect to congratulate him but his calls and text messages have gone unanswered.

    “I have already conceded defeat to Barrister David Umaru. I have called Umaru’s number after he was declared about seven times but he did not pick‎. I sent a text saying ‘this is the Chief Servant calling, please pick’ and I have not received a reply by now.

    “I have no qualms about the defeat. I did not see my defeat as an insult to my person but as God’s will.”

    Aliyu commended the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for paying attention to details and advised the body to appreciate the shortcomings in the last election and work towards correcting it.

    He also applauded the gentleman approach of President Goodluck Jonathan in congratulating the President-elect adding that his action doused whatever‎ tension that was on ground during the collation of the results.

    “President Jonathan’s approach doused whatever tension has been created. It worked to smoothen whatever rough edge the election would have created. We hope that the transition will be smooth and everyone will see a friendly handover.”

  • Nnamani’s supporters protest defeat

    Nnamani’s supporters protest defeat

    Supporters of former Enugu State Governor Chimaroke Nnamani protested yesterday the declaration of Senator Gilbert Nnaji as the winner of the Enugu East Senatorial District ticket.

    Nnamani contested on the platform of the PDC and Nnaji contested on PDP’s platform.

    This is the second time Nnaji is defeating Nnamani, the first being in 2011.

    The protesters marched to the headquarters of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) at Independence Layout, Enugu.

  • ‘I’ll defeat Akande-Adeola’

    ‘I’ll defeat Akande-Adeola’

    Prince Oyewole Oyewumi, a lawyer is contesting for the House of Representatives in Ogbomoso North , South and Orire Federal Constituency, on the platform of the all Progressives Congress (APC). He spoke with Olayinka Oyegbile on his chances. 

    Why are you in the race?

    I have always wanted to affect my society in one way or the other. I’ve always tried to seize the earliest opportunity to be useful to my community. In my own case, I think one thing led to the other. I actually started as a political  activist having being a member  of Campaign for Democracy  ( CD)  as far back as 1992 when it was founded by the late Alao Aka-Bashorun, we had people like the late Dr. Beko Ransome – Kuti , Nike Ransome – Kuti  is my  very good friend. It was through her that I got involved in political activism as against partisan politics.

    You are contesting against an incumbent (Mulikat Akande-Adeola) who is also the Majority Leader in the House of Representatives, how do you think you can beat her?

    Let me start by saying that I rate my chances very high not necessarily because of  my  own personal  qualities but  essentially because of how I think my  people- the Ogbomoso people- people  of my constituency  have reacted  to  the years of empty promises and unfulfilled dreams  that they  have experienced under her watch. There are so many examples to be given but I think that the most important thing is that the electorate in Ogbomoso is largely disappointed with the performance of the incumbent, so I think that would give me an opportunity to do well in the election.

    Do you think your background as a Prince and as a lawyer will help?

    Well , you have  combined two similes; different platforms in this regard, but I think I will explain  each one of them because  they actually are both relevant. Of course as a lawyer  I have been  prepared for the life of legislative work, it is part of my training, it is what I have practised over time and it’s interesting that while I was in Law  School  legislative  drafting was a favourite course of mine. Secondly, when you say a Prince, I think you should look at it more from  the position of more responsibility, and I am sorry to say – I mean  breeding, being well-bred of which Yoruba call ‘Omoluabi’ , from that perspective I think I have  also  benefited from  what I would call  good parentage. But whether the fact that  I am the son of  the Soun of Ogbomoso is necessarily giving me some undeserved  advantage over other contestants I do not think so because  I can tell you that  Kabiyesi considers himself as a father of all, he has not taken any step to show  that he favours me  much  as I can quickly say that  he is not totally opposed  to the fact that I am engaging  in the system  in order  to be of service. I will rather put it that way.

    What exactly do you think will make you beat the incumbent?

    Again, I believe that I would give my people a better representation. I think that these days  political representation , political leadership – be it legislative or executive- carries  with it a lot of responsibility and evolving democratic system like  Nigeria, once you put yourself  forward as  a political leader in our community people see you  more or less as a father -figure  , they expect you to carry your responsibility beyond your  immediate call either as a legislator or as a member of the executive, so the capacity to be able to perform beyond  what I would  call  the call of duty is  absolutely essential and I am aware of that. The  failing of  the current representation as I see it, is that it is regarded as  ‘all I need to do is just to be part of law making process and every other thing is left for their devices such that  infrastructural development  is not regarded as part of their call. I would quickly give an example of the Ogbomoso / Oyo Express way that has been lying literally fallow for almost 16 years now simply because those who represent us have not considered it as  part of their responsibility using their  network, using their goodwill. We hear some of them are the best friends of the First Lady, they hold caucus meetings, they have easy access to the presidency  but for some reasons it  fails them somehow to remember that such responsibility  also falls within their laps , that is just an  example .Youth empowerment is  very good, there  is a lot that can be done to develop our youth  through the government, private enterprises  same thing applies to our women , the cooperative societies with our women that had started with the very good cooperative societies especially in our own community – Ogbomoso  and the whole of the West like what we had from the days of Awolowo  and when you go to your local markets  we had  Egbe alajeseku  and so on .These  are  areas  where I believe you can be relevant  to your society  you can’t just be going to Abuja to make laws, you are going to Abuja to  take up your responsibility on behalf  of  your community. Those things I believe are areas I think we put on a good package, we are communicating this very clearly to the people and their response has been overwhelming.

    The essential thing  for me has been communicating with the people  in different ways, improvement of infrastructure, provision of employment  opportunities for our youths and our women. I am also kind one of a cultural activist. I believe there is still a lot of our traditional society can offer us.

    If elected what do you hope to bring to the table?

    We have to be very practical and pragmatic about it. I have made the pledge, God help me, I will pursue the completion  of the Oyo – Ogbomoso  axis on the expressway with every energy in my body  such that even if it is not completed I would be able to come back  and  explain what steps I have taken. I am hoping our party APC will win the election at the federal level and General Mohammadu Buhari will  be sworn in as the President  on May 29  and I also pray to  God that I win  my own election. The second agenda is also what I will pursue, I believe that Ogbomoso is a community that is very well established, it’s a community that is very well known in the country and  the world over  with people who had been  actively involved at the  federal level from time  past. Talk about Chief  Samuel Ladoke Akintola, Brigadier-Gen. Benjamin Adekunle , Chief Sunday Adewusi; these are national icons so Ogbomosho is not a people  that  can be pushed aside. I think we deserve the best.

    All politics are local, in Ogbomoso Chief  Adebayo Alao-Akala is a strong  factor, he belongs to another party now , how do you see that affecting your own chances ?

    A couple of weeks back I met Brother Bayo (Alao-Akala) as I call him and I said “Good evening egbon,  but I told you six months ago that I am contesting’ and he said ‘I don’t have a choice’, I told him ‘I am still expecting that cheque .. I know the relationship that we have, I know he is still relevant. We actually  were looking forward for him joining our party at some point. So we were actually shocked  and surprised  to discover at the end of the day that he moved away from the PDP Labour Party. On a more serious note I think that he made a serious mistake, the Ogbomoso people are disappointed that he did not join APC. That the PDP broke into about four pieces can only make your chances better.

  • ‘APC ‘ll defeat PDP in Rivers’

    ‘APC ‘ll defeat PDP in Rivers’

    All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate in Rivers State, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, is optimistic that he will win the March 28 election. In this interview with EMMANUEL OLADESU, he explains why he believes the APC will have an upper hand. 

    You claim Nyesom Wike is your friend. Are you surprised by the allegations of violence attributed to him and his party?

    Yes, but there are many friends you have that you cannot predict what they can do!

    How are you sure you will get the security agencies to implement the plans you have outlined to protect the people of Rivers State?

    Everything you deal with in life depends on season and context. For those of us who are Christians, the book of Ecclesiastes says that there is time for everything. I know that if I get there, the contexts will be different, the factors at play will be different and I am optimistic that I will get all the cooperation I need to implement my security programme. Rivers State will be peaceful again.

    Are you optimistic that the votes will count?

    I am optimistic that the votes will count. Rivers people are looking forward to installing the type of government they deserve. They won’t be intimidated by anybody; they won’t be harassed by anybody; they won’t submit to threat and intimidation. It is a matter of time and we will rise to the occasion. We will cast our votes, we will defend our votes and we will ensure that our votes count. I am convinced about that.

    I am also optimistic that we will get the cooperation of security agencies and will continue to spotlight what is going on in Rivers State and will attract the attention of the nation and the international community. It is not optional, because if votes don’t count in Rivers State, there is no guarantee that it will count elsewhere in the country. Today, we might isolate what is going on in Rivers State and say this is Rivers. If this trend of violence continues, people in other areas may be emboldened and the whole country will turn into crisis.

    So, we must all work together to ensure that we stem the tide of political violence in Rivers. It is in our collective interest and I am sure that Nigerians are listening.

    What is your fallback option?

    I have no fallback option, order than working with other stakeholders to ensure that the elections are free and fair. Up till now, nobody has found a better form of government than democracy. Democracy is our only option and we need to make sacrifices to ensure that it works.

    Will you follow the Ekiti example, by petitioning the National Human Rights Commission over the spate of violence?

    The situation in Ekiti is not as bad as it is in Rivers. Ours is worse than Ekiti and it is degenerating daily. We have made a few petitions to the National Human Rights Commission and we will continue to do so, hoping that somebody will pay attention to our cry in Rivers. So, it is not about following the Ekiti example and we will continue to act within the ambits of the law; we will not go outside the law to arrest the situation.

    The alternative is to have a lawless state and that is anarchy; that is not the option in any civilised society. We are civilised men and women and will not resort to self help.

    You have repeatedly stated you would continue with the policies of the present administration. To what extent?

    Governor Amaechi has laid a good foundation for the state and we will continue with the projects he has started. But, that does not mean that we will adopt all his policies and programmes. No two governments can be the same, just as no two individuals can be the same, even if they are Siamese twins. We will progress based on contexts and challenges that we confront, but if we are going to continue with most of his programmes.

    Would you continue with Amaechi’s policies?

    The teachers are being retrained as you are aware and the retraining is for a maximum period of one year. Some of them are in Oxford University and other UK-based universities, while the remaining ones are in Nigerian universities, under a phased programme. After some time, you won’t have Indians run the system again because we would have improved the capacity of our people, so that we can get world class education.

    We shouldn’t compromise our standards because we are scared of what people will say. A leader shows the people the way and not the people showing the leader the way.

    How are you sure that you will win the election on April 11?

    I am not a man who will waste my time on things that are not viable. I can feel the pulse of Rivers people; I know what the issues are and I have been involved in politics in Rivers State longer than anybody who is running today, including Nyesom Wike. If this election is conducted three times, I will win three times.

    I am happy you said that there may be a correlation between the outcome of the presidential election and the state election. As we speak, no one can say with certainty that either Buhari or Jonathan will win the election.

    I know that Rivers people are enlightened enough and the national scene is clear enough on who would win, no matter how we pretend. All of us have an idea who will win the election and we won’t be struggling with six week shift, if somebody was not leading and leading clearly.

  • PDP has conceded defeat before election, says APC campaign

    PDP has conceded defeat before election, says APC campaign

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) Presidential Campaign Organisation has described the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) allegation that Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu was nursing a presidential ambition after General Muhammadu Buhari becomes president as a concrete evidence that the party had conceded presidential ticket to the APC.

    Director of Strategic Communications of the APC Presidential Campaign Organisation Mr. Dele Alake said this in a statement yesterday.

    Alake, while analysing the allegation credited to the Director of Media, PDP Presidential Campaign Organisation, Mr. Femi Fani-Kayode, said the scenario started with the assumption that the APC would win the presidential polls on March 28.

    He said the time-frame of six months for the action to take place meant that Gen. Buhari and Prof. Yemi Osinbajo would have been sworn-in as president and vice president on May 29, 2015.

    “Any psycho-analyst can read the mind of the purveyors of this concoction of falsehood. Their assumption gives away the fact that they themselves accept the certainty of victory of the APC in the presidential election,” Alake said.

    He said the massive support for the APC presidential ticket locally and internationally has inflicted a devastating damage on the psychology of the PDP campaign managers, “leading to an acute case of schizophrenia.”

    Alake said the PDP presidential campaign spokesperson shot himself in the foot in his desperation to spin a conspiracy theory that was childish and merits the condemnation of all right-thinking persons.

    The statement reads: “Our attention has been drawn to a statement credited to the Director of Media of the PDP Presidential Campaign Organisation on the APC and its leaders.

    “Fani-Kayode alleged that Asiwaju Tinubu would become president by asking the Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo to resign after six months in office in the belief that the president, Muhammadu Buhari, may have terminal health challenges.

    “That the message came through Fani-Kayode, who, just a few days ago, was brought to answer corruption charges, makes the message incredulous.  The whole world knows the other reasons for the incredulity of any message delivered through him.

    “However, to the uninformed, there is no iota of truth in such allegation. It is a product of infantile and wild imagination of a convoluted, distorted and warped mind.”

    It added: “In the APC, we do not indulge in oath-taking, pact-signing and such other rituals that the PDP establishment is adept at. Such PDP-induced Okija scenarios have no place in the APC.

    “Prof. Osinbajo is a thorough-bred, accomplished professor, teacher, pastor, mentor and preacher, who is nationally and internationally acknowledged as a man of probity, integrity, transparency and competence, who can never be part of such inanities.

    “Asiwaju Tinubu, on his part, is the foremost national leader of the APC, who has achieved an enviable political status, fame and stature. He has gone far beyond using subterfuge to attain any political position.

    “It is widely known globally that he had been pivotal in midwifing the most potent and formidable opposition movement that has become the nightmare of the incompetent behemoth called the PDP, and to the delight of Nigerians, the desired change they are waiting for.

    “Having lost substantial ground politically and seeing the inevitability of an APC victory at the polls, it is the PDP that is strenuously engaging in all kinds of subterfuge from hurling personal abuses and attacks on Buhari and Tinubu; to election postponement antics; to evading elections at all costs and even the unfashionable idea of foisting an interim government. It is the PDP that is generating crisis to make the elections difficult, if not impossible. Unknown to its campaign machinery, these gimmicks portray the PDP as deep in conclusive disarray.

    “Indeed, the fact that the PDP campaign machinery can construct a post-presidential election scenario in which APC would be in power is a significant testimony of their admission that they have lost this election.

    “We note this mental and psychological concession of victory to our party’s presidential candidate, but reject the odious scenario. Nigerians should please ignore this latest antic because it is untrue, ridiculous, ludicrous, mundane and jejune.”