Tag: Dickson

  • ‘Changes Bayelsa people need from Dickson’

    ‘Changes Bayelsa people need from Dickson’

    Author and human rights activist Nengi Josef Owei is out of prison where he was committed following a libel case resulting from one of his long prosaic letters. But he is out with another epistle. This time, to the Bayelsa State Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson.

    His latest essay is crafted like an open letter to the governor loaded with lines of advice on the current plight of workers in Bayelsa State. He entitled the short epistle, ‘Sermons From The Oxbow Lake’.

    Throughout the letter, Owei addresses Dickson as His Excellency. He opines that the governor and his administration have failed to build on the legacies of the late former Governor Diepreye Alamieyeseigha.

    The beginning of his letter captures his theme. He says: “This is not a rumour, Your Excellency. According to the people of Bayelsa State, you are owing them salaries for five months. They are quite right. There is great hunger in the land, and we appear not to have saved for the rainy day. We have fallen short of the dreams of our forebears. We have fallen short of the expectations of Alamieyeseigha”.

    He further gives a brief background of the reason behind his incarceration, his future work and immediately returns to the subject of his epistle. “Your Excellency”, he says, “ I was not at the man’s (Alamieyseigha’s) burial. As you know, I was in prison for writing a book, for spelling the name of my neighbour on one hundred and fifty-three pages of paper. I have since resolved to write a new book where I will spell only my name on every page, and hope that nobody will take offence against me for doing that.

    “But that is by the way. Let’s be good friends for once. Let’s chat. We have terrible issues of state to deal with. We have the Niger Delta Avengers to think about. We have the aftermath of the labour strike to talk about. We have the high cost of fuel to consider. We really need to talk”.

    Juxtaposing the present workers’ condition with how Alamieyeseigha, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan and former Governor Timipre Sylva treated the state’s civil servants, he continues: “I was just wondering, Your Excellency, how Alamieyeseigha would have felt if he were still alive to witness the sorry sight of Bayelsans deprived of their pay for five months running.

    “He would have frowned, Alamieyeseigha would have frowned like a cowboy, at any Special Adviser or Commissioner who may have had the temerity to advise him not to pay salaries for one month. It was completely out of the man’s dictionary, that thing about owing salaries.

    “Alamieyeseigaha saw the worker as the primary tool for the progress of Bayelsa State, and he felt duty bound to pay whoever he owed, whoever he hired. You could practically say the same thing about Goodluck Jonathan and Timipre Sylva. They paid salaries in their days as governors. They never messed with the take-home pay of civil servants.

    “In fact, they took active steps to improve the common plight of civil servants under various empowerment programmes. They repeatedly acknowledged that Bayelsa was a civil service state, and they sympathized with that reality. And the fact of the matter, Your Excellency, is that you benefited from such programmes when you were not governor. Even your conscience recognizes that as the truth.”

    Massaging the ego of his subject, Owei boldly points out what he considers the major unforgivable weaknesses of the present government and elaborately offers counsel.

    He says: “I have been doing my diplomatic best to sift the gross information getting to me about your government. I am searching for words that won’t wound your pride. As things stand, however, it seems that every nice thing there is to say about the Dickson government has been said. I shudder to hear the not so nice things that are being said at the moment.

    “It is scandalous not to pay salaries, to start with. Think about it, my friend. It doesn’t tell well of your government in the history books. It has gone down in the history of Bayelsa State that Chief Henry Seriake Dickson has taken the trophy for the first governor to starve Bayelsa of daily bread.

    “That is bad enough. That’s not flattering at all. I happen to think that you can improve your image, the image of the much vaunted restoration government, by redeeming your recent pledge to pay half salaries for February, and go beyond that to do what’s right and proper”.

    He condemns the idea of paying workers half salaries and shudders to hear that the governor recently paid workers only half of April salary out of five month arrears.

    “In the first place, I think it’s unheard of, and I don’t mind using that word again, to talk of half salaries for one month when you are owing all of five months. You should pay all, and disappoint those who say — with their noses in the air — that your government can’t even pay salaries. Why should that be the foremost topic of discussion in every kitchen? It doesn’t make sense, if you ask me. And the earlier we sit down to talk, the better, “he says.

    He adds: “As you know, I shall be embarking on a reading tour around Africa very soon. I don’t want Robert Mugabe to ask me why my governor is owing the salaries of workers in an oil producing state, when I get to Zimbabwe.

    “What should I tell him? That man has the tongue of a wasp. His wit is beyond control. Read between the lines of anything he says. The other day, he said something about smokers and fools, as if they are one and the same thing, and I couldn’t help sniggering into my sleeves. That man is funny, don’t you think?

    “So what should I tell Mugabe? What should I tell Bill Clinton when I get to Arkansas? What should I tell David Cameron when I get to 10 Downing Street, London? What should I tell the princes and princesses of foreign climes why you don’t pay salaries anymore?

    “Why are you telling workers, civil servants for that matter, to ply other sources of personal preoccupation and fend for themselves? Remember that civil servants are forbidden to engage in private practice of any kind. Why is your government distracting the entire workforce of Bayelsa State from the founding dreams of our forefathers?

    “Let’s be civil, Your Excellency. Let’s be frank. Let’s reason this out around a round conference table with glass upon it to reflect our faces, coffee cups by our sides. I hate to think that the argument in every Bayelsa home has been brought down to a pot of domestic soup that was routine in times past. Even the radio now talks about the rampant theft of soup pots. That is not funny, Your Excellency, if it applies to Bayelsa under your charge.

    “Your primary obligation to the good people of Bayelsa State, as we speak, is that you pay salaries. The spirit of Alamieyeseigha will bear me witness on this. The worst government Bayelsa has seen so far may well be that of Colonel Edor Obi. It was a government that did not embark on any project. Even till date, there is no single infrastructural adventure credited to that administration. Its primary duty, as it turned out, was that it paid salaries.

    “Throughout the life of that government, that ideal was not compromised. The question is inevitable. Why should we be compelled to compare your government with the worst? Why let that happen when you can avoid it?”

    Owei is not shy to identify with the economic difficulties facing the governor but maintains that Dickson has no reason not to pay salaries of workers. He recalls that the governor once opened a bank account to save for the rainy day. He reminds the governor that the rain he saved for has started falling.

    “Do not lose sleep on the pain of a good advice given freely in friendly tones conducive to the ears of the world’s countless antennae. Your government needs friends, Your Excellency. I am quick to identify with your plight because this has never happened before. Bayelsa has never seen this kind of deprivation since the advent of the state.

    “Correct me if am wrong. But it has never been so terrible that school fees cannot be paid and children have to stay back at home and endure the day’s bite of hunger. No governor before you, from Alamieyeseigha, through Jonathan, to Sylva, ever got so helpless that they couldn’t pay salaries.

    “This is the proverbial rainy day that you were saving for, Your Excellency. You were given to see that such a day will come. You were led to envisage this day and to envision a time when the lack of salaries will beat every civil servant indoors, far away from their offices, leaving the government as empty as the old secretariat built by Olubolade”.

    In lines full of imageries, Owei laments the untold hardship of Bayelsans arising from non-payment of salaries.  He asks the governor to seek advice from true friends.

    He adds: “You do need friends like me to cheer you up at this trying time, Your Excellency. I am at your service. I am here to whisper some home truths to you. What I tell you, believe me, happens in every Bayelsa home as we speak.

    “The pots are empty. The portion of bread has become but a slice instead of a full loaf, and there is no talk of butter spread upon it. There is talk, instead, of parents using their children as mortgage for food in the open market. These things were unheard of, I tell you. They remain unheard of, and yet here they are with us.

    “First things first, Your Excellency. Clear the backlog of emoluments to the beleaguered civil servant so that the burden of leadership will become lighter on your shoulders. Redeem your name from the bad books of memory, and forsake your foul temper when you are appealing to the sensibilities of the multitude.

    “A friendly word of advice never hurt anybody. The scripture says a labourer is worthy of his wages. You know the book, the chapter and the verse in question. Pay the salaries, Your Excellency, and revamp the image of your government.”

  • Dickson breaks promise to pay workers half-salaries

    Dickson breaks promise to pay workers half-salaries

    •Governor: I have queried HoS, accountant 

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has again failed to actualise his directive that the state’s civil servants should be paid half-salaries “with immediate effect”.

    The governor, last Thursday, in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, ordered the immediate payment of 50 per cent of salaries of the workers.

    Though it was gathered that the governor wanted to pay half of one month to the workers, who had not been paid for about six months, most civil servants expected the governor to fulfil his promise by last Friday.

    But their hope was dashed as their mobile phones did not get payment alerts throughout the weekend.

    Bayelsa State civil servants are owed about six months; local government workers about 13 months and pensioners about nine months.

    The situation has plunged residents into untold hardship with many of them resorting to begging for survival.

    The statement by Iworiso-Markson claimed that excitement and joy had returned to the state, following last Thursday’s directive for immediate payment of salaries.

    He said: “Since the announcement, workers in all the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) went jubilant, expressing hope that the trend will continue.

    “Many of the workers are now happy and are poised to assist the government to move the state ahead.

    “The governor gave the directive after a meeting with the State Finance Committee at the Government House in Yenagoa.

    “The directive was in fulfilment of the agreement between the government and organised labour, represented by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC).”

    The statement also quoted Dickson as saying the payment of the 50 per cent salaries would begin with the ministries and departments, which had turned in the reports of their verification.

    It added that Dickson hailed the workers for their patience and understanding.

    But residents have derided the governor for his failure to pay workers, as he ordered.

    In reply, Dickson, at the weekend, expressed dismay over the delay in the payment, despite his directive to that effect.

    The governor directed the Head of Service (HoS), the Accountant–General and the accountants in the MDAs to ensure that the directive was carried out, not later than today.

    In a separate statement by Iworiso-Markson, the governor warned that failure to carry out the directive by Monday would attract stringent disciplinary action against the erring officers.

    Dickson said he queried why the salaries were delayed, despite the fact that the funds were released to the MDAs since last Thursday, when the directive was issued.

    He also demanded an immediate explanation from the HoS, the Accountant-General and other relevant officers “on what necessitated the delay”.

    “While regretting the unfortunate situation, he (Dickson) also used the opportunity to commend workers …for their patience, sense of maturity and understanding, stressing that the government remains committed to the welfare of workers at all levels in the state,” the statement added.

  • Can Dickson’s pills  heal troubled Bayelsa?

    Can Dickson’s pills heal troubled Bayelsa?

    There is disagreement over the appropriateness of Governor Seriake Dickson’s measures to heal a troubled and divided Bayelsa State since his second return, reports Mike Odiegwu, Yenagoa

    Bayelsa State Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson, is facing the toughest test of his political life. His second term in office is replete with challenges and people are watching to see how he will wriggle out of myriads of problems confronting his administration.

    Some observers are finding it difficult to believe that Bayelsa, a small oil-producing state with about 1.8million people, has gradually gained prominence in the list of states unable to pay salaries of workers. People believe that Bayelsa is supposed to be a model even if other states in the country are struggling to pay their workers.

    According to a recent report, Bayelsa tops the list of states unable to pay salaries. Dickson owes workers for about five months while Akwa Ibom, Edo, Rivers, Delta, Cross River and most of the states in the northern and eastern parts of the country do not owe workers. Even Taraba and Ebonyi states are said to be heads above trouble waters.

    Critics say the present Bayelsa State Government has no excuse not to pay the civil servants. According to them, the inability of the governor to pay workers is a breach of his second term campaign promise.

    A resident told The Nation that “the situation is life-threatening. Civil servants, local government workers and even teachers and lecturers in academic institutions are owed many arrears of salaries and allowances.

    “There is no gainsaying there is endemic hunger in the state. People are dying following their inability to pay critical bills and many business concerns and families are relocating to other states because of hardship,the type that had never been experienced before in the state.”

    Labour crisis

    Already, some local government secretariats and ministries, departments and parastatals had been shut down and deserted by workers. Also, some of the oil-rich state employees have resorted to begging for survival.

    The condition has also worsened the security situation in the state. House-to-house armed robberies, burglaries and violent attacks on residents by angry and hungry youths have become the order of the day.

     The state Chairman, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Mr. Ndiomu George-Diepre, said the congress was not happy with the development. Regretting the economic situation in Nigeria, he begged the governor to pay the workers to enable them meet their personal and family obligations.

    He disclosed that the workers’ strength was about 45,000. George-Diepre said: “The congress as usual is still on the struggle. Right now, we are on the air, calling on the government to pay the unpaid salaries.

    “While we understand the economic situation in the country and how it also affects the states, we are still asking that the government should pay all the outstanding salaries of workers, particularly the pensioners and of course, the local government workers.

    “There are also a lot of scams and ghost workers suspected in those areas, and the governor is saying he wants to do verification and after that they will pay. But the Labour is saying that they should be paid because they have suffered for a long time.”Recently, the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), in the NDU derided Dickson, for failing to pay them arrears of salaries.

    Also, the Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions (NASU) and the National Association of Technologists (NAT) in the university, joined in condemning what they described as Dickson’s insensitivity to their plight.

    The position of the university’s unions was contained in a communiqué signed by Chairman, ASUU, Dr. Stanley Ogoun; Chairman, SSANU, Wilcox Fakidouma; Chairman, NAAT, Ekipre Dienagha; and Chairman, NASU, Kenneth Akpofagha.

    They said the inability of Dickson’s Restoration Government to pay them salaries had made lives unbearable for them, adding that the development made it difficult for their members to meet their parental obligations, resulting in their children and wards dropping out of schools.

    The groups said: “The development has resulted in families of our members going hungry, our children being driven out of school in the last term, the sick uncared for and evicted by landlords due to expiration of house rents.

    “Also, there is increased rate of hypertension and related diseases arising from members’ inability to provide food on the table and worsened by no means of credit facilities.”

    The groups noted that though they supported the state government’s staff verification as a means of exterminating payroll fraud in the system, the timing of the exercise was wrong. The aggrieved unions argued that Dickson initiated the exercise as a calculated attempt to further worsen the already critical state of the people.

    They called on the Dickson-led government to immediately pay their salary arrears on the basis of the Bank Verification Number (BVN) they submitted earlier while the current verification exercise continued.

    But Dickson has been engaging workers and appealing to them to be patient since he came back from his long vacation. Immediately he returned, the governor set up a Judicial Commission of Inquiry to probe alleged payroll fraud in the state.

    Dickson insisted that the state’s payroll must be sanitised to determine the authentic wage bill as part of measures by his administration to pay five-month salary arrears owed to civil servants.

    A statement by the governor’s Chief Press Secretary (CPS), Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, said the governor made the proposal when he engaged labour in a crucial meeting.

    A state divided against itself?

    In fact, there is no gainsaying that Bayelsa, the Jerusalem of Ijaw nation, with only eight local government areas and the state of the former President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, is highly divided. Analysts believe the last governorship elections, especially the campaign thrusts of politicians and their political parties, compounded the disunity in the state..

    After the election which was concluded on the altar of heavy financial inducement of voters by both the APC and the PDP, Dickson became the second governor to get a second term in office.

    So, bloody and cantankerous poll, Dickson now has a huge task of uniting warring brothers and giving everybody in the state a sense of belonging. But fear  that peace may remain elusive for much longer heightened with the ongoing face of between  Dickson and the labour movements.

    Now that Dickson is back from what his aides described as a well-deserved rest, he is expected to begin to apply the right pills to heal the ailing economy of the state and seek ways to complete many of his abandoned projects because his second term clock has already started ticking. It is indeed a difficult task considering the continual dwindling of revenue accruing to the state.

  • PDP ‘ll be repositioned, says Dickson

    PDP ‘ll be repositioned, says Dickson

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will be repositioned, adding that the vision of its founding fathers will not be compromised.

    The governor urged party elders to assist the interim leadership in its bid to reconcile aggrieved chieftains and chart a new way forward for the party.

    Dickson, who is the PDP Reconciliation Committee chairman, visited former National Deputy Chairman Chief Olabode George in Lagos as part of efforts to forge unity and understanding. During the visit, he also commiserated with the former Ondo State military governor over the demise of his mother.

    A source said both party leaders discussed the challenges facing the party in the Southwest and at the national level, especially the impact of the division that resulted into the aborted national convention in Port-Harcourt, capital of Rivers State.

    The task before the Makarfi Caretaker Committee, zoning of the chairmanship and grievances arising from the alleged marginalisation of the Southwest were also discussed.

    George, according to the source, reiterated his loyalty to the party and determination to ensure that the Southwest caucus does not always play the second fiddle.

  • Our goal is to regain Presidency in 2019, says Dickson

    Our goal is to regain Presidency in 2019, says Dickson

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has said his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), is planning to regain control of the Federal Government in 2019.

    The governor spoke in Yenagoa, the state capital, following PDP’s state congress.

    He urged members nationwide to regain power for the party at the national level.

    In a statement by his Chief Press Secretary (CPS), Daniel Iworiso-Markson, the governor also urged the state chapter to sustain the unity among its members.

    He congratulated the electoral panel for the successful conduct of the congresses from the ward to the state level.

    Dickson said that, in the last four years, his government has worked hard to reposition the state and its political culture.

    The governor spoke amidst crumbling economy of the state arising from backlog of unpaid salaries of all categories of workers in the state.

    He acknowledged that the task ahead of the party leadership was enormous and urged them to collaborate with other stakeholders in the South-South and across the country towards winning the general elections in 2019.

    Dickson also expressed his optimism over victory at the Governorship Election Petition Tribunal.

    He said: “Our victory is not on trial; it was clear and transparent like our congress on Tuesday. What is on trial however, is the Nigerian Judiciary, the integrity of the Nigerian state and the individual consciences of the Judges, who are sitting and all the Justices who will sit on this matter from the beginning to the end. This is because we have done our best; you voted and we have defeated them roundly and squarely.

    “I also want to call your attention to the antics of the APC’s defeated candidate and their leaders in this state, that elections are over. The battle was fought and won by us. We want to work and collaborate with all federal agencies to protect and secure this state and bring development and prosperity to the state.”

    The Chairman of the Election Committee from the national secretariat of the party, Abuja, Mr. Edwin Anayo described the congresses in Bayelsa as the most peaceful and transparent in the country.

    The new state PDP officials elected are, Mr. Cleopas Mose (Chairman), Ebi Sunny-Goli (Deputy Chairman), Keku Godspower (Secretary), Gbalipre Turner (Treasurer) and Ebi Fafi (Financial Secretary).

    Others are: Osom Makbere (Publicity Secretary), Luke Demeoru (Organising Secretary), Amalala Atua (Youth Leader), Perekeme Richard (Legal Adviser), Numuomikari Walte (State Auditor) and Eunice Akene

  • Dickson to militants: you’re destroying Bayelsa, Niger Delta

    Dickson to militants: you’re destroying Bayelsa, Niger Delta

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson yesterday regretted that the activities of militants are damaging the image of the state and Niger Delta.

    The governor told gun-wielding youths in the region that his administration would not allow a repeat of the 1999 Odi massacre.

    Under former President Olusegun Obasanjo, the military invaded Odi in Kolokuma-Opokuma Local Government of Bayelsa State, to avenge the killing of security operatives by militants.

    A statement yesterday in Yenagoa, the state capital, by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, said the governor was reacting to Tuesday’s killing of three soldiers at a military outpost in Foropa, Southern Ijaw Local Government.

    The incident occurred about two days after suspected militants killed four naval ratings, an oil firm’s employee and his wife at a wellhead in Nembe creeks, Nembe Local Government.

    In the two incidents, the militants took away the rifles and other weapons of their victims.

    The Niger Delta, especially Bayelsa, has been on the spotlight, following the emergence of a new militant group, Niger Delta Avengers (NDA).

    President Muhammadu Buhari ordered security chiefs to crush the uprising in the state.

    Dickson condemned the unprovoked attacks and killing of security operatives.

    According to him, such unwarranted attacks portray the state and the region in bad light.

    The governor said community leaders, elders and other stakeholders would be summoned to a meeting.

    He advised the killers and their collaborators to stop.

    “Terrorism does not favour peace, neither can democracy express itself through violence,” Dickson said.

    The governor noted that the killings were putting innocent Beyelsa residents and others in Niger Delta in danger.

    He urged community leaders and other stakeholders to check activities of youths in their domains.

    Dickson said his administration was working with security agents to bring the killers to justice and forestall a future recurrence.

  • Dickson brought violence to Southern Ijaw, witness tells tribunal

    Dickson brought violence to Southern Ijaw, witness tells tribunal

    The first witness of the All Progressives Congress (APC), David Boyai, yesterday told the Bayelsa State Governorship Election Petitions Tribunal sitting in Abuja that the arrival of Governor Seriake Dickson was the major cause of violence during the December 6 election.

    The APCs’ candidate in the election, Timipre Sylva, challenged the announcement of Dickson as winner of the election by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) because of violence and alleged non-compliance with the Electoral Act.

    Boyai, during cross-examination by Dickson’s lawyer, Tayo Oyetibo (SAN), said the governor’s arrival at Okoroma Ward 1 of Southern Ijaw Local Government last December 6, led to violence.

    He said: “We were preparing peacefully for the election at Okoroma Ward 1 of Southern Ijaw until Governor Dickson’s arrival, which was when violence erupted.”

    The witness told the tribunal that he voted at the election.

    He also adopted his written statement.

    Oteyibo challenged the late filing of the original copies of the petition.

    The lawyer said the late filing of the original copies of the petition should be resolved before going into the hearing proper.

    The petitioner’s lawyer Sebastine Hon (SAN) said there was no issue to the respondent’s objections to the filing.

    Citing the third paragraph of the First Schedule of the Electoral Act, Hon averred that Oteyibo’s argument was not tenable.

    He urged the tribunal to dismiss it.

    Tribunal Chairman Justice Kazeem Alogba advised lawyers to the parties to raise their objections in their written addresses.

    Further hearing continues today.

  • ‘Dickson causing division in Bayelsa apc’

    ‘Dickson causing division in Bayelsa apc’

    Former Bayelsa State Governor Timipre Sylva has warned Governor Seriake Dickson  against destabilising the All Progressives Congress (APC). He accused the governor of fuelling disaffection in the party.

    In a statement in Yenagoa by his media adviser, Doifie Buokoribo, Sylva accused Dickson of using some “discredited and suspended” officials of APC as moles to cause disaffection and blackmail the party and its leaders.

    He said Dickson’s conspiracy against the APC will be exposed, adding that it is an effort in futility.

    Sylva said: “Dickson and his party, the Peoples Democratic Party, have re-enacted their pastime of spreading falsehood about the APC and its leaders in Bayelsa State and trying to create dissension where none exists. They had tried that before and during the last governorship election in the state. When they failed miserably, they turned to forces external to Bayelsa, but inside the election management body and armed militia community, which they used to steal the people’s votes.

    “After he was awarded victory, one would have thought that a man who ‘won’ election would concentrate on governance. But, Dickson would not. Living under the shadow of fear of losing the stolen mandate, since APC filed a petition at the election tribunal, Dickson has applied every available mischief to try to destabilise the party and blackmail its leaders.

    “They have now procured the services of some discredited officials of the APC, who were suspended recently. These renegades are being used by Dickson and the PDP to spread wild, unsubstantiated allegations against Sylva and the Minister of State for Agriculture, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri.

    He added: “Fabricating stories about Sylva and the APC has proved to be more than just a passing fad for Dickson. It has become policy – the only ostensible policy of the administration since his swearing in.

    “Dickson has manifested understandable nervousness on the governorship seat. But, there should be a limit to anxiety. He should stop his mission in futility and await the outcome of the electoral courts. Neither his nervousness nor his current mischievous publications can stop the wind of justice that is about to blow him out of his usurped seat.”

  • Tribunal strikes out suit against  Dickson

    Tribunal strikes out suit against Dickson

    THE Election Petitions Tribunal in Nyanya, Abuja, has struck out a suit by the Action Alliance (AA), challenging the election of Governor Seriake Dickson in the Bayelsa State governorship polls.

    This is yet another setback for the opposition parties challenging Dickson’s election.

    The case, which was dismissed because it was  wrongly filed, suffered the same fate at the Federal High Court in Abuja, with Justice Ademola presiding.

    The tribunal held that the petitioners, whom Mr A. O. Madabuchi stood for, were not authentic members of the Action Alliance, who were seeking the nullification of the election, which produced Dickson.

    Besides the no-right-to-file argument, which worked against the interest of the first petitioner, reports said the decision to dismiss the suit was further strengthened when a counter-petition was filed by the real leaders of the party, led by their counsel, Malachy Nwenkpe.

    Also, the legal team of Governor Dickson, led by Mr Tayo Oyetibo (SAN), inspected the ballot materials supposedly used for the election in Brass Local Government.

    This development followed the granting of Dickson’s prayers to inspect materials used in Brass.

    The poll was said to have been characterised by violence, intimidation and snatching of ballot boxes in the council.

     

     

  • Dickson, Bayelsa Speaker get knocks for lawmakers’, workers’ plight

    Dickson, Bayelsa Speaker get knocks for lawmakers’, workers’ plight

    The Bayelsa First Initiative (BFI) has blasted Governor Seriake Dickson and House of Assembly Speaker Kombowei Benson for failing to swear in the lawmakers elected on the platform of opposition parties.

    The alleged ill-treatment of the three opposition members drew the ire of BFI, a group of former elected and appointed political office holders.

    It accused Dickson of conspiring with the Assembly’s leadership, led by Benson, to stop the swearing-in of the three lawmakers.

    The members are: Watson Belemote, of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), representing Brass 2; Gibson Munalayefa, of the Labour Party (LP), Ogbia 2 and Gabriel Ogbara, of African Democratic Congress (ADC), Ogbia 3.

    They were declared winners two months ago by the Appeal Court, sitting in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.

    But the Assembly’s leadership, dominated by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), ignored them and inaugurated their party members, who won rerun in March.

    The aggrieved members sent a protest letter to the leadership of the National Assembly and the attorney-general of the federation (AGF), urging them to stop the impunity.

    BFI’s Executive Director Chief Nathan Egba condemned the ‘’anti-democratic’’ stance of Dickson and Benson.

    The activist warned that the governor’s continued failure to prevail on the Assembly’s leadership to swear in the three minority party members signalled a danger for the state.

    He said the state was setting a bad precedent, which future Assembly could also follow.

    Egba described Dickson’s alleged directive to his Special Adviser on Treasury Matters, Mr Seipulo, to remove over 500 civil servants from the payroll for allegedly supporting the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the governorship poll, as the worst decision of any governor.

    He said most of Dickson’s policies and statements, following his controversial re-election, was dividing residents.

    Egba said: “For instance, do the governor and the Assembly leadership think the people of Brass 2 as well as Ogbia 2 and 3 will be happy with the administration for shutting them out of the legislative process for almost a year?

    “We call on rulers, non-government organisations (NGOs) and civil society organisations, lawyers, particularly the AGF, and that of Bayelsa State as well as the leadership of the National Assembly, to prevail on Governor Dickson and the leadership of the House of Assembly to do the right thing.”