Tag: Dokpesi

  • Convention: PDP to screen 57 aspirants

    The  Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) National Convention Screening Committee, Gabriel Suswam, has said the committee will screen 57 aspirants jostling for various positions in the party.

    Suswam, a former Governor of Benue State, stated this at the commencement of the screening exercise on Monday in Port Harcourt.

    The PDP national convention is expected to take place on Wednesday in the oil city.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)  reports that the committee has screened the PDP former Deputy National Chairman, Chief Bode George; a former Minister of Education, Prof. Tunde Adeniran; the Chairman of Daar Communications, Chief Raymond Dokpesi and other aspirants vying  for the position of national chairman.

     

     

  • PDP CHAIRMANSHIP Agbaje, Dokpesi, George or who?

    PDP CHAIRMANSHIP Agbaje, Dokpesi, George or who?

    Sunday Oguntola reports on the many behind-the-scene intrigues and politicking playing out ahead of Wednesday’s proposed national convention of the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP)

    STAKEHOLDERS in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) are agitated over the nagging crisis in the main opposition party ahead of the national convention slated for Wednesday in Port Harcourt, Rivers State capital.  The convention, which was designed to serve as the springboard for the relaunch of the PDP, is not only being threatened but also poised to further polarise the party.

    While the Senator Ali Modu-Sheriff’s faction has called for the outright cancellation of the convention, the Senator Ahmed Makarfi-led Caretaker Committee insisted nothing will stop the exercise. Though the party has set up a reconciliation team headed by Prof Jerry Gana, there are feelers that the disharmony within key chieftains might be far from over.

    Talks are ongoing with the feuding camps to resolve the lingering crisis, which has turned the party that ruled the nation for 16 years until last May, a sorry shadow of its old self. Investigations revealed that self-interest and big egos are the main challenges to healing old wounds in the PDP. The national convention, which is highly controversial, on its self has further bought this to the fore.

    Sources informed the caretaker committee and governors elected on the platform of the party are at loggerheads over who should emerge national chairman of the party. Both camps, according to finding, are aware occupant of the post will essentially dictate the direction and shape of the party for the next three years or so.

    This realisation, it was gathered, is at the heart of the volcano threatening to descend on the party over the post. While PDP governors are bent on picking a candidate that will dance to their tune, the caretaker committee backed by elders in the party are poised to stop the governors at their track.

    The elders, who are working with the committee, are looking towards a candidate that can stand up to the governors and keep the party from influences, especially from elected politicians under the platform. The elders, according to sources, are bothered that the governors have had undue overbearing influences that affect the fortunes of the party in several states.

    An elder from the South south told our correspondent under strict anonymity: “The root of our crisis are the governors. Many of them govern the states and still want to dictate what happens in the party.

    “It is worse for those who are leaving offices. They always want to impose their candidates. That is what is responsible for the many disgruntled elements we have in several states. “That is why we have factions in almost all states in the federation. We are determined to stop the governors from hijacking the party’s apparatus and the first move is to fight off whatever candidate they have in mind.”

    The forces for, against Dokpesi Already, this dichotomy is already playing out in the race for the party’s chairmanship. On my side is the caretaker committee, which is reportedly rooting for Emeritus Chairman of DAAR Communications, Chief Raymond Dokpesi.

    Dokpesi, as far as the committee is concerned, is a heavyweight that no governor can push around. Highly travelled and exposed, it is believed that he would put the governors where they rightly belong while also muscling the PDP back to reckoning ahead of 2019 national elections.

    His expansive media empire, some of those disposed to his candidature say, will also help to project the activities and rebirth of the party across the nation. They consider him a gallant fighter who cannot be bamboozled by the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC).

    His preference, it was gathered, was responsible for the zoning of the post to the south. Last week, Dokpesi visited Makarfi at his Kaduna’s country home to solicit support for his candidature. The visit, PDP sources said, was planned to send a clear message that the media mogul is the preferred candidate of the committee.

    Makarfi, who warmly received the chairmanship contestant, said: “I stand by what I’ve been saying that the race is open. Even though zoning has always been in the party’s constitution, it does not exclude other aspirants because nothing should exclude any other person and at the end of the day, the people will freely have access to all the candidates and freely vote for whoever they want.

    “Our party needs to move away from the era of imposition as events of “automatic ticket” led PDP to its present situation, and that is why I want to ensure level-playing field for all.”

    He praised the Edo-born politician, saying he is the kind of unifier and dogged fighter that the PDP needs at a moment like this. He is said to have been assured by the Makarfi-led committee that he would contest and win the post.

    But the governors are not unmindful of the thinking of the committee. They, on their part, are determined to stop Dokpesi at all costs, a development that reportedly led to his tactical exclusion through the micro-zoning arrangement.

    The arrangement, according to findings, was hatched by PDP governors spearheaded by Rivers State’s Nyesome Wike. The Rivers governor, investigations revealed, is the arrowhead of the plans by PDP governors to run the shows in the party.

    They believe Dokpesi is too independent-minded to follow their leading. Some of the governors have also pointed out that he has a running case with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) bordering on alleged involvement in N2.1 billion arms deal.

    His ongoing trail, they believe, will be a further dent on the battered image of the party at a time it is struggling to rebrand.

    Enter Bode George With the active connivance of Ekiti’s Ayo Fayose and Ondo’s Segun Mimiko, Wike reportedly plotted to have the post zoned to the south-west last week.

    Rising from a meeting last week, the South West zonal executives said the position of the National Chairman has been zoned to Ogun/ Lagos states; treasurer to Ondo/ Ekiti and Deputy Publicity Secretary to Oyo/ Osun states.

    The factional National Deputy Chairman South West, Dr. Eddy Olafeso, said the arrangement was to prevent needless rancours ahead of the exercise in Port-Harcourt.

    To show its preference, the meeting had one of the main contestants, Chief Bode George in attendance. Mimiko and Fayose also attended to show support for his candidature. That effectively confirms George as the governors’ anointed candidate.

    Surprisingly though, George does not have the support of all PDP governors. He is said to be riding only on the support of Fayose, Mimiko and Wike. A few in the Southeast are also to be disposed to his ambition.

    But some like Enugu state governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi and his Delta counterpart, Senator Ifeanyi Okowa are believed not to be too keen to George’s candidature. Some of these governors believe he comes to the exercise with a baggage following his imprisonment over alleged contract-splitting while he was chairman of the Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA), an indictment that the Supreme Court finally ruled against.

    Having someone like him as PDP chairman, they believe will be a hard-sell to the public, who will become seeing him as an ex-convict despite his vindication by the apex court. Besides, he is perceived as too old for the post. But his backers say what counts is the experience he brings to the job.

    Agbaje as an alternative

    This is why some of the governors are reportedly backing former PDP governorship candidate in Lagos state, Jimi Agbaje. Agbaje, according to his backers, is urbane and clean enough to spearhead the revival of the PDP. They say he comes to the contest without a baggage and a soaring public perception that is considered important to sell the PDP again to the weary public.

    Agbaje, who has picked the nomination form, said: “What I bring to the table is that I am not a member of any faction or any tendencies. I am in a position to talk to everybody to ensure as you love the PDP, then it is time to come back to the zone and appeal to those who feel very strongly to join us because Nigeria cannot make the progress it deserves without a viable opposition and that PDP is going to provide that opposition as an alternative government and in a responsible manner.

    “We are going to provide that robust opposition but in a very responsible manner.” On the zoning arrangement, he said: “So for me, I am not worried that there is this thing; the party is clear. It is zoned to the south, which is the preferred choice.

    “Now it is for those in the south to decide what they want. If they say it is the Southwest, so be it. If you feel you can run against the tide, nobody will stop you.

    “We must continue to go back to the constitution; the constitution does not give you the power to exclude anybody. When you exclude you create tension. If you say look, this is what we think is best, if you do not agree, then, get into the field and let us run this race.

    “We accept that mistakes were made in the past in the PDP, especially with our internal democracy. So we have to go back to the position of the founding fathers of our party and that means that we have go back to our constitution.

    “That is very important. We have to be more all-inclusive as we have been thus far. It is about bringing people nearer rather than sending them far away from the party. Everybody must fell to be part of this party.”

    He is also said to have the support of a few elder statesman, who feels the public respect he demands is critical to reworking the party back to winning ways. But his critics believe he lacks any political clout to become chairman of the main opposition party.

    Agbaje, they point out, has never won any election. They even claim he has never won his ward, let alone local government for the PDP despite being a governorship candidate. Besides, some believe he is just fronting for George, his godfather, who ensured his emergence as gubernatorial candidate in 2015 general elections.

    Voices of dissent

    There are also former Minister of Education, Professor Tunde Adeniran from Ekiti state and former Minister of Sports and Youth Development, Prof. Taoheed Adedoja from Oyo State. Both have picked the nomination form and maintained they remain in the contest despite the zoning of the post to Lagos and Ogun States.

    Former Ogun Governor Gbenga Daniels has stepped down for Dokpesi. His move was allegedly influenced by PDP governors backing the media owner.

    Adeniran, after picking his forms during the week, said‎ he is still very much in the race as he is committed to repositioning the party towards greatness and redirecting it in actualising the dreams of the founding fathers if given the mandate.

    “‎I want to assure all our party members and Nigerians at large that my venture into the chairmanship position of our great party has no other motive than to reposition, rebrand and put the party on the path of greatness. As a founding member, who has remained with the party in thick and thin and served in various frontline capacities, I possess the fortitude and experience to help the party achieve its objectives.

    “At this crucial period of our party and national polity, we need someone who has genuine interest of the party and is acceptable across boards; someone that has no integrity issue. I believe our delegates will appreciate the great need of the party for the personality I represent,” he said.

    Nowhere to hide  Even if the convention holds, choosing someone to lead the party is certain to further polarise it. Should Dokpesi be excluded by the zoning arrangement, he is bound to fight back in no small way. If George wins the contest, he will find it hard to keep the party as one because some stakeholders will see him as a handpicked candidate.

    Should Mr. ‘Neutral’ Agbaje gets the nod, he will have powerful governors and stakeholders to contest with. His gentleman mien may also mean the party will lose some of its bites as an opposition voice.

    Aside from that, the Modu Sheriff’s camp is waiting in the wing to throw spanners into the party’s reconciliation efforts. It appears the PDP has nowhere to hide from crisis. Wherever the pendulum swings, the party, once dubbed the biggest in Africa, will have a lot of house cleaning to do for the next foreseeable future.

  • Dokpesi: PDP may break if governors impose new party chairman

    Dokpesi: PDP may break if governors impose new party chairman

    One of the aspirants for the Office of the National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP), Chief Raymond Dokpesi, yesterday said the party would break up if its governors imposed a new leader on the party.

    He said the party was in crisis because its leaders moved away from the ideals of its founding fathers.

    Dokpesi, who made the submissions at a briefing in Abuja,  asked PDP governors to break away from the culture of impunity.

    He said: “I want us to just hope and pray that the governors, who spoke out clearly, said after the Ali Modu Sheriff episode, they had learnt their lessons and they will allow the party to take or make its decision.

    “And I verily believe them even when I have seen some departure from that. I have seen some departure from that and I am not naive to believe that I should take their words hook line and sinker as it will appear but I want to hope that Nigerians are watching.

    “There is nobody that owns PDP, it belongs to everybody. The consequence of not allowing internal democracy to prevail in the PDP is the fact that the party will break, the party will disappear into oblivion.

    “So, if the PDP does not reform now, it will not survive the current crisis and that aside, let me state very clearly that I do not belong to any faction.

    “I am not even aware of any faction of the PDP. I know that there is a central PDP, I know that there were disagreement over the processes of selecting an acting chairman of the party and I am aware of the fact that prior to the main convention, a good majority of the party members believed that once the NEC had approved that the presidency should go to the north, a memorandum will  be presented to the convention that the presidency should go to the north and that by PDP tradition, the chairmanship should go to the south and you cannot change this.

    “It is part of impunity that a group of persons get up and say we want to change because I believe it is not their personal property. If you are able to market it across and members of the party agree and say yes, that is fine. This issue is about communicating with every member of the party and respecting their views not a group of persons coming together and thinking that once they have decided, that should be final.

    Dokpesi traced the crisis in PDP to when it started disconnecting from the electorate.

    He added: “They started disconnecting from the electorate. They started moving away from the ideals that brought about the formation of the party. Impunity had set in,  there were impositions of candidates, and  internal democracy was not available.

    “It  became glaring that simple zoning principles within the party were abandoned and quite a lot of the manifestoes of the party and set objectives, service to humanity, improvement among others were in the process of jeopardy.

    “So they started offending each other in the party. We started stepping on each other’s toes. Those that were not happy decided to move out of the party, those that were able to manage, managed under a lot of pains, and so on.

    “If you remember clearly by 1999, we won 23 states (governors);  by 2003, we had 23 governors;  by 2007, we had 27 governors but in 2011 election, we dropped when there were doubts about this zoning or no zoning principles, and by 2015 elections, we were left with 12 governors of the PDP. That’s how the party’s  fortunes declined. It means things were wrong.

    “I believe that the party is sick because since after the 1999 general election, overconfidence came in, things went wrong and we were not addressing them and we need to address them. I think that if people are not allowed to contest freely, if people are not allowed to emerge according to the will of the people, then we are still dancing in circles. We won’t get any other result other than the ones we got in 2015.”

    Asked if he would leave the party if a candidate was imposed at the convention, Dokpesi said he might not.

    He said reconciliation was still possible in the party and begged its leaders to give peace a chance.

     “Let me commend all those who have been involved in trying to reconcile the various groups, and I think Senator Ali Modu Sheriff is right in his point of view that look, you cannot naked me in public and then try to dress me inside. Don’t humiliate me, give me some sort of way to land and you invited me, I didn’t ask you. You came to me that I should come and run for chairmanship position and he accepted, thinking that he was doing a favour but my case is different. I, Raymond Dokpesi said I want to be chairman and I went round everybody to say I want to be chairman because I believe that we have vied away from the vision of our founding fathers.”

  • PDP will break if governors impose new chairman – Dokpesi

    PDP will break if governors impose new chairman – Dokpesi

    One of the aspirants for the office of the National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Raymond Dokpesi, on Thursday said the party will break up if its governors impose a new leader on the party.

    He also said the party is in crisis because its leaders started moving away from the ideals of its founding fathers.

    Dokpesi, who made the submissions at a briefing in Abuja, asked PDP governors to break away from past culture of impunity.

    He said: “I want us to just hope and pray that the governors who spoke out very clearly said after the Ali Modu -Sheriff episode, they had learnt their lessons and they will allow the party to take or make its own decision.

    “And I verily believe them even when I have seen some departure from that. I have seen some departure from that and I am not naive to believe that I should take their words hook line and sinker as it will appear but I want to hope that Nigerians are watching.

    “There is nobody that owns PDP, it belongs to everybody. The consequence of not allowing internal democracy to prevail in the PDP is the fact that the party will break, the party will disappear into oblivion.

    “So, if the PDP does not reform now, it will not survive the current crisis and that aside, let me state very clearly that I do not belong to any faction.

    “I am not even aware of any faction of the PDP. I know that there is a central PDP, I know that there were disagreements over the processes of selecting an acting chairman of the party and I am aware of the fact that prior to the main convention, a good majority of the party members believed that once the NEC had approved that the presidency should go to the north, a memorandum will  be presented to the convention that the presidency should go to the north and that by PDP tradition, the chairmanship should go to the south and you cannot change this.

    “It is part of impunity that a group of persons get up and say we want to change because I believe it is not their personal property. If you are able to market it across and members of the party agree and say yes, that is fine. This issue is about communicating with every member of the party and respecting their views not a group of persons coming together and thinking that once they have decided, that should be final.

    Dokpesi traced the crisis in PDP to when it started disconnecting from the electorate.

    He added: “They started disconnecting from the electorate. They started moving away from the ideals that brought about the formation of the party. Impunity had set in, there were impositions of candidates, and internal democracy was not available.

    “It became very glaring that simple zoning principles within the party were abandoned and quite a lot of the manifestoes of the party and set objectives, service to humanity and improvement among others were in the process of jeopardy.

    “So they started offending each other in the party. We started stepping on each other’s toes. Those that were not happy decided to move out of the party, those that were able to manage, managed under a lot of pains, and so on.”

     

     

  • PDP knocks Dokpesi, Secondus out of national chair race

    PDP knocks Dokpesi, Secondus out of national chair race

    The ambition of media mogul, Chief Raymond Dokpesi, to lead the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) appears to have been truncated by leaders of the party from the Southwest, Southeast and Southsouth.

    PDP governors, National Assembly members, ex-ministers and other leaders from the South at a crucial meeting in Port Harcourt on Thursday ahead of the August 17 national convention billed for the city, zoned the post to the Southwest.

    Also out of the race is Uche Secondus, former acting national chairman, who is from Rivers State.

    Dokpesi is from Edo State. Edo and Rivers are in Southsouth.

    Although Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, who briefed reporters at the end of the meeting, said any member willing to contest any position was free to do so, he was quick to advise them to respect the zoning formula.

    Also zoned to the Southwest are the positions of national treasurer and deputy national publicity secretary.

    PDP zoned the positions of first deputy national chairman, national legal adviser, deputy national women leader and deputy national auditor to the Southsouth, while Southeast got national organising secretary, national youth leader and deputy national financial secretary.

    The party’s stalwarts from the Southwest, who have signified their intention to contest the national chairmanship include former the Chairman of the Nigerian Port Authority, Chief Bode George and ex-minister Prof. Taoheed Adedoja.

  • PDP chairman: Dokpesi ‘won’t step down for George’

    PDP chairman: Dokpesi ‘won’t step down for George’

    •Fayose: we’ve no anointed candidate

    An aspirant for the national chairmanship of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Raymond Dokpesi, has debunked speculation making the rounds that he had stepped down for a fellow contestant and the party’s former Deputy National Chairman (South), Chief Olabode George.

    Dokpesi made the clarification Saturday evening when he took his campaign for the party’s top post to Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital.

    Ekiti is the 17th state in the South to be visited by Dokpesi since the race for the PDP national chairmanship started ahead of the party’s national convention slated for Port Harcourt on August 17.

    He urged the delegates to entrust him with the party’s chairmanship to bring vibrancy to the office and work with other leaders and members to regain power lost to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) at the 2015 general elections.

    Dokpesi described himself as “a leader, a transformer and a bridge-builder, who will promote, protect and project the PDP by bringing freshness into the party”.

    He alleged that since the APC won the last general election, the ruling party has not allowed the PDP leaders to rest, urging his party members to stand and defend the nation’s democracy.

    Dokpesi, who denied stepping down for George, said: “Some people have alleged that I have surrendered for our elder in the party, Chief Bode George. Let me make it categorically clear that I was born and bred in Ibadan and I do understand and appreciate the Yoruba traditions so much and so I have respect for elders.

    “But there was no time that Chief Bode George and I met and discuss this issue and I did not in any way surrender the race for him. I have not stepped down for him in any way because this time, we need fresh and younger blood that would have the physical and mental alertness for the job. I have been touring 17 states of the federation for just about a week now and I’m still strong.”

    But Governor Ayo Fayose has declared that he and the PDP caucus in Ekiti State have no anointed candidate among the aspirants jostling for the party’s chair.

    He said the state’s delegates would go to Port Harcourt with open minds, praying that God would do justice.

    Fayose described the emergence of former Borno State Governor Ali Modu Sheriff as the party’s National Chairman as a “mistake”.

  • Dokpesi: Sheriff can’t stop PDP national convention

    Dokpesi: Sheriff can’t stop PDP national convention

    A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chief Raymond Dokpesi yesterday boasted that Senator Ali Modu Sheriff cannot stop the party’s national convention.

    The convention is scheduled for August 17 in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.

    Dokpesi spoke at the Ebonyi State PDP Secretariat in Abakaliki shortly after meeting with the state’s delegates to the convention.

    His statement came as the party’s ex-National Publicity Secretary Chief Olisa Metuh dissociated himself from a suit by Sheriff and others seeking to stop the convention.

    Dokpesi, who is on campaign tour of the 36 states and the FCT, said there was no crisis in the PDP.

    His words: ‘’I don’t think there is any crisis in PDP and I don’t know of any faction in the party. Some persons think they can manipulate the system.

    “In the past, there was a lot of impunity, a lot of disrespect for party rules and regulations and some people in the party are still living in that era and think they will disturb and distort the position of the party, but the party is united. Almost 99.9 per cent of party faithful and members are solidly behind the organisation of the convention.

    ‘’There is no nothing they cannot do to stop the national convention. There is nothing those trying to stop the convention will not try but by the special grace of God, the wishes of the 99.9 per cent members will definitely prevail and the convention will hold; no man can stop the Port Harcourt, August 17, national convention of our party, PDP.

    ‘’There is no crisis in the PDP. What we need to do is to rebrand the party, re-energise the party, re-build the party, and put the party on the proper pedestal in the proper path to be able to face the challenges of the present and the future.

    ‘’The APC has shown clearly that it is incapable of handling the problems of Nigeria; it has no experience, it is not prepared for governance and it came to power by accident”, he said.

    In a statement yesterday, his Media Assistant, Mr. Richard Ihediwa, Metuh said he was not a party to the suit, neither did he instruct anyone to file same on his behalf.

    The statement reads: “Chief Metuh wishes to inform the public that he is not part of the suit seeking to stop the convention and he never instructed anyone to file any such suit on his behalf.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, Chief Metuh has taken the pains to consult those that went to court and has been reliably informed that his name was listed in error and which they have promised to rectify accordingly.

    “It is pertinent to mention that Chief Metuh has not attended any political meeting and/or programme since his chair accident at a function at the party’s national secretariat in April wherein he aggravated his spinal cord ailment.”

    The PDP New Era has urged the former Ogun State Governor Otunba Gbenga Daniel to vie for the national chairmanship of the party.

    Addressing reporters in Abuja yesterday, the group said it arrived at the Daniel option after a wide and extensive consultation among stakeholders within PDP.

     Secretary of the group Obute Benji said going by his antecedents, the former governor parades qualities required to fix the PDP “at this critical time”.

    The group said: “Against this backdrop, we, members of PDP New Era, embarked on broad-based consultations among party stakeholders, men and women, old and young, leaders and followers on the right person to lead our party to greatness again.

    “In our consultations, one name kept resonating. That name is  Otunba Gbenga Daniel, former governor of Ogun State”, it said.

    The PDP New Era said it was disturbed by the sudden turn of events that brought the once strong and virile PDP to its lowest ebb.

    “This no doubt calls for soul searching among the generality of members.

    “We believe that political parties, as any human institution, is susceptible to rising and falling, more so with the high level of intrigues that define politics everywhere. “Though painful, there should be no crime in it that we are passing through our travails. To us, it should be an opportunity to rebuild the party and make it great again

    “It is, however, instructive to note that at the heart of the crisis ravaging our party is leadership contest.

    “There is, therefore, the urgent and incontrovertible need to fix the leadership crisis in PDP, if the party must be set on the path of regeneration and greatness again.”

    An aspirant for the party’s chairmanship, Prof Tunde Adeniran, yesterday explained the motive behind his aspiration.

    He said the desire to champion the repositioning of the opposition party to regain lost glory is behind the motive.

    Adeniran urged the delegates and leaders of the party to entrust him with the national chairmanship responsibility, promising never to let them down.

    In statement by his media aide, Yemi Akinbode, the professor said that the task ahead of the PDP and Nigeria required “fortitude and experience to help the party achieve its objectives.”

  • PDP national chairmanship: Dokpesi begins campaign

    Emeritus Chairman of Daar Communications, High Chief Raymond Dokpesi, will kick off his campaign for the national chairmanship of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) today.

    The kick-off, according to a statement from The Raymond Dokpesi Campaign Organisation, is billed for Benin City, capital of Edo State.

    It begins with a blessing from the Royal Father of Dokpesi’s home town the Okumagbe of Weppa – Wanno Kingdom, His Royal Majesty, George Eghabor.

    The statement said the tour is to “personally meet with, listen to and address all the delegates of the party who shall be voting at the National Convention slated for the 17th of August 2016 in Port Harcourt.”

    It quoted the media mogul as saying “It is in furtherance of my democratic ideals that returning power to the people must first begin with discussions with the people.”

  • Dokpesi: Court fixes April 28  for commencement of trial

    Dokpesi: Court fixes April 28 for commencement of trial

    A Federal High Court in Abuja yesterday fixed April 28 for the commencement of trial in the case against businessman, Raymond Dokpesi and his company, Daar Investment and Holdings Limited.

    They were arraigned before the court on February 17 on a six count charge bordering on alleged procurement fraud and breach of public trust to the tune of N2.1 billion.

    They were said to have received N2.1billion from the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) between October 2014 and March 2015, which diverted to fund the presidential campaign of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), an act said to be a breach of provisions of the Public Procurement Act, Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act.

    Justice James Tsoho fixed the date yesterday after lawyers to parties agreed to return on April 28 following their inability to agree on the need to allow the commencement of trial yesterday.

    When the case was called, lawyer to Dokpesi and his company, Wole Olanipekun (SAN) sought clarification from the judge on the position of the case in view of media reports, which quoted the judge as saying the case was assigned to him in error and that it had been sent back to the earlier trial judge.

    Justice Tsoho explained that although he learnt the case and other similar ones were sent to his court in error, he has now been allowed to continue to hear the Dokpesi case because “steps have been taken.”

    He said unlike the one involving former Head of Civil Service of the Federation, Steven Oronsaye, who had not been re-arraigned before him, steps have been taken in the Dokpesi case, where the defendants have been re-arraigned.

    Shortly after the judge’s explanation, prosecution lawyer,  Rotimi Jacobs (SAN) told the court he was ready for trial and that his first witness was in court. As he made move to invite the withness, Olanipekun sprang up, and queried the legitimacy of the additional proof of evidence just filed by the prosecution.

    He said the bundle of documents was not served on him on time and that it was not properly filed before the court because the prosecution did not first obtain the court’s permission to file additional proof.

    Olanipekun also complained about the quality of the documents, which were mainly written statements of additional witnesses to be called by the prosecution. He noted that copies of the states in the proof served on him were not legible.

    Responding, Jacobs insisted that the additional proof of evidence was properly filed as the prosecution, under the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015 is not required to first obtain the court’s permission before filing proof.

    “The ACJA, in section 379 and 380 have made provisions as to the filing of proof of evidence. In Section 379(2) the prosecution is given the discretion to file additional proof at any time before judgment, without constraints or inhibition. No leave is required

    “This provision is in line with the decision of the Supreme Court in Nguru and the State: 2007 3 NWLR part 771 page 304. The provision requires the prosecution to merely inform the court about the filing of the proof of evidence, but not to first seek the court’s leave,” Jacobs said.

    He however agreed to provide Olanipekun with more legible copies of the documents as requested.

     The judge, at that point asked parties to agree on a convenient date for the commencement of trial. They later agreed to return on April 28.

  • Alleged N2.1b fraud: Dokpesi re-arraigned before new judge

    Alleged N2.1b fraud: Dokpesi re-arraigned before new judge

    The Federal Government yesterday re-arraigned the founder, African Independent Television (AIT), Raymond Dokpesi and his company, Daar Investment and Holdings Limited, before a new judge of the Federal High Court, Abuja.

    Dokpesi and his company were arraigned last December 9 before Justice Gabriel Kolawole of the same court, on a six-count of alleged procurement fraud and breach of public trust to the tune of N2.1 billion.

    They were said to have received N2.1 billion from the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA), between October 2014 and March 2015, for the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) presidential media campaign, an offence in breach of the Public Procurement Act, Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act and the EFCC Establishment Act.

    One of the counts reads: “That you Dr. Raymond Dokpesi and Daar Investment and Holding Company Limited, between October 2014 and March 19, 2015, in Abuja, conducted procurement fraud by means of fraudulent and corrupt act, to wit: receipt of payment into the account of Daar Investment and Holding Company Limited with First Bank of Nigeria Plc of public funds in the sum of N2,120,000,000 from the account of the Office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) with the Central Bank of Nigeria for the funding of media activities for the 2015 presidential election campaign for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and you thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 58 (4) (b) of the Public Procurement Act, 2007 and punishable under Section 58 (6) & (7) of the same Act”.

    Dokpesi, who answered to the charge for himself and his company, said they were both not guilty to the charge.

    Shortly after the arraignment, Wole Olanipekun (SAN), who led four other Senior Advocates and others for the defence, prayed the court to allow his client remain on the bail granted him by Justice Kolawole.

    The new judge, Justice James Tsoho, agreed to Olanipekun’s request that the defendants remain on the bail granted them.

    He adjourned to March 2 for commencement of trial.