Tag: Edo poll

  • Edo: INEC takes delivery of election materials

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in Edo State will take delivery of sensitive voting materials from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in Benin on Monday.

    The INEC Assistant Director of Voter Education and Publicity, Mrs. Prisillia Sule, stated this in a chat with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday.

    Sule said party agents of the 19 political parties participating in the September 28 governorship election had been invited to witness the retrieval of the sensitive materials at the CBN.

    She also said INEC headquarters had deployed the National and Resident Electoral Commissioners to assist Edo REC, Mr. Sam Olumekun, to conduct the election.

     

  • Army to deploy drones for Edo polls

    The Nigeria Army has said it would deploy drones to monitor activities of hoodlums during the September 28 governorship election in Edo State.

    It said the use of drones was to ensure a free and fair election.

    Commander of the 4 Brigade Nigeria Army, Brigadier-General Raji Benbela, who displayed one of the drones before journalists in Benin City, said the drones are to support with aerial view of strategic locations in the state.

    He spoke during the operation show of force by combined team of security agencies in the state.

    He said security agents would be deployed to strategic locations to stop unwanted elements from disrupting the process.

     

  • Igbinedion collected N5bn for Okada road project – Oshiomhole

    Igbinedion collected N5bn for Okada road project – Oshiomhole

    Edo State Governor, Adams Oshiomhole, on Tuesday accused his predecessor, Chief Lucky Igbinedion, of collecting N5billion for the dualisation of the Okada road which was never executed.

    The governor said the new 8.5km Uhen-Olumoye road also in Ovia North East local government area of the state was a testimony to what a focus government can do.

    Oshiomhole, who spoke while inaugurating the Uhen-Olumoye road, said the All Progress Congress (APC) would continue to deliver people-oriented projects to the people of Edo State.

    He said the road was a reward to the people of the affected communities for putting their trust in him.

    He told the people that the road project was part of the debt he paid back to appreciate the trust reposed in him by the people when they voted for him.

    The governor promised that the five years black out being experienced by the people would be solved next week.

    He said: “The only thing I want to reveal is that the man our party has chosen to continue from where I will stop, to start part two is not a stranger in governance.

    “The day we held the state executive council meeting where we took the decision to construct this road, he was there in the meeting because he was the chairman of the economic team. So, there is nothing we do that he doesn’t know about. He knows where we want to go and where we are at the moment. He also knows what is remaining and he knows how to do what is remaining. That is why we say we want to consolidate on what we have done and we want to go to the next level.

    “So, I want to promise you that Godwin Obaseki will even do better because he doesn’t have to learn the work again. After we have worked for eight years, I will withdraw and he will take over. I have no fear about that. And I promise you that APC will do more. Even if I am sleeping, I know that Obaseki will do well.”

     

  • PDP can’t win Edo governorship poll – Oshiomhole

    PDP can’t win Edo governorship poll – Oshiomhole

    Edo State Governor, Adams Oshiomhole, on Monday insisted that the All Progressives Congress (APC) will not lose the state to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the September 28 governorship election.

    The governor said his eight years tenures have touched the lives of Edo indigenes across the 192 wards in the state.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, he said Edo State has witnessed great projects that were never seen during the 10 years rule of PDP.

    Oshiomhole said: “For us it is fun, when you have a good report card, you are anxious to go and show to your parents that you did well in school so that you can ask for support to go to secondary school. It is when you fail that you cry and find a way to make excuses.

    “We have worked for Edo people and across the 192 wards in the state, there is no place that you will not find standard government project, whether it is road, school, health centre and water. These are things they have never seen for 10 years of PDP.

    “Before now, they use to laugh and dismiss Edo as miracle centre during WAEC examinations because public schools were dead. The parents want their children to go to university. But these children were never taught because teachers were always on strike over non-payment of salaries. So people have to resort to miracle to pass and miracle is a good way to describe an organized fraud where you pay some prescribed fee and with the collaboration of the proprietor of the school and some elements in WAEC or NECO, the young man gets the certificate that does not match his intellect.”

    “From that situation, we have rebuilt the schools and Edo teachers are paid as at when due. With all other efforts we did, the teachers are properly motivated. Now only qualified teachers are in our classrooms. From the situation where Edo used to be 23rd in WAEC and NECO, last year we came 2nd.

    “With all these, there is no way the people will vote for a party that had been given them excuses. I have no doubt whatsoever that anytime and anyday, a fair minded Edo man will vote APC.”

     

     

  • Edo poll: AA, ACD candidates step down for Ize-Iyamu

    The governorship candidate of the Action Alliance (AA) in Edo State, Ishaka Paul Ofomile and his Advanced Congress of Democrats (ACD) counterpart, Andrew Igwemoh, have withdrawn from the governorship race.

    Both candidates said they have adopted the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu.

    The KOWA Party governorship candidate, Thompson Osadolor, and Bishop Akharame of the People for Democratic Change (PDC), had last week stepped down for Pastor Ize-Iyamu.

    The candidates of AA and ACD announced their decision at a PDP rally held in Okpella, Etsako East local government area of the state.

    They noted that Pastor Ize-Iyamu has offered the best hope for the state.

    The ACD candidate, who hails from Governor Adams Oshiomhole’s Iyamho community, said the issue of who governs Edo State was not a “brotherly affair.”

    Igwemoh accused Governor Oshiomhole of developing a section of Iyamho community, as well as building a university that is not affordable for the people of the community.

    He said, “We have collapsed our structure and are now working for a team that can take Edo State to the eldorado. They (APC) promised to create 100,000 jobs when they have not even created 10, 000 jobs.”

    Pastor Ize-Iyamu told the people that Governor Oshiomhole refused to harness the huge mineral deposits of Okpella community.

     

  • Poll: Edo monarch blasts PDP over false report

    The Enogie of Eyaen, Osazuwa Iduriase, has lambasted the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for publishing in an online media that he chased the All Progressive Congress (APC) governorship candidate in the state, Godwin Obaseki, out of his palace.

    Iduriase said he was shocked that a political party could peddle lies just to win votes.

    The monarch said he was in the United States at the time the report said he refused to receive Obaseki.

    Iduriase, who predicted victory for the APC at the governorship election, said Governor Adams Oshiomhole has earned his respect for developing the state.

    He said, “We have a problem with social media because so many lies are being peddled there.  I got a call that I drove Obaseki from my palace. I said what me that was in America. How can someone that was outside the country be at his palace at the same time? That was why I said when I come to town I will see you personally.

    “If you look at the history of my people here, you will know the kind of people we are. As you now come here, we will tell our people about your ambition.

    “I will have to thank you also for the way you have conducted yourself in this campaign and I know that in the election, you are going to emerge victorious.

    “I pray our ancestors protect you before and after the election.”

  • Edo poll: Group warns fake voters, militants

    A group, the Southwest Consultative Forum,  has warned those being recruited as fake voters, militants and  thugs to desist from the plot to manipulate and disrupt the Edo State governorship poll.

    The forum alleged that the fake voters and thugs were being recruited by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from  Delta and  Bayelsa states to cause mayhem.

    Its president, Osinowo Ibrahim, alleged that the PDP was purchasing voter cards for the thugs, advising the party to turn a new leaf.

    The group alerted the electoral commission to the antics of the opposition party in its desperation for power, stressing that it could spell doom for democracy.

    He urged INEC and security agents to be vigilant so that the mission of the thugs could be aborted.

    Ibrahim said: “We will like to warn people who are recruiting militants and fake voters from Rivers, Delta and Bayelsa states to flood Edo State, all in the name of getting power at all costs, to desist from such behaviours.  The forum has registered with the INEC to monitor the election and we shall do the needful, if we detect the so-called fake voters.”

    Ibrahim supported the INEC’s decision to postpone the poll, saying that the security of lives and properties cannot  be taken for granted.

    Describing the election as a litmus test for the electoral agency, Ibrahim said the commission should avoid the mistakes that could lead to an inconclusive exercise.

    He aslo urged the stakeholders to cooperate with the INEC for a hitch-free poll.

    Ibrahim charged the candidates to maintain decorum among their supporters and shun a do-or-die attitude on the  day of the election.

    He lauded Governor Adams Oshiomhole  for his achievements in  the last seven and half years, pointing out that he has presided over a listening government.

    He said the next government should key in into  Oshiomhole’s achievements and and improve on them.

    Ibrahim added: “We also support Governor Adams Oshiomhole for his open and transparent  administration  in the last seven years and we  urge  the incoming government to  learn from his leadership  qualities so that the state can be better.”

  • Edo poll: When ‘Maiguards’ took over

    Edo poll: When ‘Maiguards’ took over

    Since the advent of democracy in 1999, several things, many of them quite unbelievable, have happened in the country. For instance, elections in Nigeria have largely become a do or die affair in which innocent blood is shed with reckless abandon. And this may notchange anytime soon.

    Added to thisis the fact thatNigeria is a nation of many possibilities; nothing really is impossible in the country. Those who have followed the history of Nigeria right from independence in 1960 will attest to this assertion.

    So, it was not too strange last Thursday when the nation was gripped with anxiety over the possibility that the Edo gubernatorial election which had been fixed for Saturday, September 10, could be postponed. Unfortunately, this hint was dropped, not by the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, which is statutorily mandated to preside over all electoral matters in the country, but by the Police and the Department of State Security, DSS.

    When the possibility of a postponement first hit the headlines, people started talking in hushed tones all over the place with INEC re-affirming the date for the election. The police and the DSS responded with outright blackmail. They simply told INEC that their officers and men will not be available to provide security if INEC will go ahead with the election. That boxed INEC into a tight corner.

    At this juncture, the electoral umpire had no option than to swallow its pride, thereby leading to the shifting of the election less than seven hours after it had affirmed its readiness to proceed with the election. That was how the preparation for the election which had reached its peak with President Muhammadu Buhari and other chieftains of the All Progressives Congress, APC, leading a colourful campaign in Benin to drum support for their candidate on Tuesday, September 6, about 48 hours before the proposed election, came to an abrupt, dead end.

    While the debate to hold or postpone the election was raging, I knew right from the onset that there was practically nothing INEC could do to assert its independence in the circumstances it found itself. I came to that conclusion because I have seen a lot of mischief at play in the operations of some security agencies particularly in this country and even abroad. Outside the country, it takes a discerning mind to actually get to know this, but in Nigeria, it happens almost every day.

    Here is an example of the sort of mischief sometimes played by our security agents in Nigeria. Years ago, some protesters, armed with placards and drums, had made their way into a government secretariat somewhere in the South-west, where the governor’s office was also located. The protesters were protesting over an alleged government interference. That day, I was having audience with the commander of the strike force in the state with his operational headquarters within the secretariat complex.

    The security agents tried as much as they could to prevent the protesters from getting too close to the governor’s office. When they saw that the protesters were hell bent on encroaching further, their commander devised an ingenious method to dispatch the protesters. Pronto, one of the security agents removed his uniform and put on a kaftan and with a stick in hand, he mingled with the protesters for a few minutes. Next, the disguised security agent used his big stick to hit one of the protesters on the head. This was predictably followed by commotion.

    In the ensuing melee, the other security agents swooped on the protesters with an alibi: “you can see now, they have started fighting”. As an eyewitness, I knew it was the security agents who simulated the attack and turned round to blame the protesters for turning violent in their protest. It was a decoy to make arrests and drive the protesters out of the complex. That is the extent of mischief our security agents are capable of causing in order to have their way. I can go on and on, but let us leave it there for now.

    From the above narration, it was wise for INEC to have succumbed to the blackmail mounted against it by the security agents. If it had not done so, who knows, anything could have happened and INEC could have been worse off.

    Down memory lane, theconcocted security scare that eventually led to the last minute postponement of the election in Edo State,falls within a similar but nauseating pattern that was pioneered by Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd), the former National Security Adviser, NSA, now languishing in detention in Abuja over allegations of financial impropriety. Barely two weeks to the presidential electionin February last year, Dasuki had caused the election to be postponed by four weeks. In his own case, Dasuki did not drop any hint of postponement in Nigeria, he did it at Chattam House, in faraway London.

    The same reason Dasuki gave for his call for postponement of the presidential election was what the security agents gave as their reason for the postponement of the Edo election. But with recent revelations, it has become distinctively clear that the period of that ill-advised postponement of election in 2015was solely devoted to things that were variance with security of lives and property.

    In the case of the postponed election in Edo, the rumour mill is agog with stories of behind-the-scene moves by gladiators in the election to perfect their rigging plans. That was why the security agents who had nothing to do with the conduct of the election aside providing security, went out of their way to order a postponement of the election. It is like a landlord organising an important business dinner for his associates in his house, only for the guests to be turned back at the gate by the maiguard with a terse statement: “Oga has cancelled the dinner”. If Oga, had indeed, cancelled the dinner, is the maiguard the appropriate person to break the news to the distinguished guests?

    Regrettably, what the unfortunate scare tactic put forwardby the security agents has done is to rubbishthe image of the entire national security apparatus in the country as meddlesome interlopers.It has also raised a fundamental question about the competenceand professionalism of the leadership of our security agencies, especially the police and the DSS in this circumstance. This is not to talk about the extra cost of the postponement to the taxpayers at a time the country is reeling under the heavy yoke of economic recession.

    The point is, the police and the DSS said they had information that insurgents and terrorists were preparing to wreak havoc during the election in Edo. Although no one else is privy to such information, but such a sensitive issue, if any at all, could have been discussed at a closed-door meeting with the hierarchy of INEC, before it hit the airwaves. But it seems the security agents were too desperate and in a blind hurry to truncate the election by all means, which was why they threw decency and protocol to the dogs.

    For now, the whole country is still waiting to see the faces of some of those “imaginary” insurgents and terrorists that so scared the police and DSS leadership as to stampede them into railroadingINEC to postpone the election. In the alternative, let us pray that by September 28, the security agentswould be able to tell Nigerians that the insurgents and terrorists who were about to descend on Edo State, have all retreated back to their habitats in Sambissa forest, Borno State,Falgore or Gomo forests in Kano,or perhaps, the Bauchi forest, in Bauchi State. Perhaps, then we shall congratulate them for a job well done!

     

  • How PDP plans to rig Edo election – Oshiomhole

    How PDP plans to rig Edo election – Oshiomhole

    Edo State Governor, Adams Oshiomhole, has unveiled plot on how the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) planned to rig the state governorship election rescheduled for September 28.

    The governor disclosed that the PDP through some governors in the South-south planned to rig the election by registering 8,000 militants from their states for the poll.

    Oshiomhole, who spoke while receiving the Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Idris Ibrahim, at the Government House in Benin City, said the PDP opted for militants from other states because they couldn’t find any local thugs to help them perpetrate violence which they have done between 1999 and 2007.

    He said the PDP resorted to liaising with his brothers (Governors) in the sub-region, Delta and Rivers, in particular, to export criminals and militants into Edo State in order to make peaceful election impossible.

    The governor recalled how he first raised the alarm on the eve of the INEC Continuing Voters’ Registration exercise.

    He explained that the militants registered in the state to have the lawful basis to be present at the designated polling units where they were expected to unleash violence on election day.

     

  • Edo election a big challenge – IGP

    The Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, on Friday said the Edo State governorship election is a big challenge to security agencies being the first major election to be conducted since his appointment.

    The IGP urged police officers and other security agencies not to relax until election results are announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    He spoke in Benin City while addressing security officials to be deployed for election duties.

    Idris vowed to deal with any police officer supporting political parties during the conduct of the election.

    On the Boko haram threat, the IGP directed effective policing of prayer grounds and areas where people assembled to avoid embarrassment from “bad people.”

    He urged all Divisional Police Officers to visit all polling units within their division and not read about them in the newspapers.

    Idris warned security personnel not to collect money for election duties, saying the Federal Government has released money for payment of security officials.