Tag: Ekweremadu

  • Nigeria needs strong anti-corruption agencies – Ekweremadu

    The Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, said the country needed strong, independent, decentralised and impartial anti-corruption agencies, operating within rules and tradition.

    Ekweremadu said this at a public service lecture he delivered at the University of Ibadan on Friday night.

    The lecture, which was organised by the university’s alumni association, took place at the Trenchard Hall of the institution.

    Ekweremadu spoke on “Federalism and The Legal Framework for Combating Corruption in Nigeria.”

    He said strong anti-corruption institutions would give hope to citizens, adding that issues of corruption and the concerns were as old as Nigeria itself.

    According to him, corruption has shown no sign of abating in Nigeria despite the various anti-corruption efforts by successive governments.

    “Dealing with corruption is difficult and challenging, but it is not without hope either.

    “We need a far-reaching and in-depth re-orientation. Importantly, Nigeria being a federation, the war against corruption must itself be developed and generalized, not centralized as it is currently the case,” the deputy senate president said.

    Ekweremadu said the country should allow each state to set up its own policing system as it was the norm in other federal jurisdictions such as the United States and Canada.

    “Decentralised policing will make the task of preventing, detecting, investigating and prosecuting certain offences and small scale corruption matter easier,” he added.

    NAN

     

  • We will rescue Nigeria from APC – PDP

    We will rescue Nigeria from APC – PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has vowed to “rescue” Nigeria from what it described as the incompetence of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in 2019.

    The party stated this on Thursday in Abuja during its expanded caucus meeting, attended by some of its governors and other key stakeholders.

    Senate Minority Leader, Senator Godswill Akpabio, set the ball rolling when he declared that about 20 serving senators of the ruling APC would be joining the PDP in the days ahead.

    Also, the Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, said those that defected from PDP to APC in the South East have no electoral value and that they are joining the APC for contracts and employment opportunities.

    “For my brothers and sisters from the South East who are defecting from PDP to APC, our people know the electoral value of each and everyone of us.

    “We should allow them get the contract they are looking for and to get employment they are looking for. At the appropriate time we will know who is who in the South East. There is nothing to worry about, we are completely in control,” Ekweremadu stated.

    The party leaders said they are repositioning the PDP to be much more vibrant to play the role of main opposition party in the country.

    Two governors and six deputy governors, as well as members of the Board of Trustees (BoT) and National Assembly caucus attended the meeting.

    The meeting, which was presided over by Chairman of the National Caretaker Committee, Senator Ahmed Makarfi, witnessed a large turnout of members.

    The Chairman of PDP Governors’ Forum, Mr. Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State, said the entire country is tired of the APC and are yearning for another change.

     

     

  • Makarfi, Ekweremadu and opposition politics

    Makarfi, Ekweremadu and opposition politics

    FORMER Kaduna State governor, Senator Ahmed Makarfi, was last Wednesday preaching to the converted when he suggested in the presence of members of his party’s strategic committee that Nigeria was unsafe without a strong opposition. The only people who did not, and still do not, know it are the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) when they held the reins of power between 1999 and 2015, and the All Progressives Congress (APC) in office since last May. It seems Nigerian political parties suffer amnesia when they take power. There is no other way to explain why not quite two years after losing the grand political prize, the PDP has started to recant.

    Senator Makarfi, who is locked in supremacy battle with another factional chairman of the PDP, former Borno State governor, Ali Modu Sheriff,  philosophised thus: “If you eliminate or encumber the opposition, nobody will be safe. It is in the interest of Nigeria that there is opposition. Some people are already apologising for voting us out of office, but we are telling them to vote for us and return us to power in 2019.” Probably aware that the regret he claimed to hear or perceive would be insufficient to return his party to power, he added: “We are reviewing and rebranding the party, it is only the judgment in Port Harcourt we are waiting for, and we are praying for a fair judgment that will revive the hope of the people.”

    It remains to be seen how the party would review and rebrand, for neither Senator Makarfi nor Senator Sheriff prioritised the need for fundamental redirection of the party in the early days of their caretaker chairmanship when they felt unencumbered by party fractiousness or legal impediments. That deficiency, if not absent-mindedness, led many observers to question whether both former governors, who did not carry out revolutionary changes in their states when they ruled, were in fact capable of the intensive surgical operation their party desperately needed. Right under the nose of their first president, Olusegun Obasanjo, the party had been asphyxiating because of micromanagement, and atrophying because of needless obtrusion into the party’s internal workings. At the states level, the party was redolent with that same obnoxious, detached style. Neither former governors proved revolutionarily different.

    The awaited Port Harcourt judgement may, ceteris paribus, resolve the contentious claims to the party’s leadership; but it is uncertain it will ineluctably lead to a resolution of the more crucial and difficult question of ‘reviewing and rebranding’ the party in order to make it competitive again and even turn it into a winner some two years down the line. It is a relief to the opposition party and many patriots that the mass defection thought to be capable of depopulating and scarifying the party has seemed to abate. Deputy Senate President, the PDP’s own Ike Ekweremadu, has sworn he never contemplated defection. Whether he is telling the truth or not is immaterial. What is reassuring is that he is evidently now not disposed to crossing over to the ruling party in order to retain his seat, as some gung-ho APC senators gratuitously suggested to him moments after former senate leader, Ali Ndume, was unhorsed.

    It makes no sense to defect to the APC, for the ruling party is itself mired in internecine warfare of its own. The party’s elected leaders are aloof from the rank and file, and restive party Young Turks have suddenly become regicidal, with no party leader sure of the loyalty of his mentees. Worse, the party’s awkward approach to the country’s economic crisis, not to say the social and political conundrums baffling and agitating the electorate, has frittered away the immense goodwill that accompanied the party into office in 2015. With nothing substantial to inspire anyone in the APC, and none of its leaders in firm control both of the party’s foot soldiers and the challenges afflicting the country, it would be decidedly unwise to jump into a party that is fraying at the edges. Senator Ekweremadu may thus have made the sensible choice to stick with a party where he is well regarded, though his current position in the Senate appears threatened.

    But by far the more crucial and sensitive of the statements made by Senator Makarfi when he addressed his party’s strategic committee on Wednesday was his pledge to embark on reviewing and rebranding the PDP once the litigation in Port Harcourt was brought to a close, supposedly in his favour. Indeed, more Nigerians appear disposed to his mercurial and level-headed leadership than that of the spirited but contentious Senator Sheriff. It is true that the PDP reposed great hopes in the combative leadership of the former Borno governor when it seemed President Buhari, forgetting he was elected by people’s votes than soldiers’ bayonets, was about to ride roughshod over the entire country regardless of the restraining tenets of democracy or even the secularity of the nation. To some extent, however, the president has been tamed and forced to play by the staid and slower rules of democracy, especially the rule of law. With that taming came instantly the need for the PDP to reassess its methods and philosophies, away from the rambunctiousness of Senator Sheriff to the much more steadying and fascinating style of Senator Makarfi.

    If anyone would review and rebrand the party, therefore, it will have to be Senator Makarfi. But it is doubtful whether even he is deeply persuaded that fundamental and revolutionary change is more important as a tool of reclaiming office than the alienation he claimed the apologetic electorate had begun to reel under. It is only now that the former Kaduna governor has begun to speak about reviewing and rebranding the party. Yet, he has not spoken of that desire in terms that are believable. Their loss of the presidency hurts badly, in fact much worse than the APC has felt badly disappointed by its loss of oil-producing South-South states. But they have not spoken to that loss with a coherence that gives the impression that they recognise the penitence and restitution they must bring to their politics.

    The PDP had a founding philosophy and an inspiring mantra, especially as exemplified by its founding fathers, many of whom were products of more than two republics and a very rich experiential background. But the moment the party was hijacked by the nihilist forces that swarmed around ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo at his assumption of office, the party’s soul was gone. To regain it, party leaders will have to embark on an extraordinary journey of rediscovery through unfamiliar political and ideological warrens. It will require inordinate amount of discipline and focus. It will require a deliberate and carefully calibrated purge of its leadership and rank and file. It will mean the emergence of new leaders fired up about the future, men and women eager to seize the moment, politicians who have reconciled themselves with and are convinced about the truest tenets of democracy.

    If Senator Makarfi is to succeed in his quest to return the PDP to power in Abuja, he has to find ways of formulating and encapsulating the ambitions and visions of Nigeria as a democratic and free nation in terms that Nigerians can cotton on to. He must also seek means of reconciling these virtues with the principles and values that undergirded the PDP when it was freshly conceived. If the present generation can identify with that process of renewal and even own it, if the party can be the perfect counterpoise to a dithering, increasingly undemocratic and unsure APC, then Senator Makarfi can say with some measure of conviction that the PDP may be on its way back. So far, however, what is evident are not these measured and philosophical and inspiring strategies to reclaim the high ground, but a sheer desperation to return to power in order, perhaps, to forestall the disintegration of a party which can’t seem to thrive outside power.

    The poignancy of the observation that Nigeria would be badly served with a weakened or destroyed opposition cannot be faulted. While it was in power, the PDP did its damnedest worst to weaken the opposition. Has the party learnt its lessons now? Or are the lessons brought so severely home only because the shoe is on the other foot, and it is hurting badly? Nonetheless, it is true that in barely two years in office, the APC has behaved much worse to the opposition. The ruling party is encouraging defections from the PDP, even as it has not for once in about two years propounded the smallest of ideas about democracy, federalism, the rule of law, and fundamental rights of Nigerians. The country indeed seems to be gnawed by a yawning vacuum. But neither the former Kaduna governor, nor Senator Sheriff, nor anyone else in the PDP for that matter has eloquently proffered a coherent and succinct alternative. Let Senator Makarfi address these matters persuasively.

  • Ex-CJ to EFCC: Ekweremadu, Ezeh after me

    Ex-CJ to EFCC: Ekweremadu, Ezeh after me

    Detectives yesterday grilled a former Chief Judge of Enugu State, Justice Innocent Azubuike Umezulike, over the N632.2million allegedly traced to his account.

    But the ex-CJ, in a letter to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), insisted that he was “spotless” and incorruptible.

    He alleged that Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu and Peter Ezeh were behind his ordeal.

    The EFCC however said there was no petition from Ekweremadu before it against the ex-CJ.

    Umezulike appeared  before  a team of interrogators after the EFCC rejected his January 12 application to travel abroad for eye treatment and a wobbly leg.

    It was learnt that the ex-CJ  arrived at the EFCC’s zonal office in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, at about 10am after which his interrogation began.

    A top source said: “After exchange of letters which made the EFCC to insist on his appearance, the former Enugu CJ  has finally honoured our invitation.

    “So far, he is responding to the petitions against him.”

    On the ex-CJ’s request to go abroad for treatment, the source said: “We have told him that if he honours our invitation (which he has done now), we will agree on when he will travel out and for how long in order not to jeopardise our investigation.

    “The letter Justice Umezulike wrote to us is silent on the date of the trip, the exact duration and the date of return. That was why we did not accede to his request.”

    Justice Umezulike, in a January 12 letter to the EFCC, said Ekweremadu plotted his travails.

    The ex-CJ made his position known in a January 12 letter to EFCC.

    The letter reads: “Your honour, while in office as the CJ of Enugu State, I faced petitions of Peter Eze and Sen. Ike Ekweremadu before the Inspector-General of Police, ICPC, the National Judicial Council( NJC) and the Department of State Security Service( DSS).

    “My trouble with Ekweremadu started in 2014 when I declared  his three-man delegates list as null and void and cannot be used for PDP primaries in Enugu State.

    “For Mr. Peter Eze, I ordered Enugu State Police Command to arrest and investigate him. These forces have circulated series of petitions against me.”

    The ex-CJ insisted that he was “spotless” and incorruptible.

    He asked the EFCC to permit him to travel for medical treatment before facing investigation.

    He added: “As a patriotic and honest Nigerian, I am under a necessity to cooperate with the law enforcement agencies in their investigation activities. But I will urge you to defer my interrogation to enable me proceed to the UK to have surgery on my eyes and to treat my leg.

    “Your honour must note that time does not run against a state matter on crime.  Consequently, when I return in a month or two, your interrogation will commence. And you may perhaps realize that I am spotless.”

    The EFCC said it was not being tele-guided by either Ekweremadu or any politician.

    The EFCC’s letter to the ex-CJ reads: “Your letter dated 12th January 2017 refers. We must put the records straight.

    “Although most of our investigations are in response to petitions filed before us, yet in conducting the investigations, we neither do the bidding of anybody (no matter how highly-placed) nor concerned with any political disagreement between the parties involved.

    “This same principle applies to your case. And again, Sen. Ekweremadu is not a complainant in  this case before us.”

    The NJC on September 29, last year recommended Justice Umezulike for compulsory retirement alongside Justice Mohammed Tsamiya, who was the Presiding Justice of the Ilorin Division of the Court of Appeal.

    The NJC said it recommended Umezulike to Governor Lawrence Ugwuanyi of Enugu State for compulsory for “delivering judgment in a case 126 days after final addresses were adopted by parties, and for other instances of abuse of office”.

    The embattled judge has since been retired by the government.

    The council also found Justice Umezulike guilty of allegedly “receiving a donation of N10m from a businessman, Prince Arthur Eze, during his book launch while two cases in which Eze was said to have had “vested interest, were in the judge’s court.”

  • I won’t defect to APC, says Ekweremadu

    I won’t defect to APC, says Ekweremadu

    Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu yesterday said he would not defect to the ruling All Progressives Congress, (APC) to save his job.

     A statement by his Special Assistant (Political Matters), Okey Ozoani, assured Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) faithful and Nigerians that “Ekweremadu is going nowhere”.

    After the removal of Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume as the Senate leader, there were speculations Ekweremadu might be sacked.

    Ndume  asked Ekweremadu to watch his back.

    Ozoani said: “Senator Ekweremadu is not contemplating leaving PDP. He is more concerned about fixing the country’s biting economic and security conditions and other challenges than saving his job as the Deputy President of the Senate.

    “It is his view that Nigeria has to first exist for us to have political parties to belong to or political offices to occupy.  Studies have shown a direct relationship between economic conditions and survival of democracy.

    “The primary responsibility our Constitution places on our government is to cater to the wellbeing of the citizens as well as security of their lives and property. When such are threatened, everyone should necessarily get serious and preoccupied with contributing his or her quota to salvaging the country.

    “Besides, he is most grateful to his colleagues for the confidence they continue to repose in him and the Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki. He is grateful for the solidarity that the Senators have continued to accord them.”

  • I will not defect to APC – Ekweremadu

    I will not defect to APC – Ekweremadu

    The Office of the Deputy Senate President, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, on Wednesday dismissed as false insinuations reports that the Enugu -West Senator could be on his way to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) to save his job.

    A statement issued by the Special Assistant (Political Matters) to the Deputy Senate President, Hon. Okey Ozoani, described the reports as “a fantasy of those peddling it.”

    Ozoani assured the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) faithful and Nigerians that “Ekweremadu is going nowhere.”

    After the removal of Senator Ali Ndume as the Senate leader, there were speculations that Ekweremadu might be the next target to be sacked.

    Ndume has specifically asked Ekweremadu to watch his back, warning that following the manner of his removal, Ekweremadu could be the next to be axed by the senators.

    The statement said: “Senator Ekweremadu is not contemplating leaving PDP. He is more concerned about fixing the country’s biting economic and security conditions and other challenges than saving his job as the Deputy President of the Senate.

    “It is his view that Nigeria has to first exist for us to have political parties to belong to or political offices to occupy.  Studies have shown a direct relationship between economic conditions and survival of democracy.

    “The primary responsibility our constitution places on our government is to cater to the wellbeing of the citizens as well as security of their lives and property. When such are threatened, everyone should necessarily get serious and preoccupied with contributing his or her quota to salvaging the country.

    “Besides, he is most grateful to his colleagues for the confidence they continue to repose in him and the Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki. He is grateful for the solidarity that the senators have continued to accord them.”

  • No plot against Ekweremadu, says deputy Senate leader

    No plot against Ekweremadu, says deputy Senate leader

    Deputy Senate Leader Senator Bala Ibn Na’Allah said yesterday that he was not aware of alleged plot by All Progressives Congress (APC) senators to remove Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu from his seat.

    Na’allah, who was at the APC National Secretariat to meet with the APC leadership over Saturday primary election for Etsako Federal Constituency, said Ekweremadu was welcome to join the APC, which he described as a very big family.

    There were reports in the media yesterday that the APC Caucus in the Senate was plotting the removal of the deputy Senate president following the successful removal of the Ali Ndume as Senate Leader.

    Ali Ndume was quoted to have told Ekweremadu to watch his back as he might be the next. Senator Kabiru Marafa was also mentioned as saying that the deputy Senate president should consider decamping to the APC to save his job.

    Saying that he was not in the country when the plan to remove the former Senate Leader, Ali Ndume, from office was discussed, Na’Allah said the APC was being strengthened in accordance with its belief that the country need to be united at this critical time.

    Asked about the plan against Ekweremadu, Na’Allah said: “All these things happened when I was out of this country. I was in Germany and it is not in my character to speak about what I don’t know. But as far as I am concerned, there is nothing near to that. As far as I am concerned, I am not aware. At least, I am back and I am in the office.

    “Please, APC is a big family and everybody is welcome. We are strengthening the party based on our belief that this country needs to be united at this critical time of our history.

    “So, I am absolutely sure that it will be a very nice thing if he decides to come. It will equally be nice if we are able to see that any other person with the intention join our great party.”

    Asked what the APC caucus intend to achieve with the politicking in the Senate, he said: “I am telling you that I was out of the country when all these things happened and there is nothing I can say that will be accurate, in view of the fact that I wasn’t around when all the politicking took place.”

    On whether he was at the secretariat to meet the party leadership on the happening in the Senate, he said: “This is the headquarters of my party and my national chairman requested to see me. That is why I am here. It has nothing to do with what transpired in the Senate.

    “If you want me to tell you why I am here, we have primary in Edo state to fill the vacancy left by the deputy governor, who left the House of Representatives and I am the chairman of the committee and I just came to receive the normal briefing from my party.”

  • Ekweremadu may be next target, Ndume warns

    Ekweremadu may be next target, Ndume warns

    Ousted Senate Leader Mohammed Ali Ndume yesterday warned that the Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu might likely be the next target to be removed from his seat.

    Ndume, who faulted the process of his removal, spoke under the cover of “personal explanation”.

    Although the Borno South Senator seemed to have accepted the fate that befell him in good faith, he warned that Ekweremadu might be the next principal officer to be axed.

    Senate President Bukola Saraki announced the removal of Ndume on Tuesday as recommended by All Progressives Congress (APC) Senate caucus.

    He warned Ekweremadu, who presided over yesterday’s plenary, to watch his back

    Ndume, who insisted that he did not do anything to warrant his removal, said he offered three times to resign  if that would bring peace in the chamber.

    He said Ekweremadu was one of those who prevailed on him not to resign.

    Ndume said: “I thank God for the way and the courage God gave me to carry on with my responsibility for the time of one and half years that God said was my time as the Senate Leader.

    “So, I want to thank, especially my colleagues, for the confidence you had in me. I thank God that throughout my service as the Senate Leader, most of the times my colleagues casually will say leader we are proud of you.

    “I was not found wanting for anything that I know and because of the unity of this Senate that is more important than myself, three times I offered to resign, if that will bring peace. But I believe that God’s time is the best.

    “You are one of those that even warned me to stop saying that I will resign. But yesterday, I was not around, change of leadership was announced.

    “In fact, if the number of those that lost confidence in me is not up to this number (38) and I am made to know I will resign because I did not become a Senate leader in order to lose confidence of any of you and that is why I am concerned about the loss of confidence because as far as I know, I have not done anything.

    “But then just like the Senate caucus has the right to say we have lost confidence in you and I think that should be.

    “I have said it I think it’s on record that I did not do anything; to the best of my knowledge I did not do anything. But as I said, since my colleagues, consciously 38 of them signed it.

    “So, if they signed that they have lost confidence, what Dino Melaye is trying to bring up now, I am not going there at all because by the time you are to be removed, at least, you will be confronted with allegations on what you have done and given chance to defend yourselves.

    “As I said since you have lost confidence, even if it is 10 of you members, then I have no moral ground to continue to lead this Senate because that means there are some people that are not with me.

    “Having said that, I want to say that this Senate is an institution that we must protect.

    “How do you protect the institution is to obey the rules and the tradition. If today, just like that without telling somebody and he goes out; if it is Ndume today and it’s okay, it may be – God forbid  – Ekweremadu tomorrow.

    “So, what I am saying is that anytime our colleagues erred in one way or the other, we should be given the chance to say: ‘look, this is what we did and therefore we have lost confidence in you’.

    “I thank God since there is nothing and I am grateful for that. So, I want to once again say thank you very much for the opportunity given me to serve as the Senate Leader and I wish my brother, the new Senate leader – we have been struggling for this for a long time – the best of service to this important institution.”

    Ekweremadu thanked Ndume for accepting his removal and asked him to continue to serve his constituents and the Senate.

    He said: “This is coming on under order 43 and it is not open to debate. But let me on behalf of the rest of our colleagues thank you for your service to the Senate and indeed to the National Assembly because you were a member of the House of Representatives leadership at some point, you came to the Senate and also held very important committee assignments and then rose to become the Senate leader.

    “Those are services we cannot wish away. So, we would like to congratulate you for the manner you have accepted the position of things and I will like to assure you that we would all continue to work harmoniously in the best interest of our country.

    Some APC senators yesterday made overtures to Ekweremadu to defect to the ruling party.

    Senator Kabiru Marafa was the arrowhead of the lobby group that wanted Ekweremadu to join the APC.

    While moving the motion to adopt the Votes and Proceedings of Tuesday, Marafa (APC Zamfara Central) noted that it was high time Ekweremadu joined the ruling party.

    He told reporters on Tuesday that Ekweremadu should defect to APC to save his seat.

    He insisted the seat of the deputy Senate president belonged to the APC.

    Senator Abdullahi Adamu (APC, Nasarawa West), who seconded Marafa’s motion for the adoption of Votes and Proceedings of Tuesday, also echoed the need for Ekweremadu to defect to the APC.

    Senator Sonni Ogbuoji (PDP, Ebonyi South), in his reaction, said the “joke” urging Ekweremadu to defect to APC was uncalled for.

    Ogbuoji said it was obvious Ekweremadu was not done with the PDP yet.

    Ekweremadu ruled that the Votes and Proceedings of Tuesday be adopted while the second clause, which was related to the overture for him to join the APC, “be duly removed.”

  • Ekweremadu warns against military action in Gambia

    Deputy Senate President, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, on Tuesday warned against any military action by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) in Gambia.

    He said military action in the Gambia could plunge the country into bloodletting and threaten the security and peace of the entire sub-region.

    A statement issued by his media Aide, Uche Anichukwu, said Ekweremadu regretted that West Africa had witnessed so many bloodbaths, including armed conflicts and human sufferings engendered by insurgency and terrorism.

    It said Ekweremadu urged the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government and the international community to explore dialogue, while also allowing Gambian laws to take preeminence as a sovereign nation.

    The immediate past Speaker of the ECOWAS Parliament canvassed sanctions in line with the traditions and relevant Protocols of ECOWAS, rather than any form of military actions, should dialogue and judicial options fail.

    Ekweremadu said: “From Liberia to Sierra Leone and Cote D’Ivoire, among others, West Africa has seen so much bloodletting and political instability. Heavy destruction of lives and property has also been visited on the sub-region by insurgency and terrorism, which remain present danger to the peace and security of West Africa.

     

    “Instructively, what normally started like child’s play often resulted in protracted, but avoidable political upheavals and fratricidal wars. This is why the people of West Africa, especially the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government, must tread with utmost caution to ensure that the sub-region is not plunged into yet another needless bloodletting and humanitarian crisis over the Gambian political challenge.

    “Importantly, we must all acknowledge the fact that Gambia is a sovereign state. If her Constitution and electoral laws allow for judicial role in resolving electoral disputes, then the Gambian constitutional courts must be allowed to count in resolving the political impasse.”

  • Tinubu, Ekweremadu for Igbo carnival

    Tinubu, Ekweremadu for Igbo carnival

    National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, are among dignitaries expected at the general Igbo cultural fiesta scheduled for Saturday at the National Stadium, Lagos.

    The traditional gong has been released and town criers have been mandated to announce to all Igbo’s in Lagos to turn out in their best and embrace the carnival with pomp and celebration.

    According to Chairman of the Planning Committee, Chief Tobechukwu Ezeani, the carnival, tagged ‘Ndigbo Unity Rally’, is propelled by a deep consensus among Igbo’s in Lagos and the Diaspora that “our spectacular cultural diversities must be harnessed as a showpiece of our strength in unity, and speed through oneness”.

    Chief Ezeani, who emphasised that our heritage as a people is among the world finest, said his committee is working in concert with leading business entrepreneurs, the intelligentsia,  town unions and market associations to renew and revive our best today for a bigger tomorrow.

    He said Ndigbo are being mobilised for a productive leap to the next level possible through the awakening of shared values of love, unity and accommodation.

    “We are inviting all nationalities, especially our dear host community, to this epic cultural confetti because the bond of humanity is most eloquent in sharing. After all, a masquerade cannot enjoy dancing without spectators,” he said.