Tag: Elections 2015

  • Religious politics is bad for Nigeria – Bishop Ighele

    Religious politics is bad for Nigeria – Bishop Ighele

    Bishop Charles Ighele is The General Superintendent of Holy Spirit Mission (Happy Family Chapel) read Political Science at the then University of Ife. He spoke with David Lawal on the lamentable roles of religion in the just-concluded general elections. Excerpts:  

    How have you been able to use your background in political science to advance religion?

    After graduating in 1980, I have seen that my background in political science and history has helped me to see how decision-making brought about a lot of suffering to families in different parts of the world.

    You now see that the way government is run, the way government is advised to do things, the quality of the citizens and how much the citizens are ready to be a part of the system. All these helped me. When I studied bureaucracy in the university, it made me understand bureaucratic bottlenecks.

    It is helping me so much in the ministry, and when you look at the bible; in the New Testament, in the Acts of Apostles, you will see people sell parts of their properties to take care of the poor and this is what the church has always stood for.

    This is how it supposed to be because it is not about we men of God getting extremely rich and the people getting extremely poor. We were not anointed just for us to feel good and be rich. We were anointed because God has other people in mind. That is what I keep telling people, it is not about us – it is about the people.

    Can religion and politics walk together for the good of the people?

    Well (smiles) you know as a preacher when you look at the Old Testament, you would see the mixture. You see religion and you see politics or should I call it governance. People like King David. You can’t divorce the two but the church has to be interested in the quality of the leaders that are arising.

    So you can’t separate the two. As far as I am concerned, I don’t believe in this is spiritual and this is secular; everything goes together.

    So, you are saying that religion and politics go together. You didn’t mention that clearly enough.

    Well, I didn’t really talk about partisan politics. Consequently, there is something known as partisan politics. What is politics? I don’t want to go into defining what politics is. But you see, man critically cannot be divorced from governance; man cannot be divorced from the people in charge unless you want to live on an island like Robinson Crusoe.

    So, there is also one known as partisan politics. Personally, I am interested in politics; I follow it to the minute details, just as I also follow football. I am not a footballer but I follow it and then I am not a politician but I follow it. I am interested in politics but I am not in partisan politics.

    What do you really mean when you say partisan politics?

    Well, partisan politics is when you decide to join a party then be a politician in that particular party, which I have personally said I will not go into. Now, I’m not saying that some of my colleagues who have gone into it have done anything wrong. As far as I am concerned, there are two groups of pastors, two groups of preachers.

    There is a group of pastors called to go into partisan politics just like somebody can also be a journalist and a pastor. Somebody can be a medical doctor and also a pastor. Somebody can be a pharmacist and also a pastor; somebody can be a footballer and a pastor. So, somebody can be a pastor and also be into partisan politics.

    I don’t condemn them at all but there is yet another group. This particular group, God has taken them to a status and God has put them in a place whereby their own is to act as fathers in the land but it does not mean that a father cannot support any of the children. People like Pastor Enoch Adeboye and Bishop Mike Okonkwo would not go into partisan politics; they belong to this other group I am talking about.

    How do you assess the last general elections?

    I did not like the last elections. I am not talking about those who won and those who lost. I am not going into that at all but you see the forces of religion and ethnicity. These two forces played a major role. Jigawa state governor, Sule Lamido, said during the campaigns that if you were campaigning for Jonathan in the north they will call you a pastor.

    In the north, people were told to vote for Buhari. Now in many churches in parts of the south, there was a lot of campaign also in the churches. People were told not to vote for a Muslim. In the north, Muslims were told not to vote for Christians.

    So, that is what I didn’t like at all and you see this is taking us back to the days of Northern Peoples Congress (NPC), NCNC and Action Group when the election was terminated through the January 16, 1966 coup. That is the element I did not like at all. I liked what happened during the SDP and NRC days when Abiola and Tofa contested. I like it that way because religion did not play a role. When religion become a major issue in campaigning in any nation, it is dangerous. I didn’t like it at all.

    I cannot see what happened during the 2015 election as political progress. It is not political development. I didn’t like it. I don’t want this country to turn to another Lebanon.

    Our two main parties have been stained with religious garbage. Those clothes need to be washed. I am not a preacher of doom but all I am saying is that corrections can be made. The APC-led federal government can begin to see how it can fill the religious gap for us.

    This is what I believe would be in the interest of our nation. Religion is worse than Indian hemp; it makes people go crazy and makes people not to think again. Religion is more than opium. It makes people to kill.

    Were you pleased with the roles religious leaders played in all of these? 

    What happened in the last elections was that APC was smarter than PDP in playing the religious card. Both parties played the religious card heavily. They were able to re-brand General Buhari from the way he had been known even four years ago. So they were able to put their hearts together.

    He brought his brain box and put it in APC to iron the whole thing. They did a very smart campaign and played a better job with the religious card.

    It was silently played in some sections of the north while some of the Christians were busy making noise about it. You won’t see the Muslim core North, you won’t see the Imams talking in papers vote for this. It was not so but here it was so because you will find out that the Muslims were highly well organised and I really commend them for that. The Christian community does not know how to move as one body under Christ to achieve what they want to achieve.

    What will be your advice to the incoming government?

    My advice for this incoming government is that they should make sure they deliver what they promised during campaigns. When I look at their package, I look at the area that they lay emphasis on being corruptions and that seemed to have struck a chord in an average Nigerians because there is corruption in this land. And so many Nigerians have now seen General Buhari as a symbol of fighting corruption.

    So hopes are high. The people are beginning to see that perhaps within six months corruption should be off from Nigeria. The first 100 days, there should be light everywhere but I think that as I speak as a leader and I want to plead with Nigerians to go and learn how to speak as leaders.

    If this government really means business, instead of just handling corruption from the top, there should be what I will call a socialisation progress – from the grassroots. In the village there is corruption, secondary school there is corruption, everywhere there is corruption. So there should be a team of think tank that should be quietly assembled and this team should be asked to produce a blueprint on how to fight corruption.

  • Election reruns: Policemen on duty

    Election reruns: Policemen on duty

    ‎Pictures showing policemen on duty and voters at Umuola ward 12,Ogbor Hill, Aba-Abia State
    ‎Pictures showing policemen on duty and voters at Umuola ward 12,Ogbor Hill, Aba-Abia State

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    ‎Pictures showing policemen on duty at Umuola ward 12, Abia State
    ‎Pictures showing policemen on duty at Umuola ward 12, Abia State
  • Updates of election reruns

    Updates of election reruns

    Abia State:

    Election completed at PU 01/01/02/004, Industrial Area Ward, Aba North.

    Registered voters – 360

     

    *3:45pm

    Voting ongoing at Polling Unit 16/11/06/003 in Mbaitoli LGA.

     

    Election completed at Polling Unit 16/11/06/009, Ogwa 1 Ward, Mbaitoli LGA.

    Registered voters – 479

     

     

    Imo State:

    Election completed at Polling Unit 006 – Central School Omuma.

    Election completed at PU16/04/03/008 Okpofe / Ezeagbogu ward, Ezinihitte Mbaise LGA.

    Counting has started in the area.

     

  • Party member challenges PDP Reps-elect candidacy

    Party member challenges PDP Reps-elect candidacy

    A member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ogun state, Tele Ogunjobi, has approached a state High Court sitting in Ijebu – Ode to challenge the candidacy of a Federal House Representatives – elect, Prince Segun Adekoya.

    Ogunjobi, former Chairman of Ijebu North Local Government Council, had aspired to run for the seat ofthe Ogun Waterside, Ijebu North and Ijebu East Federal constituency in the last March 28 National Assembly elections but the ticket, in a curious twist, went to Adekoya.

    Ogunjobi in a motion filed by his lawyers Ayo Alagbe and T.M Otayemi before Justice S.A Olugbemi in Ijebu – Ode, claimed that  he won the PDP primary election held at the Ogbere town hall last December 6 having scored 33 votes while Adekoya polled 32 votes.

    According to the plaintiff, having contested the seat at the primary with eight others and emerged winner with 33 votes while Adekoya, came second with 32 votes, the PDP Returning Officer declared him winner and returned him as validly elected party candidate for the  House of Representatives candidate for Ogun Waterside, Ijebu North and Ijebu East Federal Constituency.

    Also dragged to Court along with the House of Representatives – elect, Adekoya, are the Ogun state PDP and the state Chairman, Adebayo Dayo, alleging that they snatched the mandate given to him during the primary election which he won and gave it to Adekoya.

    He also informed the court that his name was equally submitted as the elected candidate and also forwarded to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    According to him,  the court action became necessary because his mandate was unlawfully given to Adekoya, who was subsequently declared winner during the March 28 National Assembly polls.

    He prayed the Court to help him retrieve his mandate,  declare him the candidate of PDP for the Federal House of Representatives for his constituency, and by extension the right beneficiary of the PDP victory in the March 28 National Assembly polls for Ijebu North, Ijebu East and Ogun Waterside.

  • Elections 2015 Personality

    Your greatest ELECTIONS 2015 Person?

    President Goodluck Jonathan0%
    Elder Godsday Orubebe0%
    Asiwaju Bola Tinubu0%
    Gen. Muhammadu Buhari0%
    Prof. Attahiru Jega0%
    Other: (Please specify)0%

  • 2015 Elections Poll

    2015 Elections Poll

  • May 29: Transition committee begins work

    May 29: Transition committee begins work

    To facilitate smooth handing over of government on May 29th from the incumbent, President Goodluck Jonathan (Peoples Democratic Party) to the President-elect, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (All Progressives Congress), the Transition Committee on Monday started its assignment.

    Jonathan had conceded defeat to Buhari in the March 28th Presidential election.

    The maiden meeting of the committee chaired by Vice President Namadi Sambo started few minutes past 12noon on Monday at the Vice President’s conference room.

    Among those at the meeting are the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Senator Anyim Pius Anyim, Attorney General of the Federation and the Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke, Head of Service of the Federation, Daniel Kifasi.

    Others include the Minister of State for Finance, Bashir Yuguda and the Minister of Police Affairs, Jelil Adesinyan, NAFDAC DG, Paul Orhii.

  • Mbu at INEC centre: Seizes policeman’s gun

    Mbu at INEC centre: Seizes policeman’s gun

    Assistant Inspector General of Police, Joseph Mbu on Sunday made a surprise appearance at the INEC collation centre in Lagos.

    Mbu, who was quick to spot a shabbily dressed Police man, retrieved his gun and matched him out of the centre.

    Speaking at the collation centre, Mbu said that the Saturday elections were free and fair.

    “Whoever won was based on merit, no one should cast aspersions on the Police.”

  • Kebbi results: APC ahead

    ALIERO LGA (COMPLETE)

    GOV: APC -14,958 PDP -6,923

    HA: APC- 14,600 PDP -7,533

     

    KALGO LGA (COMPLETE)

    GOV: APC – 13,032 PDP – 8,493

    HA: APC- 12,791 PDP- 8,657

     

    ARGUNGU LGA (COMPLETE)

    GOV: APC- 28,127 PDP- 14,070

    HA: APC- 27,053 PDP- 13,576