Tag: elections

  • Private security to INEC: we’re ready for elections

    Private security to INEC: we’re ready for elections

    The Association of Licenced Private Security Practitioners of Nigeria (ALPSPN) has expressed its willingness to be deployed as volunteers by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the forthcoming general elections.

    The group at the weekend declared its readiness to deploy its personnel across the country, following the military’s stance that it cannot guarantee security if elections were not postponed.

    The association is to deploy its personnel to troubled northeastern states alongside other security agencies to ensure peaceful elections.

    Addressing reporters in Lagos, the association’s executives, led by its President, Davidson Akhimien, said their decision was borne out of their love for the country.

    He said the association as a responsible and patriotic player in the country was duty bound to contribute it’s quota towards the success of the elections by making its men available for security duties across the country including the troubled states.

    It also urged INEC to consider allowing persons with Temporary Voter Cards (TVCs) vote so as to reduce the number of disenfranchised voters.

    It urged politicians to refrain from mudslinging, describing it as a recipe for violence, just as it advice security agencies deployed for elections purpose to remain apolitical.

    On the alleged plans by terrorists to use female suicide bombers to cause havoc during election, the group urged voters to be vigilant and look out for both males and females suspected terrorists.

  • Reflections on the elections

    As the elections draw near, global focus is on Nigeria. There are several reasons for this attention. There is no doubt that the first reason for the attention is that elections are to be held in the most populous country in Africa thus bringing into bold relief the march or otherwise of plebiscitary democracy in an important African country.

    A second and definitely compelling reason for preoccupation with the elections is that the elections of 14 and 28 February is scheduled to hold in a situation in which the nihilistic insurgent group, the murderous extremist group Boko Haram, is said to control about 50,000 square kilometres. The seizure of Nigerian territory by the terrorist Boko Haram has resulted in the displacement of over 650,000 Nigerians and another 80,000 as refugees in Cameroon and Chad. In effect, thousands of Nigerians may not be able to exercise their right to vote.

    Yet, a third factor why the election has attracted the attention of the international community is the unpleasant history of electoral malfeasance in Nigeria. Past elections in Nigeria were characterised by rigging, switch of election results, vote suppression, and use of public media to promote the governing party. In addition, security forces were deployed by the federal government to intimidate the opposition, their candidates and supporters. The inexplicable election result of June 21, 2014 in Ekiti State is a reminder.

    Regrettably, we appear not to have learnt from past gross electoral chicanery of 1964, 1965, and 1983 when turmoil followed elections of those years. Indeed, the pattern of past electoral malpractices appears to have reared their heads again or is in the offing as seen in recent events. Briefly, these events are purchase of voter cards, character assassinations, disruptive court cases, false opinion surveys, and sudden transfer of top police officials. In addition, the PDP- led federal government is said to have released billions of naira to farmers, in order to influence Nigerian voters.

    Instead of investing in infrastructure, the PDP, on the eve of a crucial election is bribing Nigerians with a one-time so-called stomach infrastructure. After the elections, the PDP will abandon ordinary Nigerians to insecurity, darkness, hunger, starvation, and unemployment whilst PDP political barons feed fat in the house of patronage and continue their loot of the treasury. They will continue to ignore 60 percent of Nigerians who live below the global poverty level that is less than a dollar a day that is 188 naira.

    The Nigerian middle class, a dwindling class due to President Jonathan’s economic mismanagement, is also suffering. The spending power of the class has been eroded due, amongst other factors, to the dramatic depreciation of the naira by about 25 percent since October 2014. This has inflationary consequences. Further, import duty on used cars which the middle class can only afford has gone up by 35 percent. An additional 35 percent is to be added in April making 70 percent increase in a dubious effort to produce vehicles which prices will be beyond the reach of the average Nigerian.

    The salaried category in the Nigerian middle class, most of who are public employees in the states of the federation, are owed salary arrears due to late transfer or non-availability of statutory funds under federal control to the states of the federation. Of course, the PDP may blame the crash in oil prices as the cause of the financial difficulties faced by Nigerians. However, Nigerians know that in 2010, at the time he took over as President, Dr. Jonathan met over $9billion in the Excess Crude Account and about $60 billion in the Foreign Reserves Account. Over $7 billion and close to $30 billion have been spent in these accounts under President Jonathan leaving a balance of barely 2 billion dollars in the Excess Crude Account, an account that was meant for a period like this when oil prices are falling. A visionary and competent government should have known that prices of oil crash between 5-7 years and accordingly prepare for the rainy day. The last oil crash was in 2008; six years later, 2014, there was another crash. What makes the current crash very problematic for Nigeria is that the United States of America, a major importer of Nigerian oil now exports oil and in a year or two might be the largest oil producer in the world. This is due to United States production of shale oil through the technology of fracking.

    In the old days, Chief Obafemi Awolowo would have warned Nigeria about the economic and financial difficulties Nigeria is now experiencing as he did in 1980 on the verge of then Nigeria’s economic and external debt difficulties. That is why when measured against the standards adopted by Chief Awolowo, then the leading light in Afenifere, he would certainly not have endorsed Dr. Jonathan. Indeed, he would have trenchantly criticised him for gross mismanagement, incompetence and condoning of wanton corruption. He would also have noted the marginalisation of the South-west except for the little crumbs thrown at the greedy elements in the PDP from the region. Even with less than 10 days to the election, appointments are being made to ministerial positions and the appointee is gloating. In another political clime, the status quo would have remained as the outcome of the election may not return to office the incumbent. Of course, except there is a hidden master plan to rig the election and thwart the preference of Nigerian people.

    In the history of independent Nigeria, not once has there been a change of power at the federal level between the ruling party and opposition (Nigeria since 1964 has held six federal elections under civilian administrations and three under military rule). African countries such as our neighbours, Republic of Benin, Ghana, Senegal, and Mauritius in southern Africa have peacefully voted out ruling parties in favour of the opposition. Indeed, power has changed hands between government and opposition twice in Ghana, Republic of Benin and Mauritius. These African states thus meet the test of Professor Samuel Huntington, late American political scientist, as democratic states. Nigerians can advance, deepen and begin the process of consolidating democracy by peacefully voting out PDP and installing APC in power.

    The elections coming up in the coming weeks thus provide Nigerians opportunity to make history by installing in power the opposition APC which will work for Nigerians, a party that will not loot the treasury, and a party that will truly serve the Nigerian people and bring genuine change.

    When Nigerians effect peaceful change through the ballot, the country can then begin the arduous task of building institutions of state that will provide security for all, promote the rule of law, improve the economy for the benefit of all Nigerians, and hold all public officials accountable.

     

    •Senator Fasanmi is a  member of the Second Republic Senate

  • Averting violence in Rivers elections

    Averting violence in Rivers elections

    Chief Davies Ibiamu Ikanya is the Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State in this piece, he highlights what he describes as the atrocities of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) against APC members and the implications for the general elections. He warns that the state may slip into violence, if the acts of terror are not checked.

    The greatest obstacle to democratic consolidation in Nigeria is electoral violence. Pre-election violence is as a result of the rascally disposition of some desperate and greedy politicians, who want to secure electoral victory by subverting the process and undermining the rule of law. Whilst the threat of bloodshed has always been in the air in Rivers State since the countdown to the general elections started, the upsurge in the incidence of violence in the state in recent times is worrisome. Apart from the fact that this phenomenon affects the credibility of the electoral process, the legitimacy of the election results and the rule of law, the nature, extent and magnitude of violence indicate unequivocally that it is a deliberate tool for intimidation and terror adopted as a policy and backed by security institutions who are paid from our commonwealth to protect our citizens.

     

    Electoral violence

    Electoral violence is any random or organized act that seeks to determine, delay or otherwise influence an electoral process through threat, verbal intimidation, hate speech, disinformation, physical assault, forced protection, destruction of property or assassination. The aim of electoral violence is either to influence the outcome of the process or to disrupt the entire electoral process.

    The Federal Government under the collegiate presidency of Dr. and Dame Goodluck Jonathan adopted a deliberate policy of state-sponsored violence against Rivers people when it deployed Mbu Joseph Mbu intentionally to promote (through manifestly corrupt and illicit means) the ascendancy of Mr. Nyesom Wike to political infamy. Mr. Mbu’s antics are too numerous and very well publicized. However, it may be necessary to remind us that since the day he shamelessly escorted known criminals and outlaws through the streets of Port Harcourt in the guise of a demonstration, violence triumphantly returned to Rivers State

    The PDP, having established its machinery for violence, began to unleash mayhem in the form of physical attacks on the APC members, killing and causing grievous bodily harm on our members.

    Attack on House of Assembly

    The absurdity of the attack on the House of Assembly would confound any right-thinking person who knows that there are 32 members of the House of Assembly out of which, five purportedly tried to impeach the Speaker. In the course of their quest to regain lawful access to the House of Assembly complex, the remaining 27 members were forced to sit on the bare surface of Moscow Road from where Mr. Mbu dispersed them with tear gas. Mr. Mbu left Rivers State in exceedingly controversial circumstances, after presiding over the return of Rivers State to a near state of anarchy into the warm embrace of the president and his dear wife who promptly rewarded him with a “well deserved” promotion. His legacies include the return of hitherto outlawed warlords who have re-established their camps and are operating visibly. Before he was redeployed, his atrocities reached its apogee with the attempted murder of Senator Magnus Abe when police men on his orders attacked Save Rivers Movement members at College of Arts and Science premises in Rumuola, Port Harcourt.

     

    Violence against APC members

    The following are but a few of the known cases of death and grievous bodily injuries caused our members by the PDP through its members and hirelings.

    Perhaps, the most brazen of all attacks took place in the early morning of the flag-off of the Presidential Campaign of the APC in Port Harcourt. Two different sets of gun men attacked buses conveying the party supporters from different parts of the state to Port Harcourt. The buses located several hundred kilometers from each other were riddled with bullets. A day after the attack, the police naively dismissed the attacks as incidents of armed robbery. Whilst it must be noted that nothing was stolen from the victims, one must ask the police why the “robbers” isolated APC members on the same day, at about the same time and in two different locations in the state?

    Many APC supporters on their way to the official flag-off of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari’s presidential campaign were attacked by gun men near Harry’s Town in Degema and Sakpenwa in Tai. The cowards were not bold enough to do it without hiding under face masks. They left many unconscious and in their pool of blood and fled into anonymity to spend the filthy money from their cowardly masters.

    After this, the APC secretariat in Okrika, the home of Madam Patience Jonathan was destroyed by a bomb explosion. Whilst no life was lost, party members have been terrorized and the message is clear that the PDP and its dangerously armed terrorist gangs will not allow the APC to lawfully contest for the votes in Okrika Local Government Area.

    Chief Orerehim was on the 10th of January beaten alongside others when they were having a caucus meeting at Oro-owo, Rumueme, Ward 10, Obio-Akpor LGA by thugs. He was seriously beaten and injured. He reported the matter to Rukpakani Police Station, Ada George Road. But, no arrest, invitation or investigation was made by the police.

    On January 22 in Ogu/Bolo Local Government Area, some group of PDP thugs destroyed APC billboards/banners and injured one Mr. Precious Tende. That was the third time Evans Bipi and his cohorts had willfully destroyed APC banners/billboards in Ogu, headquarters of the Local Government Area. the Ogu Council of Chiefs, the police at Ogu, the Department of State Security (DSS) and the Joint Task Force Unit are all aware of it.

    The following day, some PDP thugs numbering about 24 attacked the private residence of Barr. Cyprian Chukwu, a member of the APC in Ward 9, destroying valuable properties. He was lucky not to be at home when they came. They decapitated a young man in the premises and he is lying critically ill in the hospital with machete wounds on both arms.

    In the early hours of January 24, thugs on the orders of Mrs. Patience Jonathan, PDP attacked the National field in Okrika which was to be the venue of an APC rally scheduled for that day with guns and explosive devices and destroyed a musical/public address system, canopies, podium and chairs. Thereafter, they attacked the residence of APC Councilors and members in Okrika Local Government Area. The police are yet to make any arrests.

     

    Aiding and abetting by police

    Most of these heinous crimes have been aided and abetted by the police. In some cases, they simply looked the other way whilst the crimes were committed. In other instances, they arrested the APC complainants or members of supporters on phantom charges just to neutralize the political influence of the APC in the area. Below are some of the flagrant cases of police harassment, intimidation, unlawful arrests and detention against members and supporters of APC in Rivers State.

     

    Victimisation, arrest and detention

    In Omuma Local Government Area, Hon. Emeka Wogu, a former member of the Rivers State House of Assembly, a former Commissioner and currently Chairman, Caretaker Committee, Omuma Local Government Council was arrested and accused of shooting at Mr. President’s billboard. Meanwhile, on the fateful day (August 25, 2014), he was at a Joint Allocation Committee meeting in Port Harcourt and was nowhere near the scene of the incident at Omuma Local Government Area. He arrested on August 27, 2014 by over 60 armed policemen in a commando style, handcuffed in the presence of his children and detained for two days. He was subsequently released without any charge.

    In Ikwerre Local Government Area, Godwin Wojinda was arrested by the SARS squad of the police for stopping one Isi from running away with permanent voters cards (PVCs) belonging to ward 3, Omagwe, Ikwerre Local Government Area. He is still in police detention even when the culprit returned the hijacked material to the INEC Local Government Area Electoral Officer. He was not arrested; rather it was the complainant that was clamped into detention by the police.

     

    Anxiety over polls

    As the general elections approach, the scale, magnitude and intensity of the orchestrated violence against members of the APC has been assuming a frightful dimension, necessitating that we cry out to Nigerians and the international community. Our plight is akin to that of a people in a militarily conquered and occupied territory. PDP thugs and hirelings practically commit murders under the watchful and protective eyes of the police without as much as a slap on the wrist. The objective is obviously to antagonize and intimidate our supporters into believing that it is unsafe for them to come out and vote, thus effectively disenfranchising them.

    We make this distress call to all men, women, organizations, nations and people who cherish democracy to intervene before it is too late. It is unimaginable that a president, who is from the Niger Delta region and who assumed office on the wings of agitations for equity and justice, would permit unprovoked and premeditated violent attacks on the same people he hopes to ride on their primordial sentiments to secure his second term. The president’s cavalier attitude to the escalating violence in the state borders on criminal negligence because he knows or ought to know (or in the least remember) the level of arms in circulation and the historical volatility of the state (and region).

    We call on Amnesty International, the International Red Cross, the relevant organs of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the African Union (AU) and the United Nations (UN) to immediately commence independent inquiries into the gruesome attacks and killings in Rivers State. We call on these and other humanitarian and democratic organizations and institutions to set high-powered election monitoring networks, teams and processes to monitor the election in Rivers State to avert unnecessary bloodbath, which may cripple our already weakened economy. An acceptable electoral outcome is possible in Rivers State, but only if the elections are truly free and fair. There cannot be free and fair election, if the spate of violence, high handedness, intimidation and terror is not halted. We pledge to remain law abiding but we shall defend ourselves, our people and their votes by all lawful means.

  • Averting violence in Rivers elections

    Averting violence in Rivers elections

    Chief Daveis Ibiamu Ikanya is the Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State. In this piece, he highlights what he describes as the atrocities of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) against APC members and the implications for the general elections. He warns that the state may slip into violence, if the acts of terror are not checked.

    he greatest obstacle to democratic consolidation in Nigeria is electoral violence. Pre-election violence is as a result of the rascally disposition of some desperate and greedy politicians, who want to secure electoral victory by subverting the process and undermining the rule of law. Whilst the threat of bloodshed has always been in the air in Rivers State since the countdown to the general elections started, the upsurge in the incidence of violence in the state in recent times is worrisome. Apart from the fact that this phenomenon affects the credibility of the electoral process, the legitimacy of the election results and the rule of law, the nature, extent and magnitude of violence indicate unequivocally that it is a deliberate tool for intimidation and terror adopted as a policy and backed by security institutions who are paid from our commonwealth to protect our citizens.

     

    Electoral violence

    Electoral violence is any random or organized act that seeks to determine, delay or otherwise influence an electoral process through threat, verbal intimidation, hate speech, disinformation, physical assault, forced protection, destruction of property or assassination. The aim of electoral violence is either to influence the outcome of the process or to disrupt the entire electoral process.

    The Federal Government under the collegiate presidency of Dr. and Dame Goodluck Jonathan adopted a deliberate policy of state-sponsored violence against Rivers people when it deployed Mbu Joseph Mbu intentionally to promote (through manifestly corrupt and illicit means) the ascendancy of Mr. Nyesom Wike to political infamy. Mr. Mbu’s antics are too numerous and very well publicized. However, it may be necessary to remind us that since the day he shamelessly escorted known criminals and outlaws through the streets of Port Harcourt in the guise of a demonstration, violence triumphantly returned to Rivers State

    The PDP, having established its machinery for violence, began to unleash mayhem in the form of physical attacks on the APC members, killing and causing grievous bodily harm on our members.

    Attack on House of Assembly

    The absurdity of the attack on the House of Assembly would confound any right-thinking person who knows that there are 32 members of the House of Assembly out of which, five purportedly tried to impeach the Speaker. In the course of their quest to regain lawful access to the House of Assembly complex, the remaining 27 members were forced to sit on the bare surface of Moscow Road from where Mr. Mbu dispersed them with tear gas. Mr. Mbu left Rivers State in exceedingly controversial circumstances, after presiding over the return of Rivers State to a near state of anarchy into the warm embrace of the president and his dear wife who promptly rewarded him with a “well deserved” promotion. His legacies include the return of hitherto outlawed warlords who have re-established their camps and are operating visibly. Before he was redeployed, his atrocities reached its apogee with the attempted murder of Senator Magnus Abe when police men on his orders attacked Save Rivers Movement members at College of Arts and Science premises in Rumuola, Port Harcourt.

     

    Violence against APC members

    The following are but a few of the known cases of death and grievous bodily injuries caused our members by the PDP through its members and hirelings.

    Perhaps, the most brazen of all attacks took place in the early morning of the flag-off of the Presidential Campaign of the APC in Port Harcourt. Two different sets of gun men attacked buses conveying the party supporters from different parts of the state to Port Harcourt. The buses located several hundred kilometers from each other were riddled with bullets. A day after the attack, the police naively dismissed the attacks as incidents of armed robbery. Whilst it must be noted that nothing was stolen from the victims, one must ask the police why the “robbers” isolated APC members on the same day, at about the same time and in two different locations in the state?

    Many APC supporters on their way to the official flag-off of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari’s presidential campaign were attacked by gun men near Harry’s Town in Degema and Sakpenwa in Tai. The cowards were not bold enough to do it without hiding under face masks. They left many unconscious and in their pool of blood and fled into anonymity to spend the filthy money from their cowardly masters.

    After this, the APC secretariat in Okrika, the home of Madam Patience Jonathan was destroyed by a bomb explosion. Whilst no life was lost, party members have been terrorized and the message is clear that the PDP and its dangerously armed terrorist gangs will not allow the APC to lawfully contest for the votes in Okrika Local Government Area.

    Chief Orerehim was on the 10th of January beaten alongside others when they were having a caucus meeting at Oro-owo, Rumueme, Ward 10, Obio-Akpor LGA by thugs. He was seriously beaten and injured. He reported the matter to Rukpakani Police Station, Ada George Road. But, no arrest, invitation or investigation was made by the police.

    On January 22 in Ogu/Bolo Local Government Area, some group of PDP thugs destroyed APC billboards/banners and injured one Mr. Precious Tende. That was the third time Evans Bipi and his cohorts had willfully destroyed APC banners/billboards in Ogu, headquarters of the Local Government Area. the Ogu Council of Chiefs, the police at Ogu, the Department of State Security (DSS) and the Joint Task Force Unit are all aware of it.

    The following day, some PDP thugs numbering about 24 attacked the private residence of Barr. Cyprian Chukwu, a member of the APC in Ward 9, destroying valuable properties. He was lucky not to be at home when they came. They decapitated a young man in the premises and he is lying critically ill in the hospital with machete wounds on both arms.

    In the early hours of January 24, thugs on the orders of Mrs. Patience Jonathan, PDP attacked the National field in Okrika which was to be the venue of an APC rally scheduled for that day with guns and explosive devices and destroyed a musical/public address system, canopies, podium and chairs. Thereafter, they attacked the residence of APC Councilors and members in Okrika Local Government Area. The police are yet to make any arrests.

     

    Aiding and abetting by police

    Most of these heinous crimes have been aided and abetted by the police. In some cases, they simply looked the other way whilst the crimes were committed. In other instances, they arrested the APC complainants or members of supporters on phantom charges just to neutralize the political influence of the APC in the area. Below are some of the flagrant cases of police harassment, intimidation, unlawful arrests and detention against members and supporters of APC in Rivers State.

     

    Victimisation, arrest and detention

    In Omuma Local Government Area, Hon. Emeka Wogu, a former member of the Rivers State House of Assembly, a former Commissioner and currently Chairman, Caretaker Committee, Omuma Local Government Council was arrested and accused of shooting at Mr. President’s billboard. Meanwhile, on the fateful day (August 25, 2014), he was at a Joint Allocation Committee meeting in Port Harcourt and was nowhere near the scene of the incident at Omuma Local Government Area. He arrested on August 27, 2014 by over 60 armed policemen in a commando style, handcuffed in the presence of his children and detained for two days. He was subsequently released without any charge.

    In Ikwerre Local Government Area, Godwin Wojinda was arrested by the SARS squad of the police for stopping one Isi from running away with permanent voters cards (PVCs) belonging to ward 3, Omagwe, Ikwerre Local Government Area. He is still in police detention even when the culprit returned the hijacked material to the INEC Local Government Area Electoral Officer. He was not arrested; rather it was the complainant that was clamped into detention by the police.

     

    Anxiety over polls

    As the general elections approach, the scale, magnitude and intensity of the orchestrated violence against members of the APC has been assuming a frightful dimension, necessitating that we cry out to Nigerians and the international community. Our plight is akin to that of a people in a militarily conquered and occupied territory. PDP thugs and hirelings practically commit murders under the watchful and protective eyes of the police without as much as a slap on the wrist. The objective is obviously to antagonize and intimidate our supporters into believing that it is unsafe for them to come out and vote, thus effectively disenfranchising them.

    We make this distress call to all men, women, organizations, nations and people who cherish democracy to intervene before it is too late. It is unimaginable that a president, who is from the Niger Delta region and who assumed office on the wings of agitations for equity and justice, would permit unprovoked and premeditated violent attacks on the same people he hopes to ride on their primordial sentiments to secure his second term. The president’s cavalier attitude to the escalating violence in the state borders on criminal negligence because he knows or ought to know (or in the least remember) the level of arms in circulation and the historical volatility of the state (and region).

    We call on Amnesty International, the International Red Cross, the relevant organs of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the African Union (AU) and the United Nations (UN) to immediately commence independent inquiries into the gruesome attacks and killings in Rivers State. We call on these and other humanitarian and democratic organizations and institutions to set high-powered election monitoring networks, teams and processes to monitor the election in Rivers State to avert unnecessary bloodbath, which may cripple our already weakened economy. An acceptable electoral outcome is possible in Rivers State, but only if the elections are truly free and fair. There cannot be free and fair election, if the spate of violence, high handedness, intimidation and terror is not halted. We pledge to remain law abiding but we shall defend ourselves, our people and their votes by all lawful means.

  • Witness to elections in Nigeria

    The first election I witnessed as a small boy in  this country was in 1956. I was in form one in Christ School in Ado-Ekiti . Ordinarily I should not have been interested but for the fact that Chief Joseph Oduola Osuntokun, my brother was running for the House of Assembly in Ibadan . He had been a member of the House since  1951 and in 1955 he was appointed Minister of Works in the old Western Region which stretched from Lagos to present Delta and parts of Bayelsa states. To be a minister of such a huge region that was almost autonomous of the centre in those days was not a  small job. I also had special interest in the election because after the death of our father, Chief Osuntokun as Dawodu stepped into the shoes of our father and that included paying my school fees. I was not quite conscious of the Election in 1951 which sent him to the Western House in the first instance. What he later told me as an enquiring academic was that it was not based on universal adult suffrage but  on divisional electoral colleges throughout the region. The political parties were organizationally inchoate. What our people did was to choose three or four graduates or professional people all over the regions. This is why the first crop of politicians were top class educated people in full employment while politics was  seen as vocations.  A reading of the Hansard of the period either in the regions or at the centre will confirm the quality of their minds. My brother became Minister of Finance in 1956 at the age of 32. Subsequent elections in 1959 to the federal parliament and in 1960 to the Western House were fought on highly debated and well articulated manifestos. The elections were well fought and well run and conducted. We usually sat by the radio throughout the night as election results trickled in. Western regional elections were usually keenly fought between the Action Group, the ruling party and the NCNC, the party in opposition. Even the much more keenly fought 1959 federal election provided a lot of drama with Chief Obafemi Awolowo taking on the forces of the NPC (jamiyar mutanen arewa) or Northern People’s Congress and those of its coalition partner the NCNC.  These two parties were led respectively by the aristocratic Sir Ahmadu Bello, scion of the Usman dan Fodiye dynasty in Sokoto and Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe,  a cosmopolitan Igbo republican.

    Elections to a reasonable extent were conducted with finesse and solid planning. Awolowo’s party represented the best face of serious planning and perhaps because of this and the rather more prosperous condition of his region, the other two leaders treated him with suspicion. In spite of official British partisanship, elections even on the eve of independence still continued to be a civilized operation.

    It was not until the Action Group crisis of 1961-1962 that things changed for the worst simply because the coalition government at the centre used the opportunity to fish in troubled waters. Instead of responding to minority demands all over the country for creation of states, the Western Region was singled out for the purpose of weakening it when the Mid-West region was created out of it in 1963. The much louder demands in the North for a Middle-Belt state and Calabar/Ogoja/Rivers state were ignored. Through meddling in the affairs of the West, the Action Group party was manoeuvred out of power. This was the prelude to the Western election of 1965 which was flagrantly rigged by the Akintola’s government. The federal elections of a year earlier had suffered the same fate. The Western election of 1965 was therefore seen as a do or die affair by the two rival alliances of UPGA (United People’s Grand Alliance) and the NNA (Nigerian National Alliance) formed respectively around the NCNC and the NPC with the old two factions of the now destroyed Action Group lining behind their major partners. Attempt to resolve the national question centring on the division of spoils of office by the election failed. Following campaigns of incendiary nature in Tiv-land in the North and farmers revolt in the West, young army officers who had been watching the events and whose members were being increasingly used to put down rebellion decided to intervene and change the government. The coup d’état of 1966 did not quite succeed but it decapitated the leadership of the NNA leaving the leadership of the other party unscathed. The much internationally respected Prime Minister Sir Abubakar was brutally killed. Worst still, the top hierarchy of the officer corps from the West and the North was eliminated. Reaction swiftly followed six months later. These events eventually led to a fratricidal civil war the aftermath of which is still with us till today.

    After years of military rule we transited to democratic rule and surprisingly enough, it was like we did not learn any lesson from our history. The parties of the First Republic came back with different names with their leadership intact and unchanged except for the northern leadership which had had to make an adjustment following the loss of Sir Ahmadu Bello and Sir Abubakar

    This Second Republic collapsed under the weight of corruption of the ruling party the NPN. The military rode back on the wave of public disenchantment and brought draconian decrees to teach the ruling class one or two things about the need for discipline. Muhammadu Buhari was the popular face of the new junta which was supported by the vast majority of Nigeria’s suffering masses. The regime promptly said it was a continuation of the Obasanjo/Muhammad popular regime of the 1970s. If there had been a referendum the regime would have won by landslide. This writer dislikes non-democratic forms of government but my observation is a record of history. The government made things difficult for all politicians without discrimination. It even made Nigerians proud when it tried to bring home in a crate from London, the boastful and garrulous Umaru Dikko who publicly challenged the government.  The regime deliberately stepped on many toes without looking inwards for fifth columnists among its hierarchy. When the free sealing and free dealing Badamasi Babangida  struck in 1985, it was good bye to discipline and Nigerians went back to their pastime  of cutting corners and general and generalized irresponsibility  which the new regime allowed to fester in order to remain in power for as long as possible. The regime began a costly transition regime that was programmed to fail. It however tried to create two political parties, one a little to the right and another a little to the left! But when these two parties took on character and life of their own and produced a winner in Moshood Abiola in the best election in independent Nigeria, Babangida moved to truncate the process. We finally ended with the thieving regime of Sani Abacha who confused outright looting of the national treasury with governance. The damage this man did to Nigeria remains to be assessed.

    Since 1999 we as a country have soldiered on as best as we can holding elections that were adjudged fraudulent and lacking in integrity  not only by the international community but by Umaru Yar’Adua one of the beneficiaries.

    We are now on the eve of an election that may decide the future of Nigeria. In spite of the negative campaigns, I believe we can hold a reasonably credible election if we can trust INEC and allow it to conduct a free and fair election. If the election is openly fair and transparent, everyone will abide by the result. I am not pessimistic at all about what will happen after the results are in on February 15. There is so much to lose that I believe politicians who are leading us to the edge of a precipice will make a round about turn at the last moment

  • Students: elections must be free and fair

    Students: elections must be free and fair

    February is like every other month. But on many campuses, it is when students engage in social activities. For Nigeria, this is the month of elections.
    The presidential election comes up on February 14, the day many campuses bubble with activities to mark Valentine’s Day. But the celebrations may have to give way for the election.
    The students believe that the elections can be peaceful. They have vowed not to be used as agents of violence, but to participate constructively in the elections.
    In the past months, some civil society groups and pro-democracy organisations have been going round campuses to sensitise students on how best to conduct themselves to ensure credible elections. Students have also engaged in constructive discussion over the elections.
    For instance, at the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), a newsstand close to the Students’ Affairs Division remains a hot spot for political discussions. Students stop by for discussions, especially on the sustainability of democracy.
    At the University of Benin (UNIBEN), the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), last December, held a symposium for students in the Southsouth to galvanise them to get involved in making the electoral process peaceful and credible. Hundreds of students attended the event and pledged to ensure peace during the elections.
    But as the elections draw closer, some politicians are heating up the polity through their actions. Students are warning such politicians to sheathe their swords.
    Anthony Adinya, a 200-Level Electrical Engineering student of UNILORIN, wants parties and their candidates to eschew violence and focus on issues affecting the nation. He said: “The dimension of political campaigns is baffling. People who want to lead us left the issue and attacked the personalities of their opponents. This does not augur well for our democracy. We need to do away with this mentality and as youths, we must demand issue-based campaign.”
    Halimah Akanbi, a 300-Level Law student of Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto (UDUS), wants the election to be free and fair. “I cannot envisage winners of these general elections but I hope the poll would be free and fair enough to produce the right leaders that would develop our nation. Anyone who emerges the leader should promote quality education and resuscitate the education sector,” she said.
    Eddy Uwoghiren, a 200-Level Medicine and Surgery student of UNIBEN, urged students to get their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs). He said he wanted an atmosphere where every voter would be free to vote without financial inducement or threat to his life.
    Eddy said the popularity of any candidate on social media does not mean such candidate is favoured to win the election, cautioning youths not to be used to foment violence if their candidates do not win.
    He said: “My expectation from INEC is to conduct an election that would satisfy the curiosity of all contestants and reduce doubt about its credibility. This means all voters must be free to cast vote in a free atmosphere that must be devoid of inducement or threat. Election is not war but a process to societal development. If we admit this view, then youths must ensure they don’t take to violence if the outcome does not favour their preferred candidates.”
    Eddy also advised the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) to be non-partisan, saying this would restore the association’s credibility as the true voice of students.
    His words: “NANS should be neutral; they should stop giving unnecessary awards to undeserving politicians and desist from paying dubious courtesy visits to public officers for pecuniary gains. They must allow every student to decide who he wishes to vote for.”
    For Abdulazeez Al-mubajal, a 200-Level Law student of UNILORIN, the greatest disservice to the future of Nigeria is to use the youth for electoral violence. Rather than being paid to cause trouble, Abdulazeez urged students to use their vote to enthrone good governance.
    “What we need is a government that would support youth-oriented programmes, create employment opportunities and ensure sustainability of our existence through adequate security. There is no other time to play our roles as change agents than now. We must stand up to advocate for peace and progress of our nation.”
    Solomon Alabi, a 200-Level Business Education student of UNILORIN, said: “Youths should defend their rights by voting for their desired candidates without fear or favour. Religion or ethnicity should not play any role in this election. It is a tradition that politicians sponsor thugs to disrupt the electoral process. Let them engage their own biological children this time around.”
    Newera Aiyamekhue, final year Law student of the Ambrose Ali University (AAU) in Ekpoma, Edo State, said the nation needs help and the only people who could bring Nigeria out of its present challenges are the youth.
    “If we miss this opportunity by engaging in violence, we will compound our tribulations. We cannot effect the needed change in this country if we are being used as thugs. We must not engage in violence but preach credible election that will lift our country away from its current woes,” he said.
    Hameedat Adeleke, a 100-Level Health Education student, said: “The roles of the youth remain vital in ensuring that the election is free and fair. We can only be part of this process by exercising our right to vote peacefully. We need a government that is ready to meet up with the demands of the citizens. We need an end to the challenges facing us, such as unemployment and economic crisis. We must contribute our own quota without dancing to the tune of politicians who seek to induce us with worthless materials for our votes.”

  • Elections: Igbo flee North

    Elections: Igbo flee North

    Despite pleas by Igbo leaders and Ohanaeze Ndigbo, to the Igbo  in other parts of the country, especially in the North, to vote where they live, some have relocated to the Southeast.

    Yesterday, hundreds of women and children in the North returned to Owerri, the Imo State capital, following fears of post-election violence.

    Some of the returnees, who were seen at the ABC terminus, said they would stay until after the elections before returning to the North, adding that they abandoned their businesses for fear of crisis.

    One of the returnees from Kano State, Mrs. Mary Ikeagwuna, a widow and a mother of three, said she returned with her children, following her experience in 2011 when the Igbo were killed.

    She said more people would return to their states, especially women and children, adding that tension was mounting ahead of the elections.

    Mrs. Ikeagwuna said she registered her children in schools in Owerri before returning, to ensure their studies were not disrupted. Her words: “I don’t know what will happen after the elections. I thought it wise to return with my children. I’m a widow, they are all I have.”

    Mr. John Odinachi, another returnee from Kano, said: “The country may disintegrate after the elections.

    “The northerners are known for killing innocent people at the slightest provocation. I advise the Igbo in the North to return to the East and go back to their base after the elections.”

    A returnee from Borno State, who simply identified himself as Nwabueze, advised Ndigbo in the North to return to their states, adding that some of those who refused to flee at the peak of the Boko Haram insurgency were killed.

    Nwabueze, who also recalled the killings of members of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) in Bauchi State during the 2011 elections, urged the evacuation of corps members in the North, to avoid a recurrence.

  • Lawyers urged to stand for free, fair elections

    Lawyers urged to stand for free, fair elections

    Participants in the just concluded 2015 annual law week of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Owerri Branch, have urged lawyers to ensure free, fair and credible elections.

    The theme of the law week was “ 2015  general elections in Nigeria: the task before the legal profession.”

    Imo State governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha urged lawyers to help proffer solution to the country’s problems.

    He said: “When God chooses a man, there is nothing anybody can do about it, I respect lawyers because they  make and unmake the Nigerian state. So, the fear of  legal  profession is the beginning of political wisdom.”

    He expressed concern that the campaigns are moving away from issues, rather, the focus is now on ethnicity and religion.

    Okorochas said the Police, the Army, the Department of State Security (DSS) and money would play crucial roles in determining who wins elections. To the governor, whoever has control  over them usually wins.

    The branch Chairman, Mr. Stanley Chidozie Imo said  lawyers owe a duty not only to their clients, but to the country to uphold the rule of law and deepen democratic ideals and norms.

    Justice Mary Peter–Odili of the Supreme Court, who chaired the event, urged lawyers as ministers in the temple of Justice to always assist the court to arrive at the ‘justice of the matter.’

    Justice Odili said: “Firstly the role of the legal practitioner when faced with the disputes that would naturally occur at the end of the political battles in the fields of play precisely at the polling booths, the ward level, the local government and the state level collation centres as the case may be.  The election proper cannot be complete without taking into consideration the pre-election dissatisfactions, which may or may not be possible disputes warranting a recourse to the law court

    “Therefore, a responsibility is placed on him not to take on a brief that would only lead to an irritation of the courts as the perceived dispute,  when looked at properly,  may not be  more than a whimsical fancy of a politician seeking notice. When such a presentation occurs,  it behoves the legal counsel to render the required advice and urge the client to seek mediation outside of the court or to forget the perceived wrong, which would take the party nowhere.

    “For the umpire, judicial officers presiding in the various courts to which these disputes would be presented, there is a duty to ensure that the courts are not made an arena for frivolous petitions or processes that merely pander to the vanity of a particular legal practitioner seeking to display his legal prowess or knowledge of the law or allow a politician to create unnecessary tension with a pending legal process, which is dead on arrival.  In this case, the Judge is enjoined to terminate the process firmly and without temporising.

    “On the other hand would be a political dispute properly before court and one for which a decision would be made either way. There is no gainsaying the fact that justice must not only be done, but would be manifestly seen to have been done as the old adage goes.

    “There must be the fact within the sight of the judge at all times, that justice and peace go together none going alone because  when justice is compromised, peace can never be and no one including the judge,  ‘ is safe in  the environment that no longer knows peace and tranquility.”

    Examining whether there is conflict between the provisions of Sections 285 (6) (7) and 36 of the Nigeria Constitution, former Deputy Director, Nigerian Law School, Enugu Campus, Prof Ernest Ojukwu (SAN) said: If two ideas, beliefs, stories, etc. conflict, it is not possible for them to exist together or for them both to be true.” Can Sections 285(6)/(7) of the Nigerian Constitution exist side by side with Section 36?

    Prof. Ojukwu said: “International Human Rights norms accept that the right of access to the courts is not absolute and that the right could be limited by matters related to issues of  court procedure and  limitation rules and have set some guidelines on which to base a review of national laws and practices on this derogation

    “Examples or the criteria for validating such laws and rules against access to justice have been provided by the United Nations ( UN)  Human Rights Committee and European court of  Human Rights as stated above. Using such criteria, one can conclude that Section 2R5 (6) and (7) of the Nigerian Constitution does not conflict with Section 16 of the Nigerian Constitution, but are permissible limitations under International Law on the right to access to justice.

    “Section 285(6) and (7) as stated earlier were inserted in the Constitution as an amendment to legal regime to cure a mischief brought about by a gap that tended to foist all Nigerians political leaders that were not chosen through the will of the people, the stolen mandate as it has been described. The trial and appeal limitations provided by the law give equal opportunities to both parties in an election petition. The period provided is reasonable and practicable; it does not “restrict the access left to the individual in such a way or to such an extent that the very essence or the right is impaired.” The provisions are also appropriate  between  the means employed and the aim sought to be achieved.

    Speaking on the legal profession and the task before it in the 2015 elections, the Keynote speaker, Justice P. C. Onumajulu, who is a former Chief Judge of Imo State,  identified  general task for all legal practitioners, lawyers at the Bar, the Bench and the general counsel.

    He said: “The term legal profession refers to the profession of persons, who are lawyers which in turn refers to persons who have had courses of training in law and have been inducted into the profession  by being ‘called’ to Bar and therefore, entitled to practice the profession of law in and outside the courts. The lawyer is a versatile professional for he may be a judge, a private,  official legal practitioner, a teacher of law in an institution a director or secretary of any, corporation or other public or private body or institution, a  civil servant, an office holder in any capacity etc.”

    He continued: “The lawyer at the bar in his duty to the court, must show absolute and total respect to the courts and tribunals before which he appears and assist such tribunals to discover the truth of the matter in litigation by frank, truthful and honest statements. correct procedural steps and justifiable actions. He should not hide facts to mislead the courts of tribunal.”

    “The duty to his client is to strive for honesty, and to the best of his ability and learning,  to put across the case of his client to the court to give sound legal opinion and be  courageous. He must know that  election matters have limited tenure and span, and interest of justice demands  that a complaint against an election by way of an election petition should be expeditiously heard and disposed of by the judge to enable the parties to such a petition know, in good time their relative positions. Time, therefore, is of strict essence in election matters. Thus, election petitions should be devoid of procedural clogs incessant and protracted adjournments that cause delay in the disposition of substantive issues and disputes therein

    “This is where the judge has a great task to face and in performing this task he must eschew all forms of bribery and corruption. He must be prepared and able, in spite of all odds, to dispense justice timeously, judiciously and judicially, avoiding in the process, all manner of technicalities that affect the merits of the petition before him because his role requires a high degree of honesty, integrity, transparency, courage and above all the fear and faith in God,” Onumajulu said.

    Former Director-General of Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (NIALS), Prof. Epiphany  Azinge (SAN) said there was the need to examine  the role of the Bar and Bench at this critical period of the national history.

    “It cannot be denied that many lawyers are already  looking forward  to the flurry of actives that will characterise the forthcoming elections in the nature of election petitions. For many,  the prayer is that the harvest should be plenty and bountiful. Some are eager to invoke the jurisdiction of tribunals for minute and insignificant reasons all because they want to partake in the sharing  or redistribution of the nations cake, for others their claim to fame is the posturing  of being close to one or two judges  in an election  tribunal.”

    Azinge continued: “There is no denying the fact that lawyers and judges have not fared well as far  as public perception of their role in election  petitions is concerned. This image must change. In some instances, post election violence have occurred because lawyers rightly or wrongly have advised that an election was not free and fair. We must be conscious of our responsibility to the wider society and not to ourselves, our advice and actions should be such that we can defend whenever called upon to do so.”

    Allegations of judicial corruption, he said,  resonates more in election petitions. “Judges must be careful not to be compromised by politicians. Politicians are naturally loquacious and therefore, cannot keep a bargain that transactions between parties are confidential. Win or loose at tribunals, politicians normally quote chapters, verses  and footnots of their dealings with interested parties. So, it is not in the interest of counsel or judges to have dealings with politicians. I hope that 2015 will mark the beginning of judicial  rebirth and that lawyers and judges will stand up to be counted as contributing positively not only to the integrity of the electoral  process,  but also ensuring that judgments of election petitions are unimpeachable,” he said.

    General Mohammadu Buhari, he said, at the Abuja Accord for non-violence on  January 14, delivered a scathing indictment on the judiciary in handling of election matters, saying they  must strive to do their job to the best of their ability. “Even at that, our judiciary remains one of the best in the world. It is my considered opinion that politicians should be careful on how they tarnish the image of the judiciary before the global community,” he said.

    Azinge said it is the responsibility of counsel to explain judgment of courts to their clients to avoid reckless and sentimental imputations by disputants.  “As at the time of preparing this address, the judicial workers were still on strike on. The timing of the strike is not too good for the nation. Firstly, it may not allow the impaneling of election tribunals and secondly most of pre-election matters in court many not be concluded before the election. I want to appeal to all well-meaning Nigerians to see to the immediate resolution of the issues the judicial workers are agitating for,” he said.

    Financial autonomy for the judiciary, he said, is not a matter for debate. “Indeed, states that are yet to buy into that policy should rethink and act immediately,” Azinge said.

    Tangentially related to this, in the words of Azinge, is the crisis rocking the judiciary in Rivers State. “This is not the time to reflect on arguments on both sides of the divide, but to clearly indicate that the image of the Nigerian judiciary has been badly dented by this episode. How can we sell the message that the judiciary is the last hope of the masses when the judiciary cannot resolve its own problem. I think the proper message to the judiciary is “physician  heal thyself,” he said.

    He appealed to the Chief Justice of Nigeria to ensure that the matter is speedily resolved. “May I also invite all well-meaning  members of the bar and bench to intervene and bring this matter to an end before the election starts on  February  14.  Everybody is invited to assist to ensure that we do not end up becoming  a failed state. As always, lawyers have a role to play in ensuring that the right things are done by the appropriate  authorities,” Azinge said.

     

     

     

             

     

  • Calls for postponement of elections mischievous, says Lawyers4Change

    Calls for postponement of elections mischievous, says Lawyers4Change

    A  group,  Lawyers for Change (Lawyers4Change) has urged Nigerians to stop the mudslinging of the Presidential candidate of the All Progressive Congress (APC), General Muhammadu Buhari.

    The group also described as mischievous, the call for a shift in the dates for elections.

    National Coordinator of Lawyers4Change, Adesina Ogunlana, at a press conference, urged the Independent National Election Commission (INEC) not to postpone the elections.

    On General Buhari’s qualifications, he said there was enough evidence which attest to the fact that the APC presidential candidate attended and graduated from various military institutions abroad before and after becoming a commissioned officer.

    He stressed that Constitutional lawyer Prof. Itsay Sagay(SAN) had further clarified that a diploma from the US War College is the equivalent of Masters Degree.

    “Buhari’s regime remainz the most credible government in Nigeria today. So, all mudslinging about Buhari can’t take away the fact that he is in the class of Aminu Kano of this world”, he stated.

    Ogunlana acknowledged  that the country has been gripped with election fever and that there is a lot of tension in the air because of the February 14, 2015 Presidential elections.

    He urged all political leaders to do their utmost best to curtail violence and uncivilized modes of electioneering adding that people who are genuinely interested in serving any community should not engage in dislocating, disrupting and distroying same community.

    He further advised all security agencies to eschew partisanship in the discharge of their duties.

    “Violence is an ill wind that blows no one any good. Let all security heads and officials know that they are agencies set up for the protection of the state and not to serve the interests of any political party or group”, he stated

     

  • How to prevent violence during elections, by JNI

    The apex Islamic body in the North, Jama’atu Nasril Islam (JNI), has said free, fair and credible elections will prevent a repeat of the 2011 post-election violence.

    It noted that the acceptance of the outcome of the elections by all, especially the major stakeholders, was significant to post-election peace.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Kaduna, JNI’s Secretary General, Dr. Khalid Abubakar Aliyu, on behalf of its President-General and Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar III, said election stakeholders should ensure justice in the conduct of this year’s polls.

    It said: “…Bearing the burden of the trust of leadership, being conscious of the imperative of truthfulness in salvaging a rather drifting polity and, most importantly for the sake of posterity, the JNI hereby asserts that the most significant antidotes to violence are: free, fair and credible elections on one hand and faithful acceptance of the outcome of elections by all.

    “In any election, there must be winners and losers. We would only get it right when the elections are obviously and manifestly seen to be transparent and credible in conduct and, consequently, the losers accept defeat in good faith.”

    JNI urged the major presidential and governorship candidates to respect the Abuja Peace Accord and avoid utterances that may trigger violence.

    It said: “It is our firm belief that doing everything possible to forestall violence and save lives and property in the forthcoming elections is our collective obligation that we all have to discharge and we must, therefore, stand up to do it faithfully and devoutly.

    “From the Permanent Voter’s Card (PVC) distribution and other preparations towards the elections, to the political rallies and campaigns at various levels, there have always emerged issues and incidents that generated excitements, concerns and even anxieties.

    “Against the backdrop of these happenings, the JNI feels obliged to comment with a view to calling on, not only Muslims but the entire citizens of our great country, to demonstrate real and genuine sense of patriotism, responsibility, tolerance and commitment to peace and stability in Nigeria before, during and after the elections.

    “As an important stakeholder in the elections, in the governance of the country and indeed because of its firm commitment to the country’s unity, stability and progress, the JNI believes that this call on the citizens for peace is essentially and genuinely a religious and civic obligation.

    “It has always been the case, not only in Nigeria but in all democratic societies in the world, that seasons of general elections are usually fraught with anxieties, uncertainties and even tensions. It is apparent that the elections in the next two weeks are the most keenly contested in the history of our country…”