Tag: endorsement

  • Modelling expert gets endorsement deal

    Modelling expert gets endorsement deal

    The Chief Executive Officer of Ageless Agency, a leading modeling and events company, Grace Ene Anteyi, has signed a multi-million endorsement deal with a real estate company, ESwift Property Mart.

    The Benue-born businesswoman accompanied by the chief operating officer of Ageless Agency, Oche Peter, who stood in as witness, signed her partnership with the real estate company on a one year ambassadorial deal from July 26, 2024.

    Speaking on her endorsement, Anteyi said: “Today marks a significant milestone in my journey and in the evolution of ESwift Property Mart. It is with great pride and excitement that I stand before you as the newly appointed Brand Ambassador for ESwift Property Mart, a firm renowned for its commitment to excellence in estate management, real estate, and the provision of top-notch products and services here in Akure.”

    While expressing gratitude, she said: “Your belief in my vision and values is both humbling and inspiring. I am eager to embark on this partnership, and I am committed to representing ESwift Property Mart with the integrity, passion, and dedication that this role demands.

    “I would especially like to thank the Managing Director of ESwift Property Mart, for the trust and confidence you have placed in me. Your leadership and vision have been instrumental in shaping this partnership, and I am honored to be part of this journey.

    “As we formalise this agreement, we are not just entering into a contract; we are forging a path towards innovation, quality, and community development. Together, we will work tirelessly to enhance the landscape of real estate in Akure, creating spaces that are not only beautiful but also sustainable and inclusive.

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    “…my responsibilities as your Brand Ambassador will include engaging in promotional campaigns, serving as an influencer at physical events, and actively participating in social media and advertising campaigns across various platforms. I am excited to engage with our future homeowners, partners, and stakeholders, ensuring that every project we undertake not only meets but exceeds expectations.

    “I look forward to contributing to the growth and success of ESwift Property Mart, and to celebrating the milestones and achievements that this partnership will bring. Together, we will build more than just houses; we will create homes and communities that thrive and flourish.

    “Thank you once again for this incredible opportunity. Here’s to a future filled with promise and success.”

    CEO of ESwift property, Mr Omolayo Ezekiel Tunde, and his team expressed excitement over the partnership.

    Tunde said he was confident the partnership will be a major success.

  • Endorsement: Obiano, Nwodo trade insults in telephone chats

    •Anambra gov. lashes out at Ohanaeze, leader, says they are saboteurs •History will judge who amongst us is idiotic -Nwodo

    An angry Governor Willie Obiano of Anambra State allegedly lashed out on phone at the President of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Dr. Nnia Nwodo on Thursday in reaction to the group’s endorsement of the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for next month’s election.

    Obiano, who was disappointed that the endorsement came on a day President Muhammadu Buhari commissioned the Mausoleum of Nigeria’s first President, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe in Onitsha, reportedly described the action of Ohanaeze and its president as idiotic.

    Nwodo was said to have been shocked by the tone of the governor’s language and wondered why the matter could not be trashed out in a brotherly discussion.

    He later sent a text message to the governor saying: “Your Excellency, Gov. Obiano, I was surprised to receive a call from you a few minutes ago in which you said the following words ‘Nnia, I didn’t know that you were so idiotic’

    “I am shocked that you can be so insolent.

    “I am sure that I was not so idiotic when I addressed your State Assembly asking Ndi Anambra to disregard the IPOB boycott of your election nor was I idiotic when I pleaded with the Commander in Chief to restore your security details.”

    “History will judge who amongst us is idiotic. If standing with the popular wish of Ndigbo makes me idiotic, I am happy to be called an idiot.”

    The Anambra State Government on Friday formally dissociated itself and the people of the state from the Ohanaeze endorsement of Atiku.

    It followed it up with a press conference at Agulu yesterday by the Secretary to the State Government, Prof Solo Chukwulobelu, where it branded the action of Ohanaeze as an act of sabotage.

    Chukwulobelu, who stood in for the governor at the press conference, claimed yesterday that Nwodo, whose father served as Minister under Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, stabbed him in the back.

    He said the endorsement of the presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar and his running mate, Peter Obi, by Ohaneze Ndigbo was a slap on Zik’s face in Igboland.

    His words: “We’re not part of that decision. Our position as far as the presidential election is concerned is to keep neutrality in order not to hurt anybody and the fortunes of the Igbo in national polity.

    “From history, the Ohanaeze had failed on four occasions where they endorsed certain presidential candidates. Shall we continue that way all the time?

    “That purported endorsement by the Ohanaeze was a stab in the back to the Igbo and what we are saying is that we are not part of it”

    Obiano added that Anambra was mostly angered that all these happened on a day President Muhammadu Buhari was in the state to honour the late pioneer president, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe,  by commissioning the Zik’s Mausoleum in Onitsha

    Obiano said, “We had expected Ohanaeze leaders to participate actively in the commissioning ceremony of the Zik Mausoleum, Onitsha, Anambra State, but they didn’t consider it an honour to be part of that historic occasion.

    “We have read bits of the communiqué purportedly issued by the Ohanaeze leadership. We regret that they do not reflect the position of the people and Government of Anambra State.”

    “The position of the Anambra State Government is that Ohaneze should remain a united organisation umbrella for all Ndigbo, and should not take sides with any party.”

    “There are major leaders in all political parties, including the three major ones in Nigeria, namely, APGA, APC and PDP.

    “It is deeply regrettable that the Ohanaeze leadership has chosen to go down a divisive trajectory capable of setting back Igbo unity for several years.”

     

  • As governors coax president for endorsement

    IN the last few days of December, 2018, President Muhammadu Buhari engaged in a triple political somersault in his desperate bid to get a second four-year term. Ogun State was the first experimental archetype of that somersault. It will by no means be the last, even if not as celebrated. The president will walk a tightrope, straddle all political divides as gingerly as he can manage, and attempt to fit his constantly changing political frame in the expanding partisan frameworks of his associates. By 2017, when his talisman was still flaming hot, his re-election was expected to be a shoo-in. By the middle of last year, that expectation had become a chimera, prompting him and his panicky aides to change into other gears. That gear shifting is, however, proving to be very complicated and problematic, as the Ogun State example is unhappily indicating.

    The Ogun governor, Ibikunle Amosun, has not made the president’s straddle any easier at all. Unable to get the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) to adopt his preferred aspirant as standard-bearer in the coming governorship election, and with his every move thwarted openly and provocatively by the party hierarchs in Abuja, Mr Amosun, as intransigent as ever, has simply shifted to a different moral and ideological mode, randomly adopted another party for his supporters, and flaunted his rebellion in the puzzled and angry faces of his detractors. And using many unprintable cuss words to describe himself and his resoluteness, the governor swore to embarrass and undermine his party at the next governorship poll.

    As if his open revolt was not enough, Mr Amosun took one Yusuf Dantalle, the chairman of the party he adopted for his supporters, to the presidential villa and introduced him as a willing accomplice in the general and complicated effort to re-elect the president in February. Alhaji Dantalle, national chairman of the Allied Peoples Movement (APM), took along to the villa a letter indicating that his party had adopted the president as their candidate. On the surface, that would be good news if that party commanded fairly substantial following. But other than the publicity Mr Amosun has accorded the APM, few knew of its existence or even of its potential. It was, therefore, both significant and puzzling that the president received Mr Amosun and Alhaji Dantalle, an action that indicated that the president had unwittingly associated with the rebellion against the APC in Ogun State.

    Mr Amosun is of course entitled to vehemently disagree with his party, and even fight them if conciliation proves impossible. But what is inexcusable is to suborn the president to join his revolt against a party ostensibly led by the same president. That is not only an insurrection against the party, it is an indication of the low esteem in which he holds the presidency, a further hint of the lack of depth in the highest office in the land. Alhaji Dantalle offered the president the APM’s letter of adoption, and the president happily received it despite knowing the strange party’s antecedents and its role in accentuating the ongoing revolt in Ogun State. The anger in Ogun was obviously too fierce to allow for any second thought. But had there been some reflection in Aso Villa, the temperamental Mr Amosun could have been prevailed upon to let the APM chairman go to the villa unaccompanied or at least with his party chiefs.

    As if the implications of the Amosun-Dantalle visit had just dawned on the APC as a whole, party hierarchs in Abuja orchestrated, four days later, the visit of the Ogun APC governorship candidate, Dapo Abiodun, to the president, hard on the heels of the APM chairman’s endorsement visit of December 24, 2018. If the president obliged Mr Amosun and the APM by receiving them and indirectly associating with their rebellion against the APC, party leaders reasoned he was even more obligated to receive the state APC candidate. The president did just that when he welcomed Mr Abiodun in company with a party leader, Olusegun Osoba. If these shuffles were the last moves on the disgraceful manoeuvres from Ogun State, analysts could be persuaded to leave bad enough alone.

    But dissatisfied that President Buhari received the APC candidate and even raised his hand to signify that he was the authentic candidate perhaps deserving of support and victory, an incensed Mr Amosun plotted another visit to Aso Villa, and had his way on January 6, 2019. This time, the Ogun governor was more daring, taking the APM governorship candidate, Adekunle Akinlade, to the president. How both Mr Amosun and President Buhari rationalised welcoming the candidate of a rival party to the APC is hard to fathom. But no one seemed to care. Mr Amosun proved by his incessant visits how close he was to the seat of power, and how ready he was to drain that goodwill to its bitterest dregs. Mindful of the wary glances everyone was throwing at the president over what they regard as his unprincipled approach to politics, his spokesman, Garba Shehu, offered a disingenuous rationalisation of the APM candidate’s visit. Said he: “Following repeated media enquiries on the matter, the Presidency wishes to state in clear and unmistakable terms that as a party leader and a candidate on the platform of the All Progressives Congress in the coming elections, President Muhammadu Buhari will campaign for the party and all its candidates. This, however, does not mean that he, as the nation’s leader, will decline courtesy calls or offers of support from citizens, including candidates flying the flags of other parties. So please let there be no confusion about this. President Buhari is the APC.”

    It is not clear how many people are persuaded by the president’s unending vacillations. Mr Amosun’s intransigence is well known, and his politics not quite as well-regarded as he might hope. But surely the president could not hope that in matters of principles and his party’s existential struggles he could run with the hare and hunt with the hound, and the public would feel smug about it. Mallam Shehu’s rationalisation is inadequate to explain the president’s hemming and hawing. What is more, a few days later in January, perhaps sensing that Mr Amosun might still be livid over how he, the president, raised the hand of Mr Abiodun during the latter’s visit to Aso Vila, the Ogun governor was invited to join the president on his return flight from a campaign rally in Akwa Ibom. No one knew what they discussed on the trip, nor should anyone really care now that they know the president is chronically unable to make up his mind.

    Many analysts have suggested that the president needed to hem and haw in order to placate the variegated political interests around him, and hopefully retain their support in his crucial but difficult re-election race. This argument is logical, for the president is going to extraordinary lengths in being everything to everybody. But the Ogun conundrum was the perfect litmus test to gauge his convictions and ascertain his principles. He was surprisingly unable to comprehend that his choice in the matter, between expediency and principles, will indicate a window into his worldview and define both his person and his presidency in many poignant ways. There is little anyone can say to convince the president that he ought to understand that as the leader of the APC, he was obligated to take a hostile view of rebellion of any kind against his party, regardless of how accommodating he is as a person, or how friendly he is to the rebels.

    Sadly, for a long time, the president has simply not fully reconciled himself to being regarded as the leader of the party. No amount of rebellion will enable him see himself as the emblem of the party, the chief custodian of its values and principles, and the main projector of its strengths and weaknesses. These roles are obviously too deep for him and his aides to comprehend. The president will, therefore, straddle when the need arises, waffle when he can’t make up his mind as has become his custom, and give a part of himself to every political cannibal Nigeria has managed in nearly six decades to spawn so prolifically but so disagreeably.

  • Crisis hits Adamawa IPAC over ‘endorsement’ of Atiku

    The Adamawa State chapter of the Inter Party Advisory Council (IPAC) has been hit by crisis, with members who want the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar endorsed as their common candidate in one camp and those against such idea in opposing camp.

    Twenty-eight political parties make up IPAC in Adamawa State, but of the number, 17 were named at a press briefing yesterday as rejecting an endorsement of Atiku as purportedly made by the leadership of the council in the course of a visit to Atiku.

    “We want the public to note that the statement made by Bakawu Usman, the Adamawa State IPAC publicity secretary on  November 19, 2018 that Adamawa IPAC had endorsed Mr Atiku Abubakar is completely not true,” the state chairman of the Change Nigeria Party (CNP), Mr Aboki Wunuji, who read the text of the press briefing by the aggrieved IPAC members, said.

    The Adamawa IPAC is led by the state chairman of the PDP, Tahir Shehu who is leading the pro-Atiku endorsement campaign, but the state Chairman of the Social Democratic Party (SDP), Mr John Muva who earlier lost narrowly to Shehu in the contest for the Adamawa IPAC leadership, is among the 17 IPAC party chairmen not favourably disposed to the endorsement of Atiku and was at yesterday’s briefing.

    CNP’s Aboki Wunuji mentioned in the press briefing text dismissing the reported endorsement of Atiku that the state PDP chairman, during the visit to Atiku, claimed that the various parties visited to endorse Atiku as their presidential candidate for the 2019 election, but that majority of the members of IPEC “became annoyed as this was not their mission,” but just to congratulate Atiku on his appointment as Waziri Adamawa.

    Wunuji therefore urged the general public to disregard the purported endorsement of Atiku by IPAC as only some of the members of the council welcomed such idea.

    Other state party chairmen listed among the 17 not supporting the endorsement of Atiku include Bello Babaji of Allied Peoples Movement (APM), Ayuba Timiwge of the Progressive Party of Nigeria (PPA), Sapwavemo Hillary of Alliance for Democracy (AD), Aliyu Chamalwa (Accord), Liston Ibrahim (Young Progressives Party), Abdullahi Usman (National Conscience Party), Chahandi Ahmed (Action Alliance), Denis Taran (Peoples Progressive Party), Emmanuel Yerima (African Peoples Alliance), Bundi Pius (New Nigeria People’s Party), among others.

    Adamawa, a state with Governor Mohammed Jibrilla Bindow belonging to the All Progressives Congress (APC), has a strong tendency for the APC presidential candidate, Muhammadu Buhari. Although the emergence of the son of the soil Atiku as the PDP presidential candidate affected Buhari’s support base, it remains too strong for pro-Atiku sentiments to assail easily.

    The Atiku Presidential Campaign Organization has said it did not authorise any grants. In a statement by the organisation, it was not part of a scheme whereby innocent citizens are being asked to buy a form for N500,000 in order for them to be beneficiaries of a financial grant allegedly being sponsored by Atiku Abubakar.

    The statement said “We want to put it on record that neither the Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar nor the campaign gave any approval to this scheme or any other one like it.

    “We are aware that a great number of Nigerians are passing through rough patches as millions of people have slipped into the poverty conveyor belt as a result of the bad socio-economic policies of the current administration since 2015.

    “Jobs are being lost in quantum scale, businesses are folding up, foreign investors are afraid to bring in new capital for investments and the cost of living has ballooned to skyrocket proportion. The immediate consequence of all these is that the Nigerian has been laid prostrate for fleecing, out of the desperate bid to burrow their way out of financial incapacitation.”

    It advised citizens to shun such a phantom scheme.

     

  • Endorsement for ‘No-Slips Limited’

    Endorsement for ‘No-Slips Limited’

    The Ikeja City Mall management has expressed satisfaction with No-Slips Limited’s non-slip floor treatment and the quality of work done by its well-trained workers on their floor.

    A large portion of the mall was recently treated by No-Slips Limited to increase the co-efficient of friction and thereby reduce the possibility of slip and fall accidents by visitors and members of staff.

    In a letter of appreciation, Mr. Steve Idonigie, Operations Manager of Ikeja City Mall said, “we write to thank you for the amazing difference we have experienced on our floors since they were treated with your anti-slip product.

    “We used to receive a lot of complaints of slip/fall whenever it rains and we have tried different approaches but to no avail. Since you applied your product to the floors of our shopping mall, the result has been excellent!

    “There has been a remarkable turnaround, there hasn’t been a single incident of slip and fall in the areas treated.

    “The efficacy of the product is second to none, this is the first of its kind in this part of the world. The treated areas are no longer slipper especially when wet”, he said.

    Reacting, the Chief Executive Officer of No-Slips Limited, Mr. Charles Igbinidu, said more companies and individuals in Nigeria are beginning to take floor safety seriously.

    He added that he is not surprised with the high demand for floor safety treatment, stressing that no amount of money spent on safety can be compared to the emotional and physical pain accidents bring.

    “We have heard stories of people who slipped while walking on the doorway of their offices and sustained life-threatening injuries such that their companies had to spend so much in flying the victims abroad for treatment. There are also stories of people who have lost their lives after slipping and falling in their bathrooms.

    “Slip and fall accident can happen anytime, anywhere; on a rainy day, the entryway of every store and office building becomes a danger zone to customers and staff. Every marble floor that has just been mopped, every kitchen in every restaurant or school cafeteria; every bathtub in every hotel and home, every washroom floor with a few drops of water, high-traffic areas where spills, drops and pools can occur are especially at risk i.e. homes (bathrooms, tubs, kitchens, stairs, seating rooms) and businesses/commercial places, malls, hotels,restaurants, banking halls, offices, factories, swimming pools etc.).

    Having a secure floor to walk on gives peace of mind and confidence both at home and offices.

    “No-Slips Limited is therefore into the business of giving that peace of mind, we can never seem to be too careful as slip and fall accidents happen unexpectedly. The consequences sometimes, unpleasant,”he said.

    No-Slips Limited is a floor and bathtub treatment company based in Lagos, Nigeria . It is the sole distributor and partner of Sure-Step non-slip company in the country.

  • Ekiti PDP: Politics of zoning and endorsement

    Ekiti PDP: Politics of zoning and endorsement

    Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose has endorsed his deputy, Prof. Kolapo Olusola, for governor. If he wins the primary, can he defeat the All Progressives Congress (APC) flag bearer at the poll? Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU examines the hurdles before the anointed candidate. 

    Ekiti State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is at the threshold of history. The polarised chapter has a succession hurdle to cross. The way the challenge is resolved will determine its future. How will the PDP governorship flag bearer emerge at the primary? How can the party avert post-primary crisis?

    Eyes are on Governor Ayodele Fayose, the main character in the succession battle. His tenure of office expires on October 15. Initially, he diverted public attention by saying that he was waiting on God for direction. Peeping into the future, he has endorsed his deputy, Prof. Kolapo Olusola, son of a grassroots politician from Ikere-Ekiti, Pa Ojo Eleka. Like other aspirants, the anointed candidate was taken aback, since his boss had told him that he will not leave him behind at the Government House.

    Hailing Fayose for the decision, the Speaker of the House of Assembly, Hon. Kola Oluwawole, described it as an act of God. He said the choice of the accomplished scholar and Christ Apostolic Church (CAC) pastor reflected the wishes of the stakeholders. On why he changed his mind on Olusola, the governor said: “man proposes and God disposes.”

    The decision to anoint the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) don has drawn the ire of co-aspirants, including former Minister of State for Works Prince Dayo Adeyeye from Ise-Ekiti, former Secretary to Government Ambassador Dare Bejide from Ilawe and Senator Biodun Olujimi from Omuo-Ekiti. Threatening fire and brimstone, they said the decision will not stand.

    Other aspirants-Chief Adebisi Omoyeni, former Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice Owoseni Ajayi, former Deputy Governor Dr. Sikiru Lawal and a businessman, Otunba Segun Adewale, who had shifted his political base from Lagos to Ekiti-are enveloped in anxiety.

    Miffed by Olusola’s endorsement, Olujimi described it as an imposition. She emphasised that it was in bad faith. In retrospect, having worked closely with Fayose, the senator from Ekiti South cannot underrate the governor’s resilience and capacity for maneuvering. Adeyeye, former National Publicity Secretary of the party, was more combative. He said the endorsement was a breach of the party’s constitution. The Ise-Ekiti prince called for a free and fair primary for all aspirants. “PDP as a political party is bigger and larger than an individual, no matter how highly placed he or she may be as to override the rules and regulations of the party, which are sacrosanct in the election of any candidate for elective position,” Adeyeye said.

    The import of the endorsement was not lost on Bejide, the former secretary of the party. He disputed Olusola’s sole candidacy, urging party members to disregard the “comedy.” He vented his anger, saying: “Any caucus of the party can adopt any candidate. Whether the choice of Olusola by his caucus has Fayose’s backing holds no water as no one can impose a candidate on the party.”

    In Ajayi’s view, the PDP National Working Committee (NWC), and not Fayose, will conduct the primary and determine who gets the ticket.

    Despite these reactions, some followers of the aggrieved aspirants have been dumping them and gravitating towards the direction of Olusola, the favoured candidate. They know that reconciliation may be difficult after the poll. Also, although these contenders are united by common threat, they are not ready to pull resources together to confront Fayose. They are sharply divided by personal ambitions. The aspirants have been over-concentrate their efforts on Olusola’s endorsement, instead of concentrating energy on how to get delegates’ votes by selling their manifestos.

    Olusola is a lucky man. He did not vie for the driver’s seat. Obviously, his staying power is that he is not a rival deputy and he has not aspired to the number one position under Fayose. Thus, he has stayed focused as a loyal spare tyre. That his boss had alerted him to the danger of growing wings when he told him categorically that they would vacate office together later became a blessing in disguise. On the day the deputy governor was endorsed by the Fayose camp, Olusola suddenly embraced the reality that he had become a politician. Yet, it is evident that he will leave the succession enterprise to his principal, whose political structure he will inherit.

    His PDP predecessors were not that lucky. In eight years, Fayose, an aggressive politician, had four deputies. Three of them hail from Ikere. Olusola’s kinsman, Biodun Aluko, an architect, was impeached, following a quarrel with the governor. His successor, Omoyeni, a reputable banker, resigned after some months in office. He believed in the prospect of banking portfolio than deputy governor.

    Since he was catapulted to the front burner, Olusola has been up and doing. Although the bulk of the partisan consultation and mobilisation will be done for him by his principal, he has also swung into action, especially in his Ekiti South Senatorial District. He is a silent operator gazing at the seat of power with prayerful hope. Two things are going for him. The deputy governor is perceived as an obedient ally. Also, his candidature is also acceptable to Ikere, his cradle. Even, prominent All Progressives Congress (APC) elders from Ikere have confessed that Fayose has tied their hands by picking an indigene as his successor.

    Fayose had put on his thinking cap since 2014 when he returned to power. Political insiders confided that he had hoped to install a successor whose ascension will not possibly herald a successor-predecessor crisis. His permutation, they said, is to retain “party control” outside power.  If PDP fails to retain power in Ekiti, Fayose may lose a measure of political influence. Although Ado  had agitated for zoning to the state capital, the governor knew that the town could not be divorced from Ekiti Central, which had produced Otunba Niyi Adebayo and himself. But, the call for rotation of the highest office has been stronger in Ekiti South and the people of Ikere are more vociferous. A source said before unfolding his succession plan, Fayose had held consultations with Ado traditional rulers and other highly placed indigenes. He was said to have convinced them to settle for the deputy governor, stressing that Ekiti Central cannot produce his successor.

    Following that understanding, attention shifted from former Works Commissioner Kayode Oso, a native of Ado, who was said to be on the list of likely successors. But, according to a source, Oso is not off the radar. The deputy governor is up for grab. He and Mrs. Tosin Aluko, also from Ado, may now jostle for the running mate. The implication is that, in the perception of the PDP, Ado and Ikere are now permanent factors in pseudo-ethnic balancing in Ekiti politics.

    In particular, Ikere has politically positioned itself as the second most important town in Ekitiland, after Ado, the state capital. It has vibrant, articulate and patriotic indigenes across the professions. Their activities have made the town the beneficiary of an imaginary zoning, although most Ekiti believe that the state is one indivisible zone. One of their leading lights, legal luminary Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), has maintained that it is the turn of the town to produce the chief executive. He is devoid of political bias. The eminent lawyer said the onus is on the two main political parties to zone the governorship to the ancient town. Ikere’s greatest blessing, however, is that it hosts a College of Education, which has increased its economic activities and boosted its population. It also benefits from a network of intra-town and intra-state roads. Having produced three deputy governors, it is being perceived as a strategic voting community.

    In PDP, the coast may be clear for Olusola. So strong and influential is the Fayose structure that its members have resolved never to have any dealing with other contenders. During the Christmas period, some potential delegates even shunned the gifts offered to them by other contenders. They reiterated their loyalty to Fayose and Olusola. In the Fayose camp are the majority of statutory delegates, who rose to political stardom as state and federal lawmakers, commissioners, special advisers, special assistants, council chairmen, councillors and supervisors. Also loyal to the governor are party officers at the state, local and ward levels. Among the populace, Fayose has managed to remain relevant. His gospel of stomach infrastructure is captivating to rural dwellers. Among the artisans and peasants, he is popular.

    However, the gulf between the Fayose administration and highly educated indigenes of Ekiti has become more widened. Thus, while the ordinary people have not rejected Fayose’s government for obvious reasons, it carries the burden of predictable elitist onslaught, which Olusola can only avert by embracing the eclectic styles of populism and elitism. Therefore, the envisaged difference between Fayose’s government and any administration that may be presided over by Olusola is that the latter should have a direct touch of scholarship. This is in the enlightened interest of the aggrieved elite.

    But, will the primary be a walk over for Olusola? His rivals are sharpening their arrows which can either be deflected by Fayose’s power of incumbency or resisted by the governor’s his war chest. A party source said the PDP may not be able to avert primary crisis, owing to the stubborn nature of Ekiti politicians. “They will prefer to fight to finish, but the governor will have a upper hand,” he said. Predictably, scores of light weight PDP chieftains may defect from the party to the APC.  Olusola’s co-aspirants may be in a dilemma. While Olujimi may take solace in the fact that he will still be in the Senate till 2019, others may wallow in self-pity as they may not be able to successfully subvert or undermine the platform during the election.

    If Olusola becomes the PDP candidate, can he defeat the APC candidate? There are over 50 aspirants in the opposition party. But, the acting chairman, Mrs. Kemi Olaleye, disclosed that only 25 have indicated their interest at the party secretariat on the Ado-Ikere Road. The contenders include Femi Bamisile, Yinka Akerele, Dr. Wole Oluleye, Kola Alabi, Senator Babafemi Ojudu, Chief Segun Oni, Senator Ayo Arise, Hon. Opeyemi Bamidele, Hon. Bimbo Daramola, Ishola Fapounda, Dr Adebayo Orire, and Muyiwa Olumilua. There are indications that Dr. Kayode Fayemi, former governor, who is Minister of Solid Minerals and Steel Development, will declare his ambition next month. Out of the lot, Ojudu said only four are serious contenders.

    Ekiti APC is a wounded lion. Members of the party have not recovered from their electoral defeat in the 2014 election. Then, the PDP was the ruling party. Thus, the federal might was deployed. After the poll, there were startling revelations. But, since the Appeal Court did not upturn the poll, observers said they paled into a conjecture. Ahead of the election, APC chieftains have said that Fayose and Olusola are day dreaming. In their view, the governor has performed below expectation.

    Will the APC-Federal Government deploy its might during the Ekiti poll? In all the post-2015 polls, President Muhammadu Buhari has maintained the profile of a statesman ready to defend the integrity of the ballot box. Unlike his predecessors, the president has always frowned at electoral manipulation and deployment of troops to the advantage of his party.

    While the PDP is divided in Ekiti, the APC is also polarised. The opposition party is not considering zoning because it is not in its constitution. The battle for the ticket may escalate the tension in the opposition camp, ahead of the poll. According to observers, if the APC gladiators fail to put their house in order, the mistake of 2014 may be repeated to the advantage of Fayose’s candidate.

  • Politics of Buhari’s endorsement

    SIR: Phenomenal victory of the All Progressive Congress, APC, at the 2015 presidential polls will remain a marvel to our generation and generations yet unborn.

    It is the narrative of how a massive rudderless popularity of one man was ably harnessed by three and a half minor parties to yank power from a complacent largest political party in Africa.

    The party, the People’s Democratic Party, PDP, became so perplexed that it initially broke into two parallel entities. It took the intervention of the nation’s Supreme Court to agglutinate it.

    And, according to the APC, the behemoth PDP of yesteryears has contracted from being the largest party in Africa into a regional Nigerian party that can now boast of any meaningful influence only in the South-east and South-south of Nigeria.

    But the giant-wrecker APC has not brought its power-wrestling wizardry into national governance. People say just as General Muhammadu Buhari had not been able to turn his inalienable huge popularity into electoral victory in three previous outings, so has he been puerile in governmental matters.

    He was unable to assemble his cabinet in six months – a task which some more sagacious leaders can accomplish in two weeks. The Boko Haram, which he promised to annihilate once he gained power is still with us, 30 months after, more boisterous, more daring and more deadly.

    The Fulani herders have taken over the countryside, murdering entire communities for fodder and space, without deterrence from the federal government. Expectedly, the economy is in disarray and in doldrums. The Naira that exchanged at about N150 to the Dollar before him, once rose to N500 under him and we now rejoice that the dollar is available at about N400.

    We now procure every commodity at double the price it used to sell for. There is untold suffering in the land. The most unfortunate part of it all is that there is no iota of hope that things will improve before May 29, 2019.

    That is why it sounded as if not much concern for the citizenry was deployed when recently, the governor of Imo State said he and all Nigerian governors, safe for two, have decided to endorse the president for a second term.

    Okorocha said he personally found Buhari credible, and he still has a four-year term.

    This looks to me as if it does not matter whether the president is able to perform the functions of his office or not. So long as he can win elections for the party; national development that comes with able leadership may go to blazes!

    But the concerns of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu ,the National Leader of the APC are from a different perspective. He has drawn Okorocha’s attention to the fact that all party candidates should be ready to submit themselves to the due process of party primaries in the spirit of the constitution.

    It is also instructive that it was only soon after the Chairman of APC Governors’ Forum made his pronouncement about Buhari’s adoption that former Vice President Atiku Abubakar,made his exit from the APC.

    Of course, it might be coincidental. But it must be appreciated that at least three stalwarts of the APC, duly qualified by the APC zoning formula are seriously eyeing the presidential ticket – Atiku Abubakar, Musa Kwankwaso and Bukola Saraki.

    To publicly endorse Buhari as Okorocha did, claiming he speaks for governors is to close the door to the other northern contenders, who may not be able to contest again on the APC’s platform in the next 12 years, after the South would have taken its turn.

    Furthermore, Okorocha’s manner of endorsement would have shut the door against thousands of APC delegates, who might have contrary opinions concerning whether “Sai Baba” should be empowered to carry on or be retired to his farm at Daura.

     

    • Ola Amupitan,

    Oke Afa, Isolo,  Lagos State.

  • ‘No endorsement for Okorocha’s son-in-law’

    The Imo State House of Assembly has distanced itself from the purported endorsement of Governor Rochas Okorocha’s son-in-law, Chief Uche Nwosu, as the next governor.

    The House was reacting to a statement credited to Henry Ezediaro (Oguta Council), who claimed that the House had endorsed Nwosu, who is also the governors’ Chief of Staff, as the best person to succeed Okorocha in 2019.

    It described the claim as “mind boggling and unbecoming of a distinguished lawmaker”.

    A statement by Chief Press Secretary to the Speaker of the House, Marcel Ekwezuo, said: “I am constrained to debunk the news that the Imo State House of Assembly has unanimously endorsed Ugwunba Uche Nwosu as the next Governor in 2019. Nwosu is one of our own, and is eminently qualified to contest for governor.

    “No doubt he is a member of the All Progressives Congress (APC), and a citizen of Imo State. This, therefore, gives him right to vote and be voted for.

    “However, it needs to be cleared that at no time did the House of Assembly meet and endorse Nwosu as its governorship candidate, or any person for that matter.

    “The job of lawmakers is to make laws and take resolutions which will impact positively on the people. Endorsement of candidates for whatever position is no doubt not part of it.

    “Each lawmaker is free to have a choice of aspirant, but it’s certainly not a House matter. It is, therefore, mind-boggling that a distinguished lawmaker is quoted to have addressed a news conference and saying the 27 lawmakers have endorsed Nwosu.

    “It is the duty of the APC to produce a candidate, and if that candidate is Nwosu, then lawmakers of APC extraction are duty bound to deliver the candidate.

    “In the light of the foregoing, I believe Ezediaro, who is free to personally support whoever he wishes. Let it be clear to all that the House of Assembly is not in the business of endorsing political candidates, but of making laws.

    “Imolites are, therefore, advised to discountenance the publication as a figment of the writer’s imagination  which has no bearing with the House of Assembly.”

    But Ezediaro remained adamant on the controversial endorsement, insisting that “the House’ leadership denial of the endorsement does not erode the fact that majority of the lawmakers met and endorsed Nwosu as the next governor.

    “We are standing on our decision and very soon, I will name the lawmakers who gave the endorsement,” he added.

  • Endorsement of El-Rufai a  charade, says Sani

    Endorsement of El-Rufai a charade, says Sani

    The senator representing Kaduna Central, Shehu Sani, yesterday faulted the reported endorsement of Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai for a second term by the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Sani, who chairs the Senate Committee on Local and Foreign Debts, described the endorsement as a charade that cannot stand.

    The lawmaker said El-Rufai gathered his employees, aides and hangers-on to actualise his endorsement for second term.

    He alleged that because the chances of El-Rufai becoming vice-president, which he was aiming for while President Muhammadu Buhari was away on medical treatment, had failed with the return of the President, the Kaduna governor had taken up another project for Buhari.

    He said El-Rufai’s name dropping and mobilisation for President Buhari for 2019 was self-serving, adding that his loyalty to the President is questionable.

    Sani said: “The so-called endorsement of Governor El-Rufai by Kaduna APC amounts to endorsement of toxic waste.

    “El-Rufai simply gathered his employees, aides and hangers-on to endorse him.

    “He is a poisonous viper corrosive to the integrity and moral standing of the party in the state and the nation.

    “El-Rufai’s name dropping and mobilisation for Buhari 2019 is self-serving. His loyalty to Buhari is for political relevance and his allegiance to Buhari is for self-protection and preservation.

    “Now that President Buhari is back from health vacation and the chances of becoming a vice-president is zero, El-Rufai has taken up a new project for Buhari 2019.

    “El-Rufai’s obsession with Buhari is not about Buhari, but about himself. Buhari should protect his testicles from a man who always bends close to his knees.

    “Those who endorsed El-Rufai are marketing a bottled fart. A man who boasts of sending Yar’Adua to his grave should not be trusted by Buhari. The snake that killed the hunter can kill the charmer.”

  • Endorsement galore for Nigerian Breweries

    The Governor of Kaduna State, Mallam Nasir Ahmad el-Rufai, has commended Nigerian Breweries Plc for its role in the economic development of the state, stressing that the company remains the biggest tax payer in Kaduna State.

    The governor, who was at Nigerian Breweries Stand at the just concluded Kaduna Economic and Investment Summit (KadInvest 2.0), said Nigerian Breweries plays a big role in the state as far as investment and economic growth are concerned and remains a concrete testimony of the friendly business and investment environment the state is promoting.

    El-Rufai, accompanied by APC’s national chairman, Chief John Odigie Oyegun, Kano State Governor, Alh. Umar Ganduje, and his Zamfara State counterpart and Chairman of the Nigeria’s Governors Forum, Alh. Abdullazeez Abubakar Yari, as well as the Deputy Governor of Jigawa State, Barrister Ibrahim Hassan, maintained that Nigerian Breweries Plc was a shining example in corporate Nigeria and a strategic partner for development in the state given its huge investments and social intervention programmes in Kaduna.

    Earlier, while welcoming the governor and his entourage to the stand, the Corporate Affairs Adviser of Nigerian Breweries Plc, Mr. Kufre Ekanem, said Kaduna State was a friendly environment for investment and has been home to Nigerian Breweries since 1964 when its first brewery was built in Kakuri.

    Ekanem thanked the Kaduna State Government for its support over the years, stressing that the company will continue to be a partner for growth and development in the state in line with its commitment to supporting the development aspirations of its host governments and communities.

    He commended the governor for his commitment to the promotion of investment and economic growth in the state, pointing out that Kaduna remains a home for Nigerian Breweries, given its successful operations in the state for over 50 years.

    “We want to remain an active development partner to the state and look forward to working closely with you in this regard. This is what informs our support not only for this Summit but also other initiatives designed to make the business environment in Kaduna more conducive and friendly,” he added.

    Nigerian Breweries Plc is the leading and pioneer brewing company in Nigeria and the second most capitalised company on the Nigerian Stock Exchange. With over 120,000 indigenous shareholders, the company supports an employment impact of over 500,000 people through its value chain. Nigerian Breweries currently operates two breweries and one malting plant in Kaduna State and has continued to make strategic interventions in the development of education, health, water, agriculture, sports, etcetera in the state.