Tag: grips

  • Council poll: Defection fear grips Delta PDP

    Council poll: Defection fear grips Delta PDP

    Fear of mass exodus of members has gripped the the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Delta State, ahead of the local government elections.

    Our reporter learnt that it heightened yesterday after Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan met the aspirants and leaders from the eight Urhobo local governments in the Delta Central.

    No fewer than 100 aspirants are jostling for the party’s tickets in 25 local governments.

    The party leaders are worried that the plethora of aspirants may spell doom for the PDP after the primaries slated for Saturday.

    A leading member of the party said: “Some politicians become disgruntled when they fail to clinch the party’s ticket. We anticipate that this may lead to carpet-crossing.

    “We are aware that some of the aspirants have started hobnobbing with the opposition parties so that they can pick their tickets and run against the PDP.

    “While we are not bothered about this because we are sure of victory, these people usually turn to opposition or become enemies within. That is the concern. We don’t want our people to fight us.”  Governor Uduaghan appealed to the PDP aspirants to abide by the party’s decision.

    He urged all aspirants to remain in the party.

    Uduaghan said their interests would be best served in the PDP, adding that the party was set to win the elections.

    One of the dissatisfied aspirants told our reporter on condition of anonymity that he was considering other options.

    The Nation’s investigation showed that despite the governor’s optimism, there are concerns that Saturday’s primary election may unravel the prevailing crisis in the party.

    Already, there have been divisions between core PDP members and notable defectors from opposition parties, particularly the Democratic People’s Party (DPP).

    In Udu Local Government, it was gathered that the growing influence of the House of Representatives member, Mr. Austin Ogbabourhun, who defected from the DPP on the eve of the senatorial election last October, is a cause of concern for other members.

  • Fear of bombs at National Assembly grips lawmakers

    Fear of bombs at National Assembly grips lawmakers

    Security remained the issue yesterday, with scary lawmakers urging the executive to tackle the monster.

    House of Representatives members declared the National Assembly a likely target of terrorists.

    The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) was worried that rampaging gunmen were killing people all over the country.

    And the opposition Action Congress of Nigeria (CAN) said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) government was helpless, going by the statement credited to its National Chairman Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, who said the party “is not a security agency”.

    Members of the House of Representatives were meeting yesterday when they recollected the attack on the Command and Staff College — the elite military facility — in Jaji on Sunday, the attack on the police office in Abuja on Monday as well as Tuesday’s bombardment of Auchi, Edo State.

    They declared that the National Assembly is not safe of terror attack.

    They urged the Executive to increase the security agencies’ intelligence gathering strength and supply sophisticated arms to personnel to enable them confront criminals.

    Discussing a motion of urgent national importance brought by Abubakar Momoh, the lawmakers believed that the insecurity had reached a level where no facility is safe.

    Momoh, leading the debate, said the Tuesday robbery in Auchi, Edo State, which claimed the lives of security men and civilians, indicated that insecurity has reached unmanageable proportions.

    Another member, Rapheal Nnanna, observed that the invasion of the Special Anti- Robbery Squad (SARS) headquarters in Abuja indicated that security personnel lacked the capacity to solve the problem.

    According to him, the SARS invasion was less than 24 hours after the bombing of a Church at Command and Staff College, Jaji, by gunmen, in which 17 people were reported killed and many others injured.

    “The state of insecurity in the country has reached an embarrassing level. What happened in Jaji and SARS headquarters is embarrassing to the leadership and people of this nation,” he said.

    Nnanna said if the gunmen could operate at the premises of security agents and stroll leisurely away, they could also invade the National Assembly. He warned: “I see these people coming to the National Assembly, very soon.”

    Samson Osagie(Edo, ACN) said the Federal Government must come up with a realistic strategy to checkmate bandits. He said there were far-reaching implications of allowing the present trend of insecurity to go on.

    His words: “We can’t afford to fold our hands and watch these people kill and maim people the way they are doing.”

    Jerry Alagbaso urged security agents to increase their efforts at gathering intelligence. He called for immediate supply of sophiscated arms to security personnel to enable them confront criminals.

    “The government must improve on the sophiscation of arms that our security agents use; that is the only way they can overcome the current challenge. Our security must improve on intelligence gathering,” he said.

    Speaker Aminu Tambuwal, who presided, however, did not recap the debate.

    Tempers flayed at the Women Development Centre in Awka, Anambra state yesterday, when the President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor challenged southern governors to confront their colleagues in the North to stop the killings by the Islamist sect, Boko-Haram.

    Anambra State Governor Peter Obi challenged the church and clergy to block all the government houses to stop corruption, the way it happened in Philippines some years back during the tenure of President Ferdinand Marcos.

    They spoke during the National Executive Council (NEC) meeting of CAN. Oritsejafor decked in milk-coloured Safari dress, urged the governors of the 17 southern states to hold periodic meetings where issues affecting their people would be tackled because of what he described as Boko Haram’s barbaric activity.

    Oritsejafor said he is not comfortable with the “silence” of the southern governors whose people are being killed indiscriminately by Boko Haram. He said the southern governors should challenge their Northern counterparts on what they are doing to secure the lives of southerners living in their domain.

    The bombings, killings and attacks in the North were targeted at Christians and at Muslims who disagree with their extremist ideology, according to the pastor.

    He said it was all in its bid to exterminate Christianity and enthrone Sharia.

    Pastor Oritsejafor said: “We commend the efforts of the security agencies. However, with the way the sect members are succeeding in their attacks on military and other security posts and installations, including churches in their environments as evidenced in the bombing of a church inside the Command and Staff College, Jaji, it is obvious that they have not done enough.

    “I speak in this manner because as we are here, my heart goes to these brothers, sisters and children who have paid the supreme price in a state that is supposed to be secular.

    “We cannot shy away from discussing it because the Boko Haram sect has become a presence that is always there, somewhere in the subconscious.

    “Those of us who receive daily distress calls from relations of victims of the sect’s members and our men on ground know how it feels.

    “Since July 26, 2009 when the sect members had their first clash with security agencies in Bauchi till today, Nigerians and, in particular Christians, have been subjected to all sorts of harm.

    “Without the security measures you have put in place, there would have been killings in the South in reprisal for the bombings and killings of their brothers and sisters in the North.

    “Why would your counterparts in the North not have such measures on ground to secure the lives of your people? We have reached the point where you should all speak out against this menace of Boko Haram.

    “You should hold your colleagues who govern states where your people are being killed accountable.

    “You should ask for explanation, why your people are being displaced from their business places and killed in both open and private. You should let them know that their silence in the face of all these happenings is unacceptable.

    “The verdict of the International Criminal Court that the Boko Haram sect has committed crimes against humanity has again vindicated my stand that the American government and indeed the international community should, as a matter of urgency, designate Boko Haram a Foreign Terrorist Organisation.

    “We in CAN are strongly considering criminal charges against Boko Haram for crimes committed against Christians at the International Criminal Court because we cannot continue to fold our arms while the sect members continue with the killings of Christians in Northern Nigeria. That will be done soon,” Pastor Oritsejafor said.

    For Anambra State Governor Mr. Peter Obi, it is time to say that enough is enough. He said governors would not continue to fold their arms and allow their people killed.

    According to him, those to be blamed are political leaders because of their greed and quest for money, but the church according to Obi, must help in building a better society.

    His words: “It is time for the church to take responsibility of correcting the political leaders. A country can not move forward in the face of too much greed, the level of greed; in the country is too high.

    “The church should equally help the government to identify the role models in the society; we need not to celebrate fraudsters in the society.

    “CAN should launch a fund to help our people and churches in the North who are suffering persecution; we need to go with our brothers and sisters in the North; we must hang together with them or one day, they will hang us.”

    “We will meet our counterparts in the North for a discussion on the issue of Boko Haram. Though we have been discussing it before now, we can not allow our people to be slaughtered on a daily basis in the North. It is time for people to speak against what is wrong and evil in the society,” Obi said.

     

  • N5.6b pipeline contract: sack fever grips ex-militants

    N5.6b pipeline contract: sack fever grips ex-militants

    There is anxiety among former militant youths and beneficiaries of the N5.6billion pipeline surveillance contract in the Niger Delta following report that President Goodluck Jonathan might not renew the contract.

    The contract has been due for renewal since February, but it was gathered that the president is unwilling to renew it due to perceived failure of Alhaji Asari Dokubo, Boyloaf , Farah Dagogo and some other beneficiaries to justify the payment in Bayelsa and Rivers states where attacks on oil facilites have cripped crude oil production.

    The development led to panic by about 5,000 pipeline guards, who besieged the offices of Oil Field Surveillance Limited, the contractor handling the project in Delta State.

    Niger Delta activist, Comrade Paul Bebenimibo, cautioned President Jonathan against bowing to pressure to suspend the multibillion naira contracts awarded to former militant leaders in the region. He said terminating the contract would lead to fresh crisis in the Niger Delta, worse that the Boko Haram insurgence.

    Bebenimibo said, “I want to advise Mr. President against cancelling the surveillance contract because doing so would unleash a fresh crisis in the region. People have blamed the crisis of Boko Haram (in the north) on poverty; but I can assure you that Boko Haram will be a child’s play compared to what will happen here.

    “This contract is vital to the President’s transformation agenda. I don’t agree that the contract failed in Delta State. Oil companies and security agencies will attest that incident of bunkering and vandalism have gone down drastically. It has also helped in maintaining peace and security in the Niger Delta region because over 10,000 youths are currently employed in the programme and laying them off will plunge them and their families further into poverty.

    “In spite of the failures you talked about, the contract has led to steady rise in the volume of crude oil production, especially in Delta State, where it has recorded a huge degree of success,” he added.

    Responding to our question on renewing the contract Bayelsa and Rivers where beneficiaries have failed to combat illegal bunkering, Bebenimibo advised the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to meet with the beneficiaries to forge a way forward, maintaining that cancellation would be counterproductive.

    Besides, he called for the commencement of the other stages of the contract in Ondo, Edo and Akwa Ibom states in order to achieve the 30,000 employment slots earmarked in the original deal struck between Chief Ekpemupolo a.k.a Tompolo and the late former President Umar Yar’Adua.

  • Fear of ACN grips PDP in Kwara

    Fear of ACN grips PDP in Kwara

    Should the spate of defections to the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) by members of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and other political parties in Kwara State continue, the PDP, in particular, may be in for serious misfortune. This is the current fear being nursed by many PDP chieftains.

    Recently, the expansive Latara Hall, Ajase-Ipo Road, Ilorin played host to scores of defectors, ACN supporters and loyalists from within and other neighbouring ACN states.

    It was an occasion for the celebration of the defection of some members of the PDP, Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN) and Accord to ACN.

    The defectors claimed they were leaving a “retrogressive and oppressive” PDP in the state to the progressive party, ACN.

    Notable among the defectors are former PDP deputy governorship candidate in the 1999 election, Barrister Akinmade Yahaya Abolarin; former Commissioner and a leading light in the Saraki political dynasty, Chief James Ayeni, and a former PDP chieftain and ex-chairman of Ifelodun Local Government, Engineer Jide Usman.

    ACN national publicity secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed; the party’s governorship candidate in the 2011 election, Mohammed Dele Belgore (SAN); representatives of Osun and Ogun state governors among others, were also on hand to receive the defectors at the colourful ceremony in the state capital.

    Spokesperson of the defectors, Prince Shuaib Olanrewaju premised their defection on what he described thus: “The reason for our defection is premised on the fact that the state was among the original twelve states created since 1967, having nothing in terms of human capital and social transformation to justify the age of its existence. When we all joined hands with the PDP in the last year poll to deliver the state to the party, our expectation was that the good people of the state would be rewarded with good dividends of democracy.

    “Unfortunately, unemployment, poverty and fraudulent political promises occasioned by the PDP’s bad leadership have become the order of the day. All around us, you find mortuaries of wreckage inflicted by PDP in the state. During the past nine or more years, we all have been running a political race, the spectators (the electorate) have been looking on (though not impotently). Our state is like a patient whose condition is daily deteriorating.

    “There is the need for the state to be delivered from the hands of PDP that has constituted itself to a political demon and clog in the wheel of progress of the state. In order to achieve this political deliverance, it becomes imperative for all the progressive elements to join forces to fight these political oppressors and chase them away from governance. We promise to form a solid followership for the ACN to engender meaningful development in the state. We are declaring for the ACN today; we shall cooperate with the party from the ward, local, state to national levels to ensure the party’s victory in the 2013 local government election in the state and the national elections in 2015.”

    Prince Kolawole added that “here and there, there are evidences of total falling out of the common people with the irresponsible government of PDP. We all know that this state is dead broke. We do know it too, we had to accept that it is so because workers’ salaries are not paid when due and few weeks ago, the National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE) threatened to go on strike over non-payment of their salaries and other entitlements.”

    The ACN spokesman accused the PDP-led Federal Government of incapable of proffering solution to the nation’s problems.

    He posited that the PDP-led government’s ineptitude had resulted in the alarming rate of youth unemployment, epileptic power supply and general infrastructural decay.

    Maintaining that the PDP government had failed Nigerians, the Mohammed threw jibes at the party’s leadership for its spirited effort to defend President Goodluck Jonathan’s aide, Dr Doyin Okupe, over allegation of contract scandal levelled against him by the Benue State government

    The PDP, Mohammed insisted, had never been truthful to Nigerians on any national issue, citing the “many lies the PDP government churned out to Nigerians on the illness of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua.”

    He added that Nigerians deserved to know the exact situation of the health status of the first lady, Dame Patience Jonathan.

    Lamenting what he called lack of development and dearth of infrastructure in Kwara State, Mohammed said that the PDP-led government in the state was in no way different from the PDP government at the centre, adding: “The PDP at the national level is not performing, so you cannot expect anything different at the state level.”

    In his remarks, Belgore advised Kwarans to stop “suffering in silence” by teaming up with the ACN to sweep PDP away in the next general elections.

    Belgore added: “ACN remains the only viable alternative to PDP and the party that genuinely has the interest of the masses at heart. It is becoming clearer that PDP has absolute nothing to offer. Kwara in 2012 is worst than it was last year. People are coming in droves to ACN and there is a lot more than what you are seeing. This decamping, you will keep seeing more as we go along. My charge to Kwarans is for them to defend their right, support the party that will protect their interest and advance their cause and development. It is no point suffering. Support ACN and we will rout that evil called PDP out of our state.

    “This is not the Kwara state of my dream with these PDP people in power. What I’m seeing is a state of nightmares. It might be the dream of a few selfish people that are bent on plundering the state for their own personal gains, but it is certainly not my dream state and that of majority of Kwarans.”