Tag: Imo

  • Breaking: Ihedioha, 27 lawmakers receive Certificates of Return in Imo

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Wednesday issued a Certificate of Return to the Imo State Governor-elect, Emeka Ihedioha.

    The Resident Electoral Commissioner, Prof. Francis Ezeonu, who presided over the occasion, also presented Certificate of Return to the 27 House of Assembly members-elect.

    Ihedioha won the March 9 governorship election under the platform of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

    Read Also: Court strikes out suit restraining INEC from issuing certificate of return to Ihedioha

    Speaking shortly after receiving the Certificate of Return at the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) office in Oweri, Ihedioha promised to be fair to all respective of their tribal or party affiliation.

    He said he will abide by the rule of law in administering the state.

    According to him, “I will be Imo governor in the real sense of the word.”

    He assured members of his transition team would comprise of men and women of integrity who will contribute immensely in the development of the state.

  • INEC lacks power to withhold my Certificate of Return – Okorocha

    Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha has described the decision to withhold his Certificate of Return by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) after being declared winner of the Imo West Senatorial election as unfortunate and unconstitutional.

    The Imo Governor alleged that INEC is being used by those he said were fighting him ahead the 2023 Presidential election to stop him from going to the Senate, adding that it is only the Courts that have the powers to nullify any election after a winner has been declared and the Electoral umpire does not have the power.

    “In my own case, my Certificate of Return has not been issued and I wonder why INEC will withhold my Certificate for a frivolous reason, without hearing from me. I am not a violent person and those who know me know that. This is why we have peace in Imo State. The Returning Officer could not have done that under duress under the watchful eyes of the Police, DSS and party agents. I am not unmindful of the facts that those who are fighting me from Abuja are anxious to see me removed as a Senator. I urge INEC to do the right thing immediately by releasing my Certificate.

    The governor continued that, “let me tell every Nigerian that I fought no one and no one should fight me. If anyone fights me, he will be the loser at the end of it all. My INEC Certificate cannot be touched or seized, doing so is belittling democracy in Nigeria. It is only the Tribunal that has the right to say otherwise once a result is declared. INEC cannot seize my Certificate by mere petition written by somebody in a case I was not given the opportunity to present my own side of the story.”

    Okorocha who addressed thousands of youths, who came on protest over the conduct of the 2019 elections in the state, Wednesday, at the Government House, accused the State Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Professor Francis Ezeonu of wrecking democracy in the State “with the worrisome manner he has handled the Conduct of the 2019 elections in the State”.

    He added further that “the REC has shown that he was brought to Imo after the 2015 election to return PDP to power in the state”.

    The governor insisted that “the REC had acted illegally by ignoring the provision of the Constitution that makes it mandatory for a candidate to have 25% in 2/3 of the Local Governments in the State by announcing the PDP candidate, Emeka Ihedioha who only met the requirement in 9 Local Governments instead of 18 LGAs which is 2/3 of 27 LGAs winner”.

    Okorocha also wondered why the REC should accept the outrageous figures from the three Local Governments Areas of Aboh Mbaise, Ahiazu Mbaise and Ezinihitte, where the PDP candidate got 64,219 votes from Aboh Mbaise alone, stating that the figures from the three LGAs constituted 50 percent of the total votes got by the PDP candidate in the State with 27 LGAs.

    The governor maintained that Uche Nwosu, the governorship candidate of Action Alliance (AA) won the election and has the required spread by having 25% in 21 out of the 27 LGAs in the State, adding that “the REC is working to set the state on fire”.

    The governor also regretted that “the REC has become a willing tool in the hands of those fighting him, adding that for the REC to have ignored the Constitutional provision for the announcement of the winner of the governorship election only explains his desperation to announce the PDP Candidate winner”.

    According to him, “I say so because going by the actual calculation, the person that won this election is Ugwumba Uche Nwosu. Uche Nwosu won the election landslide, if you remove the manipulation results from Mbaise, Uche Nwosu won with over 50,000 votes, if you cannot declare him a winner because you have someone already, then they should go for a rerun because you cannot change the Constitution if the Federal Republic of Nigeria because you want to favour a candidate.

    “In the course of this manipulation, we all observed that the REC decided not to use the collation officers from Federal University of Technology Owerri (FUTO), which he disbanded for reasons he gave that they have met with politicians. Again, he brought some people whom he introduced from the University of Agriculture Umudike. They arrived just a night before the election date and we thought we have gotten the collation officers. Again, those ones were disbanded on the same reason that they have met with politicians, I wonder how this is possible having arrived the state after midnight on the election eve.

    “Now the REC went to his own University in Awka to bring in collation officers. We believed him not knowing that he brought people he has been training for a hatched job for some weeks now in Anambra State to come and carry out this injustice in Imo State.

    “These men arrived with heavy security from Anambra and went straight to the various Local Governments. We never knew that these were relatives of the PDP candidate and from the same Local Government. These are relatives of the PDP Candidate who were already briefed of what to do. This explains the over voting witnessed in Mbaise. Out of the 270,000 votes that he scored, 50% of it or over 130,000 all came from just three local governments of Mbaise”, he stated.

    He added “As far as I am concerned and we still maintain that REC has wrecked democracy in Imo State. Unfortunately for them, they were not smart enough to know that section 179 requires you to have a spread at least in 2/3 of the local governments before you can be declared a winner. They ended up with only 9 local governments instead of 18 required by law. The Returning Officer was advised by all the Senior Staff of INEC against declaring a winner without looking at the Constitution. This man in a hurry decided to announce the result against the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,

    “This is wrong, in doing so, the Returning Officer didn’t even consider the results cancelled, total voters cancelled in the different Polling Booths, was enough to declare the election inconclusive as the difference between the PDP and AA would have called for a supplementary election. With the speed with which he announced the result tells you that the man is part of the game. This again is unacceptable to all of us” he said.

    “It is obvious that this fight is targeted against me by some of those who have decided to fight me from Abuja. I am ready to take this fight as much as I can but don’t transfer this aggression you have against me to anybody associated with me, that I would not be acceptable. Allow the young men who won the elections to be so declared” he added.

    The leader of the youths, Comrade Ezenna Okoro said, “We are here to express our dissatisfaction with the manner INEC Conducted its election in the State. Particularly, we youths from Okigwe Zone demand that Uche Nwosu be declared governor and Emenike be returned as Senator elect because he won the election based on results gotten from the booths and wards,

    “INEC should not provoke us and we are giving them 24 hours to reverse the election of Imo North Senatorial Zone won by Emenike and as a matter of fact give us a date for the rerun between Uche Nwosu and the PDP Candidate having failed to make up the Constitutional requirement” he stated.

  • INEC shocks politicians with late swap of Collation Officers in Imo

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in Imo State, on Saturday shocked politicians with the unannounced withdrawal of recruited Collation and Returning Officers at the tail end of the election.

    The Collation Officers who had converged at the INEC Headquarters in Owerri, waiting for deployment to the respective Local Government Areas, were not aware that they have been sacked until they were ordered out of the premises by security agents.

    It will be recalled that the State Resident Electoral Commissioner, Prof. Francis Ezeonu, had accused the Adhoc Staff that worked during the Presidential and National Assembly elections of colluding with politicians to compromise the election.

    The REC disclosed during a media parley with journalists to review the Presidential and National Assembly elections that, “most of the Adhoc Staff compromised the election, most of them sold their appointment letters to politicians and switched off their phones. So we had disturbing situations where political thugs posed as Collation Officers and manipulated the results.

    “It is worrisome that one could sabotage such sensitive national assignment without considering the outcome but we have taken measures to ensure that it will repeat itself”.

    So the sudden sack of the Collation and Returning Officers who were recruited from the Federal University of Technology Owerri (FUTO) may not be unconnected to the measures taken to flush out the corrupt Adhoc Staff and ensure that the governorship and House of Assembly were not manipulated.

    The development however resulted in the late collation of results across the State as the new Collation Officers were not deployed to the respective Council Areas until 3am Sunday morning.

    The late arrival of the Collation Officers according to a reliable source within the Commission was a deliberate ploy to shield them from politicians who may be waiting hijack them.

    Meanwhile the drama started after the news filtered in that the Adhoc Staff from FUTO had been dropped and replaced with Staff from Micheal Okpara University of Agriculture Umudike.

    Shortly after the news was broken, politicians activated their plans. A particular governorship candidate using his contact, reached out to some of the new Adhoc Staff and thereafter there was heightened scramble by politicians to hijack the Collation Officers.

    While they were still waiting to be posted, another set of Adhos Staff from Nnmadi Azikiwe University Awka were driven into INEC Office under tight security.

    Immediately after that, those Staff earlier brought in from Abia State were ordered out of the premises by security agents at the order of the REC.

    The new set of Collation Officers were kept incommunicado and their phones temporarily seized to prevent any form of contact with politicians.

  • PDP decries killings, violence, militarisation of elections

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has condemned the heavy militarisation, violence and killing of innocent Nigerians during Saturday’s Governorship and State Assembly elections across many states of the federation.

    A statement on Saturday by the spokesman for the PDP, Kola Ologbondiyan blamed the development on what the opposition party described as the desperation of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the elections.

    “The world watched with utter horror as soldiers under the command of the Buhari Presidency, hound, arrest, shoot, terrorise opposition figures and provide cover for APC thugs to unleash violence, kill opposition members, cart away electoral materials and disrupt polls in PDP strongholds, all in the bid to forcefully foist the APC on Nigerians,” the statement said.

    The party further bemoaned the resort to bloodletting, violence and alleged official high handedness by the APC in the electoral process, which it said, has further confirmed this administration has no regard for the lives of Nigerians and lawful processes, but only interested in seizing power by all means.

    The PDP noted that never in the history of the nation had a general election recorded such bloodletting, violence and manipulations as triggered in the 2019 elections.

    Lamenting further, the PDP said: “In Rivers, Akwa-Ibom, Cross River, Delta, Bayelsa, Kogi, Benue, Imo, Abia, Ebonyi, among others, soldiers brazenly aided APC thugs to unbridle violence, hijack electoral processes and write fictitious results for APC candidates.

    “In Rivers state, soldiers invaded INEC office in Bori, beat up and chased away PDP agents and assisted the APC in ballot stuffing and writing of results.

    “The scenario was the same in Akwa-Ibom where security agents provided cover for APC thugs in their bid to hijack the electoral process.

    “In Imo state, APC thugs, accompanied by security agents disrupted polls in PDP strongholds and reportedly killed a PDP agents in Umudo/Umuwala area of Owerri.

    “In Ebonyi state, APC thugs aided by security agents, burnt down INEC facility in the state, seeing that their party did not have any foothold in the state.

    “In Ajaokuta, Kabba/Bunu, Olamaboro, Ijumu and several other local governments in Kogi state, APC thugs, assisted by soldiers invaded polling units and carted away ballot materials, a development which sparked off restiveness in some areas and resulted in mass destruction of property in the area”.

    The party regretted that in many other states, the APC, in connivance with INEC, orchestrated the deliberate diversion of electoral materials meant for certain areas to unknown destinations, resulting in the frustration of electoral processes in the affected areas.

    “We know that the APC plot to derail our hard- earned democracy and impose a fascist regime on our nation but we are resolute in standing with Nigerians and all lovers of democracy to ensure that nobody, no matter how vicious, is allowed to vanquish our democracy.

    “In all, our party stands with Nigerians in their resilience at this defining moment in our political history.

    “The PDP commends the courage of Nigerians in standing firm in defence of democracy, despite the machinations of the APC,” the party added.

  • We won’t tolerate abduction of electoral officials- Security Chiefs

    Heads of  security agencies in Imo state, including the Army, Police, Navy, Immigration, Air Force, Federal Road Safety Corps, Department of Security Services and the National Security and Civil Defence Corps (NDCDC), has warned that it will not tolerate  abduction of electoral officers by any person or group of persons during  the governorship and House of Assembly elections.

    They advised anyone planning to compromise the election in any form to have a rethink or face the wrath of the law.

    The State Commissioner of Police, Dasuki Galadanchi, who spoke on behalf of other security Chiefs, said that “nobody would manipulate the electoral process”.

    He noted that the security operatives were committed to seeing the electorate vote for candidates of their choices without any form of molestation from any person or group of persons.

    According to him the joint operation by the security Agencies with strategic meetings by the INEC REC would ensure that the elections are violent free.

    Read Also: How Adhoc staff sabotaged election in Imo -REC

    According to him,  “in conjunction with head of security Agencies, we have finished our strategic meetings with INEC. I can assure that the election would violent free. We want Imo people to vote without molestation.”

    The CP said that issues of kidnapping of electoral officials which characterized the last Presidential and National Assembly elections in the state would not be tolerated on Saturday.

    He said that those who were seeking to undermine the electoral processes would be dealt with according to law, even as he opined that the joint patrol teams of all the security Agencies would on duty on the election day.

  • 1,048 candidates jostle for elective positions in Imo

    One thousand and forty-eight candidates are vying for governorship and house of assembly positions in Imo on Saturday.

    A breakdown of the candidates as displayed by INEC on Friday showed that 67 candidates are jostling for the governorship slot.

    Nine hundred and eighty-one are vying for 27 seats in the state’s house of assembly.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that on the INEC list, Mbaitoli and Ikeduru constituencies have the highest number of candidates with 45 each, while Njaba has 32, the least.

    Following Mbaitoli and Ikeduru is Isiala Mbano, 42, Ehime Mbano, 40, Ngor Okpala, 39, while Ezinihitte and Oguta have 38 candidates each.

    Read Also: INEC regrets election irregularities in Imo

    The Action Alliance (AA), whose candidate, Mr Uche Nwosu is Gov. Rochas Okorocha’s favourite, alongside the PDP and APC are fielding the highest number of candidates, having 27 each.

    Popular comedian Uche Ogbuagu of PDP and Darlington Chimezie of the AA are in the race for Ikeduru constituency seat.

    Incumbent house majority leader, Lugard Osuji of AA, Solomon Anukam of PDP and Victor Mere of Accord Party are frontline candidates for Owerri Municipal.

  • Message to elders of Imo, speak out!

    THE macabre dance started in the early part of July 2011, soon after Rochas Anayo Ethelbert Okorocha became the governor of our beloved state: It was unfortunate! I say “unfortunate” because of the strange circumstances and the coalition of social forces that threw him up as the number one citizen of Imo State. To deceive the people with fake humility and open identification with the labouring poor in the state, Okorocha craftily and ingeniously arranged for press photographers to capture him eating ‘Akara’ (bean ball) on the streets of Owerri, our state capital. The photographs were deliberately and widely used in the media; the restless Owerri tabloids even used them on their front pages, in an attempt to depict the new governor as humble, pro-people and could be accessed easily by the ordinary man in the state. It was all photo trick, calculated to showcase Okorocha as “the man of the people”. And the unwary bought into the trick.

    When he finally settled down to governance proper, the real Rochas Okorocha began to emerge. His style, lack of decency and open disdain for bureaucratic procedures completely took over, along the line. Imo State became the new governor’s huge laboratory for all kinds of political experiments. And these experiments ranged from his collapsed Community Government Council, his three-day-a-week work formula that allows Imo civil servants to work on their farms for the remaining two work-days to what Okorocha called “Direct Labour in Contract Execution”. All kinds of experiments were introduced and mindlessly deployed to make Okorocha’s government look different, super, answerable and in tune with the popular wishes of the people. It was tragic, and before long, our governor was already running his government on flat tyres. Nothing was working, the notable legacies of his predecessors  Sam Mbakwe, Achike Udenwa and Ikedi Ohakim  were either dumped, ill-maintained or totally neglected to create the impression that he was his own man and pursuing his own vision. There was nothing specifically wrong with carving out his own niche, except that the overall impact was negative. The ordinary people, even the elite, began to grumble, complain and regret the day that Okorocha became our governor.

    Some of us began to write, grant interviews and spoke at seminars and workshops on what our state was rapidly becoming and we expected our elders, experienced and tested hands in administration, academia and political offices, to speak out and remind the young man now occupying Douglas House, the seat of government, to apply the brakes and re-organise his governance style and listen to genuine and sincere advice. Even the Catholic Archbishop of Owerri Diocese whose regrettable support for Okorocha helped him to win the controversial governorship elections in March 2011, may have been embarrassed by the new and awkward direction that Okorocha was driving the state. The prominent political elders whose voices carried weight and authority saw what was happening, but chose to be silent because of stomach infrastructure, political considerations or primordial sentiments. Yes, they refused to shout out or speak up. Men of God who command so much influence in the state and who have absolutely nothing to lose, preferred silence and refused to come out boldly to warn against consequences. Nothing like that happened and Rochas Okorocha continued to drive our dear state on flat tyres.

    Then came the year 2015: Those who knew that Imo State was headed in the wrong direction and needed to be pulled back from the brink thought that sincere-minded politicians would easily form a political coalition or partnership that would rescue the state from the grip of one man. Before this time, Okorocha had effortlessly removed his Deputy, Jude Agbaso, whom he accused of all sorts of crimes, not minding that Jude was donated to the Okorocha ticket by Jude’s elder brother, Martin Agbaso, whose political shortsightedness and miscalculation often prevent him from getting his political permutations right. Having humiliated his Deputy, Jude, out of office and ensured that the coast was now clear for him to do as he liked, Okorocha began to consolidate his grip on a state that he inherited a few years before from Ikedi Ohakim that had a vibrant and resilient economy, energy-filled civil service, good infrastructure of maintained roads, clean and green environment, running taps in, at least, the state capital, and an Imo State that recorded low crime rates as a result of deliberate security networking put in place by the Ohakim administration.

    The failure of the political elite in Imo State to construct a viable partnership that ensures that Okorocha was defeated in 2015 gave room for more amazing excesses that now characterise the administration. Yet, no strong words have come from our elders to advise on consequences or to collectively mobilise the people to stop him. Not too long after his re-election, his penchant for turning the state into a family business grew, and he continued to engage one accelerator gear after the other, and was gaining terrific speed. His two sisters were given sensitive appointments where state revenues are streaming from, then the appointment of his younger sister as our Commissioner for Happiness, a new ministry that distinguishes our state from others. He re-appointed his other sister as Chairperson of government organs in-charge of revenue from all markets in the state, then allocated three government ministries to his wife to  supervise; shifted more duties, and therefore more powers, to his son-in-law in Government House. But when he recklessly started positioning the young man to be his successor as his second term began to thin down, Ndi-Imo began to resist. While these excesses and greed were going on, plus Okorocha’s poor governance style and known disdain for procedures and processes, all having their toll on the once peaceful and vibrant state, our elders who should have spoken out and call our governor to order again preferred to keep quiet as the state sank deeper and deeper into something infinitely more difficult to describe. The Okorocha administration began to be called, openly, by Ndi-Imo as “Familiacracy”  a government of a family, by a family and for a family.

    Nor did any of our prominent traditional rulers, to my knowledge, speak out against the direction our governor was taking the state to. If our respectable chiefs and clergymen had protested the way the state was being governed, we would not have found Imo State at this awkward trajectory. And I remind myself that no strong voice in the state protested the abandonment of the popular Imo Equity Formula which our more dedicated second generation elders/leaders (after our first set of Mbakwes, Okparas, Mbadiwes, Njokus, etc) carefully put together at Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu’s Glass House office in Owerri in 1999. If Okigwe zone had not been denied the space to complete its full eight years, the spirit of the Imo Charter of Equity, otherwise called Imo Equity Formula, would not have been so grossly violated or seriously offended. That violation has brought us where the state has found itself today.

    It is still not too late to correct the mistakes that have been made and chart a new direction. Our elders need to urgently  even today  admit that a serious error has occurred in our political arrangement and recognise the need to put things right. The elders must realise that their silence has not been too golden and that the injustices of today may haunt us tomorrow. They now need to help put Imo State on the track. And this election period, and with the governorship election some few days away, is perhaps the appropriate time to pass information around, as a first step, directing and instructing our people on the critical issues at stake, and what must be done to reconstruct our society and chart a new way forward, usher in a new era of trust, better understanding and respect for the feelings and fears of our people in the three senatorial zones of the state. And finally, our people need to know that because of what Imo State has passed through these past difficult years, our next governor should, and must, be someone who possesses the experience, the vision for a totally raped state, and who can hit the ground running from Day One. Let’s re-start the re-construction of Imo State whose development and cohesion was interrupted by social forces who do not fully understand and appreciate out values and collective worth.

     

    • Esinulo was a Senior Media Aide to General Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu in exile in The Ivory Coast
  • Imo West: Collation Officer denies hostage rumour

    …declares Okorocha winner

     

    There was a mild drama Monday at the Collation Centre for Imo West Senatorial District in Orlu, Orlu Council Area of Imo State, when the Collation Officer, Prof. Ibeawuchi Francis from the Federal University of Owerri (FUTO), hid the original result sheet after declaring the Imo State governor, Rochas Okorocha as the Senator-elect.

    Ibeawuchi who stopped the declaration of the result halfway on Sunday night after announcing the result for nine Local Government Areas, out of which Okorocha won eight LGAs, said that he left the original result sheet at the INEC office in Owerri and instead wrote the result on a rumpled sheet of paper.

    But the party agents insisted that he produced the original result sheet, resulting in several hours of argument until security operatives intervened and pleaded with the party agents to exercise patience and confirm from the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Prof. Francis Ezeonu to ascertain the claim of the Collation Officer.

    When called on phone by one of the senior Police officers, the REC said that the result sheet was in the possession of the Collation Officer and ordered him to produce it.

    Shortly after the call, the Collation Officer, produced the Original result sheet and entered the figures before announcing the result a second time.

    Governor Okorocha polled a total number of 97762 votes to defeat his closest rival, Jones Onyereri of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) who scored 63117 votes.

    Addressing journalists shortly after announcing the results, the Collation Officer, who looked sober, debunked the news trending on the social media that his daughter was kidnapped to force him to announce the result.

    He said, “I have announced the result, APC had the highest vote so the Governor, His Excellency Rochas Okorocha of the APC has been declared winner”. I was not forced to announce the result and no member of my family was kidnapped, I am not aware of any such report”.

  • ‘PDP will bounce back in Imo’

    Alphosus Gerald Irona is the deputy governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Imo State. In this interview with CHINYERE OKOROAFOR, he speaks about the readiness of the party for the March 9 election, why an Oguta indigene was considered for the ticket and what he would contribute to the position, if the party wins the contest.

    YOU are the first Oguta indigene to contest for an executive position in Imo State. What does it mean to you?

    I see it as a challenge and a call to service to good development. Orlu zone has produced the governor for the past 16 years. Now, we are craving for a power shift to Owerri zone and the governorship candidate was magnanimous enough to con cede the position of the running mate to Orlu zone. I was among the few people that were considered. Based on certain criteria, I was nominated as the running mate. So, first of all, it is a vote of confidence on me. It is also a vote of confidence on my area that we can deliver, because you can’t give such a position to an area you consider to be weak. So, to me, it is a call to service and challenge, considering the fact that our area is the only area that produces oil in Imo State. Our area has also consistently delivered for the PDP in all elections since 1999. So, it is a part of the reward from the party to consider an indigene of Ohaji/Egbema/Oguta and Orlu West in particular and Orlu zone in general for the job.

    Do you have any previous experience in politics?

    My service to my people started with my two term role as a councillor in Oguta Local Government. From there, I became the state secretary of the then APP now NNPP. In 1999, I contested for the state constituency from 1999 to 2003. After that role, I served as a transition chairman of Oguta Local Government from 2003 to 2004. From 2004, I contested for the seat of the chairman of Oguta Local Government and succeeded. I was unopposed and therefore was unanimously adopted by all the political parties. I also represented Ohaji/Egbema/Oguta/Orlu West Federal Constituency at the National Assembly from 2011 to 2015. After one term I became the Deputy National Financial Secretary of the PDP. This was my last post before I emerged as the running mate to Hon. Emeka Ihedioha. When I was in the House of Representatives, I championed the exclusion of Imo State from the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC). I moved a motion on the floor of the House, calling on the then President Olusegun Obansanjo to include Imo and Abia in the NDDC. I made efforts to call for Oguta meeting. Led by Senator Arthur Nzeribe, some prominent Oguta indigenes, such as Barrister Eze Uyimadu, Ogbuage Oputa Iworisha, among others, joined me to demonstrate at the National Assembly. After this protest, Imo State and Oguta community became part of the NDDC and Hon. Tony Okenwa was nominated to represent us in the NDDC. I want to place it on record that I have never executed or benefitted from the NDDC until today. You will agree with me that there was a time Senator Arthur Nzeribe nominated me as an NDDC Commissioner. But I declined and I was asked to nominate someone else for the job. Subsequently, I nominated Ikechukwu Akeru to represent Imo and Oguta community in the board of the NDDC. Throughout my political career, I have never been indicted, either by my people or the EFCC. I couldn’t have achieved all these without a man I considered as my father, as my mentor and as my leader in the person of Senator Arthur Francis Nzeribe.

    What is your relationship with the governorship candidate, Ihedioha? 

    We are just party colleagues. He is someone I respect so much. We have a cordial relationship.

    How prepared is the PDP to challenge APC, APGA, and AA in the election?

    Power is not given; you only negotiate for power or you take power. We are determined to take over Imo State through democratic means, because the APC has failed the people of Imo State in particular and Nigerians in general. The indices are there to judge. The people of Imo are asking for an alternative and the only credible one is the PDP. It was only the PDP that conducted credible primary, not only in Imo State, but in Nigeria in general. From the state constituency primary, the House of Representatives primary, senatorial primary, governorship and the national convention, the exercise was free and fair. They were transparently done. We have a rebranded PDP where the talk of the day is the performance.

    What difference would PDP government make when elected?

    PDP government is going to do things in a different way. We are going to be accountable to the electorate. We believe in the rule of law and we are going to follow due process. Our cardinal principle is the rule of law. We will govern transparently and we will be accountable to the people. How can we be transparent and follow due process?

    We are going to domesticate the Due Process Act in Imo State. A situation where government awards contract for a road will not be the order of the day. We are also going to domesticate the Public Procurement Act. In the Public Procurement Act, there are processes to award a contract in government in order to be accountable. We are going to domesticate the Freedom of Information Act, so that Imo people can ask questions.

    What should Imo people expect from the PDP, if voted in?   

    The primary responsibility of every government is to protect lives and properties. We are going to protect the lives of the citizens, because they mean a lot to us. We are going to ensure that our people have access to qualitative education. We are going to ensure that there will be an enabling environment for people to relax. We are going to develop the tourism sector. We have a rich manifesto, which outlines our plan for the growth of Imo State. We have a clear cut definition of what we are going to do. We are not only going to revive education, we will ensure that technical education is given priority. Within the first 100 days in office, we are going to make sure that money meant for technical colleges are channeled towards developing the sector. We shall consider building additional technical colleges. When some people graduate, they go to look for a hand work to do. So, we are going to provide opportunities for our people to fully develop their potentials. Everybody cannot do a white collar job. There are people that are talented. Talking about tourism, Oguta Lake is one of the areas that will be revived. It should be a tourism hub and the present government has not done anything to revive it. Oguta golf course has also been abandoned.

    You said Senator Nzeribe is your political mentor. What can you say you have learnt from him?

    A lot! I learnt to negotiate and to recognise when to fight and when to retreat. He also taught me how to invest resources.

    How prepared is the PDP to take over Imo State in the coming election?

    What we had in Oguta before is the PDP and the APC, but as I am talking to you, the APC has split into three in Oguta. But in Ohaji/Egbema, it is the Action Alliance (AA) party that is on the ground. The APC is not prepared for election; they are banking on rigging, because they are not campaigning.

     

  • Ballot box snatching, insufficient materials mar election in Imo

    The Presidential and National Assembly elections in Imo State were marred by late arrival and insufficient voting materials, as well as absence of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Officials.

    Though the turnout of voters was impressive, they were reported cases of ballot box snatching, shooting, among other repressive actions.

    In some places, aggrieved voters alleged that INEC officials in collusion with some politicians made away with the sensitive materials.

    There were also reported cases of ballot box snatching by hoodlums dressed in Military and Police uniforms in AbohMbaise,Ohaji-Egbema, Oguta, Oru East, IsiallaMbano and OwerriNorth  Council Area.

    A former governor of the state, and governorship candidate of the Accord party, IkediOhakim, who could not vote as a result of non-arrival of voting materials in his OsuOwerre Ward 1 in IsiallaMbano Council Area, until 3pm, expressed dissatisfaction over the conduct of the election.

    Addressing journalists, the former governor stated that, “here in OsuOwerre Ward 1, we have not seen INEC officials by 1pm and voting will stop by 2pm. I am afraid that this will disenfranchise the people”.

    Also expressing dismay over the late commencement of voting, the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), IfeanyiAraraume, tasked the electoral umpire to put measure to ensure an improved performance during the next election.

    Meanwhile, the Imo State governor, RochasOkorocha has expressed satisfaction over the turnout of voters and the conduct of the election.

    The governor who addressed journalists shortly after casting his vote at ward 2 Ogboko in Ideato South Council Area alongside his wife, NkechiOkorocha, confirmed that the postponement did not affect the turnout of voters.

    Okorocha who arrived his polling Unit at about 11:04 expressed confidence that President Muhammadu Buhari will win the Presidential election with a wide margin.

    He said, “I am here with my wife at ward 2 Ogboko, for now I will say that everything is going on well. There is security everywhere.

    “I also had the rumour of ballot box snatching in Osemoto, among other areas. But given the Presidential Order many people are afraid. If not by now you will see alot of people carrying ballot boxes.

    “However, surprisingly there is no voter apathy; our people have realised that it is for the future of this country.

    “I have full confidence that Buhari will win and I will also win my senatorial election with God on our side”.