Tag: Kogi election

  • Kogi: APC candidate Audu votes

    Satisfied with poll conduct

    The All Progressive Congress (APC) governorship candidate, Prince Abubakar Audu,, voted at exactly 1:40pm, at unit 010, Ogbonicha ward, Ofu local government area of Kogi State, on Saturday.

    Audu expressed satisfaction with conduct of the poll.

    He, however, alleged that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) members destroyed electoral materials at Eti-Aja and Ojetachi Streets in Ayangba.

    The Nation gathered that the act was perpetrated before the arrival of police to the area.

  • Card reader’s failure, a plot to frustrate poll – Wada

    Card reader’s failure, a plot to frustrate poll – Wada

    Peoples Democratic Party governorship candidate in Kogi, Idris Wada, has alleged that there is a plot to frustrate the state’s governorship election.

    The governor complained about the failure of the card reader to verify his Permanent Voter Card (PVC)

    He was also riled by the fact that an electoral officer said there were few incidence forms.

    According to him, there was a likelihood the election would not be credible with the developments.

    Wada said: “There was a failure of the card reader. How can that happen? In a single election, one day in the whole of Nigeria? How can we have card reader incidents? INEC said they were providing backups.

    “There are so many people here who are going to be completely disenfranchised. This is wrong!

    “They said they have few incidence forms and there is no photocopy machine here! So, how are people going to vote?

    “It seems to be a deliberate attempt to frustrate the whole process. I am going to call the REC now when I leave here, and I hope that they can do something about it.

    “Most Nigerians were looking forward to this election. Before I came here, I believed that the whole process was free and fair, with the massive security.”

  • TMG deploys 325 observers for Kogi guber poll

    TMG deploys 325 observers for Kogi guber poll

    The Transition Monitoring Group (TMG) said on Thursday that it would deploy 325 citizen-observers for the governorship election holding in Kogi on November 21.

    The Chairman of TMG, Mr Ibrahim Zikirullahi, told newsmen in Lokoja that the observers would comprise of 300 stationary and 25 roving ones.

    He said that they had been carefully selected from across the 21 local governments in the state.

    He said that the observers would be deployed to 300 randomly selected polling units out of the 2, 548 in the state.

    Zikirullahi said that the TMG, an independent and non-partisan organization, is a coalition of 400-civil-society groups based in the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    According to him, their duty is mainly to provide timely and accurate information on the conduct of voting and counting of the results of the election.

    “ TMG’s Quick Count is the only observation methodology that can independently verify the official results of the governorship election as announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission, “ the chairman said.

    He said that the observers had been trained and accredited to witness the entire election process from start-up at the polling units through the announcement and posting of official results.

    “TMG calls on the electorate to go to the polls confident that their votes will count.

    “ Quick Count will provide independent verification of the gubernatorial results as announced by INEC.

    “If the official results reflect the ballots cast at polling units, TMG will confirm them.

    “If the official results do not reflect the ballots cast at polling units, TMG will expose them,” Zikirullahi said .

  • Kogi: INEC begins  distribution of PVCs to voters

    Kogi: INEC begins  distribution of PVCs to voters

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has commenced the distribution of Permanent Voters Cards (PVCs) to newly registered voters in Kogi.

    Mr. Daniel Kure, Head of Department (HOD) Voter Education, INEC Office, Lokoja, made the announcement on Monday in Lokoja in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    He said that the distribution of PVCs, which commenced on Nov. 14, would continue till Nov. 20, adding that there were over 47, 000 newly registered voters in all the 21 LGAs across the state.

    He called on registered voters to visit INEC offices in their various LGAs to collect their PVCs to enable them participate in the Nov. 21 governorship election in the state.

    Kure also announced that a meeting of all stakeholders in the election would hold on Nov. 17 at Riverton Hotel, Lokoja by 10 am.

    He said that dignitaries expected at the meeting includes; INEC Chairman, Mr Yakub Mahmoud, the lnspector-General of Police, Mr Solomon Arase, and the Director General of NYSC, Brig.-Gen. Johnson Olawumi

  • Kogi election: Immigration warns aliens to steer clear

    Kogi election: Immigration warns aliens to steer clear

    The Nigeria Immigration Service in Kogi  State  yesterday warned non-Nigerians  against getting involved  in this  month’s  governorship election.

    The NIS Comptroller in the state, Mr Baba Zakari, told representatives of Ghanaian and Nigerien nationals resident in the state at a meeting in Lokoja that the poll is strictly a Nigerian affair.

    According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), he warned, “You have no right to take part in any elections in this country. If any of you has registered, it is illegal and you should not take part in the election because Immigration officials will be at all the polls.’’

    He added that violators would be promptly apprehended and arraigned accordingly, adding that all the registered political parties in the state had at a meeting with the Police Command pledged to promote free and fair election.

    “The parties were told not to mobilise non-nationals to vote for them.”

    On calls to give temporary travel documents to illegal immigrants to check their activities in the country, Zakari said his office has no authority to issue any resident permit other than relevant travel documents.

    He explained that any immigrant that had no passport or ECOWAS travel document if arrested would be deported immediately.

    Responding on behalf of the foreigners, the president of Ghana Community in the state, Mr Edwin Ansah, pledged that they would not violate the law.

    Ansah, however, urged the service to take measures to check the influx of illegal immigrants who come into the country through illegal routes.

    He recalled that a Ghanaian who dealt in herbal drugs duped someone to the tune of N1.5 million and he (the president) was arrested.

    An alternative measure, he said, is for the service to give temporary documents to illegal immigrants so as to regulate their activities.

  • Re: Still on Kogi election…

    SIR: Except for Palladium’s Idowu Akinlotan, Kogi people and non Kogites are not uncertain as to who they would vote for in the forth-coming governorship election slated for November. The public opinion overwhelmingly favours the incumbent.  Akinlotan’s column, back page The Nation of Sunday September 27 further confirms that he remains an unrepentant apologist of the APC candidate, Prince Abubakar Audu.

    Akinlotan failed to explain what he meant by an effective governor. To its credit, the administration of Capt. Idris Wada has constructed 58 roads across the state. As at today, Kogi State government is up to date in the payment of salaries to its workers. Today the Faculty of Medicine has taken off at the Kogi State University while the University Teaching Hospital of the same institution is nearing completion. Mention must be made of the 12-storey Kogi House, Abuja, the remodelling of Kogi Hotels, completion of all inherited projects that ordinarily would have been left abandoned with taxpayers’ money going down the drain. In the education sector, the building and rehabilitation of over 300 secondary and primary schools, and the sustained payment of WAEC fees for final year students as well as bursary to students of Kogi State origin points to effectiveness. If all these and others too numerous to mention do not present Wada as an effective governor, then the columnist should hasten to explain its meaning. Even from afar, the writer attested to the good qualities of Capt Wada. He admitted even if reluctantly that Wada is civil and humble as against the abrasive and impatient Prince Audu. The pleasant qualities of Capt Wada, coupled with his ability amidst paucity of resources as experienced nation wide, and his ability to still steer the ship of state to the next level of development, places him way ahead of Audu. A vote for Capt Wada is not only for a vote for consolidation, it would no doubt enable the governor complete all on-going legacy projects scattered across the state.

    Capt Wada remains a rallying point for power rotation, because he can be trusted. Prince Audu’s promise to locate the state university in Kabba which he later reneged on is food for thought on the issue of power rotation. President Muhammadu Buhari won his election on the strength of integrity. This cannot be said of someone who since 2013 has stalled efforts to try him of corruption charges.

    The November governorship election is already a decided matter if you live in Kogi State. The electorates having tested both candidates know who deserves their vote.

    • Abu Michael,

    Lokoja. 

  • Still on Kogi election

    Still on Kogi election

    Many Kogites and non-Kogites who reacted to this column’s conclusions on the November governorship poll in Kogi State are in a quandary whom to support. While they admit that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Governor Idris Wada is less than effective as the state’s chief executive, they also acknowledge that the All Progressives Congress (APC) standard-bearer, Abubakar Audu, has been unable to make more friends on account of what they describe as his stuffiness and arrogance. Some rejoinders say it is difficult, if not impossible, to pick either of the two candidates in the poll. But neutrality is not an option. If a part of the electorate refuses to vote, another part will vote, and one way or the other, a choice will be made, and one of the two leading candidates will win.

    Even if it is acknowledged that the two standard-bearers are uninspiring, a careful consideration of their weaknesses and strengths should still help voters determine whom to back. Mr Wada may not be abrasive and impatient, or fiery and uncouth, but few dispute his lethargy and general lack of innovativeness. He is sensitive and won’t make you feel bad in his presence, but he is almost wholly unable to make you feel good by reason of the state’s collapsed infrastructure and hopelessness about the future. The abrasive and financially finicky Prince Audu, on the other hand, is believed to be unable to make the Kogi electorate feel good in his presence, though his supporters argue he has changed, but he makes the ordinary Kogite feel good about the state on account of his passion for development and modernisation.

    In short, in November, the Kogi voter will have to make a choice between pleasant personality and its concomitant underdevelopment on one hand, and unpleasant personality and development on the other hand. The choice is grim  and vexing, but it is unavoidable and must be made. In making the choice, however, the state must determine whether in the case of Mr Wada they can keep his pleasantness beyond the next four years and profit from it if he wins, an unlikely proposition, or whether they can limit the underdevelopment certain to accompany his victory to only his four years in office should he win. And in the case of Prince Audu, the voter must ask what economic and social value his pleasantness confer on the state in four years should he win, as opposed to what his developmental drive would bring not only for four irreplaceable years but also far beyond, especially given the fact that even today, more than any of his successors, his imprint is still solidly embossed on the state’s development.

    There is no ambiguity in the choice before Kogi. This column finds bad manners offensive, but it is not confused as to how to proceed in the face of the two choices facing Kogi. Prince Audu will woefully fail a pleasantness contest with Mr Wada; but it is hard to see the latter winning the more crucial and impactful developmental test with the former. Kogi will in November decide whether they want development or they want their ego massaged. If they choose ego over development in the face of the appalling realities of poverty and infrastructural collapse of the state, they will find it difficult to tell Nigerians they are not gluttons for punishment or that the shame of underdevelopment and poverty has not afflicted them enough. In four years, Kogi will be rid of both Mr Wada and Prince Audu, whoever wins between the two. But in four years, they will either be better for their choice or worse for it.

    A few rejoinders to this column also argue that Kogi West senatorial district peopled mainly by the Okun Yoruba will at best split their vote for the APC candidate. The reasons, they say, are that Prince Audu, in his customary brashness, once insulted the people and chiefs of the area, and that the politics of running mate and zoning of senatorial positions have pitted the Yagba side against their Okun brothers in Kabba/Bunu/Ijumu side. The rejoinders, however, admitted that of all the three men who have governed the state since 1999, Prince Audu’s government was the most impactful in Okunland. Indeed, they admit that while former governor Ibrahim Idris managed to establish a little presence in Okunland, Mr Wada has done nothing anyone taking the trouble of remembering. If in about four years Mr Wada did nothing for the Okun people, when he knew he would be needing their votes for another four years, what are the guarantees he would do something major and significant in the next four years when he would not be needing them thereafter?

    Notwithstanding the lack of sophistication of Okunland politics, it is still unlikely they will be confused as to whom to vote for. They will be reluctant to compound the historic error they made in campaigning for the new state of Kogi (created 1991), in which they found themselves unexpectedly outmanoeuvered and outgunned by the Igala from the Kogi East senatorial district. They will recognise that notwithstanding the uninspiring choices they face between Mr Wada and Prince Audu, their best bet is to throw in their lot with the man who spread development to their area, who had a great developmental track record, and who in 2011, had he been governor, would probably have supported the federal government in siting the only federal university in the state (Federal University Lokoja) in Kabba, the unofficial headquarters of Okunland. Prince Audu is still the Okun people’s best bet for power rotation and fairness. Mr wada is of no value to Kogi West.

    The Okun people will likely settle their differences over the zoning of the senatorial position, and will overcome their misgivings over the running mate issue, especially the false and misleading dichotomy over native and foreign Okun sons and daughters. They will know which side their bread is buttered, and they will reach deep into their souls and their illustrious past and do what is right. If they fail, as their contemporary fractiousness suggests, they will be compounding the error of Kogi State creation, and foreclosing a bright future for coming generations. Already, present day Okun people blame their fathers for the lopsidedness of state creation, dismayed by their forebears’ lack of foresight; it is important that a historic redress should take place now to correct a previous historic error.

    A few rejoinders also suggest that President Muhammadu Buhari would be contradicting his anti-corruption agenda by visiting Kogi to campaign for the APC candidate, Prince Audu. This is sheer piffle. President Buhari is not the law courts. Not only has Prince Audu not been found guilty of wrongdoing, the case, which has been on since 2013,, is a testament to the government’s prosecutorial mystery than Prince Audu’s adeptness at undermining or frustrating the law. President Buhari will put in context the more than N10bn alleged to have been stolen by Prince Audu at a time when the state’s annual budget under his tenure was considerably less than N30bn. In addition, Prince Audu was validly selected by the party to be its standard-bearer. The president will not fight that outcome, nor turn his back on his party’s ambitions.

    This column argues that based on Mr Wada’s poor performance and Prince Audu’s substantial developmental projects, the contest is unlikely to be indecisive. If the contest is based on whether Mr Wada is polite or Prince Audu is uncouth, then, of course, Kogi may be too far gone in errant politics than outsiders imagine. The state should keep its eye on the ball and vote sensibly for the sake of future generations. Kogi West, it seems, may finally do what is right. Kogi Central also has the capacity to disentangle the twisted skein with which Wada’s supporters seek to hamstring the state. And Kogi East, where Mr Wada hails from, is reportedly miffed by the governors inattentiveness to their pains. Mr Wada may get plenty of votes from people impressed by the comely and inviting visage of politicians, and from voters who can’t seem to appreciate the fundamentals of politics and balloting, but the votes will likely only be sufficient to spare him humiliation, not give him victory.

    Both the APC and Prince Audu should go out and reassure the electorate of his bona fides, of his newfound delicate manners, of his readiness to work and to respect the people’s rights, for the country and the state have changed so radically that former methods will get him into trouble, and of the long list of substantial work he did both in 1992 and 1999. He must resist provocations, and he must understand that if anyone is supporting him today despite his bad press, that support is based on nothing else than his developmental and financial management records. Mr Wada is not an option, and neutrality is a sterile and foolish exercise. Kogi should vote right in November and save themselves the humiliating embarrassment of being counted as one of Nigeria’s leading laggards.

     

  • INEC begins procurement materials for Kogi election

    INEC begins procurement materials for Kogi election

    Acting Chairman of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mrs Amina Zakari, said the commission had begun the production and procurement of materials for upcoming Kogi and Bayelsa governorship elections.

    She made this known on Friday in Lokoja at the opening of a one-day stakeholders’ forum on the elections.

    Zakari, who was represented by Secretary of the commission, Mrs Augusta Ogakwu, said that training of personnel for the conduct of the polls had also begun.

    She said that Continuous Voter Registration for persons who just attained 18 years and those who missed the last exercise would be conducted before the elections.

    She reiterated that only those who had permanent voter card would be eligible to vote in the elections, and urged political parties and other stakeholders to mobilize the people to come out for the exercise.
    “The commission will be fair, impartial and transparent and provide a level playing field to all contestants,” Zakari assured.

    In his presentation, INEC‘s Director of ICT, Mr Chidi Nwafor, said that collation of results of the election would be done electronically as part of efforts to enhance the election process.

    He said that application of e-software system would make it possible for collation of results right from the polling units.

    He said that the software was being deployed for the first time in the country with the coming polls in both states.

    The Resident Electoral Commissioner in the state, Mr Halilu Pai, disclosed that 221 units of data-capturing machines had been deployed to headquarters of the 21 local government areas in Kogi for voter registration.

    He also said that 42 staff of the commission, who would participate in the exercise had been trained, adding that card readers would be used for the election.

    Pai restated the readiness of INEC to conduct a free and fair election, and urged other stakeholders in the state to join hands the commission to achieve a credible poll whose result would be acceptable to all contestants.

    In his peach at the event, the Attah of Igala, Idakwo Ameh Oboni, said that democracy remained the best form of government as it gave citizens the best opportunity to secure their freedom from poverty, misrule and corruption.

    He, therefore, urged INEC not to relent in its efforts at bringing sanity into the polity and urged political parties and other stakeholders to partner the electoral umpire to achieve that.
    While pledging to use his position to mobilize his subjects to participate in the continuous voter registration and the election, Oboni advised political parties and their candidates to eschew chaos and money politics.