Tag: Kogi PDP

  • Kogi PDP: Torn apart by primary

    The Kogi State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is battling with post-primary crisis that may affect its chances at the poll. JAMES AZANIA, reports.

    At the end of the governorship shadow election of the Kogi State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Musa Wada emerged as the flag bearer for the November 16 governorship election.

    The emergence of Wada, brother of the immediate past governor Capt. Idris Wada, who also contested for the ticket, upset his co-aspirants.

    Wada polled 748 votes to clinch the ticket. He was trailed by Abubakar Mohammed Ibrahim, the son of former Governor Ibrahim Idris (Ibro), who garnered 710 votes.

    Capt. Wada came third, with 345 votes, while Senator Dino Melaye polled 70.

    Others include Aminu Suleiman- 55 votes, Victor Adoji-54, Erico Joseph- 42, AVM Saliu Atawodi (retd.)- 11, Emmanuel Omebije- 9 votes, Mohammed Shuaibi- 4 votes, Bayo Michael- 2 votes and Jabiru Haruna- 0.

    The counting resumed in the disrupted primary, setting the stage for disagreement. If not well managed, litigation, post-primary litigation may affect its chances at the poll.

    The exercise ended abruptly, following the invasion of the Lokoja Confluence Stadium, venue of the primary, by gunmen.

    Voting by delegates had, however, ended and sorting of ballots under way, when the gunmen stormed the venue at around 1.45am, causing pandemonium.

    Votes in eight out of the 10 ballot boxes had been sorted and counted before the disruption. The Governor Umar Fintiri-led election panel called a meeting of the 13 aspirants and it was agreed that sorting and counting should continue.

    Counting was to proceed at a lodge, adjacent the Government House, Lokoja, with all the aspirants and their agents present.

    Many factors led to Wada’s emergence. Money played a big role.

    Read Also: Kogi PDP’s rubble after electoral storm

    The aspirants, in their bid to outdo one other, shared $1,000 each to delegates, while another was said to have added a motorcycle each, to the $1,000 he shared.

    Prior to the commencement of the shadow poll, an aspirant, on hearing that rumour of his purported withdrawal from the race was gaining ground, retorted: ‘how can I step down; when I gave the highest (money) to delegates?’

    Such was the uneasiness. Rumours pervaded the atmosphere, including an allegation that one of the aspirants ochestrated the invasion of the venue, on seeing signs that voting was not going in his favour.

    Senator Dino Melaye (Kogi West), who was initially reported to be heading for the courts to challenge the outcome of the exercise, later rejected his appointment as the Director-General of the PDP Governorship Campaign Organisation, a position that later went to T. J. Yusuf (Kabba/Ijumu Federal constituency).

    The paradigm shift, in the emergence of Wada was near seismic, not jolting the party establishment, but also highlighting some perceived trends that stakeholders questioned.

    Wada’s emergence began to appear more in the shape of setting new trend in dynastic tendencies in the affairs of the major opposition party.

    A member of the PDP and former Acting Governor, Chief Clarence Olafemi, who served as the DG of the Abubakar Atiku presidential campaign organisation, during the general election, kicked.

    Olafemi, whose son was to run as deputy to Abubakar Ibrahim, son of former Governor Ibrahim Idris, if their permutations had materialised, opted for rapport with the APC government, saying he has been short-changed by his party, despite the sacrifices he made for it.

    He gave the hint that he was on his way out of the PDP.

    The primary also turned out to be a Kogi East affair. Kogi East is home to the majority Igala-speaking tribe.

    The Idris and the Wadas played central role in the process. Hence, the inevitable clash of family interests, more so that support crossed filial lines.

    Of the 13 aspirants that contested, the Wada family paraded two; the eventual winner and his elder brother and Idris Wada.

    Before the exercise, pundits had narrowed it to a two-way race between the immediate past governor and the son of Alhaji Ibrahim Idris.

    The PDP had ruled Kogi for 13 unbroken years, before the All Progressives Party (APC) wrestled power from it, at the November 21, 2015 governorship poll.

    While Musa Wada, younger brother of Idris Wada and son in-law to former Governor Ibrahim Idris (Ibro), emerged the candidate, followed closely by Abubakar Ibrahim Idris, another Ibro son, Ibrahim and an elder brother to Musa Wada’s wife, threw his support behind Capt. Wada.

    The initial bad blood between the Wadas was highlighted by a security detail, who spoke under the condition of anonymity.

    He claimed that when the shootings started, he and others made to safeguard the Wada brothers, and after managing to get the younger Wada into a waiting SUV, the elder brother and former governor, bluntly refused to join in the same vehicle, notwithstanding the danger that stared all in the face”.

    The primary panel had a lot to contend with. It called a meeting of the 13 aspirants, paving the way for the conclusion of the exercise, but not the bad blood.

    Between the Wadas, it would appear, however, that all may have been put behind them. The former governor was said to have declared afterwards, that he held no grudge against his younger one, and expressed his readiness to work for the victory of the party.

    “The delegates were wise. They rejected Ibro and Wada (the two former governors), because of bitter rivalry between them, and picked another person.

    “Wada after the election said he would not appeal, and also decided to call his brother to congratulate him and that settles the political feud. It is more complex in Ibro’s family, but I know common sense will prevail,” said a party chieftain.

    Not only is it feared that the rancour within the Idris and Wada clans may negatively affect the electoral fortunes of the party, other simmering and resolved grievances may further bedevil the main opposition party.

    Relations between Ibrahim Idris and Capt. Wada, who was handpicked by the former as his successor, is at low ebb.

    At the last Kogi PDP congress in Lokoja, Capt. Wada refused to acknowledge his predecessor. He did not exchange pleasantries with him, despite the close proximity in their sitting arrangement.

    Another son of former Governor Ibrahim Idris,  Suleiman, was the major backer of the failed return bid of the last Kogi PDP governor, to the Government House Lokoja.

    There is division in the Kogi PDP family. It can at best be summed up as precarious. The management will go a long way in determining the fate of the party in the election.

  • Kogi PDP in crisis over Melaye’s ‘automatic ticket’

    Yesterday’s meeting of the National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Prince Uche Secondus, with leaders from the Kabba/Bunu/ Ijumu Federal Constituency over the purported automatic ticket given to Senator Dino Melaye hit the rocks.

    Secondus led the National Working Committee (NWC) to plead with the people and aspirants to accept Melaye’s and T. J. Yusuf’s automatic tickets for Senate and House of Representatives.

    The meeting was attended by House of Reps and the House of Assembly aspirants.

    A former Chief of Staff in the Office of the Vice President, Prince Shola Akanmode, led the delegation from Kabba/Bunu Ijumu. They asked that a level-playing ground be provided for all aspirants in a free and fair primaries.

    Akanmode said they lacked the power to change the position of the Kogi West Senatorial district regarding the Senate and the existing rotational understanding.

    They promised to take the NWC’s message back to their people.

    One of the aspirants said the NWC should leave Kogi people to determine who represents them, adding that any attempt at imposition would be suicidal for the PDP.

  • ‘Kogi PDP is shameless’

    Director General on Media and Publicity to Kogi State Governor, Kingsley Fanwo, has said Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was jealous of the achievements of Governor Yahaya Bello in repositioning the civil service, a feat he said PDP failed to achieve in 12 years.

    “We sympathise with the PDP over its frustrations. First, the party was defeated in the last elections and now, the governor has achieved a major feat of repositioning the civil service within his first year in office.

    “To enlighten PDP, the staff audit is not only about removing ghost workers from the payroll, but to develop data for pension administration and electronic register. We are enthroning positive change in the service.

    “Also, the PDP administrations between 2003 and 2015 supervised the infestation of the civil service with corruption. Some of the party leaders loaded the government payrolls with names of their underage children and relatives.

    “Nigerians should know that PDP leaders are crying hoax now because the present administration just published the names of affected workers, and we have many of their relations, employed at the age of 10, on the lists.

    “Of about 76,275 workers screened, 32,753 are on the problem list and the governor has opened a window of opportunity for them to prove the cases against them. PDP has suddenly lost its mathematics sense just a year after leaving power by claiming government sacked 70 per cent of workers. Their propaganda failed on arrival.

    “We are focused on the anti-corruption war in our civil service which PDP almost destroyed. The last administration owed workers over 20 months arrears and we have come in to clear that. Now, they are the advocates of the civil servants they almost killed. What an irony!”

    Fanwo urged PDP to construct credible opposition to put the governor on his toes, saying Bello’s administration would not be discouraged by destructive criticism.

  • Ocholi: Kogi PDP didn’t speak for me

    Ocholi: Kogi PDP didn’t speak for me

    The Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Mr James Ocholi (SAN), has dissociated himself from Kogi State Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) rejection of his appointment as a “junior minister”.

    The state’s PDP, in a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Mr Bode Ogunmola, expressed misgivings about Ocholi’s portfolio as a minister of state.

    But the eminent lawyer said the party did not speak for him because he did not solicit their proxy.

    He noted that Kogi PDP’s statement was capable of causing a friction between him and President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Ocholi stressed that he was not appointed minister of the PDP or Kogi State but of Nigeria.

    The frontline lawyer expressed gratitude to President Buhari for giving him the opportunity to serve the nation.

    He pledged to discharge his duty for the benefit of all and in line with the administration’s commitment at ensuring that the citizens get good governance.

    Speaking on phone from Abuja with our correspondent, Ocholi said: “My appointment has nothing to do with Kogi PDP’s position. Mr President has a unique style, which he adopted in consulting to make sure that he realises his vision of getting credible people to serve in his team.

    “But for Kogi PDP to behave as if it was speaking for me; as if I asked them to speak against the President, is capable of setting me against my President. I don’t like the PDP approach. If the party wanted to speak on any issue, it should be objective.

    “They were so harsh, saying PDP rejected my appointment as a ‘junior minister’. I don’t understand what they mean by that. I was not appointed minister of the PDP; I was appointed minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. But since each state has to produce one minister, I was picked from Kogi State.”

    In a statement by his media aide, Onoja Michael, the minister urged Kogi PDP to stop playing “cheap politics” with his appointment.

    The statement expressed dismay at PDP’s position, saying: “To say the least, the minister is embarrassed by this attempt by the PDP to cause disaffection or score a cheap political point.  Mr. Ocholi is very proud of this appointment and remains grateful to President Buhari for counting him among the few trustworthy Nigerians to serve in his cabinet…

    “As a loyal party man, the minister wishes to reiterate, for the umpteenth time, his commitment to the success of his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), in the forthcoming governorship election in Kogi State.  The so-called rejection by the PDP is not only sinister but also inconsequential. Unlike the PDP, the APC is one big family and will continue to remain strong…

    “If the motive of this unsolicited ‘sympathy’ was to taint the integrity and loyalty of the minister or to curry his goodwill, then it must be the dumbest thing…

    “Ocholi’s commitment to the ideals of APC and the vision of Mr. President is total and unalloyed.

    “Mr. President, in his wisdom, has concluded his choice of ministers and their portfolios in the best interest of the nation…”

    The minister pledged to hit the ground running with the Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, as early as possible.

    He hinted that he and Ngige would meet early this week to plan strategies for the ministry to meet its goal and ensure that Nigerians get the best from them.

  • Kogi PDP: Furore over plots to dislodge Wada

    Kogi PDP: Furore over plots to dislodge Wada

    An high-level plot has been hatched to deny Governor Idris Wada the ticket of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Kogi with serious implications for the party ahead of the November 21 governorship poll, reports Sunday Oguntola  

    It’s a clear case of the more you look, the less you see. By last Monday, delegates of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) were already at Lokoja for the much-anticipated governorship primary. The aspirants were busy canvassing for votes, trying to win over delegates to their camps.

    Election materials were on the way just as many of the electoral officials were also on standby. Everything appeared set until the National Working Committee (NWC) announced the postponement of the exercise.

    Many party chieftains and delegates were caught unawares. They never saw the postponement coming. But members of the NWC, according to investigations, were simply working towards a pre-determined end. It took only a terse statement from the National Publicity Secretary of the party, Chief Olisa Metuh, to explain the postponement was to address logistical challenges.

    Operation stop Wada

    Findings however revealed that the postponement may have been a grand ploy by the NWC to prevent Governor Idris Wada from winning the ticket. The party had cleared Wada, Jibrin Isa, popularly called Echocho and Banjo Amoto for the contest. Wada, it was gathered, had the support of most delegates who felt he was being embarrassed by the NWC.

    The governor has not enjoyed the best of relations with NWC members. On July 1, he stormed the PDP national secretariat in Abuja for a meeting with NWC members. But he was kept waiting for hours, a development many attributed to the members’ reluctance to have a parley with him. The governor had sought for the meeting to seek explanations on why the PDP’s leadership cancelled the ad hoc delegates ward congress in the state.

    The NWC had explained the congress was cancelled because it was conducted by what it described as “unknown local organising committee.” Wada’s men had swept the poll, meaning he was fully in charge of the party’s structure in the state. After much horse-trading, during which sources said he expressed displeasure, the meeting ended without Wada securing favourable response.

    But his men still went ahead to win the rescheduled congresses on July 14. Following the victory of his men, Wada said: “We have to reinvigorate and strengthen the party to meet the current challenges.

    “You can’t enter a governorship election without putting in place the executive council members. With the successful election of the executive officers of the party we are determined to retain the state.

    “The new leadership is hungry to make a mark and to put their footprints on the sand of history, and there is a renewed spirit among the members who have put behind them the incidence of presidential and National Assembly elections.”

    But the development, it was learnt, piqued NWC members. The take-over of the party’s machinery in Kogi State, it was gathered, was why many of them launched the Operation-stop-Wada project conceived to frustrate the emergence of the governor as the party’s candidate in the November 21 poll.

    Unconfirmed reports said Wada was asked to make a certain financial commitment to get the ticket, a demand he was said to be ill-disposed to. When the plot to stop him from having the state’s party executives on his side failed, the NWC members reportedly resolved to wait for him at the primary. This, it was believed, was why the NWC declared that there would be no automatic ticket for the governor.

    What played out last week, findings revealed, was because the NWC realised Wada was going to carry the day had the exercise gone on. However, sources close to the PDP national leadership said it was not supporting the governor because he is considered a hard sell.

     One of them said: “The APC has become very formidable, being the ruling party at the centre. By fielding former Governor Abubakar Audu, the party has been even more unbeatable. Our candidate has to be someone who can take on the APC and Audu.

    “The governor, if you ask everyone on the streets, has not performed. The masses cannot feel him. There is a general discontent in the state. Salaries are being owed and the civil service is at the lowest ebb.

    “If we field Wada, we are as good as defeated. He doesn’t have the presence and aura to attract votes. He’s been on the saddle for four years with practically nothing to show for it. So, fielding him is out of the question.”

    The Echocho’s experiment

    With that mindset, the NWC has been convinced it must look for another candidate that can win votes in Kogi. This, it was learnt, was why they settled for Echocho. Isa is considered a grassroots mobiliser with public sympathy. His philanthropic activities have endeared him to the masses, which many national party officials believe will swing the pendulum in favour of the PDP.

    In 2011, he won the PDP ticket. The primary was conducted in 2010. But a court ruling, two weeks to the election, punctured his ambition. The court ruled that the tenure of five governors will end in 2012, not 2011 as earlier thought. When a fresh primary was conducted, Wada won with the support of former Governor Ibrahim Idris.

    The party chieftains believe his deep pocket and massive structure along with mass appeal will convince Kogi voters to pitch their tent with him.

    But the Wada’s camp is crying foul. It said the postponement of the primary was a recipe for defeat. The grand design of NWC members, Wada’s supporters allege, is to hold the rescheduled primary tomorrow without allowance for appeal.

    A delegate from Mopa Moro, who sought for anonymity, told our correspondent: “My real worry now with the postponed elections is that it sits well within the framework of a leadership that is ready to foster a candidate of its choice on the party, knowing that appeals cannot be entertained in time before the time allowed by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) elapses.”

    Going by INEC’s regulations, no party can replace a candidate by Tuesday, 15th September. Wada’s supporters believe the plan is to declare Echocho as winner without the allowance for entertainment of appeals and grievances.

      “The decision is a terrible lose situation for both the party and the aspirants,” the delegate stated. Checks revealed that should the NWC declare Echocho as winner, Wada’s men will work against his candidature with the party’s structure.

    One of them said: “Any aspirant that loses in an unsatisfactory manner will not have time to appeal, while any aspirant that emerges as the candidate will continually be distracted by litigations well into the campaign season of the general elections. This postponement is just a recipe for disaster”.

    Already, the APC is relishing the distraction in the PDP, pointing out that the ruling party should never be considered serious going by its handling of the ongoing crisis.

    An APC chieftain, who asked not to be named, said: “”Our excitement has become heightened, knowing that with the level of disorganisation and disunity within the PDP national leadership and the state leadership, they may just impose a weak candidate that will make us landslide winners in November.

    “Or in the best case for them, they may elect a strong candidate who will however be distracted by litigations from some aggrieved members, paving the way for our victorious emergence in the general elections.

    “So, you can see the reason for our jubilation. There really is no way out of this disaster for the PDP and we can start getting ready to move into Lugard House come January 2016.”

  • Group seeks fair Kogi PDP primary

    A group in Kogi State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Relevant PDP Stakeholders, has said a leading member of the party is planning to scuttle the party’s primary on September 10.

    The group urged the party’s national body to intervene to ensure free, fair and transparent primary.

    In a statement in Lokoja, the state capital, by its President, Haruna Khalid, the group alleged that after failing to label Governor Idris Wada a non-performer, the party’s chieftain had resorted to scuttling the ward congress or using other methods to achieve their aim.

    Khalid, who said the top member had been spreading falsehood about Wada, urged restraint in the interest of Kogi State.

    The spokesman accused then party’s chieftain of planning to sponsor an unknown candidate, to scuttle the primary.

    He said: “Nothing is known about the candidate in the state. Some of the tactics they have chosen to employ is the use of fake ballot papers, spreading unsubstantiated rumour and lies through the media. Credible information reaching us confirms that the party chieftain is acting a script and may use court cases and propaganda after the primary.”

    Khalid wondered how the PDP chief, who it alleged had worked against the party’s interest, was insisting on running on the same party’s platform, vowing to resist his emergence.

  • Kogi PDP blasts NWC members

    Things seem to have fallen apart for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Kogi State ahead of the November governorship election.

    Elected delegates are at daggers drawn with the  National Working Committee (NWC).

    The delegates, who were elected in the June 27 ad-hoc delegates’ election across the various wards in the state, have rejected the purported cancellation of their elections.

    They described the NWC’s action as undemocratic and unacceptable.

    Ibrahim Abdullahi, an elected delegate representing Igalamela/Odolu Local Government Area, said the party leadership erred by setting up a new committee to conduct fresh ad hoc delegates election when the first one was declared to be free and fair.

    He added that there was no justification for the new directive, except if there was a hidden agenda.

    Abdullahi said: “We totally reject the purported cancellation and plot to conduct a fresh election for the ad-hoc delegates.

    “We have information that certain elements in the NWC have colluded with some undemocratic party members to deny the state a transparent process leading to the election of state executives.

    “We, therefore, wish to warn any of such members against undue vested interest they are showing in the matters of our state.

    “We wish to also inform all that the members and leaders of our party will resist vehemently, any form of undue attempt to subvert the process.

    “We, therefore, call on our national leaders, Board of Trustees members, governors and opinion leaders in the party to call the misguided NWC members to order in the general interest of our party.

    “We reaffirm our loyalty, commitment and support to our party and we will resist, contest and reject any attempt to hijack the party structure through unpopular and undemocratic means.”

  • Payback time for Kogi PDP

    SIR: I wish to appeal to the people of Lokoja II Constituency comprising of five wards of Oworo, Kakanda, Kupa North, Kupa South and Eggan wards to please shine their eyes and be careful of which party they vote for the coming election.

    This is because the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) which they  have been following for over 15years has woefully failed them.

    My appeal to the constituents is to look back at the sufferings they have gone through their massive loyalty to the PDP.

    It is painful that Lokoja II area which provided bulk votes for PDP  since 1999, is grossly neglected in terms of amenities especially roads.

    One recollects with pains the deceit surrounding the so-called award of contract for the Jama’ata-Budon-Mami-Abugi-Eggan road which has long been abandoned.

    Also disturbing is the Aiyetoro-Gbedde-Iluke-Abugi and Eggan road which was purportedly awarded and which have remained even worse than they were.

    My question now is what has the area really gained from a party it has served diligently for about two decades? This is the question our people should continue asking the PDP as they prepare for the elections in the coming weeks.

    While we decry the non-performance of the party in our area, I still want to appeal to the leaders in the area including Senator Tunde Ogbeha to change for better.

    This is because it appears these leaders are more interested on who becomes a council chairman and distribution of offices rather than caring for the welfare and infrastructure for the people.

    As it appears, the people of Lokoja II constituency in Lokoja Local Government of Kogi State may have no option than move to a more caring and result oriented party that will have the interest of our people in mind.

     

    • Alh. Suleiman Abdullahi

    Lokoja

  • Kogi PDP chair slams defectors

    Kogi PDP chair slams defectors

    Kogi State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chairman Hassan Salau yesterday said some members defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) for selfish reasons.

    He was reacting to the defection of two former House of Assembly speakers, some former local government chairmen, some lawmakers and their supporters to the APC.

    The defectors were received into the APC at a mega rally last Tuesday at the Lokoja Township Stadium.

    Salau said: “The people who defected did so for their personal ambitions. Clarence was a former acting governor and speaker, while Abdullahi Bello was a former speaker. The PDP gave them everything so their defection shows greed and personal ambition. I leave them to God and their troubled minds.”

    The Special Adviser to the Governor on Media and Strategy, Jacob Edi, described the defectors as “bad eggs”.

    He said: “All the bad eggs have left finally and the party is at peace now. This is a game of numbers and majority of the people of Kogi are solidly behind Governor Idris Wada, who has transformed the state beyond the imagination of these bad eggs.”