Tag: Kwara 2019

  • Kwara 2019: Odds in favour of APC

    Politics is no arithmetic. That is why pollsters and strategists keep shifting the aces until the ballots are counted. That scientific permutation works quite well in developed democracies.

     

    In America, for instance, candidates place much premium on exit polls when making permutations on likely winners of electoral contests. In Nigeria, politicians often rely on a mixture of manipulation, thuggery and influence of money.

    Bookmakers are at work as Nigerians prepare to choose new leaders from across 91 registered political parties on February 16 and March 2. Indeed, a few states such as Ogun, Oyo, Akwa Ibom, Bauchi and Kaduna are set for titanic battles between emergent forces and ‘established’ politicians. Not so for Kwara State where the voters are determined to dictate the direction of power flow.

    The wind of change is pregnant. Kwarans are yearning for a new order and they are prepared to put their ballot where their heart directs them. For those who refuse to be sold on sentiments and pre-conceived notions of political hegemony, the odds are in favour of progressivism and people-oriented politics as depicted by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Deep in the hearts of Kwarans, the era of political dictation is over. Citizens, high and low are yearning for a leader; a father-figure who listens, who is accessible, humble, compassionate and altruistic. Across the country such leaders are few. But, with nostalgia, many remember the late Oloye Olusola Saraki, on time senate leader and perhaps the most consummate politician Kwara ever had.  Omo eni oba joni (Why don’t we have a son like his father) many are wont to say.

    Kwara today is singing the dirge of the Saraki political dynasty. The message is simple: O to ge, enough is enough. Let’s have a new political leader. For those not directly involved, this is not about  hatred or bad belle. It is simply time for change. What are the indices for change and power shift, one may ask?

    While he held sway in Kwara, Oloye Saraki played politics with deep deftness. While he had favourites for political patronage, he often consulted widely and allowed elders, in various communities mostly his acolyte, to have some say in who gets what, especially for elective positions. Perhaps, he often worked to arrived at pre-determined answers. Nevertheless, the people respected his choice, in most instances. But, Saraki’s bread was always buttered as long as he stayed within the confines of the ruling party and enjoyed the federal might.

    Oloye Saraki’s son, Bukola has long jettisoned the political skills inherited from his father. He has lost bearing owing to his inordinate lust for political power; by all means he wants to be president, no matter who and what gets destroyed. First, his strategy is to use those who work with him as pawns, while also ensuring no one gets to rich and too powerful to challenge him. Next ammunition is to amass wealth by all means, especially using state resources.

    For sure, Kwarans have seen beyond the façade of Omo Oloye. Bukola simply lacks the qualities and political dexterity of his father. It is inconceivable that Kwarans will boo and stone Oloye Saraki. Now Bukola is fast becoming a political pariah, even in his supposed homestead at Agbaji quarters in Ilorin. For those still in doubt of his diminished political power, check out the results of elections into local councils held in November, 2017. For the first time in more than a decade, many wards within Ilorin metropolis voted against candidates backed by Bukola.

    Saraki’s real political demolition came a year later during the bye election for the Ekiti/Irepodun/Isin and Oke ero Federal Constituency. Saraki’s candidate in PDP lost woefully, to signpost his final rejection by Kwarans. But, like a cat with nine lives, Bukola can still boast of having some political muscle. That was why he deluded himself in splashing millions of dollars on the PDP presidential primary in Port Harcourt. He came back badly bruised and poorer!

    Back home, he has faced still and open rejection. Across all senatorial zones, his campaign train has been booed, stoned and ambushed by agitated youths who are regretting the support that gave to Bukola and his political machinery, especially his anointed successor- Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed; more of a lame duck than an executive governor!

    In Kwara South where Gov. Ahmed belongs, the bye election to the federal constituency mentioned above must be seen as an absolute rejection of Saraki and a damning testimonial on the lackluster performance of Ahmed. Yet for doubters, an incumbent governor has been so disgraced by withdrawing the senatorial ticket earlier doled to him by the senate leader. What a mess!

    In Kwara North, the PDP campaign team led by Bukola has been stoned thrice. This is a zone that holds so much potential for wealth creation and employment generation through agriculture and solid minerals deposits. The only semblance of development is the phony Shonga Farm project now completely privatized by Saraki and his business partners; so brazenly executed without minding that huge state resources were sunk in to the scheme. And what did the owners of the land got as benefits? Their sons, mostly farmers, food processors and marketers, after losing their lands to foreigners, have been forced to Okada riding.

    The frustration of Kwara North is more deep seated, beyond economic deprivation. Since 1999- twenty years at a stretch- the zone has not produced a Governor. Bukola had promised that that after eight years of incumbent governor, the mantle will shift to the zone. That was a promise never meant to be kept. The zone has been asked to wait for another eight years, possibly. Will the people of Kwara North bite the bullet once more? It is unthinkable that Bukola will again get away with his political subterfuge.

    In Kwara Central, where the battle will be between Saraki and the blue-blood Ilorin indigenes, the outcome of the coming elections will finally give a face to the o to ge the movement. In the senatorial election, Dr. Ibrahim Oloriegbe is set to give Bukola a bloody nose by taking the senate seat. But the February 16 election has also stacked the odds in favour of President Buhari and the APC.

    As the people of Kwara get set to choose a new governor, one thing will be paramount in making that choice – now, our ballot can actually give us the government with deserve; a government that will be accountable, equitable, just and people-oriented. That choice is symbolized by the APC candidate, Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq.

    The APC candidate prides himself as an “original” Ilorin man, who had is formative education in the city, attending the Demonstration School, in MagajinGeri, Ilorin. Despite his success in the business world, he disagrees that he was a silver spoon child. He has identified poverty and youth unemployment as two evils plaguing Kwara owing to what he describes as a visionless dynasty. “We have a dynasty that has no sense of where Kwara should be going. Each one of us in our families in Kwar has become a local government onto himself because you have to provide healthcare, water and all other services for yourself and the extended family,” Abdulrazaq was quoted in a recent interview.

    Specifically, the APC candidate has promised to pursue a six-point agenda anchored on modernised agriculture, quality education and massive infrastructure, employment for the youth as well as empowerment for the women. He also pledges to boost the morale of workers through prompt payment of wages, allowances and requisite training.

    “My vision is to see a state where we are no longer dependent on statutory allocations from Abuja, where we use our enterprise to generate enough funds to run the state, where we reduce unemployment, where our women have free maternal care, where our women are empowered to achieve what they want to do. Where students have a good environment to study and can pursue what they want with government assistance either through scholarship or free education,” he said.

    His determination must have been informed by the fact that many Kwarans feel that state resources have not been prudently managed. “Between January 2011 and August 2018, the Kwara State government has received roughly N300bn in federal allocations. In the same period, the 16 local governments have received more than N500bn. This means that this state has received an average of 40bn naira annually from the federal accounts while the local councils have taken over 27bn naira annually between 2011 and 2017. Yet Kwara has one of the worst social infrastructures in this country,” said Abdulrazaq.

    He has also set his vision on modernizing agriculture by tapping into the state’s huge potentials. “Kwara has a comparative advantage in agriculture. But our farming communities don’t have facilities that will encourage investment. So we will concentrate, basically, on building infrastructure such as roads, health facilities, schools and opening up our communities to the world through stable electricity and internet connectivity,” he noted.

    While asked to sum up is strategy for enthroning good governance, Abdulrazaq said: “Basically, Kwara requires urgent dismantling of the current political mercantilism which stifles development, encourages laziness and thuggery and dehumanises our people. This will free up resources to serve the people.”

    • Kareem, a former Chief Press Secretary in Kwara State, wrote from Abuja
  • Kwara 2019: Intrigues over APC’s search for Abdulrasaq’s running mate

    The governorship primary of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kwara State for the next year’s general elections is now settled with the emergence of Alhaji Abdulraham Abdulrasaq as the gubernatorial candidate of the party. Also, both the party and the governorship candidate, according to reliable sources, have agreed to a deal that will see Ifelodun Local Government Area in the South Senatorial District of the state producing the deputy governorship candidate.

    The struggle within the APC in Kwara is now shifted to who would be selected as deputy governorship candidate as various stakeholders within and outside the party urge its leadership and guber candidate to put certain requirements into consideration as they narrow down on the final choice, writes Assistant Editor, Dare Odufowokan.

    THE All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kwara State is still working hard at putting its house in order and ensuring that all stakeholders within the party are appeased ahead of the 2019 general election. Currently, the leadership of the party and its governorship, following a reported agreement to cede the deputy governorship ticket to the Igbomina ethnic group in the southern part of the state, is now searching for a consensus candidate that will further unite the party.

    Following the resolution of the various crises generated by the primary elections of the APC, held to decide the various candidates of the party across the state, leaders and indigenes of Igbomina communities in the southern senatorial district of Kwara State had protested loudly over what they described as the seeming political exclusion of Ifelodun Local Government Area, a major part of the ethnic group by the APC.

    The people of Ifelodun L.G.A had specifically appealed to the leaderships of the party, at both state and the national level, as well as the gubernatorial candidate of the party in the state, Alhaji Abdulraham Abdulrasaq, to consider one of them as the party’s deputy governorship candidate in the 2019 governorship election if it is the desire of the party to perform well in the area ruing the next governorship election.

    “In Kwara South Senatorial District, the senatorial candidate and Federal House of Representatives candidates are from Offa and Oyun Local Government areas respectively. Offa and Oyun local government areas are the Ibolo-speaking bloc while Ifelodun, the third leg of the tripod in that federal constituency, is yet to get anything. Ifelodun local government area is the largest with a voting strength second to none in the senatorial district.

    “It happens to be a different ethnic group from the duo mentioned above. Other Igbomina-speaking LGAs in the district are Irepodun and Isin. The tripod is complete in this senatorial district with Ekiti and Oke-Ero local government areas making the Ibolo bloc. However, while Ibolo and Ekiti blocs appeared to have been settled by the APC in the current calculus, the Igbomina stock is anxiously awaiting what it will take home.

    “It is also important for APC to consider the fact that Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed, the sitting governor of Kwara State and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) senatorial candidate in the forthcoming election, is from Ifelodun. The party must court the people with a stake in the current arrangement. The best way to block the area for APC is to give them the running mate to the gubernatorial candidate,” Alhaji Ahmed Salau, a party leader in the district, had argued, while speaking to The Nation on the matter.

    Findings by The Nation revealed that the agitation of the people of Ifelodun paid off as the party, as well as the governorship candidate, after series of meetings and consultations agreed to pick the deputy governorship candidate of the APC from the council area. Our correspondent gathered that the decision was taken largely to give the people a sense of belonging in the party and resolve what has become a major grievance within the party.

    “Ifelodun is not a council area any serious political party will toy with in Kwara State. It has one of the highest voting population in the state. Also, the Igbominas are the most politically savvy people we have in the state. They know what they want and they cannot be cajoled to vote anyhow. They always have reasons for supporting whichever party they follow. It is important we carry them along. The exclusion they complained about was not intentional and we have decided to correct it,” a state official of the party said.

    Fresh agitations

    With the issue of which zone of the Kwara South Senatorial District should get the slot settled, stakeholders within and outside the party have further narrowed down the search for the APC deputy governorship candidate. All through the week, the agitation for a young Christian politician from Ifelodun L.G.A to be chosen as the deputy to the party’s 65 year-old guber hopeful, was in full swing.

    The proponents of what has now become popular as the ‘youthful Christian’ idea, argue that for religious balance, the deputy governorship candidate of the state should be a Christian since the governorship candidate is a Muslim. They also posited that a young deputy guber candidate will strengthen the APC team in confronting the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)’s claim that it is fielding a youthful team.

    This is just as foundation members of the party also raised concern over the need for the APC in Kwara State to ensure that the deputy governorship ticket is given to a foundation member of the party so as to further heal the wounds inflicted on the group by the outcome of the primary elections that saw new members of the party picking majority of the 2019 election tickets.

    The foundation members of APC in Kwara State had once vowed to shut down the party’s secretariat until “justice is done” following the primary elections across the state. Spokesman of the group, Comrade Isiaka Warah, who was also an aspirant during the primaries for Ilorin West/Asa Federal Constituency, had lamented that, “what we are seeing in the party today is a modified consensus mode of primary, since results of the last primaries exercise have been discarded by the National Working Committee (NWC).

    “In the light of the foregoing, we demand the following positions as foundation APC members in the state: governorship, two senatorial slots, three House of Reps slots, 12 House of Assembly slots and agreeable terms on the formation of the next government. Those are what we consider time tested solutions to problems bedeviling the party at this material time. Anything short of this will not only be counter- productive but inimical to our common interest ahead of 2019 elections.”

    With the governorship ticket now in the firm grip of Abdulrasaq, who is not a member of the foundation group, old members of the party are now urging the leadership of the party to seek out a foundation member of the party from Ifelodun L.G.A and make him the deputy governorship candidate of the party, to “pacify loyal members of the APC who opened the doors of the party for those now picking the tickets to come in.”

    Beyond the foundation members, several other interest groups are also calling on the party to be thorough in its considerations before deciding on who will get the deputy governorship ticket of the APC. The youths’ leader of the party in Kwara State, Hon. Oyinloye Oyelere, said the best way to secure the votes of the teeming youths in the state is to choose one of them as the running mate to the party’s candidate.

    Oyinloye made the remark while speaking with newsmen shortly after the APC stakeholders forum summit held in Ilorin yesterday. He said the youths have the strength and energy to run around and galvanise support for the party. He added that, mentoring the youths can only be possible when they are brought close to leadership at various levels of responsibility thereby preparing them for the future.

    The youths’ leader, who was once the Chairman of Isin Local Government Area of the state, posited that a young man will be loyal, teachable and committed to the principle of the government without causing unnecessary stir. He therefore advised the party to pick one of them as the running mate to Alhaji  Abdulraham Abdulrasaq as the party prepares for 2019 elections.

    *Another renowned youth leader in Ifelodun Local Government Area, Olaitan Saliu, said, “if we are given free hands to choose, we know those that have been with us during the thick and thin. Any attempt to bring a diaspora member acting as foundation member is a total disservice to our struggles of many years. We know ourselves; allow us to give the party a grassroots politician and community leader.

    “We appreciate those in the PDP tendency that joined us recently who deemed it necessary to cede deputy governorship position to the foundation group having secured three senators, four federal House of Representatives and about twenty house of assembly slots out of twenty four”.  According to Olaitan, doing that will make the work of wining the area for the APC in 2019 much easier.

    Way forward

    In a related submission, Secretary of Christian Youths in Politics, Steve Adeola, said the group is capable of mobilising Christian youths in the nooks and crannies of the state, leveraging on the tentacles of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in the state. While adding his voice to the quest of the people of Ifelodun for the deputy governorship slot, Adeola said APC must also consider a Christian for the position for equity and fairness.

    Adeola said beyond choosing a politician from Ifelodun who is a Christian, the APC should also consider putting a young man on the ballot alongside Abdulrasaq. In his opinion, there is need to encourage the youths who are participating in politics across the state. “If we can’t have the governorship ticket yet, give us the deputy governorship ticket. This will give us hope that one day, we will produce one of us as the governor,” he begged.

    Speaking on how Abdulrazaq can activate unprecedented development in Kwara if elected as the governor in 2019, Dr. Dele Adeniyi, respected research expert, who is also an indigene of Oro-Ago in Kwara South, said the APC governorship candidate should consider making good use of young party chieftains with track records of community service to assist him.

    “Let me start by congratulating the APC flagbearer, Alhaji Abdulraham Abdulrasaq for his success at the just concluded party primaries. It will be my pleasure to refresh the candidate of the progressive party of a work put together by Joint Active Citizens of Kwara (JACK) at a retreat held in Offa on 26th June 2016 under the chairmanship of Justice Banji Orilonise (Rtd).

    JACK, a brainchild of the quintessential grassroots, social mobilizer and community development enthusiast, Kayode Oyin-Zubair, had done a number of interventions necessary for the development of Kwara State. The retreat held in Offa at the instance of our initiator, Kayode Oyin-Zubair, puts the task of its success on my laps as the chairman of the organising committee.

    We looked into the following areas of interest; sustenance of livelihood for the people of Kwara State, attainment of food security status in Kwara State, Kwara State educational development status and the way forward and infrastructural development in Kwara State. Those are the critical areas of our development that took participants eight hours to dissect and eventually issued a communique. I have no doubt in my mind that, the communique will be useful in developing a working tool for the incoming government.

    The candidate himself is a member of our platform  JACK; though recently added to us. He has an asset that will assist him in our man, Kayode Oyin-Zubair, who is also the initiator of another community- based outfit known as Goal-Getters Initiative. Goal-Getters has set an unprecedented record in the area of water intervention in this state. The multi -prong approach he adopted in his water intervention project is commendable.

    The project is used to mobilize indigenes of the state home and diaspora for development through fund raising. It repaired hand pump boreholes in 12 local government areas and sunk new ones. It was also used to train young people thereby reducing the dearth of man power in repair of hand pump boreholes. However, the advantages are inexhaustible because people are no longer battling with water borne diseases. Rural dwellers can save money hitherto used for medication on feeding and other rewarding ventures,” the scholar said.

  • Kwara 2019: Igbominas seek political inclusion in APC

    Leaders and indigenes of Igbomina commu-nities in the southern senatorial district of Kwara State are currently appealing to the leaderships of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) at both Kwara State and the national level, as well as the gubernatorial candidate of the party in the state, Alhaji Abdulraham Abdulrasaq, to consider one of them as the party’s deputy governorship candidate in the 2019 governorship election. While speaking with The Nation on Friday, leaders and stakeholders of the Igbomina ethnic group stated that it would be great injustice if their communities are excluded from political consideration by the APC.

    “In Kwara South senatorial district, the senatorial candidate and Federal House of Representatives candidates are from Offa and Oyun local government areas respectively. Offa and Oyun local government areas are the Ibolo-speaking bloc while Ifelodun, the third leg of the tripod in that federal constituency, is yet to get anything. Ifelodun local government area is the largest with a voting strength second to none in the senatorial district.

    “It happens to be a different ethnic group from the duo mentioned above. Other Igbomina-speaking LGAs in the district are Irepodun and Isin. The tripod is complete in this senatorial district with Ekiti and Oke-Ero local government areas making the Ibolo bloc. However, while Ibolo and Ekiti blocs appeared to have been settled by the APC in the current calculus, the Igbomina stock is anxiously awaiting what it will take home.

    “It is also important for APC to consider the fact that Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed, the sitting governor of Kwara State and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) senatorial candidate in the forthcoming election, is from Ifelodun. The party must court the people with a stake in the current arrangement. The best way to block the area for APC is to give them the running mate to the gubernatorial candidate,” Alhaji Ahmed Salau, a party leader in the district, said.

    Similarly, some young elements in APC in the local government, led by Saliu Olaitan, a foremost community youth leader and chieftain of the party, submitted that the way to attract the votes of the youths of Ifelodun is to give one of them the deputy governorship slot. According to Olaitan, doing that will make the work of wining the area for the APC in 2019 much easier.

    In a related submission, Secretary of Christian Youths in Politics, Steve Adeola, said the group is capable of mobilising Christian youths in the nooks and crannies of the state, leveraging on the tentacles of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in the state. While adding his voice to the quest of the people of Ifelodun for the deputy governorship slot, Adeola said APC must also consider a Christian for the position for equity and fairness.

     

  • Kwara 2019: ‘Ahmed will be Saraki’s last governor’

    Rotimi Sulyman is the Publicity Director of Ilorin Emirate for Buhari (IEB), a political group promoting President Muhammadu Buhari’s re-election bid in Kwara State. In this interview with Kunle AkinrinAde, he speaks on the succession battle in the Northcentral state.

    WHAT impact is the Senate President Bukola Saraki’s defection from the APC to the PDP likely to have on President Buhari’s r-eelection, particularly in Kwara State?

    We are no under illusion that it is not a setback. But, it is a mixed bag, with lot of positives to take from it. The opposition is currently riding on the crest of wave of the Senate President’s defection to the PDP. For the very first time in his own political career, his defection has afforded the critical mass opposed to the Saraki’s hegemony of Kwara State to align with the centre; and this development may send him and his political dynasty into eternal oblivion come 2019. It is no longer business as usual for the Senate President. In fact, during the last local government election held November last year, while he was in the APC, Saraki lost in his polling booth where he voted and in his ward to the PDP; even though the election results were manipulated across the state in his former party’s favour. There are lots of factors that have conspired to reduce his influence in Kwara politics: one is poverty, which his hegemony of the state’s politics has foisted on Kwara residents over the last 16 years on account of misrule of successive governments. He was governor between 2003 and 2011 and together with his successor, Abdulfatah Ahmed who he made governor, they have a place reserved for them in the state hall of shame, on account of their gross appropriation and mismanagement of our commonwealth. Despite owing civil servants, Ahmed found it convenient to build multi-billion naira residence for his predecessor. Poverty now walks on two legs in Kwara. For a civil servants’ state, government workers are being owed months of salary arrears, particularly teachers in public primary schools, who are owed almost six month salaries. The other is the Buhari factor. The people of Kwara are in love with the President. Their yummy relationship dates back to his time as military head of state, when our son, the late Major-General Tunde Idiagbon was his defacto vice president. Currently, about five thousands farmers from the state are beneficiaries of the N1billion 2018 CBN Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP). Three of our roads namely; the Michael-Imoudu-Ganmo-Afon Junction, Afo-Aboto-Oyo State road; and Ilorin-Bode-Saadu-Jebba Road are being reconstructed by the Federal government and are nearing completion. In any election in the state between both, Saraki stands no chance against Buhari. In the 2015 general election, Buhari polled 302,146 votes to defeat Goodluck Jonathan, who secured 132,602 votes. The total votes all the three senators, including Saraki had, was not up to 250,000. The other thing is that people’s patience with the Saraki dynasty has grown thin and they want a change badly.

    How would you justify the claim that people are averse to Saraki’s dominance of Kwara politics, given the high number of politicians that defected with him to the PDP?

    You see, as a Yoruba expression goes, May God not put our survival in a difficult place. In the first place, how did they get to the positions they occupied? It was by sucking up to the Senate President. They don’t have electoral value. Individually, they cannot win their polling unit, much more their wards. You see, all the civilian governors that had governed the state from Adamu Attah in 1979, Cornelius Adebayo in 1983, Shaba Lafiagi in the aborted Third Republic, the late Muhammed Alabi Lawal to the incumbent Abdulfatah Ahmed they were produced by the Saraki dynasty. So, the Sarakis have been playing god in the affairs of Kwarans for three decades. Even all the ministers produced by the state, except Lai Muhammed, were their products. However, we all know that it is God who ultimately rules in men’s affairs. For we, Muslims, Prophet Mohammed (SWA) was the last prophet of God, and the name Ahmed is the same as Mohammed. So, in that regard, Gov. Ahmed will be the last governor of the state produced by the Sarakis. At least, no empire lasts forever. The Sarakis empire is already falling apart, given the acrimonious relationship between the Senate President and his half-sister, Senator Gbemisola Saraki. The centre has ceased to hold between them since 2011, when he worked against her ambition to succeed him as governor.  We, Kwarans, have long suffered the indignity of being referred to as ‘Saraki’s slaves’, and we want to prove that we are free-born come 2019. The last time I checked, Mauritania is the last country to abolish slavery and not Nigeria. But, in Kwara, we are at the whim of an individual and a family.

    How would you react to insinuations in some quarters that the Senate President enjoys the supports of traditional rulers in the state including Emir of Ilorin and that the recently held Durbar in the capital was to drum up support for him?  

    I don’t subscribe to such simplistic reductionism of the renewed interest in restoring durbar, an event that used to be yearly in Ilorin back then before it was put in abeyance. We are all emir’s subjects and same before him and he has no preference. But, what I know is that the Senate President is fond of ingratiating himself with the emir, Alh. Ibrahim Sulu-Gambari. This may be because his late father, Olusola Saraki, who we all know died of cancer on deathbed, in camera, pleaded with the emir to take good care of him after his demise.

    The increase in the number of governorship aspirants on the platform of APC suggests that the opposition to the Saraki hegemony is disunited and unformidable. What is your take on this assertion?

    It is the beauty of democracy that people are throwing their hats into the ring and not the other way round, as it happening in the Senate President’s camp, where aspirants are waiting for the lord of the manor’s approval before hanging their posters. But, among them all in the APC, I am of the view that four persons stand tall: the incumbent Director General of Nigerian Broadcasting Commission (NBC), Ishaq Modibo Kawu, the CEO of First Fuel and owner of amateur football club side, FC Abuja, Abdulrahman Abdulrasak, the son of late Ambassador Garba Gobir, a trained pharmacist and serial entrepreneur and cerebral banker and businessman, Lukman Mustapha.

  • Kwara 2019: Group backs Gambari for governor

    A Group, the Coalition of Registered Political Parties in Kwara State, has urged Senate President Bukola Saraki to ensure that the right person is picked as the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress.

    The objective, according to the group, is to ensure better development of the state.

    The association urged the party to pick Ambassador Abdulfatai Gambari as the governorship candidate.

    The group said that the alleged appalling political and economic situation of the state called for urgent intervention from well-meaning indigenes, especially the Senate president who doubles as the state’s political leader.

    In a letter to the Senate President  by its coordinator, Alhaji Ahmed Abdullahi, the group said: “the current situation being experienced is far from that which the indigenes of the state had expected.”

    He added: “The state is economically imbalanced in every facet of human life. Without your recent intervention, the state would have collapsed.”

    The group said that its vision was to build a virile Kwara State worthy of pride by indigenes.

    Abdullahi urged the political family to select Ambassador Abdulfatai Yahaya Seriki Gambari as the governorship candidate..

    He added: “Ambassador Abdulfatai Yahaya Seriki Gambari hails form Ilorin East Local Government of the state. An astute young man whose political record can be traced back to the 90s as a student, he is now a successful businessman in mining and oil industry. His passion for politics was ignited by your political diplomacy and dynamism.

    “As a young oil and mining magnate, Ambassador Abdulfatai Yahaya Seriki had influenced  many lives positively, while seeing you as a role model, thereby promoting  the image of our state locally and nationally.

    “His philanthropy had undoubtedly earned him unparalled honour and respect from the traditional andspiritual leaders, women, youths, friends, allies and cronies in the state.