Tag: Kwara State

  • Senator Ibrahim arraigned in court, granted bail

    A Magistrate’s Court sitting in Ilorin, the Kwara state capital on Friday granted bail to Senator Rafiu Ibrahim and nine others.

    Senator Ibrahim who represents Kwara south in the Senate was arrested by the police last Friday in connection with political violence that occurred in his Ojoku country home early last week.

    Senator Ibrahim was also the Kwara South senatorial candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the last Saturday elections.

    He, alongside other nine suspects, has been in police custody since Friday last week before their arraignment in court.

    They were granted bail alongside nine other suspects by Magistrate Bio Saliu.

    They were accused of allegedly inciting disturbance of public peace and for firing at a campaign train in Ojoku, Oyun local government area of the state.

    Their act was said to have led to the death of one Samuel Abidemi Adeosun.

    The Officer In Charge of Legal Department, Kwara State Police Command, DSP Adeyemi Ajibola prayed and adjournment of the case but, Counsel to the suspects Tunde Olomu and Rasaq Bola Gold urged the court to invoke section 36 (5) and section 128 of the constitution to admit the defendants to bail saying they are still presumed innocent until proved otherwise.

    In his ruling, Magistrate Bio admitted the defendants to bail in the sum of N500, 0O0, two sureties each in the like sum in which one of them must own a landed property.
    He then adjourned the matter to 28th March, 2019 for further mention.

  • APC sure of victory, says Abdulrazaq

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kwara state AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq on Saturday said the party is confident of winning all the elections in the state as “voters have fully brought into our message”.

    AbdulRazaq told reporters in Ilorin at his Idi Igba family house all the party’s candidates would win by a landslide because the people of Kwara “are totally fed up with the current status quo.”

    “So far so good,” he began.

    “The turnout has been good and we definitely are sure of victory,” he said minutes before he cast his ballot at the Open Space polling unit 004 of Adewole Ward.

    AbdulRazaq commended the security agencies and the electoral body for the jobs done so far, adding however that “it is too early to give full comments on the conduct of the elections”.

    He expressed concerns about reports of incomplete or mixed up ballot papers in parts of Ilorin metropolis, calling on the electoral body to quickly address the concerns.

    Abdulrazaq enjoined all Kwarans to be calm as their wish of a new Kwara would soon become a reality.

    “We call on our people to be patient and orderly. Once you get to the polling units before 2pm, you will be allowed to cast your vote. We urge our people to remain calm,” he said.

    He explained that the Otoge revolution has swept across the state and “all people must do is to be cool headed and upright to the end.

    “We are on a mission to rebuild from the scratch and victory is assured by God’s grace.”

  • Saraki impressed with voters turnout

    Senate President Bukola Saraki on Saturday lauded the massive turnout of voters in Kwara state for the Presidential and National Assembly elections in the state.

    Saraki spoke with reporters shortly after he cast his vote at Ode Opobiyi Polling Unit (005/006), in Ajikobi ward of Ilorin West local government.

    He hailed the peaceful atmosphere witnessed in the exercise and urged residents to maintain such postures.

    Accompanied by his wife, Mrs. Toyin Saraki; mother, Mrs. Florence Saraki and eldest son, Seni, the Senate president cast his vote at 10.20am.

    Read Also: Election: Don’t be deterred, Saraki tells Nigerians

    Senator Saraki urged the electorate to remain patient to enable them cast their vote within the stipulated time frame.

    He decried the late arrival of voting materials to some polling units within Ilorin metropolis.

    He called on the Independent Electoral Commission (INEC) to redress such anomalies in subsequent elections.

    Director General of Kwara PDP Mandate 2019 Campaign, Prof Abubakar Suleiman had also expressed concerns over the late arrival of materials as well as the reported malfunctioning of card readers in some parts of the metropolis.

  • INEC and conspiracy theories

    Nothing could be more inexplicable. Listen to the words of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) for Kwara State, Mallam Garba Mamdami, reportedly speaking in Ilorin on Wednesday before the commencement of the distribution of critical election materials from the office of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to Local Government Areas in the state. According to the REC, “The result sheets for Kwara were found in our FCT office in Abuja and they are going to be sent today. I will be here (CBN) till they bring it. Also the results sheet of Lagos was found here. I have sent it back, that of Lagos was also found in Nasarawa. You can see the reason the election was postponed”. It is of course reassuring that Mamdami said that the noted lapses had been corrected in the state and that the sensitive polls items were already being moved from Ilorin to the far flung Local Government Areas such as Baruten, Kaiama and Pategi as at Wednesday.

    However, against the background of these kinds of revelations across the country,  it is not surprising that assorted conspiracy theories have been espoused attributing the last ditch postponement of last Saturday’s presidential and national assembly elections till today to insider collusion by elements within INEC with external partisan interests to compromise the polls. In its immediate reaction to the postponement, for instance, the PDP and its candidate, Alhaji Abubakar Atiku, alleged that INEC acted under pressure from the APC and the presidency whichallegedly envisaged the ruling party’s imminent defeat had the elections gone ahead.

    Another variant of this allegation was that the INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmud Yakubu, preferred to postpone the election rather than cave in to alleged pressure from some quarters to hold the exercise in a staggered manner purportedly designed to favour the ruling party. The forceful condemnation of the polls postponement by the APC National Chairman, comrade Adams Oshiomhole, the party’s National Caucus as well as the presidency, however, seriously weakens the plausibility of this thesis. For, they have remorselessly put down INEC as an epitome of organizational inefficiency and incompetence stressing that the electoral umpire had been provided with all the resources it required to deliver effectively on its mandate.

    Oshiomhole has vehemently interrogated the rationale for INEC to have waited till after 2am early on February 16, when most normal people would presumably be asleep, to announce its inability to conduct the elections despite assuring Nigerians virtually every day till then of its readiness for the exercise. And the Minister of State for Aviation, Mr. Sirika Hadi, has debunked the INEC Chairman’s claim that weather challenges were partly responsible for the logistical glitches experienced by the commission in delivering electoral materials to critical destinations on schedule by air.

    Given the colossal socio-economic and psychological costs attendant on the postponement as well as the grave damage once again done to the country’s international image, it is not surprising that President Muhammdu Buhari has stated unequivocally that the incident will still have to be thoroughly investigated after the polls. Indeed, the APC has gone on to allege not only that the main opposition party had penetrated and compromised critical operatives within INEC to help skew the election in its favour but also that the PDP had prior information about the impending postponement, a development which the ruling party insists caught it unawares.

    The onus is certainly on the ruling party to offer credible proof for its allegations. But then, since Atiku had alleged that INEC was pressurized by a jittery presidency to abort the polls from holding last Saturday, what explains the rather tame and seemingly kid glove treatment by the PDP of an electoral umpire it claimed worked in cahoots with the ruling party to truncate its envisaged electoral triumph through polls postponement? The PDP has inexplicably left the APC to vehemently take on INEC on this lapse as if the ruling party was the one in opposition!

    If the allegations by the APC are true, the ruling party must have naively discounted its own oft-repeated mantra as regards the capacity and desperation of corruption to fight back in the face of President Muhammadu Buhari’s unprecedented onslaught against the monster, a war that has claimed the scalp of many a top PDP big shot.

    Of course, one must sympathize with the INEC and its leadership who are operating in a perennially charged political atmosphere of intense competition for the economically beneficial control of state power, a struggle that is all too often difficult to differentiate from war. In such a context, critical state institutions such as electoral, judicial and electoral agencies tend to be inexorably drawn from their supposedly non-partisan heights into the political fray with unsavoury consequences for their credibility and integrity as well as the efficacy and stability of the political system as a whole.

    In the run up to this year’s election, it has hardly surprising that heavy weather has been made by the opposition of the presence of one of the 12 INEC national commissioners, Mrs Amina Zakari, within the top echelon of the commission. This is because of her purported familial relationship with President Muhammadu Buhari. It has not mattered to the critics that her membership of INEC predated Buhari’s ascension to power or that one electoral commissioner in a complex organization like INEC is unlikely to be able to do much to skew electoral outcomes without extensive internal collusion.

    Yes, there should be cause for worry if there is credible suspicion of external partisan interests having access to sensitive insider information through unscrupulous INEC functionaries who violate their oaths of office. But it would appear that the critics have been most unfair to Mrs Zakari after all. It is now obvious that officials from some other parts of the country play roles even more critical than that of this woman in the elections administration process.

    It is noteworthy in this regard that in the cause of investigating the logistical failures allegedly responsible for the postponement of the February 16 elections, the Directorate of State Services (DSS), controversially invited a number of top INEC Staff to interact with its functionaries, an invitation that was later stepped down obviously for political reasons. Those earlier invited include the Director of INEC’s operations and logistics department, Professor Okechukwu Ibeano, Director of Information and Communication Technology, Chidi Nwafor, Director of Voter Education and Publicity, Osaze Uzzi and the Assistant Director of ICT, Bimbo Oladunjoye.

    The allegation that an individual was specifically planted in INEC to manipulate election for some partisan interests certainly did not take into account the organizational complexities of INEC and the details of functional allocation of responsibilities down the line. Unfortunately, the critics are unlikely to apologize to Mrs Zakari. Sure, the commissioners and staff of INEC cannot be recruited from outer space. It is also impracticable to import expatriate functionaries from purportedly neutral international agencies to conduct elections in a country of the size and complexity of Nigeria.

    Functionaries of INEC will necessarily belong to specific ethnic communities, states, regions, religious faiths and cultural entities within Nigeria. They will as human beings and necessarily political animals also have their individual political views and inclinations. How do we then ensure that officials of this critical electoral umpire adhere to their oaths of office and perform their functions devoid of ethno-regional considerations, religious bias or political partisanship?

    First, the terms and conditions of service of such staff must be attractive and generous enough to reduce vulnerability to financial inducement to sabotage elections. Secondly, the cost of violating their oath of office and succumbing to primordial or financial considerations to manipulate elections must be raised to become exceedingly high. Proven cases of election rigging and manipulation at any stage of the electoral process must attract very severe consequence.

    Election rigging enables governments to come to power in utter violation of the genuine will of the people. It is an act of violence that is the equivalent of military coup. Those who indulge in the atrocity must do so fully aware of the dire consequences if they are caught. Only the most draconian measures can help to force our errant Nigerian political elite to embrace attitudes and values conducive to any true transition to modernity. This is why this column is not unduly perturbed at the thought of ballot box snatchers being shot on sight.

     

    Buhari, Atiku and election rigging

    PMB’s directive to the armed forces and security agencies to deal ruthlessly with ballot box snatchers during today’s elections has elicited outrage in some quarters. He has been accused of exhibiting disregard for the rule law and disdain for due process. His critics insist that the Electoral Act provides sufficient penalties for ballot snatching and other forms of election rigging, which is at least two years imprisonment. But if widespread ballot box snatching provokes large scale breakdown of law and order it may be impossible even for courts to sit to enforce the Electoral Act. Draconian measures are needed to bring about some sanity in this regard.

    In siding with critics of PMB on this matter, Atiku gives the impression that he will be soft on election rigging if he is elected President. This brings to mind Atiku’s recent stunning revelation in Lagos that as Vice President, he was the mastermind behind the massive rigging by the PDP of the governorship elections in the South-west in 2003, an onslaught which only Tinubu’s Lagos was able to understand.Unapologetic, Atiku had asked his audience to give him another opportunity to repeat history perhaps on a scale of grander atrociousness. Ballot snatchers will certainly not be unhappy with an Atiku presidency.

  • Osinbajo hails Ilorin monarch on political neutrality

    Vice president Yemi Osinbajo took his door to door campaign to Ilorin, the Kwara state capital ahead of the forthcoming elections.

    Prof hailed the Emir of Ilorin, Alhaji Ibrahim Sulu-Gambari, for “maintaining balance “amongst political gladiators in the state.

    He said the emir has shown leadership and maintained balance despite the fact that some of his sons were contending with themselves in various elective positions in the 2019 general elections.

    The vice president spoke when he paid homage to the emir in his palace in Ilorin.

    He described the royal father as a respected judge during his active days on the bench.

    Osinbajo said he was in Ilorin to consult and have an interface with members of the All Progressive Congress ahead of the Saturday’s rescheduled presidential and National Assembly elections.

    Read Also: Osinbajo wades into Zamfara APC crisis

    “It is our desire that President Muhammadu Buhari be voted for second term and our governorship candidate, Alhaji AbdulRahaman Abdulrasaq and all our candidates for House of Representatives and Senate,” he said.

    He said the federal government will always “be grateful” to the emir for his “leadership, fairness and for maintaining balance” amongst his sons who are in the race for various elective offices.

    The VP was accompanied by the minister of Information and culture Lai Mohammed, APC governorship candidate in the state, Alhaji AbdulRahaman Abdulrasaq, former chairman, Federal character  commission (FCC), Prof Shuaib AbdulRaheem, Chairman Sobi FM ,and former governorship aspirant, Ahaji Lukman Mustapha among others.

    Responding, Sulu-Gambari who expressed delight over the visit, prayed for continued peace and development in the state and the country as a whole.

     

  • Police arrest four over killing of Kwara APC members

    The Kwara state police command on Thursday arrested four persons in connection with the attack on All Progressives Congress (APC) Kwara South senatorial district candidate Lola Ashiru.

    Suspected hoodlums loyal to Kwara south Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Senator Rafiu Ibrahim had on Tuesday allegedly attacked the campaign train of Architect Ashiru in Ojoku, Oyun local government area of Kwara state, killing two APC members in the process.

    No fewer than eight people still in the hospital also sustained bullet wound injuries and about 20 vehicles belonging to the APC chieftain were allegedly vandalized.

    The PDP in the state had disagreed with the allegation, accusing APC thugs of allegedly attacking its members and inflicting bullet injuries on six.

    Spokesperson of the command, Ajayi Okasanmi told THE NATION in a telephone the command was closing in on other suspects of the dastardly act.

    Read Also: Polls: Police reads riot act to politicians, hoodlums in Imo

    “Manhunt for the remaining fleeing suspects had since begun, while discreet investigation of the incident is ongoing.

    “For the umpteenth time, the command is restating its commitment to the safety of lives and property of the people of Kwara state.

    “While warning sternly that hooliganism, thuggery,  unlawful possession of firearms and other dangerous weapons will be met with superior forces and suspects arrested will be made to face the full wrath of the law.

    “Political party leaders are reminded of the peace accord they signed with respect to political campaigns in the State.

    “The command is appealing to the victims of this attack and their

    sympathizers not to result to self-help but to have confidence in the command that justice will not only be done but will be seen to have been done in this case,” Okasanmi.

    State Chairman of APC Hon Bashir Bolarinwa has urged security agents to investigate the matter bring perpetrators to book.

  • Police deploy more operatives in Kwara

    Ahead of Saturday’s Presidential and National Assembly elections, the Acting Inspector-General of Police (IG), Mohammed Adamu, has ordered the deployment of more cops in Kwara State.

    Policemen from Lagos and other states assumed to be peaceful have been drafted for onward deployment to Kwara, said to be one of the hotbeds for Saturday’s polls.

    The Nation gathered that the directive was issued on Tuesday following outbreak of violence in parts of the state.

    This is just as Police Commissioner Kayode Egbetokun has ordered sustained patrols of flashpoints and raids of criminals’ hideouts in Kwara in order to be ahead of the criminals and their sponsors.

    According to a statement from the command’s spokesman, Okasanmi Ajayi, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), the police boss also directed intensified security of all government assets, facilities, especially offices of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Ajayi said the commissioner employed all Area Commanders and Divisional Police Officers (DPOs) to double their efforts, as no stone would be left unturned in ensuring security of lives and property.

    He said: “The commissioner of police charged the officers to continue in that spirit and even do more. He reiterated the fact that no stone must be left unturned in the onerous task of ensuring the safety of lives and property of Kwara residents and the provision of adequate security for the postponed election.

    “The commissioner of police directed the immediate commencement of raids of criminals’ hideouts, emplacement of robust patrols, clearing the streets of inflammable materials such as used tyres, adequate security of public utilities, government facilities, INEC offices across the state and 24-hour aggressive situation reports of patrols of the streets.

    “He assured the public of their safety at all times, while advising potential law breakers to refrain from any untoward acts, as offenders will be arrested and be made to face the wrath of the law.”

  • I owe my appointment to Buhari, not Saraki – Lai Mohammed

    The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, says he owes his appointment as minister to President Muhammadu Buhari and no one else.

    In a statement issued on Monday in Abuja, the minister said it was “laughable’’ that anyone would seek to take credit for his appointment.

    Mohammed was reacting to a statement by Dr. Doyin Okupe the Special Adviser (Media) to the Director-General of the PDP Presidential Campaign Council, in which he gave credit to the Senate President, Bukola Saraki for the minister’s appointment.

    The minister said that the entire statement by Okupe, “is nothing but fiction writing, for which he deserves a hall of infamy award (in the fiction writing segment).

    “Not one of the claims he made in his statement is true.’’

    Mohammed challenged Okupe to make available to Nigerians any evidence he might have to support his assertion that the President sought the permission of Saraki to appoint him as minister.

    “We understand that Dr. Okupe’s cheap attempt at mud-throwing is nothing but a proxy fight, rooted deeply in the politics of Kwara State.

    Read Also: Game up for Saraki in Kwara-Lai Mohammed

    “We are aware that Okupe’s boss is feeling the heat emanating from the `O To Ge’ (enough is enough) movement in Kwara.

    “And that even the strongest of men will become disoriented and disillusioned at losing the support of a people who once venerated them to high heavens.

    “But that is a self-inflicted wound for which Okupe’s boss, an acclaimed slave master, has no one but himself to blame,’’ Mohammed said.

    The minister said he was very proud to lead the ‘O To Ge’ movement that is set to finally bring down the Berlin Wall of political hegemony in Kwara State and send Okupe’s boss into political oblivion.

    He said the movement will also free Okupe himself from merely being his master’s voice, so he can fully devote his time to his new-found pastime – fiction writing.

    NAN

  • APC to INEC: Don’t compromise your integrity

    All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kwara state has cautioned the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) against compromising its integrity and neutrality in the deployment of ad-hoc staff in the state, during the forthcoming general elections.

    Kwara state Chair of APC Chairman, Hon. Bashir Bolarinwa said the party has received information that those being posted across Kwara as Electoral Officers (EOs) and Technical Staff were nominated and trained by the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

    He also cited the case of an EO who was caught hiding boxes of ballot papers in an office in Kwara North by a vigilant Department of State Service (DSS) officer.

    He added that when the EO was forced to open the office by the DSS office he admitted to hiding the boxes, but claimed it was a mistake.

    Read Also: APC demands daily briefing from INEC

    Hon. Bolarinwa said: “We have also been inundated with the information that the technical staff in particular, most of whom are trained ICT experts, are known PDP members and are under strict instructions to manipulate the card readers in favour of the PDP.

    ”It is totally unacceptable that INEC, which is the umpire, will work in cahoots with any political party or even accept a list of ad-hoc staff from the parties. We are therefore calling on the security agencies to put all INEC staffers under strict surveillance to forestall any attempt to compromise them. On our part, we will also ensure that the process is not compromised by tainted staffers.

    ”As we have always said, we want a level playing field for all the political parties contesting the elections in the state. It is only then that the people can most freely exercise their franchise, and the oarty which has the support of the people will emerge victorious.”

    APC chair asked INEC to make available to all the parties the record of the sensitive materials they will be

    deploying to all local governments and wards across the state, ahead of Saturday’s Presidential and National Assembly elections.

    He said that would enable the parties to know what is deployed where, adding that it would forestall attempt by desperate politicians bent on rigging the elections.

     

  • Reject PDP’s candidates, AbdulRazaq tells Kwara voters

    Kwara State All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate, Mallam AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, has urged the residents to reject all Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidates at the poll.

    “They don’t have anything else for you. Go out on Saturday to vote for President Muhammadu Buhari and all our National Assembly candidates. This is the only way out for us,” AbdulRazaq said at a rally in Pakata, Ilorin, the state capital.

    He added: “We must end their misrule this Saturday. Once you vote all our candidates this weekend, we can complete the work on March 2.”

    The Director General of AbdulRazaq’s campaign organisation, Abdulfatai Yahaya Gambari, told the people, especially APC supporters to shun violence and refuse to be provoked.

    “We are for peace. All we have to do is to use our votes to end the tyranny against our people,” he said at the rally attended by thousands of supporters and locals in the area.

    Lukman Olayiwola Mustapha, a former governorship aspirant, said the antidote to misrule and oppression in Kwara State is to vote for all APC candidates.

    At another rally also yesterday in Offa, AbdulRazaq called for massive support for APC in return for quick socio-economic development of the state.

    He said the APC administration would restore public confidence in government and secure the state, a veiled reference to the security crisis that worsened with last year’s armed robbery in Offa where over 30 persons were killed.

    The rallies came a day after AbdulRazaq visited Asa Local Government Area where he promised to fix the perennial water crisis.

    He also promised to tap into the N100 billion Federal Government’s fund to address the constant clashes between indigenous farmers and herders’ communities.