Tag: leaders’

  • Of hate speech, elders and leaders

    Of hate speech, elders and leaders

    In those days when they were venerated as custodians of wisdom, elders dutifully rebuked children for insulting those older than them. Foul language attracted a frown. When the matter was thought to be serious, the cane surfaced with a whack on the head.

    Not anymore.

    Respect and moderation have lost their meanings. Public discourse has taken on the colour of abuse. Politics has become toxic; a do-or-die affair.

    Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo’s warning that hate speech will be treated as terrorism has somehow dampened the vociferous push for the dismemberment of Nigeria. The argument has been downgraded to restructuring. The debates are exciting.

    But what is hate speech? Is there really a clear correlation between hate speech and terrorism?

    The Arewa youths who issued the Igbo an October deadline to quit the North have since withdrawn their threat. Our hearts were pounding. It was like awaiting the arrival of some hurricane. But Independent People of Biafra (IPOB) leader Nnamdi Kanu keeps opening his mouth wide.

    We need to draw the line between hate speech and all that blabbing and babbling by our politicians. Besides, we should do nothing to endanger freedom of speech, which is a fundamental pillar of democracy.

    Consider Senator  Isa Misau (APC, Bauchi), whom the police have been seeking to take in since he levelled some allegations against the leadership. He said officers paid as much as N2.5m for special promotion through the Police Service Commission (PSC). Furious, the police went after the retired officer and accused him of deserting the Force.

    The lawmaker went ballistic. He hurled more allegations at the police and threatened to report the matter to the Senate.

    Who will investigate the police? All we hear are threats against Misau, who has been accused of everything, including forgery, defamation and perjury. None of these charges has been proven.  I suspect the police may one day slam the gentleman with a charge for making hate speeches against their revered leadership.

    The Senate will respond by summoning the police chief, who must come in uniform, to explain why he allowed his good offices to be used in fractions aimed at lowering  the esteem of a distinguished senator.

    A bill that will hold the record of being the fastest to be passed into law seems to be on the way to the Senate. The hate speech bill has won the heart of the much respected Senate. Renowned law teacher Prof Itse Sagay had accused the lawmakers of fleecing the treasury by taking home huge salaries and allowances, which remain secret to the taxpayer. Instead of denying this with facts and figures, senators tore at him with invectives.

    Unrepentant, the professor challenged the lawmakers to come clean on the allegations. They refused and accused him of making hate speeches against the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. We all know that the Senate harbours our distinguished men and women of whom we are so proud. Hate speeches against them will not be allowed to gain credibility and thereby bring the lawmakers ridicule, odium and scorn from right thinking Nigerians.

    Nevertheless, it won’t  be out of place to ask: when will the Senate bring down the gavel on this allegation of jumbo salaries and allowances by baring it all? Are senators afraid of the public backlash if their pay is found to be indeed outrageous? Or is it a matter of mere pride – that the salary and allowances are private and personal?  But the cash comes from the public purse, doesn’t it?

    Will Sagay now be seized and hurled before the senators for alleged terrorism to test the law?

    Just as Misau has stood by his allegations against the police, Senator Aisha “Mama Taraba”Alhassan has remained unshaken in her resolve to dump President Muhammadu Buhari for former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar should the latter choose to run for president in 2019. She said so on a visit to Atiku and sealed it all with an interview on the BBC Hausa Service.

    Some patriots, including those who call themselves Buharists (I still don’t get what that means) , among them Kaduna Governor Nasir El-Rufai, are falling over one another to defend the President. They are calling for Alhassan’s head, accusing her of disloyalty and of making hate speeches against Buhari, who has so far demonstrated the wisdom of a clever old man in this matter. Mama Taraba remains the minister of Women Affairs. Sycophancy, indeed, has its limits.

    Alhassan’s courage and sincerity in a society that lacks bold men and women and hacks down its brave ones have been praised. Hers is surely no hate speech. But many have descended on El-Rufai for showing his hand in the matter. They have gone into the archives to dig out what his former boss, former President Olusegun Obasanjo, said of him in reply to what El-Rufai wrote about him in his book, “The accidental public servant”, which many have predicted to be the forerunner of a more current volume to be titled, “The accidental governor”.

    Of El-Rufai, Obasanjo wrote: ” Nasir’s penchant for reputation savaging is almost pathological…I recognised his weaknesses, the worst being his inability to be loyal to anybody or any issue consistently for long, but only to Nasir El-Rufai… My vivid recollection of him is penchant for lying, for unfair embellishment of stories and his inability to sustain loyalty for long…”

    A memo El-Rufai wrote to President Buhari in which he declared the APC a failure has bobbed up from  nowhere. All this in an attempt to expound the view that of the governor, it cannot be said “he is as straight as a gun”.

    So long for a Buharist and his ilk.

    Just after the Mama Taraba bombshell, Atiku stoked up a fresh argument, saying he had been abandoned by the APC, which he claimed to have helped to win the 2015 election. Besides, he was obviously saying that he had been tarred – wrongly, he insists – with the brush of corruption. He challenged anybody with proof of his alleged corruption to bring it up or keep quiet forever.

    Poor Atiku. So discomfited was he  that he told his traducers to purge themselves of the wrong feeling that every rich man must have made it not by  dint of hard work but by some undue advantage – fraud, to be precise.

    He said he did not become the vice-president in 1999 as a pauper because he had been a successful investor after his retirement from the Customs Service. “If Atiku is a thief merely because of his resourcefulness and successful investments, my political enemies should tell Nigerians the source of their stupendous wealth,” Atiku said. He did not name his political enemies. Was the Turaki Adamawa afraid of being charged with making hate speeches?

    There is no need to get emotional over these matters, Your Excellency. The hate speech law will soon be here to put the purveyors of these allegations against you in their place. You are not the only one being maligned.

    The other day a friend sent me a photograph of the devastation of the hurricane that has ravaged parts of the United States with the caption: “Florida. We thank God that our own disaster is politicians defrauding us, not nature.”

    Now a note of caution to all those who -without proof – accuse the Senate of harbouring criminals, liars, pedophiles, forgers and drug pushers:  Watch out. The hate speech law will soon be activated and you may face terrorism charges.

     

    Biafra: Time to roll back the tanks

    The crisis in some parts of the Southeast should not be allowed to escalate. The separatist leader, Nnamdi Kanu, is on bail, but he keeps rocking the boat through his speeches, in violation of his  bail terms. He appears to have successfully rallied behind his cause a large army of youths, some of who have sworn to go the whole hog with him.

    The military has launched “Operation Python Dance” to rein in criminals in the Southeast. It has said that the action is not targeted at the Independent People of Biafra (IPOB).

    A group of soldiers passing through Kanu’s home have clashed with the activists. IPOB said somebody died. The military claimed nobody died. Soldiers stormed the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) office in Umuahia, smashing work tools.

    A policeman was killed yesterday in Port Harcourt.

    The Igbo man is naturally endowed with skills to excel in a united Nigeria. What he should push for is an environment where he can use his God-given talents without any hinderance, and a fair share of the national patrimony. Not secession.

    Boko Haram is still on the rampage. Kidnappers are on the loose. Armed robbers remain in business and poverty is rumbling through the land.  This is not the time for another national upheaval.

    Let’s muffle the drums of war. Let’s roll back the tanks.

  • APC leaders praise Ugwuanyi’s bi-partisan approach to governance

    APC leaders praise Ugwuanyi’s bi-partisan approach to governance

    Recently, members and leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) converged at the Convention Hall of Nike Lake Resort, Enugu, in solidarity with one of their staunch members from Enugu State, the Nigerian Ambassador to Republic of India with Concurrent Accreditation to Bangladesh and Nepal, Major-General Chris Sunday Eze (retd), who was accorded a befitting reception by Enugu State Government in respect of his new appointment.

    The auspicious event, which attracted notable leaders of the APC, namely: Senator Ken Nnamani, Senator Jim Nwobodo, Director-General of Voice of Nigeria (VON), Mr. Osita Okechukwu, Senator Fidelis Okoro, former governorship candidate of the APC, Chief Okey Ezea, former Speaker of Enugu State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon Eugene Odoh, Chief Gbazuagu Nweke Gbazuagu, Senator Emma Anosike, among others, provided a veritable platform for them to appreciate the uncommon leadership style of Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi’s Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led government in Enugu State.

    The National Vice Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the South East region, Hon. Emma Eneukwu, in his goodwill message commended Ugwuanyi for his bi-partisan approach to governance, saying that such an exceptional disposition has united leaders of the state, irrespective of their political differences. He stated without mincing words that the governor has created a peaceful atmosphere that has made it possible for everybody to be one when it comes to issues concerning the state.

    “I want to thank God for today, because this thanksgiving signifies the fact that whatever we do in this state, we are one. Whether you’re PDP, you’re APC; you’re all these political parties, once any of us achieves anything that is worth commending. It is worthy of note that the kind of governor we have is one who appreciates your talent irrespective of your party”, Eneukwu said.

    Also speaking at the event, the former President of the Senate and a chieftain of the APC, Senator Ken Nnamani, said Ugwuanyi has demonstrated political maturity in the state by creating an ambience of peace and tranquility where everybody is accorded his or her due respect irrespective of political divide.

    Nnamani applauded Ugwuanyi for providing good governance and quality leadership in the state, adding that the governor has, through the reception for Ambassador Eze, reaffirmed that he is “a governor for everybody”.

    He called on other states to emulate what is happening in Enugu State, stating that “our National Vice Chairman has alluded to the fact that we are enjoying peace in Enugu State, and we are enjoying somebody that has a large heart, not minding his political affiliation”.

    The Director-General of Voice of Nigeria (VON), Mr. Osita Okechukwu, also appreciated the governor’s bi-partisan disposition, saying that the APC has not and will not take such a rare gesture for granted.

    From the foregoing, it is apparent that the policy thrust of Ugwuanyi’s administration, anchored on peace and grassroots development initiatives, has yielded enormous progress and goodwill, resulting in the support the government enjoys from the opposition political parties. The governor has, through the above initiatives, redefined governance and brought it closer to the doorstep of the people – the true heroes of democracy.

    This uncommon attribute has gone a long way in reducing political tension in the state, and has provided the platform in which the government has thrived successfully in providing dividends of democracy to the people of the state in spite of the daunting economic recession in the country. It has caused an enduring political evolution that needs to be distilled into the lexicon of other states and the country indeed for the stability of the polity as Senator Nnamani opined.

    It would be recalled that Ugwuanyi, during his maiden media parley in June 2015 (shortly after his inauguration), organised to brief journalists of his action plans for the state as well as his administration’s approach towards achieving a harmonious relationship among the political class in the state, disclosed his intention to run a peaceful, inclusive and purposeful government. He said that his administration will accommodate all former governors of the state and other leaders, stressing that “everybody is our friend and the era of politics is over”.

    In view of the above, one is laden with emotions to note that the recent verdict by leaders of the major opposition political party in the state, the APC, reconfirms that Ugwuanyi has kept faith with his peace and development initiatives. The APC’s kudos for Gov. Ugwuanyi has further affirmed that the governor has, against all odds, remained focused and steadfast in his vision to continue to entrench good governance in the state, while maintaining an intrinsic peaceful relationship with all spheres of the society both the poor and the rich  an enduring leadership legacy that has ushered in a new vista for aggressive development of the state.

    Apart from commendations from the APC, the state chapter of the Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC), the umbrella organisation of all the political parties in Nigeria, had during the 2017 democracy day celebration, scored Ugwuanyi   high on good governance, peace and infrastructural development, expressing delight at “the governor’s exhibition of vision, candour, humility, simplicity, inclusiveness and other uncommon leadership qualities that have endeared him to the people of the state”.

    It is also pertinent to note that the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Enugu State, where Gov. Ugwuanyi presides as the state leader, also enjoys the quantum flame of the governor’s uncommon leadership style.

    The governor has, through the administration’s peace and development initiatives, systematically eschewed all endemic factors that led to bickering, disunity or infighting in the PDP and has galvanized party leaders to work assiduously as one family for the progress of the party and its government in the state. This no doubt, informed the recent well deserved endorsement of his re-election in 2019 by the PDP.

    The State Executive Committee (SEC) of the PDP, the highest decision-making organ of the party before the State Congress, had, a few weeks ago “unanimously endorsed Gov. Ugwuanyi for second term in office in 2019 for his outstanding achievements and commitment to peace and participatory democracy”.

    In all, it is explicit that Gov. Ugwuanyi’s penchant for peace, good governance and inter-party relationship have brought enormous benefits to Enugu State and have reshaped the political landscape of the state for a responsible and peaceful engagement in the governance of the state.

    • Amoke writes from Enugu State
  • Some PDP leaders deserve to be flogged –APC’s Deputy National chair Segun Oni

    Some PDP leaders deserve to be flogged –APC’s Deputy National chair Segun Oni

    The Deputy National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and governorship hopeful in Ekiti State, Chief Segun Oni, told select journalists why he wants to run for the coveted seat. The former governor also touched on some national issues, especially the kind of governance visited on the nation by the former President Goodluck Jonathan-led administration, with a verdict that all those who participated in Jonathan’s government deserve to be punished publicly. PAUL UKPABIO was there.

    You were once a governor in Ekiti State. What was the experience like?

    It was very interesting. I contested for governorship because I had ideas that I wanted to try out. So, I was very excited that I had an opportunity to try out those ideas. They worked, and I’m very grateful to God for that.

    If given the chance to be the governor again, what would you want to correct?

    Most of the ideas that we had, had been abandoned. The only thing that might need my immediate correction is the micro-credit scheme that we did. We are not going to bring micro credit back the way we did it before, but definitely, we have to do something to give people access to credit, which is what one was trying to achieve. The scheme would undergo complete repackaging. What is important for me now is new thinking. All over the world, we have not given enough attention to young people. We are bringing children into the world and their standard of living is much lower than our own, but we are not bothered. We want to survive first before we think of our children. Time is ticking. This is not an Ekiti problem. It is not a Nigerian problem. It is a problem for all humanity. That is why you see people, out of frustration, being trafficked. The trafficked person is first and foremost a frustrated person. Even when you tell them, don’t allow yourself to be trafficked, a frustrated person wants a way out. Whether that way is reasonable or not is not his immediate concern. Many of them pay to be ferried across the Meditarenean, and they know that not more than one in two would get to the destination. Some even go through the desert where they are exposed to extreme danger and some die in the process. But they are not bothered. And if you check their age, the average age of these desperate people is below 40. So, it is the failure of our system not only in Nigeria but the world over. We must provide for the younger generation. Even if you look at the so-called terrorists, what is their age? They are young people. If you look at the one that we call home boy terrorists, which nobody wants to admit to that they are homeboy terrorists; the guy who on his own enters a night club, brings out his pistol and decides to level up a few heads before he is over-powered. They would say he is not a terrorist but has gone bunkers. The guy who all on his own drives into a crowd and he is not a jihad terrorist, he is definitely going to be a home boy terrorist. What is their average age? It must have suggested that they are people who are in their productive years but are frustrated. The energy they would have used to serve themselves and humanity, is what they are diverting to all that. So, this is the time for us to call for attention to the plight of the youth, and we are not going to do that by singing on the pages of newspapers. We have to create an opportunity here to affect the youth, to make the youth a frontline agenda and to do our own martial plan for the youth. That, for me, is the most interesting challenge I want to go for. I’m not saying I know the answer, but they are beginning to come from people I have thrown this question to and were challenged also that yes, we can solve this problem. That is more important to me than building roads. Nobody has built more roads than me in this state. I did the blue hospital. I did the best eye hospital in Africa here in Ekiti, and in the short period it operated, it recovered many sights, both from within the South- West and all over Nigeria; even from outside the country.

    People say it was former President Olusegun Obasanjo who imposed you as governor the first time you came. What is the story behind your emergence at that time?

    When we were going to have the primaries or before the primaries, three years before the primaries, I was doing micro credit. I started a free JAMB forms and lecture in the state. Every year, I was giving qualified people free JAMB forms and 15 weeks of coaching in every local government. I was paying. If you do your arithmetic, you will discover that it runs into millions of naira. So, I’m sure the delegates picked my name� by goodwill. After the JAMB, I started a scholarship scheme, because many of them did well in JAMB and needed to go to the university. In terms of goodwill, I have never had any coma or dent in my career. I worked at Xerox and many places. So, if there is any screening about who will be the party’s candidate, I don’t think I will fail it. But you would remember that the PDP had been embarrassed by the fact that it had to support the determination of the tenure of a governor here and they think that okay, we are not just going to do with primary, we would combine the primary with the assessment of the individuals. Chief Ropo Adesanya was the Chairman of the party at that time. Unfortunately, before the primary, he had a problem and he was on crutches. On the day of the primary, he climbed the dais to address all the aspirants, and he said it very clearly that the party had said he should address us that the primary was not everything; it would be combined with the assessment of individuals to know who would represent the party. So, 1, 2, 3 and after three, I think the next gap was more than 500 marks between me and the next person who came fourth. If they exercised what they had told us about and they now picked one person, how does that become an imposition? I was there when they opened the ballot box. There were three boxes, and I had more than 40 per cent, and we were about 16 contestants. I had more than 40 per cent of the call in the first box, and they stopped. They met. I don’t know what they discussed. But some of them are still alive. Immediately I saw that, I believed that they had made their decision. It was not local government voting, so you cannot say that delegates were not voting according to their local governments. We had just three ballot boxes for the 16 of us. You just dropped your ballot in any of the three boxes. By the time they resumed, the story changed. The guy who was representing me was very naive. He was not conversant with the procedure. He was not asking to see what was going on. He was just calling and calling, and what I heard was that, that was when the people did whatever they had to do. But I never complained and I did not say anything. So, I believe, and I’m saying this now, that I didn’t lose that primary. If I was not made the governor, I would not have also talked about it. Immediately I was told the result, I asked my team to go inside our save and take N1 million and give to the person who came first, because it should be normal that the person who came first is the one we are all going to support. The primary was not conclusive. Because to be conclusive, you have to score more than 50 per cent. None of us scored as much. Yinka Akerele scored the highest, Prof. Ojo followed and I came third. Oni from Okemesi came fourth. And I said they should go and give N1 million to Akerele, and I told my people to also give him two buses, because I would say that we were the most prepared of the groups that were there. I also told my people to let us go round and thank all our delegates and tell them that this is the person you will vote for at the gubernatorial election. But eventually, that was not to be. I think the lesson for me is that human beings can only strive, it is only God that can strike. And if He strikes, nobody has an option. I’m saying this for the first time. I don’t mind the controversy, but individuals will justify their actions. So, when I kept hearing that I was imposed, it sounded so annoying. Because on rating basis, which of the candidates would have rated higher than me? What had they put in the lives of other people, young or old, that would have made them rate higher than me? So, if I rated number one in goodwill, and I was number three by the result of the primary, what stops me from being number one? And I don’t think I was number three. But let us assume I was number three, what stopped me from being number one? Let me also say categorically, until I became the candidate, I was not close to Baba Obasanjo. People would just say all sorts of things without being fair to the old man. He was doing what was best for the party so that the party would not have a candidate that would go the way of the previous person in future. I was not imposed by Obasanjo. Anybody who wants to counter all have said now is free and we would talk. But in terms of goodwill, I was number one. Let us also not forget that the primary is supposed to be an indication of popularity, because the party did not want to risk giving its ticket to somebody who could not win an election. And then at that time, the people of the state knew who was in the best position to command votes. More than 10,000 candidates benefited from the free JAMB forms and coaching for the three years the programme lasted. And also in our strategy room, we said if every person who benefited was 18 years and above, let us assume that they would have parents and two other siblings. So if you assume that five votes would come on account of one beneficiary, that is 50,000 plus votes. The number of votes you needed then to be governor of Ekiti, and it is not much different now, was not up to 200,000. So it means my personal goodwill was already worth more than a quater of the votes, whether I’m in party A or party B. So, people who decided this thing knew what they were doing. Ask any other person who wants to querry it what was in the basket of the goodwill of any other person. I don’t want to keep talking this way. That I’m quiet does not mean that what they are saying is true. It is not true. And if the party wants to take a decision again tomorrow on this same issue, I believe that they would have taken the decision they took.

    There is this story making the rounds that your governorship ambition is being backed by Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. How true is this?

    I’m being backed first by God. And let me say very clearly that nobody could have achieved what we are seeing on the field now, if he does not have the backing of God. And I believe, I will be backed; note my answer, I will be backed by Asiwaju Tinubu. I will be backed by Baba Akande, just as I know that I will be backed by President Muhammadu Buhari, and also by the Vice President and by everybody who wants the party to win and have a good run here. I am not backed yet, but I will be backed, and I’m working towards that. But I’m not backed by anybody yet. I’m backed only by God the Almighty. But it is a very good run so far.

    You were known to belong to the PDP before you crossed over to the APC. Recently there was this statement made by someone that APC’s governorship ticket is not for somebody who does not have a progressive background, which was believed to be a veiled reference to those who defected from other parties. What is your reaction to this statement?

    My reaction would be to ask who has a progressive background? Fortunately, I have been governor of this state. What is progressive politics? Progressive politics is about care and attention to the under-privileged. It is about equity and equitable distribution. When I was governor of this state, I was the first to start a scholarship scheme. There was no scholarship scheme before I came to this place. The state that was then called Fountain of Knowledge. I started the scholarship scheme. Bursary was the only thing the state was doing, and I told the local governments to take over bursary and they were doing it. So, in addition to bursary, we have scholarship. I introduced subsidy for parents in terms of nutrition for their children twice a week with chocolate tea and egg. Yet I’m not a progressive, I did free health care. I introduced quarterly free surgeries and we had more than 2,000 people who underwent surgeries, who are alive today but would not have been alive. Yet I’m not a progressive. I abolished the practice of carrying bench and desk to school and ensured that every pupil had full complement of desks and benches. I ensured that every school had full complement of library, and not just ensured that free textbooks were given to students at senior and junior secondary, we opened the gate to ensure that the rich and the poor had equal level of access. Yet I’m not a progressive. I recruited more than 4,000 people into the civil service in one day, and I said it must be by merit. I did not appoint one and I did not allow my colleagues to do. I said everybody whose child had the advantage should take the advantage because I wanted equity. Yet I’m not a progressive. I can just continue. Things that meant subsidy, openness, fairness were and still my principles. If Baba Awolowo was a progressive because he did education, education was virtually free here then. I was supplying free textbooks, free food and furniture. Other people who are progressives, what would they have done? And if anybody is a progressive and he’s running for this election, we should show what they have done for the people. Even before I became anything, I told you about free JAMB, free coaching and scholarships. So let all the progressives who are contesting show their credentials. What did they do, whether they were in public office or not? I did not respond because I thought it was not worth responding to. But then, it was not because I don’t have progressive credentials. I believe that without mincing words, nobody faults my credentials.

    In view of the southern agenda in the state, how are you going to overcome the mounting opposition to your ambition?

    Well, I would say that, that agitation is legitimate and fair, because you cannot preach brotherliness when some people are feeling short-changed. But I want to say very clearly that every opportunity at contesting election in this state, I have never excluded any zone. It wasn’t that people from a particular zone were asked not to contest. All the three contested before me and against me. Right from when Otunba Adebayo contested, there were only three parties. Incidentally, the three gubernatorial candidates came from the three zones: Otunba Adebayo from the Central won; Prof. Adeniran from the North came second and Dr Olowoporoku from the South came third, and that was the first governorship election in the state. There has never been a time when any zone was excluded. But even then, I believe it is our responsibility as leaders to prepare a marshal plan to help our brothers and sisters to have access to it. But for us now as a party, as APC, the most important thing is to win and take power; it is not to allocate power and lose it. If we allocate and lose it, God forbid, we would have done ourselves a very grave injustice. I believe that we should be looking for who can win for us, not necessarily where that person comes from. I will tell you that in terms of love for the south, those who are talking, including those from the south, would need to labour to prove their love for the south over and above what I have done. When I was governor, apart from the deputy governor, the three most important positions in the state were held at the same time by people from the south: the positions of minister, speaker of the House of Assembly and Secretary to the Government. It had never happened. It didn’t happen before me and it did not happen after me. So, the people of the south would know that I’m indeed a friend. If I was born there, I would not do more than that. Apart from that, I was a member of the PDP and around 2012, I was informed that PDP survey showed that my reputation was intact and that I have tremendous goodwill. Therefore, the party will find it more convenient to have me run for election for them, but I said no, I would not run. They asked why I would not run and I told them to go back to Ekiti, ask for Adeyeye, Bejide, Aluko 1 and Aluko 2. They said who are these people? I said Aluko 1 is the former Deputy Governor of the state while Aluko 2 is a former Senator. Pick any of those four and I will back them and I would work ruthlessly hard to deliver that person. All these people that are talking, how many of them would be offered the governorship ticket of a state on a platter and he would look away? I looked away because I felt we should go in there, but I learnt a lesson: it is only what you have in your hand that you can give out, otherwise you waste it. That is why I’m doing what I’m doing. I’m doing this out of conviction. I don’t want us to waste this opportunity. So I believe that if I run, I would win. I don’t know of any other person.

    There is this insinuation that you are planning to defect back to the PDP…

    Let me say this, it is good that all these questions are coming in. But if I were the one they are telling outside, I would ask how did they know? Did you attend a meeting with him, where he planned the evil? People who are saying these are exhibiting what I would call low intellect. Why will I be trying to go back to PDP? Did I owe PDP money which I have to go and pay to them? Why will I be going there? I have been here. We fought the PDP out of power with everything we have got. Many of these people who are talking were either bystanders, people who didn’t believe in the agenda of President Muhammadu Buhari and who are now trying to find ways of rubbishing people who believe. Let me tell you, wherever I am, is where I am. I am a member of the APC and by the grace of God the Deputy National Chairman. I don’t know any other party. People have asked me. They have come to me to say these people who are trying to tarnish your image, why don’t you show them where the people of Ekiti are by leaving this party? Pick any party, we would support you. And I said to them, don’t come here to insult me. I said honour is the greatest virtue, I said if I don’t pick this ticket, I would not go to any other party. I don’t have a plan B. They would say let’s have a plan B, me, I don’t have a plan B. My plan A is APC. My plan B is APC. If there is a plan C, it will be APC. That is me, because I’m not desperate. Why would I be desperate? I know that honour has no equivalent. So if anybody says he will go to the PDP, the question you should ask is, did he tell you so? Did you hold a meeting with him?

    Do you have any romance with Governor Ayo Fayose?

    Romance? How can I have a romance with a man? I don’t have any political relationship with him. But I regard everybody as a brother. I don’t have enemies. One of the things people see in my politics is that I don’t have enemies. I try as much as possible to affect people positively, because access to me is very simple and easy. Even by my opponents. So, if anybody is talking of me having a romance with Governor Fayose, that is not true.

    You are the most attacked aspirant in APC. Are you comfortable with this or what do you think is responsible for that?

    If I were not the most attacked aspirant, I would be afraid, because I’m the leader, the one in front. You want somebody to be throwing stones backward as we are running? He would be throwing his stones forward. Whoever is in front of him, he would throw his stones at. So, I’m not surprised. I’m not discouraged. That is the way it should be. I should be attacked by everybody coming behind, throwing their stones at me, trying to malign me, trying to lie against me, and so on. It is only me who has a responsibility to show maturity. I should not attack anybody. In fact, other than clarifying issues, I should not throw stones at anybody. I should not malign anybody. Who would I be throwing stones at? I’m not surprised. I’m not angered by it. Except that I can always take time to explain issues away, so that they don’t become facts. That is why I’m even saying some of these things, because when falsehood becomes translated into different languages, it is fast becoming a fact and you must curb it. That is why I have taken time to respond to the issues you have raised.

    If given the APC ticket, how do you hope to overcome the influence and power of incumbency of Governor Ayo Fayose?

    Let me say this very clearly, and I also would challenge you journalists to go out there and talk to people. The people of Ekiti State have made up their minds on what they want, and they are saying it very clearly everywhere—beer palours and other public places. Go and find out. If you conduct a short survey in Ado-Ekiti, Ikere and all other major towns in the state, you would know what people are saying. That would tell you how difficult or easy it could be. That is the reason I decided to give in to the pressure to run. I didn’t want to, but I know that if I didn’t come or answer the people’s call, I would have been the man who was responsible for our defeat, God forbid. So, find out. Feel free. Talk to our people. Find out. I would suggest that as you are leaving here now for Ado-Ekiti, take different public transports, put your question to them and find out what people would say. That is what Ekiti people are saying at the moment.

    Some people say Buhari’s performance would make it difficult for your party to win the election. What is your take on this?

    I disagree with that. I would say President Buhari has performed excellently well. The economy that we inherited was prostrate, completely down. The pilferers and the thieves of the last government had taken it down completely. I’m sure if people remember where we were coming from, all they would be doing is clapping for President Buhari, even at the level the economy is today. There is no economy in the world where you would take so much money out as if we are running the economy of America, and where people would steal so much. They said they took 56 buildings from somebody and Nigerians are even not talking. Who paid for it? The Nigerian economy. And if they are taking all those money out and siphoning them into private pockets, do you think this economy would stay? The economy we inherited was a hollow shell. They have destroyed it completely and it is now the responsibility of President Muhammadu Buhari to raise it up. It is like waking up a dead body. If you wake up a dead body and you are successful at waking it up, that body would not begin to run the moment you wake it up. The people we should be angry with are the people who plundered this country so hard; people who when they stole the budget and they were not satisfied started stealing crude oil, exporting crude oil with zero cost of production to the Far East and other places. When your cost of production is zero, you can export at any price. And they were now doing it and Nigerians were not talking about them. God forbid that they continued. Maybe they would have sold the reserve itself and then we would have nothing to even look at in future. Nigerians have to be very grateful to President Muhammadu Buhari for stopping that rot and for rebuilding the economy. You don’t expect the economy to do better than it is doing at the moment. It is doing very well. It was bottomed out and it is now moving up. No magic could have done more. And if anybody wants to quarrel about the state of the economy, he should bring the PDP people and flog them. Honestly, Nigerians should bring a bench to the Eagles Square and ask the youths whose future they have destroyed to flog those who plundered the economy of this nation. You all know those who should go on top of this bench for thorough flogging.

  • PFN urges tribal leaders to eschew hate speech

    The Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN) has called on the political class and tribal leaders to eschew hate speeches if they want a strong, virile and united Nigeria.

    It said it was important for all Nigerians to imbibe and adopt the spirit of selfless life for the purpose of moving the nation forward.

    National President of PFN, Reverend Felix Omobude, who stated this in his Sallah message, urged the Muslim faithful to demonstrate the virtues of love and sacrifice which are the hallmarks of the Eid-El-Kabir festival.

    Dr. Omobude’s Sallah message, which was contained in a press statement endorsed by his media aide, Deacon Ralph Okhiria, enjoined the adherents of Islam to be obedient to God by showing love towards one another.

    According to the statement, “The two holy books (the Bible and the Koran) talk about sacrifice. Therefore, we should be ready at all times to sacrifice for one another, irrespective of our religious affiliations, and also to make the desired sacrifices for the peace, growth and development of Nigeria.

    “With fervent prayer and love, Nigerians can live together in peace as brothers and sisters, and contribute to the progress and unity of the country.

    “It is important for all Nigerians to imbibe and adopt a spirit of living a selfless life for the purpose of moving our great nation forward.”

  • Igbo groups to IPOB, MASSOB: political leaders behind region’s woes

    Igbo groups to IPOB, MASSOB: political leaders behind region’s woes

    The leadership of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and the Movement for the Actualisation of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) got a piece of advice yesterday – blame the political leadership of the Southeast for the region’s woes.

    The advice came from two Southeast socio-cultural and political groups, the Igbo Peoples’ Congress (IPC) and The Igbo Aborigenes (TIB). The groups said IPOB and MASSOB should look inward for those who mortgaged their future.

    They said: “The leadership of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) AND Movement for the Actualisation of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) to blame political leadership in Igbo land who have been pauperising Igbos over the years before blaming the North or other Nigerians for the Igbo woes.”

    In a statement by their spokesmen Pastor Okey Colbert and Chidi Obisike, the groups noted that Igbo had occupied all positions, except the executive presidency, and this did not translate to anything positive for Ndigbo.

    The statement reads: “During the Jonathan regime, Igbo constituted more than 50 per cent of his inner cabinet and yet nothing was brought for Ndigbo by these appointees, except their families, girlfriends and bootlickers.  It is these people that IPOB and MASSOB should first query before querying Nigeria.

    “What about Ralph Uwazuruike who made Igbos to be the minority of the majorities, courtesy of preventing Igbos from participating in the 2006 National Census? Is that not affecting Ndigbo today and do we blame Nigeria also for that?

    “What Nigeria has done to Ndigbo is lamentable but what Igbos have done to themselves is even more lamentable.

    “How many times do our Igbo governors and leaders make concrete case to empower our suffering youths as Niger Delta governors and leaders strenuously made case for the amnesty deal which has now seen to the empowerment of more than 200.000 Niger Delta youths and their placement on a stipend of N65,000 every month?

    “Who speaks for the suffering Igbo Youths in Nigeria and why would they not be agitating when they are abandoned by their own leaders and by Nigeria? Nnamdi Kanu and pro-Biafra agitators should ask themselves these questions and not just blaming Nigeria and the North for all Igbo woes.

    “In the house of Ralph Uwazuruike today are all manner of state-of-the-art cars and he has luxurious estates everywhere at the expense of thousands of Igbo youths who were mowed down by Nigerian security forces in the Biafran agitation. Have IPOB AND MASSOB members looked into all these?”

    “IPC and Igbo Aborigenes support Restructuring or Referendum in the alternative, but pro-Biafra agitators must ask relevant questions and put their searchlight on Igbo land first before looking outside.

  • Bad leaders behind Mushin crisis, says ex-lawmaker

    What happened in Mushin during the last local government election does not give cause for alarm, a former lawmaker, Muyiwa Fedeyi has said.

    Fadeyi, who was in the Lagos State House of Assembly between 1999 and 2003, said the controversy over who got the ticket to run, was uncalled for.

    He praised former Lagos State Governor Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, for re-directing Yoruba politics and putting the Southwest in the mainstream of national politics.

    He urged the Yoruba race to rally round Asiwaju in his plan for the Southwest region recently occupy in the political setting of the country.

    “Ordinarily, I refrain from commenting on issues that are controversial in nature, but l am now being forced to comment because those who are in a position to intervene when things seem to be going wrong but decided to keep quiet, are themselves culpable when eventually the walls come down collapsing,” Fadeyi said.

    “What goes around comes around, most of the people shouting imposition are themselves past beneficiaries of imposition. That’s the truth,” he said”.

    He noted that in the past, the Yoruba had always been in opposition while other ethnic group enjoyed the spoil of controlling the Federal government, especially during the first and second republic.

    “Indeed, at the inception of the present dispensation, despite the fact that a Yorubaman in the person of former President Olusegun Obasanjo was the president, a large percentage of the states in western region were in opposition, including our beloved Lagos State. Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu redirected the western region politics and what we have now is a situation where you have the Yoruba at the thick of things in Abuja we even have a Yorubaman as Acting-president.

    “To my mind, Asiwaju is a personality to be respected and put in the highest esteem by every right thinking Yorubaman and other Nigerians. It is therefore appalling to read on the pages of newspapers, our fellow Yorubamen writing rubbish about Asiwaju in the press. If the ladder they used to get to the top is weak, they should rally round such ladder and make it stronger,” Fadeyi said.

  • Kashamu to PDP leaders: don’t kill our party in Southwest

    Kashamu to PDP leaders: don’t kill our party in Southwest

    The senator representing Ogun East, Buruji Kashamu, has urged national leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) not to kill the party in the Southwest.

    Kashamu, in a statement, said one or two people should not be allowed to control the party in the Southwest.

    He said: “I wish to urge our national leaders not to allow these people to destroy the party in the Southwest. If they want the party to survive in the Southwest, they must accommodate everyone. They should not allow one or two people to control the party in the Southwest.

    “We have many tested, educated and intelligent leaders in the Southwest. The structure of the PDP in the Southwest should not be left in the hands of some selfish impostors, who cannot mobilise for the party and look for resources to build it, alongside other meaningful leaders in the Southwest.

    “For instance, during the 2015 elections, one of these people was accused of misappropriating N300 million of the N500 million meant for the Presidential election. The matter is still with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    “It is normal for people to disagree. Sometimes, such disagreements, especially in a political party, could even shake it to its foundation. But, at the end of the day, it can only make it stronger. It was the laws of the land and our justice system that rescued the party and made it to stand today. We should stop all acts of impunity, lawlessness and illegality. That is the only way the party can stand the test of time.”

    He faulted dissolution of the party’s executive councils in Ogun and Southwest, saying this was wrong since the courts had resolved issues of the authentic delegates to the National Convention from Ogun State and the Southwest.

    He likened the rumbling in the party in Ogun and Southwest to “a contest among individuals interested in strengthening the PDP as a viable political party that aggregates and caters for the interests of all members and persons”.

    Kashamu urged national leaders to avoid the distraction posed by some self-serving persons.

    “Most politicians and political observers are aware of the political differences between me and Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose, and former Ogun State Governor Gbenga Daniel (OGD).

    “The others like Chief Iyiola Omisore, Chief Olabode George and the amateurish Ladi Adebutu – are latter day joiners, who dread a free and fair competition.

    “In their desperate bid to destroy me, they have resorted to all manner of tricks, intrigues and manoeuvering. They have continued to blackmail me and poison minds of members of the National Working Committee (NWC), some national leaders, past and present governors as well as former ministers, calling me all manner of names.

    “I will continue to fight for the interest of my people in the Southwest as they are my strength and shield. Without them, I am nothing. Since all my actions are borne out of sincerity and singleness of mind, I will continue to put my trust in the Almighty Allah,” he said.

    He accused Fayose  of wanting to seize the party structure in the Southwest for future negotiation for his ambition, adding that Daniel has his eyes on the national chairmanship and wants to be in control of Ogun State PDP.

  • How leaders can curb corruption, by primate

    Only pious and spirit filled leaders can stem corruption which is destroying the country, Primate of The African Church Cathedral Salem, Lagos Mainland Diocese, Dr. Emmanuel Udofiah has said.

    Delivering the sermon at the dedication of the cathedral’s N300million auditorium on Freeman Street, Ebute-Meta, he said the church was ordained with the authority to fulfil the redemptive task of proffering solutions to individual, family and societal restiveness.

    He said the peace and blessings of God would reign in the country if the church would exercise its power to seek the enduring mercy of the Almighty.

    Udofia encouraged Christians not to give up on intercessions and supplications for the country’s advancement, noting that leaders must align their actions with uprightness for the prayers to be answered.

    “When the church is led by the spirit of God, the love of God will manifest and there will be peace in our environment, the church and the society. Corruption will be a thing of the past when the church teaches what Christ has taught the church and our generation will be blessed. By the grace of God, human beings are God’s temple set aside for God’s honour and glory. So our live should be such that anyone that gets in contact with Him should be able to learn one thing or the other that will assist him or her to live a Godly life,” he said.

    Chairman of the Building Committee, Otunba Olutola Senbore, said the largest building in the African church was largely financed by parishioners’ donations and fundraisers.

    The foundation of the 20-year project, he said, was laid in July 1998, following the demolition of the former edifice. The new building is composed of a 300-guest basement hall, a 100-seater auditorium and two chapels donated by the Youth Christian Fellowship and Chief Mrs Olufunke Obasanjo.

    He said: “We have to thank God that it was possible for us to have this project completed. It was very tasking and challenging to get members going particularly as it is a project that belongs to the entire congregation.  It would not have been possible to complete it but for the various successful fundraisers by different committees.”

  • Akeredolu to Christian leaders: remain committed to God

    Akeredolu to Christian leaders: remain committed to God

    Ondo State Governor Rotimi Akeredolu has urged Christian leaders to remain committed and united unto the service of God and His people.

    Akeredolu spoke at the 2nd Session of the 12th Synod of Owo Diocese, Anglican Communion yesterday in Imeri, Ondo State.

    The governor, who is the chancellor of the Diocese, promised to continue to work in the service of God and people of Ondo State.

    The 2017 Synod of the Diocese was unique in that it marked the 17 calendar years and 18 Episcopacy Years of Bishop James Olandunjoye in the Diocese.

    In his sermon, Venerable Olatunde Abiodun said the fear of God based on sound knowledge of Jesus Christ and the application of Christ-like values are the needed panacea to the seemly confusions in Nigeria.

    He decried the fear of the unknown, which, according to him, had always lured those in authority to abuse their privileged positions to amass the resources which should have been used for the wellbeing of the people to their personal use.

    The cleric assured that Nigeria would witness restoration and move forward if leaders at all levels shun all forms of sins and join in the fight against corruption.

    He prayed for divine wisdom to guide Governor Akeredolu against those who would be scheming to damage the character of others for political reasons.

    Highlight of the Synod, which has as its theme: “Tell My People to move Forward “, Exodus14:15, was the preferment of Canon Benson Ajayi Olanrewaju as Archdeacon. Upon the administration of oath of office on him by the Chancellor of the Diocese, Governor  Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, while the Diocesan, Bishop Oladunjoye pronounced him an Archdeacon.

    The six archdeaconries in the Diocese with the Cathedral and St, Paul’s Church Imoru the host Church, Obas and Chiefs, the Diocesan Officials and the Synod host , Engineer (Chief), Funso Kupolokun praised God with thanksgivings.

    The host of the Synod, Chief Funso Kupolokun, described Governor Akeredolu as a rare political leader who desires the best for his people without any consideration. He assured the people of the state to look forward to a transformation of the state within the next two years.

    Dignitaries at the service include Otunba Timilehin Adelegbe, a Commissioner designate in Ondo State; a past Commissioner in Ondo State, MrsTola Awoh ; Prince Lanke Odogiyan, past President of Nigerian Bar Association; past Chairman Ose Local Government, Hon. Bola Adelegbe; past Chairman Forum of Permanent Secretary in Ondo State, Prince Ade Okiki .

  • South leaders condemn National Assembly over devolution of power

    A group of Southern leaders, under the aegis of Southern Leader Forum Nigeria (SLFN), yesterday condemned the decision of the National Assembly to shut down Nigerians’ quest for devolution of power.

    The leaders, who spoke in Lagos after a meeting, expressed dismay that the nation was drawn backward in its march toward the attainment of true federalism.

    Dignitaries at the meeting included Afenifere chieftain, Ayo Adebanjo; former Director General of the Department of State Services (DSS), Albert Horsfall; former Foreign Affairs Minister, Brig.-Gen. Ike Nwachukwu (retd), Vanguard publisher Sam Amuka and former Secretary General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Joe Irukwu.

    Others include Col. Tony Nyiam (retd.), Bassey Henshaw, Senator Stella Omu, an activist Yinka Odumakin, Guy Ikoku, Kunle Olajide, Amos Akingba and Ralph Uwazurike.

    Odumakin read the communique issued at the end of the meeting.

    He said: “This meeting affirms its earlier resolution in the fervent belief in the concept of one Nigeria, which we have devoted most of our adult lives to promoting and building. However, we do not want a Nigeria where any section will leave as slaves of another but rather we want a Nigeria where all citizens, irrespective of their ethnic or religious affiliation, are able to live their lives to the fullest and in happiness without let or hindrance.

    “We hold dearly that anyone who is opposed to this vision is an enemy of Nigeria of our dream.

    “We noted with sadness for Nigeria the recent shroud discussion of the National Assembly in shutting down devolution in their recent votes in the constitutional amendment. Their decision reflects the deepest disregard for the popular demand for the freeing of more powers to the federating units from our shocking central government. Instead of devolving power, the National Assembly has now given us a stronger centre that will conduct elections in local governments against extant provisions of the federalism.

    “It is obvious that the National Assembly has taken itself out of the resolution of the Nigerian crisis by foreclosing devolution of power.

    “Unknown to the lawmaker, they have unwittingly given more ammunition to self-determination forces by attempting to collapse the restructuring column in the battle for the soul of Nigeria…”