Tag: non-negotiable

  • 2023: Igbo presidency now non-negotiable

    SIR: Nation-building is not perfunctory; it is deliberate, planned and decisive.

    A country as enormous, diverse and delicate as Nigeria cannot evolve organically when a part of it is marooned and confined in the fringes of political exclusion. The argument has always been, “the Igbo are not ready”, and “they are not playing the right politics”. But this argument is classically insipid and hollow.

    Some people have also argued that the Igbo are “putting their eggs in one basket”.  This is also a moot point. The Igbo are no different from the Yoruba, the Hausa and the Fulani in the game of politics.

    A plethora of interests has always driven the politics of these ethnic groups. If we are agreed that interest is the highest common factor in the political calculations of these groups, then we cannot berate the Igbo for choosing to swing whichever way they want to.

    For example, the southwest was measured in its vote for Olusegun Obasanjo in 1999, but the southeast was generous in its vote for him. And in 2003, the southwest was unwilling to support Obasanjo, but the southeast adopted him, and even voted more for him than for its leader, the late OdumegwuOjukwu.

    The point is, the various ethnic groups have always played the politics of interest. The political exclusion of the Igbo is not because “they are not playing the right politics”, it is rather because of systemic strait-jacketing.

    Since 1999, the highest position an Igbo has occupied is “senate president”, a position which the group even lost in 2015, and if we are to go back to the second republic, “vice-president”. Obviously, this is a political chasm. We cannot pontificate on unity when this nagging political sequestration exists.

    Really, at this time, it will be hypocritical to discountenance ethnic distribution in choosing the next president in a country that is much fractured and that is unhealing from years of in-fighting.

    Also, it will be ludicrous to reduce this important issue to ethnic exhibitionism. We cannot submerge this conversation, no matter how tenuous and irritating it is. We must “jaw jaw”.

    I believe healing will begin for Nigerians when political justice is seen to have been done to all. At that point we can build a country defiant to disunity. But political justice must be done to all first to get to this stage.

    In the name of all that binds us as a country, we must begin now to work for a “red cap with an asi-agu” in Aso villa in 2023.Nigeria is for all of us, and we must work towards a society where justice breathes in the busy streets of Aba; where it hovers across the brown roofs of Ibadan, and where it strolls on the fine sands of Sokoto.

     

    • Fredrick Nwabufo, <fredricknwabufo@yahoo.com>
  • Fighting corruption in Nigeria non-negotiable, says Buhari

    PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari yesterday told former South African President Thabo Mbeki that for his administration, fighting corruption is non-negotiable.

    Mbeki, who heads the African Union High Level Panel on Illicit Flows from Africa, was at the Villa to give the President, who is the present Champion of AU Anti-Corruption Campaign, some critical updates.

    In a statement by Special Adviser on Media and Publicity Femi Adesina, the President said: “We must fight corruption frontally, because it’s one of the reasons we got elected.

    “We campaigned on three fundamental issues; security, reviving the economy and fight against corruption. It’s the reason we got elected, and we can’t afford to let our people down.”

    Noting that the government was making progress on the anti-corruption war, “and not just talking,” the President said he was very pleased with the assignment the former South African President was carrying out for the African continent.

    He said when Africa is vigorous with the war against corruption, “we will eventually appeal to the conscience of the rest of the world”.

    Mbeki said corruption was an African challenge that must be responded to, “as development challenges can only be met through the check of illicit financial flows”.

    He said he was delighted that Buhari touches on the issue in most of his speeches, with the most recent being at the United Nations General Assembly last week.

  • Delta APC: taking over state in 2019 is non-negotiable

    The Delta State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has said its quest to take over of the reins of governance in next year’s general election is non-negotiable.

    Its chairman, Chief Cyril Ogodo, spoke at the party’s maiden expanded State Executive Committee (SEC) meeting at APC secretariat in Asaba, the state capital.

    The chairman hailed party leaders and other faithful for standing firm during the challenges over its congresses.

    He said though there was a faction that conducted parallel congresses and claimed legitimacy through “a contentious court consent judgment”, the duly elected executive council, which was not party to nor consented to such judgment, could not be bound by it.

    Ogodo said what was uppermost for the party was how to dislodge the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) administration from the state in next year’s general elections.

    The chairman said the party’s State Executive Council (ESC) was poised to reconcile aggrieved members.

    “Delta State must be rescued in 2019. This is not negotiable,” he said.

    Also, the state’s party leader, Olorogun O’tega Emerhor, congratulated Ogodo and other executive members for their successes at the congresses and swearing-in.

    The party leader noted that APC’s new National Chairman, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, was misled by the Great Ogboru/Ovie Omo-Agege group to approve their alleged fraudulent consent judgment.

    He said: “Comrade Oshiomhole is a man of truth and integrity. Having now found out the truth about the fraudulent consent judgment, he will never support it.”

    Ogodo said the national chairman, as well as the Presidency, had mandated the Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, to reconcile all party groups for unity and peace.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Nigeria’s unity non-negotiable, says Osinbajo

    Nigeria’s unity non-negotiable, says Osinbajo

    Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo yesterday stated the commitment of the administration to keep one, indivisible Nigeria.

    Osinbajo made the commitment while speaking at the reception in Yola in honour of the new president of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF), the Most Reverend Musa Filibus.

    He urged Nigerians to sustain the unity which he said was the dream of the fore fathers of the country.

    According to him, Christians are encouraged to pursue justice and reconciliation with people of other faith.

    While congratulating Filibus for being the first Nigerian and second African to emerge president of LWF, Osinbajo urged him to work toward uniting the church and promoting peace and love.

    “It is our role as Christians to bind people together and we must do so by self sacrifice and love.

    “On behalf of the federal government and Mr President, I wish you an excellence and God guided tenure as president of LWF.”

    Adamawa State Governor Mohammed Bindow, who also congratulated Filibus for his elevation and making the people of Adamawa and Nigeria proud, assured him of his administration’ support to succeed.

    Filibus thanked the government of Adamawa and Nigeria for standing behind him and urged more support and prayers for a successful tenure.

    Filibus vowed to make Nigeria proud by being a good ambassador.

    “I will stand to be one among many to prove that Nigeria stands tall among the comity of nations.

    “I give thanks to all who contributed in making me what I am today,” Filibus promised.

    LWF is a global communion of 145 churches in the Lutheran tradition, representing over 75 million Christians in 98 countries.

  • Justice non-negotiable

    •The death of Citizen Eyitayo in the hands of DSS operatives should be probed

    How did 39-year-old Damilare Eyitayo die? His family members allege that he was tortured to death by officials of the Lagos Command of the Department of State Services (DSS). This is a grave accusation. The alleged use of torture makes a statement about the gravity of the tragedy.  It is particularly tragic that Eyitayo died in the alleged circumstances because he was not even a direct suspect in the matter. It is a reflection of the foggy and suspicious circumstances of his death that it has become the subject of a request for a coroner’s inquest to the Attorney General, Lagos State Ministry of Justice.

    The family lawyer, Babs Animashaun, said: “We were informed that the deceased was arrested because he was a friend to a suspect that the DSS was interested in arresting. We were also informed that it was the wife of the suspect, after she had been beaten by the gun-wielding officials that told them her husband was not around and led them to the house of the deceased.”

    He continued: “When the DSS operatives got to the deceased’s house, he was thoroughly beaten before he was taken away. We were informed that the deceased died same day in the DSS custody. We hereby request that an inquest be conducted into the circumstances of the death of the deceased to ascertain the cause and manner of death.”

    This request should be taken seriously. It is about the death of one man allegedly at the hands of state security agents. But perhaps more than this, it is about possible abuse of power that constitutes a death-threat to members of the public.

    The other side of the story, by the Lagos State DSS Director, Kunle Ajanaku, is so distant from the family’s version that it should prompt the authorities to pursue the truth and establish what happened to Eyitayo and how he died. It is clear that the two accounts can’t both be true.

    Ajanaku said: “It is regrettable that the man died. We do not engage in extrajudicial killing. When you talk of the best practices in terms of human rights and how we detain suspects, the DSS comes near first. This is a syndicate that has been able to clone the phone number of a governor. The state government submitted a petition that all the suspects involved should be arrested and prosecuted.”

    He further said: “Some of the suspects were traced to the deceased’s house. It took surveillance and technicality for weeks to trace his place. Instead of him to cooperate with officials, he resisted and turned violent. When they managed to take him into the vehicle, he struggled and escaped from the van. He was pursued and in the process, he fell down twice. As a result of his violence, we handcuffed and chained him. When he was brought to our office here, we saw his condition and rushed him to the hospital. He died while in the hospital. We have sent the case file to the Directorate of Public Prosecutions for advice. We are ready to listen to the family. An autopsy will be conducted; we do not have anything to hide.”

    It is disturbing that this case again brings up a recurrent charge against the DSS. The agency’s image has been tainted by allegations that it employs extra-legal methods in carrying out its functions.  It is a sad irony that an agency which should symbolise the supremacy of the law is linked with supreme lawlessness.

    A proper and thorough investigation should be carried out as a matter of urgency to reassure the public that justice is non-negotiable. And justice should be done indeed.

  • ‘Abia’s development non-negotiable’

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chief, Ben Onyechere, has urged Governor Okezie Ikpeazu not to be distracted in his mission to transform Abia State.

    He said the governor’s reconstruction of some federal roads should not be politicised, adding that Ikpeazu must not be dissuaded by “hypocritical politicians” masquerading as the opposition.

    Onyechere, a former Special Assistant to former Vice-President Alex Ekwueme, in a statement said the governor’s unfolding developmental roadmap will uplift the people’s living standard.

    The PDP chief said: “The opposition by those who have ganged up against the state’s proposal  to obtain a bond with which to enhance development in the name of politics is not only irritating but also repulsive and anti-Abia.

    “This administration’s determination to build on existing foundations is principally intended to fast-forward the pace of development and therefore can neither be sabotaged nor thwarted.

    “It is for these reasons and more that the governor recently re awarded the contract for the reconstruction of the 35- kilometre UzuAbam  Arochuchukwu road which crisscrosses Ndiochi and Ndiokereke up to Arochukwu.

  • Permanent Voter Cards:  Non-negotiable, yet elusive

    Permanent Voter Cards: Non-negotiable, yet elusive

    The bungled Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) distribution has enraged Lagosians and cast a doubt on the capacity of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to properly manage the electoral process without a hitch, reports EMMANUEL OLADESU.

    For five hours, many Lagosians endured the scourging sun, waiting in vain for Permanent Voters’ Cards (PVCs) in 11 councils. The cards were elusive. Around 5 pm on Friday, prospective voters cried foul. The exercise was bungled in Lagos State.

    The exercise was initially billed to take place in 20 local governments. Later, it was reduced to 11. The councils are Agege, Ajeromi-Ifelodun, Ifako-Ijaye, Ikeja, Mushin, Lagos Island, Lagos mainland, Ibeju-Lekki, Ikorodu, Kosofe and Ojo. Besides, Lagos State had an issue with the commission over what it called the de-listing of voters from six million to less than five million. Despite the fact that the electoral commission had four years to accomplish the compilation, it has failed to deliver, four months to next year’s general elections.

    According to observers, the failed exercise underscored the Independent Electoral Commission (INEC)’s poor preparation. “There is a looming disaster. If the commission cannot distribute permanent voters’ cards, after many had registered to vote, there is no evidence that it wil be dedicated to a hitch-free poll,” said Lagos All Progressives Congress (APC) Publicity Secretary Comrade Joe Igbokwe. “INEC has failed the test of credibility and integrity,” he added.

    Ahead of the exercise, leaders of political parties, who had met with INEC officials raised serious doubts about the readiness of the commission for the distribution of the PVCs. Although the agency had enough time to tackle the challenge, it was evident that the task overwhelmed the commission. Thus, the party leaders advised the Resident Electoral Commissioner, Dr. Kunle Ogunmola, to postpone the exercise, until November 28. They reasoned that, between now and two weeks, the commission would have corrected its mistakes before the kick-off of the distribution.

    Their fears were confirmed when the exercise could not take off in many councils at the weekend. It was expected to be a three-day exercise. But, nothing was accomplished the first day, to the consternation of party leaders. whose advice were ignored by the agency on the eve of the exercise.

    At noon, aggrieved representatives of political parties stormed the INEC office, Yaba, Lagos Mainland, to protest the failure. They alleged that the commission had deliberately deprived Lagosians the PVCs, in a bid to rig next year’s polls in favour of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Across the councils, many prospective voters had trooped out with enthusiasm to obtain the cards. Reflecting on the huge turnout, Lagos State APC Chairman Otunba Oladele Ajomale explained that the state government and the party mobilised registered voters for the exercise.

    He said: “Since 2011, we have been telling people to register and be prepared to obtain their cards. We have explained to them the importance of the cards to the electoral process. Lagos has a huge voting population. To enable them get the cards, the government declared a work-free day. Therefore, Lagosians were ready. But, the INEC was not ready.”

    Across the five divisions-Lagos, Epe, Ikorodu. Ikeja and Badagry-it was the same scenario.

    In Epe Division, many residents of Agbowa, Ikosi, Ejinrin, Noforija and Epe went home disappointed. A registered voter from Oto-Ikosi, Mr. Isiaka Adekunle Ibrahim, lamented that INEC officials did not show up for the exercise in polling centres. He said many people were worried by the turn of event, having stormed the designated distribution centres early in the morning. “If the INEC cannot get the cards ready by now, it is a serious problem. We have time for the collection because of the one-day holiday declared by the state government. If they had prepared well in other states, they should have prepared better for Lagos,” Ibrahim added.

    Igbokwe, who said that the party had been inundated with complaints by members, observed that the exercise has revealed that the INEC is grossly incompetent and ill-prepared for the challenges of 2015. “INEC should wake up from its slumber and rectify this anomaly,” he said.

    APC chieftain Senator Gbenga Ashafa said the commission has a long way to go in rekindling public confidence in the electoral process. The senator, who monitored the distribution in Magodo, said, INEC officials were not available. He warned against a deliberate plan to disenfranchise registered voters.  However, he said the mistake can still be corrected, if there INEC is determined to organise a credible process.

    APC National Leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu dismissed the INEC as an inept agency, wondering why it has failed to successfully complete the compilation, almost four years after. “If you have four years for this exercise and four or five months to this election you are still giving excuse, you have failed,” he said.

    INEC spokesman Kayode Idowu has attributed the botched exercise to technical problem. He said critical data were lost, following the crashing of storage disk and inability of some officials to properly handle the card readers.s

    Ajomale yesterday flayed the INEC for bungling the distribution, saying that the APC suspected a foul play. He said the poor showing has vindicated the party’s fears about the competence, credibility and readiness of the umpire to conduct free, fair and peaceful elections next year. He complained that party members were also worried about the attempt by the INEC to frustrate Lagosians, ahead of the elections. He warned that democracy and the sanctity of the ballot box were under threat, owing to the botched exercise.

    Ajomale said: “At our meeting with the INEC, all political parties, including the APC, voiced their anxiety about the unpreparedness of the INEC for the distribution of the PVCs. We have been vindicated. We said they should stop the exercise and postpone it till November 28, when the second phase will commence.

    “Our people were prepared for the exercise. They had trooped out en mass for the distribution. But, the exercise did not take off. From Island to mainland, through Badagry, Ikorodu to Epe, from Mile Two to Bagadry, the exercise failed.”

    Ajomale said the INEC would have complained about an attempt by the APC to frustrate the exercise, if the party had called its members to boycott the flawed exercise.

    He stressed: “If we had called APC members not to participate, they will say we want to sabotage their effort. They want to frustrate us. We will not be frustrated.”

    The party chairman said the work-free day declared by Governor Babtunde Fashola (SAN) to ensure a hitch-free exercise was not effectively utilised by the commission.

    Urging Lagosians to stand firm, Ajomale said the agenda of the INEc to disenfranchise them will not see the light of the day.

    He said: “Our people should stand form. The exercise has not taken off at all. Let the people of Lagos show them that they are difference, This foul play will not stand.

    “Initially, we had six million. Later, they said it is 4.8 million registered people. They have their own agenda. We will not be intimidated. We will ensure a peaceful exercise. INEC must do a thorough job. That is our demand.

    “Lagos declared a holiday because of the exercise. Everywhere we went, people were complaining. They were on queneu for hours under the sun. But, the PVCs were not available. INEC was not available. Noting was done.”

    A governorship aspirant, Dr. Leke Pitan, described the exercise as a sham. He said: “It is shameful we still try to play funny games with the simple exercise of distributing voters’ cards. In many units, our people identified their names on the lists. They were made to sign for their names only to get to the collection points and they could not get their PVCs.”

    House of Representatives member from Epe Hon, Lanre Odubote advised the INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, to resign. He said: “Voters cards are  being given to all Nigerians, but Epe is being denied its right. We have no confidence in the Jega’s ability to be fair to our people and his ability to conduct a credible poll in 2015. So, if he cannot distribute voters’ cards without problem, he cannot conduct a credible poll.”

  • ‘Jonathan’s re-election non-negotiable’

    ‘Jonathan’s re-election non-negotiable’

    The Members of the National Executive Committee made the declaration shortly after arriving Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, for a meeting.

    NYC also called on security agencies to prosecute persons and groups calling for the nation’s dissolution.