Tag: Osun poll

  • Osun poll: APC accuses PDP of planning to use thugs

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said it got information that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is planning to use thugs and to rig the September 22 governorship election in Osun State.

    In a statement yesterday in Abuja, the nation’s capital, APC’s National Publicity Secretary, Yekini Nabena, also accused the PDP of cloning Permanent Voter’s Cards (PVCs) for use in the election.

    He said: “The PDP, on Tuesday, vowed to deploy all means, schemes, shenanigans in all ramifications and magnitude to rig all coming elections, starting from the Osun governorship election.

    “The party also directed its presidential aspirants to move their political machinery into Osun State within this period.

    “When the APC learnt of the shocking disclosure, we initially doubted its veracity and dismissed it as one of the fake news in circulation.”

    APC stressed that PDP’s Tuesday statement was particularly worrisome because it coincided with the situation field report the ruling party received on the opposition’s plans for the Osun governorship election.

    The party added that PDP’s new public rigging plan was a red flag that required urgent probe by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and security agencies.

    The statement urged well-meaning Nigerians and civil society organisations to speak out and resist PDP’s plan, which it said threatens the country’s democracy.

    It reminded the PDP that the country’s democracy was maturing, adding that its crude election rigging methods, such as ballot box snatching displayed during last weekend by-election in Kogi State, was no longer accepted in elections.

    APC expressed confidence that Osun State residents would resist PDP’s ploy to take-over the state by force.

    “The people’s will, the people’s vote is supreme. It must be respected and defended, that is democratic, progressive and the right thing,” the statement said.

  • Guber poll: Saraki, Mark to reconcile PDP aggrieved members in Osun

    Ahead of the September 22 governorship election in Osun State, the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, and his predecessor, David Mark, are working to reconcile aggrieved members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state.

    The state chairman of the party, Soji Adagunodo, said the two party leaders would convene a meeting to address fundamental issues and ensure that all interests are accommodated in order to put the party in sound footing ahead of the election.

    He said the national and state leadership of the party would ensure that no one is left behind in the reconciliatory process.

    Adagunodo, who advised aggrieved members to be patient, appealed to those who had instituted cases in court to withdraw them in order to facilitate the reconciliation process.

     

     

  • Osun Poll: INEC to release candidates’ names on Monday

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) will on Monday make public the names of candidates of the political parties vying for the Osun governor’s seat.

    Forty-eight parties have submitted nominations for the September 22 poll.

    Submission of names of party candidates closed on Tuesday, July 24, 2018.

    Speaking on the ongoing process, the Chief Press Secretary to INEC Chairman, Mr. Rotimi Oyekanmi, told our correspondent that candidates’ names will be published on Monday.

    Speaking also, Prince Solomon Soyebi, a National Commissioner and Chairman Publicity and Voter Education Committee, said the process was still ongoing as parties are granted the opportunity to substitute their candidates where necessary in accordance with the electoral law.

    “There is room for substitution. There are processes and they are ongoing. It is not a finished product yet,” he said.

  • Osun poll: SSG resigns to become ADP’s candidate

    The Secretary to Osun State Government (SSG), Alhaji Moshood Adeoti has resigned his appointment.

    He also defected to the Action Democratic Party (APD).

    Adeoti had withdrawn from the governorship race as an aspirant of the All Progressives Congress (APC) few hours to the party’s primary on July 20, alleging a plot to impose a candidate on others.

    After defecting to the party, he became ADP’s governorship candidate for the September 22 Osun election.

    By affirmation, Adeoti scored 13,324 votes out of the party’s 13,367 total votes.

    In his acceptance speech at the party’s state secretariat on Ikirun Road in Osogbo, the state capital, Adeoti promised to be committed to ADP’s ideals and follow the party’s manifesto.

    Assuring members that he had the popularity to win the September 22 governorship election, Adeoti said: “I, therefore, want to seek your support in ensuring success for our party by launching all out to mobilise support for our party’s victory in the forthcoming election. Today, we make history in our collective resolve to liberate our dear state from the grip of feudal lords who are so poor in humanity that all they have is money without conscience and humanity.

    “As a grassroots politician, who had passed through virtually all stages of political leadership – as councillor, local government supervisor and party administrator and later SSG – I present a sober, deep and solid experience critically needed to lead a people-centred and masses-oriented administration as the governor of Osun State.”

    ADP’s Electoral Committee Chairman, Mr. Dozie Ike, urged party members to support Adeoti to win the election.

    Also, the electoral committee’s Secretary, Mrs. Lynn Olisa, noted that 13,400 party members were accredited for the primary, while 13,367 voted.

    She said: “Adeoti, who is our only aspirant, scored 13,324 votes while 43 votes were voided.”

  • INEC unveils timetable for Osun poll

    INDEPENDENT National Electoral Commission (INEC) has released timetable for the September 22 Osun State governorship election.

    Briefing reporters yesterday at the INEC office on Gbongan Road, Osogbo, Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Mr. Olusegun Agbaje, said the release was in line with the Electoral Act.

    He said 411,438 Permanent Voter Cards were yet to be collected.

    The REC, who said a notice of election would be made on June 23, with campaign beginning June 24, added that primaries, including resolution of disputes, would be between June 24 and July 23.

    Agbaje said August 22 is last day for submission of nomination forms, and campaigns end on September 20.

    Promising a free, fair and transparent election, he advised stakeholders to support the commission to conduct a credible poll.

    The REC said: “We have the mandate to provide a level- playing field for all players and we expect in return the cooperation of stakeholders. We expect you to support the commission to maintain equity and justice before, during and after the process.

    “On our part, we promise to operate an open door policy and ensure the entrenchment of core values and standards of the INEC with zero tolerance for electoral fraud.”

     

  • Osun poll: Towards a worthy successor

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s media adviser Semiu Okanlawon highlights the importance of continuity in the State of the Living Spring.

    Celebrated English playwright, William Shakespeare once declared ‘’All the world is a stage, and all men and women merely players. They have their exits and their entrances, and one man in his time plays many times.’’

    This is truly apt of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, having been in the saddle for over seven years in Osun and having to relinquish power in line with the dictates of the law of the land come this November.

    Osun shall be experiencing governorship election this year. There are deluge of aspirants from the two major political parties and others. Of course, the signs are visible on the political landscape while the informed electorate are understudying the political climate with rapt.

    It is not unusual for an incumbent governor in the Nigerian polity to be deeply involved in who next flies the flag of the ruling party and indeed, who takes the baton from him. By Nigeria’s political configuration, it would look odd for an incumbent to be indifferent to who takes over from him most especially where the labour of the ending tenure should not be allowed to go in ruins.

    The need for democratic consolidation often drives the incumbent towards ensuring that a worthy successor takes over so that all the democratic dividends being enjoyed by the citizens are not frittered away by a clueless successor. Definitely, Osun is in need of a worthy political successor to Governor Rauf Aregbesola simply on the basis of the need to consolidate on the gains of the eight years that will be ending in November this year.

    Beyond personal adventurism of  the aspirants, the incumbent Aregbesola is duty bound to ensure the continued survival of the giant developmental strides recorded by his administration, hence the need to make input into the emergence process of the All Progressives Congress candidate in this forthcoming gubernatorial election. In the Yoruba proverbial saying, ‘’if a mad man is allowed to bury his mother, he might probably roast it for dinner.’

    Flowing from the above, Michael Braton’s postulation that ‘’elections do not in and of themselves constitute a consolidated democracy, they remain fundamental not only for installing democratic governments, but as a requisite for broader democratic consolidation underscores the point being canvassed here.

    Further flowing from the above is the fact that election is not restricted to one day ritual of voting and subsequent vote counting and result declaration. Rather, it includes an array of processes that includes but not limited to candidate nomination and registration with the electoral umpire.

    It is trite that the Aregbesola era has introduced progressivism and dynamism to governance; a radical departure from the old order. It would therefore be in the interest of the well-being of the state that the political tendency whose modus operandi is nothing but progressivism need to succeed him otherwise, there would be an unpardonable detour to the grim political failure which includes but not limited to corruption, ineptitude, social injustice and inequality captured in Achebe’s ‘’The Trouble with Nigeria’’ engendered by failed leadership.

    Lest we forget, the celebrated author, Achebe, hinted that “the trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a failure of leadership….there is nothing wrong with the Nigerian character, there is nothing wrong with the Nigerian land or climate or water or air or anything less.’’  Osun had its experience of this failure of leadership before the current revolution hit the ground running.

    Undeniably, loyalty is a key factor in politics and by extension, governance. It is a moral component of any political relationship, hence loyalty is morality. The presence of loyalty among all strata of the political class will not only strengthen the polity but also guarantee the needed conducive atmosphere for consolidation of democratic dividends. No one in Osun would wish for the state, the type of ‘wars’ between successors and predecesors that have characterised some other political environments in Nigeria.

    Given the steady progress being recorded, who needs such tense political atmosphere in Osun to throw spanners in the wheel of advancements? Thus loyalty to the ideals, tenets and principles of the current political tendency should be one of the most important considerations for Osun political succession. The sustainable development in Lagos State offers us a good illustration here. No one would deny the smooth sail of Lagos from what used to be a jumbled metropolitan settlement to a megacity where there is order, glamour and glitz. Lagos is prosperous today and looks even much more with greater potential.

    No one also needs to be told as well that this has been due to an uninterrupted progressive political tendency and ideology that holds sway in the state since Nigeria returned to democratic rule in 1999.

    Oftentimes, commentators misconstrue loyalty to be a blind, dogmatic compliance and adherence to the rules of the game set by a political ‘benefactor’ or the incumbent who facilitates the emergence of his successor. This is wrong! Loyalty, to me, represents a religious adherence to that path created by an incumbent which has been benefitting the people and which, if followed, would achieve greater good for the people.

    Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu expected loyalty from his successor. This was because he had created a path to be followed. That Babatunde Fashola followed that path made him another superstar in the administration of Lagos. That Akinwumi Ambode has followed that path as well has enriched Lagos. It is beginning to appear like other political parties have surrendered to the APC given the unprecedented infrastructure revolution the state is witnessing.

    Already, the people of Osun dream of the picture of another 8 years with equal zeal, determination and clear vision as brought by Aregbesola.

    The issue of disloyalty has been part of our political fabric for so long. This is echoed in a lecture titled ‘’Mending a Socioporous Nation before the Third Republic’’ delivered by Prof. B.I.C Ijomah on 4th April, 1986 wherein he asserted that ‘’There is no morality. People swear by and lie by the Bible and Koran……the sacred has been profaned, the profane has been sanctified and immorality and corruption have been tagged the order of the day.’’ There is a need to sound a caveat that the loyalty of successor to predecessor being envisaged here is not the one that will turn democracy to kleptocracy typical of some emerging democracies in Africa.

    Next which is of utmost importance is charisma. Ours is an African democracy wherein the head of the executive which is the governor or president as the case may be occupies a central space in the scheme of things usually with an alluring character, doggedness, empathy, unblemished integrity, confidence, inspiration to others, commitment and passion, decision making capabilities, tact and diplomacy, astuteness and accountability.

    Do you find these lacking in Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola in Osun? No! It would therefore not be a sin for him to identify and support a candidate who best typifies those ideals that would ensure the flame keeps burning.

    To Theodore Roosevelt, ‘’In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing. The worst thing you can do is nothing’’. When the moment of decision comes, Aregbesola must do the right thing. He cannot afford to do nothing.

  • Court rejects PDP’s application to void Osun poll

    Court rejects PDP’s application to void Osun poll

    The Federal High Court sitting in Osogbo, the Osun State capital, has dismissed the application by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) seeking for a mandatory order to nullify the elections conducted by the Independent National Electoral Commission in Osun State in April 2011.

    Justice Babs Kuewumi dismissed the application yesterday in the ruling he read based on the application by the PDP.

    The PDP sued the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and former Resident Electoral Commissioner Rufus Akeju, seeking a reversal of all actions taken by Akeju as REC after an earlier order of March 28, 2011 given by the same court, which restrained him from conducting the 2011 National Assembly and House of Assembly elections.

    INEC conducted the April 2011 polls and all the seats were won by the candidates of the All Progressives Congress.

    The PDP represented by Moses Ojo, sought four reliefs in the motion and they are: a mandatory order for reversal of all steps taken by the first defendant and second defendant; an order to declare the National Assembly and House of Assembly elections null; an order directing INEC to withdraw the certificate of return given to the winners of the elections and an order compelling INEC to conduct by- elections to fill the seats.

    But Justice Kuewumi held that “only Election Petitions Tribunal can give such orders. The application is hereby dismissed”.

    INEC’s counsel Mrs. Faith Okoli hailed the ruling, describing it as erudite.

    Although PDP counsel Kehinde Adesiyan thanked the judge for the ruling, he said the party would appeal the ruling.

    Adesiyan said: “There was an order of this same court on March 28, 2011 which restrained Akeju from conducting the April 2011 elections but he went ahead and violated the order.

    “The court did not say anything on this but it is so clear that the order was disrespected. We will test the rulings we will challenge it before the Court of Appeal.

    “The sanctity and sacredness of the judiciary must be respected, Akeju violated the order of the same court.

    “It was a pre-election matter and the Election Petitions Tribunal has no power to hear pre-election matters. So we will challenge it.”

  • Osun poll: War by other means

    Osun poll: War by other means

    The governorship election in Osun State was a battle between the Federal Government and the will of the people. SINA FADARE who monitored the election in Ede, reports.

    The legendary Chinese leader, Mao Tse-tung, otherwise known as  Chairman Mao, was right  when he defined politics as an extension of warfare. According to him, in war, sophisticated weapons are used, but in politics, propaganda, character assassination, intimidation and blackmail are the order of the day. Osun election was not an exception in this regard.

    Osogbo, the capital city, was like a city under siege the day before the election. There was heavy security presence in the city. This could be felt everywhere, as armed soldiers were stationed at all the entrances into the town and at strategic locations such as INEC office, which is located along Ibadan Road.

    Driving round the town was not a pleasurable experience. There were police checkpoints at virtually all the major junctions in town. Residents cashed in on the public holiday declared by the state government to do last minutes shopping. Major markets were food stuffs are sold  like  Alekuwodo, Oja Oba, Igbona, Oluode and Ayetoro were brimming with people doing last minute shopping.

    This was perhaps because they were not sure of what would happen after the exercise. There were fears that it might end in violence, if it is not well managed.

    Mrs. Margaret Okafor told The Nation that she was forced to rush to the market because of the rumour going round that after the election people may not be able to come out, because of the crisis that may follow. This sentiment was equally shared by Mrs. Ibidun Ajetumobi, a school teacher who was so sure that due to the previous intimidation of the APC by the PDP-led Federal Government that crisis was imminent and nobody can predict how long it would last. Therefore, she had to stockpile food in readiness for such eventuality.

    On the day of election, it was a different ball game. Residents not only trooped out in their numbers to exercise their right, they were also determined to stay at the polling booth to witness the entire exercise. This was fuelled by the rumour that the PDP was preparing to rig the election, by stuffing ballot boxes somewhere, which they intend to bring to the polling booth later.

    At Ede, the country home of former governor of the state, Senator Isiaka Adetunji Adeleke, the incumbent deputy governor Mrs. Titi Olaoye-Tomori and the deputy governorship candidate of the PDP, Hon. Bello Adejare, it was politics of wit and power confronting that of the will and choice of the people.

    Adejare had boasted during the campaigns that in a matter of days he was going to rubbish the so-called achievements of the incumbent governor, Aregbesola, by humiliating the duo of Olaoye-Tomori and Adeleke in the area. Unfortunately, the contest did not go the way he expected.

    Perhaps for years to come Adeleke will not forget in an hurry the trauma he experienced that day. He was subjected to incessant harassment by hoodlums allegedly hired by the PDP, who wanted to send him to the great beyond at all cost. Indeed, it was double tragedy for Adeleke. He not only escaped the assassin’s bullet few hours to the election, it was also a cat and mouse affair between him and security agents who wanted to arrest him.

    Adeleke did his accreditation as early as 7am at Sagba Abogunde ward 2 unit 9 area of the town. He decided to stay and vote before leaving the place, but shortly after his accreditation, information reached him that his house had been vandalised by the same hoodlums who were looking for him and who had earlier engaged his security details in a gun battle.

    Immediately, he was notified about the development, the former governor disappeared to an unknown destination.

    Shortly after he left, the security agents stormed the place in five vehicles (three black jeeps and two hillux Toyota jeeps). The vehicles were filled with men in police, army and even immigration uniforms.

    They had hoped to pick up Adeleke in the process, but since he had already left the place, the leader of the group instructed the others to arrest some persons in the crowd, particularly aides of the former governor. Five of them were picked up and whisked away to an unknown destination.

    One of the APC members tried to take their picture with his phone, but the effort was thwarted by the leader of the group, who snatched the phone and smashed it on the road with full force.

    When The Nation visited him after the security men had left, he was sorrounded by sympathisers, who were congratulating him for narrowly escaping the beating of his life. He was dazed and could not talk;  he was still in shock.

    However, another interesting aspect of the election was the fact that the aged were determined to vote, despite the inconveniences entailed in the process. One of such people was Pa Ibrahim Olabosoye, a 120-year old man who insisted that he must vote for Aregbesola to continue his good work.

    Olabosoye was assisted by one of his sons to exercise his fundamental right. When accosted by The Nation after voting, he confessed that it was not easy to leave the comfort of his house about two meters to the polling booth to come and vote. But he said he had to do it for the sake of Aregbesola who has changed the fortune of the state.

  • Osun poll: Democracy in danger, says Aregbesola

    Osun poll: Democracy in danger, says Aregbesola

    Jubilation in Osogbo

    Jonathan, governors hail election 

    Victory parties continued yesterday in major towns of Osun State.

    Osogbo, the state capital, was throbbing with crowds of revellers as Governor Rauf Aregbesola led a victory parade.

    He was declared re-elected by the Independent national Electoral Commission (INEC) yesterday morning with 394,684 votes to his opponent Iyiola Omisore’s 292,747 votes.

    Aregbesola said in spite of his victory, the process was faulty and “gravely endangered democracy.”

    The governor took a hard look at what he and his party – the All Progressives Congress (APC) – faced in the run-down to the election and declared that had it not been because of the People’s commitment, something untoward could have happened.

    President Goodluck Jonathan, governors and other eminent Nigerians congratulated Aregbesola.

    National leader of the APC Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu said Aregbesola “bruised the head of tyranny with his victory.

    Tinubu, Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola and other APC leader kept vigil at the Aswiwaju residence in Lagos monitoring the situation. There was anxiety as the results were not announced by INEC Returning Officer Prof. Bamitale Oluwole, Vice Chancellor of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife until 7:30am yesterday.

    Addressing a huge crowd of supporters at the Nelson Mandela Freedom Park in Osogbo, the governor noted the traumatic challenges he faced before he winning the poll.

    “It was so sad and unfortunate that the contest that should be a normal, routine process was allowed to snowball into a needless virtual war by the Federal Government and the Peoples’ Democratic Party.

    “Ordinarily, this should be a moment of joy and celebration consequent upon the hard-earned triumph of the people’s will. However, this election shows that democracy is still gravely endangered in Nigeria. We witnessed gross abuse of power and of due process before, during, and even after the actual voting process.”

    Aregbesola lamented the unduly militarisation of the election saying the people’s courage had triumphed over an unprecedented criminal intimidation and psychological assault on the state.

    He said that the election witnessed an abuse of security agencies which he described as corruption of their professional ethics and integrity.

    Aregbesola added that the security agencies were unprofessionally utilised to harass, intimidate and oppress the people whose taxes were used to pay their salaries.

    He said: “Hundreds of leaders, supporters, sympathisers and agents of our party were arrested and detained. Also, hundreds of other innocent citizens, including women and the aged were harassed, brutalised and traumatised. In spite of this condemnable repression and abuse of human rights, the unflagging spirit of our people triumphed.

    “Our victory is due to the steadfastness and resolute determination of our people to assert and defend their rights. The PDP obviously did all it could in a most desperate manner to steal the people’s mandate.

    “Despite our victory, it is pertinent to condemn and also point out the fact that the number of accredited voters in most local governments was less than half of registered voters. Against this trend, it is curious that the bulk of the PDP candidate’s votes came from only four Local governments –  Ife Central, Ife East, Ife North and Ife South.”

    Aregbesola said the outcome of the election reflected the unwavering determination of Osun people to ensure that democracy triumphs in Nigeria.

    “With this election, the people of Osun have sent a strong signal to all and sundry that no might is powerful enough to thwart the will of the people. This should always strengthen our resolve to ensure that as from now on, every vote must not only count in Osun but must count in this country as a whole.

    “Nobody or party must ever exercise power unreasonably at any level except in accordance with the will of the people to whom sovereignty belong.”

    He added: Let me assure the good people of Osun state that I appreciate that this victory is a reward for our hard work and commitment to the welfare of our people.

    “I promise that we shall not rest on our oars but shall be spurred to work even harder with all well meaning people of the State of Osun and the generality of Nigerians to continue to enjoy your trust and support. You can be assured that we will leave no stone unturned in our continued effort to transform Osun into a land of progress, prosperity and peace for all with renewed fervour.

    “I realize that this victory and the challenges we went through is a call to greater service and sustained commitment to our people.

    “I pledge a rededication of myself to the service of our people and the strengthening of democratic values in Osun and Nigeria generally. Our country remains in political bondage and we must set her free.”

  • This election is worse – Akande

    This election is worse – Akande

    Former Interim Chairman of the All Progressives Congress, Chief Bisi Akande, has described the handling of Saturday’s governorship in Osun State as a disservice to democracy.

    He said this may be the worst election since 1966.

    He stated that accreditation was poorly handled in some areas.

    Akande also complained about the arrest of APC leaders and supporters.