Tag: parties

  • How many parties does Nigeria need?

    How many parties does Nigeria need?

    The deregistration of political parties has continued to generate controversy. JEREMIAH OKE examines the views of the protagonists and antagonists of the exercise.

     

    The deregistration of 28 political parties by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) last year has continued to generate serious controversy among the politicians.

    The leaders of the affected parties are also challenging the power of INEC to axe the parties in the court. They claimed that the deregistration of the parties had violated the freedom of association enshrined in the 1999 Constitution.

    The chairman of the Conference of Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP), Alhaji Balarabe Musa, has been critical of the INEC’s decision. However, he said the option for the deregistered parties is to merge with virile parties.

    Musa said, while exploring this option, the battle to enforce Sections 40 and 41 of the 1999 Constitution would continue.

    The chairman of the electoral commission, Professor Atahiru Jega, has maintained that the decision of the commission to deregistered parties was final. He said it was in accordance with the constitutional provision. He pointed out Sections 222 and 223 of the constitution have outlined the conditions for registration and deregistration of political parties.

    “Political parties are supposed to register with INEC and have offices in Abuja. They are supposed to hold periodic internal elections; they are supposed to have executives that represent their federal character composition in two- thirds of the states of the Federation. The Electoral Act, in particular, also says parties which do not win any seat in any of the elections can be deregistered”, he explained.

    In the last presidential election, out of the 68 registered political parties, only 20 parties presented candidates for the presidential race.

    The poll results released by the INEC showed that only four political parties could prove their worth. Other parties scored less than one percent of the total votes cast.

    The breakdown of the 2011 presidential election result indicated that 39,469,484 votes were cast. 1,259,505 were invalidated. TheAction Congress of Nigeria (ACN) polled 2,079,151, which represented 5.41 per cent; All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) 917,012 (2.40 per cent), Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) 12, 214,853 (31.98 per cent) and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) 22,495,187 (58.89 per cent). The performance of other parties were poor. The Fresh Democratic Party scored 0.09 per cent, National Conscience Party (0.09 per cent), and Social Democratic Mega party ( 0.03 per cent). Many of the mushroom parties do not have representatives in the state and federal legislature. Neither do they have council chairmen and councillors elected on their platforms.

    However, opinion is divided on the deregistration. A political scientist, Professor Abubakar Momoh, noted that the freedom of political association and assembly is sacrosant in the constitution. But he stressed that the opportunity should not be abused.

    The Lagos State University (LASU) don submitted that the many of the deregistered parties had nothing to offer, adding that their records were not impressive. “ They don’t have personnel, they don’t have offices and they don’t participate in elections. Indeed, many of them just went to register like registered companies waiting for the day they will get a contract. Meanwhile, they are giving the electorate the impression that those political parties exist, but in truth, they do not.

    “If you look at our ballot paper today, you see that it looks like a sellotape. So ,it confuses people and, if INEC deregisters them, it will reduce the numbers of the parties on the ballot paper.

    “The procedure for the registration a political party is very clear. Also, the procedure for the deregisteration is clear in the Electoral Act. The freedom of the association must not therefore, be abused. So, let them be serious about registering a political parties. They are misleading and confusing the electorate. The right to form a party should not be subjected to abuse”, he added.

    Momoh also pointed out that the long list of parties on the ballot paper could confuse voters on poll day.

    Former labour leader Chief Frank Kokori shared the same view. He said Nigeria should have emulated the United States of America (USA), which operates a two party system.

    “I am one of those advocating for two party system. During the SDP days, I was the National Financial Secretary and I contributed so much to the struggle, both at the labor level and political level. Those parties were like Republican and Democratic Parties of the United State of America. Britain has Conservative Party and Labor Party. Beside those parties, you can have few parties to satisfy certain ideological leanings, but the major ideological divide is expressed in those two major political parties. In other words, it could be either right nor left so that INEC will be able to monitor their activities. Therefore, to me, Nigeria does not need multi-party system like we have now”, he added.

    Kokori said the mushroom parties have become business ventures, adding that their founders only collect subventions from government in vain. “Those parties have no business to be in politics. As you can see, those parties were used as machinery. So, all they are doing is to register and collect the take-off grant by the government and portray themselves as political parties. Nigeria does not need that, if we really want to strengthen our democracy. So, I support what the INEC is doing.

    Former Supreme Court Justice Gorge Oguntade supported this argument. He said the proliferation of parties is undesirable.

    “Those parties are meaningless. They are registerd parties, but they are not functioning. If we want to be honest, it is good to deregister them. A party which has no representation at the local government level, no representation at the state level and at the federal level, what is it doing and why do the people refer to it as a political party? After all, political parties are formed to win power. So, I think that INEC has done very well”.

    A member of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Mr. Segun Olalude, shared the same opinion. The lawmaker, who represents Epe Constituency 11, said the deregistration is in national interest, adding that it would improve the electoral reform.

    “The deregistration is for the benefit of Nigerians and I will like to say Nigeria does not need many political parties. It will be meaningful, if we can have only two parties, and anybody who wants to go for the conservative bloc will do it, while anybody who wants to go for the progressive camp will do that as well. So, I want to commend what Jega and his people have done”, he said.

    The vice chairman of Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Lagos State, Chief Akani Seriki, said: “It is unfortunate that those parties could say they wanted to challenge INEC in court. They should be ashamed of not having even a councillor and they call themselves political parties. If I were Jega, I will deregister more. In Nigeria, we don’t need more than three political parties. So, I think Jega is on course”.

    But CNPP leader Musa disagreed with Seriki. He chided INEC for axing the parties. “The first thing we are considering is legal action in court with two premises. The first is to seek for the annulment of the deregistration. The second option is to register a new political party with clear social objectives. The third is to merge with other political parties”, he said.

    Musa maintained that INEC lacked the power to outlaw registered political parties. He insisted that the move conflicted with Section 40 of the 1999 Constitution.

    “It is clearly stated in Section 40 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. But in our own case, we will not rely on legal action alone because we know that INEC did what they did on instruction and the instruction is part of the PDP’s plan to rig 2015 elections. If we rely on going to court alone, they may drop the issue and they may have gotten what they wanted because they know how to manipulate the electoral system. So, we are going to consider the other alternatives”.

    Analysts averred that, if the parties succeed in court, the deregistered parties may bounce back. But if the INEC decision is affirmed by the court, the agency would have succeeded in weeding out the mushroom parties.

     

     

     

     

  • ‘Opposition parties’ merger to be concluded by March’

    ‘Opposition parties’ merger to be concluded by March’

    Ex-Yobe State Governor and member of the reconstituted merger committee of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), Senator Bukar Abba Ibrahim, yesterday said the deadline for the merger by the opposition parties to defeat the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2015 presidential election is next March.

    He said the merger would not fail as many are insinuating.

    Ibrahim spoke in Abuja at an interactive session with selected media on the Grassroots Leadership Quality in Africa award to be given to him by the Mo Ibrahim Foundation in South Africa on January 30.

    He said: “The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) has appointed its team, ANPP has appointed its own and I’m part of the committee. We have met several times here. We have even toured the zones. We have toured the North- central. We are meeting our supporters in the North-central in Lafia. We have addressed them and they cheered us on what we’re doing. We were in Enugu (Southeast) for a day. We shall visit other zones.

    “Before next March, we shall have an accord on this merger. This is the deadline for the merger. ACN is doing a similar thing. The party I’m not too sure of what it is doing is the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC). But I learnt it is also meeting to set up its committee. From all indications, the opposition parties are looking forward to forming a new party where they will come together as one entity. We are discussing with the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA) through Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha, on joining the coalition.

    “We are also hoping that a caucus of the Labour Party will join us to form a new party. This plan appears to be more popular than any other arrangement and I believe there is still time to register the new party.”

    On who will be the presidential candidate after the merger, Senator Ibrahim said: “Well, in politics, who gets what is always important. But the most important thing for now is not who gets what but for us to get together, merge, get a new arrangement, under which anybody can look for whatever he wants.

    “Since we are all in the opposition and we have been calling ourselves members of the progressives, we will join hands with others on the other side, the conservatives, to confront the PDP. I think it is healthy for our democracy to have at least two strong political parties. I’m convinced this experiment will work this time round.”

  • Can INEC deregister parties?

    Can INEC deregister parties?

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has just axed 28 parties for their poor showing at elections. Their leaders have threatened court actions. Will the INEC’s action stand? Deputy Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU asks.

    The de-registration battle has moved from the court of public opinion to the court room. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had stirred the hornet’s nest when it axed 20 registered political parties. The commission’s chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, complained that the affected parties merely warmed the agency’s register, adding that they had only participated in periodic elections in vain. Jega also threatened to delist more parties from the register in the future, if they maintain their unimpressive showing at future polls. The decision to remove the names of the mushroom parties from INEC list enjoys the backing of the National Assembly and federal government.

    Following the de-registration, leaders of the fragile parties have been pouring venom on INEC. Threatening fire and brimstone, the chairman of the polarised Conference of Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP), Alhaji Balarabe Musa, described Jega as a fascist. He said the commission erred in law, adding that it was acting out a diabolical script to scheme the affected parties out of 2015 general elections . “By virtue of Section 40 of 1999 Constitution and Section 78 of the Electoral Act, INEC cannot deregister political parties. It does not have the right”, said the former Kaduna State governor.

    Fresh Democratic Party (FDP) leader, Pastor Chris Okotie is in the same shoes with Musa. His party has been contesting elections for more than eight years, but with nothing to show for it. But the cleric-turned-politician says the platform has the right to exist and canvass for votes. To him, the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was afraid of other parties ahead of the forth-coming elections. Unlike Okotie and Musa, the national chairman of National Conscience Party (NCP), Dr. Yinusa Tanko, said mere threats would not resolve the hurdle. He told reporters that the matter would be decided in court, advising INEC to allow the case to be decided by the judiciary before applying its hammer.

    In the past, NCP founder, the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi had sued the commission and federal government to court over the registration ceiling. He won the case, thereby paving the way for the registration of more parties in the country. Frowning at Jega’s pronouncement, Tanko said, “the court will interpret this again”. Echoing the same sentiment, Progressive Action Congress (PAC) national chairman, Mr. Charles Nwodo said INEC was playing smart by not waiting for the decision of the court on the matter. “We are going to test our strength again at the court of law. It is against the law of the land and undemocratic to deregister 28 parties”, he fumed.

    Former factional leader of CNPP, Dr. Olapade Agoro, whose party had already been deregistered, lamented that INEC had become lord to itself. He said the agency was set up to conduct elections, which it had often failed to do lawfully on many occasions, stressing that certain PDP elements were pushing the commission to do the wrong thing. He faulted the claim of INEC on the performance of the party, saying that it is subjective. Agoro, a lawyer, said the so-called big parties had often rigged the smaller parties out at every contest. “If Tinubu had not stood up in the Southwest, there would be no ACN today and then, you will be talking about de-registration of the party. So, you want to deregister parties that cannot rig in favour of parties that rig. It will not stand. It lacks the backing of the 1999 Constitution, which guarantees freedom of association. The court will sort things out”, he added.

    Opinion is, however, divided on the de-registration. For example, many Nigerians questioned the rationality for the inclusion of many tiny, fragile and distressed parties on INEC’s list, despite their predictable failure at the periodic elections. Analysts have contented that out of 62 registered parties, less than 10 are electorally viable. Many agree that he proliferation of political parties underscores the debate over their utility as democratic agencies of the society. Should the non-performing parties be struck out of the INEC register or merely allowed to exist without the potentials of making any electoral impact in the future? The protagonists of deregistration claim that party formation is part of the framework for interest articulation and freedom of association and assembly. They argued that the democratic space should become widened as democracy grows.

    However, the antagonists perceive some of the owners and directors of the failed parties in two lights. They see them as eminent Nigerians who are seeking relevance outside the big parties where they could not rub shoulders with entrenched big wigs. Others describe those younger elements floating never-do-well parties as smart guys banking on the periodic grants to parties contesting for elections. The argument for their de-listing became more compelling following the outcome of the recent governorship elections in Edo and Ondo states. Not up to 15 parties participated in the two exercises. In fact, the second leg of governorship debate was narrowed down to only three parties in Ondo State, namely the PDP, ACN and Labour (LP).

    Jega’s INEC has consistently maintained that the failed parties should fizzle out. On some occasions, he had disclosed that the commission had the backing of the law to outlaw them for non-performance. The agency objected to the drawing of grants by the unhealthy parties prior to elections, only to come up with dismal failure. In INEC’s bid to wipe the poor parties out of existence, it had relied on Section 75, Sub-Section 2 of the Electoral Act. But older politicians, eminent political scientists, legal luminaries and civil society groups have often disagreed with the commission on the contentious issue. In their view, the umpire is not sensitive to compelling reasons for the multiplicity of political parties in a diverse and plural society like Nigeria.

    During its last national congress in Lagos, NCP had cried out that INEC was up to a mischief. One of its leaders and Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN) rejected the move, saying that it was undemocratic. He said the functions of political parties are not restricted to fighting for power in elections. “There exist in other mature democracies local parties that exist to pursue local matters peculiar to the community, group or society and they may not be interested in fighting for national or federal power,” he submitted.

    It is not the first time INEC will be embroiled in the controversy. Thus, Falana reminded the commission of a subsisting judgment in a suit by the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi, against INEC and federal government. “The Supreme Court has ruled that political parties cannot be deregistered by INEC or federal government because it would imply a gross violation of the freedom of association”, Falana recalled. But the twist to the on-going controversy is the parliamentary support for INEC. In the suit pending in court, the National Assembly counsel, Oluwatosin Apata, had prayed the court to disregard the prayer of the protesting political party, pointing out that the commission is empowered by law to take the drastic action.

    Actually, lawyers argue that the amended electoral act gives the INEC the nod to delist the fragile or failing parties, although some of them said the law is in bad faith. But it has been difficult for INEC to implement it because it would be trailed by outcry from a section of the political class. Observers also felt that the controversial clause could not be tested in the past, apparently because of the lack of will or consciousness about an imminent conflict with the 1999 Constitution, which is the guarantor of the freedom of association in the country. The fear is that, once the deregistration commences, there would be no looking back by INEC. If the hammer is dangled, only six parties would escape at the end of the day. The six top flyers at the last general elections were the ruling PDP, ACN, All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), LP, All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA), and Congress for Progressive Change (CPC).

    PDP has maintained its hold in 25 states by winning the governorship and majority seats in the state and National Assembly. Trailing it is the ACN, which retained Lagos State and bounced back in other four Southwest states – Oyo, Ogun, Osun and Ekiti. In addition, it is still the ruling party in Edo State. APGA won Anambra and Imo States. CPC installed its lone governor in Nasarawa State. ANPP cleared Bornu and Zamfara States. LP’s influence is limited to Ondo State, where it installed a governor and many legislators. INEC has also declared LP winner of the recent governorship poll in the state, although the victory is being challenged by the ACN. PDP also struggled hard in Oyo State to give ACN a fight. It won a senatorial position and few House of Representatives seats in the state. ACN made inroad into the North, winning a senatorial seat in Benue State. It also won some House of Representatives and state Assembly slots.

    Other parties are shadows of themselves and their electoral activities pale into window dressing. According to analysts, they are merely crawling at snail’s speed. Perhaps, the exception to this description is the Accord Party (AP), which has eight House of Assembly and four House of Representatives members in Oyo State. One state lawmaker has defected to the ACN. The Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN), which was supported by former Governor Gbenga Daniel of Ogun State, could only win one seat in the House of Assembly.

    In 2011, during the general elections, other fledging parties were like spectators. Many of them refused to field candidates for the polls. Some lacked visible offices or secretariats. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo once derided them as parties being operated in the bedrooms of their founders, and with their wives, children and other relations as party officials. Mocking the parties, Obasanjo said relations serve as their chairmen, secretaries, financial secretaries and treasurers. In the reckoning of the retired General, political parties were operated as business outfits yielding profits to their founders.

    Across the states, many of these mushroom parties are eager to form alliance with the dominant ones. Sources said that their officials are handsomely paid for the offer of imaginary collaboration and subjective alliance. After the general elections, they are never had again. Even, they refrain from fielding candidates for local government elections.

    These mushroom parties do not mirror the small parties of the First Republic, whose foundations were erected on solid political principle. For example, the Dynamic Party of Chike Obi was respected for its ideological stand. So also was the Farmers and Workers’ Congress of Dr. Tunji Otegbeye. Even, during the pre-independence years, the Mobolaje Group, which became Ibadan Peoples Party (IPP) won the first five regional legislative seats in Ibadan metropolis in 1952. Also, the Niger Delta Congress, Bornu Youth Movement and Mid West Party were small, but popular and relevant in their localities.

    A wide gap separates the small parties of old and private parties of today. The parties fretting under the INEC’s hammer include Action alliance (AA), Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN), Alliance for Democracy (AD), African Democratic Congress (ADC), All Peoples Liberation Party (ALP), Action Party of Nigeria (APN), African Political System (APS), African Renaissance Party (ARP), Better Nigeria Progressive Party (BNPP), Congress for Democratic Change (CDC), Community Party of Nigeria (CPN), Citizens Popular Party (CPP), Democratic Alternative (DA), Democratic Peoples Alliance (DPA), Democratic Peoples Party (DPP), Fresh Democratic Party (FRESH), Hope Democratic Party (HDP), Justice Party (JP), Liberal Democratic Party of Nigeria (LDPN), Movement for Democracy and Justice (MDJ), Masses Movement of Nigeria (MMN), Movement for the Restoration and Defense of Democracy (MRDD), National Action Council (NAC), Nigeria Advanced Party (NAP), Mega Progressive Peoples Party (MPPP), New Democrats (ND), National Democratic Party (NDP), Nigeria Elements Progressive Party (NEPP), National Majority Democratic Party (NMDP), New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), Nigeria Peoples Congress (NPC), National Reformation Party (NRP), National Solidarity Democratic Party (NSDP), National Unity Party (NUP), Progressive Action Congress (PAC), Peoples Mandate Party (PMP), Progressive People Alliance (PPA), Peoples Progressive Party (PPP), Peoples Redemption Party (PRP), Peoples Salvation Party (PSP), Republican Party of Nigeria (RPN), United Democratic Party (UDP), United Nigeria Peoples Party (UNPP) and KOWA.

    Many of them sprang up because their leaders and founders were edged out of the seemingly big parties. Indeed, crises have often polarised the major parties, making aggrieved chieftains to float new platforms. Party sources also said that many leaders of the big parties are the brains behind the small parties, which the money bags in the big parties deliberately form as a sort of “Plan B”. Thus, it has also been argued by observers that the paper weight parties were products of abuse by the elite locked in bitter competition for power and relevance. Sometimes, the sharing of the election fund in the small parties often lead to hot argument and party men drag themselves to court over the right of control. The multiplicity of the opposing parties has been to the advantage if the ruling conservative PDP, which had inadvertently encouraged many of them to spring up and create disunity in the progressive fold, thereby weakening the progressive challenge of the status quo.

    Besides, the smaller parties, it has also been alleged, have promoted the business plan of packaging endorsement programmes, in partnership with dominant parties, especially during governorship and local council elections. Indeed, as alleged by leaders of the scattered parties, many of them became an appendage of the PDP, which penetrated into the Conference of Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP), divided the fold and reduce the capacity of the many opposition parties to play the role of watchdogs. When CNPP broke into two and they were led by paralleled executive committees, it was alleged that it was the PDP at work.

    Political scientists and legal scholars contend that this awful picture contrasts sharply with the previous multi-party arrangements of the First, Second Republics and early part of this Fourth Republic. University of Lagos (UNILAG) teachers; Prof. Akin Oyebode and Dr. Derin Ologbenla, lamented that the lack of ideology has reduced the parties into platforms without substance. They conceded to individuals and groups the right to freedom of association, but they maintained that parties should have ideological directions. “Political options become possible and people are able to make their choices during elections, if the ideas, principles and ideologies of then parties are clear and understood”, said Ologbenla. Berating the political parties, big and small, for lack of sound ideological orientation, Oyebode advised them to emulate the few ones among them conducting political education for members.

    In the previous dispensations, two features of political parties were distinguishable. The existing parties, which were rooted in ideology, were actually on ground in their strongholds. Besides, they have always proposed alliances along two parallel lines, which ultimately make the polity to become disposed, in principle, to two party system, which was eventually imposed on the country in the ill-fated Third Republic. In those earlier dispensations, analysts argue that party administration was comparatively superb and no party existed without a cardinal goal.

    Despite these realities, many are of the view asking the unhealthy parties to wind up is counter-productive. But in a previous interview, Lagos State ACN chairman, Chief Dele Ajomale, disagreed. He said the number of parties on the INEC register is an embarrassment. He supported the deregistration on the ground that many of them are only faking their existence. “Many of them are just existing in name. Some of them don’t even have secretariats. Some of them don’t even have members, except three or four of them who claim to be chairman, secretary and financial secretary. The address is not existing. So, how can you they continue like that? If it is three or four parties are formidable, let us have them, instead of this hundred that is useless”, he advised.

    However, former CPC vice-presidential candidate Pastor Tunde Bakare said “you cannot stop people from grouping”, adding that, in the United States, political parties flourish without restrictions. He said some parties are only interested in local elections. Describing the deregistration as a non-issue, he also faulted the claim of poor performance, submitting that “no political party has won hands down without the cooperation of other parties”.

    Former Afenifere Publicity Secretary Yinka Odumakin agreed with Bakare. He said the whole issue contradicted the freedom of association. “Parties should be allowed to flourish and die naturally on their own. In a heavily monetised environment like Nigeria, results of elections cannot be a valid assessment of parties’ strength”, he added.

    Ekiti State ACN chairman Chief Jide Awe disagreed with both Bakare and Odumakin. He said the the stipulations by INEC, which guide the electoral process, is the beginning of sanity, adding that INEC can punish political parties for violating the rules. “INEC should move further by meting appropriate sanctions to any politician who violates the rules that guide the process of ensuring healthy electoral process in our country. It should not end with parties. I think a new order is here, if we can sustain the drive”, he stressed.

     

  • Otunba Lekan Osifeso plans mother of all parties

    Come Saturday December 22 , top socialite and executive Director of Bulletin Construction Company, Otunba Lekan Osifeso, will give his late father, mother and step-mother, Chief Oluwamuyiwa Adeyemo Osifeso, Mrs Olufadebo Osifeso and Mrs Olayinka Osifeso a befitting remembrance party and special prayer.

    Happenstances gathered that Chief Olumuyiwa Osifeso and his wives, who died many years ago, were enviable parents deserving of Lekan and siblings’decision to stage a special remembrance party and prayer for their departed souls.

    Lekan, also the Chairman of Lekai Construction Company, possesses the financial clout and influence needed to pull the creme-de-la-creme of high society to the event. As part of the bid to immortalise his parents, Lekan and family will launch a foundation in Ijebu Ode, Ogun State. It was also gathered that in order to make the party a grand one, a committee has been constituted to make sure the A-list party goes according to plan.

    The committee members include the Chairman of Bulletin Construction, Chief Faysal Harb; Hon. Sade Bent; Chief Jide Odekunle; Alhaji Bashy Kuti; Hon. Leo Awoyemi; Gbenga Akinbobola and Shina Abiola Peller. Those who should know say the December 21 party will feature fuji music maestro, K-1 the Ultimate, on the bandstand while a popular comedian will anchor the event. After the church service, a reception party will follow at the Ijebu Ode township stadium.

  • Niger opposition parties accuse Aliyu of executing elitist projects

    Major opposition parties in Niger State – the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) – yesterday accused Governor Babangida Aliyu of executing projects they said have no economic value to most residents.

    They took a swipe at the House of Assembly for failing to carry out its oversight function on the projects.

    At a joint media briefing addressed by their chairmen and governorship candidates in last year’s elections, the parties accused the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) administration of not executing masses-oriented policies but those that satisfy the elite.

    Through the CPC Chairman, Mallam Umar Shuaibu, the opposition parties challenged the execution of some projects, such as the Niger-America Medical City, Millennium Shopping Plaza, Minna Five-Star Hotel – where N500million has allegedly been expended – and Ward Development Project.

    The parties alleged that the electorate was told that the projects were to be executed through the Public Private Partnership (PPP), adding that the “partners” have abandoned sites after collecting mobilisation fees.

    They demanded a detailed account on the N5 billion Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the Aliyu administration and a private firm, Snecou Group of Companies, for the execution of the multi-sector projects.

    Shuaibu said: “Like other projects, the N5billion project was not only designed to fail but was indeed signposted by huge failure. In the first instance, the state government seemed not to have called on the services of its legal personnel before dwelling on the MoU.

    “The amount expended on this project has not been appropriated via the annual budget and implementation began even without any bill of quantity. The MoU offered the PPP partner a blank cheque.”

    The opposition parties also alleged that the PPP projects were used to siphon state funds, adding that there was no evidence of endorsement by appropriate approving authorities prior to their implementation.

    Shuaibu was in company of ACN Chairman, Capt. Isa Mokwa (rtd), and their ANPP counterparts, Hajiya Jummai Mohammed and other top leaders of the parties.

    They berated the House of Assembly for not monitoring the alleged mismanagement of state funds by the executive.

    “The Assembly stands indicted for not pursuing the Appropriation Bill with deserved efficiency, if not for a silence of conspiracy,” Shuaibu said.

    Mokwa said the opposition would send the ruling PDP packing and that the leaders of the three parties at the wards have been directed to work for the success of a new movement in the state.

  • ‘Why parties lack internal democracy’

    ‘Why parties lack internal democracy’

    A former Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission(NDDC), Elder Power Aginighan, has advised the Independent National Electoral Commission(INEC) to direct the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) and other parties to conduct internal democracy audit.

    He said the move is necessary to ensure compliance with internal democracy and avoid overbearing influences of some political bigwigs.

    Aginighan, a stalwart of the PDP, also called for a review of the Electoral Act 2010 to ensure that the PDP and other parties toe the line of internal democracy.

    He said: “After perusing the Electoral Act, 2010, I am constrained to call on the National Assembly to amend the Act to ensure that all political parties practise full blown internal democracy in Nigeria.”

    The PDP stalwart noted that Section 85 of the Act provides that registered political party shall give the Commission at least 21- day notice of any convention, congress, conference or meeting convened for the purpose of electing members of its executive committees, other governing bodies or nominating candidates for any of the elective offices specified.

    According to him: “I can boldly say that there is no party that has fully complied with this provision in the conduct of its congresses and primaries.

    “At best, the provision has only been observed mainly in the breach. The impunity with which political parties violate this very important provision of the law is traceable to the lack of sanctions for non-compliance in the Act.”

    He said the situation has led to the emergence “of hand-picked executives from the Ward to Local Government to State and National levels.”

    Aginighan added: “Most of the parties are run as private companies of some influential members who subvert the will of the generality of the members of their parties and impose their preferred executives, delegates and candidates on the party.

    “This has in turn led to the emergence of factions in many of the parties.”