Tag: PDP

  • Oshiomhole, PDP and the unfinished business

    Finally, the eagle has landed with the emergence of former governor of Edo state, Comrade Adams Aliyu Oshiomhole, as the national chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC). By that strategic political orchestration and stratagem, the APC, under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari, has sounded the ultimate nunc dimittis for the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The opposition must be wishing that this had not happened.  Oshiomhole’s chairmanship of the governing APC is masterstroke in the contemplation of a revitalized winning machine ahead of the crucial 2019 presidential election in which Buhari, as the expected candidate, continues to be PDP’s nemesis and waterloo.

    It is a platitudinous fact that the PDP never wanted the APC to remain cohesive in the hope that it could profit from its internal squabbles and divisions in the build-up to next year’s general election. That was the reason it had continued with its negative profiling of the APC and its jejune antics of taunting the APC as incapable of holding congresses and national convention to elect its national executive committee (NEC).  That narrative had, sardonically, become a platform on which the battered opposition strove to draw political relevance. Unfortunately, its rash of criticisms had only portrayed it as dimwitted. And generally, the PDP has now outlandishly reduced opposition politics to petty tittle-tattle and confabulation, poking around in the APC’s internal affairs when issues that directly affect the welfare, security and wellbeing of the nation and her citizenry are blowing in the wind.

    Therefore, the manner in which the PDP and its noxious frolics could not escape essential stigmatization with regard to its unimaginative interference in APC’s internal affairs is the same manner in which its so-called quick responses to APC’s governance issues cannot escape indictment as products of frustration birthed by the historic and sensational termination of its megalomania in the 2015 presidential election. Its rodomontade that it would rule Nigeria for the next 60 years had suffered a short circuit. Its 60-year rule dream got terminated in its sixteenth year in power. The decision by Nigerians to sign a social contract with the APC is at the bottom of PDP’s histrionics. Unable to absorb the shock and in a frenzied bid to stage a come-back to power to continue the robin hood road show, it has resorted to ridiculous and lugubrious act of propaganda and blackmail.

    But one thing has been very evident in the corpus of criticisms that the PDP has hurled at the APC and Buhari’s administration since inception: the criticisms are all sheer bunkum and gobbledygook oozing out of the belly of damaged and compromised party machine whose leaders lack the moral high ground to pontificate about corruption. But surprisingly, the PDP through its publicists has been laboring hard to skew the corruption narrative against the APC and Buhari, whose moral magnitude has received national and international approbation; a leader who typifies the moral conscience of the administration and the moving force of the anti-corruption war.

    It is in the context of the sheer preposterousness of PDP’s antics that the sensibilities of Nigerians who have become seized of the facts of monumental corruption and mindless looting that charaterised the sixteen years of the PDP government get daily assaulted and ghastly bruised. For God’s sake, the fact that the PDP has the gumption to sermonize about propriety in official conduct questions and ridicules our sense of morality. The opposition party has sunk so deep into the corruption morass for it to be able to challenge the APC. Its records of malfeasance and sleaze are sordid. Its integrity capital has been greatly discounted. There is no iota of positivity in its kitty to show to a manically bewildered citizenry.

    The PDP cannot come to equity because it does not have clean hands. The totality of the political machine is soiled. The party’s unconscionable and wicked strategy to charge the APC-led federal administration with the mundane issues and primordial sentiments of religion and ethnicity in order to diminish the single-minded effort by Buhari to confront and dismantle the odious legacies of corruption, insecurity and mismanaged economy inherited from it, are reprehensible. Herein is the fallacy of PDP’s oppositional politics. It is obviously luxuriating in the aqua of hocus-pocus, thinking that Nigerians have forgotten so soon how its government mindlessly plundered the nation’s patrimony.

    There is no doubt that the leading opposition party has nothing new to offer. It has thus become a compulsive irritant, knowing full well that it cannot electorally rebound due to Buhari’s writ-large credentials and characters of financial prudence and integrity. In addition, the prospects of a much more unified party under the chairmanship of a hard-hitting Oshiomhole have raised the bar far higher than the PDP had expected. Until June 23, the PDP had been indulged by the party’s NEC under the urbane and unassuming leadership of Chief John Odigie-Oyegun. That political indulgence had served as an oxygen mask for the prostrate PDP which, at the time, should have been put where it rightly belongs through precise and sustained narratives by the APC.

    Had Oshiomhole been the chairman at that period when the nation was daily regaled by revelations of corrupt acts perpetrated by the PDP and officials of its government particularly from 2011 to 2015, he would have robustly deployed the platform of his office to further deconstruct the nature of the plundering administration and the characters that superintended it. Today, Oshiomhole has stepped in as national chairman to the discomfiture of the opposition: all gloves are off for bare-knuckled fights with the floundering opposition. It is too late for the PDP to stop the macabre dance. Regardless, Oshiomhole will take the wind of its sail, deploying his huge capacity for wits and grits.

    Viva Nigeria! Viva APC! Viva Buhari! Viva Oshiomhole! Welcome to a new  era in political party administration. The combination of Buhari and Oshiomhole would produce robust government-party leaderships that would be complementary in their vast flourish. Oshiomhole is not ready to take prisoners.  He is in the mood to completely decimate the opposition.  He has the intellectual magnitude, the oratorical clout and the sheer fecundity to deploy the power of logic in the articulation and elucidation of party and government manifestoes and programmes. He is very efficient and utilitarian.  He will consistently and persistently intervene in very coherent defence of policy decisions and choices by the federal government.

    Indeed, the almost four years of tolerating the irritability of the PDP are over for good. The opposition is advised not to joke with Oshiomhole. Enough of political sarcasms and innuendoes that had been thrown as barbs at the APC and Buhari for a period of aeon. PDP’s characteristic criticisms that had bordered essentially on ad hominem; that had been highly tendentious most times and, at other times, vitriolic and incendiary should be moderated if the opposition must enjoy little peace. In fact, the PDP is now in between the devil and the deep blue sea. Whether it becomes irresponsible or not, it should know that it has Oshiomhole to contend with per time.

    The role of the opposition is not, as it were, to cry wolf where there is none or to become irresponsible in raising the alarm before international organisations without verifiable factual bases nor is it to play on our centrifugal proclivities at the expense of our centripetal and agglutinating fulcrum. The PDP and Oshiomhole’s opposite side- Prince Uche Secondus- will come under the sledge hammer if they continue with these odious tactics. Clarifications: the APC-led administration is not averse to criticisms, but the criticisms must be constructive.

    • Honourabe Obahiagbon, a former member of the House of Representatives, writes from Benin.
  • PDP calls for credible election in Ekiti

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has advised the Federal Government and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to ensure that the forthcoming Ekiti Governorship election is free and fair.

    The PDP National Chairman, Prince Uche Secondus gave the advice when he received Former PDP State Assemblies Presiding Officers at PDP National secretariat on Monday in Abuja.

    Secondus said that any attempt to rig Ekiti election, scheduled for July 14, would be a threat to 2019 general elections.

    He said: “The best that the All Progressives Congress (APC) can give Nigerians is to conduct free and fair election and earn the credit.

    “PDP did it in 2015. We conducted credible presidential election; we lost and handed over power.

    “People should be allowed to test their will. We must allow the will of the people to prevail.

    “If you are popular, test it. Don’t intimidate or harass the people. Tell them the truth.’’

    Secondus expressed optimism that re-branded PDP would regain its lost ground, including the presidency it lost in 2015 general elections.

    He advised security agencies not to subject their loyalty to any political party but Nigerians.

    “ Members of the security agencies should know that the tax payers’ money is so important. You are not being paid by a party. One day, you will give account.”

    He condemned the killing of innocent people in the country and called on the government to redouble efforts in arresting the problem.

    The Chairman of the Former State Assemblies Presiding Officers, Inuwa Garba, urged the party national leaders to ensure that popular and experienced candidates emerge as the party candidates in future elections.

    “Popular and experience candidates that can deliver should be our target’’

    Garba, who canvassed the inclusion of the group members in all activities of PDP, pledged the loyalty of the group to the party to ensure the success its  success in the coming elections.

    Garba commended the Secondus for leading the party well and for the achievements his administration had recorded so far in the face of intimidation.(NAN)

  • PDP to APC Chair: submit yourself to EFCC

    THE Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has urged the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Chairman Adams Oshiomhole to immediately submit himself to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to clear corruption allegations against him.

    The opposition party said Oshiomhole lacked the rectitude to speak in public as a leader at any level, whatsoever, until he clears the allegations that he diverted billions of naira meant for the people of Edo State while he was governor from 2008 to 2016.

    A statement yesterday by the PDP spokesman, Kola Ologbondiyan, said since the petition against Oshiomhole at the EFCC was in the public domain, the newly elected party chairman would do the APC, Buhari Presidency, the EFCC as well as himself a lot of good by quietly submitting himself for investigation and possibly prosecution.

    According to the party, since one of the campaign footstools upon which APC was elected into office is fighting corruption, it will be strange for Oshiomhole to go about his new assignment with allegation of corruption, even if it’s as tiny as a strand of hair.

    The statement said: “It is also instructive for the new chairman to understand that Nigerians are no longer inclined to sophistry, illogical arguments, deceit, contrivance and recourse to abuse as a method of campaign.”

     

     

     

     

     

  • APC convention a charade, mockery of democracy – PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has described yesterday’s national convention of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as a charade, a mockery of democracy and assault on the sensibility of Nigerians.

    The party said there was open intimidation and physical assault on aspirants and delegates to the convention, which it said, further confirmed the desperation by President Muhammadu Buhari’s camp to seize the APC’s presidential ticket.

    In a statement yesterday by the spokesman for the PDP, Kola Ologbondiyan, the opposition party said the APC resorted to imposing of pliable officials who had been handed the directives to muzzle other presidential aspirants in the APC ahead of the party’s presidential primaries.

    The statement said, “Delegates and other members of the APC were horrified when aspirants to various party offices were being threatened, harassed and in some cases, paid and handed written orders to mount the stage and announce their withdrawal for aspirants listed by President Buhari, under heavy security presence.

    “Nigerians are invited to note that some of the officials preferred, particularly, the National Chairman, are individuals overburdened by heavy corruption allegations, and whose expected investigation and prosecution have been traded for a Presidential ticket for President Buhari.

    “The world observed with shock how aspirants and delegates who dared to raise questions were manhandled by thugs and intimidated by security operatives.

    “It is instructive to state that the APC convention directly reflects the confusion, intimidations, violations and descent to fascism that have characterized governance in our nation in the last three years.

    “President Buhari’s handlers are aware that due to his poor performance, clinching his party’s presidential ticket under a free, fair and credible primary is impossible, hence this resort to intimidation, coercion and escalation of official hooliganism in the APC.

     

     

    “While we urge Nigerians and the international community to mark the desperation in Mr. President’s camp, for which they are bent at destroying our democracy, it is clear that with the character, personality and outlook of the incoming national executive of the APC, the party has been finally sunk by President Buhari and his power hungry cabal”.

     

  • PDP presenting ineffective opposition

    THE APC is having a field day running Nigeria as it pleases. No opposition party is snapping at its heels; no legal challenges are mounted against its misconceived social policies and constitutional infractions; no propaganda is orchestrated against its strong-arm and autocratic measures; and no sensible and credible alternatives to the ruling party’s weak and often contradictory economic plans are presented to the public. It is almost like Nigeria is under a one-party rule, with the ruling party intensifying its propaganda tactics, seeking out strong opposition parties and leaders to harry and destroy, and accusing critics of demonstrating a lack of patriotism, or plotting against the state, or even promoting the agenda of those who looted the country.

    Discouraged and fearful, the opposition has pulled its punches and muffled its criticisms. Yet, the ruling party has remained evidently vulnerable in many ways than the PDP was careless, profligate and errant in all of its 16 ugly years in office. Two reasons chiefly account for this tragedy. One is that the mild-mannered and urbane Uche Secondus, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chairman, has not quite risen to the challenge of understanding the deeply antagonistic and conflicted, and hence desperate and aggressive, nature of the APC. Until he gets the full measure of the ruling party, an organisation that must not be placated or complimented, he cannot find the antidote to their high-strung politics.

    Two is the saddening fact that the leading opposition party lost office in a hail of scandals from which it is yet to recover. Unable to purge its ranks of those who authored its appalling style of misrule, and too timid to find replacements for its grasping former stalwarts, the party has fretted anxiously on the national political sidelines, unsure whether it could ever place a foot right, whined considerably about the ruling party’s lack of self-respect, and launched half-hearted assaults to overthrow the Babylonian indecencies and raucousness of the APC.

    The PDP remains the leading opposition party, despite the frenzied effort by ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo to raise a disingenuous political armada against the APC. Unfortunately for the PDP, the man who should have been its substantive chairman, the mercurial and intransigent former Kaduna State governor Ahmed Makarfi, took office as a caretaker chairman and had to relinquish the position to Mr Secondus who appears better suited for an interim role. It is possible Mr Secondus possesses rare administrative and even rhetorical gifts; the problem is that whatever endowments he has have helped both him and his party to accomplish very little, barely making a dent on the almost impregnable armour of the self-assured and boastful APC.

    It is not clear how the PDP would overcome its debilitating paralysis. They probably hope that eventually their presidential candidate, whoever he is, will help to ennoble them and reinvigorate the party as it wars against the APC behemoth. This hope is not totally misplaced, for most political observers know that empires and great countries are ennobled by their statesmen rather than the other way round. But in the case of the PDP, there is nothing to indicate that this hope is not a crazy gambit. For, after all, its leading aspirants at the moment all have one chink or the other in their futile armours, including the highly cosmopolitan but frequently underrated former vice president Atiku Abubakar, and the aforesaid mercurial aurochs, Senator Makarfi.

    The APC is highly vulnerable, as this column has warned over the months. They have an Achilles heel that is more susceptible to attack than the one that undid the eponymous mythical Greek. They also have very little understanding of economic or political issues, exhibit deep contempt for the constitution and the rule of law, fight anti-graft war lopsidedly, amateurishly and sanctimoniously, and have no vision for the future, absolutely none beyond its proselytising rhetoric. If these weaknesses are not enough for any party and propagandist to turn into a fearsome brew against the APC, then the PDP really needs a coach to tutor them on how to poach the irrepressible Lai Mohammed from the Buhari cabinet. No, Alhaji Mohammed, the highly effective Information minister, is not surplus to requirement; he is simply the only man and conjurer who can bring water out of a rock, constitution be damned.

  • PDP, Ohanaeze blow hot over Abaribe’s arrest

    THE Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Igbo sociocultural group, Ohanaeze Ndigbo are demanding the immediate release of former deputy governor of Abia State, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe from security custody. Abaribe who is representing Abia South in the Green Chamber of the National Assembly and Chairman, Senate Committee on Power, Steel Development and Metallurgy was arrested yesterday by operatives of the Department of Security Services (DSS) at Transcorp Hilton where he had gone for a haircut. The DSS did not respond to inquiry over the arrest. Operatives of the DSS last night stormed his Apo Abuja residence, armed with a search warrant. The search was still on as at press time.

    But his party,PDP,claimed it was another evidence of “a total clampdown on the opposition and perceived opponents of President Muhammadu Buhari’s 2019 re-election bid.” Its spokesman, Kola Ologbondiyan, attributed Abaribe’s arrest to moves to intimidate and emasculate vocal members of the National Assembly. He alleged that “constitutionally guaranteed freedom of speech no longer obtains and citizens are marked, arrested and detained on the whims and caprices of those in power.” He asked the DSS to ” immediately declare Senator Abaribe’s whereabouts, as well as the charge against him.

    Moreover, the laws of our nation are clear on the process of arrest and prosecution of any citizen and not recourse to clampdown and intimidation.” Ohanaeze Ndigbo suspected that the arrest was in connection with the disappearance of the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu for whom Abaribe stood as surety in the treason case against him. The group said that the circumstances that led to Kanu’s disappearance were beyond the Senator and even the contemplation of the law that a surety can guarantee the production of an accused person. The Ohanaeze, in a statement by its President General Chief Nnia Nwodo, Ohanaze said the army in the name of “Operation Python Dance” invaded Nnamdi’s home and destabilized normalcy there. “It is only the security agency that can disclose Nnamdi’s whereabout. Senator Abaribe has no capacity, nor has any surety in the circumstances to know the whereabouts of Nnamdi Kanu. What happened in Umahia was an invasion, a war of a kind.

    “Nnamdi may have been killed or captured in the imbroglio or even escaped into hiding. The onus lies on the security forces to disclose his whereabouts. “The judiciary is beginning to tow the line of the executive by throwing the law overboard in matters that affect the South East. We are all equal before the law. Senator Abaribe must be released forthwith.” Sources said yesterday that Abaribe was accosted at the hotel as he tried to have a haircut. The Nation gathered that the DSS had sent a verbal message to him that its DG Lawal Daura “wanted to have a friendly chat with him.” Abaribe was said to have turned down the invitation preferring that it should send a letter through the President of the Senate for him to honour any invitation. Sources said “a formal invitation from DSS never came,” and people suspected to be DSS operatives had been trailing him for unknown reasons. It was also learnt that a team from the DSS recently visited Abaribe’s senatorial office in Abia State, to ascertain the authenticity of the constituency projects he has executed.

    The operatives were said to have left the senatorial office “without finding anything to hang on him.” One of the sources said that “it is clear that the arrest of Abaribe has nothing to do with the bail bond he signed on behalf of the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra leader, Nnamdi Kanu.” Officials of the DSS had in April, stormed the senator’s office at the National Assembly. Spokesman to Abaribe, Uche Awom, confirmed the arrest yesterday. Awom said that the Abia South senator was attested when he went to Transcorp Hilton to have haircut. He said: “Yes, it is true that he has been arrested. He was arrested at the Transcorp Hilton by noon on Friday when he went there to have haircut.” Awom said that no reason was given for the arrest. Only on Thursday, Abaribe expressed the disappointment of Southeast senators over the cut in the allocation for the building of the Akanu Ibiam International Airport Terminal Building, Enugu. Abaribe who is Chairman, Southeast Senate caucus, wondered why the allocation to the Enugu Airport in a zone that hardly receives a fair share of the national patrimony would be cut from N2 billion to N500 million. He expressed the determination of the Southeast caucus to get to the root of the budget cut.

  • 2019: Atiku urges free, fair PDP primaries

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has pleaded with the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to ensure free and fair contest for the party’s 2019 presidential ticket.

    Atiku, who was at PDP national secretariat on Friday, formally informed the leadership of the party of his intention to seek the party’s presidential ticket.

    The former Vice President assured the party chiefs of his willingness to accept defeat and support whoever wins the ticket, provided the exercise is just, free and transparent.

    He commended the party for the transparent conduct of the Ekiti governorship primary election.

    “If the feat recorded during the governorship primary in Ekiti State is repeated in other primaries that will come, this party is destined to reclaim its role and retrieve power generally through our electoral process,” Atiku said.

    He recalled that impunity and manipulation of the PDP past nomination processes were responsible for the party’s defeat in the 2015 elections.

    Atiku, however, observed that with the precedent set by the new leadership of the PPD, the party was on its way to reclaiming power in 2019.

    He said: “This meeting is not intended for anything other than my desire to seek the presidential ticket of the party. I am here to put you on notice and I believe that I should do this before reaching out to other organs of the party.

    “I want to thank you and look forward to working with you. Whether as presidential candidate or not, you can always expect me to fulfil my obligations as a loyal member.”

    Responding, the National Chairman of the PDP, Prince Uche Secondus, assured Atiku of free, fair and transparent presidential primary.

    Secondus said the PDP National Working Committee (NWC) has been working hard to rebrand and reposition the party.

     

     

  • PDP expresses fears over Abaribe’s safety

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has expressed fears over the safety of one of its members in the Senate, Enyinnaya Abaribe, who was on Friday arrested by the Department of Security Services (DSS).

    The party decried what it described as Gestapo-style arrest of the lawmaker, saying the development has further confirmed its position that the Federal Government has commenced a total clampdown on the opposition and perceived opponents of President Muhammadu Buhari’s 2019 re-election bid.

    A statement issued on Friday by the spokesman for the PDP, Kola Ologbondiyan, attributed Abaribe’s arrest to moves to intimidate and emasculate vocal members of the National Assembly.

    Abaribe has been trenchant in calling out President Buhari over incompetence and violation of the constitution.

    The PDP noted that the federal government had yet to give reasons for the arrest and detention of Abaribe, who has been denied access to his lawyers and associates.

    The party also noted the apprehension of Nigerians following numerous alleged plots by the federal government to frame up other lawmakers, including Senate President, Bukola Saraki, Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremmadu, Dino Melaye and Shehu Sani.

    “Nigerians can now see that our dear nation is fast descending into a fascist state where constitutionally guaranteed freedom of speech no longer obtains and citizens are marked, arrested and detained on the whims and caprices of those in power.

    “The PDP charges the DSS to immediately declare Senator Abaribe’s whereabouts, as well as the charge against him. Moreover, the laws of our nation are clear on the process of arrest and prosecution of any citizen and not recourse to clampdown and intimidation,” the statement added.

  • PDP cautions Fed Govt over cattle ranches

    THE Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has urged the Federal Government to exercise caution in its plan to establish cattle ranches in some parts of the country.

    Declaring that the country is presently in perilous times, the opposition party urged the government to hold enough consultations on the issue to avoid escalation of the same problems it claims to be addressing.

    The PDP observed that the situation has already generated discordant tunes and acrimony among major stakeholders, groups and states across the country, particularly on issues of funding and land ownership.

    Addressing a news conference in Abuja yesterday, PDP spokesman Kola Ologbondiyan said the party was worried by the lack of adequate consultations by the Federal Government, resulting in the disagreements that have trailed the plan, especially along ethnic divides.

    It called on the Federal Government to get its acts together and follow all due processes, as stipulated by the laws and the 1999 Constitution (as amended), to eliminate the disagreements generated by the policy.

    The party said the nation has witnessed enough disagreements, violence and bloodletting, adding that measures must be put in place to avert fresh crisis.

    The PDP restated its accusation of clampdown on opposition leaders and perceived opponents of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration.

    It alerted Nigerians and the international community to what it described as the antics of those it described as “enemies of our democratic process and adversaries of our unity and harmonious living as a nation”.

     

  • PDP cautions Fed Govt over cattle ranches

    THE Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has urged the Federal Government to exercise caution in its plan to establish cattle ranches in some parts of the country.

    Declaring that the country is presently in perilous times, the opposition party urged the government to hold enough consultations on the issue to avoid escalation of the same problems it claims to be addressing.

    The PDP observed that the situation has already generated discordant tunes and acrimony among major stakeholders, groups and states across the country, particularly on issues of funding and land ownership.

    Addressing a news conference in Abuja yesterday, PDP spokesman Kola Ologbondiyan said the party was worried by the lack of adequate consultations by the Federal Government, resulting in the disagreements that have trailed the plan, especially along ethnic divides.

    It called on the Federal Government to get its acts together and follow all due processes, as stipulated by the laws and the 1999 Constitution (as amended), to eliminate the disagreements generated by the policy.

    The party said the nation has witnessed enough disagreements, violence and bloodletting, adding that measures must be put in place to avert fresh crisis.

    The PDP restated its accusation of clampdown on opposition leaders and perceived opponents of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration.

    It alerted Nigerians and the international community to what it described as the antics of those it described as “enemies of our democratic process and adversaries of our unity and harmonious living as a nation”.