Tag: PDP

  • ‘Abuja can’t foist Bankole on Ogun PDP’

    ‘Abuja can’t foist Bankole on Ogun PDP’

    Ogun State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has been embroiled in a crisis over preparations for next year’s general elections. In this interview with Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN, its chairman, Chief Adebayo Dayo, speaks on the disagreement over the choice of the governorship flag bearer.

    Has the Senator David Mark led panel been able to integrate  PDP factions  in Ogun State?

    The Senator David Mark Committee was set up to integrate the new and old members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the Southwest states. You know Mark is one of the strong pillars of our party. He was appointed to lead a committee that will stabilise the PDP in the Southwest. When you see a good man, you will see a lot of good things in whatever he does. What the committee is doing in Southwest will help our party. It has been so far, so good.

    Has the panel encountered any problem in that regard?

    The only problem it has is in Ondo State where the state executive of the party was dissolved. It was unfortunate that the Ondo executive was dissolved because its Chairman, Ebenezer Alabi and members of his executive council worked very hard to make sure that the PDP remained strong in the state. As co-ordinator of PDP Southwest chairmen, when I heard Ondo State executive was dissolved, I knew that Senator Mark was not responsible for the dissolution because he believes in the rule of law and due process.

    What is the position of the Southwest PDP Chairmen on the dissolved Ondo State executive?

    As far as we are concerned, the PDP Executive Council is not dissolved. That is the court order. The matter is before the court and the court has ruled that the status quo should remain. The party chairman and members of his executive remain in office until we have a final judgment on the issue. I know that members of the National Working Committee are law abiding, they will always uphold the rule of law.

    Is it true that a faction of the PDP in Ogun is calling for the dissolution of your executive?

    I am not aware of that. It is not true. However, we are in a democratic dispensation; people are free to express their opinion.

    The Ogun PDP executive cannot be dissolved until the expiration of our tenure in March 2016. Our executive is a product of a congress held in February 2012, which was validated by two courts of law.  We have judgments from the Federal High Court and State High Court, Ilaro, confirming the legitimacy of the congress from wards to state level and the elected members of the state executive council. The speculators should be very careful, so that they don’t commit contempt of court.

    What is your reaction to the speculation that the Presidency has endorsed former Speaker Dimeji Bankole for Ogun governorship?

    The thinking of some people is that when a young man had the opportunity of occupying high office, he should remain there forever. It is not possible because time changes. Gone are the days when an individual will remain in the leadership position forever. The only person that remained a leader till his last day on earth was Chief Obafemi Awolowo. He worked for it and got it. Awo was a great man; a consistent leader who never misled his followers. Many people think they could be a leader like Awo. How many of them can shun social vices like womanising, drinking and lying like Awo did. Awo was always busy in his study room thinking of how to improve the lots of common Nigerians.

    Bankole is a young man. I love him. But, he doesn’t know who his friends and enemies are. A man who is not ready to listen and learn from someone else’s experience, because he is too much in a hurry, how will he not make mistakes? He thought because he had occupied high office in the past that he will continue to be in big office for the rest of his life. That is why he is thinking of automatic ticket.

    I have told all PDP governorship aspirants in Ogun State that I am the umpire for the race. I have no interest in who picks the ticket. My ambition is that the PDP should win in Ogun in 2015. If I am a younger man looking for appointment from a governor, I would probably take side with an aspirant. I don’t have ambition of seeking political appointment. I want to organise a free and fair primary that will be acceptable to all concerned.

    If Abuja politicians give any aspirant automatic ticket, then they have to come down to Ogun State to vote for their anointed candidate. All I know is that we are preparing for the primaries through which candidates for elective offices would emerge. The delegates elected by the party members would decide the fate of the aspirants, including those seeking governorship tickets. Nobody can impose candidates on us in Ogun State. All the candidates would emerge through due process.

    What is your working relationship with Jubril Martins Kuye (JMK) like?

    What many people don’t know is that I happen to be a follower of JMK group for 18 years. JMK has been my leader. There are no more factions or groups in Ogun PDP. Kuye played a major role in making Gbenga Daniel governor in 2003. I regard him as my leader. But, he is not the only leader in the Ogun State chapter.  Daniel is one of the leaders in Ogun State today, Prince Kashamu is another leader, Senator Otegbola is also a leader. Being leaders do not mean that they have groups. We have settled all our differences in Ogun PDP. If our governorship candidate emerged either through consensus or primary, we will all work together.

    But, where an aspirant is contented with  the promise of an automatic ticket by Abuja suggests that he lacks grassroots support. With the acceptability of a candidate by party members, 50 per cent of the workload is over. Through complimentary efforts, the party will make up the outstanding 50 per cent.  If you are not popular among the party supporters, it is not possible for the party to win the election for you.

    Have you fully integrate Gbenga Daniel’s group back into the PDP?

    Thirty minutes ago, I received a text from Daniel, telling where he was. That speaks volume that our working relationship is very cordial. As someone who has been governor for eight years, he had helped many people through appointments. He has a lot of followers. The challenge I have now is how to manage the high calibre of people and having a working relationship with them. I don’t have any problem with Daniel and his followers. I am sure with the old and new group working together, the sky is the limit for us in Ogun PDP.

    Are you reaching out to other opposition parties like Social Democratic Party (SDP)?

    Yes, we have been discussing with our leader Chief Olusegun Osoba for a very long time. The relationship is very cordial, but we have not concluded any arrangement on 2015 elections.

    How many governorship aspirants have submitted their nomination forms?

    We have 11 in our records here in Ogun. They are Kayode Amusan, Tony Ojesina, Prince Yanju Lipede, Dr. Remilekun Bakare, Alhaji Sarafa Tunji Ishola, Dr. Femi Majekodunmi, Prof. David Bamgbose, Hon. Isiaka Akinlade, Omoba Segun Adewale, Prince Gboyega Isiaka, and Alhaji Rafiu Ogunleye.

    What of Dimeji Bankole?

    I am not aware of Dimeji Bankole’s intention. I have given you what we have in our records. May be he collected and submitted his form at Abuja.

    In addition to governorship aspirants, 109 aspirants for House of Assembly, 59 for House of Representatives and 10 for Senate have submitted their forms.

    How would you manage post-primary crisis?

    Unless we want to deceive ourselves, the people that have remained in the party over the years will have an edge over those that are just returning. But, we will make sure that the positions go round. Most of the returnees have got waivers to contest. We will support them in achieving their political ambition. We shall work together at the general elections.

    Are you prepared for the general elections?

    The large number of aspirants filing nomination papers shows the strength of the party. We have 11 governorship aspirants that cut across the three senatorial zones, canvassing votes in their respective constituencies. It is a warm up for the party’s campaign to commence. With the party structure and the party manifesto, the PDP is the party to beat in Ogun State.

  • Violence mars exercise in Kwara

    Violence mars exercise in Kwara

    •Group demands cancellation 

    THE Kwara state Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) National Assembly primaries were characterized again yesterday with violence in Ilorin West Local Government area.

    The House of Assembly primaries penultimate Saturday in the same local government area was marred by violence.

    Suspected thugs loyal to one of the PDP chieftains in the council yesterday allegedly unleashed attack on several innocent members of the party.

    A group named Think Thank in the party said: “Not less than five of the duly elected delegates from the local government have been rushed to the hospital after both masked and uniformed security personnel and sponsored thugs were set on them by a chieftain of the PDP in Kwara State.”

    The group has therefore demanded for the immediate cancellation of National Assembly primaries in the state.

    “Since nothing can be built on nothing, we hereby demand the immediate cancellation of the kangaroo National Assembly Primary of the PDP in Kwara State.

    “Anything sort of this is an invitation to anarchy and a possible implosion from and revolt against the PDP in Kwara state. A stitch in time saves nine,” the group added.”

  • Massive security in Benue

    Massive security in Benue

    THERE was heavy deployment of security personnel yesterday in Benue State during the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) House of Representatives primaries.

    But the exercise was hitch-free and recorded massive turnout.

    In Makurdi/ Guma federal constituency, Hon John Tondo defeated his opponent Dickson Tarkighir, with 69 votes to 1.

    In Gboko/ Tarka federal constituency, Hon Bernard Nenge was leading at press time while Chris  Abah, popular called “Mad lion”, defeated the incumbent Hassan Saleh for Ado/ Okpokwu/ Ogbadigbo federal constituency .

    State PDP chairman, Dr. Emmanuel Agbo, told The Nation that materials were deployed on time.

     

  • PDP attacks Kolade

    PDP attacks Kolade

    Contd  from page 6

    “Indeed, the timing and the tenor of Dr. Kolade’s outburst, given the security and political situation in the land, is also very worrisome especially when a nerve-soothing statement from a person of his age and status could have encouraged our citizens and help douse the tension in the polity.

    “It is mind-boggling and embarrassing that this eminent technocrat could attempt to stand history on its head by stating that President Goodluck Jonathan went to a rally in Kano State “the next day” after 59 students were killed in Yobe State.

    “It is common knowledge and verifiable fact that the said PDP Kano rally held on April 15, 2014, about two months after the unfortunate killing of 59 students in Yobe in February, 2014.”

    In the actual fact, the said April 15 Kano rally by the PDP, in which President Jonathan was captured dancing to the “Azonto” rhythm, was held the same day that over 76 Nigerians got killed in the Nyanya bus station blast.

    Also, the rally took place a few hours after the news of the abduction of the over 200 Chibok school girls by Boko Haram broke. The girls have remained in the custody of the insurgents till date.

    The PDP further maintained that while it did not expect everybody to agree with President Jonathan’s leadership style, the party was nevertheless encouraged that Nigerians from all walks of life “appreciate the President as a committed and sincere leader” with very strong bond with his people and their well-being irrespective of religious, ethnic and political affiliations.

    The statement continued: “In the last four years, under President Jonathan, our country has witnessed unprecedented growth and verifiable achievements in all sectors with our economy ranking as the largest in Africa in spite of the daunting security challenges and the global economic recession, a fact which Dr. Kolade as a technocrat is fully aware of. We, therefore, totally disagree with Dr. Kolade when he said that Nigeria has had it much better than now.

    “It is incontrovertible that the Federal Government has sustained the fight against insurgency, deploying huge budgetary allocations to re-equip our security forces as well as intensified collaborations with national and international stakeholders to bring lasting peace to our country.

    “We wish to restate that the PDP and all well-meaning Nigerians are solidly behind President Goodluck Jonathan in this fight against terrorism. Those who expect the President to get distracted, demoralised or cowed through their utterances must know that they are fighting a lost battle.

    “Let it be clear that the PDP-led administration shall never allow terrorists and their supporters to dictate the tempo of government, which has been their direct objective.  We wish to restate that it is a globally settled principle that no government allows terrorist to influence the course of its action otherwise they have achieved their purpose against the people.’

     

    The statement called on citizens to unite and join hands with the Federal Government and security agencies in the fight against insurgency. It called on “eminent Nigerians such as Dr. Christopher Kolade to rise up to their patriotic duty in condemning the heinous acts of terrorists and urging their international contacts to support the Federal Government in the efforts to end insurgency in our dear country.”

     

     

  • Late arrival of materials delays exercise in Ekiti

    Late arrival of materials delays exercise in Ekiti

    LATE arrival of voting materials delayed the conduct of the House of Representatives primaries of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ekiti State yesterday.

    The materials arrived the state at about 5.00 pm for onward distribution to all the six federal constituencies where delegates were expected to vote.

    Arrangements were on as of press time to arrange for power generators to provide light at designated voting centres.

    The exercise is expected to stretch into late in the night.

    There was a massive security build-up in all the federal constituencies where the primaries were due to hold.

    Contestants, delegates and party members who had arrived voting centers as early as 8.00 am, waited endlessly for electoral materials.

    The strengthening of security might not be unconnected with intelligence report that some people planned to unleash terror at the voting centres.

    Policemen and party leaders and members witnessed the disbursement of the ballot papers and other materials to the designated venues some few minutes last 5 pm.

    The electoral panel chair, Suleiman, apologised for coming late assuring party leaders of their readiness to conduct transparent primaries.

    The state PDP Chairman, Chief Idowu Faleye, disclosed that the party had asked all aspirants to sign an undertaking not to challenge the results of the primaries in the court of law to prevent an outbreak of crisis thereafter.

  • Ife Summit: The smart alecks are back

    Ife Summit: The smart alecks are back

    Why now would President Jonathan treat the Southwest differently when he would never ever come back seeking our votes?

    As it is now well known, PDP both as party and government, is like a con artist. More intriguing, though, is the fact that its Southwest leaders are by far worse. After six years of the president  being in the saddle, appointing  them to  nothing higher than miserable preferments like board  chairmanship of  polytechnics  in as far away as Damaturu while allotting to tiny Bayelsa powerful agencies like NIMASSA, he has suddenly woken up to how his government has thus far treated the Yoruba like Christmas chicken. But truth be told, we can hardly blame him because, after many years of interaction with his Southwest party men, he must have come to know that they think only of self.  But if President Jonathan claims he still pities the Yoruba for the loss of the House Speakership, we should ask what in his opinion constitutes the gains of the Southwest from the tenures of Patricia Etteh and Dimeji Bankole? Or what one single thing can the Yoruba point to as benefits of those better forgotten days other than the fact that both ex-speakers significantly helped themselves?  Therefore, if PDP politicians could not, I expect our respected Obas, who were present in numbers at the Ife summit, to easily see the vacuity of the president’s jeremiad. Or how, in four whole years, has this very sympathetic president attempted to assuage that loss or mitigate its supposed effects? How many Yoruba has he appointed to key positions outside of constitutional prescriptions? Which of our many highly educated Yoruba compatriots has he appointed to the headship of key agencies or departments?  How convenient  for him now, two months to his next election, to come sympathise with us even though the Mulika -not Southwest – loss,  was at the very beginning of this administration?  The president, I think, should be told that we know crocodile tears when we see one. The Yoruba nation has come a long way, with a history dating back thousands of years even if some nouveau rich misrepresent us as a hungry people.

    And, it is not as if we had ever benefitted in any significant way from a PDP government.  During the Obasanjo era, the Agbajo Yoruba Agbaiye, a budding Pan-Yoruba cultural organisation under the sterling leadership of Lt. General Alani Akinrinade, was so peeved and  scandalised,  it had to set up a rapid response team to react to the total neglect of the Southwest when, after every Federal Executive Council meeting, huge water/irrigation projects were being announced as approved for the north and some other parts of the country when Muktar Shagari was minister of Water Resources but with hardly any ever going to the Southwest. The team had as members, Prof Jide Osuntokun, Dr Dele Shobowale, Mrs Tola Adenle and yours truly.

    The situation actually got worse as the entire Southwest road infrastructure collapsed as exemplified by the Ibadan -Benin Road which broke in two at Igbara-Oke.  So if  we were treated  that  nonchalantly under a president we called our own, what right do we have now to expect any better under the current administration which, in any case, the South – South has succeeded in annexing? This 11th hour presidential romance should naturally collapse, even before it gets under way.

    These are some of the reasons Yoruba should easily see through this joke. Candidate Jonathan was hugely voted for in the West in 2011 – thanks largely to that penitent kneeling by the candidate, in front of a highly regarded Man of God who happens to be of Yoruba extraction – but to what good?  Besides two of our young, gifted  professionals sitting in pretty offices in the presidency throwing darts and barbs at just about anybody- the last being the Nobel Laureate – what in truth can we point to as dividends accruing from that massive Yoruba vote?  Not even any of those oil pipeline security contracts which were generously awarded to the president’s kinsmen, and yet subsisting, even as oil thefts peak. Why now would President Jonathan treat  the Southwest differently when he would never ever come back seeking our votes?

    The Ife summit is nothing but a trap, dredged up by the Southwest crowd of the PDP and executed by the president who used the respect for his office to coral our royalties into attendance.  Luckily, our people have shown conclusively in Osun on 9 August, 2014, that never again shall the Yoruba be rail-roaded against their best interests or be sold on the cheap. Of course, we would be nothing better than fools if we fail to correctly interpret the complete military lock-down the world saw in both Ekiti and Osun during the governorship elections. If we were not clear-eyed enough to see where President Jonathan was going when he appointed our compatriots as junior ministers of Defence and Police Affairs, we can now appreciate that we were being set up for self immolation. And how mightily they succeeded in my dear Ekiti! But it is the same Yoruba who say you can only defile a woman once using deceit. We now know the president like the back of our palms.

    For instance, whereas our infrastructure collapsed under Obasanjo and his PDP Southwest governors, even the blind would now see what development is afoot in each of the states of the Southwest being governed by the APC. Whereas, not once did the PDP governors of that era  mention anything about  regional economic cooperation, it is now the driving force of economic development in the Southwest with the Ibadan-based DAWN COMMISSION under the lead of  Dipo Famakinwa, a brilliant management consultant.  Of course, should the PDP make any further in-road in the Southwest, the Commission will certainly be one of its very first casualties because it is beyond their ken to know its essence or relevance.

    And talking about PDP making no further inroad in the Southwest, we need to be reminded that we are dealing with an opponent for whom nothing is off limits as we saw in Ekiti  on 21 June, 2014 when a seemingly extra-ordinarily peaceful election -no ballot box snatching, no illegal thumb printing etc -was albeit,  scientifically rigged.   If we, Ekiti, could plead guilty to a failure of intelligence on that occasion, Nigerians no longer have that luxury.  Our point of departure, as a people who want our votes to count, should therefore be vigilance. We must all be very vigilant. The APC, as the main opposing political party, however, has a much bigger responsibility on its hands.  It  must, as urgently as it can, get the courts to compel  INEC to use ONLY the constitutionally prescribed INDELLIBLE ink as opposed to the VANISHING ink which it deployed to help in the scientific rigging we saw in Ekiti, at all the elections.

    A single event will illustrate this. Where she voted, a highly regarded spouse of an equally respected retired banker, thumb printed her allotted ballot paper thrice but without the slightest mark showing.  More annoyed than disappointed, she called on one of the NYSC members present who after listening to her complaint poured water on the ink pad. With this, she was able to get an almost unrecognisable mark left in front of her preferred party. But that is all the rogue scientists, purveyors of this immoral technology, need as that infinitesimal mark would subsequently migrate to impregnate a pre-programmed spot which is, of course, the PDP’s.  At the end of voting, that little ink now presents in very bold relief -in one colour, though blue and black inks were used by INEC – and all in one size. That is the mystery Professor Soyinka referred to in the Ekiti election but thanks to what happened in 2013 at the Zimbabwean presidential election, which has been handsomely reported on the internet, the world has come to unlock that mystery. Of course, PDP will most probably come with other variants of that.

    APC should now appreciate what a herculean task it has on its hands because courts which can rule that there is no division in the PDP even when the entire world saw members of the New PDP walk out of its Abuja convention, can conveniently rule that INEC is not obliged to follow in toto, the provisions of the electoral law as long as that will accord with the wishes of the PDP.

    In concluding this piece, let me humbly say that if we are truly our fathers’ children, a thousand Ife Summits by President Jonathan should not succeed in deceiving the Yoruba again.

  • Ondo PDP gets new executive committee

    The national leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)  yesterdy dissolved the executive committee of the Ondo State chapter and inaugurated a new one to run the affairs of the chapter for the next four years.

    It was a rancour free transition, as members of the dissolved executive were present at the inauguration, which took place at the party’s Abuja national secretariat.

    Governor Olusegun Mimiko, who led other party chieftains to the inauguration said the chapter had overcome its numerous crises, apparently thrown up by his defection to the PDP a few weeks ago.

    Mimiko urged the national leadership of the party to cross check future complaints from the state with the new executive, to avoid what he described as duplication of party platforms, especially as the general elections draw nearer.

    The governor enjoined the new executive committee, headed by Mr. Clement Faboyede to put in place appropriate mechanisms to address the problems confronting   the state chapter.

    Mr. Fatai Adams emerged deputy chairman and Igini Oyedele as secretary of the new exco.

  • PDP inaugurates convention committee

    PDP inaugurates convention committee

    THE Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) inaugurated yesterday its convention planning committee, ahead of the party’s December 10 national convention.

    While inaugurating the committee, the party’s National Chairman, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, praised the committee members for submitting themselves to the service of the party at a short notice.

    Committee chairman Dr. Bello Haliru Mohammed observed that the task before the committee was a daunting one that required working 24 hours till the convention date.

    Mohammed assured the leadership of the party that the 51-member committee would begin work immediately.

  • ‘Abia PDP lacks internal democracy’

    The lawmaker representing Abia Central, Senator Nkechi Justina Nwaogu, has said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state lacks internal democracy.

    Speaking in Aba ahead of tomorrow’s National Assembly primaries, she said she feared that if nothing was done by the national leadership of the party to address the situation, it might not produce the next governor.

    The Senate Committee on Oil, Gas and Natural Resources chairman alleged that the PDP structure in Abia had been hijacked by a family, noting that a situation where it was left in the hands of a few would not mean well for the party.

  • Stakeholders to meet PDP leaders on primaries

    Stakeholders to meet PDP leaders on primaries

    Following the secrecy surrounding the list of delegates and electoral materials concerning the primaries in Anambra North, stakeholders have scheduled a meeting with the National Working Committee (NWC) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to resolve the impasse.

    A PDP chieftain, Chief Chris Okoye, said members were dissatisfied with the last House of Assembly primary election.

     He said: “It is unacceptable that one buys form with N2.5 million, only for the process to be flawed.”

    There are speculations that former Aviation Minister Stella Oduah’s interest in the delegates’ list has divided members.

    Another PDP stalwart, Chuks Uneugbo, said the zone would not back the ex-minister as its senatorial candidate, as it could not have such a person as its representative in the Senate.

    The stakeholders said there were no primaries for the House of Assembly tickets, whereas a list was drawn up.

    Okoye said: “Our concern is, who are the delegates? Are the materials ready?”

    He said they would not be a party to where primaries were held in hotels with a few people manipulating the  results against the wishes of the people.