Tag: PDP

  • APC chair: we won’t accept PDP failures

    APC chair: we won’t accept PDP failures

    The Enugu State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has said it will not accept politicians the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) rejected.

    The party noted that such politicians only want to embrace the opposition party as a last resort.

    It said: “Those who want to join us from the PDP should do that now, by registering officially. This is because there will be no room for those who would want to come at injury time, after being rejected by the PDP.”

    APC Chairman Dr. Ben Nwoye addressed reporters at the end of a meeting between the state Exco members, youths and zonal women leaders.

    The chairman said APC would not be a dumping ground for rejected PDP members.

    He urged PDP members proposing to use APC as their last resort in 2015 to look elsewhere or pitch tent with the opposition party now that there were available brooms at the party’s secretariat.

    Nwoye warned that it would no longer be business as usual for those who lose primary elections and defect to the opposition to realise their political ambitions.

    The chairman said APC was doing well in the 17 local government areas and the three senatorial districts ahead of the 2015 general elections.

    The local government branches of the party, he said, had recorded a large turnout in the registration of new members who believe in APC’s ideology and agenda.

    Nwoye assured the people of Nsukka, where ACP has zoned its 2015 governorship ticket to, that its candidate would emerge through a transparent process, “because our party has zero tolerance for imposition”.

    Also, the Southeast women leaders of the APC have passed a vote of confidence in the national leadership of the party and its zonal leader, Mrs. Helen Ojukwu.

    In a communique by the women’s leaders in the five states – Enugu, Ebonyi, Anambra, Abia and Imo – the women hinted that their meetings would henceforth be in Enugu, being the central state of the Igbo.

  • I’ll battle Jonathan for PDP ticket, says Balewa’s son

    I’ll battle Jonathan for PDP ticket, says Balewa’s son

    The son of Nigeria’s First Republic Prime Minister, Dr. Abdul-Jhalil Tafawa-Balewa, has said he will contest the 2015 presidential election on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Tafawa-Balewa condemned the plot by the national leadership of the party to demoralise other presidential aspirants by adopting President Goodluck Jonathan as PDP’s sole candidate.

    He was responding to the adoption of Dr Jonathan by the party’s National Executive Committee at its meeting in Abuja on Thursday.

    With the adoption, the party said it expected party members, including those nursing presidential ambition, to drop it and queue behind the President.

    But Tafawa-Balewa said he would not be intimidated with such decision.

    In a statement yesterday, the politician said the endorsement of Dr Jonathan was undemocratic.

    He said: “I’m not intimidated by the decision of the PDP governors and the party to support the second term aspiration of President Goodluck Jonathan. What type of democracy do we have?”

  • Bayelsa monarch hails PDP NEC

    Bayelsa monarch hails PDP NEC

    The monarch of Epie Kingdom in Bayelsa State, King Malla Sasime, has praised the National Executive Council of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for endorsing President Goodluck Jonathan for a second term.

    The monarch, in a statement at the weekend, described Epie as “President Jonathan’s second home”.

    He said he was happy with the transformational strides of the President, saying that “it makes a lot of sense to recognise that fact”.

    “Let’s face it: Will it be too much to ask that Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, a minority, be given another four years?

    “Are we saying that what was good for the Southwest and other geo-political zones is not good for the minorities?

    “We are proud of Goodluck Jonathan not just because he is from a minority but equally because he has performed well given the circumstances of his tenure”.

  • PDP is undemocratic, says Kwankwaso

    PDP is undemocratic, says Kwankwaso

    The endorsement of President Goodluck Jonathan as the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) candidate for the 2015 presidential election showed that the PDP was undemocratic, Kano State Governor Rabi’u Kwankwaso said at the weekend.

    Kwankwaso said: “Since five governors defected from the PDP to APC, I told Nigerians that PDP will become a weaker party, whose democratic value will erode. Now stakeholders of the party have come out to say that they have chosen President Jonathan as their party’s sole presidential candidate without going for a primary election.”

    The governor spoke at the Government House while receiving reports from committees sent to the 36 states for consultation on calls for him to contest the presidential election.

    He said it was sad that PDP leaders endorsed Jonathan’s candidacy without consulting members and the party’s supporters.

    Kwankwaso said: “I am assuring you that All Progressives Congress (APC) leaders are committed to doing justice in the party’s forthcoming primaries, be it at the state and National assemblies, governorship and the presidential levels. The party will give everybody, especially delegates, the right to choose the best candidates.”

    The governor said when he and some of his colleagues were in the PDP, primary elections were held, adding that “even those who were offended in the party by the then President were consulted for reconciliation as part of a democratic process of building up the party”.

    He said PDP leaders had shown that they were not democrats, adding that the party would lose the 2015 general election because of their “sheer incompetence and undemocratic attitude to governance”.

    Kwankwaso accused the Jonathan administration of inducing party leaders with  money.

    Stressing that money would not give victory to the PDP, he said “money politicians” would never care about people’s well being.

    On the consultation reports, Kwankwaso said he would study them and make his decision public soon.

  • PDP gives Adamawa council officials deadline to re-register

    PDP gives Adamawa council officials deadline to re-register

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Adamawa State has given the 21 local government chairmen, vice-chairmen and councillors till September 26 to re-register as members of the party or lose their seats.

    The deadline came after the council officials voted in the party’s September 6 governorship primary election, in which Acting Governor Ahmadu Fintiri was given the party’s mandate.

    It was gathered that the move was designed to secure the loyalty of the officials to Fintiri and ensure the PDP’s victory in the October 11 governorship poll.

    There is fear that the council chairmen, who are believed to be loyal to former Governor Murtala Nyako, may work for the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    It was also learnt that the step was taken to frustrate a legal action against Fintiri’s emergence because the council officials were card-carrying APC members.

    Some party members faulted the participation of council officials because they were not given “re-admission” waiver by the PDP before voting at the primary.

    But the Mr Dimeji Bankole-led Electoral Committee was said to have turned a blind eye to it because of “pressure from above”.

    The directive was issued by the state PDP Chairman, Chief Joel Madaki, at the party’s stakeholders’ meeting at the Government House in Yola.

    At the meeting were former Minister of Petroleum Resources Prof. Jibril Aminu; former PDP National Chairman Alhaji Bamanga Tukur; Sir Wilberforce Juta; Air Commodore Dan Suleiman; Minister of Youth Development Boni Haruna and Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development Hajia Zainab Maina, among others.

    A source said: “The council chairmen and councillors are expected to re-register as PDP members from September 22. They have till September 26 to complete the process. If they fail to re-register, the councils stand to be dissolved by the acting governor. This became necessary because they are still believed to be APC leaders. PDP and the acting governor are jittery that the council chairmen and councillors can sabotage Fintiri.”

    Another source said: “The deceit surrounding the September 6 primary election has started emerging because the panel from Abuja and a gang of PDP leaders allowed non-party members to vote as delegates to elect Fintiri.

    “The electorate is beginning to realise the danger of voting for PDP in the coming governorship poll because they fear that they can be shortchanged. If Fintiri secured the support of these people, why a deadline to council chairmen, vice chairmen and councillors to re-register as PDP members?”

  • Can Abaribe get PDP ticket in Abia?

    Can Abaribe get PDP ticket in Abia?

    Since 2003, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe has been eyeing the governorship in Abia State. He is a top contender in the race for next year’s election. Can he get the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) ticket? EMMANUEL OLADESU examines his chances at the primaries.

    In the last two months, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe has been shuttling between Abuja and Abia State. He has been holding consultations with stakeholders on his governorship ambition. Among aspirants itching to succeed Governor Theodore Orji in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), he appears to be the most popular, judging by his pedigree. But, it is left for PDP delegates to either select him as the flag bearer or reject him at the shadow poll.

    Many factors will shape the primaries and the general election in the Southeast state. These include zoning, pedigree of aspirants, their popularity among delegates, financial muscle and the influence of the governor.

    Apart from Abaribe, other contenders are the Managing Director of Diamond Bank, Dr. Alex Oti, Senator Nkechi Nwaogu, Mr. Uche Oga, Mr. Okey Emutchay, Mr.  Friday Nwosu, Hon. Acho Nwakanma and Chief Mark Wabara.

    Sources said some aspirants are in the race to bargain for other positions. But, all of them are warming up for the shadow poll.

    The slot has been zoned to Abia South District. This may put the ambitions of some contenders in jeopardy.  Oga is from Abia North and Senator Nwaogu is from Abia Central.

    Many party chieftains have described Abaribe as the main issue in Abia in 2015. In the course of his consultations, he has received warm receptions across the local governments.

    The senator is a curious survivalist. He is the former deputy governor whose career was once liquidated by his former boss, Chief Orji Kalu. Instead of deserting the battle, he headed for another party. But, he could not make much impact. His structure has been a vital asset to him. When the coast was clear, he retraced his steps back to the PDP, bouncing back as a senator. In the Upper Chamber, where he represents Abia South, he is not a bench warmer. Abaribe as the Senate’s spokesman has endowed his seat with visibility. Today, many see him as the most experienced and qualified to succeed Orji.

    However, he is a victim of elite conspiracy. Abaribe is principled. He is perceived as man man endowed with a heart of steel and stone. Thus, some cabals believe that, if he becomes the governor, it may be difficult to control or cage him. But, the senator has a grassroots followership that is so passionate and committed to his cause.

    However, Abaribe’s popularity has also sent jitters down the spine of his  opponents. His campaign organisation has alleged that certain aspirants have resorted to blackmail and sponsorship of false publications to portray him in bad light and reduce his chance.

    So far, the Senate’s spokesman has visited 10 local government areas. They are Ukwa East, Ukwa West, Obingwa, Isiala Ngwa North, Umunneochi, Isikwuato, Bende, Ikwuano, Aba North and Aba South.

    When his campaign train rolled into Isikwuato local government area, Abaribe was overwhelmed by the large turnout. He praised the people for their dedication. Reflecting on zoning, he said, although he is favoured by this consideration, he would not be governor of any zone, but the governor of Abia State. “I have a commitment to serve the state and bring to bear on governance my integrity, honesty and transparency,” he said.

    However, there are hurdles to cross. Although the governor has not openly anointed a candidate, there are insinuations that he may later throw his weight behind a candidate he is grooming. However, Orji has debunked the claim, saying that he would provide a level playing ground for aspirants. The governor emphasised that he would not impose any aspirant on the chapter.

  • ‘Mimiko ‘ll add value to PDP’

    ‘Mimiko ‘ll add value to PDP’

    Bamisile Oseni Oscar is a chieftain of the Labour Party(LP) in Ondo State.In this interview with DAMISI OJO,he says the defection of Governor Olusegun Mimiko to the PDP will add a value to the party. 

    How would you react to the defection of Governor Olusegun Mimiko from the Labour Party(LP) to the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP)?

    As a politician and as a leader of the LP, I see it as a positive omen for the politics of the state. In all normal climes, we have only two major political parties. I consider the defection of Governor  Olusegun Mimiko to the PDP as a wise political move. It is imperative now for members of the Labour Party to join PDP because of the 2015 general elections.

    As been speculated all around, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan will definitely seek re-election in 2015. We all need to support him so that he can realise his dream of a great Nigeria. The PDP and the LP are siblings. We share a lot of things together. You can recall that the LP under Governor Mimiko supported President Jonathan in 2011. We were directed to vote for the President. So, the planned defection is in the interest of this state and the country.

    Many people have said that Mimiko is returning to the PDP to avoid an imminent defeat for the LP in next year’s elections because he is not popular again..

    It is the opinion of the people that don’t understand what is on ground politically in Ondo State. Not quite long ago, a bye election was conducted in Ilaje/ESe-Odo Federal Constituency. Despite that the constituency is a stronghold of the PDP, the LP candidate won the bye election. The result showed that the LP candidate won. We are still wondering why the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, in Ondo state came out with the idea that the bye election was inconclusive. Some people must have orchestrated that stalemate  to salvage their already dwindled political relevance in the politics of the state. They only wanted to give a wrong impression of their political influence to Abuja so that the people there can reckon with them.

    We have been winning elections in the state since the LP government came on board. Therefore, it is wrong for anybody to have ascribed the defection of Governor Mimiko to the fear of imminent defeat. As far as I am concerned, joining the PDP is a sacrifice for the political development of the country. As at today, we are the third largest political party in the country. We have spread beyond Ondo state. We have a senator in Plateau State, Senator Joshua Dariye; we have state assembly members from Anambra, from Bayeilsa, from Adamawa. In Ondo state, we have seven House of Representatives members out of eight, but we lost one, Nomiye, to the cold hands of death. We have 25 House of Assembly members. All the three senators from Ondo state were elected on the platform of the LP.

    Are all LP members also defecting to the PDP along with the governor?

    What I know is that, if not all, about 90 percent of us will go with him. This is because Governor Mimiko is a leader of men. I don’t think there is a serious politician without a leader, and in Ondo state, he is our leader. He has consulted widely; he has consulted party leaders, the artisans, the market women, the students, the traditional, religious and labour leaders. The outcome of the consultation is that we should move to the PDP. I am pretty sure that 90 per cent of our followers in Ondo State will follow him to the PDP.

    Will the defection not create crisis for the PDP?

    That cannot be ruled that out because society itself is a product of crisis. But then, I don’t see any reason why our joining the PDP should cause any serious and damaging crisis, if we all allow fairness in the choice of party executive members and candidates. We don’t impose people in the Labour Party and that is the attitude we are taking to the PDP. We also know that there is nothing like imposition in the PDP. There is no godfather somewhere that will be dictating to us on who will be party executive members and candidates. In fact, you will see democracy in action in the new PDP.

    It has been alleged that Governor Mimiko is insisting on having 60 percent of the structure of the PDP? What is your opinion?

    I don’t know, but that’s normal. Since we started this democracy in 1999, we have seen the defection of governors from one political party to another. Of recent, we saw some PDP governors decamping to the APC. Any governor that is coming to another party with people like House of Assembly members, House of Reps members, senators will definitely get 60 or 70 per cent. If it is true that Governor Mimiko is insisting on having 60 per cent of the party’s structure, I think he is magnanimous enough.  It is even wrong to say that we are decamping. No, we are merging with the PDP. We are collapsing the structure of the LP, which is the third largest political party in Nigeria into the largest political party. I don’t know how that will cause a problem because that’s what governors who defect to the PDP have been getting. Our people should go and check history. They will be well educated if they do.

    Will the defection not affect the aspirations of some people?

    That is the beauty of democracy, and that was why we clamoured for it. The system is not about your wealth or your might. It is about what the people want. There is a process of electing or selecting candidates for election. As I said earlier on, the two parties share a lot of things in common. It is the delegates that will elect the party flag bearers. In as much as there is fairness in the process, I don’t think there will be any cry by anybody. So, what is important is fairness, justice and openness in the process of selecting our candidates. We will all support those that emerge through fair and transparent primaries, since we are now members of the same family.

    What’s your advice to members of both parties, now that you are coming together?

    This merger now is a fait accompli. The governor has consulted us. We have endorsed the idea of merging with the PDP. We are now waiting for the day that the party flag and leadership will be handed over to the Governor Mimiko. So, my advice is that we should all be focused; let us be patient and let the opposition APC see genuine democracy in our party. There is nothing we cannot do together amicably. What should be paramount to us is how to sustain this democracy.

  • ‘PDP can not intimidate APC in Ondo’

    ‘PDP can not intimidate APC in Ondo’

    House of Representatives aspirant in Akoko Southeast/Southwest Constituency Hon. Temidayo Adejuwon is a chieftain of the  All Progressives Congress (APC). He told  DELE ANOFI that the party will bounce back in Ondo State in next year’s elections.

    Why did you join the APC, instead of the LP, despite the fact that the LP is the ruling party in Ondo State?

    If we are to examine governance in this country and, if we are not going to deceive ourselves, it is not difficult to see that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has not impacted positively on the majority of Nigeria. As for Ondo State, the LP that has now turned to the PDP that has been in government since 2007 can not also boast of succeeding in turning round the fortunes of this state or empowering the teeming masses of this state. In view of this and in the context of Nigerian politics, it is easy to align with the bandwagon and go with the ruling party, but, if politics is about service, then, the most sensible thing is to go with the progressives where such dreams can be realised.

    Yes, I am involved in active politics and in 2015, I am contesting for the  Federal House of Representatives seat for Akoko Southeast and Akoko Southwest constituency of Ondo State under the All Progressives Congress  (APC). I choose  House of Representatives  because I believe that, if right laws are made and the nation’s constitutions are written  well in a way to move the nation forward, then, the executive has no option but to abide and conform within the ambience of the laws. So, I have chosen to be part of a group of people that will reason  and write a formidable and good constitutions and legislate excellent laws that can help take Nigeria to the promised land and, with my leaders backing me and the electorate from my Constituency backing me, I know, I will be there to contribute my own quota of moving Nigeria forward. Besides, if my constituency has seen the kind of development we were hoping for, there would have been no need for me to contest but support the incumbent lawmaker. Unfortunately, we are not getting the requisite quality representation we were hoping for. I am not intimidated. I believe the people know what is good for them and that is why I am going into this.

    Are you saying that politicians are responsible for under-developing this country?

    On the issue that politicians are under developing the nation, I don’t subscribe to that. Though it is a fact that some politicians are  bad and corrupt, but some politicians are good too. I think it is about individual differences and my  candid advise is that politicians should choose to be trail blazers and achievers, whose impact will always be found and visibly seen on the sand of time. after all, the sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s legacies are still here with us even though he has been dead for decades now. Politicians can be good and politicians can develop the nation.

    You are a youth. What value have the youths added to politics in this country?

    No doubt, the youths of this country constitute a large number of the electorate. To the best of my knowledge, youths have been casting their votes well, but I will rather advise the youths to change their voting pattern now. The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led federal government has been in power since the days of former President Olusegun Obasanjo from 1999 no. Nigeria has not witnessed any fundamental growth, either with respect to economic growth, educational growth or improvement in the lives of the citizens. Instead, it has been case of hunger and increment in crime rate because the youths are jobless and unemployed. So, I will rather advise the youth who are the larger part of the electorate

    to change their voting pattern by not voting for the ruling PDP  in the 2015 election. The youths should vote for the opposition  All Progressives Congress (APC) so that we can have a change  and Nigerians can have a clean breath and a fresh government that can usher in peace, progress and advancement for the country.

    How can the youths be properly mobilised for political action?

    The youth of this country can get it right in the political arena when we have a holistic and complete change of orientation. Ordinarily, each generation has peculiarities and this generation that I belong to, the most challenging task we have is the task of rebuilding Nigeria. We need to cultivate the Idea and believe that we belong to a Nehemiah generation. In the Bible, Nehemiah was the man that allowed himself to be used by God to rebuild the broken and fallen wall of Jerusalem. Things are so bad in Nigeria today that the countrymen have lost hope. But, amidst all of these,  a new era will come up in Nigeria and we will witness economy buoyancy and crime and insecurity will end. virtually all our government schools both tertiary and secondary school are now shadows of their past. Our health institutions are in shambles. Boko Haram and other national menace can become history, if we  rebuild Nigeria because that is the only option we are left with.

  • ‘Endorsement of Jonathan is endorsement of corruption’

    ‘Endorsement of Jonathan is endorsement of corruption’

    The National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has said plans by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) not to probe its erring governors for endorsing President Goodluck Jonathan for the 2015 election is an endorsement of corruption by the ruling party.

    Addressing reporters yesterday at a rally to welcome members of the PDP who decamped to the APC at Ijora Badia in Lagos, the APC spokesman said the condition given by the governors was a challenge on the collective will of the people.

    He said: “The governors gave President Jonathan a condition that the EFCC and ICPC should not go after them. This is a dangerous sign for the country. It shows that a continuation of the PDP government beyond 2015 will incapacitate the economy which is currently at its lowest ebb.”

    While promising that the APC will give Nigeria a credible leadership that will transform the country in all sectors, the APC chieftain also commended the party’s elected governors for strictly adhering to the manifesto of the party which is basically the people’s welfare.

    He said: “The APC boasts nationwide support and our governors’ performance is excellent. The fact that people of Nigeria want a change is the reason why our party is waxing stronger and we will form the next government in 2015.

    “The endorsement of Jonathan is the endorsement of corruption. The conditions attached to the endorsement that all the governors will have immunity outside office from being probed even when they are found wanting is a sad note for Nigeria,” he stated.  Also speaking, APC chairman in Lagos State, Otunba Dele Ajomale, urged the new members to feel at home and work for the progress of the party.

  • PDP’s endorsement of Jonathan

    PDP’s endorsement of Jonathan

    On the day President Goodluck Jonathan was endorsed as the sole candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for next year’s presidential election, party heavyweights behaved so surreally it was difficult to tell what we were witnessing: a tragedy, a comedy, or a tragicomedy. The party has a right to adopt whomever they wish, and in whatever fashion that tickles their fancy. As expected, and in spite of the rigmarole of the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) — that raucous assemblage of merrymakers — the party has let the other shoe fall. In the eyes of the PDP, Dr Jonathan is incomparable, irreplaceable and indefatigable. He is their messiah, their magician, their avatar. So surreal were their statements and actions during the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting in Abuja last Thursday that some observers half expected that by a metaphysical sleight of hand, they were poised to get the rest of us — other political parties, the millions uncommitted, and the naysayers — to endorse the president. Certainly, PDP leaders looked like they would have been delighted to make Dr Jonathan the first democratically elected Nigerian president to be unanimously adopted by all of us as the sole candidate.

    The ridiculousness of their actions did not strike them. By the last count, the party’s TAN rallies had collected over eight million signatures asking Dr Jonathan to contest, with the fecund South-South indescribably coming up with over four million of those signatures. But while rallies were yet to hold in the Northwest and the restive Northeast, party leaders impatiently ramped up the play. First was the party’s Governors Forum led by Dr Jonathan’s hatchet man, Governor Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State, who announced excitedly last Tuesday that the governors had adopted the president as sole candidate. Hard on his heels was the party’s National Working Committee (NWC), which animatedly followed suit. And then came the ageless terracotta warriors of the party’s Board of Trustees (BoT), whose fevered brows had been burrowed by years of apostasy and betrayal, also concurring. The icing on the cake was the said NEC endorsement which was solid enough to draw the president out of his shell in contrived amusement and feigned bewilderment.

    Governor Babangida Aliyu of Niger State was spectacular on that day. Having been called upon to speak on behalf of PDP governors by the remorseless Olisa Metuh, the party’s publicity secretary who could defend any side of an argument with equal and detached plausibility, the didactic Dr Aliyu ribbed his comrade-in-squirming, Jigawa State governor, Sule Lamido, to signify his presence and apparent concurrence. He seemed to be saying that if the upstart Mr metuh would put him (as a governor) on the spot, he was determined not to be left on the hot stove alone with unshod feet. A nuanced game was on; but it was not immediately clear the president and others at the meeting appreciated its delicate shades of joke and mischief. Recall that shortly before some PDP governors defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) in November last year, Dr Aliyu was the leader of the subversives, and the polemicist and theorist, Alhaji Lamido, manned the ideological rampart. But on the day the rebellion matured, both Dr Aliyu and Alhaji Lamido cited some extenuating circumstances and abandoned their defecting PDP comrades at the barricades.

    Last Thursday, both men were put on the spot, and they had the distinguished honour, not to say anguish, of assenting Dr Jonathan’s endorsement, the former by his comic overkill, and the latter by his discomfiting silence. But by any colour, apostasy is apostasy. PDP BoT’s Chief Anenih, perhaps the most unprincipled politician in the country, a man for whom party and ideological differentiation is nothing but rank stupidity, was there to fix his cadaverous gaze on the PDP top brass, as if whipping them into servitude and rebellion. Reporters wrote that the PDP convention in December would be expected to confirm these endorsements. That is an understatement. The convention will confirm the endorsements, not be expected to. No one who loves his life in the PDP will attempt to oppose Dr Jonathan, either as a practical democratic joke or out of conviction. He will be crushed. And even if Dr Jonathan were to ask someone to pretend to oppose him in order to give a semblance of internal democracy in the party, the hapless fellow would still resist the temptation, for he would not be sure he was not been set up for destruction.

    Were the endorsements to be limited to the PDP, we could take consolation in the fact that the party really never had a soul, nor that even if it did, it still could not call it its own. The Southeast, as if the zone had inhaled some kind of esoteric gas, has chorused their loud endorsement. Indeed, an uproarious celebration is on in that region of forbidden republicanism to validate Dr Jonathan. Surprisingly too, a large but quite misguided section of the Yoruba elite has also endorsed Dr Jonathan, citing their distrust for and distaste of northern feudalism, and a fear of the invasion of religious dervishes from the North. The Yoruba have a talent for projecting their internal struggles onto the national plane, even as some of them, for economic reasons, such as pipeline protection contracts, are prepared to sell their souls to the devil. In the few months before the great plebiscite, there will be many more endorsements and betrayals, for it seems as if the country has lost its mind.

    The Dr Jonathan endorsement and the way it has been procured reflect a dispiriting and unnerving fact about his government and Nigerian politics. The culture had been building since the unethical and anti-intellectual years of the Olusegun Obasanjo presidency. The processes are now maturing. No one, not even Chief Obasanjo, has compromised the political elite as adeptly and with much devilry as Dr Jonathan. The Southeast is tamed and disembowelled by economic and bureaucratic baits. The South-South has reached the apogee of selfishness and errantry, with the region a virtually lawless economic ‘free trade’ zone of stolen oil worth some $8bn annually. The Southwest is laid prostrate by greed and powermongering, its long-lasting culture of race suicide reactivated. And a large swathe of the North tired of the rot, having itself promoted humungous rot during their ascendancy, have begun to sell their consciences.

    As the country under Dr Jonathan takes firm and deliberate steps towards tyranny, what we see in the mirror is a reflection of the president’s mental picture of what kind of country he prefers to govern, and a mental picture of himself. To him, and under him, Nigeria has become an eclectic pastiche with no purpose, drive or direction. And he himself has become, whether deliberately or accidentally, a dangerous, budding dictator determined to herd the country into one suffocating pen —  a country speaking with one voice, looking in the same direction, thinking the same way, regimented, devoid of soul, and unable to savour the modern joys and accomplishments of life. Between the Governors Forum, TAN rallies, PDP endorsement, and the national conference, among others, the betrayal of the country appears complete. Now, more than at any time in our history, we need a miracle to make Nigeria snap out of its self-induced stupor.