Tag: PDP

  • Southeast, Southsouth PDP: Divided by zoning

    Southeast, Southsouth PDP: Divided by zoning

    Zoning is tearing apart the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the Southeast and Southsouth states, ahead of the 2015 general elections, reports Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI.

    A pall of uncertainty is hang-ing over the 2015 governor-ship election in Cross River State. Deputy Governor Effiok Cobham is kicking against the decision of his boss, Governor Liyel Imoke, to seek a successor from the Senatorial District in line with the ruling Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) zoning arrangement. Political leaders from the district led by Cobham, have disagreed with the governor over his insistence to honour the zoning agreement. Donald Duke, who emerged governor after very stiff competition in 1999 and served for two term, is from the South District, while his successor, Imoke, is from the Central Zone. Thus, the North District has not produced a governor since the creation of the state. Imoke and the leadership of the PDP have publicly declared that the next governor would come from that part of the state. Cobham, who has been perceived as a very loyal deputy until now, surprised many when he moved against the governor.

    Similarly, Amaechi Udemba, an Asaba-based public affairs analyst believes that the recent resignation of Goddey Orubebe from President Goodluck Jonathan’s cabinet and his subsequent entry into the governorship race in Delta State, as well as the entry of Kenneth Gbagi into the race, is a signal that there is a serious plot in high places to set aside the zoning deal. Orubebe and Gbagi are from Delta South and Delta Central Districts, which have produced governors before.

    In spite of its posture in the region, this state of affairs has put the PDP in a tight corner. In Cross River, despite the party’s decision to zone the governorship ticket to the North District, a political ally of Imoke, Chief Gershom Bassey, from the Southern District has joined the race to succeed him in 2015. Although Bassey is yet to formally declare his ambition, his campaign stickers are visible on cars and vehicles of his supporters in Calabar and beyond. His ambition, which is already causing ripples, is seen as a deliberate plan to scuttle the zoning agreement.

    Bassey was recently reported to have told Imoke that he would seek the nomination of the PDP as the candidate for governor ship. His insistence, it is said, is based on an agreement the trio of Bassey, Duke and Imoke had in 1999 that each of them would be governor of the state for eight years consecutively. His friend and kinsman, Duke, had the first shot, from 1999-2007; while Imoke, who mounted the saddle in 2007, would complete his tenure in 2015, to pave the way for Bassey to govern the state between 2015 and 2023. As observers of Cross River politics put it, the haples people of the North District may have technically lost the battle because the ‘three wise men’ of Cross River State agreed that they would lead the state for 24 years, so Bassey is not morally wrong to seek to run for governorship of the state. Based on the so-called agreement, such observers believe the leadership of the party may be in tandem with the trio and has merely sold a dummy to the north by appearing to support them openly, whereas Bassey is their real choice.

    Cross River and Delta are not the only states in the Southsouth and Southeast where the zoning formula is being threatened. The insistence on zoning is causing ripples in states in the two geo-political zones. In Enugu, for instance, Governor Sullivan Chime has told everyone who cared to listen that it is the turn of the Nsukka zone to produce the governor in 2015. But this has not discouraged, Ike Ekwere-madu, the Deputy Senate President, from aspiring for the plum job. Ekweremadu is from Enugu West Zone, like incumbent Governor Chime.

    The scenario in Akwa Ibom is not different. Ahead of 2015, when the incumbent governor, Chief Godswill Akpabio, would complete his second and final statutory term, a debate has broken out over where the governorship pendulum would swing; with a growing number of people now clamouring for an open contest. There are two schools of thought on the question of the next occupant of the Uyo Hill Top Mansion. Some politicians and opinion leaders are canvassing that it is the turn of Eket district to produce the next governor based on the zoning formula. The former past governor of the state, Obong Victor Attah, from Uyo District, was in power for eight years. His successor, Chief Godswill Akpabio, from Ikot Ekpene District is doing his second term of eight years. The people of Eket senatorial district expect to have one of their own on the governor seat in 2015.

    Yet; there are those who argue that no arrangement like that exists in the state, hence, aspirants from any of the two senatorial districts could vie for the job. Akpabio has not helped matters. He has been accused of exacerbating tension in the state, with his seeming doublespeak on the zoning issue. At one time, he had openly declared that he was not opposed to zoning. But, he later said that he was not a product of zoning and therefore the issue is in God’s hand

    In River State, the emphasis is on the dichotomy between the upland and the riverine people. Indications are that both the PDP and the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC), who are currently engaged in a battle of dominance, would try to outwit each other as far as zoning is concerned. The state is made up predominantly of Riverine Ijaws (Kalabari’s, Okrikans, Ibani’s, Andoni’s, etc) and the Upland (Ikwerre’s, Ogoni’s, Ekpeye, Etche, Oyigbo, Ogba’s etc). Since the old Rivers State was created on May 27, 1967, from the defunct Eastern Region and further balkanized into Bayelsa and new Rivers State, in 1996, harmony, brotherhood and cooperation have been sustained through the application and observation of the upland/riverine dichotomy principle in the allocation of socio-political and economic gains accruing to the state.

    In 1999, when the West District was to produce the governor, the Kalabari, though the largest homogenous ethnic group in the zone, conceded the position to a politician from the upland, (Dr. Peter Odili), for the sake of equity and fairness, considering that the last occupant of the Brick House, Chief Ada George, was from the riverine area. That was in spite of the fact that his tenure lasted less than two years. The upland Rivers East Zone was also given another chance in 2007, when Sir Celestine Omehia and Governor Chibuike Amaechi, from Ikwerre, took over the mantle of leadership. The general feeling today is that it is the turn of the riverine people.

    But, contrary to the zoning arrangement, the Ogonis who are predominantly located in the upland region are agitating for the governorship mantle in 2015. The Etches and the Ikwerres are not left out in the quest. Thus, the argument for and against zoning is currently raging in Rivers. It is generally accepted that in a multi-ethnic setting like Rivers State, it is legitimate for various groups to be given a chance to rule. But, for other reasons, some groups are now saying that it is retrogressive to choose leaders solely based on ethnicity. “What we need is not a governor from a particular ethnic bloc, but one (wherever he may come from) that would guarantee us infrastructural development, socio-economic prosperity, political stability, youth empowerment and job security,” one of such observers said.

    Similar arguments have reverberated in other states facing the zoning challenge. For instance, Udemba said that, for the sake of equity it is only natural to allow the Delta North that had stood aloof for 16 years to take its own turn. He argues: “If we search deeper, it can be confirmed that sometimes in 2006 political groups, including the G.3 and the Delta South Elders Forum had championed the need for power to shift to the Delta South in line with the zoning policy. The G.3, which comprises the lsoko, Ijaw and ltsekiri politicians of the South, had hinged its clamour for power shift on PDP zoning policy.” Against this background, he is wondering why some persons are now reversing the argument because zoning does not favour them this time around.

    Delta Central has produced two governors, – Olorogun Felix Ibru and Chief James Onanefe Ibori – who ruled for three and eight years respectively. Delta South produced Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan, whose eight-year tenure of two terms would elapse in 2015. That leaves Delta North as the only zone that has not produced a governor since the state was created in August 1991. But, in a move, which may signal a stiff opposition to power shift, some chieftains of the PDP are working towards scuttling the zoning arrangement.

    Following the development in Akwa Ibom State, the Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA) recently cautioned politicians in the state against going against the zoning arrangement. The Coordinator of HURIWA, Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko, said after touring the state, his group is convinced that there are danger signals concerning the zoning arrangement in Akwa Ibom, which, if not addressed, may lead to crisis. “We are convinced beyond the shadow of doubts that there are ominous signs that some aggrieved politicians within the ruling PDP, who have lost out of the scheme of governance in Akwa Ibom State are gearing for a fight and may precipitate a conflagration of bloody dimension as run up to the 2015 elections begins in Akwa Ibom State,” he said.

    On the other hand, Jalingo Agba, a civil rights activist, disagrees with Udemba and Onwubiko. Agba, feels that the exercise is a distraction. He said pundits have argued that the North District should produce the next governor of Cross River because it is the only district yet to do that, since the splitting of Akwa Ibom State from Cross River State in 1987. He added: “They have cited some constitutional provisions on rotation of power and federal character. But my view is that a governor can come from any part of the state. If the person is able to clearly demonstrate his capacity to empower the youth to create wealth and help themselves, the last thing I will ask of is where he/she comes from.” He argues further: “But as 2015 draws closer, we must make haste to shift the argument from which part of the state the governor should come from to looking for someone who can really present to us a blue print on how to translate our potentials to prosperity because our state is in dire need of that person who must be an expert in public debt management because the state is the third most-indebted in the country.”

     

  • Court fixes May 12 for ruling in suit against Wada, five others

    Court fixes May 12 for ruling in suit against Wada, five others

    A Federal High Court in Abuja yesterday fixed May 12 for judgment in a suit seeking to sack Kogi State Governor Idris Wada.

    Justice Abdulkadir Abdulkafarati gave the date after listening to arguments from lawyers to the parties in the suit instituted by a chieftain of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Kogi State, Mohammed Jamiu Audu.

    Other defendants in the suit are the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Jibrin Isa Echocho, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), former Governor Abubakar Audu and the Attorney- General of the Federation.

    The plaintiff said the process leading to the conduct of the December 3, 2011, Kogi governorship election was allegedly manipulated by INEC.

    Audu, who queried the legitimacy of INEC’s decision to substitute him and Obaje with Abubakar Audu in the election, argued that the process that produced Wada as the PDP’s candidate for the election violated the Electoral Act, particularly Section 33.

    The plaintiff wants the court to, among others, declare that he is the valid and legitimate winner of the election and declare him governor.

     

    Mackings Nezianya adopted his final written address filed with his originating summons. He also argued his counter affidavit to the separate objections filed INEC, Wada and PDP. The other defendants failed to respond to the case.

     

     

  • PDP owns Kwara, Jonathan insists

    PDP owns Kwara, Jonathan insists

    •Vows to reclaim state in 2015

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday insisted that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) owns Kwara State. He said the party will win the governorship election in 2015.

    Jonathan said that the PDP will test its might in the state by winning any elective positions in the state between now and 2015 general election.

    The President spoke in Abuja when Hajiya Bola Shagaya led members of the Kwara PDP to the Presidential Villa to thank him for his role in the PDP rally held in Ilorin.

    Jonathan said: “We remain very grateful and from what we saw that day, I do not think we need a soothsayer to say that Kwara is totally for the PDP. Kwara is totally for PDP.

    “Just like the Principal Secretary said, the taste of the pudding is in the eating. In 2015, we will know who owns Kwara. And if God gives us the opportunity, we will even test our strength before 2015.

    “All stolen mandates will return to PDP. And those who think that they can run away with our mandates should think twice. As a member of the Assembly who refused to defect, you will have nothing to regret. Just celebrate it.

    “If they think that PDP will allow them to run away with it, they will see it. So let us continue to encourage you and we will continue to work together with your leaders, supporters. Not only will we win the election at the national level, we will also win at the state level.”

    Continuing, he added: “We must take over the state structures of the party, we must take all, because it is easy to reach the grassroots through the states than the centre.

    “So any state we are unable to win, party members in that state will continue to live like orphans. So definitely, we are taking Kwara. So I am quite pleased with what you have done today.”

    The President went on: “Let me join others to express our appreciation for the reception you gave to us when we came for the rally. The rally in Kwara was even thicker than some zonal rallies.

    “It was like that because the government had wanted to distract the attention of the citizens. They arranged some programmes even within the Ilorin and those programmes failed. These things do not happen by chance because men and women who are here worked very hard to get to that level.

    Speaking on behalf of the group, a party elder, Laziz Jimoh, promised that the state will back Jonathan in 2015.

    He told the President that without a sitting PDP governor, they remain orphans.

    Among the delegations were Senators Simeon Ajibola, Gbemi Saraki, Special Adviser to the President on National Assembly Matters, Suleiman Ajadi and Special Adviser to the President on Ethics, Sarah Jibrin.

     

     

  • ‘Jonathan is unfair to Southwest’

    ‘Jonathan is unfair to Southwest’

    Former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) National Vice Chairman (Southwest) Senator Yinka Omilani speaks with Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN on the crises rocking the party, the alleged marginalisation of the Southwest by the Jonathan Administration and the proposed national conference.

    Has normalcy returned to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) under the leadership of Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu?

    The new chairman, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, is a known person. He is an experienced politician, having ruled Bauchi State for eight years. But, politics is not something you can engineer to change the system within a month, particularly in the PDP where the problems are overwhelming. He has tried by going round the states. He had visited some state governors and former Presidents in his quest to find solutions to the party’s problems. He has started well. It will take time before we can measure his success.

    As the former PDP National Vice Chairman (Southwest), what is responsible for the protracted crises in the party, especially in the Southwest?

    What we (PDP members) lack in the Southwest is known to everybody. It is unity. There is wise saying that united we stand, divided we fall. Unless we put acts together in the Southwest, we are going nowhere. It will not pay us. We will neither be on the left nor the right of the equation. Several steps have been taken publicly and privately to resolve the crisis, but self-interest had frustrated all efforts. There have been several meetings held at state and zonal levels. Some members were not invited to the Southwest zonal meetings. It makes the efforts of the leaders fruitless.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has decided to step aside from the PDP activities, citing international engagements. Don’t you think his absence will affect the PDP in 2015 elections?

    Chief Obasanjo is still a card carrying member of the PDP. If no one listens to his words of wisdom, I think it will be right for him to keep his peace and find something else to occupy himself. He is an international figure. He travels more than a pilot. He travels across the world to serve humanity.

    A new group of PDP Southwest leaders emerged recently under the leadership of the former Attorney General of the Federation, Chief Richard Akinjide to challenge what they described as imposition of Prince Kashamu Buruji as the zonal party leader. What is your view?

    I am not aware of that group. Akinjide has never been a politician even though he was a nominated member of PDP Board of Trustees (BoT). I have met Kashamu before. By my own assessment, Kashamu has never been a politician. Three years back, I met him on the podium when the Ogun PDP governorship candidate, Major Gen. Adetunji Olurin, was campaigning at Ijebu-Ode. That was my first time of meeting Kashamu. The second occasion was in Abuja when we were invited by the PDP headquarters. He represented a faction of the party. Other factional leaders from Ogun State in attendance were former Governor Gbenga Daniel and Chief Jubril Martins Kuye.

    Kashamu is active now in the Southwest because the erstwhile PDP Chairman, Bamanga Tukur, installed him as the Chairman of the Mobilisation Committee in the Southwest. Majority of leaders in the Southwest, even in Ogun State, don’t recognise him. Abuja made him and he reports back to them. There is little anybody can do. We are hoping things will change for good. I have not seen any change yet. Even though the new leadership is working for change, it is yet to happen. It is our expectation that justice will be done. People like Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, Chief Bode Mustapha and Mr. Olusegun Oni, who were elected at the congress, but removed from office, are still waiting to be called back.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has fixed August 9 for the Osun State governorship election. How prepared is the PDP?

    The PDP is working. It is very sure that the PDP will win Osun back from the All Progressives Congress (APC). We have only three aspirants now. If the party meets at the last minute to unite, it will be a straight fight between the APC and the PDP.

    Yoruba leaders have criticised the Jonathan Administration for marginalising the Southwest. Do you share this view?

    I share their view. We don’t deserve it at all. Yoruba voted massively for Jonathan. It is a general cake that has to be shared among those who contributed to the baking of the cake. We went to Abuja on this issue. All the PDP governors and leaders were there to confront President Jonathan. He promised to rectify the anomaly after 2015 elections. Apart from the ministerial appointment, which is constitutional, what do we get from Jonathan regime in the Southwest? We have nothing to show for the massive support and solid votes Jonathan got from Southwest in 2011.

    President Jonathan will convene the national conference next Monday. Are you satisfied with the modalities for the selection of delegates?

    Nigerians are not happy that many of those that are to represent them at the conference were hand-picked by the Presidency. The President should have asked each state to nominate people, not him. It is the right of the people to choose those to represent them at such an important gathering that has to do with the future of the country. Those hand-picked may not achieve anything and the purpose of the conference may not be achieved, unless the right thing is done. Those hand-picked will be loyal to the Presiden,t instead of the people.

    What is your reaction to the suspension of Central Bank Governor Lamido Sanusi by the President?

    Through whatever means, one climbs up. He would definitely come down through the same process. The President nominated Sanusi and forwarded his name to the Senate for approval as the governor of Central Bank. If anything should happen to him, the Senate that approved his appointment should be involved. The suspension by the President shouldn’t have been done. The executive should have allowed him to complete his tenure, which ends in June. It will definitely backfire on the economy. Already, the naira is falling. Until the truth prevails in Nigeria, we will never have a good government in this country.

    When is the PDP Southwest congress holding?

    I have no idea. That is for the national headquarters to decide. Like I said earlier, some members are no longer being invited to the Southwest zonal meeting.

     

     

  • ‘Don’t stop  Nnamani from  returning to PDP’

    ‘Don’t stop Nnamani from returning to PDP’

    A lawmaker, Senator Gilbert Nnaji, has condemned the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) move to stop former Enugu State Governor Chimaroke Nnamani from returning to the party.

    Nnaji, in a statement yesterday, said: “I decry Enugu State government’s and PDP’s move to stop Nnamani from returning to the party. His return is a welcome development.

    “PDP’s umbrella is big enough to accommodate the old, returning and new members. If Nnamani is readmitted, it shows the party is repositioning to continue as the ruling party in the country and Enugu cannot be an exception.

    “PDP’s door is open for anybody who cares to enter. Nnamani’s re-entry is an asset to the party because as an ex-governor and a former senator, he has much to offer to ensure the party’s success in next year’s elections.”

  • Insurgency sponsored against Jonathan, says PDP

    Insurgency sponsored against Jonathan, says PDP

    •NSA Dasuki: Shettima’s outburst not political

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has blamed the festering insurgency in the country on “unpatriotic elements” whose want to discredit the person, office and administration of President Goodluck Jonathan.

    In a statement yesterday by its National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, the party said the tactics is to distract and detract the President, constrain the successful delivery of his transformation programme so as to portray him as non-performing and ridicule his score card when time reckons.

    The party said it was beyond conjecture that the Nigerian version of terrorism is the product of a narrow political persuasion that defies logic and reason.

    “We accept the reality of terrorism as a global phenomenon. However, the peculiar trend of the Nigerian version which subsists on a welter of nebulous demands and masked identities, hacking down innocent Nigerians – women, children and the elderly – in an awful scorch earth fashion, and in an obstinate ridicule of dialogue, defies all reason and logic and only summarizes a well considered agenda of national destabilization for a purely selfish political cause. We pointedly finger the opposition.”

    But the National Security Adviser (NSA), Sambo Dasuki, holds a different view. At a briefing on terrorism in Abuja yesterday, Dasuki, a retired colonel, urged the political elite not to politicise the the Boko Haram insurgency.

    Dasuki, at the event, had clarified the recent emotional outburst by the Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima as the governor’s reaction to the spate of terrorist attacks on soft targets in his state.

    According to the NSA, Shettima’s statement should not be viewed from a partisan prism. He said: “That statement by the Borno Governor was not a political statement.

    “He may be a member of the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) but that does not necessarily mean he was speaking from partisan perspective”.

    The PDP said Jonathan is being persecuted on account of his minority origin, arguing that no leader in the history of the country had faced the height of persecution that the President had been subjected to since he assumed office.

    The statement added: “We recall statements by some politicians, vowing to make the country ungovernable for President Jonathan on the eve of the 2011 general elections and therefore adjure Nigerians to rise against this brute ideology of violence from which a tiny clique of the political class intends to benefit ultimately. It is the climax of wickedness only heard of the Lucifer in the distant bosom of hell fire.

    “Ironically, this is in spite of his humility and his fidelity to the orthodoxy of all democratic norms and values. This is in spite of his proven commitment to the unity and progress of every party of Nigeria irrespective of tribe and religion. Ironically, this is in spite of his proven competence and record delivery of his electoral promises”.

    The ruling party urged well-meaning Nigerians to resist those behind the sectarian violence and insurgency in the country and to shore up support for the President in his efforts to “deliver the dividends of democracy to the people”

     

  • PDP owns Kwara, Jonathan insists

    PDP owns Kwara, Jonathan insists

    *Vows to reclaim the state in 2015

     

    President Goodluck Jonathan Tuesday insisted that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) owns Kwara State and will win the governorship election in 2015.

    Stressing that all stolen mandates in the state will be reclaimed, he said that the PDP will test its might in the state by winning any elective positions in the state between now and 2015 general election.

    He spoke in Abuja when Hajiya Bola Shagaya led members of the Kwara PDP to the Presidential Villa to thank him for his role in the PDP rally held in Ilorin.

    Jonathan said: “We remain very grateful and from what we saw that day, I do not think we need a soothsayer to say that Kwara is totally for the PDP.”

    “Just like the Principal Secretary said, the task of the pudding is in the eating. In 2015, we will know who owns Kwara. And if God gives us the opportunity, which I believe, probably we will even test our strength before 2015. All stolen mandates will return to PDP. And those who think that they can run away with our mandates, as a member of the Assembly who refused to defect, you will have nothing to regret. Just celebrate it.”

    “If they think that PDP will allow them to run away with it, they will see it. So let us continue to encourage you and we will continue to work together with your leaders, supporters and make sure that just like the Senator said, not only will we win the election at the national level, we will also win at the state levels.”

    Continuing, he said: “We must take over the state structures of the party, the Governor and the state Assembly, we must take all, because  it is easy to reach the grass root through the states than the center because the country is so big that by the time we distribute positions, you will not be noticed. But at the state level, we can touch more people.

    “So any state we are unable to win, members of the party in that state will continue to live like orphans. So definitely, we are taking over Kwara. So I am quite pleased with what you have done today,” he added

    He went on: “Let me join the organizing Secretary and Vice President to really thank you for finding time to come and interface with us. I welcome you to the state house and appreciate the efforts you took on the Ilorin and other parts of Kwara.”

    “Let me also join others to express our deepest appreciation for the reception you gave to us when we came for the rally. The rally in Kwara was even thicker than some zonal rallies.”

    “It was even a day because the government had wanted to distract the attention of the citizens. They arranged some Programme even within the Ilorin and those programmes failed. These things do not happen by chance because men and women who are here worked very hard to get to that level so extend our appreciation to those our brothers and sisters and formidable member of our party who are not here. You spent your personal money in mobilizing our people to get there that day,” he said.

    Speaking on behalf of the group, an elder of the party in the state, Laziz Jimoh promised that the state will back Jonathan for 2015 Presidential election.

    He told the President that without a sitting PDP governor in the state, they will remain like orphans.

    Among the delegations include Senator Simeon Ajibola, Gbemi Saraki, Special Adviser to the President on National Assembly Matters, Suleiman Ajadi, Special Adviser to the President on Ethics, Sarah Jibrin.

  • Ekiti poll: PDP drops  consensus option

    Ekiti poll: PDP drops consensus option

    •Fixes primary for Saturday

    The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has fixed Saturday for its primary election in Ekiti State, where the party’s flag bearer for the June 21 poll will be elected.

    The PDP leadership took the decision yesterday after a meeting with the 14 aspirants in Abuja, where the aspirants failed to agree on a consensus candidate.

    It was learnt that one of the aspirants, former Governor Ayo Fayose, insisted on the conduct of a primary election.

    Ward congresses for the selection of delegates for the primaries begins today.

    Speaking with reporters after the meeting, PDP National Publicity Secretary Chief Olisa Metuh said the need for a primary arose because the aspirants could not agree on the consensus option.

    Metuh said the party would support a consensus option only if all the aspirants agree, adding that the party would go ahead with the primary even if only one aspirant disagreed.

  • ‘Imo PDP aspirants should be issue-based’

    ‘Imo PDP aspirants should be issue-based’

    Governorship aspirants on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Imo State have been urged to be issue-based, instead of dropping the name of Governor Rochas Okorocha on the pages of newspapers.

    The Senior Special Assistant on Media to the Governor, Mr. Sam Onwuemeodo, in a statement, advised the aspirants and other PDP chieftains to concentrate on laundering the battered image of their party, instead of attacking a man, who had endeared himself to the people through his programmes.

    He said Okorocha was not the problem of PDP in Imo, but its inability to justify the mandate given it by the people for 12 years.

    The aide said: “It is correct to allude that the problem of Imo PDP is not Governor Okorocha, but the indigenes, who are yet to reconcile with the party for fooling them. PDP chieftains should reconcile with the Imo people, instead of wasting their energy by casting aspersions on a performing governor.

    “PDP ruled Imo for 12 years. APC will also rule for 12 years, after which the indigenes will look at the scorecards of the two parties, rate them and pick the one to continue governance. The decision is that of Imo people and not Okorocha’s or PDP’s.

    “It is equally important to tell those insinuating that the Federal Government or the Presidency will come here and force somebody on Imo people as the governor to drop such an unpopular idea because it will not work. The indigenes will not allow that to happen.

    “Any party, which cannot secure victory through the ballot boxes, should not participate in the poll, because a winner must emerge through this process. That is the truth.”

  • Call Ekiti PDP, LP to order, group urges police

    Call Ekiti PDP, LP to order, group urges police

    •LP: we had no hand in violence

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi’s Campaign Organisation has accused the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of “re—activating” violence in the state.

    It urged well-meaning Nigerians, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and security agencies to be wary of the PDP’s “violent actions”, which it said is informed by the fear of electoral defeat.

    In a statement by its spokesman, Dimeji Daniels, the campaign organisation said: “Confronted by the reality that the people of Ekiti State have rejected it, the PDP has activated its long-orchestrated series of violent acts against the peace-loving people.”

    It accused the PDP and “its Labour Party (LP) extension” of contracting mercenary voters from Kogi and Ondo states, adding that 18 of the mercenaries from Idanre in Ondo State were arrested by the police at the weekend.

    The organisation said: “The plan to get these impostors registered in Ekiti State did not pan out well, as Ekiti people resisted this gross and intentional violation of the Electoral Act. Last Sunday, some PDP hoodlums attempted to smuggle in mercenary voters at St. Luke’s African Church Primary School Polling Unit, Ayede/Itaji Ward 10, but they were resisted.

    “This obviously angered PDP hoodlums at the polling unit, who later trailed Mr. Bolaji Matthew, one of the registered voters at the polling unit and the Supervisor for Education in Oye Local Government, to his home in Oloje, Oye Local Government, where they beat the daylight out of him. Matthew is still receiving treatment at a hospital.

    “An hour later, these hoodlums descended on the INEC office in Oye Local Government to cart away voter registration materials and Direct Data Capturing (DDC) machines.

    “If the PDP could exhibit this level of desperation and show of naked violence at this time, one can imagine what it is planning for the election on June 21. We are well aware that the PDP has been holding series of nocturnal meetings to perfect its violent acts. We are also aware of its boast that it would send fear down the spine of APC members in Ekiti State, as well as its plan to kidnap top officials of the state government and the All Progressives Congress (APC) and blame it on the insecurity in the country.

    “However, everyone knows Ekiti is peaceful, meaning that the PDP’s plan would be dead on arrival. While we were not in government, we fought the PDP legally without resorting to self-help to retrieve our stolen mandate. We will continue on this path, but let it be known to all those beating the drums of war that the APC cannot be cowed and will resist their violent acts. We will make sure that the PDP’s seven-and-a-half years of the locusts in Ekiti State are not relived. Ekiti people say NEVER AGAIN to the PDP! We shall no more see the Egyptians we saw between May 29, 2003 and October 15, 2010!”

    The organisation condemned a statement credited to an LP governorship aspirant, Mr. Opeyemi Bamidele, that the June 21 election is “fight to finish”.

    It said: “We condemn a statement credited to Bamidele yesterday. At a town hall meeting in Iyin-Ekiti, superintended by the Oluyin of Iyin-Ekiti, Oba Ademola Ajakaiye, where Bamidele was quoted to have said that the June 21 election is ‘fight to finish’ and that he would not hesitate to mobilise thugs to Ekiti State from Mushin in Lagos State. This utterance is unbecoming of someone aspiring to lead a progressive state like Ekiti.

    “Indeed, some LP thugs loyal to Bamidele inflicted machete cuts on two APC members, Ojo Seyi and Busuyi Alake, during the distribution of permanent voter cards in Iyin-Ekiti. He indeed acted true to his threats before uttering them to the gathering of Iyin-Ekiti sons and daughters. This is barbaric, inhuman and desperate.

    “While the Kayode Fayemi Campaign Organisation commends the Police for arresting the mercenary voters from Idanre in Ondo State, we urge the force to call the PDP and LP to order. We equally call on well-meaning stakeholders to condemn these barbaric acts of the PDP and the Bamidele faction of the LP. When ambition becomes desperation, men of goodwill must not remain silent. We must jointly ensure that desperate politicians do not return Ekiti to the days of One Day, One Trouble.

    “Ekiti people have made up their minds to vote for Dr. John Kayode Fayemi. All these violent acts by the PDP and the LP will not win them a single vote in Ekiti. They have been rejected by the people before the election.”

    LP State Chairman Akin Omole denied the allegations, saying: “If there is any party suspected to have perpetrated illegality in the registration, it was the APC.”