Tag: PDP

  • Fulani herdsmen invasion: Waku calls for state of emergency in Benue

    Former National Vice Chairman of the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), Senator JKN Waku, wants a state of emergency to be declared in Benue State to protect lives and property.

    Speaking to The Nation in reaction to the continued killing of people in the state by people suspected to be Fulani herdsmen, Waku said that only a state of emergency could save the situation from degenerating further.

    He said Governor Gabriel Suswam himself has admitted that the killings are beyond his capacity to tackle.

    Suswam had at the weekend called on the federal government to “do something” on the activities of the nomads that are threatening the economic life of the people of Benue State, adding that “the entire people of Benue are very worried how militias in their thousands are moving freely and causing destructions in the state.”

    Waku said: “The governor, who is supposed to be the chief security officer of the state is nowhere to be seen, having admitted that he tried to quell the killings but his efforts couldn’t yield result.

    “I only read in the national dailies that the situation has overpowered him, as he called on the federal government to do something. What can the federal government do? The president can only declare a state of emergency to protect lives and property before the situation gets out of hand.

    “If this is not done, the people may resort to self defence, which may degenerate.

    “Because that is how civil wars start. When people resort to self defence, it’s a recipe for civil war, which can be avoided.”

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain expressed shock over the President’s silence on the current situation, saying: “The continuous silence of the federal government can be interpreted as an implementation of its strategy to create crisis in the state which they consider is not in favour of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    “We are not sure whether this is part of the implementation of the federal government’s strategy to bring militants and militia into Benue State to carry out its bid and create an impression that the invaders are Fulani herdsmen.”

    Waku said the killings have been ongoing for about three years without any arrest made to bring the perpetrators to book.

    He said that over 5000 people have already been killed by the hoodlums and property estimated in billions of naira destroyed in Guma, Gwer West and other local government areas since the attacks.

    Waku predicted that there would be “terrible starvation” in the near future, not only in Benue but larger parts of the country, since the farmers have fled their farm lands.

    “When the period of starvation comes, it shouldn’t be attributed to a natural disaster because it is sheer negligence on the part of the federal government,” he said.

  • Olubolade  joins Ekiti  governorship race

    Olubolade joins Ekiti governorship race

    Former Minister of Police Affairs, Navy Capt. Caleb Olubolade, on Saturday, declared that he would contest the 21st June governorship election.

    He made the declaration in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, at a reception organised for him by members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), where he declared his intention to contest the election.

    Olubolade berated the Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, for obtaining a N25billion bond from the capital market, noting that, “borrowing of money by Fayemi is a product of failure of governance. It is a sign that he is running a failed government.”

    Olubolade added, “I want to assure you that I will not borrow a dime to finance the state and all I am going to execute as programmes will align with the transformation agenda of President Jonathan.”

    Meanwhile, a swift reaction by the spokesperson of the Fayemi Campaign Organisation, Mr. Dimeji Daniels, clarified that “Olubolade’s puerile outbursts are products of a befuddled power seeker.”

    Daniels said, “Navy Captain Caleb Olubolade is not in tune with governance, because if he is, he would know that borrowing from the capital market to execute regenerative projects and bring about infrastructural development is not tantamount to failure in governance.

    “In all their seven and a half years of profligate and rudderless governance in Ekiti, they never in their wildest thoughts felt Ire Burnt Bricks Industry could be resuscitated because the PDP does not resuscitate, rather it kills.”

  • Jonathan gives deadline for defectors to return to PDP

    President Goodluck Jonathan has urged defectors from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) that wants to return to the party to do so within the next few days or loose their privileges.

    He gave the deadline at the Dan Anyiam Stadium, Owerri, Imo State during PDP’s Sensitization rally where former governor of Imo State Chief Achike Udenwa and a number of former party members were received back to the party.

    Others persons that returned to the party on Saturday included Senator Chris Anyawu, Senator Ifeanyi Ararume, Chief Mike Ahamba, Chief Cosmas Iwu, Chief Lambert Iheanacho, and Hon. Independence Ogunewe.

    Stressing that PDP is the only party that can lead Nigeria to greatness, Jonathan said that if the former members who defected to other parties return within the period, they will be on equal pedestal with existing members and enjoy the same privileges otherwise, they will have to be on the queue.

    He assured the new returnees that there will be no discrimination against them in the PDP.

    He said: “The message today is very clear and I believe some of my good friends are not here. They know where they are is not…we have opened the door for a few days. You join us these few days, the position you occupy is the position any other person will occupy. No discrimination.”

    “But if you don’t come and come later, you will queue behind your ward assistant chairman.”

    “So, the time to join us is now so that there will be nothing like discrimination in anything. The party is open for everybody. Equal rights and justice is guaranteed. We are party that believes in justice and so, we must also believe I equal rights.”

    “For us, Imo state PDP has come together, everybody has equal rights, there is no discrimination. We call on all of you who are still watching that this is the best time to join us so that you can use the platform of PDP to express any interest you have.” He added

    Claiming that the occasion was not a campaign rally, he said that there will be no democracy in Nigeria without the PDP and that it is the only party that can guarantee equal rights and justice as well as a level-playing field for all members.

  • Why court must stop Mark, Tambuwal, by 79 defectors

    Why court must stop Mark, Tambuwal, by 79 defectors

    Senators, Reps who dumped PDP for APC battle to keep seats

    The 79 legislators, who sued the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and leaders of the National Assembly over threats to declare their seats vacant, justified their decision to defect from the party yesterday.

    The lawmakers – 22 PDP Senators and 57 members of the House of Representatives, including those who have defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) – argued that Senate President David Mark and House Speaker Aminu Tambuwal could not declare their seats vacant.

    They contended before the Federal High Court, Abuja that Mark and Tambuwal cannot rely on the provisions of sections 68(1)(g) and 68(2) of the Constitution in declaring their seats vacant because there is division in the PDP and a faction of the party has merged with other parties.

    They argued that the two conditions precedent for lawful defection, as provided in the Constitution – division and merger – had occurred to warrant their defection.

    The planitiffs’ lawyer, Mahmoud Magaji (SAN), argued that – as against the contention by the PDP, its former Chairman Bamanga Tukur and Mark – the power to decide whether a defecting lawmaker’s seat is vacant or not, where his party is factionalised, is the court’s.

    Magaji, who adopted his final submissions in the case, argued that his clients were justified in abandoning the PDP and that the National Assembly’s leadership cannot, by virtue of their defection, declare their seats vacant.

    His argument was in reaction to arguments by Joe Gadzama (SAN) and Ken Ikonne (lawyers to the PDP, Tukur and Mark) to the effect that the plaintiffs’ seats automatically become vacant upon their defection, by virtue of the provision of Section 68(1)(g) of the Constitution.

    They argued in their counter affidavit that the suit was misconceived as the plaintiffs were under the wrong impression that it requires Mark’s and Tambuwal’s pronouncement for the seats of defecting law makers to be declared vacant.

    Both lawyers argued that there was never a division in the PDP to justify the plaintiffs’ defection and qualify them for exemption as provided under Section 68(1)(g) of the Constitution.

    The section deals with instances when seats can be deemed vacant. Section 68(2) deals with the powers of the Senate President and Speaker to declare seats vacant.

    Gadzama, who tendered two judgments from earlier cases involving the Tukur-led faction and the Abubakar Baraje-led faction of the party, argued that the PDP was never divided.

    Ikonne argued that the plaintiffs failed to prove that the party was actually divided to the point of being turn apart. He also argued that the plaintiffs misconceived the nature of the powers vested in the Senate President under Section 68(1)(g) of the Constitution.

    Ikonne said his position was informed by his understanding that the provision of Section 68(1)(g) is not only mandatory; it is self-executing.

    “This is because the vacancy happens by virtue of the operation of the law,” he said.

    Gadzama and Ikonne, who had in their preliminary objections queried the competence of the suit and urged the court to strike it out, urged the court to dismiss the suit, should it resolve the objection in favour of the plantiffs.

    Replying, Magaji argued that the existence of the suits, whose judgments Gadzama tendered, was a confirmation that the party was polarised. He argued that what the Tukur-led PDP sought in one of the cases was that members of its Executive Council be declared the authentic leaders of the party.

    Magaji contended that there was nowhere in the suit decided by Justice Evoh Chukwu of the Federal High Court, Abuja, where anyone denied division in the party. He drew the judge’s attention to a portion of Justice Chukwu’s decision (pages 72 to 75), which he said supported his position.

    Magaji argued that it is only the court that can decide when a seat is vacant where a member defects to another party when there is a division in his old party.

    He urged the court to disregard the defendants’ objection to the suit and grant his clients’ prayers and reliefs.

    Tambuwal, represented by Alex Marama, challenged the suit’s competence and urged the court to dismiss it. He argued that the suit amounted to an abuse of court’s process because it was wrongly filed.

    Tambuwal argued that the suit ought to he initiated by way of writ of summons as against originating summons filed, because issues raised required the calling of oral evidence to resolve.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), represented by Al-Hassan Umar, chose to be neutral in the proceedings. It filed neither an objection nor a counter affidavit in the suit. It argued that the dispute was a PDP affair.

    Justice Ahmed Mohammed refused Magaji’s request that the court should sanction Senator Ita Enang, who he said urged Mark to declare the seats of some of the plaintiffs vacant, despite a subsisting interim order of the court directing parties to maintain status quo.

    Justice Mohammed, in rejecting Magaji’s prayer, held that the court’s rules made sufficient provision for how issues relating to disobedience to court’s orders should be handled.

    He held that since there was no formal application for an order against Enang, Magaji failed to provide evidence against the senator, “the court is not in a position to sanction the said Senator“.

    Justice Mohammed has fixed judgment for March 26.

    Defendants in the suit include Tukur, Mark, Tambuwal, the PDP and INEC.

    The plaintiffs are, in the originating summons, seeking a declaration that:

    •the circumstance prevailing at the national level and various state chapters of the PDP (4th defendant), which led to factions/ divisions as witnessed at the Special National Convention of the 4th defendant held on 31st August 2013 and holding of a parallel convention simultaeneously at Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, followed up with the emergence of new National Executive Committee constitute and qualify as crisis, faction and division anticipated under section 68 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 as amended;

    •any of the plaintiffs or other members of the PDP who pursuant to the crisis that led to factions/divisions in the 4th defendant, joined new faction of the 4th defendant or desires to join it or another political party (individually or as a group) is/are saved by the proviso to section 68(1) (g) of the Constitution, as amended without losing his/their elective seats; and a declaration that:

    •in view of the proviso to Section 68 (1) (g) of the Constitution as amended, the 1st defendant or any other officer of the 4th defendant or any person or authority whatsoever cannot declare vacant the seats of any of the plaintiffs or other members of the 4th defendant that joined or who may desire to become members of another political party, in view of the present crisis that created factions/divisions in the 4th defendant.

    The plaintiffs are pleading for an order “restraining the 2nd and 3rd defendants from conducting any proceedings in their respective chambers aimed at declaring the seat (s) of any the plaintiffs or other members of the 4th defendant who joined or intended to become members of another political party vacant” in view of the present circumstance in the 4th defendant as vacant.

     

  • Sambo’s aide Balat dies at 62

    Sambo’s aide Balat dies at 62

    Jonathan, Mark, others mourn

    Former Minister of State (Works) and Special Adviser on Special Duties to the Vice President Senator Isaiah Balat is dead.

    Balat, who served in 1999, and was elected as senator representing Kaduna Southern Senatorial district, died at the National Hospital, Abuja of an undisclosed ailment.

    Balat (62) was a founding member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Kaduna State and contested the governorship primaries but lost to Vice President Namadi Sambo.

    President Goodluck Jonathan has condoled with Sambo and the Balat family as well as his kinsmen, the people of Kaduna State and supporters, whose interests he represented and defended throughout his political career.

    The President prays that God would receive the soul of the senator, whom he had the pleasure of working with in the Presidential Villa, and grant him eternal rest.

    Senate President David Mark described the late Balat as “an astute politician, a distinguished parliamentarian, respectable colleague and gentleman.

    He noted that Balat was one of the leading lights on the political scene who “demonstrated his love, patriotism and dedication to the ideals of nationhood.”

    Kaduna State Governor Mukhtar Ramalan Yero expressed shock and sadness . He said the death was a “big loss” not only to his family and Kaduna State but to the country.

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar said Balat’s death had depleted the breed of bridge-builders diligently committed to holding together Nigeria.

    Yero said: “Balat exhibited the true essence of sacrifice as one of the leading lights of our present democratic dispensation. History will judge him fairly as one of those who gave their all in building a modern, peaceful and prosperous Nigeria.”

    The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) also expressed sadness.

    National Publicity Secretary Olisa Metuh described the death as a huge loss to the country, adding that Balat left the scene at a time the nation needed his contributions.

    President of the Southern Kaduna Peoples Union (SOKAPU), umbrella body of the southern Kaduna people, Dr. Ephraim Goje said: “Just as we are recovering from the death of former Governor Patrick Yakowa, we are receiving this blow again, this is another big blow to the Southern Kaduna people.

    “But our consolation is that both Balat and Yakowa left their marks on the political terrain of Kaduna State.”

    Civil rights activist Mallam Shehu Sani said Balat was a political asset to the North.

    “His death is a great loss to Kaduna, northern Nigeria and Nigeria.

    “We have lost a pacifist an optimist and a political titan. Balat was a political asset to northern Nigeria and an ardent believer in a politics of consensus.

    “He lived his life a liberator of his people and an upholder of their dignity.

     

  • 2015: APC hires Obama’s strategists as PDP plans rallies

    2015: APC hires Obama’s strategists as PDP plans rallies

    CAMPAIGNS for the 2015 elections are yet to open, but parties seem not to be taking chances.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has engaged prominent international political consultants AKPD Message and Media to boost its electoral chances.

    President Goodluck Jonathan and governors of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governors are also getting set. They met on Monday night behind closed-door to finetune strategies for zonal rallies to receive defectors and woo new members to the party.In a statement issued in Lagos on Tuesday by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said the Chicago, U.S.-based firm is best known for its lead role in President Barack Obama’s presidential campaigns in 2008 and 2012.

    The party explained that the firm has also worked with key Democratic party candidates throughout the U.S. and has a strong reputation for supporting leading populist movements across the globe.

    “We have been working closely with AKPD Message and Media over the past few months and we shall leverage on the firm’s skill, experience and expertise throughout the upcoming campaign cycle,” APC said.

    “As a party destined to bring change and succour to the long suffering people of Nigeria, the APC is proud and excited to work with one of the foremost exponents of change in the world, especially with their track record of success in political climates akin to ours, notably in Kenya, Tanzania and Ghana. With this strategic partnership, the process of change in Nigeria has already begun and it can’t be stopped,” the party concluded.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the meeting, Abia State Governor Theodore Orji said it was also part of regular meetings with the President to review other activities of the party.

    According to him, the ongoing consultations between President Jonathan and traditional rulers and other interest groups across the country are expected.

    But he declined to confirm when exactly the President would declare his ambition to contest the 2015 presidential election.

    Orji said: “The meeting was in compliance with what the President promised us, that he will be meeting regularly with PDP governors. He met with us today and we reviewed party activities, especially the rallies that we are going to hold in the states and zonal levels.”

    “The rallies are meant to sensitize people. In Owerri, we are going to receive some people who are coming back to the party. In other states where people are coming back to the party, they will be received formally. We discussed party affairs.”

    On the President’s yet to be declared ambition, he said: “It is the President that knows when to declare. This consultation is what a President should do. A President should consult with his subjects, that is what he is doing. Declaration is not the issue now.”

    “The President will declare when he wants to; he will tell you if he wants to run or not. As of now, what he is doing is to interact with stakeholders and that is the function of the President, to meet with his people,” Orji added.

    The President recently met with the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero; Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuade; Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi; Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu and Oba Babatunde Akran of Badagry.

    At the meeting were Vice President Namadi Sambo; Secretary to the Government of the Federation Anyim Pius Anyim; PDP Chairman Ahmadu Muazu and his Deputy, Uche Secondus.

    Governors at the meeting included Sule Lamido (Jigawa), Ibrahim Shehu Shema (Katsina), Liyel Imoke (Cross River), Martin Elechi (Ebonyi), Theodore Orji (Abia), Mukhtar Ramallan Yero (Kaduna), Gabriel Suswam (Benue), Garba Umar (Taraba), Muazu Babangida Aliyu (Niger), Jonah Jang (Plateau), Isa Yuguda (Bauchi), Saidu Nasamu Dakingari (Kebbi) and Emmanuel Uduaghan (Delta),

    The Deputy Governor of Bayelsa, John Jonah and that of Adamawa, Bala James Ngilari were also in attendance.

     

  • 2,000 declare support for Ahmed, Saraki

    2,000 declare support for Ahmed, Saraki

    Belgore: we are not surprised

    Over 2,000 youths under the aegis of the Mohammed Dele Belgore (MDB) Solidarity Group announced yesterday their support for Kwara State Governor AbdulFatah Ahmed and Senator Bukola Saraki of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The MDB Solidarity Group was the youth megaphone of Mohammed Dele Belgore before his defection to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The group’s State Coordinator, Obalowu Olaitan, described the defection of the 2011 governorship candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) as embarrassing.

    Olaitan announced the group’s dissociation with Belgore’s defection, saying all lovers and defenders of democracy are irked by his action.

    Said he: “The forum condemns the defection of MDB when Kwara is in high political competition for development; the action has been informed by self-centred ambition to the detriment of Kwarans and Nigerians.

    “In the interest of well meaning Kwarans and Nigerians, we officially dissociate our forum from the MDB political movement and subsequently announce our merger and harmonisation with other progressives and vibrant youths of the state to be known and addressed as APC TEAM Kwara.”

    But Belgore’s media aide Rafiu Ajakaye said: “We are not in any way surprised at Olaitan’s action.

    “There is no such group as the MDB Solidarity Group. The group of youths allied to Belgore is MDB Solidarity Team. They missed it. We wish Olaitan and his backers well.”

  • For APC, time is ticking

    For APC, time is ticking

    Among the reactions to my column, last week, on the diatribe by the Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, against defectors from his ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the new formidable opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) were a few who said I was biased. Some of them said I should’ve equally criticised the defectors from PDP to APC. Others said I should’ve considered the merit or otherwise of why the defectors from APC to PDP defected before condemning them.

    I plead guilty to both counts, but only partially. I plead partial guilt on the first count because my silence on the defections to APC can be easily and seemingly justifiably construed as a blind endorsement of the opposition party. It was an endorsement, alright. But it was not a blind one; no Nigerian who has witnessed and/or experienced PDP’s brutalising misrule of the country in the last 15 odd years – a misrule which has made Nigerians much poorer today than they were in 1999 and which has also made their country much more insecure today than it was since then – would not shudder at the prospects of four more years of same under the behemoth, never mind the 60 more years of same it has been threatening Nigerians with.

    The huge turnout in the membership registration of APC a couple of weeks ago which prompted the PDP to accuse the party of preparing the ground to rig next year’s election – a strange accusation coming from a ruling party which prides itself as being the largest on the continent – was a clear testimony of the desperation of Nigerians for something, anything, to rescue them from PDP’s misrule.

    However, as a journalist and political analyst, I have a responsibility to point out to the public that it is not just anything that can rescue them, obvious as this is. Obviously anything which lacks the virtues necessary for good and transparent leadership can only lead to a change of guards, so to speak, rather than to a change from the misfortune of the people.

    The way the APC has carried on since it emerged as an amalgamation of All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and a faction of All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), it stands the distinctive risk of becoming PDP, with all its ingrained “garrison democracy,” in all but name. For the sake of itself and of Nigeria, the APC must do everything it can to have internal democracy.

    In defecting to the PDP from APC, both Malam Ibrahim Shekarau, former Kano State governor, and Alhaji Attahiru Bafarawa, his former Sokoto State counterpart, accused it, in effect, of being no better than PDP which it wants to replace. This was precisely why I thought it was strange that the two would defect to the PDP, which is obviously too set in its undemocratic ways to transform itself and offer the genuine article.

    However, both governors were justified to have felt exasperated with the way the top party hierarchy at the centre simply asked them to subordinate themselves to the governors of their states. The right thing the party should have done was to have provided a plain level field for congress elections of its officials from the ward level to the national within at most six months of its emergence. If it had done so most of the internal crisis the party is currently facing in several states would have been avoided. Certainly, its defectors would have had to look for other excuses.

    I say excuse because, in my view at least, the defectors should not have given up so early in the fight for entrenching internal democracy in the party, especially when they are unlikely to make any serious difference in the way the party they have defected to is run.

    It is not too late for APC to avoid creating itself in the terrible image and character of the PDP. It can avoid this pitfall ideally by first of all dissolving its interim executive organs at the ward, local government and state levels before the congress elections. These interim executives have generally constituted themselves into obstacles in the way of internal democracy.

    However, if dissolving them sounds impractical, the least the interim leadership at the national level should do is to bar them from contesting in the congress elections. It should also bar its own members likewise. Not least of all, it should send large enough teams of members with high integrity to conduct the elections.

    For example, for Kano that has 44 Local Government Areas (LGAs), the APC should send a 46-man team of outsiders to Kano, made up of a chairman and secretary and one person per LGA to conduct the elections. And for a state like Bayelsa that has eight LGAs, they should send a 10-man team, also of outsiders, with a chairman and secretary to conduct the elections. If this looks unaffordable the party should send teams larger than those it sent for the membership registration, say at least one member per two LGAs.

    Of course, all this would cost a lot of money which APC is not as well endowed with as PDP. However, with proper organisation the party does not need the huge outlays the PDP has been using to keep itself in power.

    If the well-endowed and the comfortable members of the party sincerely wish to rescue Nigeria from the clutches of what looks like an unreformable PDP, they should selflessly give their all, including their money and time, to ensure they create and sustain internal democracy in their party. The time to do so is not on their side.

    RE: Makun and the defections from PDP

    Sir,

    I agree with you that politicians are looking for shelter from the typhoon called poverty. Blame the social system which protects big business at the expense of the people. The truth, however, is that the Alice in Wonderland world awaits the politicians the day their charming promises fail to send the hungry and the homeless to sleep.

    Amos Ejimonye, Kaduna. +2347085284103.

     

    Sir,

    Are you surprised at any politician or Nigerian politicians and their comments? They all cling together when ‘the goings are good’ AND vituperate when their ‘goings get sour’. Not only Maku, not only Bafarawa and not only Shekarau! They are spread across all the political parties.

    Lanre Oseni. +2347064181045.

     

    Sir,

    It is surprising how you condemned Shekarau’s and Bafarawa’s defection from APC to PDP, while keeping mute on the defections of many governors and legislators from PDP to APC! To you any defection from the PDP to any party is like a blessing to the nation (or north), while defections from any party to the PDP is a curse to the nation (or north). The truth is: APC treated Shekarau, Bafarawa and many other members just like the PDP treated the five defecting governors and other members too. Please always be objective in judging peoples actions and inactions.

    Habibu Hamisu Ibrahim. +2348033262011.

     

    Sir,

    Dr. Nnamdi Benjamin Azikiwe (God bless his gentle soul) was once asked, why he joined d then NPP, and not NPN, UPN, GNPP, PRP, or any of the parties, so called then) in Nigeria’s Second Republic. He retorted, among others: “…I reserve to myself, the prerogative to pick and choose, those who will travel with me, comfortably in d same ‘boat’ … and I will not complain (about) the ultimate fate of the ‘canoe’!”

    Defecting politicians (either in APC, LP, APGA, PPA, PDP, whatever called) in Nigeria today are enjoying this prerogative of jumping into any ship or canoe they feel comfortable with and/or may guarantee them electoral success. So it’s a question of time, for us to see the ultimate outcome of these defections. For now let us watch, pray and wish them well/bon voyage!

    Chukwuma Dioka. +2348142171487.

     

     

  • ‘Omisore can’t win ward election’

    ‘Omisore can’t win ward election’

    Osun State Commissioner for Special Duties and Regional Integration Ajibola Bashir has described Senator Iyiola Omisore’s statement that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will win the governorship election as “an empty boast.”

    Bashir said Omisore cannot win election in his ward and local government, adding: “It amazes me when someone like Omisore, who lost in his ward and local government in 2007 and 2011, boasts that the PDP would capture Osun State.”

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) fixed August 9 for Osun State governorship election. Omisore assured his supporters while submitting his nomination paper for the PDP governorship ticket that if he was picked as the party’s flag bearer, he would dislodge All Progressives Congress (APC) from power.

    Bashir, who spoke to our correspondent, wondered why a person like Omisore who can’t win ward election now want to rule the state. “Someone who was rejected by his people at the ward and local government hoping to rule the state is a comedian”, he said.

    According to him, Omisore‘s first election as a senator in 2007 was declared null and void by the Appeal Court. In 2011, he was defeated by the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) candidate Senator Babajide Omoworare. Rather than challenge his victory at the tribunal, he said Omisore keep saying the election was rigged.

    “The one that went to the tribunal, I mean Wole Oke lost at election petition tribunal level and the Court of Appeal.” PDP can’t win any election in Osun State.

    “As a party, we are the party in control. We know they would engage in thuggery, unleash security operatives to harass and intimidate and to steal peoples mandate, our people are prepared to thwart their evil machinations. We don’t have any doubt that the government of Aregbe sola will continue beyond 2014.

    “We are prepared for the August 9 governorship election. We have delivered on our promises. In 2011, our people in Osun voted for APC. It is only in Osun that PDP lost presidential election in the Southwest”, he said.

    Reflecting on the success of APC membership registration exercise, Bashir said within 24 hours, 100 forms sent to each unit were exhausted. We have 3,010 registration units in the state. That is to say over 300,000 people were registered on the first day of the exercise.

    He said: “From the registration exercise, Osun State is a pace setter. The State of Osun has decided to go the way of APC.”

    According to him Governor Aregbesola has made the people to be the centre of development and stressed that in a democracy when people is the source of your strength, you don’t need any other strength again.

    “Human being is the focus of our development programme. The gamut of our development programme is about elevating the people. All our programmes are about the people”, he added.

     

  • Osun poll: How far can Omisore go?

    Osun poll: How far can Omisore go?

    Senator Iyiola Omisore is one of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship aspirants in Osun State. If he gets the PDP ticket, can he defeat Governor Rauf Aregbesola at the poll? Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU examines his chances.

    In Osun State, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship ticket is most likely to be Senator Iyiola Omisore’s. But does he have any chance against Governor Rauf Aregbesola in this year’s governorship election?

    In the PDP, other aspirants are Senator Olasunkanmi Akinlabi, Chief Peter Akinbade, Hon. Niyi Owolade, and Hon. Wole Oke. However, Omisore is the first aspirant to unfold his ambition.

    In Osogbo, the state capital, the former deputy governor fired salvos at the ruling APC when he declared his ambition to rule the state. It was not a torrent of un-replied missiles. The APC Chairman, Lowo Adebiyi, chided Omisore for peddling rumour and falsehood. He said the governor has justified the confidence reposed in him by implementing people-oriented projects across the three senatorial districts. “The people know that the governor is working for the progress of the state and he will not relent. He deserves a second term because of his achievements. The slogan in Osun is continuity. No room for marauders,” he added.

    Between 1999 and 2002, Aregbesola and Omisore had one thing in common. They were chieftains of the Alliance for Democracy (AD). Omisore was the Osun State deputy governor in the Bisi Akande Administration. Aregbesola was Commissioner for Works and Infrastructure in Lagos State under former Governor Bola Tinubu.

    However, there was a deep ideological gulf between the two politicians. A source said that that difference became more evident when Omisore, who he described as a typical political investor, started demanding returns on his investment. Instead of grabbing the meaningful opportunity for political tutelage under the more experienced Akande, he was impatient. He claimed that his structure was instrumental to the emergence of his boss as the governor,” added the source. But Akande, who believed that the resources of the state should be used for people-oriented developmental projects, was said to be taken aback. The House of Assembly was instigated to impeach the governor. But, Akande was unperturbed. Ironically, the legislators later turned the heat on the deputy governor. At the peak of the crisis between him and Akande, he was impeached.

    Omisore’s greatest ambition is to become the governor of the State of the Living Springs. He has been nursing the aspiration since be entered politics in the days of the late Gen. Sani Abacha, the former head of tate who ruled with an iron fist. Even, when Brig-Gen. Olagunsoye Oyinlola was selected as the flag bearer in 2007 by the PDP, Omisore believed that he was the right person for the job. Twice, the opportunity had eluded him. But, like an optimist that he is, hope, for him, has become the elixir of life.

    As the state prepares for the poll, the PDP chieftain has adorned the cap of the opposition leader. He has reviewed the political situation in the state and chided the governor for “behaving as if he is still in Lagos”. Although he did not tender proofs, Omisore alleged that the resources of the state are not judiciously allocated. In his view, the previous PDP administration, which was declared illegal by the court, was many poles apart from the present administration, in terms of performance. .

    To the ruling APC, Omisore has only attempted to equate statesmanship with showmanship. “It is the ranting of an ant. We have hesitated to join issues with him because we can only react to the comments of credible men”, said a party elder, Chief Felix Awofisayo. “He is not in the reckoning. Our joy is that Aregbesola is working for Osun. If he says that he cannot see what the governor has done, he is blind’, he added. Another party chieftain, Sola Lawal, warned PDP leaders against heating up the polity. He said their plans to divert the governor’s attention by instigating religious leaders against him based on unfounded allegations have failed.

    Omisore has two hurdles to cross to get to Bola Ige House – the seat of government. He has to fight for the PDP ticket with other contestants. They include Senator Olasunkanmi Akinlabi, Senator Isiaka Adeleke, Wole Oke, and Fatai Akinbade. If being controversial is the main deciding factor, then, Omisore will beat them at the primaries. Besides, he has a popularity test awaiting him on poll day. If he defeats them at the primaries, can he convince the people to reject Aregbesola at the poll? A PDP source said that the party may opt for a consensus candidate. He doubted, if the former senator would be the beneficiary of this option. “The thinking is that, to confront this governor, we need a candidate that will be acceptable to the generality of the people. We also want to go for the election as a united house. People are thinking about a consensus candidate. This has worked for the ACN. If we go this way, I doubt, if it will be Omisore. We need a candidate who can match the governor,” added the source.

    But, another sources said that the Presidency has its eye on the politician from Ile-Ife. “The only problem is perception. But, top PDP leaders are behind Omisore,” he added.

    Omisore is not an underdog, but controversy has always dodged his steps. When he defected from the AD, he became a factor in the PDP. Instantly, he became a senatorial aspirant, despite being a ‘rejectee’ from another party.

    A cloud of uncertainty hung over his political career in 2002 when he was arrested in connection with the murder of the former Attorney-General and Minister of justice, Chief Bola Ige. For months, the flamboyant politician was in detention, his fate hanging in the balance. Many party members deserted him. The feeling was that he could not be an asset, but a liability to any party.

    As a detainee, Omisore did not bury his ambition for a seat in the Senate. There were protests within and outside his party. The former national chairman of the party, Mr Audu Ogbeh, advised that Omisore should not be given the ticket on moral ground. He felt that, as a suspect, he would be a moral burden to the party at that critical period. Ogbeh felt that, if the PDP was actually committed to the emergence of rational leadership, Omisore was more of a liability than an asset. The advice was not sufficient to deter the state leadership of the PDP from issuing a nomination form to him.

    Observers have described Omisore as a curious survivalist. For him, history merely repeated itself in 2002/2003. In 1998, he had honed up his machinery in preparation for the governorship election. He had relied on his financial clout and the political structure he built when serious politicians were on holiday in the state. In the days of Abacha, when principled politicians of the old order could not participate, the rascally new breeds who lacked ideological compass invaded the slippery political field.

    That year, some old politicians expressed reservations about Omisore’s romance with Afenifere/AD. In particular, the Chairman of Afenifere/AD in Ekiti State, the late Chief Nathaniel Falaye Aina, cautioned the Osun State chapter of the party against fielding Omisore as the running mate to Akande, the governorship candidate. It was during a crucial meeting of the group in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital. Aina, an Awoist, rejected the explanation by Ige that Omisore had made a significant input into the establishment of the Osun State AD and that there were enough people on ground to control him, if he wanted to go off the line. The old politician may have been infuriated by the activities of the unprincipled young politicians dancing around the military.

    The former deputy governor of the old Ondo State carried his protest further by telling Ige and other party leaders that he would not share the same high table with Omisore. His grouse was that the impatient new breed politicians who were alien to the progressive agitations in the Southwest were political enemies within.

    He said there was no convincing proof of any political and moral rectitude on the part of the Abacha politicians, the arrowheads of the “leprous” parties in OsunState. Aina predicted that the Southwest AD would regret the hand of fellowship extended to the Abacha politicians.

    When that future came, the prediction of the Ekiti politician came into fulfillment. It jolted Ige and other leaders who deluded themselves into thinking that a leopard could change its skin. The AD won the poll in Osun State, but there was division after victory. A wide pole separated Akande, the visionary leader and his deputy, the businessman. The cohabitation created a nightmare, until Omisore was shoved aside.

    Predictably, the former deputy governor went to his natural political habitat. He was a big catch to the conservative rivals of the progressive bloc. His defection coincided with the time former President Olusegun Obasanjo was planning to have a political base after four years in office. The Southwest PDP was in want of candidates that would be acceptable to the people who had already embraced AD, which was largely perceived as an off-shoot of the old parties, the Action Group (AG) and the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN), that cared for the society, When the task proved difficult, the ruling party at the centre turned to the option of pre-determined rigging.

    The design was that PDP should look for ‘capable men’, not on account of sound pedigree, subscription to the familiar ideology that attracted the zone to the men of the old order, or past diligent service to the people, but on account of deep purse and capacity for the strange behaviours condoned by a political bloc bent on imposing itself on the reluctant voters. In 2003, PDP delighted in raising thugs for destructive activities than mobilising voters for party endorsement.

    Omisore was handicapped. Nevertheless, he bared his fangs from the prison. Many wrote him off, because he was not visible. He did not feature in any campaign. The people of Ife-Ijesa District had no hint of his manifesto. His agenda was not known. He was not even privileged to vote during the election. According to the AD chieftains, the electoral body allocated victory to him.

    In 2003, Omisore defeated Senator Mojisoluwa Akinfenwa, a former Commissioner for Education in the defunct Ige Administration who joined the Action Group in the fifties. The PDP senator was one of the beneficiaries of the political earthquake that swept the Southwest. Those who made him senator said that more of his type were needed in the region to attract the dividends of mainstream politics to Osun and the other sister states. The hope of the few who swallowed the deceit were dashed.

    In the Senate, the Ife/Ijesa senator was the Chairman of the Finance and Appropriation Committee. What mattered was not performance in 2007 when Omisore sought re-nomination. With the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) not being truly independent, electoral victory was certain for the undeserved. Victory must be won by all means and at all costs. Omisore’s challenger, Hon. Babajide Omoworare, the grandson of Ooni Adesoji Tadeniewo Aderemi, was agitated. The people were enraged. History was re-enacted. Ife, Ilesa and environs were battle grounds again. The contest between Omisore and Omoworare reminded the people of Ife about that day of rage when Chief Remi Fani-Kayode and Chief Michael Omisade clashed at the House of Representatives election, with the power that be swinging the pendulum of victory towards ‘Fani-Power’.

    But Omoworare, a lawyer, went to the court. A new election was ordered, but when the new senatorial poll was conducted, it paled into another festival of rigging.

    However, 2011 was the turning point. On the soap box was Omisore, the two-time senator. The campaigns were issue-oriented. But he lost. His bravado and over-confidence evaporated. The election reflected the restoration of the sanctity of the ballot box.

    After the poll, the senator was left in the cold. Federal appointments eluded him and it was clear that, for some time, Omisore would be politically jobless. But the PDP chieftain remained a force in his party, according to his supporters. He went back to the drawing board and the scheming for the governorship ticket commenced.

    Party sources said that Omisore, who has just bagged a doctorate degree from abroad, has the backing of a leading political actor in Ondo State. Curiously, a section of the factionalised Afenifere has been closely associated with his aspiration. In fact, Omisore was said to be present at the Afenifere reunion meeting in Akure. But Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) took exception to this, saying that it was an unfortunate miscalculation. “If Omisore was in the Afenifere meeting, the bodies of Awo, Ajasin, Adesanya and Ige would turn in their graves”, said ARG leader, Hon. Olawale Oshun.

    The PDP will soon hold its governorship primaries. Will Omisore get the ticket? If he gets it, can he beat Aregbesola at the poll?