Tag: PDP

  • ASUU strike is subversive, says Jonathan

    ASUU strike is subversive, says Jonathan

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan believes the prolonged strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) is more of subversion than a mere trade dispute.

    But following criticisms across the country of the December 4 ultimatum he handed down to ASUU to call off the strike or risk mass sack, the President says government may review its stance.

    He spoke in Yenagoa late Friday at the Bayelsa State PDP Caucus meeting.

    The President is from that state.

    Responding to an observation by his former boss, Chief Diepreye Alamieyesigha, that the deadline given the lecturers coincides with the burial of Professor Festus Iyayi who died in the course of resolving the dispute, President Jonathan said the leadership of ASUU showed utter contempt to his person and office.

    He said never in the history of Nigeria has the President sat through a labour dispute meeting the type of which he had with ASUU.

    He said:”What was expected, having met with the highest authorities in the land for long hours, was for ASUU to immediately issue a statement within 12 or latest 24 hours to state their position whether they were accepting government’s offer or not. And if they are not accepting, they should state the reason for that.

    “But despite the fact that I had the longest meeting with ASUU in my political history, we did not start that meeting until around 2 pm and the meeting ended the next day in the early hours of the morning.”

    He said ASUU has ceased to act like a trade union.

    “I have intervened in other labour issues before now. Once I invite them, they respond and after the meeting they take decision and call off the strike.

    “At times we don’t even give them a long notice unlike in the case of ASUU that was given four days notice before the meeting. As you are meeting to resolve trade disputes, you expect the trade unions to get their officials ready.

    “As far as the government of Nigeria was concerned, all the critical people that should be in a meeting were there, so what else do they want?

    “After that, they didn’t meet until one week, despite the fact that you met with the highest authority. It was unfortunate one of them, Prof. Iyayi died.

    “The way ASUU has conducted the matter shows they are extreme and when Iyayi died, they now said the strike was now indefinite. Our children have been at home for over five months.”

    He said the ultimatum was proposed by the Committee of Vice Chancellors and that the Supervising Minister of Education merely “passed on the decision.”

    He promised to hold consultation on the deadline “so that we will not be perceived to be insensitive.”

    Focusing on the PDP caucaus meeting, he urged unity in the party, stressing that without unity it would be difficult to achieve much in 2015.

    The state chairman of the party, Colonel Samuel Inokoba (rtd), who presided at the meeting dismissed the G7 governors as the voice of anarchy who were out to destroy what the nation’s founding fathers started.

    He urged all stakeholders in the state to continue to support the President as he faces the daunting task of ruling the country as well as the governor.

    Alamieyesigha described the recent defection of five PDP governors to the APC as “a national embarrassment.”

    The meeting started on Friday night and ended in the early hours of yesterday.

    Meanwhile, the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), and the Enugu State University of Science and Technology (ESUT), are set to resume academic activities tomorrow.

    They made the announcement in separate statements in Nsukka and Enugu yesterday.

    The Registrar of the UNN, Anthony Okonta, said that “normal academic activities would resume immediately.”

    He asked students who have pending examinations for the 2012/2013 session to report to their respective faculties and departments in Nsukka and Enugu campuses.

    The ESUT Registrar, Chris Igbokwe, also advised students and academic and non- academic staff to report to the institution on December 2.

    He advised students to return to their campuses at Agbani and Enugu campuses as the second semester examination would commence on Monday, December 9.

    The Federal Government, on Thursday, directed all federal universities to resume work on or before December 4.

    The Supervising Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike, said ASUU members who fail to report for duty that day should consider themselves fired.

     

  • The new PDP – APC merger in perspective

    The new PDP – APC merger in perspective

    Nigerians have not seen the last of PDP’s troubles

    Not even the most audacious hater of the banal PDP could have , this time a year ago, conjectured that the political behemoth could  come crashing so ignominiously under the sheer weight of its sins against Nigeria and Nigerians. The sins of biblical Sodom from which only Lot’s family escaped eternal judgment, would pale into literal insignificance compared to PDP’s banality which, in  its  mere fourteen years stranglehold over Nigeria  reduced a resource –rich country, which should ordinarily have been the pride of black peoples all over the world, to an absolutely beggarly country wallowing in the lowest rungs of the world’s development index. In those fourteen years, the only time, as of recent, when a Nigerian can truly feel proud of this country is when our yet to be adulterated youth, win some sporting laurels far away  from our shores; more from their own individual efforts than any deliberate policy of the PDP-controlled federal government.

    Only recently, a Ghanaian minister lost her high office simply because she expressed a mere intent to have some huge amount of money at her disposal to politically control the people but  here in an amoral PDP- controlled Nigeria, a minister continues to sit pretty in President Jonathan’s cabinet despite copious evidence of  her moral, financial and constitutional  derelictions  and weeks after the president’s panel of inquiry set  up, more to obfuscate than to adjudicate, had submitted its report. In like manner, the government has washed its hands clean of any responsibility to ensure that those who creamed off billions of naira through the oil subsidy scandal are promptly brought to book, merely by handing them over to the courts which is equally under its baleful control, sure the accused ones will, at best, be given a slap on the wrist. After all, children of PDP Chairmen, past and serving, are among. But presidential spokespersons will waste no time in telling you how the president does not control the judiciary. Nigerians, however, know better than the courts which unashamedly declare that there is no split in the PDP, in your face as it is, straight from the party’s Abuja mini convention.

    Those who stole billions from the pension fund are not any different. Indeed, so horrible was the pension scam, and the government’s effort at cover up, that in spite of a court order to arrest him, the police claimed it could not locate an accused top gun in the pension’s department, who was, incidentally being guided round the clock by dozens from the same Nigeria Police until he was allegedly helped to escape from the country.

    Given the above scenario many Nigerians have refused to be excited at the historic merger of a huge chunk of that same political party with the All Progressives Congress, claiming, indeed, that Nigerian politicians are all the same: what with ownership mentality, imposition of candidates and the fact that corruption is basically party- blind, though much more at home in the PDP.

    My response to all these has been that although one individual Nigerian is hardly different from  the other, PDP  in its corporeal sense and dealings,  is completely irredeemable, no matter how good its individual members may be. It was for this reason that Moremi Funmi Olayinka, the late Ekiti State Deputy Governor, used to liken it to a virus. The reader is certain to know a decent PDP member who is, however, party to the large scale treasury looting and perverse election rigging over which the government has superintended these many years. They are getting worse by the day.

    Many have, therefore, wondered as to how these big guns ‘porting’ into the APC from PDP will not spoil the broth and my answer is  two-fold;  one,  that the milieu is by far different. Whereas all those murky practices are more the directive policies of the PDP, a party from which you could hardly identify a lone biblical Lot for redemption, you will find among the  APC leaders, individuals like its Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande,  General Buhari and many others,  who are, indeed, Nigerian poster boys of the incorruptible. These two leaders have held high public offices and have been adjudged completely above board, leaving office in flying colours and with serial testaments to their patriotism and honesty. It is equally true that while accusations of imposition and the lot could hold true in smaller, regional parties, it is totally unthinkable that individuals, qua individuals, could exercise the same level of influence in a much bigger, national party, like the APC.

    However,  much more important is the fact that APC’s hope of rescuing Nigeria from the evil stranglehold of the PDP, rests mostly on comprehensively galvanising the people to make it a mass movement  by aggressively pushing to the public space, PDP’s record of  unprecedented corruption and non-performance since 1999; one that has no single redeeming feature, not even the GSM phenomenon wrongly attributed to Obasanjo but  which  the thoroughly disreputable Abacha regime had, in fact, initiated.  APC should let the world know that PDP luxuriates in illegalities such as abrogating the electorate and robbing the treasury blind. These negativities should be comprehensively enumerated and their evil consequences brought home vividly to Nigerians. The APC must show, very clearly, how and why, these are the very reasons an otherwise blessed country like Nigeria is wallowing in the abyss of ignominy with the poverty level of its citizens in the high 70s.  The recent resignation of the chairman of SURE-P, though allegedly for health-related reasons, should best be seen in the fact that the programme was fast becoming a cesspool of patronage and corruption with which the decent man will never ever be connected. These inglorious facts about the PDP, therefore, impose a moral obligation of probity on all levels of the APC membership: leaders, officials and ordinary members alike, if it must lay claim to any higher moral ground which is a sine qua non for victory.

    Ever a master of self deceit and unprecedented rigging in whatever level of election, local, state or federal, the PDP had been loudest in  proclaiming on roof tops, how the exit of no less than five state governors and sundry legislators at all levels  would not affect  it. I imagine, therefore, that even if, as a result of its many problems, President Jonathan decides to dump the party today, some jokers like Gulak would claim that nothing has happened as long as Chairman Tukur remains his rambunctious and all-conquering self. It can only be a shame that President Jonathan could not see the disaster Chairman Tukur had become to the PDP.  A well-heeled and aristocratic former governor, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, unfortunately, sees the party only as an extension of his vast holdings where he is the undisputed authority. He could, therefore, not tolerate the elected party secretary, nor did it matter to him whether or not meetings of the national executive of the party, which he saw as no more than the nominal boards of his many companies, met as statutorily expected. Rather, it was game for him to summarily dissolve state executive committees which he replaced with some fringe, unpopular members as long as his word would be law. The result was that when concerned members, state governors inclusive, raised these troubling issues with the president who is the party leader, it mattered nothing. Indeed, to ensure he had his way, Alhaji Tukur went back many decades to drag the one and only Umaru Dikko, to head his self-appointed Disciplinary Committee; all these while the soporific PDP leadership slept. Today, they can only gnash their teeth as it matters nothing to them either if their party could no longer field a governorship candidate from within its own ranks but must go shopping for one in other political parties. Nigerians have certainly not seen the last of PDP’s troubles as the party’s winter is already here.

  • APC, PDP, LP to boycott poll

    APC, PDP, LP to boycott poll

    A massive moral and legal burden hangs over the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) today as it insists on proceeding with the controversial supplementary governorship election in Anambra State.

    Dr. Chris Ngige,the candidate of the All Progressive Party (APC), Mr.Ifeanyi Ubah of Labour Party (LP) and Comrade Tony Nwoye, Peoples Democratic party (PDP) have opted out of the supplementary poll.

    They are demanding outright cancellation of the November 16 election, which they said was characterised by fraud.

    The candidate of APGA, Chief Willie Obiano, has however endorsed the conduct of the election.

    Mr. Ubah has already gone to court to challenge the legality of the supplementary election.

    He says Supplementary election is not known to the 1999 Constitution.

    He has secured an order for accelerated hearing in the suit filed at the Federal High Court, Abuja.

    His counsel, Mr.Olagoke Fakunle (SAN), in a letter to the INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, yesterday drew the chairman’s attention to the “processes filed in that action” and for him to “respond to these processes not later than the 6th of December 2013.”

    He said: “You would have noticed that amongst the processes is a Motion on Notice for interlocutory injunction restraining you from conducting any further election in Anambra State with regard to the office of the Governor of the State,until the court has had an opportunity to review the legality of your pre-election processes towards that election.

    “It was for the reason of the urgency and importance of this action that the Federal High Court ,on 28th November 2013, made an order to abridge the time within which you and other Defendants may file your responses to both the application for injunction and the originating summons.The court also granted accelerated hearing of the matter by adjourning the hearing to 9th December, 2013.”

    The court order and the pendency of both the motion and substantive suit, Fakunle said, “have activated the doctrine of lis pendens.”

    He added: “The doctrine of lis pendens precludes you from taking any steps in furtherance of your planned supplementary or other election in Anambra State with regard to the office of governor of the state until the Court has determined the application for injunction and the legality of your pre-election processes and the planned supplementary election itself.”

    He asked for the postponement of today’s supplementary election to “avoid a situation whereby you would have foistered a fait accompli on the court and the court in response will therefore be constrained to void everything you have done including the outcome of the proposed supplementary election.”

  • APC, PDP, LP to boycott poll

    APC, PDP, LP to boycott poll

    A massive moral and legal burden hangs over the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) today as it insists on proceeding with the controversial supplementary governorship election in Anambra State.

    Dr. Chris Ngige,the candidate of the All Progressive Party (APC), Mr.Ifeanyi Ubah of Labour Party (LP) and Comrade Tony Nwoye, Peoples Democratic party (PDP) have opted out of the supplementary poll.

    They are demanding outright cancellation of the November 16 election, which they said was characterised by fraud.

    The candidate of APGA, Chief Willie Obiano, has however endorsed the conduct of the election.

    Mr. Ubah has already gone to court to challenge the legality of the supplementary election.

    He says Supplementary election is not known to the 1999 Constitution.

    He has secured an order for accelerated hearing in the suit filed at the Federal High Court, Abuja.

    His counsel, Mr.Olagoke Fakunle (SAN), in a letter to the INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, yesterday drew the chairman’s attention to the “processes filed in that action” and for him to “respond to these processes not later than the 6th of December 2013.”

    He said: “You would have noticed that amongst the processes is a Motion on Notice for interlocutory injunction restraining you from conducting any further election in Anambra State with regard to the office of the Governor of the State,until the court has had an opportunity to review the legality of your pre-election processes towards that election.

    “It was for the reason of the urgency and importance of this action that the Federal High Court ,on 28th November 2013, made an order to abridge the time within which you and other Defendants may file your responses to both the application for injunction and the originating summons.The court also granted accelerated hearing of the matter by adjourning the hearing to 9th December, 2013.”

    The court order and the pendency of both the motion and substantive suit, Fakunle said, “have activated the doctrine of lis pendens.”

    He added: “The doctrine of lis pendens precludes you from taking any steps in furtherance of your planned supplementary or other election in Anambra State with regard to the office of governor of the state until the Court has determined the application for injunction and the legality of your pre-election processes and the planned supplementary election itself.”

    He asked for the postponement of today’s supplementary election to “avoid a situation whereby you would have foistered a fait accompli on the court and the court in response will therefore be constrained to void everything you have done including the outcome of the proposed supplementary election.”

  • More PDP governors will defect to APC – Okorocha

    More PDP governors will defect to APC – Okorocha

    Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, on Friday disclosed that more governors are on the verge of dumping the crisis-ridden People’s Democratic Party (PDP) for the All Progressive Congress (APC).

    Commending the five PDP Governors for their courage, Okorocha assured that the action of the governors will further strengthen the country’s democracy and midwife the much desired two party system.

    Addressing journalists at the Sam Mbakwe International Cargo Airport, Owerri, shortly after he arrived from Abuja, the governor said that he had earlier predicted the “crossover” of the aggrieved governors to APC, adding that the country is now heading to a two party system which would create opportunity and freedom synonymous with healthy democracy.

    He restated calls for the total cancellation of Anambra State governorship election, adding that it was marred by “noticeable irregularities.”

     

     

  • Group advises members to be selfless

    A political pressure group, Peoples Democratic Party Youth Circuit (PDPYC), Delta State chapter, has advised members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) not to scuttle the prevailing unity in Delta Central chapter of the party by pursuing selfish interests.

    The group gave the advice while congratulating the candidate representing Delta Central Senatorial District in the National Assembly, Senator Emmanuel Aguariavwodo, on his victory at the just-concluded bye-election.

    In a statement by the state Chairman, Comrade Andaye Rawlings Dagidi and state Publicity Secretary of the group, Hon. Roland Oyibo, the group praised Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan, his Deputy, Prof. Amos Utuama, chairman of the party in the state, Mr Peter Nwanboshi, party leaders and party faithful for their efforts towards the party’s success at the polls.

    In a related development the Ovu Ward 5 of PDP described the party as a gateway for development in Urhobo nation in particular and the state in general.

    The leadership of the Ovu PDP ward 5 made the remark while commending the ward leader, Chief Vincent Omovie and the Ethiope East PDP party leader, Chief Bernard Edewor for their efforts in ensuring that the local government is delivered to PDP during the just-concluded Delta Central bye-election.

    The ward chairman, Mr. Johngold Ighoyivwi commended the exemplary leadership of Chief Bernard Edewor and Chief Vincent Omovie, noting that the success recorded during the Delta Central bye-election was as a result of the tireless efforts of the leaders to ensure that PDP regained its mandate in Delta Central.

  • Why my expulsion from PDP cannot stand – Oyinlola

    Why my expulsion from PDP cannot stand – Oyinlola

    The suspended National Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, has stated that his expulsion from the party, as recommended by the Umaru Dikko-led disciplinary committee cannot stand.

    According to him, the recommendation of the Dikko committee was an attempt to foist falsehood on the truth, stressing that “nobody can build something on nothing.”

    In a statement issued on Thursday by his Principal Secretary, Femi Adelegan, Oyinlola maintained that the National Executive Committee (NEC) of the PDP, which is statutorily empowered to ratify the composition of the Dikko committee, did not approve it.

    Oyinlola said the committee hurriedly worked to the answer in a feverish bid to get rid of him before the hearing of a pending suit at an Abuja Federal High Court, challenging the various acts of illegality by the leadership of the PDP.

    He stated: “No sane or decent person would be surprised at the recommendations of the illegally constituted disciplinary committee, which from the outset, shouldered a heavy burden of legitimacy, integrity, lack of respect for fair play, principles of natural justice and the rule of law.

    “It is patently clear, that the Dikko committee acted under questionable circumstances as if the PDP were a mere mechanical contraption that could be manipulated without respect for laid down rules and regulations.

    “The Dikko committee is a comical show of the absurd that could only erode whatever remains of the credibility of anybody who decides to circumvent regulations and rebuff a law court.

    “Indeed, the questionable manner in which the committee has carried out its commissioned assignment, and the end results of its members’ contributions to the deviant posture of the NWC, which has chosen to disrespect the Judiciary serially, would stand eternally in their records.

    “Regrettably, the National Working Committee has again demonstrated its disdain for the judiciary by spurning court processes and the notification of our counsel, Mr. Awa Kalu, SAN, intimating the party with the pendency of a suit challenging the existence of the committee and the actions of the NWC in court, on the grounds that the committee is illegal.”

     

     

  • No going back on merger with APC – Baraje faction

    No going back on merger with APC – Baraje faction

    The Abubakar Baraje faction that on Tuesday merged with the All Progressives Congress (APC) alongside five erstwhile Peoples Democratic Party governors has declared that there is no going back on the agreement.

    According to the group, the agreement is a done deal because a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in respect of the merger had been duly signed by the two parties.

    Still smarting from the loss of five of its governors and some leading lights to the APC, the Bamanga Tukur led PDP on Thursday congratulated the merging parties for their action.

    A statement by the spokesman of the Baraje group, Chukwuemeka Eze said:

    “The MoU between us and the APC has been duly signed by both the nPDP national chairman, Alhaji Abubakar Kawu Baraje, and the national chairman of the APC, Chief Bisi Akande.

    “In this regard, the general public should disregard any statement from whatever source which tries to give the impression that the merger between us and APC is in danger. The truth in that the merger is waxing stronger by the day and that our resolve to save our fledgling democracy is unshakable.

    “President Goodluck Jonathan and the PDP leadership should come to terms with the fact that PDP is now an opposition political party and Jonathan should start writing his handover notes as APC is fully set to take over the Aso Rock Presidential Villa in 2015 so as to give Nigerians the dividends of democracy they have been yearning for.”

    Eze assured PDP members in the National Assembly intending to move to the APC of security of their tenure, saying their seats are guaranteed by relevant provisions of the Nigerian Constitution and the Electoral Act.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, there is no danger of their losing their seats as made clear by sections 68(1) (g) and 109(1) (g) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended) in relation to the status of members of a legislative house (state and national) who defect from the political parties from which they were elected to join another political party.

    “The wordings of the aforesaid sections are in agreement with those of sections 64(1) (g) of the 1979 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria given judicial interpretation by the Supreme Court in the case of FEDECO Vs Goni (1983) FNR 203. This case was argued by the best legal minds of that era (Chief FRA Williams SAN and GOK Ajayi SAN). The court held that such a member keeps his seat if his defection is as a result of a division or split in his party.

    “In this regard, particularly now that we have the majority in the National Assembly, our members in the National Assembly should express no fear as they are well protected and covered by the Constitution of the Federal Republic seeing that Alhaji Bamanga Tukur and his cohorts have succeeded in splitting the PDP into old and new PDP and are free to join any party of their choice.”

     

  • ‘PDP to become opposition party soon’

    Mr. Tom Ohikere, a former Kogi State commissioner of Information in the Ibrahim Idris administration of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has said the party will soon be struggling for relevance in the nation’s politics.

    Dr. Ohikere told our reporter on phone yesterday that the poor level of internal mechanism in the ruling party led to the irreconcilable differences among its top players.

    Five PDP governors and chieftains on Monday defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “It is the tragedy of leadership and poor internal mechanism in the PDP that led to its viable members defecting to another party. That is just the beginning of an end to the PDP, because more governors from the ruling party will soon quit and join the APC,” Dr Ohikere said.

    The former spokesman of the PDP in Kogi State noted that the defection of five governors to APC showed that the APC was a more viable alternative to PDP.

  • PDP expels Baraje, Oyinlola, Jaja

    PDP expels Baraje, Oyinlola, Jaja

    The National Disciplinary Committee set up by the leadership of the Bamanga Tukur led Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has recommended the expulsion of Alhaji Abubakar Baraje, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola and Dr. Sam Sam Jaja.

    They were suspended on November 11 for what the leadership of the party described as anti -party activities. Baraje was the national chairman of the New PDP while Jaja was his deputy. Oyinlola was the national secretary of the Baraje faction.

    He, however, said he remained the national secretary of the ruling party. Oyinlola has been at war with the leadership of the PDP over the latter’s failure to reinstate him as the party’s national secretary.

    The Court of Appeal in Abuja had on November 6, ordered the PDP to reinstate him as the national secretary of the party. The party suspended him instead.

    Announcing the committee’s recommendation on Wednesday, Deputy Chairman of the Disciplinary Committee, Chief Ebenezer Babatope, pronounced Baraje, Oyinlola and Jaja guilty as charged.

    Babatope, who spoke on behalf of the committee however said the case of Senator Ibrahim Kazaure who was also suspended alongside the trio, had been deferred for one month. According to him, Kazaure would still have to appear before the committee on December 10 to clarify certain issues relating to his case.

    The committee therefore extended his suspension by 30 days. But in a reaction yesterday, Oyinlola maintained that he remained the national secretary of the PDP and that his expulsion cannot stand.