Tag: presidential

  • 2015 Presidential Elections: Matters Arising

    For the first time, an incumbent president of this great country has stood and lost an election. And for the first time in our beleaguered history, a losing presidential candidate has graciously picked up the phone to congratulate the winner and concede defeat. This is, indeed, a watershed moment in our political journey. To be sure, this is the culmination of the yearnings and aspirations of a people that has been long over due. There are many lessons to be learned from this nation’s rebirthing experience.

    For President Jonathan, he is both a winner and loser. First, a winner because he picked up the phone and did the honourable thing – concede defeat. In this sense, he has probably written his name in gold as the father of a New Democratic Nigeria. By rising above the temptations of power, adhering to his better innermost judgments, and unshackling himself from the goading and firm grips of the sycophants around him – I am pretty sure those grovelers would have urged him not to concede defeat by misinforming him on the deceitful need to challenge the elections in some six states of the North. The incumbent president has set an example for others after him to follow. He has demonstrated an uncommon grace and nobility never before seen in the country.

    Yet, he is equally a loser. Here was a man who had the presidency handed down to him on a platter of gold after the death of former President Umaru Yar’Adua. In 2011, he was overwhelmingly re-elected. Then, he chose to ride the tiger’s political back and certainly ended up in its belly of defeat. By choosing to perennially run for re-election and forgetting to govern, Jonathan brought today’s defeat on himself. Has he deployed the same degree of commitment like he did in the past six weeks to fighting Boko Haram, it would have long been conquered long before the general elections, and certainly the Chibok girls saga was a stake to which he was inescapably tied to. Nor did his inability to tame those around him – from his domestic family to his political one – helped his cause. Albeit, too little too late and his defeat today has wide reaching repercussions for so many especially his South South peoples.

    President-elect Mohammadu Buhari is a winner along with his APC team. By sheer perseverance and shrewd political engineering, he has actualized his tall ambition of ruling the country a second time. He deserves a lot of kudos and commendation, but I will leave other analysts to dissect the factors and indices that galvanized this victory for him. But, I hope his second coming is for all the right reasons. I hope he can rise above the cocoon of ethnocentrism and sticky allegations of bigotry about him to bring all federating units together and forge a new frontier for the entire nation.  As a sign of seriousness to the electorate, he must demonstrate his willingness to tackle corruption and insecurity – his chief election promises – by laying the groundwork for the big picture.

    First, he must show willingness to fight corruption by caging the Tigers in his inner circle, demonstrably making certain that things cannot be business as usual anymore by for instance taking the cost of governance and slashing same significantly. Elected officials must be made to realize that public service is not a quick path to overnight riches. Second, he must take on big things, by for instance, laying the blue print to infrastructural development across the nation. He must fix power and road/train amongst other important needs of Nigerians. He should not resort to political vendetta as this may signal a giant failure path and collective dashing of hopes of the many inspired by this moment. He could, for instance, indicate to the South East that the vestiges and incidences of the civil war no longer imperil them by embracing and extending to them a fresh hand of fellowship. This last point is seminal because the general’s worst performance was in the South South and the South East. Understandably, the South South was not expected to vote against their favourite son. The president-elect had been known to have once asserted that the South East refuses to forgive him because of the civil war. All these ill wills ought to be buried if he wants to rise to the level of, say, a Mandela, the Madiba, instead of choosing the path of pettiness of Chief Obasanjo.

    For the reigning and defeated PDP, the reign of impunity and arrogant aura of invisibility has come to a meteoric end. If this serves a heavy dose of deterrence to the incoming APC, the Nation would be the primary beneficiary. The General and his APC must take notice that they are elected to serve, not to make the Nation desolate. In the event that they engage in the same abominations that made PDP desolate including gross corruption, dearth of empathy, political deafness, abuse of office/power, among many other vices. These abominations desecrated the most holy of places – the hallowed chambers of the judiciary, legislature, and executive quarters. The ruling party and turned apostate induced even the most revered of ‘prophets’. The General and his APC must learn from the ruling party’s ordeal or wait for a ready electorate to whip them out when the next general election comes.

    Finally, the Nigerian electorate is the biggest winner. For too long, we have stayed disenfranchised.  The electoral process was simply a ruse with politicians abusing the process and the mightiest installing themselves without fear of political reprisal. But maybe, just maybe, the power of the vote is beginning to be restored. The process is still far from perfect, but maybe this shining moment is a glimmer of hope for good things to come. Maybe, just maybe we can now vote and have a say in who truly governs us. Maybe, just maybe, we can now arm ourselves with voter card PVC that is capable of sounding a firm note of caution to any elected official; the voting axe is laid at every elected tree, he that fails to bear good fruits shall certainly be hewn down. That is the first principle of democracy; that is how the blueprint of a national rebirth is established. May God help and sustain Nigeria and the incoming government at the centre.

    • Phillip Okey Igwe, Esq is Managing Partner, Lagem Firma & Partners Victoria Island Lagos.
  • Still on the Presidential race

    SIR: Not even a foreigner can disregard the seismic wave of electioneering that is sweeping through the country. The heated debates and the endless chants of ‘Change’ and ‘Transformation’ by fervid stalwarts of political parties herald a great event for the country. And the political banners and posters?  They seem really ubiquitous.

    The 2015 presidential election, which took place on Saturday, should be a keenly contested election in the nation’s annals of democratic birth. The past few weeks have, no doubt, witnessed a resurgence of electioneering by the main political parties—with renewed gusto this time. This contrasts sharply with the lull that enveloped the political scene, following the initial postponement of the polls on grounds of insecurity in the northeastern region of the country.

    However, quite lamentably, the presidential campaigns did not go without mudslinging and muckraking between the ruling party and the opposition party. The jangled nerves and the wagging tongues, therefore, are evident of the politically charged atmosphere of the gladiatorial contest. Every passing day in this geo-political terrain propels us deeper into the fog of uncertainty about the election and its aftermath.

    It is discernible that a new wave of political consciousness is coursing swiftly through the minds of the populace, one replete with resentment and bile towards members of the ruling political party. A close examination of the incumbent president reveals that he is not the much-sough-after messiah for the nation. He has proven to be bereft of necessary political acumen to govern this empire successfully. A litany of his shortcomings will not be attempted in this article, for it runs interminably. It must be stated that a vote for the bowler-hatted man is an endorsement for the continuation of maladministration, and a vote for the gap-toothed retired general is an approval for a change. The agents of transformation must be living in fool’s paradise if they believe they have hoodwinked the Nigerian citizenry with their political chicanery about their standard-bearer.

    Nevertheless, the results of the election can bring forth two things:  Firstly, it may likely pave way for the much-trumpeted socio-economic revamp and national development if well handled. Secondly, it may propel the geo-political landscape into a political maelstrom, resulting in possibly, its disintegration, as predicted by the American soothsayers. However, the latter appears to be the more likely. Thus, it is axiomatic that our fate as a country hinges on the results of last weekend’s election.

    It is hoped that the result will reflect a situation whereby the masses elect a captain who will manage the affairs of the nation’s ship excellently. It is our constitutional right. So, to successfully navigate through this Scylla and Charybdis will be to heed the suggestions of Nicollo Machiavelli, in his classic ‘The Prince’, meaning that the masses would choose a lesser evil when plagued by two evils. From the foregoing, this is a formidable decision.

    The global community is not oblivious of the political upheavals lurking in the dark suffice the efforts at enabling the two contestants reach a peace accord. Even President Obama has deemed it expedient to address Nigerians and admonished them against violence, especially when some muddle-headed elements have threatened to turn the nation into a theatre of war if their tribesman does not emerge victorious at the polls. Professor Jega and his team of experts must be commended for their innovations.

    • Kingsley Charles,

    Ikorodu, Lagos.

  • 2105 presidential election and Nigeria’s destiny

    2105 presidential election and Nigeria’s destiny

    If yesterday’s elections were free and fair by national and international standards, President Jonathan would have pushed the country in the direction of its destiny

    If the presidential election yesterday was free, fair, and credible, Nigeria as a country would have moved very close to its destiny of a peaceful, stable, unifiable, multi-ethnic modern state that is pro-development. The euphoria ignited by a free, fair, and transparent election would be of immense pleasure to the nation as a corporate body, its citizens and friends across the globe.

    The distance between the country and its destiny since independence can be traced to several factors. One was the desire in the first republic for a one-party state by a ruling party that wanted to dominate the rest of the country. Another was the rise of military regimes that succeeded in changing the character of the country from federal to quasi-unitary system of governance, most of which in the process became more corrupt than the civilian regimes they ousted from power.

    The last factor was recurrence of fraudulent or manipulated elections between 1959 and 2014. It is on record that the 1959 election supervised by the departing colonial master was rigged in favor of the section of the country that Britain preferred to succeed it. Similarly, the 1964 federal election was rigged in favor of the ruling party, just as the 1979 and 1983 presidential elections were adjudged by many citizens to have been manipulated in favour of the ruling party at the center. The June 12, 1993 presidential election claimed by its organiser, General Ibrahim Babangida, as the freest in the nation’s electoral history was also ‘rigged’ against the winner, MKO Abiola at the end through annulment. The other four elections: 1999, 2003, 2007, and even 2011 were all perceived by national and international observers as below the average standard of democratic elections in the so-called third world. No wonder, one of the earliest promises of President Jonathan after he assumed the presidency in 2011 was to ensure conduct of free and fair elections. If yesterday’s elections were free and fair by national and international standards, President Jonathan would have pushed the country in the direction of its destiny, but more on this later.

    In many ways, corruption, believed to be the cancer that has been destroying the country, cannot be isolated from the type of governments that the country has been saddled with since 1959: military dictatorships and civilian administrations brought into being by questionable elections. Citizens for too long have known that a government created by fraud cannot but be fraudulent. Consequently, many citizens, if not most, view all the governments since independence as lacking in legitimacy. Such citizens see corruption as part of the political fabric of the country and joined their leaders on the bandwagon of political and bureaucratic corruption. If by chance or design yesterday’s elections were free and transparent, legitimacy would finally come to the governments that grow from them.

    The first vital step in rebuilding governments at all levels in the country is a free and transparent election. It will stop the tradition of personalistic and neo-patrimonial state that has been in existence in the country’s independent life till now. In other words, the culture of impunity that has raged for decades will be over. Citizens’ consent to their governance through free and fair ballot will further energise them in their demand for full accountability from those who govern them. Not only at the executive level will a new culture emerge from fair election, the legislative culture in the country in the last sixteen years will have to bow to the expectations of citizens who own the mandate now freely given to the executive and the legislature.

    Whether the incumbent is the winner or loser of a free and fair election, he will come out as the moral winner. He will write his name in gold as the first president that respected citizens’ fundamental human right to choose their leaders in an unfettered election. President Jonathan will, despite the muscular and vitriolic campaign of the last two or so months by his supporters,  be able to beat his chest in any part of the country while saying that he has become one of the builders of a free modern polity. If he loses, he will be one of the many democratic leaders across the globe that failed to win re-election, something that has never happened in our own country before him.

    Should General Buhari win a free and fair election, he is likely to be humbled by the trust of the people in giving him the opportunity to rule the country several decades after he had ruled it as a military dictator. He will no longer see his power as deriving from the barrel of guns but from the hearts of voters across geopolitical and ethnic lines. Consequently, he will be more likely than not to listen to the wishes of the electorate, knowing full well that without them, he could not have become president in the last quarter of the life of an average ruler. There will be no space in his government for any manner of ethnic or cultural domination but only for the building of a modern democratic multiethnic nation.

    As for the average citizen, he or she will feel invigorated by free and fair elections. The feeling of political impotence on the part of the electorate which has created an I-don’t-care attitude over the years will disappear. It will become easier for the electorate to demand accountability from their president and lawmakers. It will become easier for citizens to join policy debates about how much should their lawmakers earn directly and indirectly. Citizens will have more opportunities to bring the issue of re-federalising the country for unity and development on the table with the hope of stimulating a process that is inclusive in terms of how to make the country work and keep it united for progress and development.

    International friends of our country will be more likely to be partners than what they have been. Our immediate neighbours in the ECOWAS will feel relieved that the giant of the region has finally risen to the challenge of accepting the nuances of democratic process and governance. No longer will our West African neighbours feel threatened that post-election violence will create another wave of refugees that can destabilise smaller countries in the region. A Nigeria that has finally joined the ranks of Senegal, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Benin, etc., in moving away from the culture of impunity to one of accountability and the rule of law will certainly become a friendly lever of economic power in the region.

    With respect to our other international friends in Europe, the Americas, and the Orient, Nigeria’s free, fair, and transparent election will have to disabuse their minds about the facile generalisation about Nigeria being largely a rogue, failing, or failed state. The feeling in the outside world that a country that cannot conduct a free and fair election lacks legitimacy and cannot be trusted to respect accountability will diminish and gradually disappear as the culture of allowing citizens to choose their leaders grow in the country.  Nigeria will be able to see more genuine investors, instead of hearing about them on government-controlled radio and television announcements.

    Finally, millions of Nigerians at home and abroad who have been worried stiff about the future of the country will now sleep without the fear:”what are we going to do if things suddenly fall apart.”

  • Presidential election: pdp’s last cards

    From popular outcry, President Jonathan had promised Nigerians and the International Community that the elections on March 28 and April 11, 2015 would hold. And that Prof. Jega would not be removed or sent on terminal leave when the elections are just around the corner.  I had told Nigerians and the International Community that President Jonathan could not be trusted in his promises, as he would always go behind his promises to initiate or instigate moves that would undermine his own promises.  How can we explain the Pro-Jonathan’s protest by OPC for the removal of Jega as the nation witnessed in Lagos on Monday, 16 March, 2015, which was meant to scuttle the March 28 and April 11 elections he has promised would hold?

    When it dawned on the President and the PDP that the use of PVCs and Smart Card Readers-obviously meant to bring about free, fair and credible elections, devoid of rigging-was a foregone conclusion, protests and court cases were instigated by the Presidency and the PDP to stop the use of theses technological devices which ought to have been supported by the president who himself once promised to tackle corruption with the same technology he is now afraid of. This is  simply because the use of Card Readers would not allow those who had cloned and bought PVCs to use them without being detected at the elections.  Just because the INEC, the people of Nigeria and the International Community have insisted on the use of these technological devices for the election of March 28 and April 11, and that under no circumstance should these elections be subjected to another postponement, the PDP’s last important card is its attempt to create confusion of monumental proportion on the day of election.

    The plan is to ensure that Card Readers don’t work on the days of elections, in because of the ruling party’s morbid fears about the use of Card Readers that would definitely expose their rigging plans on D-day.  Now, the APC has accused President Jonathan’s administration and the PDP of planning to jam the Card Reader machines on voting days for which an Israeli has been hired.  The Israeli “had developed three prototype Card Reader Jammers to be carried in the pockets of trusted PDP chiefs on election day to disable the Card Readers so as to justify the PDP’s fears about the Card Readers.  Besides disabling the Card Readers, “the jammers will also disable all telephones, ipads etc, within the state’s radius of those carrying them on their persons”.  The plan is to deploy the Card Jammers to the strongholds of the APC like North West, South West, North East, Rivers State and other suspected areas in the North, South East and the South -South.

    The Israeli is already seen as a traitor to the International Community interested in free, fair and credible elections in Nigeria, and “an enemy of Nigeria and Nigerians who do not mind if the nation burns, as long as he has collected his pay”.

    For the production of 75,000 jammers, the nation would cough out S15m at S200 per jamming machine for the PDP!  On this serious matter, Nigerians, the International Community and the leadership of the INEC must see to it that none of the telephone service providers like MTN, GLO and ETISALAT cooperate or compromise with the Federal Government in this jamming game while the (NCC) must steer clear of this shameful scenario.  The leadership of INEC< with the cooperation of the International Community, must provide counter jammer to the PDP jamming machine.  Already, the International Community and especially the US have made it clear through the Vice-President of the US, Joe Biden, that INEC must use the PVCs and Smart Card Readers for the March 28 and April 11 elections in Nigeria (Punch, Friday, March 19, 2015, p.7)

    The questions that President Jonathan and PDP must answer at this eleventh hour are these: what plans do they have for successful elections that are free, fair and credible on March 28 and April 11?  What plans do they have for creating crisis by using technology (jammers) to prevent the Card Readers from working on March 28 and April 11?  How actually prepared are they for these elections?  And, finally, are they prepared to take responsibility for scuttling the March 28 and April 11 elections and the attendant consequences, should anything go wrong in accordance to their plan, wish or prayer?

    Or, by creating crisis at the coming election, do they hope that the Army would take over in order to prevent any elections and General Buhari from being sworn-in as the next president?  It should be pointed out that any attempt to take over the government by the military would lead to a situation worse than those of the Arab Springs where the Military and the Police had no choice but to surrender to the superior force of the masses of the people who drove out president Mubarak and got him tried for crime against the Egyptian people by the International Criminal Court.

    The Inspector General of Police has said: “no waiting at polling booths after voting” (Punch, March 20, p.2).  Traditionally, an electorate is expected to wait after casting his or her vote to ensure that the vote counts and is counted.  That is what INEC, the legally constituted authority to conduct and monitor elections in Nigeria, says.  Voters are well protected by electoral, and not police, laws.  The IGP should not usurp the powers of INEC and should be careful about his illegal directive, which is not tenable, because what he is saying is that voters should not wait to monitor what happens to their votes and collect the results on the spot.  This is yet another rigging device that must be thrown into the dustbin.

    On a final note, Nigerians must insist that election materials are delivered to the polling stations on time, as not doing so would affect those who are eager to cast their votes, especially if delays of election materials occur in the strongholds of the opposition party.  The Federal Government must also be careful about the way it manipulates the NTA for carrying news and advertisements about PDP to the exclusion of the APC, because the NTA is for all Nigerians and not for President Jonathan and PDP alone.  Surely this policy of exclusion would backfire, as it would further draw the wrath of Nigerians against the ruling party.  A word, we say, is enough for the wise!

    • Makinde, FINAL, Professor of Philosophy,

    DG/CEO, Awolowo Centre for Philosophy, Ideology & Good Governance, Osogbo, The State of Osun.

  • We have not adopted any presidential candidate

    We have not adopted any presidential candidate

    Alhaji Sikiru Oke is the Deputy National Chairman of Accord Party. He was the party’s pioneer National Legal Adviser and helped in drafting the party’s constitution. He spoke with SEYI ODEWALE on why his party is not fielding any presidential candidate for the forthcoming election, why the party has not adopted any presidential candidate of any party and other sundry issues bordering on election. Excerpts: 

    Why is your party not fielding candidate for the presidential election?

    It is true we are not having a presidential standard bearer, but it is not we can manufacture by ourselves. People must show interest in the party to want to use its platform to stand for election. It is not that we did not have people who are interested in contesting on our platform, but when we did some screenings, we discovered that some people were not credible, they were just looking for a party to use to stand as its standard bearer, to negotiate with the two major political parties to collect money, influence and political appointments. Some of them after getting our party’s nod to represent us at the polls would go to these major parties and tell them that they are ready to step down for their candidates, if they are willing to pay much.

    We had a similar case in Ondo State in the last election that held in that state. We had a candidate, who said he had no money to pay the nomination fee of N1 million and he was aspiring to become the governor of the state. We looked at him and said instead of us not fielding any candidate at all in that election, we could waive the money for him just to feature him as our candidate in that election, at least, our name would be mentioned in that election even if we did not win. To me, my belief is that if as a candidate you do not have one million to pick the form to express you intention to run on the party’s platform, how then will you campaign and mobilise the people? Election these days are not based on your character alone, you must be able to mobilise your people to vote for you and this involves money.

    So, we fielded him in that election only to discover that he went to the Labour Party to negotiate, he also went to the PDP to discuss with them and he manipulated himself in such a way that the unfortunate happened to him. His name did not come out as a candidate for Accord Party in that election. On going to the Election Tribunal, he filed a case for exclusion in the election and the implication was that there had to be a re-run.

    And since he did not pay the party’s nomination fee, some documents that were supposed to be sent by the party to INEC were not sent. This actually was the reason for his exclusion. But because certain forms were submitted to INEC through the back door without our knowledge, his name got to INEC, but was not printed on the ballot papers.

    When we got to Ondo State, the case began, which at the end of it all may necessitate calling for another election, which again may put some huge financial burden on the Federal Government and the parties. So, everyone saw the implication of the re-run. Those who lost in that election wanted a rerun as it would help them improve on their performances. But the party that won did not want a rerun as this might deplete its already lean purse. So, we heard it on good authority that the parties started negotiating with that fellow, who was demanding for N1 billion. The APC wanted a rerun of that election and wanted him not to succumb, so also was the PDP. But the Labour Party did not want a rerun, so all these parties had to negotiate with him and offered him something. It was him these parties knew not the Accord Party and as such, he was not carrying the party along.

    So, when we heard about all these, we said we were not going to be a party to any of it because it was fraudulent. When the issue got to my table as the party’s legal adviser for advice, because I was then the party’s founding legal adviser before I became its deputy national chairman, I said the man was not our candidate, he did not pay. When he spoke to me on phone, he said he had problem raising the money and promised to write an undertaking to pay later, which I said he should do. He then asked his personal assistant to bring a hand-written undertaking on an ordinary sheet of paper, not even a letter-headed paper and the said undertaking was not written in my presence. So, I told him on phone that he did not look to me as a serious candidate. I said if he was serious enough, nothing would have stopped him from coming to Abuja to see me and discuss, but he did not.

    Eventually when we discovered his antics, we summoned an emergency meeting of the party’s national working committee and sent a delegate to Ondo State to appear at the tribunal because he manipulated the tribunal in believing that a representative of the party’s national executive was at the court, which we did not know anything about. In order not to tarnish the image of the party, the national secretary and some other executives were asked to go to Ondo State to testify against this fellow at the tribunal. A drama actually ensued when the case was called. Someone stood up and introduced himself as the party’s chairman while the real chairman was at the tribunal.

    The chairman, accompanied by other executives, also stood up to introduce themselves. The court was thrown into pandemonium. The impostor later ran away. But the party categorically told the tribunal that it did not know the plaintiff and that he was not the candidate of the party as he did not purchase the party’s nomination form and did not fulfill all the conditions laid down by the party for him to run on its platform. We did that in the interest of the party and the nation. We did not collect any money from any party to have done what we did.

    So, we were guided by that experience in screening those who came out as presidential aspirants this time around. We then resolved not to have anybody who may want to use our name to start negotiating as we had it in Ondo State. And coming to our participations in general elections, you would recall that our party had an affiliation with the PDP about 70 to 80 per cent of our founding national officers were from PDP.

    Were they deployed from PDP or they defected?

    They were sort of deployed because at that time, PDP was having some internal wrangling and the late Chief Solomon Lar took PDP to court on the issue of leadership of the party. So, because they were not sure of what might befall that party, some of them needed a plan B and the Accord Party was their supposed alternative in case PDP crashed. That was how Accord came up. But shortly before we were registered, PDP got over its problem and some of those that came to join us went back to PDP.

    I was not a member of the PDP. I started with Accord as its legal adviser, being a lawyer. I took part in writing the constitution of the party and I became the first national legal adviser.

    Looking at it from that angle, it got to a point that they said since PDP is not having problems again we should all fuse into the party. But I said no, I was not a member of PDP and would not join it. We have to start negotiating with them, don’t forget, that was 2003 when election had held. That time we had our party members in the National Assembly some state assembly. We had Senator Osakwe at the upper chambers, while three of our members were in the Delta State House of Assembly and a commissioner was appointed from our party then in Delta State. This was our party’s first outing.

    We then said if we were to go back to PDP we should negotiate and we set up a committee to meet with their committee and they were about holding their congress then. We then said as conditions for joining them that if they (PDP) took the slot of the party chairman, the slot of the deputy must be given to us. The same formula was to be applied for the secretariat. But unfortunately, this could not fly as they queried the strength of our party. Olusola Oke, who was their legal adviser then, said we should come and collapse into the PDP that was because all the parties were making one move or the other, but we said no, instead of doing that we would rather maintain our identity as a party. What informed our decision was the way the former Vice President Atiku Abubabakr was treated by the PDP when he was begged to return to PDP after his initial exit.

    Atiku then returned to PDP and was asked to go to his ward to register to be readmitted into the party. He was reduced to an ordinary party man. So, at my level then I’m sure if I had gone to the ward to register, they would not have given me an ordinary ward leader. So, its better I remain in my party where I will be relevant. I preferred to stay back and if they call for leaders of the party I’m sure of being counted as one.

    Since my survival does not depend on the party; I would not mind staying back in my party than to go to PDP and be rubbished. And as God would have it in 2007, Senator Rashid Ladoja was not given the governorship ticket of the PDP. This was the fall out of his impeachment, which he fought at the court and won. I was one of the lawyers, who defended him up to the Supreme Court. But before the Supreme Court could give its judgment in favour of Ladoja, the PDP in Oyo State had done its primaries, which chose Alao-Akala. Ladoja was still interested in contesting, but he had no platform, hence he joined our party. I presented him to the electorate at Mapo Hall, Ibadan. I was then the national legal adviser of the party. And he tried a lot, but lost the election. However, through him we had four House of Representatives members, 11 House of Assembly members. So, we are in the minority in Oyo State and without us in that state Assembly, nothing can move. We have the deputy speaker and five commissioners in the state cabinet.

    Recently PDP approached us based on what we had done for them in the past. In 2007, we adopted Yar’adua/Jonathan ticket as our candidate. In 2011, we were silent about endorsement. The result of our endorsement in 2007 was some ministerial slot to compensate us for supporting them. Our first chairman, Ikhra Bilbis, was made a minister. In 2011 our national secretary was made a commissioner in Imo State and all sorts of positions were given to us. Although we were silent on Jonathan’s endorsement in 2011, we were still given some board appointments. Our national chairman, Lawal Nalado was given a board appointment

    This time around the PDP approached us, but we have not yet given them our word; we are still talking. We have not endorsed any party. This is because we don’t want a situation where some people will go and collect money on behalf of the party. Something happened last month, some top members of the ruling party approached us and we told them our proposal and before we knew it they had invited the media and I spoke specifically that we are still talking and have not endorsed any presidential candidate or any party. The door is open to any party that wishes to talk with us; we are not an appendage of the PDP. If APC approaches us we will talk with them and see how our discussion can benefit the nation. So that day, I told the media that we have not adopted any party. The following day, I was bombarded with many calls telling me that they heard me say that my party has adopted Goodluck Jonathan. And I said no. Cleverly, what the NTA did was to cut an area where I said we have adopted PDP before and attached it to where I mentioned that members of our working committee are meeting with them to give the impression that I said we have adopted Jonathan. What I specifically said that day was “we have adopted PDP before, we are still talking and nothing will stop us from adopting them if we agree on terms”. The station did not complete my statement to give the impression that my party has adopted President Jonathan. The following morning I made some calls to the organisers of the meeting and I told them that, that was not what I said. I then called another press conference to set the records straight where I said we have not adopted Jonathan and that we are still talking.

    At another forum where other parties gathered to discuss similar issue, I was categorical about it and I said we have not adopted President Jonathan and I equally spoke to press to make my party stand known that we have not endorsed President Jonathan. Concerning the shift in polls’ date, I said my party did not support it. We wanted the election to hold. If we had endorsed President Jonathan, we would have taken the same stand with the PDP.

    The impression people had was that every other party apart from the APC was cajoled to support the shift in the election date and people thought the parties were perhaps induced to have rallied support for the ruling PDP, which it needed at that material time. So, people felt that Accord Party also supported the shift.

    Myself, and the national secretary of our party, Alhaji Nureni Adisa, represented the party. Why I’m representing the party these days is because my national chairman has been indisposed of late. He travelled for medical checkup and just returned. So, while he was away the responsibility fell on me as his deputy to represent him. Of course, we heard it that they lured some parties. As a lawyer, I must be mindful of what I say, what I don’t

  • We have not adopted any presidential candidate

    We have not adopted any presidential candidate

    Alhaji Sikiru Oke is the Deputy National Chairman of Accord Party. He was the party’s pioneer National Legal Adviser and helped in drafting the party’s constitution. He spoke with SEYI ODEWALE on why his party is not fielding any presidential candidate for the forthcoming election, why the party has not adopted any presidential candidate of any party and other sundry issues bordering on election. Excerpts: 

    Why is your party not fielding candidate for the presidential election?

    It is true we are not having a presidential standard bearer, but it is not we can manufacture by ourselves. People must show interest in the party to want to use its platform to stand for election. It is not that we did not have people who are interested in contesting on our platform, but when we did some screenings, we discovered that some people were not credible, they were just looking for a party to use to stand as its standard bearer, to negotiate with the two major political parties to collect money, influence and political appointments. Some of them after getting our party’s nod to represent us at the polls would go to these major parties and tell them that they are ready to step down for their candidates, if they are willing to pay much.

    We had a similar case in Ondo State in the last election that held in that state. We had a candidate, who said he had no money to pay the nomination fee of N1 million and he was aspiring to become the governor of the state. We looked at him and said instead of us not fielding any candidate at all in that election, we could waive the money for him just to feature him as our candidate in that election, at least, our name would be mentioned in that election even if we did not win. To me, my belief is that if as a candidate you do not have one million to pick the form to express you intention to run on the party’s platform, how then will you campaign and mobilise the people? Election these days are not based on your character alone, you must be able to mobilise your people to vote for you and this involves money.

    So, we fielded him in that election only to discover that he went to the Labour Party to negotiate, he also went to the PDP to discuss with them and he manipulated himself in such a way that the unfortunate happened to him. His name did not come out as a candidate for Accord Party in that election. On going to the Election Tribunal, he filed a case for exclusion in the election and the implication was that there had to be a re-run.

    And since he did not pay the party’s nomination fee, some documents that were supposed to be sent by the party to INEC were not sent. This actually was the reason for his exclusion. But because certain forms were submitted to INEC through the back door without our knowledge, his name got to INEC, but was not printed on the ballot papers.

    When we got to Ondo State, the case began, which at the end of it all may necessitate calling for another election, which again may put some huge financial burden on the Federal Government and the parties. So, everyone saw the implication of the re-run. Those who lost in that election wanted a rerun as it would help them improve on their performances. But the party that won did not want a rerun as this might deplete its already lean purse. So, we heard it on good authority that the parties started negotiating with that fellow, who was demanding for N1 billion. The APC wanted a rerun of that election and wanted him not to succumb, so also was the PDP. But the Labour Party did not want a rerun, so all these parties had to negotiate with him and offered him something. It was him these parties knew not the Accord Party and as such, he was not carrying the party along.

    So, when we heard about all these, we said we were not going to be a party to any of it because it was fraudulent. When the issue got to my table as the party’s legal adviser for advice, because I was then the party’s founding legal adviser before I became its deputy national chairman, I said the man was not our candidate, he did not pay. When he spoke to me on phone, he said he had problem raising the money and promised to write an undertaking to pay later, which I said he should do. He then asked his personal assistant to bring a hand-written undertaking on an ordinary sheet of paper, not even a letter-headed paper and the said undertaking was not written in my presence. So, I told him on phone that he did not look to me as a serious candidate. I said if he was serious enough, nothing would have stopped him from coming to Abuja to see me and discuss, but he did not.

    Eventually when we discovered his antics, we summoned an emergency meeting of the party’s national working committee and sent a delegate to Ondo State to appear at the tribunal because he manipulated the tribunal in believing that a representative of the party’s national executive was at the court, which we did not know anything about. In order not to tarnish the image of the party, the national secretary and some other executives were asked to go to Ondo State to testify against this fellow at the tribunal. A drama actually ensued when the case was called. Someone stood up and introduced himself as the party’s chairman while the real chairman was at the tribunal.

    The chairman, accompanied by other executives, also stood up to introduce themselves. The court was thrown into pandemonium. The impostor later ran away. But the party categorically told the tribunal that it did not know the plaintiff and that he was not the candidate of the party as he did not purchase the party’s nomination form and did not fulfill all the conditions laid down by the party for him to run on its platform. We did that in the interest of the party and the nation. We did not collect any money from any party to have done what we did.

    So, we were guided by that experience in screening those who came out as presidential aspirants this time around. We then resolved not to have anybody who may want to use our name to start negotiating as we had it in Ondo State. And coming to our participations in general elections, you would recall that our party had an affiliation with the PDP about 70 to 80 per cent of our founding national officers were from PDP.

    Were they deployed from PDP or they defected?

    They were sort of deployed because at that time, PDP was having some internal wrangling and the late Chief Solomon Lar took PDP to court on the issue of leadership of the party. So, because they were not sure of what might befall that party, some of them needed a plan B and the Accord Party was their supposed alternative in case PDP crashed. That was how Accord came up. But shortly before we were registered, PDP got over its problem and some of those that came to join us went back to PDP.

    I was not a member of the PDP. I started with Accord as its legal adviser, being a lawyer. I took part in writing the constitution of the party and I became the first national legal adviser.

    Looking at it from that angle, it got to a point that they said since PDP is not having problems again we should all fuse into the party. But I said no, I was not a member of PDP and would not join it. We have to start negotiating with them, don’t forget, that was 2003 when election had held. That time we had our party members in the National Assembly some state assembly. We had Senator Osakwe at the upper chambers, while three of our members were in the Delta State House of Assembly and a commissioner was appointed from our party then in Delta State. This was our party’s first outing.

    We then said if we were to go back to PDP we should negotiate and we set up a committee to meet with their committee and they were about holding their congress then. We then said as conditions for joining them that if they (PDP) took the slot of the party chairman, the slot of the deputy must be given to us. The same formula was to be applied for the secretariat. But unfortunately, this could not fly as they queried the strength of our party. Olusola Oke, who was their legal adviser then, said we should come and collapse into the PDP that was because all the parties were making one move or the other, but we said no, instead of doing that we would rather maintain our identity as a party. What informed our decision was the way the former Vice President Atiku Abubabakr was treated by the PDP when he was begged to return to PDP after his initial exit.

    Atiku then returned to PDP and was asked to go to his ward to register to be readmitted into the party. He was reduced to an ordinary party man. So, at my level then I’m sure if I had gone to the ward to register, they would not have given me an ordinary ward leader. So, its better I remain in my party where I will be relevant. I preferred to stay back and if they call for leaders of the party I’m sure of being counted as one.

    Since my survival does not depend on the party; I would not mind staying back in my party than to go to PDP and be rubbished. And as God would have it in 2007, Senator Rashid Ladoja was not given the governorship ticket of the PDP. This was the fall out of his impeachment, which he fought at the court and won. I was one of the lawyers, who defended him up to the Supreme Court. But before the Supreme Court could give its judgment in favour of Ladoja, the PDP in Oyo State had done its primaries, which chose Alao-Akala. Ladoja was still interested in contesting, but he had no platform, hence he joined our party. I presented him to the electorate at Mapo Hall, Ibadan. I was then the national legal adviser of the party. And he tried a lot, but lost the election. However, through him we had four House of Representatives members, 11 House of Assembly members. So, we are in the minority in Oyo State and without us in that state Assembly, nothing can move. We have the deputy speaker and five commissioners in the state cabinet.

    Recently PDP approached us based on what we had done for them in the past. In 2007, we adopted Yar’adua/Jonathan ticket as our candidate. In 2011, we were silent about endorsement. The result of our endorsement in 2007 was some ministerial slot to compensate us for supporting them. Our first chairman, Ikhra Bilbis, was made a minister. In 2011 our national secretary was made a commissioner in Imo State and all sorts of positions were given to us. Although we were silent on Jonathan’s endorsement in 2011, we were still given some board appointments. Our national chairman, Lawal Nalado was given a board appointment

    This time around the PDP approached us, but we have not yet given them our word; we are still talking. We have not endorsed any party. This is because we don’t want a situation where some people will go and collect money on behalf of the party. Something happened last month, some top members of the ruling party approached us and we told them our proposal and before we knew it they had invited the media and I spoke specifically that we are still talking and have not endorsed any presidential candidate or any party. The door is open to any party that wishes to talk with us; we are not an appendage of the PDP. If APC approaches us we will talk with them and see how our discussion can benefit the nation. So that day, I told the media that we have not adopted any party. The following day, I was bombarded with many calls telling me that they heard me say that my party has adopted Goodluck Jonathan. And I said no. Cleverly, what the NTA did was to cut an area where I said we have adopted PDP before and attached it to where I mentioned that members of our working committee are meeting with them to give the impression that I said we have adopted Jonathan. What I specifically said that day was “we have adopted PDP before, we are still talking and nothing will stop us from adopting them if we agree on terms”. The station did not complete my statement to give the impression that my party has adopted President Jonathan. The following morning I made some calls to the organisers of the meeting and I told them that, that was not what I said. I then called another press conference to set the records straight where I said we have not adopted Jonathan and that we are still talking.

    At another forum where other parties gathered to discuss similar issue, I was categorical about it and I said we have not adopted President Jonathan and I equally spoke to press to make my party stand known that we have not endorsed President Jonathan. Concerning the shift in polls’ date, I said my party did not support it. We wanted the election to hold. If we had endorsed President Jonathan, we would have taken the same stand with the PDP.

    The impression people had was that every other party apart from the APC was cajoled to support the shift in the election date and people thought the parties were perhaps induced to have rallied support for the ruling PDP, which it needed at that material time. So, people felt that Accord Party also supported the shift.

    Myself, and the national secretary of our party, Alhaji Nureni Adisa, represented the party. Why I’m representing the party these days is because my national chairman has been indisposed of late. He travelled for medical checkup and just returned. So, while he was away the responsibility fell on me as his deputy to represent him. Of course, we heard it that they lured some parties. As a lawyer, I must be mindful of what I say, what I don’t see I regard as hearsay. I was not given money, I was not called upon to come and collect money. I was there with my national secretary to represent my party. INEC called all political parties to hear our opinions, whether we support the shift or not. So, our secretary, Alhaji Nureni Adisa and I were there. When we got there, Jega gave us the low down, how they have performed and the way forward. The lobbying must have taken place before the meeting. Our party’s position did not border on inducement, but on what we thought would move this country forward. So, when people said PDP was offering some parties some money, I heard it and I refused to go there. This is why my party did not support the shift in election dates.

    Fortunately, I can tell you authoritatively that immediately Jega presented the situation to us, I was the first to speak because we sat alphabetically, because Accord is the first on the list. I said it categorically that in Yobe State, where there is insurgency, the governor of the state held a rally there that day and there was no bomb blast, in Maiduguri, Borno State they have been holding rallies there and no insurgency disturbed them. So also in Damaturu, Yola and Adamawa, they have held rallies there and no reported case of bomb blast while the rallies held, why citing security reason for postponing the elections?  We have never had it on record that a political rally was bombed whenever they held rallies. The only place we heard of bombings at political rally was Rivers State where there is no insurgency.

    Looking at the state of preparedness for the election, INEC was fully prepared. If we extend this election for more than one year, those who will not collect their PVCs will collect them. The percentage of PVC that has not been printed is so negligible, so also is for those who have collected their PVCs. But that is not INEC’s problem. The commission has printed the cards and the people have refused to collect them.

    I said if truly there was security challenge as they put it, my party and I were not in support of the shift. At the end of the day 16 parties supported the poll shift, while only nine of us, including the APC, were against poll shift.

    Let us look at the election, what are your projections, particularly the way parties have gone about their campaigns, which many say are not issue-based, but those of calumny and hate, do you see them bringing good results?

    Political parties have resorted to propagandas instead of facing the realities. We know what is happening in PDP states, we can assess the performances of their governors. In APC states people can equally assess the performances of their governors. At the federal level we all can see. Nobody is blind and if you are, you can still perceive what has been done. The level of development whether it is commensurate with the revenue received. But instead of campaigning to tell the electorate about what they can do, what they have done and what they will do, they have resorted to assassinating their characters. If somebody says he will do something what then is your headache about that? Its only when he has failed that you can talk. The dimension which the campaigns have gone is worrisome; they are shallow and shameful.

    What some of the politicians don’t know and which damages their credibility is telling lies. Why should you tell lies? What you cannot do why say you can do it? This is the root of the problems most politicians are facing.  They would have promised one thing or the other to the electorate, which unfortunately they could not fulfill. And instead of coming out clean to tell them why they could not, they will then be blaming the opposition for their inadequacies and would want to resort to all manners of trick to be re-elected.

    However, with the way elections in Ekiti and Osun States went, it will be extremely difficult for any political party to rig in the forthcoming election. With the use of PVCS and card readers coming into play, it will be difficult to rig. When the issue of deploying soldiers came up, we looked at it as something new. At a forum organised by INEC for parties, which I attended I said constitutionally, it is wrong to deploy soldiers to monitor election. But it has got to a level whereby our police are not being respected again by the people. What I told INEC is that there should awareness

    Are you saying that your party supports soldiers’ deployment on the Election Day?

    If you are asking for my personal views, I would say yes, but if it is my party’s views you want to know, I cannot speak for the party because it is a decision, which will be taken by the party’s executives and its NEC and working committee. But left to me, with what I saw in Ekiti and Osun States and since the soldiers would not be there to molest anybody, I would say yes to maintain law and order. Though it is unconstitutional, but we can bend the law, but not break it. I agree that it is unconstitutional going by the judgment of the court over Ekiti polls tribunal, but there was nowhere it was reported that there was a breakdown of law and order and I think the soldiers’ presence ensured that.

    Going by the recent revelation of recorded video of how last year’s Ekiti governorship election was rigged, what is your take on it?

    Fortunately, I was part of the team of lawyers that defended Governor Ayo Fayose at the tribunal. And fortunately or unfortunately, the tribunal has delivered its judgment before that revelation came up. However, may I say since the so-called revelation came up I have not been privileged to listen to the said tape. As at the time it came out it could not have been included in the matter because it would have amounted to an extraneous matter. So, to have brought it into the matter before the tribunal would have been difficult.

    If APC were to drag the matter to court what do you see as happening?

    They would have to prove beyond reasonable doubts that because it is criminal offence. In law there is what we call Actus rheus and mens rea. They are Latin words for actions taken and the intention behind them. Before one commits an offence there must be an intention for it and there must be acts carrying out that intention. There are some intentions one may want to carry out but one may b constrained of not opportune to do so, one cannot be punished for that. And there are some acts never intended to be carried out but do happen, one cannot be punished also, as they are accidental. So these people might have planned to rig the election, but might not have had the capacity to do so or in the alternative, the atmosphere might not have allowed for such act.

    But the dailies reported that the likes of Omisore and Fayose confessed that the voices on the said tape were theirs?

    Even if they heard their voices on the said tape and all that, where exactly did they carry out their intention by way of action? They planned and agreed on what to do but on getting there and seeing security men, were they able to do what they said they wanted to do on the said tape?

    But it was alleged that the soldiers on ground were accomplices to what they allegedly did?

    It is not possible. You would have witnessed one or two or more of such elections in Nigeria and you would agree with me that, that was the most sanitised election in the country. You remember in those days of second republic when ballot boxes would be snatched and stuffed with ballot papers? Those things cannot happen again this time around. Tell me how could it have been possible to rig when accreditation of voters starts almost immediately in all polling booths and ends at the same time? So, it is not possible to vote simultaneously in two places.

    But do you agree that rigging has stages; before, during and after election? 

    It is not possible to rig in any form.

    Assuming the election is rigged after voters had cast their votes, and election results are doctored after the election had ended?

    It is not possible. Why and how it is not possible is that by the time votes are being counted all party agents will endorse the result in the presence of everyone and have their copies and don’t forget this internet age all the results before you know what is happening would have been posted on the internet via e-result. So, how would you manufacture the result from elsewhere and which ward would you say have the result? The level INEC has placed election in Nigeria is very high. You cannot rig, if you are not popular, you are not popular.

    With the use of PVCs and Card readers, it will be extremely difficult to rig. Once you place your thumb on the reader your identity will show. You cannot use stolen PVC or somebody else’s card. Accreditation and voting takes place simultaneously so, how would you rig? So, the presence of soldiers, to me, would bring sanity and people would behave. You would not want to commit suicide by trying to snatch ballot boxes or disrupt voting process if you sight a soldier nearby. So, those contemplating rigging should perish that thought.

     

     

  • Will presidential election be decided by hate campaign?

    Will presidential election be decided by hate campaign?

    For nearly three months now, the two main contending parties in the presidential election, the All Progressives Congress (APC), the main opposition party, and the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP), the ruling party at the centre, have been seriously engaged in vigorous electoral campaigns for support in the forthcoming presidential election. There is a lot at stake for both parties and a hard fought and robust election campaign is an essential part of the democratic process. The electoral situation is more fluid today than ever before. Marginal votes are likely to be significant and these can swing the election one way or the other between the two main contending parties. Despite this, the public still expects that the election campaign should be conducted in a civilised and civil manner, with the main focus being placed on the critical political and economic issues of the day.

    Sadly, this is not the case now as this is increasingly looking more like a rancorous, hateful and divisive campaign, instead of one with the real focus on the critical issues of the day. It is perfectly understandable that the two main contending parties, the PDP and the APC, should engage themselves in a robust manner in the election campaign. But this is no justification for the resort to the kind of foul language the public is being treated to in the course of this electoral campaign. All decent persons must find this development reprehensible. We have been having elections in Nigeria long before independence in 1960 and after. But I cannot recall previous election campaigns in Nigeria that have generated such hateful and indecorous language as this one. Nigeria’s four pre-independence leaders, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, the Sardauna, and Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, refrained during election campaigns from calling one another names, or heaping insults and vile attacks on their political opponents. The political rivalry among them was very intense, but they deliberately refrained from personal attacks on one another. Whatever their political differences, they were decent men and conducted themselves decorously. Only during the disgraceful era of Akintola/Fani-Kayode’s dirty politics were the electorate and the Nigerian public treated to such scurrilous and foul attacks on their political opponents as we now have it.

    In this current campaign climate of hate, and resort to ethnic and religious divides, the PDP, the ruling party, has been guiltier than any of its political opponents. Shopworn lies are constantly being concocted, fabricated and peddled by some of the party’s roughnecks, veterans of street fighting and, beerhouse brawls.  Femi Fani-Kayode, head of the PDP publicity in the elections who like his deceased father, Remi Fani-Kayode, is a Cambridge educated lawyer, has constantly hauled personal attacks and insults on General Muhammadu Buhari, the APC presidential candidate. He is certainly not a proud product of Cambridge, that genteel and sedate university. President Goodluck Jonathan has not yet disassociated himself from this hateful campaign. In fact, he seems to encourage it.

    Femi Fani-Kayode claimed falsely that Buhari did not have the school certificate, the basic requirement for contesting the elections. When he was proved wrong, he came up with other incredible lies regarding Buhari’s Chatham House lecture, which were equally debunked. More recently, he claimed that the fuel crisis in the country was the handiwork of the APC, the main opposition party. Again, his allegation proved to be false as the crisis was due to the refusal of the oil marketers, who were being owed money by the PDP Federal Government to import refined oil. Femi Fani-Kayode has neither admitted his mistake in this regard, nor apologised to the nation for his misleading remarks. Governor Ayo Fayose has been equally totally unrestrained in his verbal attacks on General Buhari, going as far as to warn that if he won Buhari would die in office. This is most uncharitable and has been roundly condemned in the country. It is a real pity that Jonathan has chosen these indecorous propagandists to lead his campaign. They have done his campaign more harm than good. But what else should we expect when President Jonathan himself irreverently dismissed former President Olusegun Obasanjo as ‘a motor park tout’. How can he then call his men to order?

    In contrast to the desperate campaign of the PDP, the opposition party, the APC, has been more restrained in its approach to the electoral campaign. It has conducted a brilliant, skilful and impressive electoral campaign that has fully exploited the weakness of the PDP Federal Government. It has refused to be drawn into personal attacks on President Jonathan, Buhari’s opponent in the election. Instead, it has identified the main issues on which the elections should really be fought, namely massive corruption in the PDP Federal Government, colossal mismanagement of the national economy, Nigeria’s woeful infrastructure, the increasingly violent Boko Haram insurgency that has led to thousands of death in Nigeria, the vast number of the internally-displaced refuges in our country and Jonathan’s Abuja land grab.

    To some extent, ensuing economic and political events have also been broadly favourable to the APC. The falling oil prices, the 30 per cent devaluation of the naira, the continuing dispute over how much money exactly is missing from the national accounts, and the inability of the PDP Federal Government to maintain security, law and order in the country have all contributed to the growing unpopularity of the PDP in the country. The APC has wisely anchored its campaign on the inherent incompetence and inability of the PDP to run a clean, honest, transparent and effective government in the country. Its poor record on employment, creation of jobs, reduction of poverty level in the country has been its Achilles heel. The Nigerian economy may be the largest in Africa. But Nigeria, under this PDP government, has one of the lowest par capita incomes in Africa. Evidently, the man in the street is mystified that the country is so rich but that its people are so poor, and that there is still such mass poverty in the middle of such opulence in the country.

    The resort to vile language and personal insults by agents of the PDP shows quite clearly that its campaign has no real merit and that the party cannot defend its appalling record in office. Vast sums of money, most of it public funds, illicitly acquired, are being expended by the party to bribe the churches, the mosques, and the traditional rulers. But it is doubtful, given the structure of Nigerian politics, that this will have any effect on the electoral fortunes of the party in the March elections. In the case of Afenifere that has so shamelessly and so strangely declared its support for President Jonathan, its support is worth little or nothing to the PDP. Afenifere is no longer the formidable political organisation or movement that it once was. None of its present leaders can win elections in the Southwest. They have become irrelevant in the politics of the Southwest where their political influence has fallen considerably. Equally, the traditional rulers in the Southwest that President Jonathan has been trying desperately to woo have little or no influence on the electorate in the region. Even in Ife, the Ooni, the leader of the pack, has little or no political influence now. So trying to bribe the Obas is a waste of money, time and effort. They cannot deliver the votes Jonathan needs to win the elections, if they are free and fair.

    Instead of focusing its attention on the real issues of the elections and defending its record in office, the PDP has been trying desperately to scuttle it. First, it fraudulently procured a shift in the date of the elections. Then it rejected the use of the voters’ card reader for which the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was provided by the PDP Federal Government with the necessary funds. Then its leading spokesmen, particularly Chief Edwin Clark, the self-acclaimed ‘god father’ of President Jonathan, attacked Professor  Attahiru Jega, the fair-minded chairman of INEC, demanding his premature suspension from office. Altogether, the PDP has run a negative electoral campaign, which is counterproductive. It has alienated quite a lot of the few uncommitted voters and will not secure for Jonathan the marginal votes he needs to win the election.

    It must be said to the credit of Buhari that he has stood above the petty electioneering of the PDP propagandists. He has looked more confident, charismatic and presidential than Jonathan, his main opponent. He has refused to be drawn into any negative campaign, preferring instead to focus on the main issues of the day. He has his own faults too, but on the basis of his campaign strategy and his steady and unwavering commitment to defining the real issues of the elections, many consider him to be a far better candidate than Jonathan. He deserves to win the presidential election.

  • Presidential obscenity

    Presidential obscenity

    Ebele Integrated Farms Limited’s over 90 hectares of land is corruption writ large

    The sullying content of an advertorial published in the media by Purpose Driven Initiative (PDI), a non-governmental organisation accusing President Goodluck Jonathan of vilely acquiring 94.04 hectares of land in Aviation Village, Abuja, through Ebele Integrated Farms Limited that he purportedly owns majority shares in, is deplorable.

     The advertorial titled: “Let us talk about corruption. This is how the Nigerian government conducts business and fights corruption,’ declared: “A sitting President, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, incorporated a company, Ebele Integrated Farms Limited in which he is a major shareholder on December 30, 2011…Ebele Integrated Farms Limited applied for and was granted 94.04 hectare plot of land, Plot 1689 in Cadastral Zone EOS Aviation Village, Abuja on January 13, 2014.”

    What the law says: The 1999 Constitution (as amended) under the Fifth Schedule Part 1(Code of Conduct for Public Officers), Section 1 provides: ‘a public officer shall not put himself in a position where his personal interest conflicts with his duties and responsibilities.’ Despite the fact that the same Fifth Schedule, section 2 provides that “without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing paragraph, nothing in this sub-paragraph shall prevent a public officer from engaging in farming,” it is clear to the discerning that the sub-section does not condone public officers’ acts of putting themselves in a situation where their position conflicts or gives them undue advantage over others. This is what happened in the president’s land grabbing expose. It defiles and defies the law. It disrespects the high innocence and majesty of public his office.

    The law forbids the president or any public officer from simultaneously holding any position with the one being currently occupied. And quite contemptuous of the law is the fact that Mr. President registered a company with his native name as a sitting president, hiding under farming and thereby deploying his clout in a corrupt manner to secure such strategic land for himself and the company. Questions: Who pays for the land and at whose expense? How many of the executive heads of agencies and states, especially those ones under the control of the ruling party, can ignore requests for land from the president’s company with his name prominently stated as its leading director on its letter-head? Is this not arbitrary and cynical? Is this not a clash of interest in the discharge of public duties that section 1 of the Fifth Schedule frowns at? How can Mr. President’s anti-corruption crusade be taken seriously by anybody, not even his aides that are privy to his proclivity for grabbing not only just land but also anything in sight?

    No wonder he set a bad precedent, which his supporters claimed was inherited from former President Olusegun Obasanjo who, as they asserted, secured 100.12 hectares of land, Plot No.1 Cadastral Zone E09 Kuje, Abuja on June 27, 2005, to self for same farming purposes through Obasanjo Farms Nigeria. Also, Bala Mohammed, Minister of Federal Capital Territory (FCT), appointed by the incumbent president and who also approved the land for his benefactor, took to this reprehensible ruling party’s pattern when he also incorporated Bird Trust Agro-Allied Limited on May 31, 2012; and reportedly put himself as its major shareholder before subsequently going ahead to secure for self through his company, a 40.4 hectares, plot 1683 in Cadastral Zone E05 of same Aviation Village in Abuja on April 11, 2014.

    We wonder about the number of several unknown top government functionaries of the ruling party that have been emulating the president’s illicit and unfathomable primitive acquisition of public land in the FCT. At the rate at which the land is being grabbed by those in power, we wonder what is left of the remaining land originally designated for aviation purposes at the Aviation Village in the Abuja Master Plan.

    This singular act puts a serious question mark on the moral and ethical right of President Jonathan to continue to rule the country. In better-managed climes, his indiscretion on the Abuja land grab is sufficient to make him resign from his position, not to talk of him still hopeful of contesting the March 28, 2015 presidential election.

    We state without equivocation that the grabbing appetite of the president is obscene and shameful, and condemn his involvement in such public immorality. The president and the governors across the states, according to the law, are trustees of the land kept in their custody since all land belongs to the people. So, it is abominable for the president to acquire land meant for public purposes for personal end under the guise of embarking on farming. Public officers can acquire land for farming but we doubt whether it should be by grabbing the ones hitherto allocated for a justifiable public cause even before the president got into office. Mr. President and others involved in this ignominious land grabbing should forthwith return them to the original owner. This is much more so that what was reported was not all about farming but more of other commercial activities. This is the least expected of the president since no one would want to initiate impeachment proceedings against him over the matter.

  • I’ve not endorsed any presidential candidate, says Akiolu

    I’ve not endorsed any presidential candidate, says Akiolu

    Lagos monarch Oba Rilwanu Akiolu has said he has not endorsed any presidential candidate.

    Oba Akiolu spoke yesterday at the inauguration of four Nigerian Navy ships by President Goodluck Jonathan at the Naval Dockyard, Victoria Island.

    He dismissed speculations that he endorsed the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari.

    “Who gave you that rumour? Who said so? Some of the things they are writing, like that former Minister Obanikoro, I went to his mother that she should warn him. For the presidency, I support the best person.

    “If I want to do something I do not pretend. Allah will give the presidency to the person Nigerians want.”

    The monarch used the opportunity to reiterate his support for the candidature of APC’s Akinwunmi Ambode for Lagos governor, adding that he acted in God’s wisdom in picking Ambode.

    “I have my reason for saying it and I do not hide it. I acted in God’s wisdom and picked Ambode and by the grace of God, he will be the governor of this state.”

    The monarch took a swipe at former President Olusegun Obasanjo and former Minister of State for Defence Musiliu Obanikoro, accusing the former of crying foul.

    He praised the President for the new acquisition, adding that “the very energy which God gave them to do this, they should do many other things for the country so that all will be well with us.”

    Akiolu who said the Dockyard, a large area of land, was collected from a family in the colonial days without compensation, urged the Federal Government to do something to solve the inherited problem.

    On election postponement, he said the reason given by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was acceptable, adding that he was hopeful that the elections will hold on March 28 and April 11.

    He said: “The President and INEC have told us that the elections will take place and I hope by the grace of God, it will be like that. For the time being, the intent and purposes for the postponement is acceptable.

    “It is the responsibility of all of us to ensure we have free, fair, credible and acceptable general elections.

    “God gives leadership to whomever he wants. When the time comes, no human being can stop it. So many things are going wrong in this country now. Some people do not want to say the truth but it is the truth that will liberate us and may God give us all long life so that we will see.”

    The monarch lambasted Obasanjo for the pains he caused Lagos State between 1999 and 2007 when he was president, adding that “God gives many people long live so that they can get enough punishment, like what is happening now”.

  • Presidential candidates urged to honour non-violence pact

    Presidential candidates urged to honour non-violence pact

    Presidential candidates of the two leading political parties, President Goodluck Jonathan of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and General Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC), have been urged along with their teeming supporters to respect the non-violence pact recently signed concerning their campaign.

    Former presidential candidate of the Democratic Peoples Party (DPP), Otunba Owolabi Odebudo, who had earlier dropped his ambition in support of the candidacy of President Goodluck Jonathan, made this appeal at a press briefing in Abuja yesterday where he also called on Nigerians to collect their permanent voter cards (PVCs) to enable them vote in the Feburary elections.

    Otunba Odebudo, who recalled that his decision and that of its party to step down for President Jonathan, was predicated on a forceable situation whereby a clear winner might not emerge in the first round of the election, which may eventually overheat the polity.

    The former DPP flagbearer said since opinion poll had already put two candidates in the lead as dominant, he would call on ten other candidates in the race to step down for President Jonathan, as the ten candidates may eventually drop out in the event of a second round ballot.

    He said his stance for calling on the 10 candidates to drop their ambition for President Jonathan was also based in the interest of the nation, since according to him, “their programmes have a lot in common with the transformation agenda of President Jonathan.”