Tag: resist

  • Nigerians ‘ll resist military takeover, says Bakare

    Nigerians ‘ll resist military takeover, says Bakare

    Serving Overseer of the Latter Rain Assembly Pastor Tunde Bakare yesterday warned those overheating the polity to respect the constitution.

    He said he would deploy resource available to mobilise against military takeover.

    The cleric, in a message, titled: “The birth pang to a new Nigeria”, noted that some politicians were undermining the constitution to seek unwholesome way to power.

    He said there were conflicting signals that the country was in extreme case, noting that what was happening was not strange or new.

    Bakare added that the constitution was clear on succession, stressing that those playing god by virtue of their position were making the path to a new Nigeria painful.

    The pastor, who likened the politicians’ conduct to the biblical Absalom and Adonijah, said: “Whenever leaders serve with a military energy, leadership vacuum will be created. Since nature abhors vacuum, the country will face setbacks.

    “Those trying to undermine the country are like Adinijah and Absalom, whose inordinate ambition set them against their father, King David, and the people of Israel.

    “If the President is very healthy and able to discharge his duties, there will be no room for Absalom and Adonijah.

    “So, anyone with inordinate ambition is an Absalom. Those who don’t learn from history are Adonijah. Adonijah did not learn from what happened to Absalom and he came to wrong conclusion.

    “Do not forget that we have constitution in this country, as bad as the constitution is, as unacceptable as it appears, as full of potholes as it may be, it is still the constitution of Nigeria and certain things are stipulated there.

    “In the light of the fact that the President cannot discharge his duties, he must transit power to the Vice President of this country. This President has never led without transmitting that power.

    “And if you want to know whether the President has not recover, I said during this sermon that the country was in the path of recovery, give him chance. Niger Republic has not seen their President for a while. Nigeria needs an energetic leader, the circumstances of our polity has brought us to where we are.”

  • Labour vows to resist salary cut

    The Federal Government’s decision to reduce salaries of public servants in some agencies, where their salaries and allowances are far above the threshold of National Salaries and Wages Commission has not gone down well with organised labour.

    Already, organised labour is set for a showdown with the government, as various unions disclosed to The Nation that they are not ready for any reduction in salaries and allowances of their members, particularly at this time of recession.

    Labour is also irked by the government’s plan to increase tax revenue, in view of the dwindling economic resources.

    Already, evaluation and grading department officers of the Salaries Commission are said to have gone round the country to compile data on such agencies.

    Finance Minister, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, said last week that a circular had been issued on the approved template for the computation of operating surpluses of agencies.

    She added that there would be non-allowable expenses in the computation of operating surpluses, including salaries and staff loans in excess of approved scale by National Salaries and Wages Commission; moneti-sation of medical and other allowances; business class travel for officers other than Chairman and CEO.

    Also, salaries of some ministries and agencies were drastically cut last month with explanations that there was a new formula for determining personal income tax of workers.

    However, labour leaders, who spoke with The Nation kicked against the alleged unilateral reduction in the salaries of workers in the federal public service and warned that the move would be resisted by organised labour.

    The Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC) President, Comrade Boboi Kaigama, and the National President, Association of Senior Staff of Banks, Insurance and Financial Institutions (ASSBIFI), Comrade Oyinkansola Olasanoye, frowned on what they described as the unexpected and unilateral reduction in workers’ salaries and asked for immediate refund of the money deducted.

    Comrade Kaigama said: “We kick against that and we ask the government to refund such deduction. We don’t know how they came about that. Workers have not been notified why, and about any increase in taxes. We call on them to refund Nigerian workers their money.”

    On the big disparity between the salaries of workers in the core ministries and some government parastatals, who are on the same level, the TUC president asked: “Is it now they are seeing that? “

    He noted that world over, it operates like that; those agencies have their pay package different from that of the core ministries and can’t equate it. He said if government wants to bridge the gap, it should increase the salaries of workers in the core ministries. “This is no time for reduction of salaries. We will kick against it and resist it”, Kaigama stated.

    On his part, Comrade Olasanoye said it was wrong for the Federal Government to reduce workers’ salary without due negotiating with their representatives.

    She said: “Actually, the Federal Government can’t reduce salary without informing the labour unions in the public sector. It is completely wrong. It was the same government that declared that the economy was in recession.

    “Government can’t take such a unilateral decision. Maybe they have met with the unions and other representatives of workers in the affected ministries and agencies. Maybe they have presented documented facts to their representatives on why it was important to reduce their salaries.  That I cannot say for sure, but government is bound to engage stakeholders before taking any decision that will affect workers’ welfare.”

    She noted that the government could only do such, having put in place basic amenities such as good health insurance for the workers, good housing scheme and others. She emphasised that ASSBIFI under her leadership will not support any move that will endanger workers’ welfare in any sector.

    However, the President of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Ayuba Wabba, said he was not sure that the salary deduction story was credible. He added that the Congress had neither received any formal information about it nor confirmed it.

    Wabba said: “I am not sure it is credible. I asked the Chairman of Joint Council and that of the Federal Capital Territory of the Congress this morning, but they said the information was not credible enough.

    “We need to act on credible information and the FCT Chairman and the Joint Council Chairman are the right people to know, but we have not received any formal information on that. Salary is a right of workers and nobody can unilaterally cut it or reduce it. I enquired from them and they communicated back to me.”

    Also, the National Secretary of Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Comrade Shuaibu Usman Leman, in a release titled: “Stop these deductions,” described the action as “not only callous, but also ill-advised and uncalled for.”

    He lamented that in this period of economic recession, the Muhammadu Buhari administration that was elected based on its ‘change’ mantra cannot afford any confrontation with poor workers that supported the advent of the administration. He, therefore, urged for caution.

    There was an outcry by the Federal Government staffers last week when a memo addressed to all members of staff, titled: ‘Reduction in November 2016 Salary’, stated the cut in the salary.

  • ‘Resist election rigging’

    Ondo State Governor’s wife Mrs. Olukemi Mimiko has urged women and other eligible voters to resist election manipulation in the November 26 poll.

    She urged mothers to warn their wards against being used during and after the election.

    Mrs. Mimiko spoke at a forum featuring a lecture titled: “Women: A reliable pillar in nation-building”, at Ore, Odigbo Local Government delivered by PDP governorship candidate’s wife, Mrs. Ebunoluwa Jegede.

    Mrs. Mimiko said: “We need to go back to our various houses to talk to our children and husbands to preach politics of peace, tolerance and love to them, so that peace could reign supreme in the state during and after the election.”

    She advocated politics without bitterness to guarantee peace.

    Thanking the people, especially the womenfolk for their support over the years, she assured that her husband’s administration remained committed to their welfare and growth.

  • Oyo workers vow to resist salary cut

    Oyo workers vow to resist salary cut

    •NLC denies agreement with govt

    Members of the organised labour movement in Oyo State, under the umbrella of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), have opposed any move by Governor Abiola Ajimobi to cut workers’ salary.

    They vowed to use available means to resist this.

    Governor Ajimobi yesterday told the people in a programme on Splash FM that the labour leaders agreed with the government that workers’ salary should be cut, following the state’s dwindling resources, at a meeting last Monday.

    NLC Chairman Mr. Waheed Olojede described the claim as false.

    Olojede, who expressed surprise at the claim, said there was never any such meeting with the governor where salary cut was discussed.

    Warning the government to desist from any step that would cause disaffection between it and the workers, the NLC chairman wondered how the labour would enter into an agreement with the governor on salary cut at a time the NLC was agitating for salary review.

    His words: “Today, the Oyo State governor featured in a radio programme and informed the public that he held a meeting with labour leaders and that we agreed on salary cut because of the present economic situation and the state’s dwindling resources.

    “The message got to us as a very big surprise because at no time did labour hold a meeting to negotiate with the government on workers’ salary cut.

    “It is true we held a meeting with the government last Monday, but it was convened to discuss the bailout loan, which the Federal Government has released to Oyo State.”

    The NLC boss said the agenda of the meeting, which was attended by the governor, the head of service and other officials, was based on the Federal Government bailout to states and how soon the arrears of workers’ salary would be paid.

    He said: “We went to the government to know how much was it and how it will be spent to clear the arrears of salary. At that meeting, the government told labour that soon, they would access the funds from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and as soon as the fund came, they were prepared to spend the money for the purpose for which it was meant. That is the clearance of allowances, salary and pension arrears.

    “We also agreed at that meeting that since the federal allocation committee held a meeting in Abuja and released allocation to the states, payment of April salary of officers on GL 13 and above should begin immediately, while we await the bailout fund to clear May, June, July and August salary. That was the position at that meeting.

    “It was a big surprise today (yesterday) when the governor said he had discussed with us and we agreed that he should cut workers’ salary. We say no to this and that there is no agreement between us and the governor that workers’ salary should be cut. This is also to inform employers of labour that the last NEC meeting of labour held on August 6 resolved that the law that guides minimum wage allows it to be reviewed after five years of implementation.

    “The minimum wage was approved in 2011. The national headquarters of the NLC is preparing to call for a review of the wage. So if the NLC is agitating for an increase of workers’ salary, why should any government talk of salary cut? To us as labour in the state, this proposal is not acceptable. It is anti-labour, anti-social and unacceptable.”

  • Osun Poll: We “ll resist rigging

    The Akure Chapter of Ijesa Youth Development Association (IYDA) has urged the people of Osun State to vote massively for the continuation of Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s administration for another four years  to sustain the ongoing rapid development in the State.

    Besides, the group has also criticised the violence allegedly being perpetrated by thugs suspected to be working for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) ahead of the August 9, 2014 governorship election.

    A statement issued by IYDA’s Coordinator, Olusayo Ogunleye and Publicity Secretary, Boluwaji Faseyi in Akure, the Ondo State capital particularly condemned the recent alleged burning of an official white Toyota Hilux jeep belonging to the Special Adviser (SA) to Governor Aregbesola on Agriculture, Mr Festus Agunbiade where it was parked in Esa-Oke, Obokun local government.

    Agunbiade was in his home town to mobilise the electorate in Esa-Oke Ward seven for next month’s governorship election.

    IYDA urged security operatives  to monitor the activities of PDP leaders in the area who they alleged are planning to rig the election through violence.

    The group noted that Ijesas should not mortgage their future by collecting token to give support to those who have no plan for the people rather than to rule by force.

    The statement reads further: “We know those behind the killing of late Bola Ige, who are now dancing on his grave seeking for votes.

    “We are appealing to the good people of ijesaland comprising six local government areas to shine their eyes and reject them totally at the polls to sustain the massive transformation going on in the state.

    IYDA said the All Progressives Congress’s (APC) administration in Osun state has touched all sectors of the economy in its developmental strides particularly in areas of the economy, good roads network, education and employment opportunities among others, in spite of the dwindling federal allocation.

    The group maintained that they would resist any act of violence in the area, stressing that Ijesas are known to be progressives and would continue to maintain the status quo.

  • Muyiwa Ige: resist fraud

    Muyiwa Ige: resist fraud

    Osun State Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development Muyiwa Ige has raised the alarm over attempts by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to rig the August 9 election through the bulk purchase of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

    The son of the late Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Chief Bola Ige, who spoke in Ibadan at the weekend, said the plot also includes using the police and military to harass the people.

    He urged the people to resist the PDP and the plan to use force to capture and enslave the state on August 9.

    Ige remarked that the PDP has nothing to offer the people other than violence, corruption and mismanagement.

    “That’s why the only thing they are harping on is that they are coming with Federal might and brazenly, they believed they will harass our people . The best we can do is to embolden our people. Let them know that the police and the military are also our own. If they are coming to protect us, yes they should protect us. So, we should all come out bright and early.

    “Before we even come out on the day, we should all get our Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs). Right now, it’s operation show your PVC. We must encourage all our people to go out and obtain their PVCs . Once they obtain their PVCs, they must not sell them…”

  •  ‘Ekiti will resist rigging’

     ‘Ekiti will resist rigging’

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi spoke with reporters in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, on the preparations for the June 21 governorship election, Vice President Namadi Sambo’s description of Ekiti as a war front, the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) threat to ‘capture’ the Southwest and other issues. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU was there.

    Vice President Namadi Sambo has said that Ekiti State will become a war front during the governorship election? What is your view?

    Quite frankly, my immediate reaction when I saw the statement from the Vice President was disbelief, until I eventually read it in about five newspapers and saw that the language was consistent and that the reports are similar in all the papers. The Vice President is someone I relate with very well. He and I are on the board of the NDPHC (Niger Delta Power Holding Company) and the Nigeria Integrated Power Project (NIPP). He chairs the company and I represent the Southwest in the company. And through that, we meet fairly regularly. The Vice President has every right to push for his party in any election. That is his legitimate right. But, to have said what the media reported was quite unfortunate because we are not at war in Ekiti. We have enjoyed three and a half years of peace and we are one of the most peaceful states in this country today. So, for someone, who occupies one of the highest offices in the land as our Vice President to reduce the importance of his office and promote insecurity, either directly or by subterfuge, is quite unbecoming of the person who occupies the number two position in our country. There is a part of me that still wants to treat it with scepticism and I still would like to take it up with the Vice President whenever I get the opportunity. I hope he would deny the report. But, I do think the underlying implication of the purported statement should worry any decent Nigerian who is interested in credible elections, especially in the light of what recently happened at Ilaje/Ese Odo and the role played by a minister of government, which has now been confirmed by the Resident Electoral Commissioner in Ondo State. In any decent polity, the minister would have been asked to leave by now. If you do anything that flies flagrantly in the face of the law, then, the maximum weight of the law ought to be applied by INEC. The law is very clear on these matters and even the military is empowered to disobey manifestly unlawful orders. What happened in Ilaje/Ese Odo appears to many people as a precursor of the grand plan to steal elections in Ekiti and Osun States. And the INEC ought to be sending a very strong signal that the institution would not take kindly to unlawful interference in the electoral process.

    I can tell you that there is a lot of intelligence available to me about people sewing fake soldiers and policemen uniforms in preparation for Ekiti election and I hope INEC would be reassuring not just Ekiti people but Nigerians because the Ekiti election is even far more important than the 2015 election because if confidence is lost in INEC’s preparation and eventual implementation of the Ekiti election, that will rub off terribly on the 2015 election. I mean the INEC is already under watch, given what happened in Anambra. To then see Ekiti election going in the wrong direction would totally put paid to any hope on the part of Nigerians that anything good can come out of the 2015 elections and I don’t think President Jonathan needs that. I think he has conveyed an image of himself as a decent politician, who is not going to manipulate or resort to extra-legal or illegal ways in election management in Nigeria. So, I think the INEC, together with Inter Agency Committee on Election Security, would need to give Nigerians a lot of reassurance following the Vice President’s careless statement. But perhaps, out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaketh. I think it is very unfortunate. I think it is unbecoming of his office. And I think the Vice President really ought to withdraw the statement and reassure Nigerians that the agenda for Ekiti election is not going to be determined in Aso Rock but by Ekiti people because it is a referendum on the performance of the government in Ekiti; it is not a national election. It should not be expanded to a national election. But, let me also say that whatever evil machinations are in place from Abuja, Ekiti people are fully ready.

    But, the Vic President made that statement at a time the PDP is also saying that it will ‘capture’ the Southwest. Are you not nursing any fear for this election?

    This is Ekiti and people who are familiar with the history here would know that this is not a very good place to rig election. You can afford to manipulate elections in Anambra because Anambra has a lot of rich people who are even richer than the governor and do not care too much about who governs the state. In Ekiti, you will discover that everybody is interested in what happens here because we have 2.5million potential governors in this state. Every single indigene believes he has what it takes; that he understands government and that he knows how to govern. So, you can’t say such a person should not have an opinion on who governs. And every time election was manipulated in Ekiti, the result has not been palatable. Whether you refer to 1964/65 wetie crisis, which eventually culminated in the 1966 coup, Ekiti was even a stronger zone of resistance than Ikenne where Chief Awolowo hailed from and of course, when you talk of the 1983 election rigging in Ondo State, we all can remember what happened here. And of course, my own recent experience has also demonstrated that our people are far too sensitive to allow external interference in their affairs. People will make all sorts of claims; that they would do this, they would do that; but, the truth of the matter is that, even the PDP admits that this governor has done well, but it is about gaining an in-road to the Southwest by hook or crook. Unfortunately for them, the PDP had been in government here for seven and a half years and Ekiti people cannot forget in a hurry what they went through in those years. It was murder, mayhem and crises for the bulk of the period. And don’t forget that, for those seven and a half years, there were six governors. So, it was instability galore. That is what would have to be placed side-by-side what happened in our time in office.

    Federal might is always going to be a factor in any election, but I can assure you that the peoples’ might is bigger than federal might. So, we have nothing to fear. We are ready for the worse. But, light will overcome darkness. The election will be a referendum on the performance of our administration and those competitors in Ekiti.

    What do you mean by the election being a referendum on your performance?

    First, what do I mean by that statement? An election is necessarily a referendum of what an incumbent has done or failed to do in the judgment of the electorate. Somebody running for the first time can only make promises and hope that the people will believe his promises. As an incumbent, I am running on the record of the public goods that I’ve delivered in every community and constituency. I have been on the campaign trail for over three weeks now and in every place I get to, the people are the ones who reel out what we have done in their communities. It is a much taller order for me in the sense that I must present tangible, palpable, verifiable evidence of what I have done. That is what I have to sell. And in addition to that, with the record that you know that I have, I now want to do one, two, three and four when I come back. So, it is a referendum on my performance. It may not be a referendum of the performance of my competitors. But, even in the case of one of my competitors, the election is a referendum on who he was when he was in office in the state and what he did. Even, if he chooses not to talk about that, others would talk about his record in office. The record will be set straight.

    Why do you think that you deserves a second term?

    I ran in 2007 on a platform popularly known as the ‘Roadmap to Ekiti Recovery – My Eight-Point Agenda. At the time, I was very specific about what I was going to do in office as far back as 2006. When you talk about social security – if you read my inaugural speech you will find social security benefit to the elderly there. If you read my inaugural speech, you will see laptop per child there. There is nothing that we have done in this state that we have not picked up from the eight-point agenda. And everyone who is objective can attest to the fulfilment of what we promised Ekiti State people. And in the various communities that we are going to meet people, they speak to that. So, I think the answer to your question is yes. My performance has earned me a reason to believe that I would be re-elected. A dimension to this, today, the result of one of the polls that we conducted at the various communities came to me. One woman they spoke to basically just said: “We like Fayemi. He has done very well. He has fulfilled all his promises. He has not done anything that we don’t like, but the issue is that, since he has already done everything he promised, he should allow another person come in”. I found that very interesting. But, the thing is that we have not actually done everything. There are areas where I would score myself 70 per cent or even 60 per cent. There are still some things to be done.

    Seriously speaking, I think we have done reasonably well. Don’t forget that this state is number 35 on the revenue ladder of the country. People often forget that. And this is a state that gets N3billion a month against N23billion in Bayelsa with a smaller population. So, I think it is important to put this in proper perspective. We run a social democratic agenda and it is a progressive government. You will see that in many of the policies that we put in place. We concentrate on how to assist the weak and the vulnerable in our State. Additionally, we have run a reasonably clean government. So, I think we have done enough to earn a second term. But, we are also not unaware that performance itself is not the only factor in an election. But, it is the most critical success factor for an incumbent.

    There are some things you said about the disparity in the money you get from the Federation Account. Are you comfortable with the federal system being practised in Nigeria?

    We don’t operate a federal system in Nigeria. At best, we operate a distorted, pseudo-federal system, which does not operate coordinate powers among the federating units, but a hierarchical, subordinate powers inherited from our military past. If we operate a federal system, then, you will not have things like UBEC and TETFUND, which give people the impression that states are beholden to the Federal Government, whereas it is the funds jointly owned in the Federation Account that is being shared. If we run a proper federal structure, you will not have us here spending our meagre resources in sustaining the police while we have no authority over its activities in the state, unless our views coincide with or reinforce the instructions from Abuja. It’s simply a distortion of the federal system.

    As for the disparities in earnings between Bayelsa, or Rivers and Ekiti, I do not have any problem with it. I’m an advocate of fiscal federalism. So, I do not necessarily have a problem with Rivers State, for instance, earning what comes from its soil. However, in order for us not to undermine the nation, for any federal system to work well, we often need equilibrating mechanisms so that one side is not overwhelmingly rich and other parts of the federation so despicably poor. We have to find a mechanism to balance this and, if you look at the Australian and Canadian constitutions – even in the American constitution, you have these mechanisms there. We have them in ours as well, but they are exercised in breach rather than in consistency with the law. So, I hope those who are working on this at the National Conference will be able to come up with a federalism that is more cooperative than combative because states are being forced into a combative model.

    One of your programmes that the opposition has not criticised is the digitalisation of your income. Could you to shed light on it?

    You are talking about the Integrated Payroll Biometric System. I don’t know if the opposition has not criticised it. When we started it, they called us all manners of names – that the agenda was to get rid of the civil servants. But, eventually, you are right, they couldn’t criticise it because the civil servants and the teachers became champions of the electronic payment system and it has saved us from a lot of money spent on ghost workers. We are now even trying to use the same system for our ‘Citizen Identity Management System’ and our social security payment, which is still manual payment and there is still a level of inefficiency and waste that we have detected in the social security payment. But, clearly, biometrics is the way to go. If you want to run an efficient government, technology has to play a major role. And that is how we have been able to reduce fraud in the system. We now save an average of N200million.

    The scholar and princess of Ado-Ekiti, Professor Modupe Adelabu, is likely to be your running mate. Why are you retaining the deputy governor as your running mate?

    You know what they say – if it is not broken, why fix it? The deputy governor has done very well. She did exceedingly well managing the state Universal Basic Education Board. My party has a position that the deputy must come from Ado – Ekiti and I cannot go against the position of the party on that. My late deputy was also from Ado – Ekiti as you know. So, we just replaced her with another Ado – Ekiti person who happens to be a direct descendant of the monarch here. But, that is not what qualifies her for the job. She is, more importantly, a professor and expert in educational administration.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Senator: Nigerians’ll resist tenure elongation

    The lawmaker representing Ekiti Central in the Senate, Babafemi Ojudu, has said Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu’s call for two additional years in office for President Goodluck Jonathan and governors has justified his prediction that the proposed national conference is designed to elongate the president’s term of office.

    In a statement in Ado-Ekiti, Ojudu said: “My attention has been drawn to a statement made by my colleague, Ekweremadu, for two additional years for Mr. President and governors. But just as it failed during the regime of Gen. Ibrahim Babangida and the tenure of Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, this exercise or adventure will also fail.”

    Ojudu said Nigerians voted Jonathan for a four-year term, which can only be reviewed by another presidential election.

    He said: “Any attempt to elongate the president’s term will be resisted by Nigerians. It is undemocratic! Nigerians are wiser and determined to make our democratic experiment succeed more than ever before. The planned tenure elongation can only be in the interest of a few Nigerians and it is capable of bringing the country to its knee.

    Ojudu said there were two pointers to the fact that the proposed national conference was a hatchet job to achieve a predetermined objective of tenure elongation.

    He said: “One of them is the president’s position that the outcome of the conference will be brought to the National Assembly and one of the leaders of that legislature is Ekweremadu, who is already canvassing for tenure elongation. Nigerians must by now be seeing the link between the call by Ekweremadu and the proposed national conference.”

    Ojudu urged Nigerians to be on the alert to ensure that “this stillborn proposal is not stealthily smuggled in overnight.”

  • Bakassi refugees resist relocation

    There was confusion at the weekend when officials of Bakassi Local Government in Cross River State, led by the Chairman, Dr Ekpo Ekpo Bassey, attempted to relocate refugees, who were allegedly evicted from Cameroon, to the resettlement camp in Ekpri Ikang.

    Ekpri Ikang is in the new Bakassi Local Government, which was created by the House of Assembly in 2007.

    The refugees, who are camped in the primary school in Akwa Ikot Edem, Akpabuyo Local Government Area, were allegedly chased from their homes in Efut Obot Ikot community in the ceded Bakassi Peninsula on March 7 by Cameroonian gendarmes.

    They have been in the school since then.

    The government officials were chased away by the refugees, who said they were not moving, except to a place of proper resettlement in Dayspring.

    It was a pathetic sight. Women and children were wailing. Men were resisting the efforts of security operatives, who came with the council officials, to move them.

    The leader of the relocation team, Iyadim Iyadim, addressed the refugees, but some of them blocked the camp’s entrance.

    They alleged that the gesture was a move to take them back to a hostile environment, where they were driven out in 2010.

    Their leader, Asuquo Etim, said: “We have said we are not going to Ekpri Ikang. We said so even when the deputy governor came here.

    “We are not going there because of the nature of that environment. We don’t like it.

    “The chairman came to force us to that place, but we told him we would not be able to go there because there we were attacked, robbed and even our women were raped.”

    Another refugee, Bassey Okon, said: “In 2008 after Bakassi was ceded, we were taken from one place to another; from Ikang primary school to the council headquarters.

    “After that they gave us N15,000 to start life afresh. Imagine, I was given N15, 000 to cater for my family of five.

    “Later, they allocated the housing estate to us but one day they came and drove us out and re-allocated that same estate to people who were not refugees.

    “Due to the trauma, I went back to Bakassi Peninsula to see if I could make ends meet, and the Cameroonians brutalised us and you are saying you want to take us back to Ikang again to torture us as was done some years ago.

    “We will not go to Ikang. We prefer to die here, if government would not resettle us in the place of our choice, which is Dayspring.”

  • NGF should resist intimidation

    SIR: If the PDP governors are true believers of democracy, they should take the so-called presidency and its fixers head-on and vow not to be intimidated by their threats to impose President Jonathan on PDP members. Those calling themselves leaders and friends of the president have no right, whatsoever, to tell PDP members who to elect. If they so believe in President Jonathan, the party’s National Convention is there to test his popularity, instead of trying to intimidate PDP governors into supporting a cause they do not believe in. Besides, apart from a few opportunists among the PDP governors, Jonathan has not earned their support.

    One can’t help but be amazed at Chief Edwin Clark’s comments, when he claimed that the NGF should be dissolved. The NGF should know that if they ignore or run away from their bullies, they will keep coming after them. Like with dogs, turning tail in flight is a signal for pursuit. And if they yield to their threats, the threats will keep aiming higher as they will become victims, and find it increasingly harder to overcome the bullies. There is only one proper response to leaders-turned-backyard bullies. Stare them down, stay the course and stand up to them.

    Jonathan and his praise-singers should be smart enough to know that no amount of threats, intimidation and blackmail will make the governors change their position on the candidate that they want to elect. Determined governors must be ready to take battering, tumbles and bruises, no matter how grievous they seem, because truth and right are on their side.

    Spin doctors in the presidency, it seems, have misled the President that they really know the country called Nigeria. Do they even feel the pulse of PDP members, let alone that of Nigerians? This ignorance, which some people misconstrued as arrogance, has led them scurrying to re-install sacked National Working Committee members from the South West PDP, a move akin to eating their vomit, all in a bid to pacify already perceived enemies to support the President’s re-election project. This is just the beginning of a series of dog fights in the party as 2015 approaches.

    Interestingly, President Jonathan has put so much faith in the troika of Bamanga Tukur, Tony Anenih and Godswill Akpabio, and his mouth piece, Edwin Clark; men that talk from both sides of their mouth. One writer even noted that Anenih was appointed BoT Chairman to reposition PDP. Excuse me; is it PDP Edo or PDP Nigeria? Has Anenih been able to reposition PDP in Edo State? Here is a man that has since been demystified and sent to the cleaners by Governor Adams Oshiomhole. Twice.

    In one breath, Clark says Jonathan is PDP’s sole candidate, in another, he says nobody should be stopped from contesting as “the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria guaranteed equality of all Nigerians to seek elected offices, when and where necessary”. So anybody can contest on the platform of an opposition party but no PDP member has the constitutional right to contest because of Jonathan?

    Akpabio said the PDP Governor’s Forum will try to identify Judases amongst them; the same Judases Anenih is demanding total loyalty from, and the same Judases that, according to Tukur, have been giving Jonathan sleepless nights?

    On what moral ground can these men stand on to lecture other people on politics and democracy when their own party is collapsing? Everything is in black and white now, and Nigerians expect the Presidency to respect the democratic will of the various states governors and their people.

    • Lloyd Robinson

    Port Harcourt, Rivers State