Tag: rigging

  • ‘How we deployed ICT to prevent rigging in Osun election’

    ‘How we deployed ICT to prevent rigging in Osun election’

    The Osun State Governor,  Rauf Aregbesola has revealed how the deployment of Information Communication Technology (ICT) in monitoring and reporting of events as they unfolded during the August 9 governorship election in the state prevented falsification of results.

    The governor, in a statement by the Director Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon,was quoted as stating this while delivering a keynote address titled “Broadband: Oxygen for Digital Economy” at the Africa Digital Forum and Award 2014 organised by the ICT Watch Network at the Sheraton Hotels and Towers in Ikeja, Lagos Sunday evening.

    Aregbesola pointed out that ICT was put to use by the various situation rooms set up by the government to monitor, get results and happening across all the units, wards and Local governments in the state helped in no small measure.

    He bemoaned the situation of the country at this jet age lacking the capacity to deploy Internet and other advanced technologies to locate the whereabouts of the Chibok school girls several months after their abduction by Boko Haram insurgents.

    The governor noted that Nigeria has a new opportunity for economic resurgence in the digital economy age, saying that the nation has the requisite infrastructure both material and human.

    He said, “We have a huge human population (167 million) with equally immense needs. This is a potentially immense market with which we can trade our way from poverty to riches. Added to this is the demography of that population.

    “Our population is predominantly composed of youths who are energetic, enthusiastic, and innovative”. The governor stressed

    Aregbesola noted that the Osun experience in the use of modern technology and the use of Internet could be a model for national ICT development on a non-partisan basis.

    The governor pointed out that the use of ICT will enhance greater deployment and consumption of broadband.

    According to Aregbesola, “In Osun, without being immodest, we can say that ICT has been a major plank of governance. We pioneered e-learning with the invention of Opon Imo. We have also been able to provide card based e-credit for farmers. Of course, we have also deployed e-based payroll and staff ID card on MasterCard platform directly connected to the holder’s account.

    “We have also devised e-ID Card for all pupils in public schools and the card will now serve as payment instrument for our home-grown school feeding and health programme (O’MEALS).

    “We set up the OYESTECH, an institution for training youths in the use, assembly and repair of electronic gadgets from plasma television, computers to mobile phones”. The governor told the gathering.

    Aregbesola held that Nigeria has a great potential for enhancing development in this information age through the digital economy.

    He noted that there are still huge potentials in road traffic monitoring and control, CCTV camera, weather monitoring and forecast, national population database among others.

    He said, “What this means is that there is power and potential in numbers. A great number of people mean a potentially great variety of needs to be met.

    “The good thing is that in meeting these needs, a self-reinforcing cycle is created in which people have access to employment, are productively engaged, earn income, create wealth, and spread prosperity with accompanying prospect of material uplift and satisfaction”. Aregbesola pointed out.

    The governor added that any human mass is a potential source of wealth generation from which positive developments can spring, stressing that what is required therefore is creativity in turning the potential into public good.

  • ‘APC ‘ll not condone rigging in Niger East’

    ‘APC ‘ll not condone rigging in Niger East’

    The Conference of All Progressives Congress Publicity Secretaries (CAPS) has reflected on the senatorial by-election in Niger East District, alleging that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was planning to rig the poll.

    Rising from its two-day meeting in Lagos, the association said malpractices could deprive constituents their right to freely choose their representative in the Upper Chamber.

    In its communique, CAPS alleged that the election was postponed in some councils when it was discovered that the APC candidate was in early lead.

    It said: “CAPS reviewed the so-called ‘inconclusive’ senatorial election in the Niger East Senatorial Zone and observed with dismay a plethora of spurious developments. It is the right of the people of Niger East to freely choose their senator.

    “We hereby urge them and the entire people of Niger State to be vigilant and forestall the collusion between the PDP and key officials of the INEC to rob the people of their free choice of an APC candidate, which is now about to be truncated, as was done in Ekiti and Anambra states.”

    Thirty four publicity secretaries were present at the maiden meeting, which aim was to explore modalities for repositioning the party, ahead of next year’s elections. A chairman and six zonal co-ordinators were elected to run the affairs of the conference. They are the Chairman,  Joe Igbokwe; North Central Co-ordinator Mr Jonathan Vatsa; Northeast Cordinator Rev Phineas Padio; Northwest Coordinator Yahaya Bashir; Southeast Coordinator Okelo Madukaife; Southwest Cordinator)- Mr Sola Lawal; and Southsouth Coordinator Hon. Fortune Paneb

    Reflecting on the Osun State governorship , the conference hailed the people for defeating the PDP, which it described as the  party of political predators, urging the chapter to sustain the tempo in next year’s polls.

    CAPS added: “ Elections have increasingly become militarised, even to the point of deploying masked security personnel to intimidate and humiliate the electorate. Elections should be carnivals, not war rehearsals and the INEC must give flesh to its rejection of militarised elections in exchange for civil elections.

    “The recent distribution of Permanent Voter Cards (PVC) and Continuous Voter registration in some states manifested all the indices of failure. The conference advises INEC to raise its act, take firm corrective measures and stop indulging in ostrich pride, while monumental challenges lie ahead.

    “The conference calls on all stakeholders in the nation, particularly the National Assembly, to, as a matter of utmost urgency, return the recommendation of the Justice Uwais panel on electoral reforms to the front burner, particularly as it affects INEC deriving its funding on first line charge, drawn from the Federation Account and independent operatives appointed by the National Judicial Commission to guarantee some measure of independence from political interferences.”

    The association also decried the gale of impeachments instigated by the PDP, saying that it is a bad omen. While congratulating Nasarawa State Governor Tanko Al Makura for surviving the threat, it advised the House of Assembly to refrain from distracting the attention of the governor.

    It added: “In Enugu State, the PDP has thrown the instruments of governance to the swine by the governor, who instigated the impeachment of the deputy governor,  Mr Sunday Onyebuchi, for running a poultry farm, yet turning round dramatically to deploy the impeached public officer as the Deputy Director in the State Civil Service. Meanwhile, the ailing governor and impeacher-in-chief still runs a farm. Where are the standards?  Our nation must be allowed to degenerate into a mushroom society under the careless watch of the PDP.

    “The PDP, having forced an illegal impeachment on Adamawa State, is now seeking to employ every crooked machinery to return the state to the path of retrogression. The APC is however, prepared to set the people pf Adamawa free.

    “CAPS hereby demands the suspension of the ‘state of emergency’ in Adamawa State, which has the barest minimum of insurgence ,or at the least,  lift the dusk-to- dawn curfew from this week to rid the electioneering atmosphere of fear or encumbrances and pave the way for free and fair elections.”

  • Who actually attempted rigging in Osun?

    Democracy is a game of consensus in which competing elite groups offer differing ideas of how best to organise society. Their primary theatre of competition is election. Though conflict is embedded in politics, the players have at the back of their mind the best of their people at heart. After elections have been won and lost, the losers take it calmly and retreat to prepare for the next one. This is the fabled ‘spirit of sportsmanship’ that has become the hallmark of developed society and which makes democracy to serve the best interest of the people ultimately.

    However, looking at the events leading to, during and immediately after the August 9, governorship election in Osun State, the conduct of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its candidate, Senator Iyiola Omisore, has left much to be desired. It is like they are at war with the people of the state. They have given the impression that they must win at all cost or heaven will fall.

    One of their assault on the people is unconscionable fabrication and abuse of media access. It is a seriously perturbing development to find a syndicated story in many of our national dailies on Wednesday September 3, to the effect that two staff of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) have been suspended because they, according to the quite reprehensible story, allegedly colluded with the All Progressives Party (APC) to rig the August 9 gubernatorial election in Osun.

    It is reprehensible on the one hand, because the apparently un-investigated story projects our newspapers in very bad light as thoroughly shoddy and quite careless in their reportorial duties. On the other hand, the utter falsehood of such story gives away the unconscionable character of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and invariably that of the politicians with which it is peopled.

    That the party will have the effrontery to turn the truth on its head and flip facts over in the service of its failed political bid to foist a candidate of irreparably damaged reputation on the people of Osun during the August 9 election remains an incomprehensible mystery.

    Unfortunately for the party, facts, given their nature, are not easily amenable to the kind of senseless revisionism as the PDP is trying to engage in. For the record; the fact of the matter is this: the two Electoral Officers (EOs) in question were in fact working in cahoots with and for the PDP to subvert the will of the people of Osun State before and during the governorship election.

    One of the two culprits, Segun Eshilokun, was the Electoral Officer (EO) for Obokun Local Government who, along with one Ismaila Taofik, was apprehended with a truck full of election materials a day prior to the Election Day, before INEC officially began to distribute such materials. Eshilokun and his partner were handed over to the police by the youths, only to be subsequently released to a PDP top functionary from Ile-Ife, Professor Oladipo Oladapo. The excuse given for their release was simply and barefacedly, ‘Order from Above’.

    The second suspended staff of INEC was the EO for Osogbo Local Government during the election. Being the largest voter base in the state, and given the already widely known support for the APC in Osogbo, this EO made spirited attempts to manipulate the electoral process in favour of the PDP. It was the vigilance and persistent complaint by the APC that prevented his brazen attempts from succeeding.

    In fact, his suspension was consequent upon petition to INEC by the APC about his numerous attempts to twist the voting process in Osogbo in favour of the PDP of which he is a card-carrying member. For instance, it is on record that on Election Day, he released only 64 out of the 227 identification tags he was supposed to release to APC polling agents.

    The intent was to deprive the APC polling agents of access to their polling units to monitor the accreditation process. The APC had to call INEC Commissioner for this zone, Ambassador Wali, to intervene. But he was not done yet. When voting came to an end, the same EO withheld the customised Form EC8C meant for recording collated results for Osogbo Local Government. Again, the APC had to call in Ambassador Wali, who issued him a second query in one day for the form to be released.

    If we put these and other shameless incidents of attempted rigging by the PDP alongside the militarisation of the state, the cases of widespread bullying by gun-wielding agents of the PDP-led federal government, the unlawful arrests of APC bigwigs, including members of the governor’s cabinet among many other such horrifying acts, would it not be clear to all which party actually attempted to rig?

    That the PDP can now turn around to enrol the media in its reprehensible propaganda to change the facts is quite inconceivable. But it is even more unfortunate that our media practitioners will allow themselves to be co-opted into this kind of disgraceful agenda to turn the victim into perpetrator over-night.

    The cases of attempted electoral manipulation against the two suspended INEC staff are in the public domain and were given good coverage in the media. It is the least any media practitioner should do in satisfying the requirement of professional ethics to do a proper check of the accuracy of a story before rushing to press.

    The blatant falsehood of this story gives the impression of media collusion with the PDP to convert lie into truth. Against this background, INEC also owes it a duty to Nigerians, the people of Osun, and to morality to come out clearly and say which party the suspended EOs were actually colluding with. Associating the name of INEC with this mendacious story can only drag its name in the mud and give it a taint of partisanship.

    The electoral body would lose nothing by coming out to announce which party is involved in the attempt to manipulate the election for which the two EOs were suspended pending the completion of the investigation it is conducting. After all, it is still in the process of investigation. But to keep quiet in the face of this morally damaging story in which INEC’s name has been mentioned in the authentication of plain falsehood cannot bode well for the integrity of the electoral body.

    It is not only a matter of moral obligation for INEC, but the electoral body would also be making a strong statement that no political party or partisan group has a right to use its name as a stamp of authority for falsehood.

     

    • Ogundele writes from Osogbo, Osun State

  • Rigging: APC hails Jega over revelation

    Rigging: APC hails Jega over revelation

    Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Prof. Attahiru Jega has been hailed for his revelation on how the August 9 Osun State governorship election was almost rigged.

    The Director of Publicity, Research and Strategy of the state All Progressives Congress (APC), Kunle Oyatomi, gave the praise yesterday.

    The party said Jega allegedly confirmed the party’s insight that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had a master plan to hack into INEC’s database and corrupt the electoral register  to disenfranchise thousands of voters.

    “We made this information public on several occasions, weeks before the election, but few people believed us. This was the reason they were buying up permanent voter cards.

    “We had also informed the public that the PDP was planning to abuse and misuse the security personnel to terrorise, arrest and harass APC supporters and leaders before the election,” the statement alleged.

    It added that Jega revealed that the security personnel went beyond arresting APC leaders and supporters; they also “locked up, in their overzealousness, some INEC adhoc workers.”

    The APC stated: “When we complained about hooded security officials, DSS spokesperson, Marilyn Ogar, in a very unprofessional outing, justified the deployment of such hooded security officials who almost killed our National Publicity Secretary Alhaji Lai Mohamed.

    “We thank God that Jega had come out publicly to condemn the deployment and to declare the occurrence unacceptable.

    “He even said the INEC will not allow the deployment of hooded security officers in any other election process. We hope Marilyn Ogar is listening.”

  • 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.

  • ‘Rigging ‘ll be resisted in Osun’

    ‘Rigging ‘ll be resisted in Osun’

    Deputy Director, Bureau of Communication, Osun State, Mr. Sola Fasure, in this interview with Musa Odoshimokhe, speaks on the Aregbesola administration and preparations for the August  9 governorship election. 

    What are the issues that will shape the August 9 election in Osun State?

    The election will be decided by the general condition in the country, the direction the leadership of this country is taking: whether we are making progress or we are retrogressing. Secondly, the performance of the party in power in the state and the quality of the candidates vying for the governorship will form part of the issues.

    Since the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) won in Ekiti State, people have been saying it could engender a bandwagon effect in the entire Southwest…

    The outcome of the Ekiti State election momentarily provided a fillip for the opposition, whose voice has been totally muted. It gave them hope. Those talking about a bandwagon effect are clearly misreading the event. The situation and the circumstances in the states involved are not the same. In political science, no two elections are the same. No matter how similar the circumstances may look, the outcome will not be the same. They are two different elections; there is lot of misreading of the Ekiti scenario. If it is about the so-called stomach infrastructure, the incumbent governor in Osun State, Rauf Aregbesola, has put in place some empowerment programmes that could be described as stomach infrastructure, even before they coined the slang. You will recall that he has put in place the O’meal programme, which makes provision for the feeding of primary school pupils in the state. This is not just one of those meals, but, we are talking about balanced diet. The testimony is there. The programme is so successful that the British parliament sent a delegation to come and study it, with the intention of recommending it to other states in Nigeria. The programme has provided job, for thousands of people, who have equally contributed to its success. The programme is actually integrated into the development of agriculture in the state. It has provided jobs for thousands of people who are involved in various ways. The governor has also put in place before now a scheme to assist farmers. A lot of unemployed people, particularly school leavers, were taken into the programme. Many of them are now successful farmers. They produce food for the state and also for export to other parts of the country. The government also has in place a programme called Agba Osun under which the aged, the widows and the vulnerable in the society are taken care of. They are given a monthly stipend. They are also given access to free medical care. So, if it is in terms of what goes into peoples’ stomach, then the governor has been in the game before now.

    When it comes to the grassroots, the governor is also a grassroots man. Every month, he does the walk–to-live programme, where he will do a 10 kilometre walk, in selected communities, in different local government areas. It an open thing, it is open to everyone in the communities involved. He equally interacts with the people through the programme called Gbangbadekun. Under this programme, he visits communities to interact with the people, particularly to give them opportunities to ask questions. Through the programme, he gives clarifications where needed. It is a one-on-one thing. So, there is no doubt that he is a grassroots man. I am not even talking about the performance in office now, but if they say the factors that made Ayo Fayose to win in Ekiti are his connection to the grassroots and his provision of stomach infrastructure, then Aregbesola is far ahead in this regard in Osun.

    There were allegations that PDP won in Ekiti through some sort of photocromic ballot device…

    The technology is available theoretically; a phototropic device in which a thumb print can disappear and then reappear. It can disappear if put in a certain place and never come back again or it may be put there and then it disappears and reappear later. Let’s say it is now being deployed in a conspiratorial way between the PDP and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). That would mean that the PDP would have thump-printed the ballot papers before the election. And then it disappears and when voters thump prints, it also disappears when it is folded. When put in the ballot box the PDP thumb print then reappears. The technology is available, but there is no empirical evidence that it was deployed in Ekiti. Nevertheless, it is one of the possibilities. It was alleged because we heard a woman saying when the ballot was given to her, she had a long phone call, but when she went to thumb her ballot paper, she found that someone had apparently thumb-printed on the ballot paper given to her in favour of the PDP. But like I said, it has not been subjected to any forensic data. And so, we take it as that. But if that is what they intend to do in Osun State, they will meet their waterloo. We already have in place measures. I will not reveal them here. Suffice it to say that we have educated our members on what to look out for; if such gimmick is being deployed, they will expose it. Let nobody be under any illusion, if it is proved that the method is being deployed, we would challenge it, by subjecting every ballot paper to forensic analysis. If such nonsense is tried, it is going to be exposed to the whole world. Let’s just keep all the options open; let’s believe that INEC will not compromise standards. INEC too will be vigilant and would want to leave a legacy. They will not want Nigeria to go up in flames; they will not want the wishes of the people to be subverted. They will not want democracy to be put under strain and make other forms of government attractive.

    How would you assess INEC’s preparation for the election?

    There are stages in election. The first stage, of course, is the compilation of the voters’ register. The other stages include the deployment of materials, both sensitive and non sensitive. INEC had told us that they are already deploying the non sensitive materials and that the sensitive material will be deployed two days before the election. I hope that INEC would protect its sanctity. There have been allegations that people are still having problems collecting their permanent voter’s cards. I am appealing to INEC to speed up the process. There have been allegations that an opposition party has taken over unclaimed voters’ cards and distributed them to mercenaries. INEC should know that Osun is not like any other place; most of the polling stations are embedded within the communities. The people know themselves, so if somebody is impersonating and bringing someone else’s card, such person can easily be apprehended. If INEC is going to allow such a thing, democracy would be subverted. I believe that INEC may have some logistic challenges, but I expect them to quickly sort out such challenges. Recently, INEC redeployed its Resident Electoral Commissioner. It is not our business to question INEC’s deployment of its staff, as long as there is no sign that it will jeopardize the conduct of the election. But the redeployment was done at the instance of one of the parties to the election. The PDP candidate has been asking for the removal of the commissioner. INEC initially stood its ground, but later buckled. It is a very dangerous signal that INEC is being put under pressure. If INEC buckled at this request, what further demand are they going to make which INEC will accede to? It is puzzling and imponderable why INEC buckled. But we just hope that it will stop at that.

    How do you react to the issue of Omo Ilu?

    It is a diabolical arrangement. We have received reports that it is surreptitiously disenfranchising people and they are taking away peoples destiny. They have diabolical components; they are using the method to initiate people into secret cults, where they would be made to pledge allegiance and loyalty to the PDP. They are promising to give people N5, 000 in exchange for the Omo Ilu form to put their voter’s card number. Some other private and personal information or bio-data are taken with a pledge of loyalty to the PDP because we heard that our people are being called into some places. The government has an alternative arrangement for empowerment, not handing out a mere N5, 000. The government has just made available N4 billion interest free loan to people in all the local governments. There will be no oath. There will be no allegiance to any party. It is purely empowerment for people who want to work, empower themselves and take their own destiny into their hands.

    The PDP candidate has promised to dislodge Governor Aregbesola from office. He has gone to the grassroots seeking the support from the communities….

    Let me say that he is adopting tactics that will make him look popular. One of the interesting things about this election is that there is no opposition. Omisore is not a serious candidate by anybody’s standard. If Omisore is eating corn with both hands, this is something to take serious. In Yoruba land, serious people don’t do that in order not to sound as if one is mocking those who could not afford something to eat. If Omisore is copying Ayo Fayose, then it is a tragedy that the method is uneventful. It is a huge joke. He has been in the political scene since 1999 and has not been a man of the people. He is known for violence, rough handling of opponents and threatening of opponents. Recently, the former governor of the state, Isiaka Adeleke, was rough handled by his thugs. If that is what he has been known for, then how can he suddenly change; start eating corn, pretending to be popular. The people are not stupid. They see you for who you are. You cannot take them for a ride. He is not popular; he is only.

  •  ‘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.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Ekiti 2014: Groups vow to resist rigging

    Pan-Yoruba groups across the Southwest, last Saturday, vowed to resist any attempt to rig the forthcoming governorship election slated for June 21 in the state, adding that it would be a major test of the dignity of the Yoruba people.

    The groups, under the auspices of Oodua Nationalist Coalition (ONAC), comprising self-determination and Pan-Yoruba groups from nine Yoruba-speaking states, including parts of Edo and Delta states, said the adoption of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate last Saturday signals the form that the election would take.

    “We urge authorities to realise that the rigging of elections in 1964 and 1983 led to violent uprising. The rigging of 1983 led to a military coup, while the 1964 rigging eventually led to civil war. The crisis began in the Southwest and took 30 months of bloody conflict to resolve. Nigerian political leaders appear to have learnt nothing from history,” the groups said at the conclusion of a two-day conference at Ado Ekiti.

    The groups adopted the incumbent, Dr. Kayode Fayemi as the sole candidate of the groups in the election, describing Fayemi as the Pan-Yoruba candidate because of the progressive bent of his administration.

    Leaders of other ethnic groups drawn from Ekiti and other parts of the Southwest especially Hausa-Fulani, Tiv, Igbo and Ebira communities were also at the event. The groups also set up what it called Pan-Yoruba Campaign Movement for the election of Dr Fayemi on June 21.

    The groups expressed worries that the PDP in the state is beating its chests that they have the support of the president to ‘turn Ekiti state into ashes in the name of power,” saying that such arrogant posture will only burn out the patience of the people of Ekiti state and the entire Yoruba nation.

    The groups suspect the current registration of voters in Ekiti state, saying: “It gives us a lot of concern and suggests that INEC has shown a prelude to massive election rigging in Ekiti state. We call on INEC to conduct a free and fair election and resist attempts to turn Ekiti state into an axis of turbulence.”

    “We warn politicians that have not learnt anything from history. The Yoruba people must not be taken for granted. The Ekiti election is a Yoruba affair; it is also a local and international affair. We do not want the current democratic experience to fall. But we warn that any attempt to rig the forthcoming election in Ekiti may lead to mass resistance and the eventual torpedo of the emerging electoral culture.

    “In the past, we did not see anything to defend, but now the Ekiti people and the greater Yoruba family have seen what is worth defending in Ekiti State”, the groups stated in the communiqué, which was signed by 55 groups and was proclaimed on behalf of the groups by Mr Popoola Ajayi and Mrs Adenike Ojo.

    Several leaders of the groups who spoke at the two-day meeting said the Ekiti election is crucial to the survival of the progressive movement and its transformation agenda in the South West states. The gathering was attended by about a thousand delegates drawn from the south west states. National leader of the TIV community, Mr. Yaro Gowon said he was in Ekiti to join forces with Pan-Yoruba groups to ensure victory for Dr Fayemi at the poll.

    It stated “We have an historical duty to defend the gains of the past three and half years. In 1965, our people rose up against attempts to impose alien values on us. The recalcitrant posture of the Federal Government eventually led to the civil war that engulfed the country. In 1983, our people laid down their lives in defense of the gains of democracy under the Unity Party of Nigeria, (UPN) led by the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo.”

    The groups added: “Today we have seen the transformation of the government in Ekiti state. We have seen gains in the area of education, health and the drive for over all human development. We are here to defend the radical tradition of the people of Ekiti state and the revolution that has made Ekiti state the destiny of local and international interests.”

  • Election rigging in the Yoruba Southwest is poison to Nigeria

    A major part of the reason for Nigeria’s growing failure is that we do not respect the unique cultural character of each of the many nationalities of our country. In a shallow and unthinking manner, those who control power in our country are forever striving to impose cultural uniformity over Nigeria’s many nationalities – as if, in all situations of human life, what is good for the goose is good for the gander.

    This integrationist bungling is many-faceted. The federal government subtly pushes an educational programme aimed at suppressing the languages, and even the cultures, of Nigerian nationalities. Ardent Muslim chieftains, when in control of the federal government, seek to use federal power to make Nigeria a radical Muslim country. The rest of us, when a Northern Muslim state adopts Sharia Law, cry foul. Recently, federal legislators from a nationality whose culture accepts the marriage of under-age girls pushed through the National Assembly a resolution making the marriage of under-age girls law in all of Nigeria. Quite often, the integrationist bungling spills over into the realm of the absurd.

    But, worse still, they often provoke resistance – sometimes violent resistance akin to insurrection – as well as inter-group conflicts. Sudden explosions by Muslim indigenes in the towns of the North, resulting in mass killings of non-Muslims (mostly Southerners), started mostly in the years since the hot controversy over whether the Sharia should be enshrined in the Nigerian Constitution. The determined opposition from the South naturally gave the Northerners the fear that non-Muslim Nigeria was up against the way of life of the Muslim North. That fear launched an era of spasmodic eruptions by Muslim folks in the North. Islamic fundamentalist terrorist gangs and terrorism were later developments on those mass eruptions.

    It is not usually recognized that mass eruptions in the Yoruba South-west, following upon blatant rigging of elections, are also a form of culture-based resistance. About 1000 years before the coming of British rule, the Yoruba nation began to build towns and kingdoms, in which they evolved a unique political system of their own. That system was based upon the principle that power belongs to the people. From that general principle, the Yoruba developed the various details of their system. For instance, unlike the citizens of other kingdoms in the world, the Yoruba did not accept that a king should be succeeded automatically by his son, without any say by the people. Rather, the citizens of each Yoruba kingdom selected their king from the pool of their eligible princes. Usually, a standing committee of high chiefs did the selecting on behalf of the citizens; but, it was the rule that the citizens, as individuals or as groups, could freely lobby these high chiefs, and that the chiefs must be available and listen to the people. In essence, the selection was done by the people. In some kingdoms, the practice was that, after the high chiefs had decided the selection, they would stand at the palace gate and announce to the crowd of citizens, “We have given you your king” – meaning, we have chosen for you the prince that you wanted the most.

    In their towns, Yoruba people lived in large family compounds known as agbo-ile, each of which housed tens of families. The chiefs (below the king) were domiciled in the biggest and oldest family compounds. When a chief died, he was not succeeded automatically by his son; all the people of the family compound held meetings and selected one of themselves as the next chief. This process always resulted in competing candidates, factions, meetings upon meetings – and then, ultimately, the selection.

    In short, the Yoruba people have, for more than 1000 years, elected their rulers. That is their political culture. It was very important to them that their selections of kings and chiefs should be handled fairly and with integrity. That was the way they maintained order and stability in their towns. In the course of hundreds of years, fairness in the selection process became like a religion to them.

    Then came British rule, and then the British system of election of rulers – in self-governing and independent Nigeria. There is not much difference between the British system and the traditional system of the Yoruba, and the Yoruba people expect the new system to be as fair, and be done with as much integrity, as their own traditional system. Yoruba people can be very passionate about this.

    Between 1952 and 1960, the Yoruba expectations over elections were considerably well met. The party that managed to win our first regional election in 1951 and to control the regional government, the Action Group, did not try thereafter to use governmental power to manipulate or rig elections. The opposition party too, the NCNC Western Region, did not try to manipulate or rig elections. Usually, the two were close and the races were tight. Many people forget today that the NCNC actually beat the AG narrowly in the 1954 federal election in the Western Region. That is how competitive the elections were – and yet neither party (all Yoruba leaders and all Yoruba candidates) tried to cut unfair corners. Yoruba culture reigned triumphantly, and the Western Region gradually evolved into a solidly democratic modern society.

    But then came Nigeria’s independence in 1960, and a determined federal-cum-Northern determination to dominate all of Nigeria, including the Western Region. The emergence of a new party in the Western Region as a subordinate ally of the party of the Northern Region opened doors for those who sought to dominate the region. So it was that in the 1964 federal election, we in the Western Region experienced, for the first time, the kind of massive election manipulation and rigging that we had long faintly heard of from the North. Because we had never experienced these things before, we were too confused to respond adequately.

    But then the 1965 Regional Election came, and it was even more blatantly rigged in the same ways. The insult was now too unbearable, and we the youths of the Western Region refused to accept it. We erupted all over our region. And we continued to fight and resist until we dragged down all order in Nigeria – and until the military seized power.

    The youths of the Yoruba nation have had to fight the war of resistance against election rigging again and again, and in various forms, since then. They fought a shockingly bloody one in Ondo State in 1983 that again paved the way for military take-over in Nigeria; and a series of technologically sophisticated ones in 2007 – 11.

    In short, Yoruba people just cannot, and will not, tolerate the horrendous cultural insult that election rigging represents. Today again we have persons elected at our pleasure ruling our six states. We know that this kind of situation has usually tempted those who want to rig election in our land. Those who control federal power in Nigeria refuse accept that, in political culture, the Yoruba nation is different from most of the other nationalities of Nigeria. In spite of the fact that the noise over the National Conference supersedes all other things right now in Nigeria, the South-west is not careless. If there are any persons thinking of rigging in the elections that will soon be due in the South-west, they should be reminded that rigging elections in the Yoruba South-west is usually a bringer of bad news for Nigeria and Nigeria’s federal rulers.

  • Ogboru warns PDP against rigging

    LEADER and former governorship candidate of the Democratic People’s Party (DPP) in Delta State, Chief Great Ovedje Ogboru, has warned the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) against rigging Saturday’s by-election in Delta Central.

    He said his party was not ready to go to court at the end of the poll, but would match any move by the PDP.

    Ogboru spoke during the launch of the campaign of his party’s candidate, Chief Ede Dafinone, at Sapele Athletic Club, Sapele.

    He said DPP would no longer condone rigging, urging the party’s supporters to turn out en masse on Saturday to vote and guard their votes.

    The state DPP Chairman, Mr. Tony Ezeagwu, said the party was going into the election fully prepared and that its candidate, Chief Dafinone, would emerge victorious.