Tag: Shaibu

  • UPDATED: Court rejects Shaibu’s request to void Ighodalo’s candidacy

    UPDATED: Court rejects Shaibu’s request to void Ighodalo’s candidacy

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has dismissed a suit by the impeached deputy governor of Edo state, Phillip Shaibu seeking the nullification of the February 22 governorship primary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Edo State, won by Asue Ighodalo.

    In a judgment a moment ago, Justice James Omotosho held that Shuaibu lacked locus standi to have challenged the outcome of the primary because he did not fully participate in it and was not present at the venue of the primary the day it was held.

    The judgment was on the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/308/2024 in which Shuaibu had also sought the conduct of a fresh primary.

    Justice Omotosho held that although it was not in doubt that Shuaibu was a governorship aspirant, who purchased expression of interest and nomination forms, there was no evidence that he participated in the actual primary.

    The judge also held that Shuaibu failed to effectively counter the claim by the defendants that he only participated in a parallel primary held in his house.

    He further held that where a person bought expression of interest and nomination forms, got screened and cleared but failed to physically participate in the primary, he/she has lost the right to challenge the outcome of the primary.

    Justice Omotosho also held that the suit by Shuaibu was premature because he failed to exhaust the internal dispute resolution mechanism of the party before heading for the court.

    The judge said, as a member of the PDP, he was bound by the rules and regulations of the party, which require an aggrieved aspirant at a primary to first approach the party’s Appeal Committee before filing a suit in court.

    He held that having not exhausted the internal dispute resolution mechanism put in place by his party, the suit is premature and the court cannot exercise jurisdiction to hear it.

    Justice Omotosho found that Shuaibu failed to provide credible evidence to support his claim that the primary was manipulated and the 393 delegates were disenfranchised.

    He held that the plaintiff’s allegation of irregularities in the conduct of the primary was not supported by any credible evidence.

    Read Also: BREAKING: Court rejects Shaibu’s request to void Ighodalo’s candidacy

    He held that there was sufficient evidence to show that Ighodalo actually won the primary.

    The judge held that with INEC’s report on the primary and the result sheet tendered by the defendants, the court has no problem on concluding that Ighodalo won the primary.

    In a separate ruling in another suit by Shuaibu, Justice Omotosho granted him leave to amend his originating process from originating summons to a writ of summons given the fact that contentious issues were raised in the suit to warrant the calling of oral evidence.

    Shuaibu is, by the second suit, challenging his impeachment as Edo deputy governor.

  • Shaibu: I did not announce a ban on smoking in movies, ritual scenes

    Shaibu: I did not announce a ban on smoking in movies, ritual scenes

    The Executive Director of the National Film and Video Censors Board, NFVCB, Dr Shaibu Husseini has refuted claims that he announced a ban on smoking and ritual scenes in Nigerian films.

    Husseini, in a recent chat with The Nation, explained that he was misquoted and quoted out of context on the subject matter.

    The film critic and curator explained that as a classification board, the NFVCB will not implement any policy that will muzzle creativity.

    In his words, “My attention has been drawn to a couple of trending headlines that suggested that the FG, through the NFVCB,  has “banned smoking and ritual scenes in Movies.” Interestingly, there is no part of the report following the headline where I was quoted to have announced the ban. I did NOT announce a ban on “smoking,” or smoking, and ritual scenes in movies” at the (southeast zone) stakeholders engagement on a healthy screen and the campaign to have a smoke free Nollywood which was held in Enugu in collaboration with CAPPAfrica . No, I did NOT. 

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    “What I mentioned in a speech that I have shared here is the existence of a regulation (NFVCB Regulations 2024) that in line with global best practices prohibits the PROMOTION and GLAMOURISATION of Money Ritual, Ritual Killing, Tobacco, Tobacco product, Nicotine products in movies, musical videos and skits. The regulation aims at discouraging the “unnecessary” depiction, promotion, advertisement, or glamourisation of tobacco or nicotine products in movies, musical videos, and skits.

    “The regulation demands the display of a health warning for necessary smoking scenes that are required for historical accuracy, or for educational purposes, and to depict a negative lifestyle in movies, musical videos, and skits. The required health warning shall be displayed at the commencement of the work and at the end.

    “Although we will issue an official position and cause the regulation to be published upon gazetting, I want to assure that as a classification board, we will not implement any policy that will muzzle creativity. Any movie, skit, or musical video that displays or depicts

    Tobacco or nicotine products, brands, or use that is necessary to the realization of a narrative shall be given the appropriate classification (rating) and shall not be shown to persons below the age of 18. So there is no truth in the “headlines””

  • Shaibu’s security post demolished

    Shaibu’s security post demolished

    Security post at the private home of the impeached Edo State Deputy Governor, Comrade Philip Shaibu, was yesterday evening demolished by a team from the Government House, Benin and Edo State Ministry of Roads and Bridges.

    Members of the demolition team, backed by fully-armed policemen and operatives of Edo State Security Network, pulled down the structures with a bulldozer at about 5pm.

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    A female resident of the compound, who spoke in confidence, alleged that no notice was given to the erstwhile deputy governor before the demolition.

    Shaibu’s Chief Press Secretary, Ebomhiana Musa, declined to comment on the demolition.

  • Shaibu’ private residence’s security post demolished without notice – Source

    Shaibu’ private residence’s security post demolished without notice – Source

    The security post at the private residence of the impeached Edo state deputy Governor, Comrade Philip Shaibu, on Sunday, April 14, demolished without notification, by a team from Government House, Benin and Edo Ministry of Roads and Bridges, barely a week after his removal.

    While Shaibu was in office, the security post, by Benin Golf Course in the Government Reservation Area (GRA), was always very busy, but it became deserted immediately after last Monday’s removal of the then deputy governor.

    Members of the demolition team, backed by fully-armed policemen and operatives of Edo without notice at Security Network, without resistance, quickly pulled down the expensive structures with a bulldozer, from 5 p.m.

    Read Also; Ondo Guber: Aiyedatiwa, Ibrahim, Akinterinwa others get certificates to contest primary Monday

    A female resident of Shaibu’s compound, who spoke in confidence, insisted that there was no notice given to the erstwhile deputy governor, before the demolition, with the action described as barbaric and ridiculous.

    Our reporter also gathered from some of Shaibu’s displeased neighbours and passersby, who identified the demolition team’s members as being from Government House, Benin, as not being happy with the inhuman exercise, but they pleaded not to be named.

    Shaibu’s Chief Press Secretary, Ebomhiana Musa, declined to speak on the demolition.

    It will be recalled that the impeached Edo deputy governor is optimistic of getting justice at the Federal High Court (FHC), Abuja, presided over by Justice Inyang Ekwo, over his illegal removal, ahead of the September 21, 2024 governorship election in the Southsouth state.

  • The fall of Shaibu

    The fall of Shaibu

    Philip Shaibu, the impeached deputy governor of Edo State, fell from power during the week in a plot believed to have been orchestrated by his boss, Governor Godwin Obaseki.

    The handwriting was boldly on the wall. The target saw the danger coming, but he lacked the street wisdom and the political firepower to avert it.

    Shaibu is downcast. He has vowed to fight on, partly encouraged by the few dispirited sympathisers he has attracted. But as Godwins Omobayo, a 37-year-old engineer from Ibilo in Akoko-Edo Local Government Area, immediately filled the vacuum created by his ouster, the reality about the end of his era dawned on his powerless supporters.

    The huge loss in the power game contrasted with the status he acquired almost four years ago. The same man who fought to keep him on the joint ticket dropped him, six months to the end of his second term with his erstwhile boss. He was cast out like a nominal fellow without a rich political background – used and dumped.

    Shaibu is down. But it may not be the end of his political career. Moments of political adversity can either strengthen or weigh down a political actor. The opportunity is still there for an astute politician to return to the drawing board and arm himself with novel strategies for survival.

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    Some deputies like him were shoved aside in the past, only to bounce back in the National Assembly as senators. Others were not that lucky; they went into oblivion. Few in that category are yet to completely find their feet. They are loafing and floating in their regression to self-pity, licking the wounds of their mistakes and the tragedies inflicted on their illustrious political careers by senior political partners.

    Shaibu is a trained accountant. But he hardly anticipated that day of accountability when the table could suddenly turn. He is versed in auditing, a core professional course in his chosen field. But political auditing is a different ball game. The assessment criteria and tools could be highly subjective, suspect, partisan, sentimental and harsh. Thus, when the panel audited his activities, using an inexplicable method handed to them by his tormentors in the executive and legislative organs, he was inevitably found guilty.

    The overzealous House of Assembly closed its eyes to the subsisting court case and the presiding judge’s directive that the respondents, including the lawmakers and other agents of the state, should be put on notice.

    The transformation of the dethroned politician was instant. It was akin to a change of status from an asset to a liability. He was in Benin in the morning as a titular, lonely, and rejected ‘deputy’ man of power. Before noon, he had lost his immunity, strolling out of power as a loner. All entitlements – severance allowance, gratuity, and pension – if any, are hanging. Even, if he is pardoned in the future and the impeachment is reversed, the time lost cannot be regained. Left in the cold, he now contends with a fading influence.

    Shaibu has, for now, lost on two counts. Apart from losing the number two seat in Edo, he cannot also be fielded by any political party for the governorship election. According to the electoral commission, party nominations have closed. He lost out in the succession plan, which, fundamentally, was the bone of contention between him and his boss.

    It is ironic. When the hand of his principal was heavy on the state parliament, Shaibu was his partner in tyrannical tactics that smacked of the violation of the principle of separation of powers. For more than a year, 14 All Progressives Congress (APC) lawmakers-elect were not allowed to take their seats in the hallowed chamber till the end of their tenure. The state legislature was operating at half capacity. Those times were remarkable for panic and pain as democracy was on crutches in Edo and duly elected Assemblymen forfeited the legal and legitimate right to represent their constituencies.

    Little did Shaibu know that a fatal blow of fate awaited his position. He is not a greenhorn. But it is doubtful if he had taken cognisance of the nature of the Nigerian brand of presidential system that has made presidents and governors some sorts of emperors, dictators, neo-colonialists, imperialists, and lords of the manor. They brooked no opposition.

    A former governor once retorted: “Ordinary deputy governor? Who is his father?”

    The former deputy governor of Edo is not oblivious of the fate of those before him, including Enyinnaya Abaribe, Christopher Ekpenyong, Kofoworola Bucknor-Akerele, Femi Pedro, Iyiola Omisore, Abiodun Aluko, Jude Agbaso, Ali Olanusi, Eze Madumere, and Simon Achuba. Their offence may be due to their lack of adjustment to the role of a spare tyre. Shaibu’s history or current affairs teacher in secondary school would have hinted him about the consequences of Ajasin/Omoboriowo, Ige/Afolabi and Ali/Akpofure imbroglio in the Second Republic. The scenarios conveyed the impression that though the constitution mandates the governor to run with a deputy, the deputy has no clearly defined and visible role, duties and responsibilities to perform in a presidential democracy beyond what the principal is inclined to permit.

    In some states, commissioners are in better reckoning than many deputy governors. Governors have never liked the fact that their deputies are the number one beneficiaries of official mishaps, either through impeachment, incapacitation or death. Obaseki might have been ready to accommodate Shaibu to the extent that he would not dream of succeeding him. That meant a sort of career sealing for an ambitious youth who perceives politics as a career and vocation.

    A star student union leader during his university days, Shaibu joined politics without much experience in remunerative labour and private business. Luck smiled at him as a member of the House of Assembly and later, the House of Representatives. His godfather and benefactor was the erstwhile labour leader, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, former governor and incumbent Edo North senator. Indeed, Oshiomhole was responsible for choosing Shaibu as Obaseki’s running mate in 2016. But the cordial relations ended after his inauguration. What only remained was the radical dress code; like the adorning of phoney Awo caps by some clever guys in the progressive camp.

    There was a conflict of interest. When a crisis broke out between godfather Oshiomhole and godson Obaseki, Shaibu declared his absolute loyalty to the governor. It was expected. But he did more. He also declared war against his mentor to the extent that when the senior comrade fell from the APC national chair, he was mocked by those whom he had assisted in gaining power, including His Excellency, the erstwhile deputy governor. .

    As the APC became hotter for Obaseki, he sought refuge in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). After securing the ticket, he also fought a hard battle to retain Shaibu as deputy. If the governor had not insisted on him, Shaibu would have suddenly become a wanderer in the wilderness.

    Shaibu’s ambition to become governor never aligned with Obaseki’s succession plan. When he tabled his proposal before the captain, it was declined. Obaseki insisted, in the spirit of equity, fairness, and justice, that the slot should go to Edo Central, which has not produced a governor since 1999. Those were not the only reasons. It may be that Obaseki also peeped into the future and realised that someone who could ditch his mentor may also do the same thing to him after leaving office.

    Shaibu has an inalienable right to contest, but it was evident that without the support of the state party leader, his ambition was dead on arrival.

    The options open to the former governor are four. Shaibu can team up with APC in his district to battle PDP. There is no permanent friend or foe in politics but permanent interest. However, at the initial stage, Shaibu’s former APC colleagues may loathe his defection while recalling the old betrayal.

    He can join another party, either the Labour Party (LP) or any mushroom platform, rebuild it, and use it for negotiation. It is not an easy option.

    Alternatively, he can remain in PDP, and endure the shame and pain of denial. This means that he would not earn the label of a serial defector.

    The last option is to retire from politics and pursue a career in his enviable accounting profession, acquire a chartered status if he has not already done so, work hard to become an ICAN Fellow, launch into business, using his political connections, and become an entrepreneur of repute and employer of labour.

    The last option is fantasy. Politicians never contemplate retirement from the game of intrigues. They keep hope alive, despite any setback, and hope is an elixir of life.

  • Impeachment: Court to hear Shaibu’s suit April 19

    Impeachment: Court to hear Shaibu’s suit April 19

    • Ex-Deputy Gov will be considered if he applies to join APC – Basiru

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has fixed April 19 for hearing of a suit filed by the impeached Deputy Governor of Edo State, Philip Shaibu, against the state house of assembly and others.

    The matter, which was before Justice Inyang Ekwo, was on Friday fixed for hearing after a team of lawyers, including Alex Ejesieme, SAN, showed up to seek a date for the case.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) observes that though the suit, marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/405/24, was not listed on the cause list, the lawyers, who said they were for the defence, came to the court.

    Shortly before the judge rose, one of the lawyers told Justice Ekwo that the matter was scheduled to hold on Thursday but due to the public holiday, the court did not sit.

    “So in obedience to court, we came today,” he said.

    But Justice Ekwo, who held that he could not preside over a matter that was not in the file, directed them to liaise with the court registrar for the next adjourned date.

    The matter was consequently fixed for April 19 for hearing.

    NAN reports that in the suit dated March 26 but filed March 27, Shaibu sued the Inspector-General (I-G) of Police; State Security Service (SSS) as 1st and 2nd respondents.

    He also joined Hon. Justice S.A. Omonua (rtd.), the Chairman representing himself and members of the Panel of Seven Appointed by the 4th Defendant; the Chief Judge of Edo; and Prof. Theresa Akpoghome as 3rd to 5th respondents.

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    Shaibu, in the suit filed by O.A. Gbadamosi, SAN, also listed Mr President Aigbokhian; Mr Oghogho Ayodele Oviasu and the Edo State House of Assembly as 6th to 8th respondents respectively

    In the originating motion on notice, a declaration that the threat and failure of the 3rd to 8th respondents to give him a fair hearing in the impeachment proceedings commenced by the 8th respondent is illegal, unconstitutional, and a gross violation of his fundamental right to fair hearing, pursuant to Section 36 of the 1999 Constitution, as amended.

    He sought a declaration that the failure of the 8th respondent (assembly) to serve the purported impeachment notice on him personally and on each member of the House of Assembly, in line with Section 188(2) of the 1999 Constitution is a violation of his right to fair hearing.

    He also sought a declaration that the inclusion of the 3rd, 5th, 6th and 7th respondents as chairman and members of the seven-member Investigation panel to investigate allegations contained in a purported impeachment notice to the applicant is tainted by a reasonable likelihood of bias and will result in a violation of the applicant’s fundamental right to fair hearing, guaranteed by virtue of Section 36 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, as amended.”

    He sought an order directing the respondents not to take any further steps in violating his fundamental right to fair hearing, guaranteed by virtue of Section 36 of the 1999 Constitution.

    He also sought an order directing the 3rd, 5th, 6th and 7th respondents to recuse themselves from sitting as Chairman and members of the 7-Man Investigating Panel appointed by the 3rd respondent, on account of the likelihood of bias on their part against him, among other reliefs.

    Giving seven grounds of argument, Shaibu averred that before now, he had never been confronted with any of such notice or allegations of misconduct or abuse of office or any allegations at all, whether as deputy governor or acting governor.

    He said he had not been served with any letter/notice as required by Section 188(2) of the 1999 Constitution, as amended and no privilege had been accorded him by the assembly to provide answers to any purported allegations to warrant a process targeted at his removal from office as deputy governor.

    “The 3rd respondent via a letter dated 25th March, 2024 was appointed by the 4th respondent as the chairman of a panel of seven persons to investigate the allegations contained in a purported impeachment notice, which is yet to be personally served on the applicant. officer and community leader from Esan North East Local Government Area of Edo Central Senatorial District, where there is strong clamour against the gubernatorial ambition of the applicant.

    “The 3rd respondent appears to have been given the hatchet job of recommending the removal from office of the applicant, in order to weaken his political ambition of becoming governor of Edo State.

    “The 4th respondent being a protégé of the 3rd respondent, appointed him as chairman of the Investigating Panel, when other persons he offered the same appointment rejected it, because it was a politically motivated job,” he said, among other grounds.

    NAN reports that Shaibu was, on Monday, impeached by the state’s house of assembly after the seven-man panel found him guilty of perjury and leaking of the government’s secrets.

    The retired Justice Omonuwa-led panel, which had its inaugural sitting on April 3 in Benin, ended its sitting on April 5 with Shaibu or his counsel failing to show up.

    Ex-deputy gov will be considered if he applies to join APC – Basiru

    The National Secretariat of All Progressives Congress (APC) said yesterday that the application of former Edo State Deputy Gov ernor Philip Shaibu would be considered if he applies to join the party.

    The ruling party also boasted that it would win the governorship seats in both Ondo and Edo states by ensuring that they manage any crisis that may threaten the strategy of the party.

     Speaking during an interactive session with journalists in Osogbo, Osun State capital yesterday, APC’s National Secretary, Senator Ajibola Basiru, noted that the political party boasts free entry and exit.

    Basiru said: “I read that some people met and said that they don’t want him to join the political party… My approach is this: a political party is like a school, you cannot tell somebody that somebody should not be your classmate in the school.

    “It is the proprietor of the school that will determine whether you should be admitted or not.

     “When Shaibu applies to the relevant arm of the party then the application will be taken and considered.

    “A political party is a free entry and exit organization, and in politics, the more the merrier.”

     He stressed that in the 2023 general election APC won two of the three senatorial seats, which shows that APC is the party to beat in Edo State.

    “We are confident that we are going to send Godwin Obaseki and his tea-drinking politicians out of Government House by the grace of God in the September 21 election,” he said.

    He dispelled insinuations of bickering between himself and the Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Adegboyega Oyetola, saying: “He is my leader with Baba Bisi Akande.

    “Some of us are serious minded people. We have work to do. We are working towards the primary in Ondo State.

    “We have already successfully managed the primary in Edo State, and by the grace of God, we are going to take the two states.”

  • Edo 2024: Shaibu’s application will be considered if he decides to join APC, says Basiru

    Edo 2024: Shaibu’s application will be considered if he decides to join APC, says Basiru

    …says APC will win Ondo, Edo guber polls

    The national secretariat of All Progressives Congress (APC), Ajibola Basiru, has said the former deputy governor of Edo state, Philip Shaibu would be welcomed if he decides to join the ruling party.

    Ajibola also said the APC would win the governorship seats in both Ondo and Edo states by ensuring that it manages any crisis that may threaten the strategy of the party.

    Speaking during an interactive session with journalists in Osogbo capital of Osun on Friday, April 12, Basiru noted that the political party is free entry and exit.

    Basiru: “I read that some people met and said that they don’t want him to join the political party… My approach is this, a political party is like a school, you cannot tell somebody that somebody should not be your classmate in the school. It is the proprietor of the school that will determine whether you should be admitted or not.

    “When Shaibu applies to the relevant arm of the party then the application will be taken and considered. A political party is a free entry and exit organization and in politics, the more the merrier, so the more people you can bring to your doorstep.”

    Read Also: APC leaders accuses Aiyedatiwa of printing fake membership slip

    He stressed that in the 2023 general election, APC won two of the three senatorial seats which shows that APC is a party to beat in Edo state.

    Basiru stated: “We are confident that we are going to send Godwin Obaseki and his tea-drinking politicians out of Government house by the grace of God in the September 21 election.”

    He dispelled insinuation of bickering between him and the Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Adegboyega Oyetola.

    He said: “He is my leader with Baba Bisi Akande, some of us are seriously minded people, we have work to do, we are working towards the primary in Ondo State, we have already successfully managed the primary in Edo State and by the grace of God we are going to take the two states.”

  • Shaibu: The curse of second fiddle

    Shaibu: The curse of second fiddle

    By Kene Obiezu

    SIR: Philip Shaibu has been impeached as the deputy governor of Edo State and replaced by 38-year old Omobayo Godwin. He has declared his impeachment illegal, but until a court of law says so, such a declaration would remain beyond his fiat as an erstwhile deputy governor.

    Since he indicated his intention to become governor, Shaibu has become the number one enemy to power in the state. Godwin Obaseki, the governor, has been open in his opposition to Shaibu’s bid. As the theatre has unfolded in Edo State, the impossible fate of a deputy governor who aspires to be more than a figurehead has been laid bare.

    In his bid to become governor, Shaibu has evoked the homeboy trope. A career activist and unionist who rose to fame during the heady days of student unionism in University of Jos, he considers himself the quintessential homebred politician who not only knows where the pulse is in Edo State but feels it first-hand.  In this wise, Shaibu favourably compares himself to a certain favourite for the Edo State governorship who needed a translator to commune with his kinsmen and spirits when he visited his community.

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     What offence did Shaibu commit to impel his impeachment? What has changed to make a pariah out of a man who has claimed to have bankrolled elections in 2016 and has not been challenged?

    Obaseki and his stooges in the state legislature sure have no coherent answer. Shaibu’s fate sealed from the moment private disaffection over the next governor of Edo State spilled into public disagreement is a remaking of the impossible remit of the Nigerian deputy governor. An office hamstrung by the constitution itself is often made impossible by the clownish tendencies of governors who act like emperors, and crave control of everything.

     What is happening in Edo State is history repeating itself. In 2010, as President Musa Yar’Adua dangled between life and death from the threads of an illness, his closest aides and family members cared less for the president’s survival than to check his inevitable replacement by the vice president to the office. This was until death checked them all.

     Ondo State also required death to ultimately disarm the bomb that was about to detonate in the state. Since 1999, deputy governors in Zamfara, Oyo, Kogi, Ekiti, Imo, Lagos, Osun, Akwa Ibom and Bauchi have all been impeached for contrived offences. It is a battle that is never far away from government with the prudent question being where next.

    It is disruptive that a governor should spend his last days in office orchestrating the impeachment of his deputy rather than consolidating his legacy. The clearest lesson for Shaibu and other deputy governors may yet be that in a duel of big dogs, it is impolitic to show sharp teeth.

     There is also a sense in which those who have treated Shaibu so shabbily are heedless and reckless students of history. Before he was re-elected in 2020 by the skin of his teeth, Obaseki had seen his political aspirations mortally threatened by the excesses of his predecessor Adams Oshiomhole. With the Aso Rock door firmly shut, and the odds stacked against him, he turned to Edo voters. Having done nothing to distinguish himself from his do-nothing contemporaries on the Nigerian Governors Forum, his subsequent victory at the polls was part moral outrage, part protest.

    Edo voters recognized a system synthesized to oppress and deployed their voter power to foil it. They may yet queue behind Shaibu as he seeks to shame his executive and legislative oppressors. But before they can, Shaibu may have to leave his the PDP lest fortune which fears the brave but tramples cowards under foot foil his fate.  But that he who latched on to the goodwill of Edo voters like a starved infant to his mother’s breast and was saved electoral humiliation in 2020 would now oppress someone who backed him to the hilt for nothing apart from showing ambition is another fraught lesson in the fragility of the human memory.

    • Kene Obiezu, keneobiezu@gmail.com

  • Don’t readmit Shaibu, protesting APC members caution leaders

    Don’t readmit Shaibu, protesting APC members caution leaders

    Hundreds of protesting members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Etsako West Local Government of Edo State yesterday opposed the planned readmission of the impeached deputy governor, Comrade Philip Shaibu, into the party.

    The protesters, who came from the 12 wards of the local government, trooped to the party’s local government secretariat in Auchi and submitted their petition against the proposed readmission of Shaibu.

    Their leader, Yakubu Musa, said Shaibu’s exit from APC in 2020 brought peace and tranquility to the party, stressing that his readmission into the party would bring rancour and disunity.

    He said: “We are protesting attempt by Shaibu to jump boat and defect to the APC.

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    “The attempt is viewed seriously by members of the APC as a calculated plan by Shaibu to bring rancour, disharmony and unprecedented crisis into the party.”

    The leader of the protesters pleaded with the National Chairman of APC, Dr. Abdullahi Ganduje; the party’s leader in Edo State, Senator Adams Oshiomhole and the Acting Chairman of APC in the state, Jarret Tenebe, not to allow Shaibu into the party, alleging that he had no political value to add to APC.

  • Edo: Shaibu shouldn’t leave PDP, can still be governor – Lagos Chair

    Edo: Shaibu shouldn’t leave PDP, can still be governor – Lagos Chair

    The Lagos State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has urged the impeached Edo Deputy Governor, Mr Philip Shaibu, to be patient with the party, saying he could still become governor of the state.

    The PDP Lagos State Chairman, Mr Philip Aivoji, made the appeal in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Lagos, following the impeachment of Shaibu by the House of Assembly.

    NAN reports that the Edo House of Assembly on Monday impeached Shaibu following the adoption of the recommendation of a seven-man judicial panel led by retired Justice Stephen Omonua.

    The relationship between Shaibu and his boss, Gov. Godwin Obaseki, went sour when the former indicated interest to succeed the latter, the development which led to the a parallel party governorship primary in Feb.

    Consequent upon Shaibu’s removal, Obaseki immediately appointed and swore in 38-year-old Mr Omobayo Godwin as his new deputy.

    Read Also: I will fight my ‘illegal’ impeachment, Shaibu vows

    Reacting, Aivoji said that Shaibu should remain in the party in spite the development, and never to consider leaving the party at all.

    He said that Shaibu could still become the governor of the state with perseverance and patience.

    “What we are concerned about is winning Edo back for PDP. The impeached deputy governor needs to be patient and hand over everything to God.

    “Whatever happens, no one ever can tell, he (Shaibu) can still become the governor in a future. He should not leave the party.

    “That is my advice because it is the party that brought him up. When he became the deputy governor, there were millions of people who could have become the deputy governor before the party picked him.

    “Since this has happened, he should look for a way of mending fences to actualise his dream of becoming the governor. He can still become the governor,” he said.

    On whether or not the impeachment of Shaibu would affect the fortune of the party in the Sept. 21 governorship election in the state, Aivoji said he didn’t think so.

    “If it would affect, they (the lawmakers) would not have taken that decision, ” he said.

    Aivoji called on the Edo chapter PDP to work harder and block all necessary loopholes to win the election. (NAN)