Tag: Sylva

  • Bayelsa poll: Court to deliver judgment in suit seeking Sylva’s disqualification Tuesday

    Bayelsa poll: Court to deliver judgment in suit seeking Sylva’s disqualification Tuesday

    A Federal High Court, Abuja yesterday, adjourned the judgment in a suit seeking the disqualification of  former Minister of State for Petroleum, Timipre Sylva from contesting the  November  11 Bayelsa governorship poll until Tuesday.

    The matter, which was on number one on the day’s cause list, however, could not go on due to Justice Inyang Ekwo’s absence.

    The court, therefore, fixed Sept. 26 for judgment.

    The suit, marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/575/2023, was filed by Mrs Ogbomade Johnson, an All Progressives Congress (APC) aspirant for Bayelsa governorship election against Sylva.

    Johnson, in the suit dated April 24 but filed April 27 had sued APC, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and Sylva as 1st to 3rd respondents respectively.

    She prayed the court for an order of mandatory injunction compelling INEC to delist the names of APC and Sylva from among the list of political parties and candidates for the November election.

    Read Also: Don’t circumvent electoral process, group tells Sylva

    The aggrieved aspirant also prayed for an order of perpetual injunction restraining Sylva from parading himself as the APC’s governorship candidate in Bayelsa, among others.

    She sought a declaration that the APC was duty-bound in contract to commence and conclude primary election in Bayelsa in accordance with the provisions of the Electoral Act, 2022 and the regulations and guidelines of the political party, after having demanded and received the sum of N10 million from her, along with other five aspirants.

    Johnson further sought a declaration that by virtue of the conduct of the APC’s primary poll on April 14 in contravention of the provisions of the Electoral Act, 2022, and the regulations and guidelines of the political party, the APC had no candidate to field for the poll, among other reliefs.

    The APC had cleared Mrs Johnson, Sylva, Joshua Maciver, Festus Daumiebi, Mrs Maureen Ongoebi and David Lyon as aspirants in the April 14 primaries.

    In the primary election conducted in the 102 of the 105 wards of the eight local governments in the state, Sylva was said to have scored 52, 061 votes; Maciver scored 2, 078; Johnson scored 584; Daumiebi scored 557; Ongoebi scored 1, 277 and Lyon scored 1, 584 votes.

    In a counter affidavit deposed to by Sylva, the ex-minister prayed the court to dismiss the suit.

  • Don’t circumvent electoral process, group tells Sylva

    Don’t circumvent electoral process, group tells Sylva

    A group, the Pan Nigeria Democratic Alliance (PNDA), has warned the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress APC, in Bayelsa State, Chief Timipre Sylva, not to circumvent the electoral process in the  November 11 governorship election .

    The group, which spoke through its Convener, Chief Olaitan Adewale, in a statement, said as a  true democrat who has paid his dues, the President should not allow  the antics of anybody or group who wants to circumvent the process to attain political office against the will and choice of the majority.

    Read Also: Bayelsa guber: PDP youth leader, top aides dump Diri for Sylva, APC

    “We are particularly surprised at the desperation of some people whose antics have already led to violence, death and displacements in some parts of the state, particularly in Basambiri-Nembe. This has been the pattern in Nembe and Brass in every election-cycle particularly those that Sylva is involved in. 

    “Bayelsans still remember how the governorship primary of the APC was marred with violence and gross irregularities. During the primary poll, Sylva reportedly got over 58,000 votes, and other co-contestants were said to have secured a little over 10,000 votes. 

    “The truth of the matter is that the exercise was a mere allocation of votes and stuffing of ballot boxes. Chief David Lyon was allocated less than 3,000 votes and he reportedly came fourth and could not challenge the outcome of the exercise. Such a thing would not be allowed in the coming governorship election. This is no time to count on violence and manipulation of the process to win elections. This is a period of good governance,” he said.

  • Bayelsa guber poll: Panic hits Sylva’s camp as loyalists leave in droves

    Bayelsa guber poll: Panic hits Sylva’s camp as loyalists leave in droves

    As the Bayelsa State governorship election, scheduled for November 11, 2023 gets closer, panic has hit the camp of the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Timipre Sylva, as his support base is being eroded daily with supporters ditching him for the camp of the incumbent, Senator Douye Diri of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The scenario has also been compounded by the reluctance of the national leadership of the party to support his campaign financially.

    Only recently, the closest political ally of Sylva, who is also an immediate past member of the House.of Representatives, Hon. Israel Sunny Goli, dumped him for the PDP over what was described as irreconcilable differences.

    Also, a few days ago, the platform of former legislators from 1999 till date declared their support for Diri with the vote of confidence on Diri moved by a former Sylva ally, Hon. Robert Enogha, and seconded by Rt. Hon. Werinipre Seibarugu, former Acting Governor and also a deputy governor to Sylva.

    The development is becoming a source of worry to his supporters and party leaders in the state.

    A close associate of the former minister, who spoke to our reporter in confidence, while taking stock of the political climate in the state ahead of the election, said: “If care is not taken, the way Sylva is going about it, he and his supporters may be plunged into political oblivion and ultimately retired from the Bayelsa political space, because events of the past are haunting him and his followers.”

    The source recalled how Sylva led a team of his supporters to meet the National Chairman of APC, Alhaji Abdullahi Ganduje, to raise funds to support his campaign.

    Read Also: Bayelsa guber: Diri, Sylva in war of words

    “The team met a brick wall as the chairman was not enthusiastic about the idea. Rather than buying into the idea as the usual practice during a serious election season like the governorship election, he mockingly threw the task back to Sylva by giving him the task to first list the number of persons he had empowered in his state. Sylva and his team were given one hour to do that, while Ganduje waited to no avail and they left the national chairman’s residence with forlorn faces and utter disappointment.”

    Another source further expressed disappointment that APC supporters back in Bayelsa are frightened by daily depletion of supporters, defecting in droves to the ruling PDP.

    The indicators, according to the sources, are gloomy for APC, so long as free and fair election is conducted in the state.

    However, in the past couple of weeks, the media has been agog with reports about the push back by the APC governorship candidate in his bid to secure victory.

    Also, he tried unsuccessfully to drag the Presidency into his campaign, trying to enlist the support of the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila. His effort was also futile.

    Sylva’s opponents accuse him of being hell-bent on returning the state to its dark days of bombing of political opponent rallies.

    A prominent community leader from Southern Ijaw Local Government Area equally condemned his choice of deputy from a local government that produced the first graduate in the person of late Chief N A Frank Opigo. “Southern Ijaw people are appalled at the APC’s choice of a deputy governorship candidate whose credentials are well known to be questionable. What an insult to our collective sensibilities?”

    The question on the lips of vast majority of Bayelsans is: Is there any interest the former Minister of State for Petroleum has other than coming to sell the state just as he was accused of revoking the state most priced asset the Atala Oil Field OML 46 which is the common patrimony of the land of his birth? OML 46 it would be recalled is the marginal oil field allocated to Bayelsa State during the resource control agitations. Rather than protect it for his state Sylva revoked it and reallocated it to a company that was only incorporated in September 2019 with no single asset or experience. These are some of the baggage the APC has to contend with in the days ahead of the election.

  • Bayelsa guber: Diri, Sylva in war of words

    Bayelsa guber: Diri, Sylva in war of words

    • Sylva to Diri: you are incompetent, your defeat imminent
    • Ex-minister’s statement outbursts of rejected politician – Gov

    The Bayelsa State governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Timipre Sylva, has told the state Governor, Douye Diri, to prepare to vacate the Creek Haven, Government House, describing him as incompetent and a woeful failure.

    Sylva, who reacted to Diri’s comment that he and the APC were not sellable in Bayelsa, said the governor was only having his last kick because he knew his defeat was imminent.

    The former Petroleum Minister in a statement signed by his Special Adviser, Media and Publicity, Julius Bokoru, said Diri had nothing to campaign with as he had wasted his four years of unmerited victory in the state and was waiting to be kicked out by the people on November 11.

    Sylva said: “Douye Diri is fully aware his chances of winning are nil. While Sylva maintains a wide lead over Diri in experience, competence and sincerity of purpose, Diri, who was imposed on the people steadily drifts into massive defeat because of his glaring incompetence and insensitive governance.

    “In his statements in front of the few remaining Nembe LGA PDP people, Diri is seen to pride himself with the Nembe Bridge, but the world knows that that bridge was 75% completed by Sylva. Diri barely touched that bridge.”

    Sylva said the people had expected Diri to be going around inaugurating developmental projects ahead of the election, but because he had nothing to show, the governor was busy issuing vague statements and bribing people for support.

    Read Also: Diri, Sylva clash on Opu-Nembe lingering crisis

    Sylva recalled that Diri lost Nembe LGA with nearly 80% of the votes against him saying his obsession with Opu-Nembe and Nembe LGA generally was connected to another round of defeat waiting for him in the LGA.

    However, Governor Douye Diri has further described Sylva as a rejected politician and a drowning man looking for a straw to clutch, saying that the former Governor is only fighting a losing battle.

    Speaking through his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Alabrah, the Governor said Sylva had been abandoned by chieftains and stalwarts of his party (APC), wondering how a politician already rejected by his own would fare at the poll in less than two months.

    The governor asked: “Where is the money and the road today? It is the Bayelsa State Government that is building the Nembe-Brass road today. It goes without saying that Sylva hates Bayelsa and that is why he has been rejected by his own people and rejected by Bayelsans.

    “He has been rejected by the people because of his antecedents and the things that he did that are against Bayelsa. He is a rejected stone at home. Mind you, he was stoned by Bayelsans when he was governor in 2012. The same man that was rejected before has been rejected again and why is he trying to play God?

    “Sylva should go and rest. He has no hope in the forthcoming election. Bayelsans have aligned with Diri who has shown capacity and delivered landmark projects in the state including Sylva’s area.”

  • Diri, Sylva clash on Opu-Nembe lingering crisis

    Diri, Sylva clash on Opu-Nembe lingering crisis

    Bayelsa State Governor Douye Diri and former Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Chief Timipre Sylva have clashed over the lingering political crisis rocking Opu-Nembe kingdom in Nembe Local Government.

    While Sylva, the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the November 11 governorship poll, said the governor’s fresh plot to destabilise Opu-Nembe would fail, Diri accused Sylva of playing the ostrich in the crisis.

    Sylva in a statement signed by his Special Adviser, Media and Publicity, Julius Bokoru, alerted security agencies and the public to fresh plot by Governor Diri to stoke fresh crisis in Opu-Nembe ahead of the election.

    He said Diri had been the hand behind Opu-Nembe bloody crisis in the past two years.

    Insisting that the governor had shown nothing but absolute disdain to the people of the area, Sylva said Diri is only interested in keeping Opu-Nembe in crisis because it is the stronghold of the APC.

    Sylva s2aid upon his return from junketing abroad, Diri was angry to behold that the Inspector-General of Police hearkened to the outcries of the people and restored calm to Opu-Nembe.

    Read Also: Diri, Sylva clash over Opu-Nembe lingering crisis

    He said: “It is very concerning that Governor Diri has become obsessed with Opu-Nembe, a community for which he had shown absolute disdain. If you ask Governor Diri to point to one project he has done in Opu-Nembe, be assured he cannot point to half a project.

    “Many believe, however, he has been the hand behind the crisis in Opu-Nembe for the past two odd years. He clearly showed his leprous hand earlier this year. Before the elections became eminent and before Sylva emerged as the governorship candidate of the APC, Governor Diri had shown only contempt for Opu-Nembe.

    “It is quite disturbing that Governor Diri only woke up from his slumber at this time when at the plea of the community, the Inspector-General of Police intervened and got the community back on its feet again.”

    Governor Diri’s Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Alabrah, while reacting to a statement credited to the former Bayelsa governor, in which he accused the incumbent governor of stirring crisis in Opu-Nembe (Bassambiri), said Sylva was embarking on a futile mission to deflect attention from his own disdainful role in the protracted conflict.

    He said it was a surprise that Sylva just found his voice one month after the current crisis broke in the community.

    Diri said: “It is equally befuddling that Sylva was engaging in scape-goatism when virtually everyone in the state and beyond knew who the key instigator and agent-provocateur in the Bassambiri crisis was.

    “To claim that the governor had been silent, in one breath, since the current skirmish was ignited in Chief Sylva’s paternal community two years ago, smacks of either his poor analysis of the situation on the ground or perhaps he is ignorant of the governor’s role in ensuring that peace returned to Bassambiri.

    “For the former governor to also turn around to accuse the incumbent governor of stirring crisis in the community, on the other hand, is an indication that Sylva had forgotten what a governor needed to do in such a circumstance and he therefore does not deserve the votes of the Bayelsa people on November 11.

    “Bassambiri is a community in Bayelsa State whose citizens deserve the protection of the state government, just as the community deserves development like all its counterparts across the state.

    “Our administration will therefore not shy away from its constitutionally-guaranteed mandate and responsibilities to people of the state, including those in Bassambiri community and the Nembe people as a whole.

    “It is doubtful if the Bassambiri people can recall any of Sylva’s legacies in their community, except perhaps the frequent conflicts instigated and perpetrated by persons known to him and who enjoy his protection.”

  • ‘Sylva will win by wide margin’

    ‘Sylva will win by wide margin’

    Youths’ movement under the auspices of Bayelsa New Generation Leaders (BNGL) has said former Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Chief Timipre Sylva would win the November 11 governorship poll in Bayelsa State by wide margin.

    The Director General, BNGL, Apostle Bodmas Kemepadei, made this known yesterday during the formation of grassroots coordinators for the All Progressives Congress (APC) across local governments of the state.

    He said BNGL, a socio-political organisation comprising mostly youths cutting across communities, wards and local governments in the state, had re-echoed victory for Sylva, the APC governorship candidate.

    He noted that their stand that Sylva would sweep the poll was informed by their consultative meetings and visits to youths and other stakeholders managing communities’ structures capable of influencing votes at the grassroots.

    Read Also: LG poll: Outcome of results reaffirms PDP dominance in Edo, says Obaseki

    Kemepadei said most structures of the other parties at the ward levels had collapsed to the APC.

    He said the opposition’s hope of holding Yenagoa Local Government, which seemed to be its last hope, had become a dark shadow dream, as most of its structures were crumbling.

    Kemepadei said he believed that Sylva would consolidate his achievements as governor and build on the legacies of others, as government was a continuum.

    He appealed to the electorate not to be deceived by meagre appointments and sweet coated tongues from the opposition.

    He advised the appointed local government coordinators to open a channel of communication with the electorate at the ward levels.

    The Kolokuma/Opokuma Local Government Coordinator, Woyingimiebi Uge, hailed the director general for the lofty ideas that culminated in the formation of grassroots coordinators.

    He reaffirmed the coordinators’ commitment to pursue the Sylva/MacIver’s mandate at the grassroots level and expressed confidence of APC’s victory at the coming poll.

  • Don’t involve President in Bayelsa poll, group tells Sylva

    Don’t involve President in Bayelsa poll, group tells Sylva

    A group, the Pan Nigeria Democratic Alliance (PNDA) has warned the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Bayelsa State, Chief Timipre Sylva, not to involve President Bola Tinubu in his bid to win the November 11 governorship election in Bayelsa State.

    The group, which spoke through its Convener, Chief Olaitan Adewale, in a statement, said as a true democrat who has paid his dues, the President should not allow the antics of anybody or group who wants to circumvent the process to attain political office against the will and choice of the majority.

    “We are particularly surprised at the desperation of some people whose antics have already led to violence, death and displacements in some parts of the state particularly in Basambiri-Nembe. This has been the pattern in Nembe and Brass in every election cycle particularly those that Sylva is involved. 

    “Bayelsans still remember how the governorship primary of the APC was marred with violence and gross irregularities. During the primary poll, Sylva reportedly got over 58,000 votes, and other co-contestants were said to have secured a little over 10,000 votes. 

    “The truth of the matter is that the exercise was a mere allocation of votes and stuffing of ballot boxes. Chief David Lyon was allocated less than 3,000 votes and he reportedly came fourth and could not challenge the outcome of the exercise Such a thing would not be allowed in the coming governorship election. This is no time to count on violence and manipulation of the process to win elections. This is a period of good governance,” he said.

    The group urged Tinubu to caution security agencies, especially the police, adding they should desist from being partial in their intervention in Bayelsa.

    PNDA called on the Acting Inspector- General of Police (lGP), Mr Tunji Egbetokun, to rein his men.

    “We have been closely monitoring the political developments in Bayelsa with keen interest. Polls after polls including those conducted by APC pollsters and close associates of the the APC candidate have given no chance for him to win a free and fair election. This development is not about APC as a party, but the antecedents of the candidate who has been rejected at the poll a number of times,” he said.

    Read Also: Poll will liberate Bayelsa people, says Sylva

    PNDA also charged the APC candidate to note the disaffection of the leaders of the APC in the state with the way he is handling the party like a sole administrator and their grouse about him, urging him to settle his party’s internal crisis. 

    Adewale stated that his group is concerned about the undemocratic approach by the APC candidate and the general developments in the State, adding that whatever happens during the poll could have ripple effects nationally.

    “The subterranean moves to compromise the electoral umpire, the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC as reported in the media are also known to us and we appeal to those behind such moves to desist forthwith. Every Bayelsan and Nigerians are watching the development with keen interest,” he said.

    The group further urged the President on strengthening democratic institutions.

  • Bayelsa election: Leave Gbajabiamila out of your frustration, I will defeat you, Sylva tells Diri

    Bayelsa election: Leave Gbajabiamila out of your frustration, I will defeat you, Sylva tells Diri

    The Bayelsa state governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Timipre Sylva, has said that the November 11 poll would not just be an election, but a liberation of ‘Bayelsans’ from the concentration camp the state has been reduced to.

    The immediate past minister of state for petroleum resources and the state leader of the APC urged the people of Bayelsa to remain strong, steadfast and hopeful, saying that the party is edging closer to a bright new day.

    He also warned Governor Douye Diri, his rival in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to leave the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, out of his frustration ahead of the November 11 governorship election.

    Sylva, in a statement on Tuesday, 29, by his special assistant on media and public affairs, Julius Bokoru, noted that his attention was drawn to a publication in one of the national dailies allegedly sponsored by Diri that he (Sylva) was behind attempts to blackmail Gbajabiamila in a bid to influence some federal board appointments and weaken the CoS.

    He described the publication which also alleged that he was trying to influence the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) postings in Bayelsa state to the APC’s favour as “the job of scavenging mercenaries.”

    He said it was curious that “the poorly-worded piece” had none of the national paper’s team of journalists he described as among the best in the country on it.

    Sylva said instead an ambiguous “Our Reporter” was credited as the author of the report, creating instant impressions that the “black-market publication may have slipped through the paper’s very professional management.”

    He said: “The publication is false and is as sordid as the depressed minds of its sponsors. Sylva’s democratic records are there for all to see. He is no cynic, nor is he one to seek victory or political success through illegitimate means. Sylva’s sincerity, patriotism and passion for progress has been his spur in what has now become a stellar journey of service.

    “It is worrying that the Bayelsa State Government, prompted by a certain politician would abandon its duty of governance and delve into low-rate, lethargic propaganda, procured, very painfully, by tax payers monies of the state.

    “Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila is a true party man, a well-spoken academic, a fine man of grand qualities and a true friend and ally of Chief Sylva, this recent attempt at sowing seeds of discord between Sylva and the Chief of Staff to the President is an exercise in futility”

    Read Also: PDP blames Sylva for attacks on Bayelsa community

    Sylva said President Ahmed Bola Tinubu would appoint competent hands into vacant positions, as he had done in the recently sworn-in cabinet members in his drive to industrialise and open up Nigeria to greater laps of progress and peace”.

    The statement said: “Sylva is also not the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC); it is therefore not in his place to move INEC staff around the country. That aspect of the publication is also another lie paid for by the Bayelsa State government.

    “The ongoing blitzkrieg of propaganda against Sylva is a symptom of the current administration’s cluelessness and edginess, cast in between a failed run and an integrity test at the polls. The state government has switched to survival mode by lying, scheming, intimidating and liquidating the state treasury in managing its sweeping rejections by the people.

    “November 11 is not just an election, but a liberation of Bayelsans from the concentration camp such a great state has been reduced to. Sylva urges Bayelsans to remain tall and strong, steadfast and hopeful as we are edging closer to a bright, new day.”

  • ‘Why Sylva is backing Lyon for governor’

    Festus Daumebi, a lawyer and Bayelsa Central senatorial candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the last general elections, spoke with Mike Odiegwu on why former governor of Bayelsa State and Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva, annointed Chief David Lyon as governorship candidate for the November 16 poll.

    You once called on the leader of the Bayelsa APC and former Governor Timipre Sylva to join the governorship race. Are you disappointed that Sylva, who is now a minister, did not heed that call?

    I’m not disappointed at all. Let me applaud Chief Timipre Sylva for deciding to be a statesman that he is and has been. He has put the party’s interest and that of his state above his personl interest. As a matter of fact, Bayelsans were yearning, praying and craving for him to be the next governor, going by his antecedent and track records when he was governor of this state. There is no ministerial portfolio that you will compare to that of executive governor of a state; a viable state like Bayelsa State. If he were after his personal interest, he wouldn’t have accepted a ministral portfolio against the people’s wish for him to become the next governor of this state.

    So, you can see clearly that Chief Sylva is a statesman that puts the interest of the people above his interest. At this critical time of  our political development, particularly in Bayelsa State, where the PDP claims to  purportedly hold the grip, it will only be good in the interest of the nation that we have the leader of the party at the center to work with his followers back home to further strengthen the party in the state and that’s exactly what Chief Sylva has done. So, why will I be disappointed?

    How do you react to claims by some critics that the junior ministerial portfolio given to Sylva belittles him and Bayelsa State?

    I am not disappointed at all at that office. It is at the President’s prerogative to allot portfolios and if anybody is condemning Chief Sylvia for accepting a minister of state portfolio, I think the person is misguided. In fact, the minister of petroleum for state is as viable as any other first grade ministry. It is among the first grade five ministries in the Federal Republic of Nigeria and Bayelsa being a major contributor in the petroleum sector, it’s only good that a son of the soil, who is conversant with the issues, handle that portfolio. As a matter of fact, on behalf of the APC and people of Bayelsa State, I thank His Excellency, President Muhammadu Buhari, for finding our son and our leader worthy to hold this all-important ministry and we are glad. We are not disappointed at all.

    In Bayelsa State, how strong is the APC?

    The party, as a matter of fact, is ready and more prepared than any other political party you can imagine in this state. In 2019 general elections, the performance of the party is out there in the public domain. This is a state where the temporary ruling party, the PDP, believes is a hundred percent PDP state. But, we have at present two House of Representatives’ members and a serving Senator. That is to say out of the three senators, we have one and out of the five House of Rep members, we have two. In other words, out of the eight National Assembly members we have three and they have five for now and there are matters before the tribunal that we cannot talk about. Nobody knows how those matters will go. So, that’s to say that APC is Bayelsa and Bayelsa is APC.

    Now, talking about the preparedness of the party in the state, the dynamics of the politics in Bayelsa has changed within the past few days, following the emergence of Chief Sylva as a minister. Sylva, who is the leader of the party in the states, holds the party so dearly to his heart. With a man he has decided to back, David Lyon, our likely candidate by the grace of God, I don’t see the chances of the PDP winning this election. With the candidate we are putting forward, PDP stands no chance.

    Don’t you foresee crisis within your party ahead of the election, especially after the primary?

    There are no crisis anywhere and there will be no crisis. It is a simple logic. For you to win an election, you must have a structure. Today if Chief Sylva is not contesting an election, whoever he decides to back and give support, will win the election because he has the structure in the states. So, where will the crisis come from. You cannot come from nowhere where people have finished building the house, you become a landlord it doesn’t happen. So, there will be no crisis in APC. All members of the party are entitled to vote as we have adopted direct primaries for Bayelsa. The party have adopted direct primary.

    Has the party adopted direct primary?

    Yes. At the state level, we have adopted direct primary where every party member is entitled to vote and we believe in the people. We know all the people. We are here every day in Bayelsa with the people. Most of these people only come in two weeks to the election; some are Port Harcourt-based. So, how can you come from nowhere two weeks to the election and expect to win a man who has been with the people? We are here with the Chief Sylva structure. Our foot soldiers are everywhere and so winning this election wouldn’t be an issue.

    One of the aspirants, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, supported Sylva, your principal, in 2015. Why is your camp not supporting Lokpobiri since Sylva is no longer running?

    Politics is a game of interest. Like I said, Lokpobiri  is an elder brother. He’s my leader. I respect him so much. But, for this purpose, for this governorship purpose, if he emerges,  if God says it is his own and he emerges as the candidate of the party, I pledge my 100 per cent support to my party man. But, before the primary, he doesn’t have my support. It’s a personal decision, before the primary my support is for David Lyon, the aspirant that is backed by Chief Sylva.

    Manypeople are describing your aspirant, David Lyon, as a neophyte. Do you think he has requisite experience and credentials to be governor?

    Let me start from credentials. Our constitution is clear. The requirements for one to become the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is a school certificate. David Lyon has a sound primary school certificate, a sound SSCE, a graduate of the University of Ibadan. He did College of Education in Port Harcourt campus.

    All these certificates are attached to his form that I personally purchased on his behalf and submitted. So, the issue is, if you think that he’s not qualified, what’s your definition of qualification? You can go to court. Talking about degrees, what Bayelsans want are tractors, bulldozers, working sites, action and not PhD holders and professors that will come and tell us they want to turn us today to Dubai. Tomorrow, they say it is Jerusalem and next day, they are creating a new city towards the end of their administration. That is not what Bayelsans want.

    David Lyon is not going to promise Bayelsa Dubai.  David Lyon wants to promise Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom, our neighbors. At least if in four years, and God grant him the grace and he gets to eight years, and he can change the state’s narrative to that of Akwa Ibom, we are good to go. We’re serious about this. So, if anybody is talking about qualifications, David Lyon is more qualified than any other persons.

    How do you react to the recent display of strange brotherly love between your principal, Sylva, and the Governor Seriake Dickson?

    I must at this point commend Governor Seriake Dickson for the brotherly love he showed at the point of the nomination and screening of our principal. That is to say a man may be bad, but not in all areas. I know that Seriake Dickson is not a good leader, but I give it to him on the role he played during that period. He showed that we can fight inside, but let us be brothers outside. The APC, for that show of love he displayed is grateful. We are very sincere people. When you do good, we give it to you and when you do bad we give it to you.

    Are you expecting defections, following the recent changes in the state?

    It has started already.  The governor’s representative in Ogbia Local Government Area and  Southern Ijaw defected to the APC recently. Let the parties primary come and go, you will be tired of publishing defections because the people know that the Restoration Government has failed and what the Restoration Government is planning is from frying  pan to fire.  How can you be a commissioner and you can’t pay your children school fees and yet there is no physical development? This is very parochial and sectional government that believes in only its immediate environment. The governor doesn’t believe in the state. Do you see Yenagoa as a state capital?

    So, this election is  not about the APC, it is about the individual. It is the individual candidate that the party is projecting. It is the individual that rules or governs or represents his people. So, Bayelsa has realized themselves and the mistakes we have done over the years and we are willing and prepared to correct them with our PVCs. We are going to vote based on individual.

    Power comes from God. David Lyon is not coming to be a governernor to enrich himself. It is not all about money. The major driving force of this team is the development of Bayelsa State. Before you develop a place, you must have interest in that place. How do you expect most of these people that are parading themselves around Bayelsa to develop the state when they don’t even stay here. We have the majority with us. We are good to go and by the grace of God David Lyon will be sworn in the next governor of Bayelsa State.

     

     

  • Why Sylva should not contest for governor, by Binabo

    All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain and former Bayelsa State Acting Governor Nestor Binado spoke with Mike Odiegwu in Yenagoa, the state capital, on the preparations for the governorship primary, the chances of the aspirants and issues that will shape the November 16 poll.

    How prepared is the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the forthcoming governorship election in Bayelsa?

    Our party is strong. Right now, we want to do an in-house primary. We have many  aspirants for the forthcoming primary. We have a former Minster of State for Agriculture. We have a retired Commissioner of Police and we also have Perye Aganaba, a young, vibrant, intelligent man. I also heard that a former Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) just entered the race.  Th number of aspirants alone, who want to be governors of this state in our party, should tell you that the party is strong. We are very much ready  to win this governorship election and form the next government of this state.

    The governor has said that APC lacked structures and presence to win elections in Bayelsa. Recently, former President Goodluck Jonathan said the same thing. How do you respond to these?

    For me, such statements do not make sense. I don’t know what they call structures. We have at the ward level, party officers, and other members of the party. We also have at the local government level and we also have at the state level. So, what structures are they talking  about. They are living in denial because they know that the APC this time around has the best chance to win the election. One of the reasons is that we are united. We are the only viable opposition to the PDP in this state. So, I keep asking, ‘what do they mean by structures?’. We have everything we need from the ward to the state level. I am even surprised at the former President because the APC is the one representing him at the Senate. We won the election in his senatorial district in this last general election. The APC has a member representing Southern Ijaw at the House of Representatives. We also won some seats in the House of Assembly. Generally, in the last elections, we showed our strength against all odds and we are going to prove them wrong this time.

    What kind of candidate do you think the APC needs to win Bayelsa state?

    The APC must present a candidate that doesn’t have skeleton in his cupboard. We need a clean, approachable candidate that has no baggage. The candidate must be acceptable to everybody, not only to members of the APC. The public must appreciate the candidate and look at him as a total departure from the past. There is an outcry that this state needs a change because of the the misrule of the PDP. So, people want a change. Even in 2015, that outcry was there. So, this time, members of APC should put their heads down and listen to the public by looking at each of these aspirants in the APC. If we are able to present a young, vibrant, focused and peoples candidate, we will win the election.

    Do you have a preferred candidate for this election?

    As a politician, who has held reasonable positions in this state, as Deputy Speaker, Speaker and as the Acting Governor, that handed over to the present government, definitely I should have a candidate. I support the aspiration of Engineer Preye Aganaba. He is the one that fits into what the people in the state are looking for at this time. He is a young man,  a computer engineer, who has done well in the business circle. He has also been a good politician for a reasonable length of time. In 2015 elections, he was the senatorial candidate of the APC for Central Senatorial Zone. He has been a loyal member of the APC. He was one of the founders or the leading member of the APC in this part when the former governor, Chief Timi Sylva, came into the party and because Sylva was a former governor, Aganaba handed over everything to him and at that point, Sylva became the leader of the party. The rent of the first office of APC was paid by Aganaba. He has suffered for the party as a loyal party member and I feel that anybody who has worked for the party should have a chance.

    The argument against your preferred candidate is that he is inexperienced. Some persons also say he is  too young and and may not have the capacity to govern Bayelsa. What’s your take?

    Such argument doesn’t hold water. In the world today, there’s a kind of revolution, particularly in the circle of governance that power should go to the younger ones. Preye Aganaba is over 45. Is he still a young boy? Within the circle of youthfulness, he’s no more a youth. Anybody, who is above 40, is no more a youth in the Nigerian context. When you are beyond 30 years, you are no more a youth. That’s why even in the NYSC, once you are above 30 years, you don’t serve. So, why would somebody who is about 47 years old be called a youth. When did Gowon become the Head of State? What of Detie Spiff, who was 27 years and we see what he did massively. When did Seriake become governor? At what age did Timipre Sylva become governor?

    So, anybody who says Aganaba is a young man is even praising him because he has the strength. Besides,  in governance, it’s not the governor alone that makes things happen. If you have good advisers and the leader has listening ears, then, you have good government. When Dettie Spiff became governor of the old Rivers State, all his commissioners were old people, some of them old enough to be his father. He made serious impact. So, anybody who says the young cannot do it is making a mistake.

    Preye Aganaba graduated years ago; had his own computer workshops. He has managed his private life, business life. Would you say he has no experience? What do they even mean by experience? Let me tell you, the traditional chiefs, some of them are not as educated as we are, but they are better administrators. The most difficult profession or part of administration is being a traditional ruler. If you want a very good governor,  look for someone who has wisdom, who is intelligent, who will be able to gather a group of experienced advisers. Look at Bayelsa State, all the advisers are small boys and they’re afraid of the governor. So, how do you think such person can advise him? What kind of advice would they give?

    Former Governor Timipre Sylva flew the flag in 2015, and it’s also rumored that, despite being a minister-designate, he would want to contest again. What do you think?

    Everybody, who has satisfied the criteria in the constitution is qualified to contest. I’m also qualified to contest. If it is his desire, he is qualified to contest. The  laws of Nigeria allow him. He can contest. However, I may plead with him that, having become minister, he should play a fatherly role as the leader of the party so that we will have a united family going into the election. Sylva has many followers. He has a lot of influence on persons and he is respected by many people within the party, both at the national level and at the state level. I will advise him not to contest. He should rather play a fatherly role and unite everybody in the party. The success of the party will be more glorious to him. That is what I think he should concern himself with.

    Do you think APC needs reconciliation ahead of the primary and the election?

    For the primary what we need is peaceful primary devoid of violence. Then, we can definitely come back to unite to fight the oponent, which is the PDP. So, we need peace; we need unity to win this election. Whoever becomes the candidate will need support to enable the party win the election.

    Would you say the party stands a better chance now to win Bayelsa?

    Yes, our party is in a very better position than even 2015 to win this election. We are prepared and apart from that, we know what is happening in the camp of our opponent. In 2015,  PDP heavyweights came into APC to make us stronger. This time around, we expect such defections and when you add it to other advantages we have now, that we didn’t have before, we will win the election.

    Are you in support of the argument that Bayelsa should align with the party at the centre?

    From the political history of the Southsouth, and particularly the Ijaw people, we have always worked with the center. In all the republics, we worked with the centre.  When PDP was at the centre, because we aligned with them, it gave us the opportunity to  produce the President of this big nation and that’s why we are advocating that this state needs to be tied to the center. Once we’re tied the center, we get more. It is just like you are a father of many nation and one of them will say ‘no daddy, I don’t want to come close to you’, what do you think will happen? That child will lose. So, we need to be tied to the center and that’s the best for the ijaw man. This state is the Mecca of Ijaw nation. We need to be tied to the center. If we don’t, we will lose much. I advocate that this state should be part of the center.

    The leaders in your party are already quarreling over the mode of primary. So, which mode do you support?

    In general elections, everybody goes to vote. Not so? For everyone  in this party to participate in selecting the candidate, I would like direct primary. The direct primary  gives every card-carrying member a voice to say ‘this is the person I want’ and that gives beauty to democracy. If we need democratic systems in our party to prevail, that direct option to me is the best.

    What is your take on zoning?

    Even at the federal level, either elective positions or appointments, people argue for quota system. In this state, though it’s not written, we have a mutual understanding, which of course, is moral. Alamieyeseigha  came from the central; when he left, Jonathan stayed for about a year. Sylva came and completed the years meant for the East. People kept quiet to allow Sylva to come. When Jonathan was Vice-President and President,  we didn’t allow the position of Jonathan at the center to cause any misunderstanding and on the moral agreement we had.  Now, when Jonathan was there and Sylva was removed, the thing moved from the East to the West. No section or zone has ever completed eight years. It is the West that will be completing the eight years by February 14, 2020. This unwritten but mutually agreed movement of governor from one zone to another helps to avoid animosity among us. If we destroy that seeming understanding, it will bring to much quarrel.

    …So, whose turn is it to produce the next governor?

    It is the turn of the central zone. The central can bring anybody, but even when you come to the central, if a local government in the central has produced before, that council should allow others to produce the next one. In the central, there are three local government areas. Yenagoa, Kolokuama-Opokuma and Southern Ijaw. Southern Ijaw had produced because Alamiyeiseigha came from there. So, it is the turn of Yenagoa and Kolokuma-Opukuma, to produce the next governor of the state.

    There’s no complexity at all. In a family you will not want one person to have it all at all times. It is good that you have today, your brothers and sisters will have it the next day. It brings harmony. So, if we say no it must be one person others will feel that you want to dominate them and let me tell you no human being likes domination.

    To avoid the mistake of 2015, when the primary of your party was marred with violence, what type of primary would you expect the national APC to conduct in Bayelsa state.

    It is only in indirect primary that the entire process can be marred by violence. But if it is direct primaries, I will also go to my ward to vote. Yes, the direct has its own disadvantages but they are limited. It is like general election, some places maybe peaceful, some may have violence but it may not affect the general outcome of the election. If there is violence in my ward, it doesn’t affect the other wards.

    The argument is that most APC members don’t have permanent party cards. They said they were given slips and that they have lost them. How do you authenticate members to vote in direct primaries?

    Such argument is a mischievous defense. If you’re a member of a group and you know that a slip is the only thing that identifies you as a member of that group, will you go and keep yours carelessly? I still have mine.  It is only those looking for indirect primaries for reasons best know to them that will always present such argument. Some of the delegates have already told me that the aspirants are promising to pay them well.  The APC is a party of sanity. We are saying we are fighting corruption but you who wants to be governor is instigating corruption and he wants to be governor.

    You have not become a governor and you have started corrupting members of your party and the process. If I were at the national level of this party and I have such information that aspirants are promising to pay delegates, I will investigate you because you are not in line with the principles of our party. This party has three things; security, corruption and economy. You, who want to be governor are encouraging corruption, that means you are not party members. Then you are not even party members. Maybe, you don’t even understand the manifesto of the party you are in and you want to become governor. So, for me the best is direct.

    Why are people afraid of direct primaries. Let me tell you, when we do direct primaries all our members, the teeming members of the party will have a sense of belonging and they are the same people who will vote for you in the general election. If you exclude them how do they know they are members of your party and get ready to vote for you in the general election. Commit them and make them feel they are actually members of this party. How do you know your strength. It is through that you can even know your strength.