Tag: tinubu

  • Tinubu as punching-bag of sore election losers 

    The voting pattern in the Southwest on February 23 will surely continue to draw varied reactions from across the land. There are those who consider it a hard-earned victory for APC salesmen who did a yeo-man’s job and there are those who like to downplay the glory of such APC leaders.

    On aggregate, incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari defeated his closest rival, Atiku Abubakar, hands down in Yorubaland, except in Oyo and Ondo where the candidate of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) won by a narrow margin.

    Across the country, APC scored 15,191,847 votes to defeat PDP which scored 11,262,978. But the figures are generally considered unimpressive given the total number of registered voters in the country. Out of over 82 million names on INEC’s voters register, only a paltry 28 million showed up that day, representing a third of the registered voters.

    But whichever way we look at it, the exercise was quite historic in the sense that a few myths were shattered just as a good number of those hitherto considered political heavyweights were completely demystified in their respective bases.

    First is the cult of retired generals who did not hide their opposition to Buhari’s candidature and did everything humanly possible including a campaign of calumny to stop him, but to no avail. The outcome of the elections clearly showed that they were out of tune with the people who actually determine who becomes president, governor or what have you.

    Again, you also have ethnic entrepreneurs, especially in the south, who had hedged their fortune on Buhari’s defeat, just as we also have closet politicians masquerading as religious leaders. This latter category had more or less turned their sectarian platforms to a whip to lash Buhari continuously. You also have their allies in a section of the media who resorted to name-calling, all targeted at demarketing the APC presidential candidate.

    Having watched their dream turn smoke following the announcement of the polls’ results, this coalition of sore losers seem to have found a new pastime – bashing of the co-chairman of the APC Presidential Campaign, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. It explains the spate of media attacks on APC National Leader lately.

    Even while joyous members of APC are still toasting Tinubu and other leaders of the campaign council, these sore losers have gone to the ridiculous extent of trying to detract from the victory by peddling the falsehood that Tinubu was no longer influential in Southwest on account of perceived low turnout of voters in Yorubaland and Buhari’s loss in two states – Oyo and Ondo. Very funny indeed. Like we say rhetorically in Yorubaland, they say someone is bigger than you and you sneer shamelessly that it is just by a bit. So, if it is that easy, why were you unable to add that “small bit” to your own so that you can be bigger than that person?

    Of course, PDP’s victory in Oyo is easily attributable more to two local factors: popular disenchantment with some of Abiola Ajumobi’s policies as well as the discontentment arising from the APC primaries which led to the exit of influential members like Christopher Alao-Akala to ADP and Senator Soji Akanbi to ADC to pursue his senatorial ambition. He is the incumbent senator representing Oyo South senatorial district.

    In electoral mathematics, Ibadan city alone undoubtedly accounts for about 60 percent of Oyo vote. The truth of the matter is that many influential groups in Ibadan were unhappy with the chieftaincy reforms introduced by the Ajimobi administration. They considered them as an attempt to erode the power, prestige and influence of the Olubadan of Ibadan.

    So, the anger was expressed loudly by voting against APC.

    Also, Alao-Akala’s exit negatively impacted on APC as the party lost a significant number of votes in Ogbomoso where the ADP candidate is strong. But the good news is that the party leaders have now done the needful by reconciling with him ahead of the state election and he has promised to join forces with APC for the March 9 polls.

    It is therefore, wrong to say that APC’s loss that day was an expression of dislike for Buhari. Rather, it was brought about by the mismanagement of local politics by the ruling party.

    As for Ondo State, it was clearly the case of a divided house. Though the governor’s stool is not in contest this year, there were unresolved issues around the primaries conducted last October to select candidates for the state assembly as well as the National Assembly. Most of the candidates that emerged were not the favourites of Governor Rotimi Akeredolu. The former NBA president has never hidden his bitterness over the development. Unfortunately, the issues were not redressed before the party went into the February 23 election. The result was the defeat of the party by Atiku.

    Of course, overall, it should be admitted that PDP had a bankable message for the Southwest voters on February 23 – restructuring. Anyone familiar with the progressive values subscribed to by the Yoruba generally will easily understand that Atiku’s promise quite resonated well with the people. It gave some elements within Afenifere whose electoral value had depreciated in their respective bases because of their flirtations with Goodluck Jonathan in his failed bid for second term a new political oxygen of sorts.

    Suddenly, they had something to crow about and a perfect excuse to take up briefs from Atiku as his salesmen in Yorubaland. While executing their brief as Atiku’s marketers, it became quite fashionable for these elements to portray Tinubu as opposing restructuring and therefore working against Yoruba interest by campaigning for Buhari’s second term.

    They got even dirty by trying to blame the migrant herdsmen’s sacking of farmlands in Yorubaland and inflicting bodily wounds on farmers on Tinubu.

    It, therefore, took a lot of hardwork and leg-work to convince the people otherwise. The discerning Yoruba surely know better. They refused to buy the cheap stories by such mischief-makers. They know Tinubu’s partnership with Buhari has paid off for South-west in terms of dividends of democracy. Thanks to his negotiating skills, a Yoruba man in the person of Professor Yemi Osinbajo became Buhari’s running-mate in 2015 and has now been re-elected with Buhari for a second term which ends in 2023. Not only that, the Yoruba were saddled with strategic portfolios in Buhari’s first term. In terms of federal projects, the Southwest could not be said to have been marginalized in anyway. Ready examples is the construction and completion of new railway line between Lagos and Abeokuta, even as work is in advanced stage for the Lagos-Ibadan end.

    So, let no one try to downplay the yeoman’s role Tinubu and other APC leaders did in the Southwest to tip the pendulum of victory in Buhari’s favour.

     

    • Engineer Balogun wrote from Ibadan, Oyo State. 
  • Photos: Tinubu meets NURTW executives over violence in Lagos

    Ahead of Saturday’s polls, National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Tuesday met with the executives of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) in Lagos against violence during the election.

  • Akala rejoins APC, dumps gubernatorial ambition

    A former Governor of Oyo State, Adebayo Alao-Akala, has returned to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    He is the governorship candidate of the Action Democratic Party (ADP) in the March 9 governorship election.

    The former governor, The Nation learnt, made the decision earlier today after meeting the APC National Leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu in Abuja and Lagos.

    A reliable source within the party confirmed that the Ogbomoso-born politician will make a statement on his new decision today for his supporters across the state to understand the reasons for his move ahead of the March 9 governorship and House of Assembly election.

    READ ALSO: Breaking: APC NWC suspends Amosun, Okorocha

    His return to the APC will deal a heavy blow on the alliance he was leading among opposition parties against the governing party in the state.

    He was leading an alliance between ADP, African Democratic Congress (ADC), Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Zenith Labour Party (ZLP) and the Social Democratic Party (SDP).

    Prior to the election, Akala had vowed that all opposition parties would do anything to end to the reins of the APC in the state.

    But the intervention of Tinubu and other national leaders made him change his mind.

    The former governor left the APC last October to pick the governorship ticket of the ADP.

    He is widely believed to have influenced the victory of the PDP in Ogbomoso Zone in the February 23 presidential election.

     

     

     

  • Democrats must accept results of credible polls, says Tinubu

    All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart Asiwaju Bola Tinubu on Saturday said that he was confident of victory for President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He said the masses were ready to show gratitude for his people-oriented programmes and policies.

    Tinubu told reporters after voting at his O47 Unit, Kaffy Junction, Sunday Adigun Street, Alausa, Ikeja, that the president had promoted the welfare of the masses in the last four years.

    He said: “My hope and my determination for my party is that we are winning because we have the support of the masses.

    “We are popular among ordinary people. We are not talking about the elite, the rich. We are talking about farmers, traders, artisans, common man, parents whose parents are feeding now once per day.”

    The former governor had stormed the voting unit around 11.15 am, accompanied by his media aide, Tunde Rahman, and Southwest APC Woman Leader Chief Kemi Nelson.

    After accreditation and voting, he went to his private house, few metres from the polling booth, to greet relatives and other visitors.

    On entering the house, he was seized by nostalgia, as he told the people that he really missed her illustrious mother, the late Chief Abibat Mogaji, Iyaloja-General of Lagos and Nigeria.

    During periodic elections, the party leader usually storm the house to bring his aged mother out to vote. When the old woman was on wheel chair, Tinubu always wheeled her to the polling booth.

    In a voice laced with emotion, Tinubu said: “Ordinarily, I would have just gone back after casting my vote. My late mother’s card is with me. I miss her. But, I have to come to greet my daughter (Iyaloja of Lagos, Chief Folasade Ojo), and my grandson.”

    After spending few minutes inside the house, he returned to his Bourdilion, Ikoyi residence.

    Tinubu expressed satisfaction with the voting process, saying that Nigerians were determined to make it work.

    He said: ” So far, so good. It is the demonstration of resilience by Nigerians. Election is one of the best and most difficult ways to choose our leaders and representatives. It is the beauty of democracy. It may not be easiest process to manage and maintain.But, with our resilience and determination, we are getting better.”

    Reflecting on last week’s postponement, Tinubu said although it could be frustrating and challenging, it was not deliberately planned by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    He recalled that the commission explained the circumstances that warranted their decision to postpone the polls, adding that it was open and ready to take responsibility.

    The former governor said he was satisfied with the performance of INEC so far.

    Noting that the conduct of election is still very challenging, he said it takes time, perseverance, tolerance and consistency to achieve perfection

    In his view, Nigeria will overcome the pains and move to the horizon of progress.

    Tinubu said as a democrat, he is prepared to accept the outcome of a free and fair exercise.

    He stressed: “I will accept the people’s verdict. Any democrat that cannot accept the result of free and fair election is not worthy of being a democrat.

    “We must be able to respect the result of free and fair election.”

    The former governor said if the opposition rejects the outcome of a free, fair and credible process, then, they cannot be described as Democrats.

    Read Also: Senator Remi Tinubu overwhelmed by high turnout

    Tinubu chided the main opposition party for consistently alleging that the APC was planning to rig the elections.

    Berading the opposition leaders for their regression to defense mechanism to rationalise their imminent defeat, he said rigging has been their pastime.

    He denied the allegation that he was wooing people with money, saying that he has never been involved in vote buying.

    Tinubu said although he was fond of assisting people with money in furtherance of philanthropic gestures, he has never taken money from government in the last five years.

    He stressed: “I am not an agency of government. I don’t take contract from the government of Buhari in the last five years. I am on my own.

  • I have no relation to or interest in Act Technologies —Tinubu

    All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, has condemned Sahara Reporters for incorrectly linking him with a company called Act Technologies Limited.

    A statement issued by Tinubu Media Office yesterday said the APC leader has absolutely no relation to, or interest in, Act Technologies Limited.

    “He had never even heard of the company until the PDP (and its cronies in the media) started this campaign of calumny a few days ago.

    “Moreover, Asiwaju (Tinubu) has never been involved in the supply of card readers, voter registration and accreditation frameworks or any other materials or services to INEC. Never,” the statement added.

    According to it, SaharaReporters’ story is but an unfortunate and crude attempt to malign Asiwaju’s name.

    The statement titled ‘Response to Allegations in Saharareporters’ reads: “Our attention has been drawn to a false and reckless story published online by Sahara Reporters wrongfully accusing Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu of electoral malpractice and incorrectly linking him with a company known as Act Technologies Limited.

    “If lies were sand, this story would be a desert. Perhaps the only thing this story manages to get correct is the spelling of Asiwaju’s name. However, the story is but an unfortunate and crude attempt to malign Asiwaju’s name.

    Read also: PDP’ll be defeated on Sat, says Tinubu

    “Asiwaju has absolutely no relation to, or interest in, Act Technologies Limited. He had never even heard of the company until the PDP (and its cronies in the media) started this campaign of calumny a few days ago.

    “Moreover, Asiwaju has never been involved in the supply of card readers, voter registration and accreditation frameworks or any other materials or services to INEC. Never.

    “Let us be clear in this matter. If any political party was in control of INEC’s procurement practices in 2014/2015, it would have been the one in control of the federal government at that time.

    “Asiwaju never asked for, nor did he receive, anything or any contract from Jonathan’s government.

    “As incompetent as his administration was, even President Jonathan would not have sat idly by while important electoral contracts were being handed over to his most implacable political foe.

    “As often happens with fiction concocted by amateurs, the application of a little common sense causes the entire story to fall apart.

    “Even the technological aspects of the report are fantastical and unfounded. The whole thing simply makes no sense from a technical point of view. The report only makes sense as part of a concerted effort to attack Asiwaju.

    “Why the PDP and their media boosters fear him so much, we leave for them to answer. But it is odd that they expend so much time and energy manufacturing falsehoods against someone whose name will not even appear on any ballot.

    “This story is simply another effort by those opposed to President Buhari and the APC to justify their plans to distort the elections by alleging that the APC government is illegitimate and was rigged into office.

    “The only problem being that the facts do not support their claims nor their rationale for cheating.

    “These people are incurable. They do not rig because they were once victimised by rigging; they rig because rigging is not only in their blood, it is their blood.

    “Such arrant nonsense has no place in our national discourse.

    “Sahara Reporters has descended to a new low. To publish such an unfounded report is more than shoddy journalism; it is malicious.

    “The publication and its editors should be ashamed.”

  • PDP’ll be defeated on Sat, says Tinubu

    All Progressives Congress (APC) Presidential Campaign Council Co-chairman Asiwaju Bola Tinubu yesterday urged party members in Lagos to intensify  the mobilisation for Saturday’s rescheduled presidential and National Assembly elections.

    Noting that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was jittery, he said the ruling party will defeat the opposition party at the poll and put it to shame.

    The former Lagos State governor also explained why Igbo in Lagos should vote for the APC, saying that the government in the Centre of Excellence has never discriminated against them and other non-indigenes in the distribution of the dividends of democracy.

    Tinubu, who urged women leaders to mobilise traders for the crucial poll, also advised youths to heed President Muhammadu Buhari’s advice by shunning thuggery, ballot snatching and other forms of violence.

    He advised party faithful to accommodate defectors from the rival PDP, saying that they had become legitimate members of the fold whose cooperation are required for mobiliasation for victory.

    Tinubu, who urged them to use their index fingers to thumb print on the ballot paper, advised the party agents and canvassers to be vigilant.

    He said: “You agents must report early. Be vigilant. Shine your eyes. If an agent goes to ease himself, the canvasser will take his position. A canvasser is also an agent.”

    The party said there will be a meeting of party leaders with council chairmen at his Ikoyi residence today to discuss the preparations for the Saturday election.

    Exuding confidence, he said: “We will win on Saturday and we will hold a celebration rally next week.”

    Tinubu addressed party members, shortly after the stakeholders’ meeting at the party secretariat on Acme Road, Ogba, Ikeja.

    The meeting was attended by Governor Akinwunmi Ambode; his deputy, Dr. Idiat Adebule; Secretary to Government Tunji Bello; governorship candidate Babajide Sanwo-Olu, his running mate Obafemi Hamzat; and APC Governorship Advisory Council (GAC) members – Prince Tajudeen Olusi; party chairman  Tunde Balogun; one-time Finance Commissioner Olawale Edun; Prince Abiodun Ogunleye; Chief Busura Alebiosu; Chief M.A. Taiwo; Chief Murphy Adetoro; Chief Mutiu Aare; Alhaji Akanni Seriki; Olorunfunmi Basorun; Dr. Yomi Finnih; Chief Muyiwa Sosanya and Cardinal James Odunmbaku.

    Other chieftains included: Former Minister of State for Defence Demola Seriki; former Deputy Governor Olufemi Pedro; Oyinlomo Dammole; Ademorin Kuye; APC Vice Chairman (Lagos West) Funso Ologunde; party secretary Wale Ahmed; publicity secretary Joe Igbokwe; his deputy Abiola Salami; Senators Musiliu Obanikoro; Ganiyu Solomon; and Adeola Olamilekan; Southwest APC Women Leader Mrs. Kemi Nelson; Lagos APC Women Leader Jumoke Okoya-Thomas; Mrs. Fausat Gbadebo; Cornelius Ojelabi; Ayodele Adewale; Mrs. Olayinka Oladunjoye; Mrs. Yetunde Arobieke; Sanwo-Olu’s campaign manager Tayo Ayinde; Mrs. Kafilat Ogbara; Arewa leader Kabiru Ahmed; Chris Ekwilo and House of Assembly members-Wasiu Eshilokun; Rotimi Abiru and Tunde Braimoh.

    Welcoming the chieftains and party followers, Balogun urged them to pass Tinubu’s message to other members who are busy in their local governments with door-to-door campaigns at the wards.

    Tinubu, who told the party congregation that he has not slept for three days, owing to his involvement in preparations for the polls, urged members to gird their loins.

    He said: “Are you ready for the polls? Go out on Saturday. Don’t’ be discouraged. Take your PVCs. Go and vote and we will win. Who are we fighting? It is the PDP.”

    Reflecting on the postponement of the poll, he said the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) ship ran into turbulence, praying that the ship should land safely and happily on Saturday.

    Tinubu, who spoke in English and Yoruba, said: “INEC will land safely and happily on this election and APC will win. They destroyed INEC office and materials in Abia. They are finished on poll day. We will bury PDP. They don’t want you to vote. They don’t want you to be around. Their plot has failed.”

    He added: “We are not fighting INEC. There is no nation without obstacles. No leadership without challenges. Leadership must address the challenges. We are in a growing democracy. I was governor during the bomb explosion at Ikeja in 2002. It was very daunting. But, we responded and cared about our people. That is the concern of all of us and President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “WE are not fighting INEC. INEC is not our opponent. We are going to compete and we will defeat them. They do not have our strength in the Southwest, Northwest, Northeast, Middle Belt. How will they win?”

    Warning against hypocrisy and divisive tendencies in the political family, the party leader said leaders were aware of the allegations against a chieftain from Badagry, Mr. Bamgbose, who has refused to work for the party after benefiting from the party’s slot.

    Tinubu, who advised members to mobilise vigorously to demonstrate the strength of the APC in Lagos, said defectors to the party should be carried along.

    He said: “You should emulate me. I have accommodated Obanikoro, Demola Seriki and Da Silver. This is a good example of leadership. We are a big party. We cannot but offend ourselves. As you beg God for forgiveness, you should learn to forgive your fellow human beings.”

    Turning to the women, Tinubu said: “Don’t rest in your local governments. Go to the markets and stalls. Mobilise them to vote.”

    He also said members who have problems and complaints should not hesitate to inform their leaders at the ward and local government levels.

    Stressing the importance of grassroots mobilisation, Tinubu said: “Get the attendance register at the ward. Call meetings. You know the number of polling units in your areas. Work hard. You must win. Tomorrow, I will hold meeting with the 57 council chairmen at Bourdillon.”

    The former governor admonished youths to shun unruly behaviours on poll day to avoid unpleasant consequences.

    He said: “Let me warn our boys. You heard President Buhari’s warning on thuggery, ballot snatching. You heard him. I don’t command an Army. The Permanent Voter Card (PVC) is my Army. We must go out to vote for president Buhari and our National Assembly candidates on February 23 and our governorship and House of Assembly candidates on March 9. The warning is: don’t fight.”

    Tinubu also warned some restless youths against the harassment of of esteemed party elders during meetings, saying that anyone who is culpable is an agent of the PDP. He said APC is interested in celebrating democracy and not violence.

    Urging Igbo in Lagos to vote for the APC, he said: “We appeal to our Igbo brothers from the East. This is the state where you conduct your business. Your children are in our schools. There is no discrimination against them in WAEC, NECO  and tertiary fees. This time, we are asking you to help us. We will look at the votes from Ojo, Alaba, Surulere, Amuwo Odofin, Ajeromi Ifelodun.”

  • Tinubu: Buhari didn’t order shoot on sight

    On election postponement

    By law, we should continue to energise our people. It depends on our resources. Because the Electoral Act allows us to continue to campaign and ask us to stop campaigning only 24 hours before the actual election. And once INEC changed the election date to February 23, they have given us the opening to campaign and energise our people. If you have a garden and you don’t nourish it with water, the grass will remain dormant. We don’t want our party to remain dormant.

    This is ability of the leadership to convert adversity to opportunity and prosperity and that’s it; that’s what we must do.

    On whether the postponement will affect credibility of INEC

    It depends on how it is handled and the new process. How the process is managed? You can convert what appears like a crisis, a situation of adversity, to an opportunity and progress

    Read also: Army Chief: ballot box snatchers’ll be dealt with

    The INEC, under the law, is empowered to postpone, cancel and do whatever is necessary to ensure free and fair election.No party other INEC has this power. We can express our anger and disappointment, but no party can reverse what has been done. So, we are ready for Feb. 23.

    On President Buhari’s statement that those who disrupt the election do so at the risk to their lives…

    “ I was in that meeting; the president was just reinforcing the fact that if you you are out there snatching ballot boxes, and causing destruction, you are at risk of your own life. Whatever happens to you, no president will give an order that his own citizens be shot summarily, No! No, its okay, emotions are running high these days. Any individual including myself can be misinterpreted.

    Shoot on sight are not his words; he is a law-abiding person and he understands categorically and clearly what the rule of law is and the lives of individual citizens, he knows that he is in that office to protect. Now, let me say this: he has been fighting Boko Haram, kidnappers and all that before this election, did you hear him asking them to be shot and executed summarily?

    If he has gone through that in the last five years, please give him the benefit of the doubt.

  • Poll shift painful, but we must maintain our commitment, says Tinubu

    ALL Progressives Congress National Leader and Co-Chair of the party’s Presidential Campaign Council, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, is urging continued commitment from all voters regardless of the  pain caused by the  postponement of the  Presidential and National Assembly elections.

    “Do not allow this delay to deter you from the expression of your democratic rights. What you had set your mind to do on February 16, keep your mind and heart on for February 23,” he said yesterday in reaction to the delay.

    Tinubu in a statement in Lagos said though he appreciated the enormity of the logistical challenge that elections in a vast country like Nigeria poses to INEC, “we are still pained that the Commission could not meet this challenge within the time allotted.

    He said he was no less “perplexed that INEC literally waited so late in the day to make known the obstacles preventing it from keeping faith to the election schedule.”

    He added: “INEC could have and should have given the nation more ample and earlier warning. This could have perhaps lessened the pervasive disappointment that we all now feel. It also would have helped people better order their steps.

    “We have reports of eager voters rising early to leave their homes to cast their ballots only to be told upon arriving at their appointed polling stations that the election had been postponed.

    “This should not have happened for it could well discourage people from coming out when the election takes place. Thus, we heartily commend those people for coming out in exercise of their fundamental rights and duties as citizen voters, who vote by vote, seek to build and perfect our democracy.

    “For each voter is in part an architect and each one of your votes is a brick by which, when lain together, shall construct a strong democracy in such a way that it shall forever stand and endure.  Thus, we appeal to all who actually came out to vote and to those who intended to vote today, to maintain your commitment. Do not allow this delay to deter you from the expression of your democratic rights. What you had set your mind to do on February 16, keep your mind and heart on for February 23.

    “INEC has stated the reason for the delay and has expressed regret over the inconveniences it has caused. We must take INEC’s statement at face value and hold to the belief that INEC understands even more than ever the sober and grave responsibility it has to our nation and our democracy. INEC can only properly discharge that responsibility by conducting free and fair elections.

    “While we cannot go back to repair what did or did not happen to cause this postponement, we all must encourage INEC to do all that is necessary so voting can smoothly proceed on February 23. Whatever our political affiliation, we must encourage INEC to overcome the difficulties in order to rise to this most important occasion. INEC must commit itself more than ever before to perform to its utmost so that these elections will be remembered as a free and fair exercise consonant with the best of international standards.

    “In the end, elections must be held in such a manner that every vote carries the same weight and no vote is  minimized because elections took place much earlier or later in one place than in another. Thus, it is better to experience a slight delay to conduct the elections properly rather than to conduct the elections piecemeal and uneven fashion.

    “No one will absolve INEC if such a fate befalls this all-important election. The electoral body must use the one-week extension to mend its logistics gaps and lapses. This delay has clearly provoked significant anger and disappointment among the people. The voters were ready and INEC should have been equally as prepared and ready as the voters. Yet, we ask that the people contain their anger and remain calm. Let no one be tempted to breach the peace because of this delay.

    “In the greater scheme of things, a one-week delay is not overly burdensome when compared to the importance of conduct of free and just elections in the establishment of representative democracy and good governance in our land. Please, persevere just a bit longer to ensure that the elections on February 23 truly reflect the will of the people. Whatever obstacles may come, be they large or small, let us show the world the Nigerian people will not be deterred from realizing the democracy for which we have fought and sacrificed so long and so hard to achieve”.

  • Tinubu seeks three million votes for Buhari in Lagos

    •Urges party members to ensure APC’s victory

    All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu yesterday urged members of the ruling party to work hard to deliver at least three million votes for President Muhammadu Buhari in tomorrow’s poll.

    Tinubu gave the challenge at a parley with party members and supporters at a stakeholders meeting in Ikeja.

    The party leader, who spoke mainly in Yoruba, said the APC in the state could not afford not to deliver on the promise of overwhelming votes for the President.

    Tinubu said the President trusted in him and party members to win resoundingly in the state, urging party faithful to do their best to meet and exceed expectations.

    Reiterating his commitment to Buhari’s re-election, the party chieftain said he would give his all to ensure Buhari’s victory.

    He said: “I want you our party members to go all out and vote massively for President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “You must deliver at least three million votes or more to the president to show that the whole state is firmly for him.

    “I have been made the co-Chairman of the APC presidential campaign committee because of the trust the President reposed in me and party members to always.

    “We should justify that trust and give our best for Buhari and Osinbajo on Saturday”,he said.

    Tinubu urged party members to mobilise other members and residents within their neighbourhoods to vote for the President.

    He challenged all members to ensure that APC wins in all the polling units across all the wards.

    The party leader said election co-ordinators had been appointed to mobilise votes for APC across the state, and urged them to deliver on the assignment.

    Tinubu said party executive members were automatic co-ordinators in their respective areas, urging them to get results.

    He promised that all members would be compensated based on the results they delivered in their respective areas.

    Tinubu urged members to shun electoral malpractices as the party was not known for such.

    He also urged party members to eschew all acts of violence  but conduct themselves peacefully ,during, before and after the election.

    He expressed confidence that the president would not only emerge victorious in the election, but would win resoundingly.

    Tinubu said the governorship candidate of the party in the state, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu, would take the state to greater heights and urged residents to vote massively for him on March 2.

    Tinubu urged the APC members to stand with Sanwo-Olu the same way they supported him during the last primaries.

    The party leader said issues concerning the primaries had been resolved, promising all those who could not get tickets would be compensated with appointments.

    Tinubu commended the state Deputy Governor, Mrs. Idiat Adebule for her loyalty to the party, saying that attribute was expected of every party man.

    The party leader said the deputy governor stood with the party when it mattered, urging women in the party to follow her example.

    He said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) represents ineptitude and urged Nigerians to reject the party at the polls.

    Speaking, Sanwo-Olu said the APC was passionate and committed about a better and greater Nigeria and Lagos.

    He urged residents to vote massively for Buhari on Saturday and him on March 2 for the delivery of more democratic dividends.

    Former Minister of State for Defence Musiliu Obanikoro, former Lagos Transportation Commissioner Kayode Opeifa and Southwest Women Leader of the party, Mrs Kemi Nelson were some of the prominent party personalities at the meeting.

    Also at the meeting were: members of the party’s Governor’s Advisory Council (GAC), including Dr. Abayomi Finnih and Alhaji Tajudeen Olusi.

  • Physically-challenged rally for Buhari, Tinubu, others

    The Amalgamation of Physically-Challenged People in Lagos Mainland Local Government and Yaba Local Council Development Area of Lagos State yesterday staged a walk across major roads in the area.

    It was to sensitise residents to vote for the candidates of the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the House of Assembly, House of Representatives, Senate, governorship and presidential elections.

    The group comprising the hearing-impaired, visually-impaired, cripple, dumb, down syndrome and others with various deformities, well-wishers, party faithful and supporters trooped out to participate in the walk.

    They gathered at the APC secretariat on Borno Way, by Coates junction in Ebute-Meta, from where they moved with drum sets, singing and dancing through Herbert Macaulay Way, Adekunle, Alagomeji en route to Sabo.

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    The Chairman, Elders’ Forum of the People Living with Disabilities, Mr. Adisa Adeniyi, said it was important for people living with disabilities to appreciate members of APC, especially Senator Oluremi Tinubu and others for assisting them, adding: “This is payback time for us to express our gratitude to them.”

    The Coordinator, Movement for Disable Right Forum, Comrade Kehinde Oshilaja, hailed his members for trooping out for the rally.

    He said: “We are doing the walkthrough rally to express our support and solidarity to those contesting on the platform of APC in Lagos State, as well as President Muhammadu Buhari. We implore Lagosians to vote for our candidates, including the governorship candidate, Babajide Olushola Sanwo-Olu, Senator Oluremi Tinubu and President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday and March 2.”