Tag: tinubu

  • Buhari, Tinubu, governors, others to grace Ganduje’s daughter’s wedding in Kano today

    Buhari, Tinubu, governors, others to grace Ganduje’s daughter’s wedding in Kano today

    The ancient city of Kano was yesterday agog ahead of today’s wedding between the daughter of the Kano State  Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, Fatima (Baby) and the son of Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State, Idris.

    President Muhammadu Buhari, National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, governors and other top dignitaries are expected to witness the grand ceremony today.

    Others who are expected to grace the occasion include  Senate President, Bukola Ssaraki; Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Dogora, other principal officers and members of the National Assembly.

    Also a number of ministers, diplomatic corps, technocrats, captains of industries and top aides of President Buhari are also expected to witness the marriage ceremony, described by many as the marriage of the year.

    On Friday, wife of the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Oludolapo,   arrived with over 15 First Ladies of various states in preparation for the D-Day.

    Over 20 governors are also expected to be in Kano for the marriage ceremony.

    The wedding Fatiha will hold in Kano Central Mosque, beside the Palace of the Emir of Kano, His Highness, Malam Muhammad Sanusi 11.

    As at the time of filling in this report, Kano State Government House has already wore celebration mood with different colours depicting Hausa-Fulani and Yoruba tradition.

    Security agencies are already on ground to provide adequate security for the event.

    Speaking on security arrangement, the state Commissioner of Police, Mr. Rabiu Yusuf said all necessary arrangements had been put in place to ensure a hitch-free marriage ceremony.

    “As you can see, we are all busy. Dignitaries have already started arriving at the airport. We have deployed our men to strategic positions. Everywhere is calm and there is no cause for alarm.

    The Nation recalls that over 11 governors stormed Kano on November 10, 2017 and witnessed the marriage introduction of the couple.

  • Tinubu always welcome in Ondo, says Akeredolu

    Tinubu always welcome in Ondo, says Akeredolu

    Ondo State Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu yesterday said former Lagos State Governor Asiwaju Bola Tinubu is always welcome in his state.

    A statement by the Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Yemi Olowolabi, faulted reports that the All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart was not needed in the state.

    The statement reads: “The attention of Ondo State Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN) has been drawn to news reports in some media of February 26 in respect of statements made at the meet the governor’s programme, which was part of the activities to mark the anniversary of his first year in office.

    “According to the reports, the governor said the reconciliation committee, led by Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has no business in Ondo State and that the state ‘does not need a trouble shooter’.

    “Another headline stated: ‘Why Tinubu can’t come to Ondo’, which suggests that Asiwaju Tinubu is not welcome in Ondo State.

    “It was also reported that Governor Akeredolu ‘denied Boroffice as senator representing Ondo North’.

    “Akeredolu would like to clarify any potential misunderstanding that could arise from these false and misleading reports.

    “He wishes to make it clear that the Asiwaju Tinubu-led reconciliation committee is welcome in Ondo State at any time.

    “The committee will, however, find that it has no work to do in the state, as there is peace and stability in the Ondo State APC.

    “The governor never doubts the ability of Asiwaju Tinubu to successfully carry out this onerous task of uniting our great party and putting it in good stead for the task ahead.

    “The governor does not deny the legitimacy of Senator Ajayi Boroffice’s position as the senator representing Ondo North Senatorial District.

    “However, the point Governor Akeredolu made was that he knows of only two APC senators in the state who are currently working with the state government for uplifting Ondo State.”

     

  • APC: Group commends Tinubu

    APC: Group commends Tinubu

    The reconciliation assignment given to Asiwaju Ahmed Tinubu is the best way to ensure the All Progressives Congress (APC) reclaims its place and wins the 2019 Presidential election, the Liberty Movement, (LIM), has said. According to the group, the internal crisis within the APC is affecting the economic and social transformation of Nigeria by undermining the expected cooperation between the Presidency and the National Assembly.

    It said the reconciliation will also lead to smooth implementation of the 2018 budget and fast track economic and political dividends for Nigerians. The Liberty Movement said only reconciliation of the various interests can bring back public trust, adding that APC is currently deeply factionalised in most of the 36 states and that only a united front can save the party from imminent defeat.

    The movement in a release signed by its National President, Mr. Edward Olusola, and National Secretary, Samson Ndubuisi, said the reconciliation within the APC is necessary to revive the dwindling fortunes of the APC and bring the party on the right track of history. It commended President Mohammadu Buhari and Asiwaju Tinubu for the peace initiative.

    Liberty Movement noted that in spite of the challenges of the APC, it remains the party to beat.  “Many Nigerians may not be happy about the fact that all promises have not been fulfilled by the APC, but in reality, they know that the PDP does not offer a viable alternative.

  • APC crises resolution: Oyegun pledges to back Tinubu

    APC crises resolution: Oyegun pledges to back Tinubu

    National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, yesterday promised to support Asiwaju Bola Tinubu in the presidential mandate to reconcile the warring sides in the ruling party.

    Moments after emerging from a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Aso Rock Villa,Abuja,Oyegun dispatched a letter to Tinubu in response to the February 21 memo from the former Lagos State governor.

    Tinubu had accused the APC chair of frustrating reconciliation efforts in the party taking “improper unilateral decisions” on issues affecting national and state chapters.

    Oyegun,he alleged, had refused to cooperate by delaying the release of information critical to the resolution of crises in state chapters.

    Tinubu in his letter entitled  “Actions and conduct weakening the party from within said while the chairman had allowed the crises in the chapters to fester by his refusal to take appropriate actions, his decision to take some “inappropriate unilateral decisions” in recent times in the affected chapters had created fresh difficulties for the reconciliation process.

    However,Oyegun in a three  paragraph  reply to Tinubu yesterday said: “I thank you for your letter dated February 21, 2018, for your prayers and good wishes for my health. I wish you the same and pray that our good God keeps you strong and grants you His peace.

    “Let me once again formally congratulate you on the peace making assignment Mr. President has entrusted you with. It is most challenging but I believe you will ultimately justify the confidence reposed in you by Mr President. In this you have my fullest support.

    “Be assured, dear Asiwaju, of my highest regards now and always.”

    He was silent on the issues raised by Tinubu in his own memo.

    Oyegun was at the villa earlier in the day to confer with Buhari apparently on Tinubu’s letter,copies of which he had sent to the President,Vice President Yemi Osinbajo,Senate President Bukola Saraki and House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara.

    It is believed yesterday’s  meeting was to enable  the party chairman explain his own side of the story to the president.

    Odigie-Oyegun arrived the Presidential Villa at about 3pm and left at about 3.50pm.

    Apparently aware that State House correspondents would seek his reaction to the letter, he cleverly  avoided them.

    As soon as he sighted the journalists who were waiting for him at their operational base inside the Council Chambers Briefing Room, Odigie-Oyegun increased his pace as he was finding his way out of the premises.

    Governor  Yahaya Bello of Kogi State , on Thursday night hailed the wisdom of President Muhammadu Buhari in appointing Tinubu to reconcile aggrieved members of the party.

    Speaking with State House journalists at the end of APC governors’ meeting with the President at the Presidential Villa, he said that the governors also have confidence in the leadership of the National Chairman, John Odigie-Oyegun.

    On the allegation by Asiwaju Bola Tinubu to the President that the party’s national Chairman was frustrating his reconciliation efforts, Bello said “We the governors and majority of APC members have confidence ?in our national chairman Chief John Oyegun, we also believe in President by appointing Bola Tinubu, our leader to reconcile some aggrieved members of our party.

    “However, one size fits all will not work in all the states where some erring members need to be disciplined.” he said.

  • APC reconciliation: Tinubu will succeed – Bello

    APC reconciliation: Tinubu will succeed – Bello

    Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello, on Thursday night commended the decision of President Muhammadu Buhari to pick the National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, to reconcile aggrieved members of the party.

    He said the former Lagos State Governor would succeed in the assignment.

    Speaking with State House journalists at the end of APC Governors’ meeting with the President at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, Bello said the governors also have confidence in the party’s  National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun.

    On the allegation by Tinubu that the APC chairman was frustrating his reconciliation efforts, Bello said: “We the governors and majority of APC members have confidence ‎in our national chairman, Chief John Oyegun. We also believe in the President’s appointment of Bola Tinubu, our leader to reconcile some aggrieved members of our party.

    “However, one size fits all will not work in all the states where some erring members need to be disciplined.”

    He said the governors urged the President to seek re-election in 2019 because of his achievements.

    “‎There are three things. One, he has done excellently well, secondly on fighting corruption.

    “Even as governors, we are competing among ourselves to ensure that the little resources available are utilized for the people. So corruption is reduced to the barest minimum.

    “Next is the revival of the economy, job creation and making sure that Nigerians are comfortable. Based on this performance, we are urging Mr. President to please run and fly in 2019. So, there is nothing more to that,” the governor stated.

     

     

     

  • Tinubu to Oyegun: stop frustrating peace moves

    Tinubu to Oyegun: stop frustrating peace moves

    All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart Asiwaju Bola Tinubu has accused National Chairman John Odigie-Oyegun of frustrating reconciliation efforts in the ruling party.

    He said the chairman had compounded the challenge of reconciliation by taking “improper unilateral decisions” on issues affecting national and state chapters.

    Tinubu added that Odigie- Oyegun had refused to cooperate by delaying the release of information critical to the resolution of crises in state chapters.

    The former Lagos State Governor made the observations in a February 21 letter to Odigie-Oyegun, .titled: “Actions and conduct weakening the party from within”, copies of which were sent to President Muhammadu Buhari, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Senate President Bukola Saraki and House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara.

    Tinubu was appointed by President Buhari on February 6 to reconcile party leaders and political office holders where there are crises.

    On February 14, Tinubu visited Odigie-Oyegun and members of the National Working Committee (NWC) at the National Secretariat to seek support for the assignment.

    He has since been meeting with party leaders. He visited Sokoto State where he was received by Governor Aminu Tambuwal and Senator Aliyu Wamakko.

    Tinubu said while the chairman had allowed the crises in the chapters to fester by his refusal to take appropriate actions, his decision to take some “inappropriate unilateral decisions” in recent times in the affected chapters had created fresh difficulties for the reconciliation process.

    Citing Kogi and Kaduna states, Tinubu said Oyegun’s hasty decision to inaugurate a parallel state executive committee for Kogi State and his indifference to the leadership tussle in the Kaduna chapter led to “demolition of property and threat of violence”.

    The former Lagos State governor accused the chairman of “lack of openness and fairness, which have led to internal crisis in some states’, stressing that the principles of internal democracy and the “institutions of the party” have been undermined.

    Urging Oyegun to ponder on the imperative of laying a good legacy, Tinubu advised him to change tactics and work within the confines of the party constitution.

    He said: “To lessen animosity and return the party to the path of internal democracy and openness, beg that you refrain from taking any more improper unilateral decisions with regard to the national and state chapters of the party.  As the chairman of the party you must work within the confines of the duties and responsibilities enumerated under the party constitution.”

    “If you continue to do so, I fear you may undermine the party in no small degree. You may well cause internal fractures and dissension difficult to repair yet visible to all.  I fear this can undermine our goodwill with the electorate and make the approaching challenges to the party materially more difficult than they need to be.”

    Acknowledging the rift between him and Oyegun, the former Lagos State governor said the overriding interest of the party should take precedence over and above personality clashes.

    Tinubu said: “Drawing from your behaviour in Kogi, Kaduna and with regard to the state chapter assessment requested, I am led to the inference that you have no intention of actually supporting my assignment.

    “Instead, you apparently seek to undermine my mandate by engaging in dilatory tactics for the most part. When forced to act, you do so in an arbitrary and capricious manner, without the counsel of other NWC members and without regard to our internal procedures.

    “You may have personal qualms with me. That is your right as a human being. However, you have no such right as the chairman of this party. This party belongs to all of its members. You have no greater claim on it than any of the rest of us.

    “Whatever personal qualms you may have with me are secondary at this point.  You have a moral and professional obligation as the party chairman to act in the party’s best interests. Your hurried and unilateral actions belie the important agency you hold for the party.

    “Thus, in furtherance of the assignment given to me by President Buhari, I request that you make available to me the status reports and all other pertinent information regarding the state chapters without further delay.”

  • Tinubu writes Oyegun on actions and conduct weakening APC from within

    Tinubu writes Oyegun on actions and conduct weakening APC from within

    Determined to succeed in the mandate given to him by President Muhammadu Buhari to reconcile members of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has urged the party’s National Chairman, John Odigie-Oyegun, to give a status report on local chapters. In a letter to the APC chair, Tinubu reminded Chief Odigie-Oyegun of the need to live up to his promise and be the bulwark of support to ensure the success of the presidential mandate rather than engage in acts that could subvert it.

    I trust that this letter finds you in good health and may that never change.  I also hope that you are in an apt frame of mind to read this letter according to the spirit in which it is written and to derive apt counsel from it.

    Our party has travelled far in a brief time.  To pull and mend the disparate legacy parties into one, we surmounted high obstacles that would have daunted others.  To win the election, the then candidate Muhammadu Buhari had to campaign as never before and we, as a party, had to stare down great odds to win.

    We held firm to our principles and did not cast our eyes away from the progressive objectives that led us to form this party in the first instance. We kept faith with the best of our ideals and we matched noble ideals to strong effort. We won. Nigeria won.

    Sadly, some, who were entrusted with positions of high responsibility within the party seemed unable to handle the success given them. Little attention was tendered the principles upon which this party was formed and pursuant to which it was presented to the public as an alternative to the cynical politics of the PDP (Peoples Democratic Party).

    We were born as a party of internal democracy; but our internal institutions have been actively undermined or allowed to atrophy.  The spirit of a new and better Nigeria that guided us to unprecedented electoral success has been steadily replaced by the bankrupt and rule-less ways that brought the PDP low.

    Since the election, there have been several reports of lack of openness and fairness which have led to internal crisis in some of our states. There have been allegations of self-induced crisis resulting from merchandising of internal processes. We all must agree that the party was bound to suffer growing pains but not to the extent of losing part of the substantial goodwill that brought us to power.

    However, that which concerns me has little to do with the manner by which the party is growing. What concerns me is the manner in which the crisis is developing that can lead to serious erosion of party cohesion and confidence. Were I alone in this concern, I would discount my observations as a sign of my own misperceptions or infirmity. However, I stand not alone in this worry. My grief is shared by so many party members that I would not be accused of exaggeration if I said substantial party leaders are worried about the course of our vessel.

    I believe it was from this sober concern that President Muhammadu Buhari recently appointed me to lead the consultation, reconciliation and confidence-building efforts in our party. Upon the appointment, I gave the President my word that I would work diligently and objectively to achieve the goal set before me.

    In this vein, my first port of call after receiving this assignment was our party’s National Secretariat to present myself before the National Working Committee (NWC), with you as one of its members by virtue of your position as Chairman of the party. During my interaction with the NWC, I enjoined its members to freely express their views concerning the state of the party at the national, state and local levels. I listened attentively to the views of every member of the NWC present.

    On your part, you promised unalloyed support for my mission. Consonant with that vow, you said you would provide all information at your disposal and you vowed to act as a liaison between me and the state party chapters.  At that very meeting, I announced I had formally started the assignment handed me by President Buhari. I offered to keep you abreast of my work. I said that I wanted the NWC to be like an informal advisory council and sounding board to me in the discharge of this presidential mandate.

    Unfortunately, the spirit of understanding and of cooperative undertaking to revive the party seems not to have lived beyond the temporal confines of that meeting. I assure anyone who cares to know that this positive spirit of cooperation did not meet its demise at my hands.

    My position was and is that we can only restore the party by resolving its current deficiencies in an unbiased, neutral manner that allows us to strengthen our internal democracy by annealing those internal institutions and processes vital to such internal fairness. I stated this position then and still hold to it with all sincerity.

    Yet, disappointment greeted me when I discovered that you had swiftly acted in contravention of the spirit of our discussions. Instead of being a bulwark of support as promised, you positioned yourself in active opposition to the goal of resuscitating the progressive and democratic nature of the APC. As a party, we have strived to be the best, present hope for the nation. Yet, your goal appears to be something of a lesser pedigree.

    In our discussion, you personally mentioned Kogi, Kaduna, Kano and Adamawa States as places afflicted by serious party issues. Given your assessment, these were states where I believed cooperation between you and I should have been intense and detailed. Instead, you have taken it as your personal mission to thwart my presidential assignment in these key states.

    In Kogi, you rushed to the state to unilaterally inaugurate a new slate of state officials, parallel to the officials already heading the state chapter of the party.  While this may place you in significant affinity with those parallel officials you handpicked, this machination suggests no improvement in the welfare of the party in Kogi or at the national level.  This usurpation of authority exacerbates conflict and confusion; it does not resolve them.

    It is my understanding that your dissolution of the duly- constituted state executives and the hurried naming of the above-mentioned caretaker group was not approved by the NWC. This arrogation of power sets you at variance with members of the NWC as evidenced by National Publicity Secretary Malam Bolaji Abdullahi’s statement, condemning your improper and unusual action.

    You had let this situation fester for months on end. Only when I was appointed to help resolve internal disputes and when you realised I might focus early on Kogi, did you stir from your indifference and inaction. You could have wisely and prudently treated this matter beforehand. By waiting to the last moment, your unilateral action was implemented in haste and unbalanced in thought.  By creating a parallel body, you not only acted improperly, you grew a second problem from the stem where previously there had sprouted but one.

    The Kaduna State chapter apparently has been troubled by disputes over who the party recognises as acting chairman for the state.  The dispute has at times degenerated to the point where there purportedly has been demolition of property and the threat of violence.

    This eruptive state of affairs is a direct and proximate result of the inability of the party under your leadership to follow the dictates of the party constitution and regulations to arrive at a result that all may agree was rendered objectively, in harmony with the principles by which this party was founded.

    While everyone may not be pleased with the result, all contestants would acknowledge that the process had been fair and neutral. In this way, rancour is contained and reconciliation more easily achieved.

    Because this matter has been left to fester, positions have hardened and intrigue and animosity are more the authors of the day than unity, compromise and cooperation. It is always better to repair the crack before it becomes a hole and the hole before it becomes a gap. You did neither in this instance. Yet, you lifted not a finger to honour your vow to provide information and contacts to help me do this important repair.

    After my interaction with the NWC and given the urgency of the work needed to mend and heal the party, you should have presented the status reports on state party chapters as promised, and certainly without much delay.  Your reportage is vital to my work. Your delay in not reporting on a single state chapter now delays and threatens my assignment.

    Mr. Chairman, I cannot overstate the imperatives of time in this regard just as I cannot overstate the need for cooperation and to work in accordance with the formal rules and ways of our party.

    Yet, something else is afoot and I must draw attention to it so that we can end the malpractice before it impairs the party and my assignment any further.  Drawing from your behaviour in Kogi, Kaduna and with regard to the state chapter assessment requested, I am led to the inference that you have no intention of actually supporting my assignment.

    Instead, you apparently seek to undermine my mandate by engaging in dilatory tactics for the most part. When forced to act, you do so in an arbitrary and capricious manner, without the counsel of other NWC members and without regard to our internal procedures.

    You may have personal qualms with me. That is your right as a human being. However, you have no such right as the chairman of this party. This party belongs to all of its members. You have no greater claim on it than any of the rest of us. Whatever personal qualms you may have with me are secondary at this point.  You have a moral and professional obligation as the party chairman to act in the party’s best interests. Your hurried and unilateral actions belie the important agency you hold for the party.

    Thus, in furtherance of the assignment given to me by President Buhari, I request that you make available to me the status reports and all other pertinent information regarding the state chapters without further delay.

    Also, to lessen animosity and return the party to the path of internal democracy and openness, I beg that you refrain from taking any more improper unilateral decisions with regard to the national and state chapters of the party.  As the chairman of the party, you must work within the confines of the duties and responsibilities enumerated under the party constitution. You must not stretch beyond them.

    If you continue to do so, I fear you may undermine the party in no small degree. You may well cause internal fractures and dissension difficult to repair yet visible to all.  I fear this can undermine our goodwill with the electorate and make the approaching challenges to the party materially more difficult than they need to be.

    As chairman of this party, you should not want this to be your legacy. As a member of this party from its inception, I don’t want this to happen to the party and I don’t want such an awful thing to be your legacy.

  • ‘Why Tinubu is best leader to reconcile APC chieftains’

    ‘Why Tinubu is best leader to reconcile APC chieftains’

    As the debate on whether President Muhammadu Buhari should seek re-election continues, Imo State Chief of Staff and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Ugwumba Uche Nwosu, spoke with reporters in Lagos on the importance of a second term for the president, the succession battle in the Southeast state and why Asiwaju Bola Tinubu is the best party leader to reconcile aggrieved APC members. PAUL UKPABIO was there.

    Are you of the opinion that the President should run again?

    I think that most people tend to forget that one’s destiny is not in another’s hand. Your destiny depends on what God says you will become. President Muhammadu Buhari is qualified, very much ready and eager to continue to be the president of Nigeria in 2019. So, I don’t see the reason why somebody will make a remark and it will be binding on the person the remark was made about. I don’t see any reason President Buhari should not contest election in 2019. As I had said in previous interviews, there is no president in the history of the Federal Republic of Nigeria that has fought corruption to bring back the image and integrity of the country. Most people might say that they are not seeing physically what the President is doing; these people should know that it took the PDP 15 years to destroy this nation and only four years will not be enough for President Buhari to do so.

    The president has begun the process of putting things in order. But it will take him some time. It is like pouring a cup of sand into a bag of rice; it will take time to sieve the rice from the sand. So, for those of us who are ardent supporters of President Buhari, we don’t see any reason he should not contest the 2019 election. For me, I will support President Buhari. And my governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha, also believes in him. President Buhari, at this time in the country, is the man we need to strengthen this platform so that the man that will be coming after him in 2023 as president will stand on a solid foundation and this country will continue to move forward.

    Buhari is eminently qualified to run again, and his destiny is in the hand of God, not any man. He is still the best that the country and our great party, the APC, needs in 2019. The president should run again and we will support him.

    But, considering that many Nigerians are hungry and angry, do you think Nigerians will still come out to support the President and your party like they did in 2015?

    You see when someone makes a remark and you generalise it to mean the whole of Nigeria, I don’t think it is right. When you say hunger, who brought us to this point? Who brought hunger to Nigeria? Was it President Muhammadu Buhari? No, it was the PDP. I don’t know if you have forgotten that a single individual in this country was caught with billions of naira, dollar and pounds. Was it President Buhari that took these monies outside the country? Was it President Buhari that hid these monies inside his house? No. These are the people that destroyed this country before President Buhari came in.

    Today, many things are changing for the better. For instance, we were not producing rice before, but today, we are producing rice in so many states of the federation. The other time, people were crying about recession; do we still have recession now? No. Recession is over. So, it will take some little time for President Buhari to stabilise the country. I have no fear that this country will be better again, because it took 15 years for the party called PDP to destroy it, and Buhari is working tirelessly to fix it back. So, I can bet you that President Buhari will again win convincingly in the 2019 presidential election. You can see this from some of the places he has visited recently in the North and the mammoth crowd that came out to receive him. So, Buhari is not somebody you can just make a remark about in the newspaper on the radio or the TV and think that is the way to go. Nigerian politics has changed. The people want somebody who will remember that they are there, and not somebody who will just be busy on the radio and TV blowing grammar.

    When you look at President Buhari, you will see that Buharism is running in him. So, it takes a man of integrity like the president for people to believe in him. He has high integrity because he is not corrupt. So, let us wait till 2019. But I can tell you straight away that President Buhari is winning in a landslide in 2019. There is no doubt about that.

    President Buhari recently appointed Asiwaju Bola Tinubu as the chairman of the APC Reconciliatory Committee. But many Nigerians believe it is a difficult task, going by the number of feuds in your party. Do you think that Tinubu can deliver on this assignment?

    I have no doubt that His Excellency Senator Bola Tinubu will handle this assignment very well. You know he is one of the leaders of our party, and he is widely respected in the country. He is a man that knows how to settle problems, especially when it comes to issues of political parties. I have no doubt in my mind that President Buhari made the right choice in choosing Asiwaju Tinubu for this very important assignment. He has the capacity to bring together again the different factions in states like Kano and Rivers, among others. So I don’t have any problem in His Excellency, the former governor of Lagos State, Bola Tinubu handling the assignment. In fact, this is what our party needs at this point in time. It is what is needed in any political party, particularly when the political party is in power.

    It is normal for parties to have internal quarrels, but the good thing is to settle them and move ahead. Asiwaju (Tinubu) will do the job very well, and we believe that his team will at the end of the day bring back every member to one family, the APC.

    Some people believe that Tinubu will have a difficult task when he comes to Imo trying to reconcile the state’s Abuja politicians who are not in good terms with those that are based the state and who have the backing of Governor Okorocha…

    I don’t think that we have any faction in Imo State. We have one political family and that is the APC, which Owelle Rochas Okorocha is the leader. So, if there is any other Abuja APC or whatever, I don’t know about that. Remember that you don’t win an election in Abuja; you win an election in the state. If you are an APC leader in Abuja, then you better vie for election there. There is no faction in APC in Imo State. We have one family. So, Imo State is not one of the states that Senator Bola Tinubu will come to, because we don’t have any problem in the state.

    Recently, Governor Okorocha announced that he would support the Commissioner for Information, Prof Nnamdi Obiaraeri, for the Okigwe Senatorial seat instead of the incumbent Senator Benjamin Uwajumogu, and this is raising some dust. Is this not a part of the feuds Senator Tinubu will have to settle?

    No, nobody has driven Senator Uwajumogu away from the party. He is the senator representing the Okigwe zone, but the governor has the right to say, ‘this is the person I want to support.’ But that does not mean that any other person from that zone will not choose who he or she will support. It is a democracy. Everyone has the right to support a candidate of his choice like the governor did. Of course, if there are 600,000 persons in Okigwe zone and 400,000 say it is Ben Uwajumogu, the governor will not change it. And if they say it is this particular person, nobody will change it. So, the governor has the right to say this is the person I want to support, like other people would also do.

    But all of us in the APC, when we get to the party’s primary, whoever wins the primary will represent the party. The governor has only said this is the person I think can represent this senatorial zone very well. There may be other people too who may think that Ben will represent them very well. So, when they get to the field, whoever wins will take the day. I don’t think this is a problem. You will discover that apart from the person the governor said he would support, at the end of the day, you may see up to 20 to 30 other persons running for the same position in the zone.

    The Rescue Mission programme of the governor will be coming to an end by next year. Do you think that the budget presented by Governor Okorocha for this year would effectively complete this programme?

    Very well. We believe that by May 2019, His Excellency will be handing over to the next governor completed projects which he started in 2011 to 2019. So we don’t have any doubt in our mind that His Excellency will finish the projects he has started. He will be handing over clean, completed projects to anybody that will come in as the next governor of Imo State.

    What is your next political destination in the state? Is it the governorship?

    Many people have asked me this question and I have seen a lot of endorsements coming from the APC, from the youths, from women, from different groups. I want to appreciate and thank each and every one of them for indicating their interests and urging me to come out to run for the 2019 governorship election in Imo State. I want to believe that this is coming from their hearts and because of the love they have for me. Year 2019 is fast approaching, but for now, we have a governor. By 2019, I will know where God will take me to. But for now, His Excellency Owelle Rochas Okorocha is still our governor, and I have also told him that in a short time, I will come out and make my intention known to everybody.

    Meanwhile, I have to give it to the youths of Imo State. Left for them, they would have opened my mouth and make the declaration on my behalf. But I want to assure them that I will not disappoint or let them down. At the right time and very soon, I will make it known to everybody. It is not something to fear or worry about. Where we are going to, God has already destined it and I don’t think that any man can change it. What God has made, nobody can unmake it. So, 2019 will be 2019.

    But, if the APC gives you its ticket, many in Imo think this will run against the Imo Charter of Equity, particularly as the Orlu zone has held power already for 16 years through Achike Udenwa and Rochas Okorocha. Do you think the Okigwe and Owerri zones will allow another eight years of the Orlu zone through your candidacy?

    When you say zone, I wonder what zone you are talking about. And when you say equity, I wonder also what you mean by equity. You know the greatest problem in this country is this issue of zoning. And when you talk about zoning, my own federal constituency, my own local government area has never produced the governor of this state. Have we produced the governor of the state? Has the governorship been zoned to my local government area? Has it been zoned to my federal constituency? Has it been zoned to the other federal constituencies like Ngor Okpalla, Okigwe, Ihitte Uboma and others? This is the question we should be asking ourselves.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Akinwunmi Ishola’s death huge loss, says Tinubu

    Akinwunmi Ishola’s death huge loss, says Tinubu

    All Progressives Congress National Leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, has described the death of playwright, author and culture activist Prof. Akinwunmi Isola, as a huge loss.

    In a statement by his Media adviser Tunde Rahman, the former Lagos State Governor said:  ”The death of Prof. Akinwunmi Ishola saddens me. It is a huge loss.

    “Prof. Ishola earned reputation for his writing and work in the promotion of Yoruba language. To his credit are many celebrated works like Efunsetan Aniwura, Oleku, Kosegbe, Saworoide and Agogo Eewo

    “Coming not too long after the death of Alagba Adebayo Faleti, we have lost another Yoruba literary scholar and culture icon.

    “Though late Prof. Ishola was younger, both of them were like Siamese Twins. Both were playwrights and authors. Both worked relentlessly for the promotion of Yoruba culture and tradition.

    “Alagba Faleti was born in Agbo-Oye in Oyo State and Prof. Ishola in the capital, Ibadan, both earned their stripes and lived in Ibadan.

    “I commiserate with the family of Prof. Ishola for this loss. I mourn with Gov. Abiola Ajimobi. May the soul of Prof. Ishola rest in peace, “ he said.

    Prof Ishola died on Saturday at the age of 79.

  • Why Tinubu’s assignment is crucial, by APC chiefs

    Why Tinubu’s assignment is crucial, by APC chiefs

    Senator representing Kaduna Central Shehu Sani has warned that avoidable doom awaits the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the 2019 polls,  should Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu fail to reconcile aggrieved members.

    This came as Kaduna State APC governorship aspirant Alhaji Sani Sha’aban said the strength of any political party depends on its mechanism for resolving internal crisis.

    Sha’aban hailed President Muhammadu Buhari for appointing Tinubu to chair the reconciliation committee.

    Sani, a chieftain of APC and chairman of Senate Committee on Foreign and Local Debt, spoke yesterday with reporters in Abuja.

    It was his own reaction to Tinubu’s appointment by Buhari to lead the APC team of consultation, reconciliation and confidence-building.

    Tinubu’s assignment, among others, is to forge cohesion within the APC ahead of the 2019 general election. It involves resolving disagreements among party members and leaders.

    It also involves reconciling political office holders in some APC-controlled states and addressing crises in the party’s chapters in Kano, Kogi, Kaduna, Bauchi and other states.

    “It is going to be a tragedy if he fails. This is what I know and I can speak in parables,” said Sani, who has not been in a good relationship with his Governor Ahmed Nasir El-Rufai.

    According to him, the Kaduna State governor has pocketed the party and wants to impose his will and unleash terror on members, by exploiting his proximity to the President.

    He said Tinubu´s appointment has halted, for now, the defection of most APC members to other political parties.

    Sani said it was no more news that the APC was faced with crises in some states where it holds sway, adding that the crises have defied solutions for over two years.

    The senator noted that efforts made in the past have failed to address the multi-state crises.

    Sani while confirming that the Kaduna State chapter of the party is now having a parallel executive, said it was left for the Tinubu team to address the situation before it gets out of hand.

    “It is left for Asiwaju to build the bridges. Lagos is known for bridges; therefore, we hope that there will be Seventh Mainland Bridge to connect the divide, but we are not sure of this.

    “Right now, the party is already divided in Kaduna and it is for the national secretariat to note this and we have said it in clear terms,” he said.

    Sani advised the Tinubu reconciliation team not to take sides but to give equal treatment, especially as far as Kaduna state is concerned, in the interest of the party and its members.

    He noted that the PDP was not destroyed from the outside, but from the inside, adding that it was the marginalised and oppressed elements within the party that became the final nail on its coffin.

    Sha’aban, an ex-member of the House of Representatives, who spoke in Zaria, Kaduna State, said crisis in a political party was an ingredient of democracy, adding that politics was all about solving crisis.

    “Therefore, crisis in political parties is normal but it all depends on how best a party resolves such crisis,” he said.

    He said:  “Chief Tinubu is capable and suitable for the post. I am confident that he will definitely deliver the goods successfully.”

    On his political ambition, Sha’aban said his politics always incline toward the masses, identifying their needs and devising measures to address such problems.