Tag: vote

  • ‘We’ll vote for Buhari if he contests’

    The Southeast Elders Council has promised to vote for President Mohammadu Buhari in 2019 if he contests.

    Their decision, they said, is because the All Progressives Congress (APC) government has done well in fighting corruption and the Boko Haram insurgency.

    Chairman of the forum and former President-General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo Dozie Ikedife addressed reporters yesterday at Nnewi, Anambra State.

    Ikedife said the resolution was taken during the forum’s meeting in Enugu.

    He said: “Southeast Elders Forum is prepared to support President Muhammadu Buhari for a second term if he contests.”

    The forum also urged the president not to relent in his fight against corruption.

    According to him, the All Progressives Congress-led Federal Government under Buhari has done well in its fight against corruption and Boko Haram insurgents and so the President should be allowed to consolidate the “good work” he started.

  • 2019: A vote for generational shift

    2019: A vote for generational shift

    As the country warms up for the 2019 general elections, Correspondent HANNAH OJO highlights the factors underlying the agitation by youths for roles in governance.

    Former Vice Prresident Atiku Abubarkar stirred the hornet’s nest in a recent Facebook live chat where he described his return to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) as a calculated move to save the future of Nigeria by creating jobs for the teeming youth population, should he become president come 2019.

    No sooner had he began to speak in a tempered voice that a barrage of comments filtered in from young people. A Facebook user, Excellent Emechebe, threw a salvo at the presidential aspirant asking why the famed politician could not pass his  ambition to a younger person. “You are too old. This is another Buhari in disguise,” Emechebe said. Following in line was another young man, Aziza Uko Douglas who fired a retort: “If you care about the youths so much, at 70, you wouldn’t want to run for president. You would look for a much younger person who is qualified with a vision and put your support behind that person”.

    As the 10-minute live session which generated 9004 comments progressed, it became glaring that the youths are frustrated by their marginalisation in the democratic process. Agitations appear to be growing among young people who are protesting the unwritten rule that defines their role in the electoral system simply as voters with handed down roles of election riggers or bag carrying personal assistants.

    When the House of Representatives passed the NotTooYoungToRun bill in the middle of the year, it was greeted with excitement. However, the snail pace of the constitutional review committee, which took some months before forwarding the bill to the Houses of Assembly soon created doubt.  It was not until some weeks back that the bill was forwarded. Following the transmission to the 36 Houses of Assembly, a minimum of 24 Houses of Assembly must sign their approval before the bill would be signed into law. Kwara and Adamawa have signed the bill into law. Youth Initiative for Advocacy and Advancement (YIAGA), a civil society group which has been putting youths in the heart of participation in the political process stated on its website that it has sent 991 personalized letters to legislators in the 36 state houses of assembly in Nigeria.

    Hamzat Lawal, an activist who is one of the front man of the campaign for young people in politics  is of the opinion that failure to pass the bill before the 2019 elections may lead to voters’ apathy from the youths’ bloc.

    “I believe that come 2019, if this bill sees the light of the day, we should aim at having a young president of the federal republic of Nigeria. I and my friend have started a campaign called TPC which is The People’s Candidate which is about taking power back to the people”, he stated.

    Also, as the campaign for young people to run for public office gathers momentum, Hamzat is also quick to condemn people who believe Nigerian Youths are not capable of being good leaders.

    “The civil society, the entertainment and tech sectors are being led by young people.  I think it is just a conspiracy to limit the potentials of young people to say that they are not ready? if you don’t even give them the opportunity, what yardstick would you use to measure their readiness?

    “If you are 18 and you are eligible to vote someone into office, you should be eligible to be voted into office. Mankind is meant to aspire and the worst thing that has happened to our generation is that we are not even allowed to aspire.

    Recalling the turn of event at a national day of action where thousands of youths marched peacefully in Borno in support of the #NotTooYoungToRun bill, Hamzat also affirmed that the eagerness with which the youths have pushed for the implementation of the bill is a sign that they are ready to take charge of leadership.

    Power, competence and previous results

    Dayo Adeniyi, a Mandela Washington fellow whose outfit, Matadors Leadership Institute has been organizing leadership training wants the #NotTooYoungToRun campaign to be focused on addressing competence and previous results, not just on wrestling power.

    “There’s an experience that could come with age so if someone is old, competent and can deliver quality service, why not? That someone is young does not mean the person will do anything different from what we have always seen. We need young, tested and competent people whose focus is on the service they can render, not the power they seek.”

    One of the factors responsible for young people’s clamour for roles in politics and governance is the unemployment rate, which stands at 14.2 per cent, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. Again, the trading of Nigerian youths in Libya who got caught up in modern day slavery after trying to escape the hardship at home could also be said to be one of the factors fueling youths’ agitation for participation in governance. Also, the EndSARS campaign on twitter which called for the scrapping of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad of the police and was followed up with a rally recently may be a signal to the fact that Nigerian youths are beginning to shift from a standpoint of activism to wrestling power from the old political class. To win the battle over gerontocracy in governance, Nigerian youths would first have to conquer the reformation of a system where power often goes to the highest bidder.

     

    Reporting done as part of BudgIT 2017 fellowship

  • ‘Obiano won on sympathy vote’

    ‘Obiano won on sympathy vote’

    The Director of Adoration Ministries, Rev. Emmanuel Uke, in this interview with reporters in Lagos, speaks on the outcome of the Anambra State governorship election. Musa Odoshimokhe was there.

    You predicted victory for Governor Willie Obiano. Are you satisfied with the outcome of the election?

    Let me start by saying that I am very happy at the outcome of the election and Anambra people are also very happy. I predicted it and when the message came, I saw Obiano emerging a winner of the contest.  But, I also saw the evil one trying to rig him out and because he stepped on the Adoration ground, we prayed against the evil intentions of the wicked ones.

    I remember what happened after the prophesy, people were calling me fake prophet just because I said what the Holy Spirit revealed to me. I told him in confidence that he will win after praying for him and he eventually won to the glory of God.

    I did not campaign for anybody. I am just the mouth piece of God. I am a priest of God; I am neither a politician nor partisan. The Church of God and the party of God is my own party. Holy Spirit endows His prophet with gifts.

    What should Obiano do after the election?

    He has seen that God and the masses love him as reflected in the election. It is now left for him to justify the vote by filling in the gap in areas he did not do well in the past three and half years. This is the time for him to re-strategize in order to make the people happy because he knows that some people are not happy with him but for me, he scored above average. He did well in the area of security and payment of workers salary and other areas. The Holy Spirit is warning him not to forget the poor masses.

    I also believe that he won the election because people are tired of imposition of candidates and godfatherism in the state. I believe that we have passed the level of godfatherism in Anambra State and that was why they gave him a sympathy vote.

    How can Peter Obi and Obiano reconcile?

    Peter Obi did wonderfully well during his administration. In fact, he was the one that handed the baton over to Willie. We believe so much in his credibility. I expect him to congratulate Willie Obiano and let love continue to lead Anambra state. Willie should also find a way of extending a hand of fellowship and love to him.

    The international best practice is to congratulate or support whoever that emerges winner for peace and unity of the country or state. For me, all the candidates should come under one roof in thanksgiving to God. It is not easy to contest for an election and I thank them for their courage.

    Obiano should keep behind all the tantrums that were thrown at him during the election. People called him names; a thief, a drunkard and so on, those things are hurting but Christ is our ideal. So, I want the governor to find a place in his heart to forgive them. This will further enhance the development of the state.

    Your assessment of the election?

    I am very happy at the peaceful conduct of the election. You know in Anambra State, people claim to be omnipotent. Some people think they can buy things over with their money. So, in this election, they were disappointed.A

  • ‘Nigerians ‘ll not vote for PDP in 2019’

    ‘Nigerians ‘ll not vote for PDP in 2019’

    Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji  Lai Mohammed, in this interview with reporters in Lagos, speaks on efforts by the Muhammadu Buhari administration to revamp the economy, Mainagate and the threats by the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) to resume bombing of oil installations. EMMANUEL OLADESU was there.

    What is your perspective on   Mainagate. Don’t you think it is a major dent on this government, especially on the anti-corruption war?

    The fact that Mr. President, immediately the issue came to his knowledge, asked for Maina’s disengagement is the most important thing.  That to me is a clear signal that we do not condone corruption. There is no better way to handle the issue than this.

    What is the Federal Government doing to revamp the economy?

    As you are very much aware, this administration’s contract with Nigerians sits on a tripod; the fight against corruption, tackling insecurity and reviving the economy. Even our worst critics acknowledge the progress we have made in fighting corruption and tackling insecurity. But one area in which they have consistently criticised us is the economy. Right from the inception of this administration, we chose the path of seeking a lasting solution to the economic crisis plaguing the nation instead of engaging in a quick fix that may attract accolades but will not endure. We chose to be painstaking instead of engaging in palliatives. I am happy to inform you today that we are winning! As you are very much aware, this administration’s contract with Nigerians sits on a tripod: the fight against corruption, tackling insecurity and reviving the economy. Even our worst critics acknowledge the progress we have made in fighting corruption and tackling insecurity. But one area in which they have consistently criticised us is the economy. Right from the inception of this administration, we chose the path of seeking a lasting solution to the economic crisis plaguing the nation instead of engaging in a quick fix that may attract accolades but will not endure. We chose to be painstaking instead of engaging in palliatives. I am happy to inform you today that we are winning! Our well-thought-out policy, encapsulated in the administration’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP), launched on April 5th 2017, is working and the results are beginning to show. In September, we exited recession and returned to the path of growth, after five consecutive quarters of contraction. As we said then, taking Nigeria out of recession did not happen by accident. It was the culmination of months of hard work by the administration and fidelity to its well-articulated economic policies. This administration will not relent in its determined effort to usher in a new dawn for Nigeria. We are winning the battle to revive the economy. We are fighting corruption like never before. We are tackling insecurity with a renewed vigour. While the naysayers, who are obviously in the minority, persist in their pastime of acting as a distraction, discerning and well-meaning Nigerians will continue to appreciate and encourage the good work of our administration.

    Some APC chieftains including  Hammed  Ali and Lauretta  Onochie have said  more than 50 percent of PDP members are still in Buhari’s government while many who worked for the APC’s victory are grumbling . What steps are you taking to address this anomaly?

    I think the president has actually explained that as early as 2015, he did direct that they should bring nominations for compilatory demands and he was very clear in his directives as to who should make the boards, who should qualify. I remembered he said anybody that are sent to you must be frontline actor in the run-up to the 2015 election. Anybody who had either contested for primaries within the party and had lost or as a consensus was asked to step down.  Anybody who either contested election either at the governorship level, national assembly or even state level against either PDP or APC and had lost. He said these are the main stakeholders in the party and are people who ought to be recommended for appointment. As you know, Mr. President himself cannot know all these people. All politics as they say is local. The president cannot know who in  Akwa Ibom for instance, contested for  National Assembly and lost against PDP or who in Borno state contested primaries for Senate with a fellow APC candidate and lost. So, I think those who are charged with that responsibility failed and that is why we are in the mess we are in now. The president has however promised that he is going to take a fresh look into it. One thing is to dissolve the boards but you can’t leave them vacant. But I believe we are going to see lots of progress in that area very soon.

    Don’t you think it is the money these PDP appointees are making in your administration they are using in fighting you?

    I wouldn’t know where they are making the money from. But clearly, in politics, they always say never empower your enemy.

    You said the president cannot know everybody who contested during the 2015 election. But there are some APC members who worked in the Presidential Campaign Team, yet they have not been compensated. Is the government looking into this?

    That is why I gave the example of governorship and national assembly. But also don’t forget, that all politics is local. If I am the chairman of Delta state APC or I am a leader in Delta state APC and I am given criteria, but I decide to bypass that criteria,  Mr. President is too busy to look into all these things. I know many states for instance  where people are complaining that it is not those who ought to be compensate that were rewarded by the government. But again, it is not possible for you to compensate everybody at the same time. Certain boards are not due for dissolution because some of them are tenured while some are governed by certain rules. Also, certain boards need specialists to manage. Like I said, the truth of the matter is that Mr. President as far back as 2015 gave this assignment to party members and they failed. They failed Mr. President. That is the honest truth, I know.

    How was the crisis between Baru and Kachikwu resolved by the government?

    To the best of my knowledge, Kachikwu made his point and Baru also did same. But the point is that over time, we have seen Baru and Kachikwu working together. However, the position of government is that you can’t start talking of fraud. There is nothing like $25b fraud in the NNPC; not in the least.  The opposition, notably the PDP felt that they have something to hold against this government.  But I can assure you that it is not possible under this administration to have a $25b fraud. The entire economy will collapse.  There is no $25b fraud.  Yes, there could have been lack of communications, understanding and procedures but  I think all that has been put behind us.

    After two and half years, APC finally held its NEC and Caucus meetings which by your constitution ought to have taken place a long time ago. Was it due to pressure or the party has now gotten its acts right?

    Frankly, speaking, there is no party that came to power like the APC that is not bound to have the kind of challenge that we have today. If you go back to the ANC in those days and even what ANC is facing today, our case is like we are a rainbow party. People often forget that APC didn’t come through today until 31st of July 2013.

    APC did not elect its executive council until June 2014. Within two weeks of the election of the executives, we had to face election; first in Ekiti and then few months later, in Osun.  If you look at  APC, it was made up of disparate political parties- ANPP,CPC, ACN, DPP, part of PDP and part of APGA. It takes time for these to gel and for them to work together as a party.

    Within eight months of being a political party, we had to face election and when we won this election, some members of APC had not even known one another or sat down together with one another. So, the hiccups that we experienced were normal.

    Before we could settle down, our first test was election of National Assembly leadership which showed the political faultlines of the party.  But we thank God, we are gradually mending all those fences. The party is working more together as a group. The major gladiators are back on the same page as you can see from what transpired during the caucus meeting and the NEC meeting.

    Are you afraid that your government may not go beyond 2019 and the PDP may regain power as the ruling party?

    As to whether we are afraid of whether we are afraid of the PDP staging a comeback, I can confidently tell you that we are not even contemplating it.  It will be a tragedy for Nigeria to fall back into the hands of PDP.  They dropped us in hell and we are taking people out of hell.  How can Nigeria now go back to Egypt?

    It is not about APC or President Buhari. With the kind of revelation that is coming out, the kind of rot, you want those people to come back and preside over the affairs of Nigeria again? What will happen to the investigations that were carried out if the PDP should win elections again?  It will be swept under the carpet. This is the first time in the history of this country that we  are making real recoveries. Only three days ago, we signed an MOU with the Swiss government to return $321m that was stolen from the country. This is the first time this country is actually looking at our problem from a realistic and pragmatic viewpoint.  We are not talking of what we are going to achieve in two years or three years. We are talking about laying a solid foundation for a Nigeria that our children will be able to thrive. Unfortunately, the reform agenda is always longer than the political agenda. In many parts of the world, they plan for 10, 15, 20 years. Nobody plans for 4 years. When you look at our MTEF, we are talking about 2020 even though we know that there may be a change of administration depending on the outcome of the presidential election.  But you do not think in the short term. Nigeria should never ever pray for PDP to come back.

    When we negotiated with the Swiss government to return Abacha’s loot, they gave us some conditions. One of which is that we must identify what programmed we want to use the money for and that the World Bank will supervise what we are using the money for. When we now argue that we are a sovereign country and that they can’t dictate to us how we are going to spend money that was stolen from our country and they are returning, they said ‘yes, but when we returned part of it to your country, you relooted it under Jonathan; which is true.

    You are the face of APC and the mouthpiece of the Federal Government. How do you feel when you say something and issue statements and people keep saying it is a lie?

    I have two burdens. The first is that I happen to be the face of the opposition and PDP has not forgiven me and they will never forgive me. I think they look at the magnitude of what has happened to them and they hold me solely responsible; which is not fair.  But, I did my bit. Now becoming the face of government again, so it is automatic that whatever comes from Lai Mohammed, we must shoot it down as fake news and a lie. Unfortunately, my father gave me the name Lai also. So, it makes it very easy for them. But what I challenge them every time is please, give me one thing I said that is not true. Emotionally, you may not agree with me but in terms of facts and figures, I have never said anything which they can dispute.  You don’t have to like it but you can’t deny that they are facts.

    Are you not worried about the recent threats by the Niger Delta Avengers to return to the creeks and destroy oil installations?

    Of course, we are very worried about it because if the avengers should start destroying our oil installations, it is going to bring the country back to its knees. And that is why we are appealing to them. We have not breached any agreement with them and we will rather appeal to them to understand that there is more to gain by all sides in engaging than in going back to the trenches. Even power has improved in the Niger Delta. Infrastructure has improved. Contractors can now go and work there. We are talking of University of Maritime Technology in the Niger Delta, Second Niger bridge and East- West road. I think what they are fighting for will be achieved much more if there is peace and we will continue our engagements with them because it will not be in the interest of anybody to have crisis.

  • ‘Anambra ‘ll vote for Obiano’

    ‘Anambra ‘ll vote for Obiano’

    Chief Joseph Okonkwo is the former Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Anambra State. He is supporting the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) governorship candidate, Governor Willie Obiano. In this interview with reporters in Enugwu-Ukwu, he speaks on the governor’s re-election bid. Nwanosike Onu was there.

    WhaT is your assessment of the political party taken part in the election?

    Let me tell you right away that the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) is the only party genuinely contesting this election. It is the only party with a legitimate candidate. The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC) are gold diggers in the November 18, governorship election. They are being sponsored by godfathers. In the PDP, a former governor of the state who is a new joiner, a fresh member so to say brought his foster son and school mate at Christ the King College (CKC) Onitsha to join him hijack PDP. He has made him the party’s candidate in the election, but from all indications, they have not officially joined the party as I learnt. So, both the party’s governorship candidate and his deputy including their financier hijacked the primaries of PDP to the annoyance of original members. They have caused the disintegration of PDP in Anambra State as I speak. There is now the senator Annie Okonkwo and his group, the Dr. Alex Obiogbolu faction which have ended up in court over the same reasons. You now see that the PDP will be going into the election factionalised and disintegrated. How can a house divided against itself stand? As for the APC, some principal actors in that party led the burning of Anambra state during the reign of Dr. Chris Ngige as governor. They also abducted him. By our efforts then, myself and Igwe Peter Anugwu of Mbaukwu, Ngige secured his freedom at choice hotel in Awka where we disperse the hoodlums and brigands who burnt the state down.

    Could you shed light on the N7.5b election fund?

    You see, shortly after he left office, former Governor Peter Obi came to my house in Abuja to complain to me how he spent the sum of N7.5b on Obiano in 2013 to make him governor for which he needed a refund, but which Obiano was not yielding to. I was sort of taken a back and I asked him a few questions. How come this claim, I asked him. He repeated in my own house in Abuja the N7.5b. I then reminded him that when he was aspiring to be governor in 2003, I was one of the few people he approached. In fact, he visited my home in Enugu with drinks in company of one Oscar Onwudiwe from Ogbunike and Chukwudi Okafor from Enugwu-Ukwu, my home town. He gave me his manifesto and told me his ambition while soliciting my help and advice as a political “guru” in the state as he said who knows Anambra State in and out. So, when he sought to contest, I thought he was genuine having told me his brother and sister were reverend father and sister in the Catholic Church. In fact, I felt he was coming from a religious background. But at a stage as we talked, I found that he ran out of money with which to prosecute his ambition and had to rely on friends some of who are businessmen from Anambra resident in Lagos. It was then I also found that he was indebted to some banks. So, when he made this claim of N7.5b, he spent on Obiano to make him governor, I asked how come knowing that before you won the election you were not buoyant again. You see, after he was sworn-in as governor, because of his low profile style, little did we know until we got the information that he was taking a security vote of N1.5b, and later N2b. Again, when he forcefully took over public lands in Onitsha and forced the original owners out with the excuse that he was brining in a brewery, these people that brew “Hero Beer” in the name of the state, little did we know that it was a personal investment against what he told us. So what I am trying to say is that he lacked the moral rectitude to attack Obiano who is clean and a perfect gentleman saying he refused to repay N7.5b spent on him during the 2013 governorship elections if he did.

    But, these things you just said have not explained what transpired in your house at Abuja when he came complaining to you about the money and Obiano’s refusal to reimburse him…

    When he told me Obiano owned him N7.5b and sought my help to recover it, I asked him how he got that kind of money when I know that before he became governor he was indebted to some individuals and banks. He didn’t answer me the question but said that I was insulting him because he came to my house and stormed out. But I told him that I won’t be a party to fleecing the people of the state the sum of N7.5m if ever he spent it. Obiano is using that money prudentially to build bridges in Awka and some other places which is visible, pay salaries which some states can’t, provide security, build roads and revolutionise agriculture and we are happy for that. But I know that Obi didn’t spend that kind of money on anybody if you knew him very well.

  • NLC to workers: vote out governors owing salaries

    NLC to workers: vote out governors owing salaries

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has urged workers to vote out governors who are owing salaries.  It has advised its members to get their voters’ cards ready for the next election.

    Its President, Ayuba Wabba, who was in Benue State to support the workers in their battle against unpaid wages, said workers would be taking their destiny in their hands, if they registered and voted wisely.

    He urged the workers and their families to ensure that they obtained voters’ registration cards.

    He said most governors believed that workers did not vote, and that this explained the shabby treatment meted out to them.

    Wabba told Benue workers that experience had shown that governments were not ready to pay salaries and pensions without a fight, adding that it was up to them to do the needful to get their salaries and pensions regularly.

    A delegation led by Wabba, was in Makurdi, the Benue State Capital, in solidarity with the workers at the end of their one week warning strike against non-payment of salaries, pensions and gratuities.

    The NLC chair described Benue, with a record of seven months of non-payment of salaries in ministries and parastatals, 11 months in  local governments and teaching institutions, and 13 months of pension arrears, as the worst in the country.

    Wabba further said Congress could no longer fold its arms while the workers were being maltreated.

    He condemned the refusal of the the government to pay the workers after collecting bail-out funds.

    The labour leader said though  some states had met salary and pension obligations to their workers and pensioners, the Benue government had been indifferent.

    Wabba said: “The wilful act of the government was illegal as it violated all known rules of employment, callous, morally reprehensible and a betrayal of the trust of workers and pensioners who had voted the government into office.

    “In the light of the pains and indescribable suffering brought upon the workers, pensioners and their families, congress had no hesitation in giving full support to any lawful action including a full strike action, in pursuit of their salaries, pensions and gratuities.”

    He urged the workers and pensioners to remain united and not allow officials of the government or anyone to distract them from their objectives.

    Wabba said the NLC resolved that it would take steps to mobilise all workers for effective action to defend their interests.

  • Fashola fails to vote

    Fashola fails to vote

    •’I was on ministerial assignment’

    Constituency members waited in vain at the weekend at the State Senior Grammar School, Itolo, in Surulere Local Government area where former Minister of Power Works and Housing and immediate past Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola was billed to vote in the local government election.

    But he failed to arrive until the ballot was closed at Ward G3 Unit 002.

    Party members complained that apart from not seeing him to vote, he did not mobilise for the party ahead of the election.

    Some APC stalwarts also said the former governor ought to have led by example by showing up in Lagos to cast his vote as other top leaders of the party.

    Apart from National Stalwart Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, who voted in Ikeja and Governor Alinwunmi Ambode who voted in Epe, octogenarian first Civilian Governor Lateef Jakande also braved the inclement weather to cast his ballot Ilupeju.

    Senators Oluremi Tinubu, Gbenga Ashafa, Olamilekan Solomon and Speaker Mudashiru Obasa, federal lawmakers and appointees like Abike Dabiri-Erewa also voted.

    A government official also observed that Fashola did not show up at any of the event organised by the Ambode administration to celebrate Lagos State at 50.

    Reacting, Fashola’s media aide, Hakeem Bello said the Minister of Works, Land and Housing was on ministerial assignments.

    “The ministry was hosting the National Council on Works meetings in Abuja. He has some other engagements. He was in Abuja for some ministerial responsibilities too. The event involved Commissioners for Works across the federation,” he said.

  • Lagos Polls: Don’t complain if you didn’t vote, says Remi Tinubu

    Lagos Polls: Don’t complain if you didn’t vote, says Remi Tinubu

    Senactor Oluremi Tinubu on Saturday said that eligible voters in Lagos State who did not cast their votes in the local government elections would not be justified to complain against local councils. Oluremi, representing Lagos Central, said this in Lagos in an interview with journalists in her residence in Bourdillon, Ikoyi. The wife of a former Governor of the State and National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, Chief Bola Tinubu, spoke with newsmen after casting her vote. “This is the time to show solidarity for the government; we believe that this government is working; this is the time that everybody should perform his/her civic duty,’’ she said. The senator said that voting was a way to hold governments accountable. “It is not for you but for your generation yet unborn so that things can be put in place. “We have set the standard in Lagos; every elected candidate does not have any choice but to work,’’ she said. She said that she had been working as a people’s representative for the past six years and would continue to do so till the end of her tenure. Mrs Tinubu commended the Lagos State Independent Electoral Commission (LASIEC) for efforts in conducting the polls. “LASIEC has done well; security personnel are on ground ensuring that there is peace and order.’’ Also, the Secretary to the Lagos State Government, Mr Tunji Bello, who voted at Ward E, Olonade Street, Yaba LGA, commended voters who turned out in spite of the downpour. “Voters have shown support for democracy by coming to vote in spite of the rain. “Starting the election behind schedule is understandable due to the downpour; it is impressive. “I believe that APC will carry the day,’’ he said. Mr Jide Jimoh, representing Lagos Mainland in the House of Representatives, told journalists that the elections had been peaceful. “The election process is fantastic so far, and I commend the Lagos State Commissioner of Police for that. “I won’t want to make any judgment on LASIEC because we are just starting. Taking off does not matter; it is landing that is the most important thing. “We have taken off; at the end of the day, we will see the result. I expect a positive result,’’ he said. (NAN)

  • NLC to workers: prepare to vote out public officers

    NLC to workers: prepare to vote out public officers

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has called on workers to obtain their voter card with a view to voting out anti-labour public officers, who contribute to non-payment of salaries across the states.

    Its President, AyubaWabba, who stated this in Abuja, while reacting to the complaints of non-payment of salaries by local government workers through the National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE)President, Ibrahim Khaleel, urged workers to vote out political office holders who oppose minimum wage.

    His words: “We must prepare to vote out governors or any political officer holder, who is refusing to pay us salary. We must continue to lament. We have the power, so we must use it this time. Workers, pensioners and their households, who are in one way or the other suffering the inhumane treatment of non-payment of workers’ wages, must be voted out of office in the next election.”

    He urged unions and workers to unite for a vibrant struggle against oppressive employers, adding: “Every member of the labour movement, irrespective of the union, must understand that it is only in unity that we can achieve our objective.

    “Therefore, we all must in solidarity play our part in order to achieve success. So, commitment, which,  of course, will bring us to working together, is the key.

    “And every leader, no matter the union or association in the labour movement, must consciously see the welfare of its members as very essential in all we do. It is, therefore, important that anytime we have a need for national action, all affiliates must deem it sacrosanct to mobilise their members for such action.”

    Also, Wabba stressed the importance of local government autonomy, saying: ‘’Local government areas are very important to the social-economic welfare of every citizen in Nigeria, because we all come from one LGA or the other. So, granting autonomy to LGA system in the country will in so many ways make things better for us all. In fact, it will pay the political elite a lot if they strengthen development in LGAs. Both influxes of people from rural areas to the urban cities and other vices that accompany rural-urban migration will drastically reduce’’

    Khaleel, who appreciated the leadership of NLC for initiating the familiarisation visits, urged the  the Congress to strengthen its relationship with affiliates and see all of them as important aspects of NLC’s existence.

    He further stressed that capacity building and inclusiveness are crucial in the effort of the NLC to survive the challenges ahead and succeed as an umbrella body of labour movement, which every other union and association should look up to and run to in times of need.

    While he expressed worries about the persistent trend of non-payment of salaries, especially to local government council workers, he said the N6,000 minimum wage, which the Zamfara State Government has continued to pay its workers was worrisome and shameful.

    He then called on the NLC to specifically intervene in cases involving the NLC Chairperson in Ogun State and the state government, and the seizing of Akwa Ibom State’s NULGE chapter’s check-off dues for five months by the state.

  • Group passes confidence vote on Okorocha

    Group passes confidence vote on Okorocha

    As critics slam the leadership style of Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha, a group Ndi Imo in Lagos whose members are indigenous to the state, has described such criticisms as mere distractions from the opposition and those who have no access to the state’s treasury to pilfer as was the case in the past.

    Rising from their monthly meeting held at the Lagos State Igbo Community Centre, Okota Lagos, members of the group noted that critics of the policies and programmes of the governor were ignorant of the impressive achievements recorded by the All Progressives Congress (APC) administration in Imo State.

    “Within few years in office, Governor Okorocha has achieved laudable, dramatic, and exhilarating changes at all levels of government, in all strata of the state and in every nook and cranny of society. The Rochas’ fame for good governance is applauded by an anonymous many even beyond his state. He has, in a positive manner, touched the lives of the common man to the chagrin of his opponents,” they said.

    The group further noted that Rochas is the man the people wanted, adding that he is fulfilling his campaign promises to the people.

    “Governor Okorocha is a man who wants to enhance the welfare of the downtrodden. Every technocrat in Imo  State had maintained that free and compulsory education is not possible but he has proved them wrong by providing free and compulsory education for the people,” they said.

    On infrastructural development, Ndi Imo in Lagos maintained that Okorocha has performed wonderfully well.

    “Consider the number of roads being opened in just few years. It’s incredible and unheard of in any state in Nigeria. People are asking where the money is coming from.  Imo State has enough money to do whatever it wants to do. The unfortunate thing is that previous administrations had been siphoning the money meant for development and taking care of the welfare of the so-called godfathers who take enormous share of the state’s funds every month.

    “Rochas has no godfathers except the Almighty God. He is really God-send because he is doing things the way the people want them done,” they said.

    The group regretted that unnecessary criticisms in Imo State against all serving and former governors of Imo State was as a result of business men in the state who indulge in partisan politics.

    In other states, the group said, business men do not indulge in partisan politics; rather they sponsor those who are interested in politics. They also stated that “Rochas Okorocha has done so well more than any other previous governor of the state which some of us have witnessed when we had visited Imo State in various times.”

    On issues of pensioners and workers owed months of salaries, the group maintained that “the impression being created that pensioners and workers were not paid was  erroneous based on our interactions with some of the workers. Pensioners have been paid and are happy for having substantial amount of money to start up tangible businesses.”

    Explaining how Governor Okorocha struck a positive deal with pensioners, the Special Assistant to Imo State Governor on Liaison/Liaison Officer Imo State Liaison Office, Lagos, Nze Steve Asimobi said: “Having considered the huge amount of money owed to pensioners by previous administrations, Governor Okorocha summoned the pensioners for a meeting where he discussed with them the possibility of giving them 40 per cent of the backlog of pension arrears owed them by previous administrations while they continue to receive their current monthly pension every month. They agreed, not out of coercion but after many meetings even at ward levels of the concerned pensioners.”

    Continuing, the Liaison Officer said: “Governor Okorocha is making giant strides to enhance the economy of the state, noting that some moribund industries have been revitalised. He also revealed that Imo Airport has been approved as an international cargo airport.

    “In the circumstances, Governor Okorocha, in his determination to ameliorate the sufferings of Southeast traders, has acquired five cargo aircraft to enable them to bring their goods straight to Imo State instead of going through other states.

    “Imo Air, he said, will be operated by Dana Air.

    “Again, the dilapidated Imo Concorde Hotel has been revived and it’s fully functional.”

    Along Aba Road, he said, there are many industries that are springing up which will provide employment opportunities for Imo people.

    The group also noted that it was not correct that Governor Okorocha had sold off most of the parastastals in the state, even as they said some of the parastatals such as Imo Transport Corporation and Imo State Water Corporation were concessioned to some agencies for efficiency and they are working hard to make them efficient, even as they are paying members of their staff.

    On security, Ndi Imo in Lagos noted that Imo people can now sleep with their two eyes closed, in contradistinction to what used to be. They revealed that Governor Okorocha had put in place serious security plans that made criminals to flee the state.

    They stated that “there are still few isolated cases of kidnap and robbery, Imo Security Network has been able to checkmate the activities of criminals. Robbery and other related vices have drastically reduced.”

    The group advised Ndi Imo back home to draw a line between politicking and governance. Mingling politics and governance, they said,  should be consigned to the trash can of history in 2019.

    On the mandate for every local government to construct 15 kilometre roads, the group noted that: “If all the 27 local governments construct 15 kilometre roads, it will ensure rapid development.

    However, while one may admit that some roads in the grassroots lack quality or standards due to lack of commitment to job specifications on the part of some contractors, it is incontrovertible that no government in Imo State has opened more roads than Okorocha’s administration.