Thursday, 27 February 2014

Plateau LG polls: PDP wins in 14 local governments, DPP wins one


Governor Jonah Jang
The APC lost in all 14 local governments were it presented candidates
The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, has won in 14 of the 15 Local Government councils where chairmanship elections held on Tuesday in Plateau State.
The Democratic People’s Party, DPP, won in Langtang North Local Government. The major opposition political party in Plateau, APC, which presented candidates in 14 local governments, did not win in any council area.
Elections did not hold in Jos North and Wase based on insecurity.
The results were announced by the Plateau State Electoral Commission on Wednesday.
Josephine Piyo of PDP, and the only female in the race, defeated Emanuel Jugul of the All Progressive Grand Alliance, APGA, to win in Riyom.
John Maikudi, PDP, of Central Plateau State, won in Kanke Local Government.
Emmanuel Lomang, PDP, of Northern Plateau state won in Barkin Ladi Local Government.
Peter Dung, PDP, won in Jos South Local Government, the council area of the incumbent Governor Jonah Jang.
Caleb Mutfwang, PDP, won in Mangu Local Government.
Daniel Kungmi, PDP, won in Mikang Local Government.
The immediate past transition council chairman of Quaan-Pan Local Government, Theophilus Dakas Shan, was elected as the substantive chairman on the PDP ticket.
In Kanam Local Government Area, Ado Yusuf, PDP, was elected.
Nicholas Kemi Nshe, PDP, won in Shendam Local Government..
Sam Go’ar, PDP, won in Pankshin Local Government.
S.A Abok, PDP, won in Jos East Local Government.
In Bokkos Local Government, Kassah, PDP, was declared winner of the polls.
David Racha, PDP, won in Bassa Local Government of Northern Plateau State.
The only opposition party which succeeded in winning in one of the Local Government was the Democratic People’s Party, DPP, as Dan Dul won in Langtang North.
Meanwhile, an election tribunal was inaugurated on Wednesdays to take care of complains of political parties and candidates unsatisfied with results.

Pensioners accuse firm of withholding N65m arrears



Majeed (left) and Adone
No fewer than 200 pensioners under the aegis of the National Institute of Oceanography and Marine Research Pension Union have accused the Industrial and General Insurance Pension Fund Managers Limited of withholding their monthly pensions.
They also alleged that another N65m, which was the accumulation of the periodical increase on their pensions in 2013, had not been paid by firm.
A member of the union, Mr. Afinowi Majeed, told our reporter that the union’s predicament began in 2012.
He said, “In 2012, the managers withheld our pension for four months – from September to December. After several futile attempts to get them to make payment, we took the matter to the Office of the Public Defender.
“In March, we had a meeting with IGIPFM in OPD’s office and they signed a memorandum of understanding to pay our pensions as and when due.”
Our reporter learnt that the pension managers eventually paid the arrears, but again defaulted on other agreement reached.
The pensioners said presently, they had yet to receive their January pension, adding that the pension for December 2013 was only recently paid.
Majeed said, “This delay in the payment of our pension is not from the government; the IGIPFM gets our money as and when due. In fact, the government always pays pensions after paying workers’ salaries. The Federal Government increases pensions anytime there is salary increase. This was done last year, but we have yet to receive that increase and it amounts to N65m.”
 Another pensioner, Mr. Awonuga John, said, “Before we could get our December pension paid, we had to make several trips to IGIPFM’s office.”
Chairman of the NIOMR Pension Union, Mr. Francis Adone, said, “We have already lost about five of our members simply because they do not have the money to get medical attention. Three others have been sick for the past two years and still, they do not have money for medical attention.”
When our reporter contacted the spokesperson for IGIPFM, Mr. Steve Ilo, he said, “This is not correct. NIOMR pensioners were paid up to December 2013 even when we had not received cash backing from the Federal Government for December.”
He was, however, silent on the N65m increase on pensions in 2013.

Police drop fraud charges against Lagos ex-deputy gov


Former Deputy Governor of Lagos State, Alhaja Sinatu Ojikutu
The police have dropped the N130m fraud charges it instituted against a former Deputy Governor of Lagos State, Alhaja Sinatu Ojikutu, before a Federal High Court, Lagos.
Justice Mohammed Yunusa, in a short ruling, struck out the charges on Wednesday upon an application by the prosecuting counsel, Mr. Effiong Asuquo, for the withdrawal of the charges against Ojikutu.
The police gave no reason for withdrawing the charges.
However, the arraignment of the woman had been stalled twice in February due to her moves to settle with the complainant, who was said to be the victim of the alleged fraud.
The Special Fraud Unit of the Nigeria Police had charged her with three counts of conspiracy, fraud and stealing.
Ojikutu was alleged to have  in September 2011 conspired with one Sampson Ojikutu, who was said to be at large, to fraudulently obtain the sum of N130m from one Cajetan Okekearu.
It was alleged that the money was obtained under the pretence that they possessed a plot of land to sell at Lekki Phase 1, Victoria Island Lagos.
The complainant was said to have later discovered that their claim of ownership was false, since there was an already existing title to the land.
The offences were said to contravene the provisions of sections 1(a) (iii), and 8 (a) of the Advanced Fee Fraud and Other Fraud Related Offences Act, Cap. A6, Laws of the Federation, 2004.
She was also said to have contravened the provisions of section 390(9) of the Criminal Code Act, Cap. C38, Vol. 10, Laws of the Federation, 2010.

No plan to hike fuel price, says NNPC, PPMC


PPPRA says the reappearance of long queues at filling stations is artificial.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, on Wednesday denied reports of an imminent hike in the pump price of Premium Motor Spirit, PMS, popularly called petrol.
The denial came in the wake of pockets of queues by motorists that surfaced at filling stations around the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, following speculations that government plans to increase the price of the product.
The Acting Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, NNPC, Omar Farouk, who said there were no plans to increase the price of petrol, claimed the NNPC had sufficient stock of the commodity to meet nationwide demand.
Urging motorists to desist from panic buying, Mr. Farouk said the stock of fuel at the depots across the country is enough to last the country for several weeks.
The corporation noted that the re-emergence of long queues at filling stations around Abuja and environs was due to hoarding by station owners in anticipation of fuel price hike.
He implored filling station owners to refrain from hoarding fuel to help reduce the long queues around town.
The NNPC also cautioned products marketers loading petrol from various depots not to hoard the product as erring marketers would be sanctioned.
The Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency, PPPRA had earlier said the reappearance of long queues at filling stations across the country was artificial and uncalled for.
The PPPRA spokesperson, Lanre Oladele, confirmed that there was enough stock of products to keep the country going for several days.
According to Mr. Oladele, with the release of import licenses to marketers for the first quarter of 2014, there was no reason for fuel scarcity.
“We can assure Nigerians that we have enough stock to wet the nation. What we have is artificial scarcity to create false impression whereas the entire nation is wet with the products,” Mr. Oladele said.
He advised Nigerians not to engage in panic buying, as the Pipeline and Products Marketing Company, PPMC, a subsidiary of the NNPCresponsible for the supply of the products, has made adequate provision for the supply of the commodity to all parts of the country.
“PPMC has a robust stock of fuel, apart from the stock in NNPC depots to serve the country for several days,” the PPMC spokesperson, Nasir Imodagbe, said.

World leaders arrive in Abuja for Nigeria’s centenary


Flag of Nigeria
More than 12 Heads of State arrived at the Presidential Wing of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, on Wednesday ahead of Thursday’s (today) centenary, theNews Agency of Nigeria reports.
The visiting Heads of State were received at the airport by some members of the Federal Executive Council.
Those that were received at the airport include Presidents Hifikepunye Pohamba of Namibi; Paul Kagame of Rwanda; Yahya Jammeh of Gambia and Prosper Bazombaza of Burundi.
President Helen Sirleaf of Liberia and the former Secretary-General of Organisation for African Union, Dr. Salim Ahmed Salim, who led the Tanzanian delegation also arrived in Abuja on Wednesday for the celebration.
Also arrived in Abuja were the President of Mauritania, Mohammed Ould Abdel Aziz; Ethiopian President, Mr. Hailemarian Desalegh; and the European Union President, Mr. Jose Manuel Barroso.
The Zambian Minister of Defence, Mr. Edgar Lungu, will represent the Zambian President, Micheal Saata. Israel is also being represented by its Minister of Agriculture, Mr. Yair Shamir.
An official of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who did not want to be mentioned, told NAN that 42 Heads of State were being expected to attend the celebration.
Meanwhile, United States President Barack Obama has designated State Counsellor Thomas Shannon as the leader of a presidential delegation to the centenary in Abuja.
A statement in Abuja on Wednesday by the State Department said Shannon would meet with government officials and participate in high-level activities with other world leaders during the centenary.
The US official, who is expected to deliver a message from Obama to Nigeria, would also travel to Lagos for discussions on a range of issues of mutual interest and interact with Nigerian youths.
Also, President of the Swiss Confederation, Didier Burkhalter,  has sent a letter of congratulations to President Goodluck Jonathan on the nation’s centenary.
Burkhalter would be represented at the celebrations by the Swiss Ambassador to Nigeria, Dr. Hans-Rudolf Hodel.
“May the ties of confidence and friendship which so happily exist between our two countries continue to flourish in the coming centenary,’’ the Swiss president wrote.
The major highlight of the week-long activities includes an international conference on peace and security in Africa on Thursday to be attended by several world leaders.
The British colonial authorities had on January 1, 1914 amalgamated what were then the separate protectorates of Southern Nigeria and Northern Nigeria.
The amalgamation gave birth to the single geo-political entity known as Nigeria.
The celebrations will also feature the conferment of honours on 100 Nigerians, with about 40 per cent of the awards to be presented posthumously.

PDP faults Amaechi’s absence at national conference forum


Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi
THE Peoples Democratic Party in Rivers State has decried the absence of the state governor, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi, from the Southern Forum on National Conference.
The state PDP explained that it viewed the governor’s absence from the event that was held on February 24, 2014, in Calabar, the Cross River State capital, as a demonstration of Amaechi’s neglect of the cause of the people.
In a statement by the Special Assistant on Media to the party’s Chairman in the state, Mr. Jerry Needam, the party argued that rather than express his support for the meeting in Calabar, Amaechi decided to attend a gathering organised by the All Progressives Congress.
Describing Amaechi’s action as disrespectful, the state PDP maintained that the governor sponsored the APC meeting outside the state.
The statement reads in part, “The Rivers State chapter of the PDP notes with sadness the deliberate absence of Governor Rotimi Amaechi at the all-important Southern Forum on National Conference held in Calabar, Cross Rivers State, Monday, February 24, 2014.
“The party views Governor Amaechi’s unexplained absence as a demonstration of his neglect and abandonment of the cause of the people of the area which ought to be his priority.
“Most annoying to the party is the fact that the governor, rather than showing support for the Calabar conference, which was attended by the most eminent personalities from the states of the South, Governor Amaechi prominently featured at an All Progressives Congress meeting, which was being sponsored by him outside of the state.”

Mike Okiro’s N1bn Libel Suit against NOPRIN: Court Adjourns To March 21


Mike Okiro
By SaharaReporters, New York
A High Court in Ikeja has set March 21 for the mention of a libel suit filed by a former police Inspector General, Mike Okiro, against the Network of Police Reform in Nigeria (NOPRIN).
Mr. Okiro filed the suit in response to a petition by the group to the Senate advising against his confirmation as Chairman of the Police Service Commission (PSC).
A report by NOPRIN in 2013 had exposed indictments on Mr. Okiro, and it called on the Senate to turn down his nomination.
In the petition, the group set out four grounds for their objection to the former IGP for the post.
Among them, NOPRIN accused Mr. Okiro of promoting extrajudicial killings in the country.  And stressing the need to keep the PSC “civilian, credible and effective,” they argued that Mr. Okiro would not able to live up to the task.
The network also accused the former police boss of cultivating partisan interests that contravened the provisions of the constitution, and concluded that he carried “clear and irremediable integrity deficits.”
The petition further underlined that the re-nomination of members who had previously served a term negates the provisions of the constitution under the PSC Act.

Court rejects exparte motion to reinstate suspended CBN Governor, Sanusi


CBN Governor, Sanusi Lamido
An Abuja High Court on Wednesday rejected an ex-parte motion brought by the suspended Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, Lamido Sanusi. Mr. Sanusi asked the court to set aside his suspension from office.
Mr. Sanusi was suspended by President Goodluck Jonathan last Thursday over alleged financial recklessness and official misconduct.
He filed the suit on Monday to challenge his suspension. He had not only asked for reinstatement, but also an order of interlocutory injunction restraining the president, the Attorney General of the Federation and the Inspector General of Police from stopping him from performing his duties as CBN Governor.
Mr. Sanusi asked the court to grant him his prayers because the delay in doing that could cause irreparable and serious damage and mischief on him in the performance of his statutory functions.
But when the case came up on Wednesday, Justice Gabriel Kolawole  refused Mr. Sanusi’s prayer. He instead ordered that Mr. Jonathan and other defendants be put on notice.
He said the notice would enable them to appear before the court to explain why Mr. Sanusi’s prayer should not be granted.
Mr. Kolawole said it would be difficult to grant interim orders without hearing the defendants.
He stated that after the defendants had been put on notice, he would rule on whether or not the court had jurisdiction to entertain the suit.
He therefore fixed March 12 for Messrs Sanusi, Jonathan and others to argue the motion.

Presidency under fire for cooking up document linking Sanusi to Boko Haram insurgency


Mr. Omokri has the reputation of being government’s online marksman
Reno Omokiri, a close aide of Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan, is wound up in a massive scandal after the digital footprint of a slanderous write-up against the recently suspended governor of the Central Bank, Sanusi Lamido, was traced to his computer.
Mr. Omokri, Special Assistant to the President on New Media, is believed to have used a pseudonym, Wendell Simlin, to circulate an article that tried to link the recent spike in Boko Haram attack to the suspension of the CBN governor, Lamido Sanusi.
The article tried to use a purported historical framework to draw contextual relationship between the suspended CBN governor and Boko Haram attacks.
“Given the quantum of funds that were appropriated by the Sanusi-led CBN on non banking related activities and donations, and the strong desire that he and Alhaji Umaru Abdul Mutallab have for proselytizing Islam as well as their circumstantial links to terror (Sanusi via Gideon Akaluka and Mutallab via his son) it is not such a leap for them to facilitate the activities of terrorists,” the article read in part.
The article was circulated to bloggers and journalists on Wednesday with the third party email address, wendellsimlin@yahoo.com, but an analysis of the document’s metadata revealed that Reno Omokri authored it.
The document’s digital signature shared a 100 percent resemblance with that of others PREMIUM TIMES had received from Mr. Omokri in the past.
The document was created by Mr. Omokri or someone else who used his Hewlett Packard computer at 10:01 on Wednesday. Sixteen minutes after it was created, the document was printed and revised once before it was sent out at 11:54 using the Wendell Simlin’s email address.
The email was sent out using the Nigerian government’s official internet service provider, Galaxy Backbone, from Abuja, Feyi Fawehimi who first investigated the mail told PREMIUM TIMES.
The revelation of the potential scandal angered Nigerians on social media with many calling for his sack.
Mr. Omokri who claims to be a pastor, often posting gospel tips on twitter, is criticized for failing morally and acting criminally by
trying to blame Mr. Sanusi for terrorist killing less than 48 hours after members of the Boko Haram sect murdered young students in their  hostels.
“If it is true that this guy tried to capitalize on this tragedy by forging documents to implicate somebody else, pressure should be
placed on the presidency to fire him,” Pius Adesanmi, a professor of english and respected social critic said on his Facebook page.
Mr. Omokri has the reputation of being government’s online marksman. He is believed to be President Jonathan’s coordinator of internet trolls and  leads the government’s social media onslaught on opposition parties and critics of the administration.
“Some of us who know him know he establishes spurious online accounts to malign opposition,” Tolu Ogunlesi, a journalist, said.
“It is something we know he does,” another blogger said.
The “grave” attitudinal deficiency exposed by Mr. Reno’s email shows a great danger ahead of Nigeria’s 2015 elections, critics say, arguing that it is an indication that the President Goodluck Jonathan-led administration would rather reap politically from the killing than put an end to it.
“Rather than solving the Boko Haram problem, he is using it for political gains,” Mr. Fawehimi said. “It is quite low and depressing.”
Mr. Omokri is yet to respond to PREMIUM TIMES’ request for comments as at the time of publishing this report.
Aso Rock spokespersons, Reuben Abati and Doyin Okupe, also did not answer or return calls made to them repeatedly by our reporter.

Trailer crushes police officer to death


The police officer died on the spot
A mobile policeman in uniform was on Wednesday crushed to death by a trailer at the gate of the main branch of First Bank,
near Bichi road,  in Jos.
Witnesses say the police officer died on the spot as the vehicle smashed part of his head.
The trailer was coming from the Plateau State House is Assembly.
A witness, Ladi Emmanuel, told PREMIUM TIMES that the police officer was on a motorcycle going to his place of assignment.
Sources say that the victim attempted to overtake the trailer at a bend.
The victim was immediately rushed to the Plateau State specialist hospital but was confirmed dead on arrival.
The driver of the vehicle was arrested by the police and taken away from the scene for further interrogation.
The incident created vehicular traffic within the area, which houses several major business including the Jos branch of the Central Bank.
Meanwhile, colleagues of the victims who were on duty within the vicinity molested other road users.
The Plateau State government had in early 2012 banned the use of motorcycles within Jos metropolis.
However, some uniformed officials, including the police and security officers in charge of enforcing the ban, have continued to defy the directive, riding their motorcycles in the prohibited areas.

Killing Of Children By Boko Haram: Government Not Doing Enough, Say Groups


Two child’s right organizations, Africans Unite Against Child Abuse (AFRUCA-UK) and the Centre  for Children’s Health Education, Orientation and Protection (CEE-HOPE Nigeria) have strongly criticized the Federal Government for what they describe as ‘negligence and indifference’ in the growing number of cases of killings, especially of children and young students in Northern Nigeria in recent times.
Citing the examples of the killings of an estimated 50 students of the Federal Government College in Buni Yadi, Yobe State in the early hours of February 25 by suspected members of the extremist Boko Haram, the organizations said it was unacceptable that under a sovereign state such atrocities could be going on unabated.
‘The killings of young, innocent and completely hapless students have reached not only an alarming but also an unacceptable level. If we agree that we have a government then the government should be able to protect its people particularly the young and vulnerable.  Unfortunately that is not what we are seeing under this administration,’ said Betty Abah, Executive Director of CEE-HOPE Nigeria.
She added that it was high time both government and individuals shelved ethnic bias and religious sentiments and face the common enemy which is terrorism.
‘We cannot continue as if all is well. A nation where children are unsecured and cannot look to any future, either arising from potential-stifling corruption at the highest level or the fear of being slaughtered like mere chickens shouldn’t exist in the first place, let’s face the raw fact,’ Mrs Abah added.
Debbie Ariyo of the UK-based AFRUCA described the situation as disheartening. “It is the role of government to help secure lives and property. It is not right that our children are exposed to harm and danger at the hands of terrorists this way. Government needs to act to ensure better protection for the citizens, especially children. In the same vein children and families who have been displaced through the evil acts of terrorism need to be offered protection and accommodation,” she said.
 The groups specifically lamented the series of recent killings of students and children by Boko Haram ranging from the July 6 2013 attack at Mamudo Government Secondary School in Yobe where at least 41 children and one teacher were killed; the  29 September 2013 Gujiba College massacre where suspected gunmen entered the male dormitory in the College of Agriculture in Gujiba, Yobe State, killing at least 44 students and teachers;  the Baga massacre of April 19 to 20, 2013 in Borno State where over 228 people were murdered as well as the first major onslaught on March 8, 2010 in the Dogo Nahawa in Plateau State where more than 500 villagers including several children were killed in cold blood. There were also other attacks carried out in churches, markets with high children casualty.
‘The entire world is watching the gross human rights abuses and outright slaughter of children with hardly any forms of reprisal action by the government, and we urge the government to end  this evil trend henceforth.  The rights of children to adequate protection even in conflict and war situations are protected under national and international laws and edicts and Nigeria cannot be an exception,’ the statement added.

Boko Haram Attacks Adamawa Villages; Casualties Unknown - PREMIUM TIMES


By Sani Tukur
Unknown gunmen on Wednesday night raided three villages in Madagali and Michika local governments in Adamawa state, residents and officials have said.
According to the chairman of Madagali Local Government, Maina Ularamu, who spoke with PREMIUM TIMES over the telephone, the attackers, suspected to be members of the extremist Boko Haram sect, first attacked Kirchiga Village before proceeding to Shuwa town both in Madagali Local Government Area.
“They came to Kirchiga at a little after 8p.m and opened fire sporadically at the people,” he said.
He however could not confirm any casualty figure as at midnight on Thursday.
Mr. Ularamu added that the gunmen also attacked neighbouring Shuwa town, adding that the sounds of gunfire could still be heard in the town as at the time we spoke to him.
Also, a resident of Michika town, who declined to be named for security reasons, told PREMIUM TIMES that he could hear gunshots in the town.
He reported intermittent sounds of gunshots and said most people in the town had run home for safety.
The spokesperson of the Nigerian Army in Yola, Nuhu Jafaru, could not be reached to comment for this story. Calls to him were unsuccessful as his telephone line failed to connect.

Monday, 3 February 2014

Rivers Police Commissioner Mbu To Be Removed


CP of Rivers, Joseph Mbu
By SaharaReporters, New York
Joseph Mbu, who has had a controversial career as the Rivers State Commissioner of Police, has been removed from his post, a source at police headquarters in Abuja has informed SaharaReporters. The source said the commissioner is expected to leave his post at the end of this week. However, the source added that the police hierarchy has made no public announcement of Mr. Mbu’s removal.
The removal of the police commissioner, known to be a crony of Patience Jonathan, the wife of Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan, is coming on the heels of threats by opposition party All Progressives Congress (APC) to block all legislative proposals by Mr. Jonathan until the political crisis believed to be instigated in Rivers State by the President and his wife is resolved.
A police source told SaharaReporters that, barring any last-minute interference by President Jonathan, Mr. Mbu will be sent to the National Institute for Strategic Studies (NIPSS) in Kuru, Jos as a face-saving measure.
Mr. Mbu has been accused of working to undermine Governor Chibuike Amaechi of Rivers State, a political foe to Mr. Jonathan. The controversial commissioner had often provided cover to members of the political opposition in Rivers State who have sought to cause violence in the state by attempting to hijack the state assembly in an illicit bid to impeach Mr. Amaechi.
In recent weeks, as he sensed his planned removal from Rivers State, Mr. Mbu had placed newspaper adverts in newspaper to congratulate Nigeria’s Inspector General of Police Muhammed Abubakar.

Saturday, 1 February 2014

Why I didn’t contest against Obasanjo in 2003 – Atiku


Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar
Former vice president continues his consultation on APC invitation
A former vice president, Atiku Abubakar, on Thursday in Ibadan, Oyo State explained why he did not run against his boss, former President Olusegun Obasanjo in the 2003 presidential primaries of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.
Mr. Abubakar was Mr. Obasanjo’s deputy between 1999 and 2007.
In the build up towards the 2003 presidential election, some PDP governors, led by former Delta State Governor, James Ibori, reportedly lobbied Mr. Abubakar discreetly to contest against his boss in the 2003 presidential primaries of the party.
The action allegedly pitted the former vice president against Mr. Obasanjo, although both men worked together to win the 2003 presidential election. They fell out in the build up to the 2007 election when Mr. Abubakar opposed the former president’s plot to extend his rule through the unsuccessful alteration of the 1999 Constitution.
The stand-off between the president and his deputy remained unresolved which caused Mr. Abubakar to decamp to the defunct Action Congress, AC, where he ran for the presidency in 2011.
Speaking for the first time on what transpired, the former vice president said he refused to accept the invitation to contest the election on moral grounds.
Mr. Abubakar, who was responding to a remark by one of the participants in his South-West consultative meeting in Ibadan, said despite the belief by some that his best chance to have emerged as the president of Nigeria was in 2003 when some members of the PDP offered him the opportunity to contest against his former boss, he found it difficult to accept the offer.
He said doing so would have been against the position the PDP had earlier taken at a caucus meeting to retain the presidency in the South.
He noted that his ambition and indeed that of any politician could not be realised in negation and commitment to party decisions.
“Yes, I may nurse legitimate ambition, but I am not the kind of person who will want to climb the political ladder because an opportunity cheaply presents itself,” Mr. Abubakar said.
“You don’t have to stand in the way of commitment to party decisions because you stand the opportunity to benefit from an infraction.”
Meanwhile, at a reception organized by the Oyo State Government, Mr. Abubakar recounted how he spent his days in Ibadan as a civil servant.
“My most memorable days in my civil service career were in Ibadan. So, I say this is a kind of a home-coming,” he said.
“Anytime I come to Ibadan – either for politics or personal reasons – I come back with a lot of memories. But much more than the memories, I am more fascinated by the new things and developments that I see in Ibadan.
“I want to say that since the Ajimobi administration took off, there have been positive changes in the city of Ibadan in terms of infrastructure development.”
He said his visit to Ibadan was in continuation of his political consultations with associates and stakeholders in response to the invitation extended to him by the All Progressives Congress, APC, in December last year.
Responding, the governor, Abiola Ajimobi, extolled the former vice president as a “broad-based, principled and consummate politician.”
He said not many politicians in Nigeria could match Mr. Abubakar’s democratic credentials.
The governor also noted the humble nature of the former Vice President.
“He has a personal touch to his relationship and sometimes you wonder if he has ever been the Vice President of this country,” Mr. Ajimobi said.
“As you go round consulting in Oyo state, you have a friend and someone who can accommodate you and what you stand for in Oyo State. I pray that in the next few weeks your consultation will result in consummation and then we can conclude the marriage.”

Ekiti 2014: 30 jostle for Fayemi’s job


Some of the governorship aspirants in Ekiti
The tempo of political activities has increased in Ekiti State following the release of governorship election timetable by the Independent National Electoral Commission. Akinwale Aboluwade, in this piece, examines the countdown to the election
Politics in Ekiti State is becoming increasingly interesting with more than 30 aspirants jostling to emerge as the winner in the oncoming governorship election. Joining the fray is a former leader of the All Progressives Congress, Mr. Opeyemi Bamidele, who until lately was locked in fierce contest with incumbent Governor Kayode Fayemi for the governorship ticket of the APC. Among the long list of aspirants is an aspirant on the platform of the Accord Party in Ekiti, Mr. Kole Ajayi. Already, politicians are engaging in talks, meetings and covert negotiations and scheming in view of the emerging political contest. The scramble for the highest political position in the state has intensified, following the announcement of June 21, 2014 date for governorship election in the state.
Although the Independent National Electoral Commission has yet to allow aspirants engage in campaigns, there are clear signs that the mood is upbeat. Long convoys of politicians moving round the state for surreptitious meetings are commonplace. Some politicians have defied the electoral law by engaging in different forms of campaign activities while the embargo has yet to be lifted by the electoral umpire. In a bid to circumvent the INEC directive, some aspirants hold rallies and canvass votes on different occasions in the guise of having mere political meetings.
A rally organised by the representative of Ekiti-North Federal Constituency, Mr. Opeyemi Bamidele, was halted by the police on the grounds that it was in violation of the electoral law. The crowd of supporters and onlookers, who witnessed the event, were dispersed with tear gas. Some members of the Road Transport Employees Association of Nigeria and the National Union of Road Transport Workers earlier barricaded the major road from Ajebandele in Ajilosun area to Okeyinmi junction area of Ado Ekiti, the state capital in protest against the rally.
The Police Public Relations Officer, Ekiti Command, Mr. Victor Babayemi, said the rally was stopped because INEC had not lifted the embargo on political rally in the state. He noted that Bamidele and his supporters violated Section 99 of the Electoral Act 2011 as amended, saying that the group embarked upon political campaign and not just a rally on the occasion.
Commenting on the issue, the Labour Party in the state said that the ruling APC was creating an atmosphere of insecurity. Describing the development as a bad omen in politics, the state chairman of the party, Mr. Akin Omole, said, “It is now a crime in Ekiti for opposition parties to hold meetings and conduct their businesses in an atmosphere of peace because of fear of possible attack by party thugs.
“Today, Ekiti is being run like a police state. Opposition political parties in the state can no longer hold meetings. Our meeting was disrupted in Ilawe-Ekiti and our chairman in that council was beaten up by APC members. We reported the case but the Divisional Police Officer did not do anything. Little wonder, they were bragging around that they are the ruling party in Ekiti. This is a bad development and we will no longer tolerate all these”.
In his reaction, the Director of Media and Publicity, APC, Mr. Segun Dipe, said, “It is only LP that can explain what it means by alleging that Ekiti is now a police state. If by police state it meant that the citizens are being well-protected, we take that as a compliment and even wish to do more. But if it says it is not feeling secured, which I doubt, then the party is saying it is afraid of its shadows. LP is clueless and wants to blame its cluelessness on APC.”
Prior to the release of the governorship election timetable for Ekiti State, Feyisetan, wife of former governor, Ayo Fayose, predicted her husband’s return to Ekiti State Government House after the 2014 governorship election. The prediction is a signal that the race to the Okesa Government House might have taken a spiritual dimension.  Like other aspirants in the race, the declaration by INEC has further spurred the campaign team of Fayose to action. While many hold the believe that the PDP was far from victory in the governorship, Fayose was optimistic of his return to the Ekiti State Government House, saying, “The time is up for the present government because the PDP has come to take over the administration of Ekiti State.”
The desire of the Minister of Police Affairs, Caleb Olubolade, to run for Ekiti State governorship is not clear yet as he appears to have slowed down on his moves. Before now, there was a rumour that he was the President Goodluck Jonathan’s choice as PDP candidate in the race. However, there were indications from Abuja that the Presidency has no anointed candidate in the Ekiti election.
If still interested, the former Military Administrator of Bayelsa State is an aspirant to look out for as one of the heavyweights in the governorship contest.
An aspirant and a leader of the party in Ekiti, Chief Dayo Adeyeye, hailed the timetable release by INEC, saying the PDP will flush out the Fayemi-led APC government in the election. He said, “The PDP is united in this struggle to get the rudderless administration of Fayemi out through the ballot. The task to get the APC out of power is a collective effort, which every Ekiti PDP leader is ready to do in order to move our dear state forward.”
However, the INEC in Ekiti State has warned politicians against the breach of the electoral law. It also advised stakeholders in the oncoming election to desist from incitement and violence. The state Resident Electoral Commissioner, Alhaji Halilu Pai, while addressing journalists on the governorship poll at the commission’s secretariat, said it was wrong for aspirants and their parties to commence campaign before the stipulated date.
According to him, the display of campaign billboards and posters by aspirants in the state is illegal and unacceptable. He said engaging in campaign while the commission has yet to announce the election date, would attract severe punishment.
Pai added that, “Politicians should wait for INEC’s directive and for embargo to be lifted. It has been clearly spelt out that campaign should not begin until 90days to election. We must plan very well and follow the electoral law strictly. Posting of posters and mounting of billboards at this time is illegal and tantamount to campaign for election. This can only be done not earlier than 90 days to the election as specified in the Electoral Act. Posting of posters and billboards by aspirants is heating up the polity. The honourable thing to do is to remove them and wait for the right time.”
On the level of the commission’s preparedness for the elections, Pai said Direct Data Capturing Machines would be deployed to conduct upgrading and review of voters’ status, where those that had not registered would have the opportunity of doing so before election. Recalling that no fewer than 93,000 cases of double registration were detected before the Anambra election, he said the Automated Fingerprints Identification System would be deployed where necessary.
He said, “Those with double registration would be allowed to vote after the irregularity has been corrected. But this will not stop us from ensuring that they are punished.” The REC added that efforts were on to ensure that those that relocated from their former addresses were given opportunity to transfer their registration to preferred units.
Meanwhile, a former Nigerian Envoy to Canada and Peoples Democratic Party governorship aspirant in Ekiti State, Mr. Dare Bejide, has urged all intending candidates to play the game according to the rule and adhere to the directives of the election umpire. Bejide, who noted that the political sphere would fully come alive when PDP candidate emerges, said it was too early to determine the party with more clout. He said, “Ekiti people need a visionary and intelligent personality who can effectively pilot them into the great future of their dream. The period when people engaged in violence rather than intellectual issues aided by wealth of experience is over. We need a candidate that has wide acceptance. Our people must come together and have a mature candidate with deep depth of experience”.
Bamidele also stressed the need for all players to be sincere and demonstrate their loyalty to the agenda of the Ekiti people. In an open letter to Fayemi, he said the promise by the governor that his administration would support a hitch-free election in the state was incredible and strange to the people of Ekiti. Bamidele, who lamented his experience in the governorship contest, said, “I have taken my time to read through your New Year message of January 1st, 2014 in which you, among other things, expressed your concern for security of lives and properties in the state.
“Your Excellency, how would I and my constituents believe your professed commitment to protection of properties if I made statutory payments to the Signage Agency under your office to mount 16 billboards as an elected representative to wish people who elected you and I into office a Merry Christmas and a
Happy New Year on the 22nd of December 2013 and, in less than 48 hours, your political appointees destroyed the billboards?
“How will you explain the fact that you and your cronies are the only elected and appointed public servants or statesmen who can air their views and programmes on the Broadcasting Service of Ekiti State?”
However, in his reaction, the Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Mr. Yinka Oyebode, described Opeyemi’s allegations as an outburst of a liar and mischief maker. Oyebode said, “Opeyemi Bamidele is either genuinely ignorant or is deliberately mischievious. Whichever is the case, it is important to say that his letter is a potpourri of outright lies and deliberate distortion of issues.
“MOB should be blamed for introducing violence to Ekiti politics. The rising tension in the politics of Ekiti started immediately he joined the race with his penchant for importing thugs from Ondo State to cause mayhem in Ekiti. He remains the greatest threat to the 2014 poll. But the good news is that the 2014 contest is about Ekiti development and not about brigandage which the MOB and his gang represent.”
Interestingly, the people of Ekiti are of the opinion that the governorship election in Ekiti State could be peaceful, free and fair if politicians would adopt the spirit of sportsmanship and allow the people’s votes to count.

All 16 Kwara local government chairmen, deputies, others dump PDP for APC


Senator Bukola Saraki
They accused the PDP of refusing to address the observations and complaints of its founding members.
The chairmen of all the 16 local government areas of Kwara State, and their deputies, on Friday formally decamped from the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, to the All Progressives Congress, APC.
Also, 193 elected councilors and 80 supervisory councilors defected to the APC.
The chairman of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria, ALGON, in the state, Abdulateef Okandeji, announced the defection of the council chairmen and councilors at a news conference in Ilorin, the state capital.
The state governor, Abdulfatah Ahmed, had alongside four other PDP governors defected to the APC last November. The other governors are Chibuike Amaechi (Rivers), Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto), Murtala Nyako (Adamawa) and Rabi’u Kwankwaso (Kano).
Twenty members of the Kwara State House of Assembly followed suit on January 22.
Two former governors of the state, Bukola Saraki and Shaba Lafiagi, both of who are senators, were among the 11 senators that served the upper house notice of their intention to move from the PDP to the APC on Wednesday.
Mr. Okandeji who is also the chairman of Ilorin East Local Government Area explained that the chairmen, deputy chairmen and supervisors decided to leave the PDP because of the party’s refusal to address the observations and complaints of its founding members.
“I recall that following the refusal and failure of the national leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to address the observations and complaints of its founding members especially about the lawlessness, impunity and injustice which had become the norms and led to factionalisation of the PDP, our leaders decided to team up in what is known as the nPDP under the national chairmanship of our own Alhaji Abubakar Baraje,” he said.
“After exhaustive consultations and deliberations by our leaders spearheaded by Senator Bukola Saraki, it was unanimously decided that the best option for us would be to merge with the newly formed All Progressives Congress (APC) and work together in the overall interest of the good people of this country and towards the advancement of democracy.
“Therefore, it is against that very brief background that we, the members of ALGON, Kwara state chapter hereby publicly declare for the APC and call on all our supporters and well-wishers to join hands with pour leaders to move the state and the country forward on the viable alternative platform provided by the APC.”