Tag: 2023

  • As Peace Eludes the Weak in a World of the Strong, Welcome to 2023 – By Dennis Onakinor

    As Peace Eludes the Weak in a World of the Strong, Welcome to 2023 – By Dennis Onakinor

    By midnight of December 31st, 2022, joyous sound of fireworks will reverberate through the skies of most towns and cities across the world in celebration of the dawn of 2023. But for the people of Ukraine, it will be the now-familiar sound of fire from machine guns, tanks, artillery, missiles, jet fighters, and bombers, which signify nothing but death, destruction, and misery. For, since Vladimir Putin’s war machine rumbled into their country on February 24, 2022, Ukrainians have known no peace.

    While most people are still aghast at the occurrence of this conflagration in a 21st Century European society, Russia continues to intensify its indiscriminate bombardment of Ukrainian towns and cities. And, from the plethora of related analysis, an incontrovertible fact emerges: that Ukraine would not have been exposed to Russian military aggression if the country had not given up the nuclear weapons it inherited from the defunct Soviet Union, in accordance with the terms of the “1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances.”

    “Might is right,” wrote the German-born American Anarchist, Ragnar Redbeard, in his 1896 publication of same title, aka “Survival of the Fittest.” Drawing from Social Darwinism, and deploying virulent incendiary language, Redbeard denounced all Judeo-Christian principles of rights and wrongs, and condemned modern societal principles of justice, equity, morality, etc. Hear him:

    “Blessed are the strong, for they shall possess the earth; cursed are the weak, for they shall inherit the yoke … Blessed are the bold, for they shall be masters of the world; cursed are the humble, for they shall be trodden under hoofs … Human rights and wrongs are not determined by justice, but by might … Each molecule, each animal, fights for its life … the survival of the strongest is the iron law of history.”

    President Putin may not have read Redbeard’s “Might is Right,” but as an irredentist, who glorifies Russia’s military might at every opportunity, he certainly understands that in international relations power plays a dominant role. For, whenever he discusses his Ukrainian war casus belli, he never fails to accuse the US of unbridled exhibition of military power across the globe. Whereas, if the truth were to be told, Russia stands condemned for same exhibition of military power by its unprovoked aggression against its neighbour.

    In course of announcing the annexation of occupied Ukrainian regions of Donesk, Lugansk, Kherson, and Zaporozhye on September 30, 2022, Putin accused the US of being “the only country in the world that has used nuclear weapons twice, destroying the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan.” He went further to state that in course of the 2nd World War, the US and Britain reduced most German cities to rubble because, just like the nuclear bombing of the two Japanese cities, they wanted to “intimidate our country and the rest of the world.”

    Viewed from the perspective of Cold War political currents, Putin might be right that the US had always sought to resolve international conflicts through unilateral military action, as it did in Grenada in 1983, Libya in 1986, and Panama in 1989. But even so, post-2nd World War history is replete with instances of display of military might by the super powers, with the US setting the tone in its 1960 – 1975 military intervention in Vietnam. The Soviet Union followed suit in its 1979 – 1989 occupation of Afghanistan, while the US once again showcased itself in Iraq between 2003 – 2011. Suffice to say that both powers were dealt humiliating blows in course of their military adventurism.

    Be that as it may, Russia’s ongoing brutal and barbaric military campaign in Ukraine belies President Putin’s accusation against the US’ conduct during the 2nd World War. As witnessed by the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), Russian forces have shown utter disregard for the sanctity of human lives in course of their punitive military campaign, as they leave a trail of mass graves, smouldering ruins, and human misery in their wake.
    Truly, occurrences in the ongoing war had been predicted by analysts, including Yours Sincerely (see The News Guru article titled “Ukraine Crisis: War is Not Inevitable if Preventive Diplomacy is on the Cards”). For instance, it was noted that Ukraine’s inferior armed forces would be unable to repel Russia’s invading forces without the direct intervention of their NATO partners; and that restriction of hostilities to Ukraine’s territory would only serve to heighten Russia’s unwillingness to end its aggression, since its civilian population will not be directly impacted by the war.

    Indeed, Ukrainian forces are presently unable to respond to Russia’s missile barrage because the US and its NATO allies have refused to provide them with long-range weapons – a situation occasioned by Putin’s threat to resort to nuclear weapons in the event of Ukraine being provided with military capabilities that could pose “existential threat” to the Russian “motherland.” It’s a scenario akin to a boxing fight in which one of the boxers has one of his hands firmly tied behind his back. For how long will the rest of the world allow this pitiable situation to prevail in the Ukrainian war?

    In light of the foregoing, the self-ruled Pacific Island of Taiwan must tread cautiously as it confronts a revanchist China in asserting its independence status, which is not officially recognized by most countries of the world, including the US that has “committed” to protecting her against Chinese military aggression. But, while the US may readily arm Taiwan against Chinese aggressive designs, the Ukrainian war has shown that mere possession of arms is not enough for a militarily-inferior entity to tip the scales of war against a global military power.

    “Will the US defend Taiwan against Chinese military invasion?” Asked by a reporter at a joint news conference with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on May 22, 2022, President Joe Biden responded: “That’s the commitment we made … we agree with ‘One China’ policy. We signed onto it and all the attendant agreements made from there. But the idea it (Taiwan) could be taken by force, it’s just not appropriate. It’ll dislocate the entire region and be another action similar to what happened in Ukraine. And so, it’s a burden that is even stronger.”
    But even so, the Taiwanese authorities must seek concrete guarantees from the US and other allies, that any armed conflict with China would not be restricted to Taiwanese territory, but will be extended to the Chinese mainland through every available means. In essence, it will not be a one-sided affair involving the destruction of Taiwanese towns and cities by Chinese forces. Otherwise, such a military confrontation is totally unnecessary and should be avoided at all costs.

    But even at that, all parties to the simmering Sino-Taiwanese conflict should work relentlessly towards resolving it diplomatically, rather than seek a military solution. Particularly, Taiwanese leaders must realize that pacifist diplomacy is not synonymous with unpatriotism and cowardice, and that war serves no useful purpose other than the benefits that accrue to the global military-industrial complex, represented by vicious arms dealers, unscrupulous mercenaries, profiteers, and sundry base elements.

    Unfortunately, most states have imbibed the erroneous notion that exhibition of military might deters external aggression. With North Korea seemingly getting away with its provocative nuclear sabre-rattling and missile tests, countries like Iran have certainly concluded that acquisition of nuclear weapons and their delivery systems is the only effective deterrence against adversarial threats. And, going by occurrences in Ukraine, where Russian military might is proving right, Iran and its ilk might just be right.

  • 2023 will be a positive turning point for Nigeria – Saraki

    2023 will be a positive turning point for Nigeria – Saraki

    Former Senate President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki has congratulated all Nigerians at home and those in the diaspora at the beginning of year 2023 while praying that the new year will be a positive turning point for the country.

    Saraki in a statement from his Media Office in Abuja signed by Yusuph Olaniyonu noted that many events, both sad and good, happened in the year 2022 that just ended but that there were many reasons for both the entire country as a collective and individual citizens to appreciate God for sustaining us all.

    “Our country continues to confront security, economic, political, and social challenges. More than ever witnessed in many homes, the present situation is bleak and many cannot celebrate. Yet, there are many reasons to thank God. There is hope for a brighter future and the promise that this new year will provide a good turning point for our country and its people.

    “We should all look forward to the bright side of life and the promise that the country’s so much-talked about vast potentials will soon turn to reality. It will present genuine opportunities for citizens to realise their positive aspirations.

    “I urge that we do not relent in praying for God’s intervention in the national state of affairs in 2023. We should look forward to a good future for our country. All Nigerians should be more patriotic and work together to defeat all the negative forces arrayed against our country. We should work for peace, unity, and sustainable development.

    “I believe we have the opportunity to use 2023 to change the course of our nation for the better. It is an election year. We should ensure that the elections are free, fair, peaceful, and credible. All eligible Nigerians should go out to vote for credible candidates who have genuine interest and the capacity to make a positive difference in our country. If we achieve this in the first quarter of the new year, we can then look forward to using the last two quarters to make positive differences in our polity”, he stated.

    Saraki further prayed to God to heal the country, protect her security officials on the front lines defending the country and give them victory over the enemies.

  • 2023: LP presidential candidate, Obi consults Ojukwu’s family

    2023: LP presidential candidate, Obi consults Ojukwu’s family

    The Presidential Candidate of the Labour Party (LP), Peter Obi, has visited the family of late Igbo leader, Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu as part of his ongoing nationwide consultations.

    Obi, former Anambra Governor, was received at the residence of the renowned Igbo leader in Enugu by his widow, Amb. Bianca Ojukwu, on Saturday.

    He said it was important for him to visit every leader in the country for their blessing and support, since he needed everybody to clearly understand his good intentions for the nation.

    “For me to do anything, especially as I am going around now, it is necessary that I have to come and meet my leaders and leaders exist in various spheres of life.

    “For me, the most important thing is going around, whether it is a political leader or a religious leader. You plead for their blessings. I need everybody’s blessings.

    “You need everyone to understand you; you must elucidate what you are doing to them and be able to say, ‘I came for this purpose’ and that is why I am here to see the great Ojukwu’s family.”

    “I know with her ( Bianca Ojukwu) own approval and support, comes the approval of Ezeigbo, Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, wherever he is praying for us,” he said.

    Obi said that he had met most Igbo leaders and “I am their son”, adding: “So, if you see your son doing well and breaking new grounds, you only have to encourage his effort”.

    “I have met with most of our leaders. I am consulting with all of them,” he added.

    Responding, Ambassador Bianca Ojukwu said that among other achievements Obi recorded in Anambra as governor was putting to an end to the era of godfatherism in the state.

    According to her, Obi is one of the most progressive, competent and transparent politician in Nigeria today.

    “What we are moving towards is a very defining and decisive moment in Nigeria’s political history.

    “We are seeing a momentum like we have never seen before in the political landscape of the country.

    “And we are seeing a Nigerian of Igbo extraction who has invaded the socio-cultural and political landscape like a hurricane.

    “Of course, Mr Peter Obi, we know of his capacity, having been the first two term governor in the history of Anambra State,” she said.

    Ojukwu noted that Obi’s emergence and acceptance by Nigerians of all ages and walks of life could be likened to a tsunami.

    “It is not an easy task for him to have achieved what he has; the level of acceptance and recognition almost like a revolution that Nigeria has never seen in its history.

    “I think at the end of the day, what every Nigerian needs is a responsive government. A government that has an affinity with the masses. A leader that the people can trust.

    “So I think many of us are looking forward to this election because it will define whether Nigerians are truly sincere about the change that they so desperately need,” she added.

  • President Buhari’s 2023 New Year message

    President Buhari’s 2023 New Year message

    My Fellow Countrymen and Women.

    A very happy and prosperous New Year to you.

    First, I would like to thank and honour the Almighty who saw us through the year 2022 and has given us the opportunity to see another year. Each New Year is an opportunity to reflect on the past year, reposition, and move forward with the New.

    As we celebrate the opportunity to be alive in the year 2023, we must also acknowledge the passing away of our brothers and sisters who didn’t make it into this new year. May their souls rest in perfect peace.

    This year is particularly important to me because this message is in essence valedictory. After having the honour of serving you, my compatriots, for the last seven plus years, my tenure as your President in the most revered tradition of our ongoing and maturing democracy must necessarily come to an end. In the next five months we would have gone to the polls and elected a new president along with new governors and a plethora of other elected officials at both the national and state levels.

    All these electoral and democratic principles are working in concert because of the transcendent beliefs, beyond partisan politics, of you the great citizen of Nigeria. In addition is my personal commitment and executive promise to see to the letter that the 2023 elections being diligently conducted by INEC will be free and fair. The collective electoral will and votes of Nigerians will be fulfilled, even in the twilight moments of my watch.

    Reflecting on year 2022 allows us as a government to examine our legacies of successes and challenges. As we celebrate our wins and review obstacles, we all must understand that governance is a continuum, which still places a transitional responsibility on this administration to provide for the incoming government a non-partisan and objective roadmap for 2023. We as Nigeria; one country united under the will of God and actively growing as an indivisible entity, have been enabled year after year, decade after decade, to weather all stormy waters and emerge stronger and better where others have fallen and disintegrated. This has made us a unique nation across the globe and our continent.

    In year 2023, Nigerians go to the polls to exercise our right to vote and elect a new Administration, it is an important year for our country to ensure that we have another smooth transition of government, to whoever the people have decided upon. This administration’s landmark Amended Electoral Act will ensure that we have free and fair elections across the Nation. We as Nigerians must also take responsibility to ensure we participate in ensuring that the 2023 elections are free and fair by not engaging in anti-state activities and other nefarious acts that may affect the run of the polls. We must also resist every attempt to be used by politicians to create unrest in any form to disrupt the elections. We, as government will ensure such activities are met with the full force of the law.

    As our security agencies continue to make the country proud, we must continue to assist our patriotic forces by providing much needed community intelligence. It is our collective responsibility to ensure that Nigeria remains safe and peaceful for us all. Therefore, we have a duty and obligation to support our troops and intelligence agencies by being alert and reporting anything suspicious. The fight against insurgency in the North East region has continually recorded very clear wins in the past year. The Federal Government, and the Borno State government, have started the journey of returning internally displaced persons to their ancestral homes earlier taken by the insurgents. Also, over 82,000 insurgents with their families have surrendered to the Nigerian military. A number of surrendered insurgents are currently being processed by the rehabilitation (Operation Safe Corridor) program. The fight against banditry, kidnapping and other crimes in the North West and other regions is gaining momentum and showing very clear results. One of which is the resumption of Train Service along the Kaduna to Abuja corridor.

    In the aftermath of the EndSars, our administration took heed and instituted the ongoing Police Reform program based on a new Presidential Vision for Policing in Nigeria. This new vision is framed in a clear road map that transcends the tenure of this administration and it is predicated on six principles: a) Building Trust and Legitimacy b) Leadership, Accountability and Oversight c)Technology and digital media d) Community Policing and Crime Reduction e) Officers Training and Education f) Funding, Officers’ Welfare, Wellness and Safety.

    This reform program is very much in its foundational phase but has recorded noteworthy successes in improving police welfare and their emoluments. Other gains have been the ongoing training of 500 police cadet trainers to enable a better training regimen for the 2022 first batch of the 10,000 new cadets with an additional 10,000 set for 2023. In support of these reforms has been the provisioning of new material for the Nigeria Police to steadily improve on its constitutional responsibility to enforce law and order, protect lives and property as well as street level peace and security.

    Despite the ongoing global economic crisis, we have been able to weather the storms. Inflation across the globe is at its highest, the Federal Government has been resolute through its economic interventions to remain above water during this period. 2022 brought a combined impact from ongoing wars and aftereffects of COVID-19. Though creating its own fiscal challenges, we have continued to subsidize our energy costs to buffer households from inflationary pressure of high energy costs. In 2023, we are focused on building on our GDP and sustain the huge surge in the non-oil GDP growth.

    The Nigerian Start up Bill has been passed as an Act. This is considered a huge step in lowering our unemployment figures by boosting job creation and supporting the entrepreneurial drive of our youths. If you recall in my 2021 New Year speech, I had mentioned the need to secure the future of our youth recognizing that our young people are our most valuable natural resource, at home and abroad. In this regard, we worked with the legislature to develop an enabling law to turn their passions into ideas that can be supported, groomed and scaled across regions. 2023 will see the implementation of the Nigerian Start Up Act nationwide.

    The year 2023 would, indeed, be a time when we would work to solidify on delivering key strategic priorities under our “SEA” – (Security, Economy and Anti-Corruption) Agenda. Some of the key priority areas we would direct our attention and strengths to include:

    a. Focus on SECURITY; we will continue to engage, push back and dismantle the operations of both internal and external extremist and criminal groups waging war against our communities across the Nation. We will also focus on ensuring that free and fair elections would be held come February 2023. Our security forces are working in partnership to ensure the wins we have got in war against insurgency, banditry, secession and other crimes are sustained and more wins acquired.

    b. For the ECONOMY; our focus would be on maintaining and building economic growth through the national economic diversification agenda that supports the goal of national food self-sufficiency and growth in non-oil sources. The ongoing infrastructure revolution by our administration will see us deliver the key projects across the Nation in power, rail, roads, ports and technology.

    c. ANTI-CORRUPTION: On the anti-corruption drive of our administration, we have created new records in this fight, growing from 117 convictions in 2017 to 3,615 convictions as at December 2022. We as a government are committed to ridding our nation of all forms of corruption, through the collaboration with all the arms of Government to effectively prosecute this fight.

    As we welcome the New Year, let us look with hope to 2023, a year to move forward as a Nation towards unity, progress and prosperity. I offer my own personal felicitations, mindful of the various opinions and interpretations of our executive legacies. I welcome and accept both the accolades and criticisms in equal measure secure in the conviction that I did my best to serve our dear country Nigeria and I pray that the next President will also pick up the baton and continue the race to make Nigeria one of the leading countries of the world by the end of this century.

    Long Live the Nigerian spirit of oneness, togetherness, and unity. Long Live the Federal Republic of Nigeria. A Happy and prosperous New year.

    God bless you.

  • BREAKING: New Zealand rings in New Year 2023 with fireworks

    BREAKING: New Zealand rings in New Year 2023 with fireworks

    New Zealand, an island country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean has welcomed the New Year 2023. The country is already 45 minutes old into 2023 at the time of filing this report.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports New Zealand is among the early nations to hold its New Year’s Eve celebrations and welcome in 2023.

    New Zealand welcomed the 2023 New Year at 10.15 am GMT with a light show over the Auckland Harbour Bridge and a fireworks display from the Auckland Sky Tower.

    TNG reports that the New Year will be ushered in at different times across the globe. Australia, especially, will join New Zealand as one of the first nations to ring in the New Year.

    Meanwhile, the small Pacific island nations of Tonga, Samoa and Kiribati/Christmas Island are actually the first nations of the world to mark the New Year at 10 am GMT.

    Howland and Baker Islands, which are unoccupied territories of the United States, will be the last places on Earth to celebrate the New Year.

    However, the last occupied territory to celebrate January 1 will be American Samoa at 11 am GMT tomorrow morning.

  • Buhari to sign 2023 budget Tuesday – Lawan

    Buhari to sign 2023 budget Tuesday – Lawan

    Barring any last-minute changes, President Muhammadu Buhari will sign the 2023 appropriation bill on Tuesday (Jan. 3, 2023).

    Senate President Ahmed Lawan confirmed this to State House correspondents on Friday after a closed-door meeting with Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Lawan revealed that he discussed some national issues with Buhari, including the president’s recent additional loan request, the legislature’s support to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) ahead of the general elections and the 2023 Appropriation Bill.

    He said: ”We are looking forward to Mr President signing the Appropriation Bill 2023, by the grace of God, on Tuesday.

    “This because we signed the document yesterday (Thursday), having lost some time because of some anomalous figures we had in the bill presented to the National Assembly (NASS).

    “But thank God, the NASS in both chambers have passed the Appropriation Bill 2023 on Wednesday, and I’m sure that Mr President and his team, on the executive side, will work on what we have done.

    ”And the first thing on Tuesday, the first official working day of the year, I believe that Mr President will be signing the Appropriation Bill 2023.”

    He lamented that the NASS would have passed the bill a week earlier had it not been for irregularities spotted in the bill.

    “We are very pleased that we have been able to, in the last four years, ensure the passage of the appropriation bills in record time before every Christmas, and Mr President had always signed before the end of the year.

    “This year, particularly, is because of the anomalous, very undesirable and unfortunate situation that we had to delay a little bit.

    “You will recall that the NASS had to cut down its Christmas recess to come back on Wednesday for the sole purpose of passing the appropriation bill which we could have passed a week before. So all the same, there’s nothing that we missed,” he further stated.

    According to him, the seamless working relationship between the executive and the legislature has regularised the signing of the appropriation bills since 2018, resulting in a “predictable January to December” budget for our country.

    On the 2023 general elections, Lawan pledged that NASS would continue to assist and support INEC to enable it deliver credible elections.

    “We also discussed the 2023 general elections. The current NASS has always supported the executive in terms of ensuring that INEC gets whatever is necessary for it to work to ensure that elections are supported, that INEC doesn’t lack in anything.

    “So we have committed ourselves to ensuring that we give INEC whatever it needs for it to conduct a very free, transparent and credible 2023 general elections.

    ”We are here at all times between now and June 11 when our term will also expire as a legislature in the NASS.

    “But before then, whatever INEC needs for 2023 to be a success, we will surely and certainly provide such support,” he said.

  • Obi didn’t break any law on appointment of Osuntokun as DG – Lawyer

    Obi didn’t break any law on appointment of Osuntokun as DG – Lawyer

    A Constitutional Lawyer, Mr Kayode Ajulo, says the Presidential Candidate of Labour Party (LP), Mr. Peter Obi, is in order for appointing Mr Akin Osuntokun as the Director General of his Campaign Organisation.

    Ajulo said this while speaking with NAN via telephone in London on Friday against the backdrop of the controversy surrounding his appointment.

    He said the former Managing Director of NAN was a member of the LP and was appointed as Director, South West for Obi Campaign organisation, a position he described as the equivalent to a Deputy DG

    He said Osuntokun’s transition to the DG Campaign organisation was a natural thing following the resignation of Dr Doyin Okupe who was also from South West Nigeria.

    Ajulo said Okupe’s replacement by Osuntokun was in order because they were both from South West, stressing that Osuntokun was a veteran politician who was once the campaign Director for former President Olúsegún Óbasanjo.

    He said Osuntokun was no longer a member of Zenith Labour Party since Aug. 2022, adding that he was only ZLP Senatorial Candidate.

    According to him, no law in Nigeria governs the appointment of DG of any campaign platform in Nigeria, it’s simply a political appointment and what is basically required is trust and competence.

    Mr. Dan Nwanyanwu, the National Chairman and Presidential Candidate, ZLP in a statement, also said the controversy generated by the appointment of Osuntokun was uncalled for.

    According to him, Osuntokun is no longer a member of the party.

    “We hold no grudges because it is his fundamental right to associate and exit from any organization.

  • 2023: Atiku will win at first ballot – PDP PCC

    2023: Atiku will win at first ballot – PDP PCC

    The Atiku/Okowa Presidential Campaign Organisation says the Presidential Candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, will sweep the 2023 presidential election at the first ballot.

    The Spokesperson of the council, Mr Kola Ologbondiyan, expressed confidence in a statement he issued in Abuja on Tuesday.

    Ologbondiyan said that with Abubakar’s overwhelming support by Nigerians across the board, the outcome of the presidential election, in which Abubakar would emerge victorious on Feb. 25, 2023, would shock pollsters.

    “He enjoys the solidarity and support of greater majority of Nigerians who were not captured in the indices relied upon by many of the pollsters in their projections on the 2023 Presidential election.

    “It Is incontrovertible that Abubakar will win the majority of lawful votes across the country and garner the constitutionally required 25 per cent of votes in more than 24 States of the federation.

    “It is evident that the massive traditional voters of the PDP across the polling units, wards, local governments, states and the six geo-political zones are not distracted in their steadfastness to rescue Nigeria from the misrule by voting enmasse for Abubakar.

    “Also, this army of traditional voters are unrelenting in mobilising the non-partisan voters as well as the undecided across the country to vote for the PDP presidential candidate,” he stated.

    Ologbondiyan added that it was clear that no candidate has the political muscle and national acceptability to stop Abubakar at the first ballot.

    ‘Our campaign is therefore unfazed knowing that majority of Nigerians across the nation are in consensus to elect Abubakar as the next President of our country.

    “This is particularly, given his proven capacity, competence, political will, and national acceptability to provide leadership at this critical time of our national history.”

    He urged Nigerians to remain united and focused in rallying with Abubakar in the collective mission to rescue and rebuild the nation.

  • BVAS: No room for electoral fraud in 2023 – Gov. Yahaya

    BVAS: No room for electoral fraud in 2023 – Gov. Yahaya

    Gov. Inuwa Yahaya of Gombe State, said with the introduction of the Bimodal Voter Authentication System (BVAS), there is no more room for electoral fraud, come 2023 poll.

    Yahaya, who stated this on Tuesday in Tukulma ward in Akko Local Government Area (LGA) of Gombe State, said prior to the introduction of BVAS device, the card readers which were used in previous elections, were manipulated by some politicians for electoral fraud.

    The governor said the BVAS had been introduced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to avert such electoral frauds.

    He said he remained confident that if the 2023 elections were to be held anytime, the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidates at all levels would win elections in the state.

    “Before now, some people will sit in a room and write results, declaring whoever the winner of election, but with BVAS, we are not scared because we have supporters,” he said.

    Yahaya appealed to potential voters in the ward to ensure that they collect their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs), adding that the PVCs remained the only tools for electorates to choice and determine their leaders during election.

    He called on women and youths to vote for Bola Tinubu and all APC candidates in the state, adding that a vote for his party would help sustain the good performances so far recorded by his administration in the state.

    Earlier, the State Director-General, APC Campaign Council, Mr Zubair Umar, appealed to supporters to collect their PVCs ahead of the 2023 general election to exercise their franchise.

    Umar also called on youths to engage in peaceful politics and eschew violence.

    He said that Yahaya needed no campaign for re-election because his administration had performed beyond expectations in all sectors.

    According to him, there are over 200,000 PVCs yet to be collected in Gombe State, so I urge supporters and all those who registered to ensure that they collect their PVCs before elections to enable them vote the party of their choice.

  • No group can hold us to ransom, Akinjo tells Arogbo/Ijaw

    No group can hold us to ransom, Akinjo tells Arogbo/Ijaw

    A pro-PDP pressure group in Ilaje Local Government Area, Ilaje Mandate Voice For Akinjo has described the third term bid Hon Kolade Akinjo as divinely ordained that cannot be threatened by faceless bodies.

    The group was reacting to a report monitored on some WhatsApp platforms by the Akinjo Team Akure wherein they warned former chairman of Ilaje local government, Hon Banji Okunomo of uncomplimentary remarks about Arogbo-Ijaw people.

    Okunomo, a former governorship aspirant of the PDP was said to have described Arogbo-Ijaw people as interlopers, a statement he had denied severally, saying it lacked basis.

    Even with the denial, Akinjo Team Akure, reportedly made up of Arogbo-Ijaw indigenes frowned at the statement and threatened to truncate Akinjo’s ambition.

    But while reacting to the development, the Ilaje Mandate Voice For Akinjo dismissed the threat.

    The statement in full: “No group can hold Ilaje interest on ransom because we are not fools-Akinjo group tackles Ijaw allies

    “We are very disturbed that some unscrupulous elements who are planted within the PDP especially pretending to be supporters of our ever-performing and ranking Hon Victor Kolade Akinjo for the third term agenda to continue the good work he started since 2015 are beginning to sabotage our plans.

    “They hide under the false accusation that our foremost leader Hon. Banji Okunomo alleged the Ijaw Arogbo people are called interlopers and that Ilaje and Apoi will not allow them to test the House of Representatives seat come 2023. But he has even denied the statement on many occasions and even in the Awawa Radio where he explains his own side of the story.

    “But to our surprise, a so-called Akinjo Team based in Akure made up of our Ijaw Arogbo that does not going to the grassroots has been issuing threats upon threats that Ijaws cannot be cowed. Who is cowing Ijaw people? We are disappointed that the group did not know that it is APC that is trying to cause confusion among us and they are not wise. What we are saying is that even without any group, Akinjo and Agboola Ajayi will win their election very well.

    “After all Arogbo votes are not more than the majority of Mahin Ilaje and Apoi altogether. So we are not afraid of any group. They are betrayals. Afterall Hon. Akinjo contested the primary and the same Arogbo people voted for him in our party so why now the complain is coming very strongly that somebody say something against Ijaw Arogbo.

    “Nobody forced the ticket from anybody and Akinjo only contested because the Arogbo PDP leaders said they don’t have anyone who can contest the seat. Nobody should blame anyone that way.

    “We are one people. But what we are saying is that Akinjo third term ambition is Ilaje interest and no one can hold Ilaje interest on ransom. Even though we are one. The Ilaje and Apoi cannot leave the Rep and spoil the senate whereby Ilaje will not be at the Rep, Apoi will not be there, and only Ijaw who are not Yoruba to be there to represent our interest.

    “We are not fools because when D. I Kekemeke was SSG, we did not say anything, when Kingsley Kuku was raining, we did not say anything and even now, Chief Shoot Aside is controlling Surveillant. Ilaje and and Apoi will not leave these two National Assembly positions for Ijaw people. Period!”