Tag: 2023

  • 2023: To hell with Atiku and anyone supporting him – Ortom

    2023: To hell with Atiku and anyone supporting him – Ortom

    Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom has told the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate Atiku Abubakar, to go to hell as he will not support his ambition ahead of the 2023 election.

    The Governor lamented the killing of 18 people in his LG last week.

    Ortom stated this on Sunday night when he hosted the party’s G-5 Governors comprising Nyesom Wike (Rivers); Okezie Ikpeazu (Abia); Seyi Makinde (Oyo) and Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi (Enugu) in Government House, Makurdi.

    “To hell with Atiku and anyone supporting him. They should go and tell him. You want me to be a slave for a Fulani. It’s better I die. Anybody supporting Atiku is an enemy of Benue.

    “My people are being killed and you want me to be quiet. My tenure ends in May and you can do whatever you want if you think you have the powers. I have written my will. When I gave it to my wife, she cried all night. If I die at 62, many of my mates have gone a long time ago and If I die today, I’m a fulfilled person but let it be recorded that I died resisting the invasion and killing of my people.

    “I will never support a Fulani man to become president. If there is another person who is ready to work with me and ensure the security of my people, I will work with him,” he said.

  • 2023: C/River APC Guber candidate loses support of party chieftain, community leaders

    2023: C/River APC Guber candidate loses support of party chieftain, community leaders

    Chief Sam Bassey, a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Cross River and community leaders in Biase Local Government Area, have pledged support for the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Sen. Sandy Onor.

    They made the declaration at a stakeholders’ meeting on Sunday at Biase, near Calabar.

    Bassey said he and his followers took the decision to work for the success of Onor while still in the APC.

    He noted that their action does not in any way amount to anti-party activity; It is meant to correct the injustice meted out to their constituency.

    “The zoning structure adopted by the state chapter of the APC in their primaries election is in itself anti Akamkpa/Biase federal constituency where we all hail from,” he stated.

    Bassey, a member of APC legacy group, said time has come for the political class and political parties to demonstrate equity, fairness and justice in sharing political offices.

    He pointed out that using zoning or rotation to deny or marginalise other minority segments of the state is against the spirit of brotherhood.

    Lashing proponents of back-to-south zoning arrangement, Bassey maintained that the agitators of rotation are mostly those who want to continually dominate the other sections that make up a zone.

    He stressed that every senatorial zone has credible people and resources to lead the state.

    He regretted that both the APC governorship and senatorial candidates are from Efik and from one local government area.

    While noting that this arrangement was with the exclusion of Akamkpa and Biase local government areas, he said it was an attempt to pepertually marginalise the minorities in the south.

    “I am vehemently opposed to this kind of arrangement where some people will remain underdogs and cannot occupy certain positions.

    “Against this background, I, some community leaders and hundreds of our followers in Akamkpa/Biase federal constituency have endorsed and adopted the PDP governorship candidate, Prof. Sandy Onor, ahead of 2023 polls.

    “I believe that Sen. Onor can help us, we have discussed. He is very approachable and has a listening ear. We would try our best to mobilise for the election,” he stated.

    On whether his support and campaign for PDP candidate does not amount to anti-party activity, he said: “I am still in the APC and a legacy member of the party.

    “I have not defected, but the truth is that I am supporting the PDP because that is where the happiness of my people comes from. Besides, if my people are not happy in politics, I cannot even call myself a politician.”

    He advised all the candidates and parties to play by the rules rather than engaging in politics of propaganda and sentiments.

    Also speaking on behalf of some community leaders, Chief Emmanuel Ogban, said, “Some of us have already made up of our minds and are mobilising our people to work for the PDP governorship candidate to fight marginalisation in the south. We have been neglected.

    “This 2023 election is not about party affairs, it is about capacity and credibility as well as who can deliver and redeem us from sufferings and economic doldrums,” he said.

  • UEFA introduces Women’s Nations League

    UEFA introduces Women’s Nations League

    UEFA has announced the  introduction of  the women’s Nations League among the countries of Europe.

    UEFA announced on Thursday in Nyon that the tournament for women will begin next year,

    The competition, which will link into qualification for the European Championship and the World Cup, will start in autumn 2023, it said.

    In the usual practice with the men, countries will be divided into leagues based on their ranking, with promotion and relegation between the leagues.

    UEFA confirmed there would be three tiers with teams playing in groups of three or four within those tiers.

    “I said this summer that we will continue to invest in women’s football, and we are,” UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin said.

    “Off the back of a historic UEFA Women’s Euro, it is now time to further develop women’s national team football.

    “We have built an open, competitive and continuous system in which every match will matter, a true reflection of the European sports model.

    “I am convinced that this format will help all European national associations and keep the dream of qualifying for a major international tournament alive.”

    Proposals for a revamp of the women’s national team competitions, including the introduction of a Nations League, were presented to member-associations by a working group in Frankfurt last month.

    This had happened ahead of the qualifying draw for the men’s Euro in 2024.

    The new formats were officially ratified by UEFA’s ruling executive committee on Wednesday.

    The men’s Nations League was first played in 2018, with the idea that it would provide more meaningful and competitive matches to replace international friendlies.
    Portugal won the first edition in 2019.
  • Beyond the politics of endorsement – By Promise Adiele

    Beyond the politics of endorsement – By Promise Adiele

    The innocuous word ‘endorsement’ presently enjoys celebrity status in Nigerian politics. ‘Endorsement’, hitherto prevalent in the register of advertisement where persons of appreciable popularity approve of a product, has surreptitiously crept into Nigeria’s political lexicon. Unlike in advertisement where ‘endorsement’ maintains an unruffled facade, its identity in politics connotes blessing and support, but sometimes betrayal, deceit, and a tragic presage. While in advertisement ‘endorsement’ simply means approval, in politics, it maintains a positive affirmation but also adorns a sinister complexion. When in William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Decius, one of the conspirators came to cajole Caesar to the Capitol, he preyed on Caesar’s longing for flattering by informing him that the Senators had endorsed him to be crowned the same day. That was a lie. The Senators who purportedly endorsed Caesar were vicious conspirators that eventually murdered him in the most barbaric manner. A misplaced, irrational political endorsement can, in all its gratifying potential, lead to tragic consequences, especially for those intoxicated with the lure of power. Caesar believed the deceit of endorsement, ignored his wife’s warnings and the entire soothsayer’s prognosis about the Ides of March. He met his waterloo.

    Nigeria’s political canvas is never short of inscrutable, recondite preoccupation which challenges the people’s claim to intelligence and independence. The originators of these preoccupations summarily mystify the entire process to satisfy a yawning, inordinate appetite. They do not care for a second if they look stupid as long as they mislead the people, violate public peace, and cause confusion in the body politic. According to Nigeria’s political jobbers, the air we breathe must be politicised. The flight of birds in the air must be given political interpretation. Arsenal vs Chelsea must be analysed and understood along the lines of Nigerian politics. The taste of bitter kola against the sound of it in the mouth must certainly not escape Nigeria’s political exegeses. All of these must in one way or another provide a peep into how the people will vote as if the electorate are zombies from another planet.

    The newfound love for political jobbers in Nigeria now is the politics of endorsement. I have been intrigued to no end as to how Nigeria’s current political discourse has recently centred on the endorsement of various political office seekers, especially presidential candidates. From the North to the South, East to the West, the current political champion right now is an endorsement. It appears anyone endorsed by any group in the country has won the election rendering the efforts and posturing of the electorate inconsequential. In 2015, Nigerians endorsed the current government and did so again in 2019. Towards the 2023 elections, Nigerians must be wary not to redefine endorsement as a systemic enthronement of handicapped leadership which inevitably leads to the imposition of hardship and suffering. It is obvious that the collective endorsements of 2015 and 2019 were huge mistakes but the continuous pleading of ‘it is well’ in the face of harsh living conditions has proved to be a genuine extenuating gesture. Now, it is time to set aside the “it is well” cold refrain – that unction of uncommon hypnosis fawned by the timid and their defeated consciences. It cannot be well when people consciously endorse a pathetic candidate in an election.

    With endorsement dominating Nigeria’s political discourse, one’s intellect is inundated by different ideological pressures to rationalise what seems an odious reality. But rationalization must be informed by reason to save one from sliding into mental abstraction. Let’s face the truth – in real politics, the ultimate endorsers are the people, the electorate with valid voter cards to do the needful. It is laughable, in fact, ridiculous that Nigerians should worry about what group has endorsed a candidate and what other group has not endorsed another candidate. I am aware of the influence groups and sundry elements can wield in politics when they privately endorse a candidate. But that is applicable under normal circumstances. The Nigerian circumstance is not normal therefore, endorsement of any kind has lost all the glory and relevance associated with modern-day politicking. In Nigeria today, those who endorse privately belong to the upper-class echelon and therefore are immune from the harsh socio-economic realities in the country.

    Look at Ohaneze, Afenifere, Arewa, and other notable groups across the country. Their chairmen and spokespersons wine and dine with the high and mighty, they are big men and women all of them. It is therefore an existential delusion to imagine that these people, by their private endorsement of any candidate speak for the impoverished, hunger-ravaged masses. Some of these people promoting endorsement as if it is the real election conceive Nigerians as idiots. Well, I believe Nigerians are not stupid or are they? Political office seekers in Nigeria now, especially the presidential candidates should be circumspect about those they visit for endorsement. Julius Caesar was endorsed by the Senators to be crowned but it was a different type of endorsement. Macbeth was endorsed by the witches to become a king but was afflicted with a morbid desire for power which led to his downfall. Endorsement seekers beware. This warning does not require any mental elaboration, it is simple and straight to the point.

    There is an emergency in Nigeria under the APC-led administration. Every right-thinking person is aware of this reality. The real endorsement will be done at the polls next year and it will be carried out by the victims of serial economic plundering, insecurity, inflation, corruption, non-existing Medicare and a somnolent educational system. Towards the 2023 elections, I am a bit worried that of Nigeria’s estimated population of 200 million people, less than 100 million people registered to vote. In Brazil during the just concluded general elections, 154.4 million voters participated out of a population of 214 million people. In the 2018 elections in that country, 147 million people voted. In Nigeria, less than 100 million people do not represent the suffering, vanquished masses. Everyone registered to vote should be ready to participate in the elections in Nigeria. Effective, valid endorsement is carried out by the direct recipients of government policies and not by those whose bread is buttered irrespective of the character in power.

    The all-important question is – when Nigerians go to the polls next year, what will they be endorsing? Will they endorse a fraudulent change mantra conceived and packaged in 2015 which has led Nigerians to the precipice? Indeed, will Nigerians be endorsing broken promises which have destroyed the family unit due to the high cost of living? While at endorsement, Nigerians must remember that a bag of rice now costs N45,000 and the price per litre of petrol is N200. All Nigerian public university lecturers and students must surely have something to endorse. Nigerians should decide whether to endorse the monumental stealing of their crude oil through which the country bleeds excessively. Till today, no one has been arrested. Life goes on. Certainly, Nigerians must decide whether to endorse backwardness, polarized polity, expensive cost of governance, broad daylight robbery by former governors in the guise of pensions and other entrenched absurdities. Please, kindly decide whether to endorse Aso Rock as a convalescent home for old, infirm people who should be recuperating and enjoying their retirement.

    At this time, Nigerians must decide what they want. Brazil just endorsed a new beginning by voting out an anti-people, corrupt, wasteful government. Indeed, the supreme endorsement resides with the people. The Nigerian political endorsement resides with Nigerians and not some bourgeois, aristocratic class that is not affected by the vagaries of government policies. Will Nigerians, in all their glory and famed sophistication endorse candidates with fraudulent academic records, indeterminate age, mysterious genealogy, uncertain health conditions, and a damning verdict by former President Obasanjo and another elder statesman Bode George – those who know better. It is only a tragic generation that will endorse affliction for the third time. Let 2023 come quickly. Authentic endorsement beckons.

  • 2023 election, payback time for Tinubu – Shettima

    2023 election, payback time for Tinubu – Shettima

    Vice Presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Kashim Shettima, says 2023 election is payback time by the north to Tinubu, for his past support to the region.

    Shettima said this when he visited the Hausa community in Alaba-Rago, in Iba Local Council Development Area (LCDA), on Wednesday in Lagos.

    He urged them to vote for the party’s presidential candidate, Sen. Bola Tinubu.

    Shettima was accompanied by Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State, Gov. Abdullah Ganduje of Kano State, Lagos APC Chairman, Cornelius Ojelabi, and all Arewa leaders in Lagos.

    He said that Tinubu made President Muhamadu Buhari President in 2015 by giving him bloc votes from the South-West, a feat he repeated in 2019.

    Shettima further said that Tinubu provided the platform for Atiku to contest presidential election when Atiku was chased out of PDP, same thing he did for Nuhu Ribadu.

    ”We are people of honour, we should honour our pledge and promise. This is payback time for the north to support Tinubu,” Shettima said.

    Gov. Abdullah Ganduje of Lagos State said that as far as the north was concerned, ‘the issue of Tinubu is concluded’.

    ”Kano State wants votes from you for Tinubu. You have to promise us you will surpass Kano in your votes for Tinubu,” Ganduje said.

    He said that Tinubu appointed non-Yoruba indigenes into government when he was governor, describing him as ‘a real nationalist’.

    Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State urged the Hausa community ‘not to be deceived’ and to vote for APC in the presidential and governorship elections.

    Sanwo-Olu said that the meeting with the community was part of the party’s political discussions with non-indigene groups residing in Lagos State.

    He thanked the Hausa community for supporting the efforts of Lagos State Government, as government scaled up infrastructure and amenities in the LCDA.

    The governor also thanked them for maintaining peace while co-existing with other residents of the state.

    He said that the administration would be completing the Lagos-Badagry highway soon, as the stretch toward Okokomaiko, the final stage, which would be completed by the end of 2022.

    Sanwo-Olu said that the General Hospital currently been built in Iba would be completed in the not too distant future, then government would move inside Ojo and take up the Kemberi-Afromedia Road.

  • 2023: Why Ukwa-la-Ngwa people will not vote for PDP – APGA Chair

    2023: Why Ukwa-la-Ngwa people will not vote for PDP – APGA Chair

    The Chairman of APGA in Abia,  Rev. Augustine Ehiemere, says the Ukwa-la-Ngwa ethnic nationality in the state has suffered untold neglect for the past 20 years under the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Ehiemere disclosed this on Friday in a statement issued in Umuahia and made available to newsmen.

    The statement was issued against the backdrop of the alleged plot by the ruling-PDP to “poach“ APGA’s House of Assembly candidates from Ukwa-la-Ngwa.

    He stated that APGA received intelligence about a plot by PDP to use its candidates to sabotage the chances of APGA’s Governorship Candidate, Prof. Greg Ibe.

    He, therefore, advised the candidates to resist any inducement, financial or otherwise, to lure them out of APGA.

    He maintained that the plot was to offer the candidates “irresistible financial inducements” to defect to the PDP.

    “According to our intelligence, their plan is to lure the affected APGA candidates with such heavy financial offers to help deliver PDP governorship candidate, Prof. Uche Ikonne, in their respective constituencies.

    “They equally promised to concede the House of Assembly seats to some of them, while others would be rewarded with political appointments in the imaginary Ikonne-led government,” Ehiemere stated.

    He described the experience of Ukwa-la-Ngwa people under PDP as lamentable for anybody to vote for its candidates.

    He explained that the nine local government areas of Ukwa-la-Ngwa, including Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu’s Obingwa, had the worst roads in the state.

    Ehiemere expressed sadness that Ukwa had nothing to show in terms of infrastructure and other indices of development, in spite of being the only oil-bearing area of the state.

    He asked, “So, why should any right-thinking candidate of Ukwa-la-Ngwa extraction succumb to the PDP trap?”

    He urged the APGA candidates “to refuse to be remembered on the wrong side of history.

    “We urge them to stand tall as heroes of democracy and support our governorship candidate in his vision to birth a new Abia where merit will be placed above other sentiments.

    “The bid to free Abia from political bondage is a divine project that should not be truncated or sacrificed on the altar of personal aggrandisement,” he added.

    The APGA chieftain expressed regrets that certain politicians were desperate to continue “to use our common patrimony to hold the state down perpetually.

    “Never again shall we mortgage our future and that of the unborn generation because of pecuniary interests.

    “We should not allow those who have allocated to themselves the position of kingmakers to use our collective resources to buy our future.

    “We must all rise to ensure that only those who have the competence to revive our economy and navigate the state out of its present economic doldrums receive our mandate,” Ehiemere stated.

    He contended that PDP had brought misery to the people with the delays in payment of salaries and pensions, in addition to the deplorable state of infrastructure.

    He urged the people to reject the continuation of god-fatherism and imposition which, he said, had taken the state far behind others in the South-East.

    He maintained that the 2023 “is the time to vote for competence and not mediocrity.

    “Abia cannot be entrusted in the hands of emergency philanthropists and overnight billionaire government contractors who are feeding fat on Abia’s commonwealth.

    “The next Abia governor must have capacity and a track record of achievements, like Prof. Ibe, ” Ehiemere stated.

    He described Ibe as the best among all the governorship candidates.

    He said that Ibe, the proprietor and Chancellor, Gregory University, Uturu, remained “the single highest employer of labour in the state.

    “Ibe has empowered thousands of our people long before now, unlike some of these emergency philanthropists,” he stated.

    Reacting to the allegation of poaching, the PDP’s Acting Spokesman, Chief Amah Abraham, said that it was not true that PDP was poaching APGA candidates.

    “The truth is that the Ukwa-la-Ngwa people have realised that their interest would better be served under the PDP.

    “It’s not poaching. They are people who have realised their mistakes and want to return home.

    “It’s called political realignments and wheel balancing.

    “We engage them constructively and they are aligning themselves with the winning party.

    “It’s not a matter of any inducement. They are committed to the cause of PDP,” Abraham said.

  • 2023: Atiku, team land in United States for Campaigns, meetings

    2023: Atiku, team land in United States for Campaigns, meetings

    The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)  for the 2023  elections, Atiku Abubakar, has arrived  the United States of America for campaign purpose.

    Atiku stormed  Washington D.C. in America with his entourage for consultations and meetings ahead of the 2023 election in the country.

    He flew to the U.S, alongside the Director-General of the PDP Presidential Campaign, Governor Aminu Tambuwal.

    Others are ex-Imo Governor Emeka Ihedioha, and business mogul, Raymond Dokpesi, both key members of the campaign team.

    The former vice president and his team are  also expected to meet with top Nigerian business leaders in the U.S., and the nation’s young professionals in the diaspora.

    They were received by ex-Senate President Bukola Saraki, House of Representatives Minority leader, Ndudi Elumelu, ex-lawmaker Dino Melaye, Atiku’s Special Assistant Phrank Shuaibu, among others.

    Atiku’s engagements include a meeting with Nigerians in diaspora, as well as with PDP members in North America.

    Recall that there were speculations that the Waziri of Adamawa has been banned from entering the United States before the 2019 elections in the country.

    Atiku has now traveled to United States on a few occasions since then.

    The trip was then condemned by the APC through its campaign spokesperson, Festus Keyamo. The Minister of State for Labour is serving in the same role ahead of the polls.

    Atiku is expected to return to the country next week Monday and the next point of call for the continuation of his campaign is  Ekiti state  in the South west of Nigeria.

  • Okowa presents N561.8bn budget for 2023

    Okowa presents N561.8bn budget for 2023

    Gov. Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta on Thursday presented a budget of N561.8 billion for 2023 to the State House of Assembly for approval.

    Okowa, while presenting the budget, Christened “Budget of Seamless and Stable Transition”, in Asaba, said that the figure showed an increase of 17 per cent over that of 2022.

    He said that the budget was made up of N235.2 billion in Recurrent Expenditure, representing 42 per cent, and N326.6 billion Capital Expenditure, representing 58 per cent.

    Okowa said that the budget would be mainly funded through Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).

    ”With the sustenance of all the measures put in place to overhaul the revenue infrastructure, the IGR for 2023 is expected to improve.

    ”The signs are obvious with a performance of 89 per cent of the budget in the first nine months of the current year. We shall continue to sustain and improve on the measures taken thus far which culminated in the increased revenue profile.

    ”While new sources of revenue are being explored, we shall also intensify enforcement of appropriate tax legislation.

    ”It is therefore, our projection to generate the sum of N95 billion as IGR in 2023, representing 17 per cent of the total projected revenues for the year,” he said.

    The governor said that the IGR estimate for 2023 was higher than that of 2022 by N15 billion, with a proposed growth rate of 19 per cent.

    Okowa also said that the budget would focus on strengthening the existing administrative institutional framework, build capacity of public servants, ensure value for money and improve the quality of public service delivery.

    ”The State Government will also strengthen the relevant institutions of the state responsible for sustaining the reforms and gains of the Fiscal Transparency, Accountability and Sustainability (SFTAS) programme of the World Bank which has recorded tremendous improvements in our financial administrative processes,” he said.

    Gov. Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta on Thursday presented a budget of N561.8 billion for 2023 to the State House of Assembly for approval.

    Okowa, while presenting the budget, Christened “Budget of Seamless and Stable Transition”, in Asaba, said that the figure showed an increase of 17 per cent over that of 2022.

    He said that the budget was made up of N235.2 billion Recurrent Expenditure, representing 42 per cent and N326.6 billion Capital Expenditure, representing 58 per cent.

    Okowa said that the budget would be mainly funded through Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).

    ”With the sustenance of all the measures put in place to overhaul the revenue infrastructure, the IGR for 2023 is expected to improve.

    ”The signs are obvious with a performance of 89 per cent of the budget in the first nine months of the current year. We shall continue to sustain and improve on the measures taken thus far which culminated in the increased revenue profile.

    ”While new sources of revenue are being explored, we shall also intensify enforcement of appropriate tax legislation.

    ”It is therefore, our projection to generate the sum of N95 billion as IGR in 2023, representing 17 per cent of the total projected revenues for the year,” he said.

    The governor said that the IGR estimate for 2023 was higher than that of 2022 by N15 billion, with a proposed growth rate of 19 per cent.

    Okowa also said that the budget would focus on strengthening the existing administrative institutional framework, build capacity of public servants, ensure value for money and improve the quality of public service delivery.

    ”The State Government will also strengthen the relevant institutions of the state responsible for sustaining the reforms and gains of the Fiscal Transparency, Accountability and Sustainability (SFTAS) programme of the World Bank which has recorded tremendous improvements in our financial administrative processes,” he said.

  • 2023: Nigerian Global Roundtable concerned over radicalization of political space

    2023: Nigerian Global Roundtable concerned over radicalization of political space

    A Non-Governmental Organization, NGO, the Nigerian Global Roundtable based in Vienna, Austria has raised concerns over the coming 2023 general elections in Nigeria.

    The NGO is aimed at pursuing good governance and accountability and facilitating the economic empowerment and overall development of Nigeria and Africa at large which purpose is to advance and consolidate knowledge, free from discriminations of all kinds and promote matters relating to Africa and Nigeria in particular.

    The Think & Do NGO is also a legal entity registered in Vienna, Austria, with distinguished Nigerian professionals from all walks of life from across the world – both at home and in the Diaspora.

    In view of the persisting and current prevailing leadership problems across Africa and Nigeria in particular, the NGO has been engaging Nigeria’s and Africa’s leaders, opinion influencers and policymakers on topical issues on leadership and their vision on how to move the continent forward through organising series of debates, webinars, and communiques.

    In a statement: Given the various insinuations regarding the coming election and the need for Nigerians to participate in a free and fair, and transparent election, we the Nigerian Global Roundtable as concerned stakeholders are worried over the radicalization of our political space. We therefore wish to call on all political parties, candidates, their supporters, the media and the Authorities to respect the rules and additionally state as follows:

    1. That election campaigns are a competition of ideas and political parties with different manifestoes are part of a democratic system in selecting a new leader.

    2. That politicians should focus on what they intend to do for Nigeria and not in the slandering or attacking of their rivals.

    3. That bill boards of opponents are legitimate ways of communication and that those of opponents should not be destroyed.

    4. That presidential candidates have a duty to caution their supporters to desist from threatening violence to dissenting voices and supporters of the opposition parties.

    5. That presidential candidates have a responsibility to ask their supporters to desist from online bullying and violent verbal exchange between their supporters.

    6. That presidential candidates have a responsibility to ask their supporters to desist from all actions that could raise anxiety that could culminate in electoral violence during the campaigns.

    7. That the terms of the Peace Accord signed by the presidential candidates be monitored and adhered to.

    8. That to move Nigeria forward, Nigerians are encouraged to actively participate in the coming elections and vote according to their conscience, towards electing credible, competent, and capable leaders considering the following factors; integrity, competence, and zero tolerance towards corruption.

    9. That INEC avoids bottlenecks for all Nigerians that are yet to collect their voters’ cards to enable all willing Nigerians to freely exercise their franchise.

    10. That activities of INEC are conducted in a manner as to guarantee a fair and credible election.

    11. That we urge all Politicians and their supporters to be civil in their campaigns. They should eschew lies and propaganda, show dignity and advise their supporters to embrace peace. Their campaign should be issue based.

    12. That Irrespective of ownership structure of the media houses, the media should be ethical enough to advise politicians to remain on the subject of their manifestation not blackmail opposition or slander others.

    13. That the electronic transmission of our election voting results is the law of the land, and its legitimacy was affirmed by the Nigerian apex court. Therefore, no political party should truncate the established law by blackmail, extortion, and or intimidation of the INEC staff.

    14. Lastly, we sympathize with all the victims of the current floods throughout Nigeria and urge the Nigerian government to create a relief fund to assist them. We also urge the Nigerian government to prioritize the completion of the Dasin Hausa Dam as the counterpart to the Lagdo Dam in northern Cameroon to avert the reoccurrence of this flood disaster in the future. We also urge state governments to embark upon enduring drainage systems/projects in their respective states, as the next rainy season is only a few months away from the current one.

  • Super Falcons play Canada to begin FIFA World Cup 2023 campaign

    Super Falcons play Canada to begin FIFA World Cup 2023 campaign

    Nigeria’s Women’s Senior Football team, Super Falcons, and the best to come out of Africa, and would begin their 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup campaign against Canada.

    Super Falcons have been drawn in Group B against Canada, Republic of Ireland, and one of the host countries Australia.

    The draws were made earlier today (Saturday) in Auckland, New Zealand, one of the host cities of the competition.

    Nigeria would look at increasing their chances at the competition, having the highest records of African representative (nine times) in the competition, and never missed the world cup since the competition began.

    Other African teams in the competition are South Africa in group G, Zambia in Group C, Morocco in Group H while Senegal and Cameroon still have chances if they win their playoff games.

    The historic prestigious competition would kick off with New Zealand playing against Norway on July 20, 2023, while Australia, the other host country, play Republic of Ireland the next day.

    The FIFA World Women’s Football fiesta would, in this edition, witness 32 teams all grouped into eight groups competing for honours.

    The US national women’s team with the most title would be looking at winning their fifth title and their third straight when they begin their campaign against Vietnam.

    In another related competition, Nigeria’s Women Junior national team, Flamingoes, are through to the semifinals of the ongoing FIFA World Women’s Cup in India.

    Nigeria beat powerhouse US 4-3 on penalties after the match ended 1-1 in regulation time.

    The Flamingoes made history, becoming the first African team to reach the semifinals and have a chance to extend their heroics when they play the winner between Tanzania and Columbia.

    The semifinal match comes up on Wednesday.