Tag: Governorship Election

  • BREAKING: We’re probing MC Oluomo’s threat against Igbo – Lagos CP

    BREAKING: We’re probing MC Oluomo’s threat against Igbo – Lagos CP

    The Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Idowu Owohunwa has said that an investigative enquiry has been launched into the alleged threat issued against Igbo by the Lagos State Parks Management Committee Chairman, Musiliu Akinsanya popularly known as MC Oluomo.

    Owohunwa made this known while featuring in an interview with TV Arise News on the preview of the governorship and state assembly elections slated for Saturday.
    MC Oluomo, in a viral video had threatened that Igbo people living in Lagos should not bother to come to the polls if they will not for the ruling party, All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Reacting to it, Lagos CP said: “We condemn in strongest possible terms any act, statement that could be interpreted, speech that could be interpreted deeply as political tension. With regards to this specific video, it is currently a subject of an investigation.”

  • The moment to rescue ABIA state – By Chidi Amuta

    The governorship election on Saturday 18th is more decisive for Abia state than many others. It is an opportunity to end the tragedy of a long night of disastrous governance that has plagued the state in the last twenty four years. It is a unique opportunity to etch a difference between darkness and light and between government for a selfish cartel and democracy as government of the people for their own good by one of their own kind.

    This election is coming at a time when Abia state has accumulated so many negative records among states of the nation. To citizens of the state, a tradition of irresponsible and insensitive governance may have become all too familiar and normal. The records speak for themselves. From the administration of Mr. Orji Kalu to that of Theodore Orji and the outgoing Okezie Ikpeazu, the story of Abia has been one long night of deceit, unbridled corruption and epic incompetence. Even as the people prepare to troop out once again to vote for yet another governor, the question on the lips of most honest Abia citizens is whether democracy will bring them hope and some goodness or continue with a life of perpetual despair, poverty and hopelessness.

    The picture of the state on this eve of a governorship election is sad and almost tragic. As we speak, Abia is easily the most indebted state in the federation with a debt portfolio of over N189.9 billion. The present government that ratcheted up most to this debts inherited a debt of about N35 billion from its predecessor. It is the state with the longest period of default in the payment of the salaries of staff in the public sector especially education and health. Doctors in the state’s service are owed upwards of 30 months in salary arrears. No one knows when they are on duty or on strike. Teachers in government primary, secondary and tertiary institutions are in the same boat or slightly worse.

    The state university runs consistently on upwards of an average of six months in arrears of salaries and allowances of staff. The state polytechnic at Aba is in default of salaries and allowances to the tune of over 30 months and still counting. The institution has virtually lost its accreditation while its academic and administrative staff now supplement their livelihood as keke and Okada riders or petty traders in inconsequential merchandise.

    Doctors in government health institutions have gone without salaries for upwards of 30 months. Most state pensioners have since forgotten when last they received their pensions let alone gratuities. The sick no longer bother to go to any of the state’s general hospitals or health centres knowing well that they are likely to come out feet first because doctors and nurses are either perennially on strike or have no motivation or facilities to provide care or cure. Drug prescriptions are worthless since most pharmacies in state hospitals have a permanent sign on display: “OUT OF STOCK” to announce a perennial absence of essential and basic drugs and medicaments.

    The city of Aba has been in decline and abandonment for the last 24 years. Drainage is absent. Sewage system is unheard of. Open drains filled to the brim with unprintable effluents empty onto the surface of the few ill maintained roads available.

    Aba is literally an inhabited refuse dump. Mounds of refuse greet the eyes at nearly every inch of the city which has a permanent stench of something dead. Most roads in the town are in desperate disrepair. Some people have forgotten when some of these were roads as many have become deep gullies and waterways that are hardly impassable when it rains. Adjoining the many dilapidated roads is one or two uncompleted flyovers that the state government has been building and commissioning in bits for the better part of the last seven and half years.

    The sorry state of Abia state is inscribed boldly on the faces of every citizen except the few who are responsible for this scandalous absence of responsibility in government. People are hungry, poor, unkempt and viciously frustrated.

    This is the effective backdrop to the elections that will take place in the next three or four days to elect a new governor. The choice before the people is therefore a clear one. The crisis of governance in the state has defined the type of governor that Abia people should be looking forward to having from May 29th 2023. The ideal next governor of Abia state must therefore come to the table with a mix of qualities that have openly been deficient in the last 24 years. These are competence, capacity, track record of performance, knowledge and character with conscience and empathy.

    Abia needs a governor who can read a balance sheet. We need somebody who understands the essence of governance. It must be somebody who understands the complimentary relationship, the social contract between government and people. The new governor must understand that in government, as in business, there is a clear distinction between revenue and expenditure and between recurrent expenditure and capital costs.

    Above all, the new governor of Abia state must have empathy for the people he governs. Governance without compassion becomes a machine of insensitivity and evil. The new governor must know that a government thrives when the minimum expectations of the people are met. Salaries and wages must be paid as and when due. When workers receive their salaries and allowances regularly, demand is stimulated and supply of goods and services is ignited. Contentment and prosperity are generated.

    Abia is easily the most industrially and commercially viable state in Nigeria. But the spirit of enterprise and industry among the people has been stifled and crushed by a succession of bad and irresponsible governments. If brought back to life, the city of Aba alone can give the state an internally generated revenue base of at least N5 billion a month as against the little over N1 billion collected at present. Even the present level of IGR is an understatement as a plethora of criminal networks are known to cream off most of the internally generated revenue in the name of task forces, consultants and other cartels of corruption. The state’s dormant revenue pool must now be activated in order to deliver to the Abia people the prosperity they deserve but have waited endlessly for.

    I have seen most of the political propaganda material being brandished around the Abia governorship campaign. The noisiest faction is the one claiming that the governor must come from a particular geo political zone. That argument is moribund, redundant and prehistoric. Abia does not need a Bende or Ngwa or Umuahia governor. I agree that ewuity and identity are part of politics but we must distinguish between what is strategically important and what is politically expedient.

    Therefore, what Abia needs now is a good governor, in fact a better governor than the parade of locusts that have so far reduced the state to its present sorry state. If you ask me, I would confidently say that on the contrary, it is now the turn of Abia state to rise to the promise of its founding fathers through the election of a capable, enlightened and committed governor. Parochial sentiments and little primordial micro nationality qualms should not obscure this larger goal.

    I have heard the loud voices of the Ukwa/Ngwa faction of the Abia political elite. For the avoidance of doubt, I was born in Abia state. My birth chord lies buried there beneath a kola nut tree. The bones of my parents and grand parents lie buried in the soil of Abia. I n addition, I can confidently assert, factually, that there is no citizen of the state, living or dead, that contributed more than my humble self in getting then president General Ibrahim Babangida to sign off on the creation of Abia state. But I have never directly or indirectly staked a proprietary entitlement to the political leadership of the state. I am also solidly from Ngwaland. None of the people shouting about the entitlement of the Ngwas to use their demographics to dominate the leadership of the state is more Ngwa than myself. I have probably contributed more to the development of Ngwaland and the Ngwa identity in Nigeria than the majority of these campaigners. But, I have never, however, insisted that the choice of a fit and proper governor for the state should be restricted to my village, clan or sub ethnicity. What Abia, or indeed any and every state or Nigeria for that matter needs is a capable and competent leader to deliver to the majority the dividends of democracy. That is the message of the moment’s political reality as we have seen it.

    By a historical coincidence, the crop of candidates vying for the governorship of Abia state are in general qualitatively better than their predecessors but the political party configuration of the moment is vastly in favour of the candidate and agenda of the Labour Party. The attributes that earned Mr. Peter Obi the shattering success in the last presidential election are now at the disposal of Abia state in the person of the Labour Party candidate, Mr.Alex Otti.

    After a careful scrutiny of the antecedents and qualities of the contenders, I am convinced that only Mr. Alex Otti, of the present crop of candidates, possesses the attributes of the kind of governor that can rescue Abia state from the doldrums in which it has been plunged by the present and past administrations of locust governors.

    Mr. Peter Obi had outlined character, capacity and competence as core qualities for the highest political offices in today’s Nigeria. As it was valid and attractive for Nigeria, it is even more imperative for Abia state.

    At a personal level, I have known Mr. Alex Otti for the past many years and can boldly assert that he possesses the requisite attributes and proven qualities to lead a rescue mission to dig Abia state out of the deep ditch into which the present and past governors have dumped the state.

    I knew him as a young boy growing up at Umu-uru, next door to my Umuguru village. Later, as one of my students at the University of Port Harcourt, I remain proud of Alex who justified the confidence of we his teachers with a brilliant First Class Honours degree in economics and the social sciences. In his banking career, first at First Bank and, later, as Managing Director of Diamond Bank, Mr. Otti distinguished himself by being in the forefront of outstanding management turnarounds in both organizations. In the contest for the present tenure of the position of Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria under president Jonathan, Alex Otti was a front line candidate and stood a very good chance of being the current Governor of the Central Bank but for reasons of political considerations. I

    n his private business, Alex has recorded undoubted success. As a manager, Alex Otti is competent, informed, enlightened and has the requisite private sector linkages to expand the economic horizon of Abia state and thus lift it from the present centre of poverty to its deserved status as a place of prosperity and economic influence.

    For the avoidance of doubt, I make this bold endorsement of Mr. Otti in full cognizance of the respectability that Abia state deserves but cannot get under the lack lustre and embarrassing canopy of the present leadership in the state and the ones that preceded it.

    Abia is no ordinary state. Many fellow Nigerians have expressed consternation that a state that boasts of some of the most distinguished and illustrious citizens of our nation both living and dead can degenerate into such a laughing stock. This is the state of Michael Okpara, Ebitu Ukiwe, Kalu Idika Kalu, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, late Ndubuisi Kanu, Anya O Anya, Darlington Uzu, Onyema Ugochukwu, the late Stanley Macebuh and many more others.

    This plea for a fit and proper person as the next governor of Abia state is entered on behalf of these illustrious citizens as well as the millions of long suffering people of the state who have simply suffered too much. Our people cannot remain in bondage for much longer than this moment.

  • IG orders nationwide mop-up of weapons ahead governorship election

    IG orders nationwide mop-up of weapons ahead governorship election

    The Inspector-General of Police (I-G), Mr. Usman Baba, has directed police commands and formations to intensify the mop-up of illicit arms and ammunition across the country ahead of the March 18 election.

    Baba gave the order in a statement by the Force Public Relations Officer, CSP Olumuyiwa Adejobi, on Tuesday in Abuja.

    The I-G said the order was to curb the trafficking of illicit Small Arms and Light Weapons and mitigate security threats to the ongoing electoral process.

    He added that it was also for the general safety of Nigerians.

    “One month after handing over of previously recovered arms and ammunition to the National Centre for the Control of Small Arms and Light Weapons,  the Nigeria Police has recovered additional 182 sophisticated arms and 430 ammunitions of various calibres,” he said.

    Baba therefore, ordered all commands and formations to sustain the tempo, so as to halt the proliferation of illicit arms and ammunition in the country.

    The I-G disclosed that logistics had been distributed to police commands and formations nationwide ahead of the governoship and Houses of Assembly elections.

    He said the additional support was to ensure effective security before, during, and after the elections.

    According to him., the logistics include operational vehicles, non-lethal weapons, body armour and anti-riot equipment.

    The I-G enjoined strategic police managers to deploy the additional operational assets and manpower to ensure proper security during the upcoming elections.

    He also directed all police personnel to ensure that the elections were conducted in a peaceful and secured environment.

  • Omo-Agege meets Buhari, says Delta very ripe for taking

    Omo-Agege meets Buhari, says Delta very ripe for taking

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Delta, Sen. Ovie Omo-Agege, Thursday, dismissed the notion of the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) firm grip on the state.

    He told journalists after a closed-door meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari in Abuja that “Delta is very ripe for the taking” adding that it was a misconception to tag Delta, a PDP state.

    “That is a very serious misconception to tag Delta State, a PDP state. Delta is very ripe for the taking.

    ”We’re determined to achieve this; we’ve been going round each local government, ward by ward, making the case; drawing the attention of the people of the state to the mis-governance and lack of performance on the part of not just Okowa but the PDP led administration in the past 14 years.

    “The message to people is resonating; we’ve been able to make the case to them that Delta State is supposedly a very, very rich state.

    “And indeed a very rich state given the contributions that we (APC government) have made, not only to the economy of this country, but also to the economy of the state.

    ”This is because of the receipts we have gotten from federal allocation, inclusive of a 13 per cent derivation and other resources that come to the state by way of Internally Generated Revenue,’’ he said.

    The governorship candidate said that the APC’s reckoning since the Okowa administration came into office, Delta State had received close to about N4.2 trillion.

    “And this came, like I said, by way of federal allocation. It came by way of 13 per cent derivation, and also about N400 billion that the state has borrowed.’’

    He, however, alleged that the incumbent governor, Ifeanyi Okowa, had nothing to show for the N4.2 trillion earned by the state in the last seven and half years.

    The Deputy Senate President said that he was in the Villa to confer with the President on national issues.

    According to Omo-Agege, Okowa’s administration has yet to settle gratuities and pensions of workers for up to nine years and has yet to commence payment of the N30,000 minimum wage despite the financial status of the state.

    He alleged that in spite of being a medical doctor, the health sector in Delta took a nosedive under the Okowa’s administration.

    Omo-Agege also accused the Delta governor of betraying his counterparts in the South by accepting to be a running mate to the PDP Presidential candidate in spite of agreement that the presidency should shift to the South, after the eight-year tenure of President Buhari, a northerner.

    He said: “It is the position of Deltans and most especially, indeed the entire southern Nigeria, that given the fact that we have supported Mr President, Muhammadu Buhari, for the past eight years, it’s only fair, just and equitable that the next President should come from southern Nigeria.

    ”And it may also interest you that Okowa as the Chairman of the Governors Forum in South-South was one of those who led this charge, and met in Asaba, where the case was made.

    ”So to the chagrin and disappointment of many at home, Okowa betrayed that cause by selling away our right to the presidency, and instead going for office of a Vice President at a time when the entire country is offering us the presidency.

    ”So our people are not taking this treachery kindly and determined that they will punish Okowa.”

    The Deputy Senate President, who insisted that his chance of winning the governorship election was bright, assured that he would address the challenges of unemployment, insecurity and infrastructure decay in the state on assumption of office.

    He also said he would make the business environment attractive to investors to return to the state in order to create employment for the people.

  • 2023: Court affirms Kantigi as Niger PDP candidate

    2023: Court affirms Kantigi as Niger PDP candidate

    A Federal High Court, Abuja, on Thursday, affirmed Mr Liman Kantigi as the validly elected governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the 2023 elections in Niger.

    Justice Zainab Abubarkar, in a judgement, dismissed the suit brought by the plaintiff, Mr Idris Mohammed Sani, for lacking in merit.

    Newsmen reports that Sani had sued the PDP, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and Kantigi as 1st, 2nd and 3rd defendants respectively.

    In the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/804/2022, the plaintiff had challenged that the PDP (1st defendant) ought not to have cleared Kantigi (3rd defendant) to participate in the party’s primaries, having submitted false documents for the poll.

    Delivering the judgment, Justice Abubakar held that the suit failed to disclose reasonable cause of action against the defendants.

    The judge, who said that the case was a pre-election matter, held that the cause of action should have crystallised 14 days after the said action.

    She, however, said that the suit was filed before the conduct of the primaries.
    The judge held that the plaintiff had no cause of action in the suit, hence, the jurisdiction of the court cannot be activated.

    She said that the court would have assumed jurisdiction if the plaintiff had challenged the actual conduct of the poll.

    Abubakar, who said that the suit was not properly instituted, declared that it lacked merit.
    She consequently dismissed the suit.

  • Governorship primary: Adamawa APC sues for calm

    Governorship primary: Adamawa APC sues for calm

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Adamawa has urged its supporters to remain calm following the nullification of the party’s governorship primary election which produced Sen. Aishatu Ahmed as the gubernatorial candidate.

    APC Secretary in the State, Dr Raymond Chidama made the call at a news conference on Saturday in Yola, saying the party received the court judgement nullifying its governorship primary with “mix feelings”.

    He said the party had since appealed the judgement, saying, “we objected to the position of the court for refusing to order for the conduct of a fresh primary election”.

    He urged party loyalists and the governorship candidate to remain calm, adding that, “all avenues of justice would be exploited by the party to ensure equity and fairness through the process of appeal.

    “I want to assure our members that our party will definitely participate in the 2023 governorship election,” he said.

    The Secretary expressed optimism that APC would wrestled power from the ruling PDP in the state.

    A Federal High Court sitting in Yola, on Friday, nullified the APC governorship primary in the state. The trial judge, Abdulaziz Anka, said the exercise contravened the provisions of the 2022 Electoral Act and the party’s guidelines.

    The court also barred Ahmed, popularly known as Binani from parading herself as governorship candidate, and declared that the party had no candidate in the 2023 governorship election in the state.

    Binani emerged winner of the May 26 primary, having scored 430 votes to defeat her closest opponent, Nuhu Ribadu, who polled 288 votes.

  • BREAKING: Binani sacked as APC governorship candidate in Adamawa

    BREAKING: Binani sacked as APC governorship candidate in Adamawa

    A Federal High Court sitting in Yola, the capital of Adamawa State has nullified the candidature of Aishatu Ahmed as the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the State.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that Ahmed, popularly known as Binani, the Senator representing Adamawa Central in the National Assembly (NASS) emerged as the governorship candidate of the APC for the 2023 elections in May.

    Binani beat Nuhu Ribadu, Muhammad Bindow and Abdulrazak Namdas to clinch the party governorship ticket. However, the Federal High Court cancelled the governorship primary election and ruled that the party does not have a governorship candidate for the 2023 general election.

    The court ruled on Friday that the APC flouted its rules and provisions of the Electoral Act in the conduct of the Adamawa governorship primary on May 27 and 28. It said the result of the election could therefore not stand.

    Binani made history by beating six other male aspirants, to become winner of the primary. She was accordingly declared the ticket bearer. His closest rival in the primary, Ribadu, however, faulted the primary and headed to court to ask that it be nullified.

    Ribadu alleged that delegates from Lamorde, one of the 21 local government areas of the state, did not emerge from a special congress but were illegally allowed to participate in the primary. Ribadu also alleged over voting and vote buying, asking for a fresh election that could pass all the tests of credence.

    Delivering his judgement on Friday, Justice Abdulaziz Anka of the Federal High Court 1, Yola, said the primary was conducted in substantial non-compliance with party guidelines and other relevant laws.

    Although he dismissed the issue of vote buying, he specified the issues of over voting and fielding of delegates from Lamurde local government area where a congress was affirmed not to have been conducted. He cancelled the primary without ordering a fresh one.

    While supporters of Nuhu Ribadu have hailed the judgement as reflecting their contention that the primary was not properly conducted, Binani’s camp vowed to challenge the judgement. Counsel to Binani, Tomi Ologunorisa, a SAN who spoke to newsmen immediately after the judgement, said it would be appealed without delay.

    “We have listened to his Lordship. Our responsibility now is to study the judgement, but one thing I can assure is that we will appeal the judgement. We will do that within the next two weeks,” the senior advocate said.

  • INTERVIEW: Omo-Agege will bring the much-needed transformation in Delta – Ewherido

    INTERVIEW: Omo-Agege will bring the much-needed transformation in Delta – Ewherido

    Mr Francis Ewherido, a foundation member of the All Progressive Congress (APC) in Delta State has said the gubernatorial candidate of the party in the State, Senator Ovie Omo-Agege will bring the much-needed transformation in the State if elected into office in the 2023 elections.

    In this interview, Mr Ewherido, who is a writer and insurance broker, and who tells you he is a professional who just found himself in politics courtesy of his late brother, Sen. Akpor Pius Ewherido, averred that the Deputy Senate President will make a good governor.

    Ewherido, who spoke extensively on the 2023 elections, the issues that led to the Ewheridos piping low on politics and their eventual return, argued that Senator Omo-Agege is good product and therefore is easy to market for the governorship position.

    He stated that this is especially so, stressing that the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in the State has not made any meaningful impact to positively affect the lives of the people of Delta in the last 16 years.

    Read full interview below:

    Q: YOU WERE ACTIVE IN 2015, BUT HAVE BEEN QUIET THEREAFTER

    You are correct. My brother Emma and I were involved more than you know 2015. The APC lost the governorship election in Delta, but won at the centre. Like other states the leadership of APC in Delta State took their turn to congratulate the President-Elect then, Muhammadu Buhari, at Aguda House in Abuja. The venue was not yet full when we got there. The front roll was fully occupied, but there were empty seats in other rolls. Emma sat on the front roll. Then more people came in. One of them was a former member of the House of Representatives, who crossed over from PDP to APC two days earlier. The leader of our delegation told Emma to vacate his seat for the Honourable. Emma refused. The leader started threatening Emma. I was in shock. He later apologised to Emma privately, but of what use when you disgraced him publicly?

    See, my late brother, Sen. Ewherido was founding member of APC nationally and the arrowhead in Delta State. After he died, his loyalists sent Chief Adelabu Bodjor, Hon. Edewor Omonemu, and the late Chief Henry Olori to ask us the way forward and if an Ewherido family member was interested in taking over. We told them we just wanted to be left alone to mourn our brother. They sought our consent and we told them they could go ahead to look for a new leader and financier. Omonenu was detailed to go to Lagos to see a potential new leader and financier.

    Anyway, other unsavoury incidents happened after the Abuja incident and we just felt it was needless hanging around. We decided to concentrate on our individual pursuits. In Urhobo, there is onome (this is mine) and oravware (This is ours). In life, onome should sometimes take precedence over oravware. APC was oravware. 

    In politics, loyalty is a scarce commodity and when you get it, you treasure it. Sen. Ewherido could not have committed such a school boy error of publicly humiliating and telling a hard core loyalist to vacate his seat for a day-old member of the party. The same person for whom Emma was publicly disgraced is back in PDP as we speak. But we are still in APC. Since then, we decided to concentrate on onome until HE Senator Ovie-Omo-Agege became deputy president of the senate. He extended a hand of fellowship to us and that is why we are back on the train.

    Q: IS THAT WHY YOU ARE ROUTING FOR OMO-AGEGE?

    Not necessarily. Any good marketer will tell you the ease of selling a good product. Those from Delta Central back home are in a better position to tell you the impact the PDP-led Delta State Government has made and that of Omo-Agege senator representing us. For me ipsa loquitur (the fact speaks for itself).

    PDP has not clothed itself in glory in the last 16 years, especially. Omo-Agege has shown that he can bring the much needed transformation in Delta State if Deltans vote him in as governor. Look at Rivers and Akwa Ibom States and what they have achieved in the last 16 years. How much revenue did they and Delta State earn within this period? I just feel the problem with Delta State it is lack of good leadership. Omo-Agege will be a good governor. He has proven that with his performance in the senate.

    Q: SO, YOU ARE NOT SUPPORTING HIM DUE TO PARTY AFFILIATIONS?

    May be partly because my late brother wanted APC to rule Delta State and provide good and visionary leadership. But I am also supporting him because in my opinion, he is the best candidate. Incidentally, I am supporting other APC candidates in the state because I feel they are the best. For Senate I am supporting Chief Ede Dafinone. The other candidates are eminently qualified, but I have known Dafinone in the financial circle, not just him, but his siblings, for a while. Except for Ede who politics threw into public light, the rest of them are accomplished but live private lives. I had to caution a young friend who said Ede does not have the financial capacity to match his candidate. I told him that beyond his personal accomplishments and wealth, Ede has family wealth that spans over 60 years. You do not compare that with wealth that was created from in 1999. In any case, the election should be issues-based, not who has more money.

    Q: BUT THEY ALSO SAY HE IS NOT A GRASSROOT MAN AND CAN NEITHER SPEAK URHOBO NOR OKPE

    The grassroot base issue is not true. Speaking fluent Urhobo might be true, but I speak Urhobo fluently because my parents taught me. The mistake of the father should not be visited on the son. There are other aspirants in the same boat as Ede Dafinone. They also do not speak Urhobo fluently, but the question is, is speaking Urhobo a criterion for providing effective representation of your people? The business in the senate is conducted in English and Dafinone is very sound there. I would have been worried if he could not speak English very well. My position in no way negates my age old advocacy that we must speak our indigenous languages to our children and stop a vital part of our culture from going into extinct. But we should stop muddling issues and stay focussed.

    Rev. Francis Waive, who represents my constituency in the House of Representatives is another good product that is easily marketable. For me, he is the best representative of my constituency in the green chamber since 1999. Again res ipsa loquitur. (The fact speak for itself). He deserves a second term. There is another candidate who tickles me a lot. He is not from my constituency, but a sound young lawyer. We worked for the same client some time ago. He was the lawyer while I was the insurance consultant. He is very hardworking, diligent and thorough. We must begin to support and vote for our best candidates at all levels. That is one of the surest ways for a better Nigeria. Finally, is my home boy, John Oyibokwifi, aspiring to represent Ughelli South Constituency in the Delta State House of Assembly. I am sentimentally attached to the constituency because apart from my hometown, being part of Ughelli South, my late brother Sen. Ewherido was the first legislator to represent the constituency in the fourth republic – 1999 to 2007. There are three major blocks, Ewhu, Ughievwen, and Olomu in the constituency, not to discountenance my maternal home town, Effuron-Otor. Power has gone round and come back to Ewhu and John is a young, vibrant and intelligent man. He is a new kid on the block, but the cap fits.

    Q: SO YOU BELIEVE IN POWER ROTATION

    Yes, but initially I was opposed to it until Ibori rammed it down our throats in Delta State. Now I see the benefits. The Urhobos used to be terribly hated in Delta State. I remember traveling from Asaba to Lagos around 2001. The venom that came out of one mama from Asaba sent shivers round my body. She hated everything about Urhobos including our delicacies and how we spoke. Now Delta South and Delta North have produced governors. Anger towards Urhobos has eased and the political atmosphere is calmer because every ethnic group thinks it can now produce a governor through power rotation. 

    The initiator and beneficiaries of zoning in Delta State are all in Delta PDP. I thought they should sell and champion power rotation between North and South as a recipe for peace and stability in Nigeria, but that seem not to be the case. I am a firm believer of rotation of power between the north and south. It is the turn of the south and I am resolutely committed to it. Any lover of Nigeria should. National interest should supersede personal interest. I see only Southern candidates contesting to be the next president of Nigeria. I can’t see beyond that. After eight years, power goes back to the north in 2031, thank you.

  • INEC releases list of candidates for 2023 guber election in Ebonyi

    INEC releases list of candidates for 2023 guber election in Ebonyi

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Tuesday in Abakaliki displayed the list of governorship candidates nominated by political parties for the 2023 governorship race in Ebonyi.

    Mr Francis Nwifuru, Speaker of the Ebonyi House of Assembly, candidate of the APC, and Prof. Bernard Odoh, a former Secretary to State Government (SSG) of APGA) made the list.

    Also cleared by the commission to run for the governorship in Ebonyi was Chief Ifeanyichukwuma Odii of PDP,  Chief Edward Nkwegu, LP and Mr Chukwuma Nwandugo of the Action Alliance (AA).

    Other governorship candidates shortlisted by the commission include Dr Sunday Opoke for the Young People’s Party (YPP) and Mr Anthony Usulor of the Nigerian Renaissance Movement (NRM).

    Dr Joseph Chukwu, the INEC’s Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), who announced the release to newsmen in his office in Abakaliki, said that the display was in line with Section 32 (1) of the Electoral Act.

    “The law empowers the commission to display the final list of the authentic candidates for any election 150 days to the Election Day,” Chukwu said.

    According to him, 13 political parties fielded governorship candidates and their running mates for the March 2023 gubernatorial election in Ebonyi.

    He said that 15 political parties also fielded 246 candidates for the House of Assembly Election and added that campaigns for the governorship and state assembly elections would commence on Oct. 12.

    He, therefore, advised gubernatorial and the house of assembly candidates against flouting the provisions of electoral law by kicking off their campaigns before the stipulated time.

    “246 candidates across political parties will contest for seats in the 24 state assembly constituencies in Ebonyi.

    “We wish to warn that campaigns for the governorship and house of assembly elections have not started; the campaigns will commence on Oct .12 as provided for in the 2022 electoral law.

    “It’s an offence for political parties or their candidates to embark on campaigns outside the INEC-approved timetable of activities,” Chukwu said.

  • Why I want to be Kano governor – PDP guber candidate

    Why I want to be Kano governor – PDP guber candidate

    Muhammad Sadiq-Wali, the Kano State governorship candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) says his main target is to restore the lost glory of the state, known as the centre for commerce.

    He said this when he spoke with newsmen in Kano on Monday.

    “Why I decided to contest for governor is because there is need to bring positive and sustainable change to Kano and Nigeria as a whole. My team is prepared to build the economy through Public Private Partnership (PPP).

    ”Kano State is private sector driven and most of our citizens are very industries and we need to encourage them. All they need is support from the government.

    “If given the mandate my administration will become economically independent and would promote small-scale businesses and local/indigenous industrialisation.

    “This was how countries like China developed their economy,” he said.

    He said that his administration would come up with policies that will promote local industries and encourage direct foreign investment for the betterment of the state.

    He said that he will use his wealth of experience in the private sector to provide quality leadership to the people of the state as well as ensure economic growth through enhanced Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).

    “Any government that has the development of the state at heart prioritises infrastructure development in areas where commercial and business activities are booming, to make way for economic growth and increase the drive for revenue generation,” he said.

    Sadiq-Wali said that infrastructure such as roads have continued to dilapidate in the state because of the increasing population in urban areas.

    “We need to expand and build infrastructure in local areas where you have competitive opportunities,” he said.

    He promised to ensure to reduce rural-urban migration to decongest the increasing population in the city and ensure development by building required infrastructure and industries in local areas where raw materials and human resources were available.

    “My team agenda also includes Social Service Reforms, Civil service reform and education.

    ”It is all about re-orientation, re-focusing and making government for implementation, sustainability and wealth creation,” he said.