Tag: Ifeanyi Okowa

  • BREAKING: Gov Okowa’s commissioner fires aide for supporting Peter Obi

    BREAKING: Gov Okowa’s commissioner fires aide for supporting Peter Obi

    Anthony Onoriode Ofoni, a Commissioner in the cabinet of Governor Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta State has fired his aide, Atare Awin for lending support to the presidential bid of Peter Obi, the presidential candidate of the Labour Party in the 2023 elections.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports this is contained in a statement personally signed and released on Tuesday by Ofoni, the Commissioner in charge of the Directorate of Project Monitoring and Audit in Delta, under who Awin served as Media Technical Aide.

    Awin had repeatedly publicly shown support for Peter Obi, but in the statement released by Ofoni, he stated that Awin was fired for sharing counter opinions about Governor Okowa’s administration.

    The statement reads: “I wish to inform you, of your disengagement as Special Assistant Technical Aide to my office as the Delta State Commissioner for Project Monitoring/Audit.

    “This decision became necessary owing to your well-publicized opinions on the policies and programs of the Delta State Government and PDP at large, which are in contradiction to what the State Government had achieved in the last 7 years.

    “As a Commissioner and member of the State Executive Council, I wish to distance myself from the opinions you expressed on your platforms, as it does not represent my stand on the performance of Senator Dr. Ifeanyi Arthur Okowa administration which has been well credited for the overall transformation in the State by way of giant strides in infrastructure, social development, job creation, wealth creation and the overall development across the State.

    “This disengagement is with immediate effect. I, therefore, wish you well in your future political endeavours”.

  • 2023: We must be united to fight and win – Atiku

    2023: We must be united to fight and win – Atiku

    Alh. Atiku Abubakar, the Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has said the party must be united to fight and win the 2023 general elections.

    Abubakar said this on Wednesday in Abuja at the presentation books in his honour, marking the party’s presidential campaign and inauguration of the Presidential Campaign Council (PCC).

    He noted that the task before the party was to come together and rebuild the nation, adding that it was a task that must be done.

    “But to rescue our nation, we must take over the mantle of leadership, from the leadership that has gotten us into this mess.

    “We must therefore be united and come together to fight and win all the elections next year.

    “We must rescue this nation for the sake of us, the sake of our children, and for the sake of generation yet unborn,” he said.

    He also noted that the PCC was not just a campaign council, but a general election council, which would ensure sweeping victory for all candidates of the party come 2023.

    He further said that as seasoned politicians, their job is to navigate the “muddy waters” of politics and to campaign for and win elections.

    Similarly, Dr Ifeanyi Okowa, Delta Governor and Vice Presidential candidate of the party said “Our product is a good product, and our candidate has promised a lot.

    “Thank God we have a man who already has a document and covenant with Nigerians. I challenge all other presidential candidates to present to Nigerians their documents.

    “It is not enough to appear on television. They must submit to Nigerians what they want to do, so they can be judged by it.

    My covenant with Nigerians is to work with a government that has a roadmap to our success story,” he said.

    Three books chronicling the life and some contributions to national development of the PDP presidential candidate were presented.

    The titles of the books are: The Story of Atiku Abubakar, Landmark Constitutional Law Cases on Nigeria (2004- 2007) and Restructuring As Pathway to Unity and Development.

    Recall that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) announced Sept. 28 as official date for the commencement of campaigns  by political parties.

    Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, Chairman, INEC had during the announcement said that this was in line with the provision in Session 94(1) of the Electoral Act 2022.

  • 2023: Okowa rubbishes Labour Party, others says only PDP can defeat APC in Southwest

    2023: Okowa rubbishes Labour Party, others says only PDP can defeat APC in Southwest

    Vice-Presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa has rubbished the chances of the Labour Party and other political parties to defeat the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Southwest region of the country in the 2023 elections.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that Okowa was speaking on Tuesday at a PDP Southeast zonal stakeholders meeting in Enugu State, where he said other political parties, including the Labour Party, do not have the wherewithal to defeat the APC in that region.

    Stressing that PDP is the only party that can beat the APC in the Southwest zone, the Delta State Governor averred that the presence of other political parties would be felt in a few places during the 2023 elections and that they will diminish afterwards.

    “A lot is happening in the Northwest and Northeast; we are very strong. In the North-Central and the South-South, we have become strong; and PDP is in-charge in the Southeast. We saw what happened in Osun. We are in charge of Oyo and Ondo states. A lot is happening in Ogun and Ekiti states and even in the very Lagos State, PDP is going to compete favourably,” Okowa said.

    He further stated that the PDP’s presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar has the solution to Nigeria’s many problems because of his vast knowledge, experience and capacity.

  • [TRENDING VIDEO] Okowa’s campaign buses flood dilapidated Delta liaison office in Abuja

    [TRENDING VIDEO] Okowa’s campaign buses flood dilapidated Delta liaison office in Abuja

    Video clip showing the dilapidated state of Delta liaison office in Abuja and allegedly purchased campaign buses by the Vice Presidential candidate of the PDP, Governor Ifeanyi Okowa has emerged online.

    TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reports that despite the terrible state of the liaison office new campaign buses have been purchased for the 2023 general elections.

    The background voice describes the state of the office built by the former Governor of the state, Chief James Ibori.

    Watch:

     

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    A post shared by Media/News Company (@thenewsgurung)

  • 2023: Why we picked Okowa over Wike as running mate for Atiku – PDP National Chairman

    2023: Why we picked Okowa over Wike as running mate for Atiku – PDP National Chairman

    National Chairman of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Dr Iyorchia Ayu has hinted at why the party decided to pick the Governor of Delta State, Ifeanyi Okowa over Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike as running mate for Atiku Abubakar for the 2023 elections.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Dr Ayu gave the hint in his remarks on Tuesday in Abuja at the Northern Christian Youth Assembly Summit, with the theme ‘Unifying Nigeria: The Role of Northern Christian Youths and Women’.

    Speaking, Ayu stress that it was time for Christians to show greater interest in politics, saying: “I do not think God will just come down and answer your prayer, you need to act too, that way, God will help us.

    “For a long time, many people saw politics as something to be left to others, but I am happy that today this narrative has changed, events have made it possible to see that the control of political power is very important.

    “Therefore, it is important that Christians have to rise up, come together and show a greater interest in politics”.

    The PDP National Chairman urged the youths to join parties and be interested in what is happening around them so as not to allow bad leaders take over power and misuse it to affect them, their families and communities negatively.

    He said that Nigerian needed leaders that would attend to the challenges facing the country and assured that Atiku Abubakar, the PDP Presidential candidate, will be the right choice to achieve that. He assured that if given the chance, they would unify the country and enhance national development .

    “We looked around and we thought we have to give him not just a vice president that will assist him, but we did our homework to select a young man who is highly educated, very humble, and who has done very well as a governor in his home state.

    “It is on Okowa’s personal merit he was selected by the party as the vice presidential candidate to Atiku Abubakar. I think Nigeria will be very lucky to have two such people who are committed to development, who are detribalised and who believe in uniting this country,” Ayu said.

    He, therefore, urged the group to support Atiku and mobilise Nigerians to vote for PDP, so as to salvage Nigeria.

    Present at the occasion, the vice presidential and Delta State Governor cautioned against cyber bullying in the name of campaigns ahead of the 2023 elections.

    Okowa made the remarks on Tuesday in Abuja at the Northern Christian Youth Assembly Summit, with the theme ‘Unifying Nigeria:The Role of Northern Christian Youths and Women’.

    He said that Nigerians should be allowed to use the cyber space to express their choices ahead of the 2023 general elections.

    “We are beginning to see bullying in the cyber space of our country, I think that everybody should have his space, time, to be able to think, make comments without being bullied,” he said.

    According to him, what is important in the build up to the election is for Nigerians not to act on emotions, but be guided with knowledge and build cohesion in electing credible leaders to transform Nigeria.

    “This is the hallmark of those who think and use their brains; when we talk about the future is for the youths, it is actually from today.

    “However, the real truth is, our youths particularly youths leaders must be in position to have a clear understanding of things so that they are able to guide others aright.

    “This is because if you have a leadership that is not able to provide that true leadership of guiding people aright and people begin to think in the wrong way, then you create further problems rather than finding solutions and we all go the wrong path,” Okowa said.

    He commended the group for organising the summit to discuss Nigeria’s challenges and find solutions. Okowa also said that the topic of the event was apt, because it focused on unifying Nigeria.

    He called on Nigerians not to practice politics of religion, but to unite to elect leaders that would build a Nigeria for all where things would work. He assured that if elected, their administration would give priority to education and tackle poverty.

    In his comments, the Anglican Archbishop of Jos, Rev. Marcus Ibrahim, who read from Ezekiel 3:16-21, called on youths to guide other citizens to elect credible leaders in 2023.

    Ibrahim called on the Church and youths to be the voice of the voiceless by speaking against evil and injustice in the country.

    “As we enter election year, we should give our people direction, by encouraging them to come out and vote. Youths as watchmen should herald a new dawn in the country as we prepare for 2023 general elections.

    “To me, the winning team is Atiku and Okowa, so we should make noise everywhere because that is one of the strategy God taught Joshua to defeat Jericho,” he said.

    Earlier, the host, Mr Bok Ayuba, former Speaker, Plateau House of Assemby, said the group had agreed to back the PDP candidates, because they believed in their capacity to rescue Nigeria and make things right.

    Ayuba said the group has branches in all local government areas of the country and would go round to mobilise support for the PDP.

    “We will go to every state to mobilise from each local government to have a great number to discuss the way forward ahead of 2023 elections,” he added.

    He urged members of the group “to spread the news and galvanise massive voters’ support to ensure PDP wins in 2023”.

  • 2023: Okowa evolves as ‘trouble-shooter’ – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    2023: Okowa evolves as ‘trouble-shooter’ – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Five months plus to the 2023 general election, Delta State Governor and Vice Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Dr Ifeanyi Okowa, is firing on all cylinders, thus belying his irreproachable mien.

    As he promotes the qualities that recommend former Vice President Atiku Abubakar for the presidency, and what he’ll do if elected on February 28, 2023, Okowa deploys the military tactic of offence and defence.

    He takes on the candidates and running mates of other major parties, and gives Atiku the needed alibi to tackle his “disagreement” with Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike, arising from Atiku’s pick of Okowa as running mate.

    If we may ask: Isn’t that partly what Atiku “hired” Okowa to do while listing the qualities of a vice president at his unveiling of the governor on June 26, 2022?

    Atiku had said: “You (Nigerians) know him (Okowa) to be a fighter; you know him to care about winning (elections); you know him to care about good governance; and you know him to care about our people.”

    And that’s the groundwork Okowa is laying early on in the processes leading to the presidential poll that’s a must-win for the PDP to regain power nationally since 2015.

    As the only incumbent governor in the run for president, the Medical Doctor-turned politician occupies a unique position among the vice presidential candidates, and so has a lot to prove, to justify the confidence Atiku reposes in him, and silence his doubters that he’s a capable pick in politicking, winning elections and governing therefrom.

    On that score, Okowa’s first outing was a viral interview with BBC pidgin, dismissing candidate Peter Obi of the Labour Party as insufficiently experienced for president.

    Okowa obliquely asked the former Anambra governor (2006-2014) to take tutorials from Atiku, the vice president under President Olusegun Obasanjo (1999 to 2007).

    “For them (Obasanjo and Atiku) to have handled the economy at that time and made it something better, offering hope, creating jobs, and filtering the society was not easy because it’s a bigger thing,” Okowa says.

    “So someone is supposed to learn through that. If you look at Obi’s experience, you’ll know it’s small… It is not enough for this one (2023 presidency); it will be hard. His experience is not deep enough.

    “That is why I am appealing to our youths to be wise and vote well; they should not be blinded by the concept of a false change because that is how they raved on (former President Goodluck) Jonathan in 2015,” Okowa adds.

    Okowa’s also taken on candidate Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress, who, responding to Atiku’s criticism of his picking a fellow Muslim, former Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima as running mate, rated Shettima as more qualified than Okowa.

    But Okowa, scoring himself above Shettima in whatever parameters, respectfully advised the former Lagos State governor to leave the trivial, and address Nigeria’s myriad problems, the collapsing APC, and the many unsavoury issues surrounding Tinubu’s candidacy.

    Okowa laughed off Shettima’s pledge on August 22, at the Nigerian Bar Association Annual General Conference in Lagos, that if elected vice president, he’d take care of security, while Tinubu would handle the economy.

    Questioning Shettima’s knowledge of the duties of the Commander-in-Chief, Okowa lectured him: that security is the responsibility of Tinubu if elected as the president.

    Okowa noted Shettima’s failure to stem the Boko Haram insurgency under his government (2011 to 2019), leading to abduction of 276 Chibok schoolgirls in April 2014.

    Okowa’s returned to Obi’s presidential run lately, accusing him of dragging the church into politics, by visiting worship centres, where he’s received as a rockstar.

    Engaging newsmen in Kano on August 31, as part of the delegation that received former Kano State Governor Ibrahim Shekarau into the PDP on August 29, Okowa deplored Obi’s novel fraternising with the church.

    “Now, you begin to look at what is going on; the Peter Obi factor is as if he is trying to go through the church and make it look as if he is driving the Christians into politics,” Okowa says. “I do not believe that the church should actively go into politics because that is not their calling.

    “But people are just hanging to anything they can reach out to even to the detriment of their fate (faith). I don’t believe that’s the right path to go,” Okowa adds.

    But Obi, via his campaign media office – Obi-Datti – on September 1, described Okowa’s charge as baseless, and an attempt to label him (Obi) as belonging to the country’s “primaeval politics, religion, tribe, and geography.”

    Stressing that any attempts to pigeonhole him into any sector of the national life “will fail,” Obi reminded Okowa that he’d visited churches “even before he became (began) the present run for the presidency,” citing one of such visits as during “Dr Okowa’s child’s wedding at the National Ecumenical Conference Centre, Abuja, this year.”

    Yet, Okowa doesn’t just trouble-shoot, promote and defend Atiku, but he also showcases his own experiences, and what he’ll bring to the Office of the Vice President.

    Okowa’s run the gamut of political offices as Secretary, and Chairman of Local Government Area; political party Senatorial Coordinator; Commissioner in three ministries; Secretary to the State Government; Senator of the Federal Republic; Governor for eight years (2015-2023); and Vice Presidential candidate going into the 2023 polls.

    Besides the National Economic Council (NEC) that’s placed under the Vice President, Okowa’s cut out work for himself in the nation’s problematic health sector.

    Having practiced in the public and private health sectors, Okowa deployed the experiences to craft a Bill at the National Assembly that culminated in the establishment of the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS).

    The NHIS that’s beneficial to Nigerians, especially free medical care for the young and elderly, has improper implementation of underfunding and corruption, but it’s running smoothly in Delta State, courtesy of Okowa, who’s promised to fix the scheme at the federal level.

    Okowa equally flaunts his managerial skill in the field of Education, particularly overseeing four Universities, without incessant strikes by the institutions’ unions.

    Whereas the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has extended its six-months’ “warning strike” to a full-blown indefinite protestation, the non-academic staff unions only lately called-off their three-month-old strike.

    Hence Okowa’s invited the Federal Government to take a cue from how he’s coping with funding the varsities, and the welfare of their Academic and Non-academic staff.

    Okowa’s also drawn attention to his concession of the Asaba International Airport, and wants the government to emulate him, and free the national airports of its control.

    With these and more offerings Okowa’s is bringing to the table, what other Vice Presidential candidate could Atiku ask for in the journey to The Villa that looks a heartbeat away from February 28, 2023!

     

    *Mr Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria.

  • Flashback: I will step down – PDP National Chairman, Iyorchia Ayu

    Flashback: I will step down – PDP National Chairman, Iyorchia Ayu

    The National Chairman of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Dr Iyorchia Ayu had promised to step down from his position in events prior to the presidential primary elections if a Northerner should emerge as the presidential candidate of the party.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Dr Ayu, who is from the Northern region of the country, after emerging as the National Chairman of PDP, in an interview said if his party should pick its presidential candidate from the North, he will give up his position to ensure geopolitical balancing in the party.

    “Luckily, party positions are not tied to the position of executive and legislative positions. However, I’m a very democratic person and I will do everything to promote the interest and image of my party. If the PDP says I should step down after a presidential candidate emerges and happens to be from the North, I will be very glad to do so because what we want is to take over the government and run the government in the interest of Nigerians. So, I’ll sacrifice anything to ensure that my party wins,” Ayu promised.

    However, the National Chairman has reneged to the chagrin of some PDP members on this promise after former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, a core Northerner, emerged as the presidential candidate of the party.

    Following the emergence of Atiku as the presidential flag bearer of the PDP, crisis struck the party, especially after the presidential candidate picked the Governor of Delta State, Senator Ifeanyi Okowa as his running mate, against the expectations of some party members, who preferred Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike as the vice presidential candidate of the party.

    To make the PDP approach the 2023 general polls with a united front, the party’s Board of Trustees (BoT); and National Working Committee (NWC) stepped in to address the lingering crisis between the presidential candidate and supporters of the Rivers State Governor. A committee was set up.

    TNG gathered that supporters of Governor Wike resolved to remain in the PDP but made some demands, including that Ayu resigns as National Chairman to enable a Southerner to take over in line with the North-South power-sharing formula of the party since the presidential candidate is from the North.

    However, Ayu has hitherto remained adamant and refused to step down from the National Chairman position of the party, even as Governor Wike has started a political romance with the All Progressives Congress (APC), inviting heavyweights of the opposition party to commission key projects in his State.

    Even, reports emerged that the Rivers State Governor sued the PDP, Atiku, and the Governor of Sokoto State, Aminu Tambuwal while involving the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), to contest the outcome of the presidential primary election. However, Wike, in a swift move, denied the reports.

    Why Iyorchia Ayu will not step down as PDP National Chairman – Aide

    Meanwhile, Special Adviser on Media and Communication to Ayu, Mr Simon Imobo-Tswana, in a statement released in Abuja on Monday, stated that the PDP National Chairman has no plan to step down from his position.

    “We restate, therefore, that the PDP National Chairman has not resigned and has no plan of resigning. For clarity and emphasis, he was elected for a tenure of four years. Sections 45 and 47 of the PDP Constitution are clear on the removal and/or resignation of the National Chairman.

    “Those who don’t know this should get copies of the party’s Constitution for more information on the matter. PDP members and the general public are advised to ignore any story of such a phantom resignation,” Mr Imobo-Tswana stated.

    According to him, the stories purported that Ayu had resigned and that his resignation letter is with a former Senate President, David Mark is false and members of the public should disregard it. Imobo-Tswam said that with all emphasis, the story was, in its entirety, false, baseless, reckless, inaccurate and a complete work of fiction.

    “If there is such a resignation, it exists only in the imagination of those who have made themselves available for hatchet jobs,” he said.

    Imobo-Tswam said that if Ayu had resigned, he would give his resignation letter to the Deputy Chairman (North) and not Mark, adding Section 45 (I and ii) of the party’s Constitution was clear on that.

    “So, where does Mark comes in here, being that he is not even a member of the party’s National Working Committee (NWC). It appears that those who have been procured to blackmail the national chairman out of office are not even aware of what the party’s Constitution says about the matter.

    “We are shocked that such reckless, vicious, mischievous and fabricated falsehood can find prime space in the mainstream media. But, even more shocking is the fact that otherwise respected media houses have made themselves easy platforms for unscrupulous people to peddle falsehood and run smear campaigns,” he alleged.

    Imobo-Tswam emphasised that the national chairman, “is on a crucial assignment to lead the PDP on a historic rescue mission comes February 2023. And, he will not be deterred or distracted by media terrorism or political blackmail”.

  • Dame Ogbodu’s Urhobo Folktales a welcomed development – Okowa

    Dame Ogbodu’s Urhobo Folktales a welcomed development – Okowa

    Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa has said the book, Urhobo Folktales written by Dame Beauty Esiso Ogbodu is a welcomed development and a step in the right direction to reclaiming “our lost cultural values”.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Governor Okowa said this at the book launch which was held at Wellington Hotel, Effurun, Uvwie local government area of Delta State.

    Okowa in his speech read at the occasion by Chief Tony Ofoni, the State Commissioner for Projects Monitoring and Audit, commended Dame Ogbodu for the efforts put in to write the book.

    The Delta State Governor especially commended Ogbodu for promoting integration and advancement of the Urhobo ethnic group through the writing of folktales on the cultural values and moral behaviour among the Urhobos.

    The Governor said the book is not just a means to bring the people together, but also a medium of exchange of ideas, that can help to boost tradition and cultural values that will be of overall benefit to the people that will be passed on from one generation to another.

    “As a government, we are proud and understand that this book Folktales on Urhobo, shows commitments to enlighten the social, cultural and spiritual concerns of the Urhobo people and humanity in general.

    “It identifies the significance of other folktales in the social and cultural life of a people and for future advancement for study.

    “Today, we all understand, that global civilization has brought our moral and ethical behaviour to great danger, and this calls for concerns for both private and public sectors to double their efforts towards a rapid emphasis on reclaiming back these values because they represent our identity.

    “Therefore, as a government that believes in the overall growth and development of her people, we shall continue to support any development that is focused on re-enforcement of good moral and ethical behaviour among our people especially among our youths, since they are the hope and custodians of our nation’s identity,” Okowa said.

    TNG reports that Urhobo Folktales – A Social Cultural Analysis was written by Dame Beauty Esiso Ogbodu in collaboration with the Urhobo Renaissance Society (URS).

  • Delta transports 312 Christian pilgrims to Jordan

    Delta transports 312 Christian pilgrims to Jordan

    No fewer than 312 Christian pilgrims from Delta were on Monday transported to the Holy land, Jordan in Israel through the Port Harcourt International Airport.

    The Executive Secretary, Nigerian Christian Pilgrim Commission, Rev.  Yakubu Pam, at the departure briefing in Asaba, warned the intending pilgrims against absconding.

    The NCPC boss, represented by the Director of Mobilization, Mr Chris Udegbunam, lauded Gov. Ifeanyi Okowa for his consistency in the sponsorship of Christians in the state on pilgrimage.

    Pam congratulated the intending pilgrims for their level of preparedness both spiritually and physically to embark on the journey of faith.

    According to him, ”it is the policy of the commission to achieve zero absconding of pilgrims in the Holy land.”

    He, therefore enjoined not to abscond, adding, ”he commission frowns seriously at it and would do everything humanly possible to discourage it.”

    Okowa, represented by the Commissioner, Bureau for Special Duties, Johnbull Edema, urged the pilgrims to be good ambassadors of the state and not bring disrepute to the state government.

    He said that as pilgrims they need to conduct themselves in a manner befitting and worthy of Christians.

    Okowa said  that the exercise would offer opportunity for the pilgrims to visit historical biblical sites they read in the Bible and to draw them closer to God.

    He urged them to pray and seek the face of God for the peace, unity and development of the state and county particularly as the nation gradually approaches the 2023 General Elections.

    In his remarks, the Chairman, Delta State Christian Pilgrims Welfare Board, Most Rev. Cyril Odutemu, admonished the intending pilgrims to conduct themselves decently while in the Holy land.

    He warned them against unruly behavior in the Holy land and advised them not to do anything that would undermine the security of the host country.

    Also, the Executive Secretary of the Board, Apostle Samuel Okoh, charged the intending pilgrims to be good ambassadors of the state and Nigeria.

  • The hullabaloo over Okowa’s ‘downgrade’ of Obi – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    The hullabaloo over Okowa’s ‘downgrade’ of Obi – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    When politicians have nothing to offer, they resort to flaunting their “superior” educational qualifications and/or public or corporate experiences to deceive the electorate.

    That’s why the haggle over “Who’s more qualified” to be Nigeria’s president in 2023 has been disputing to detract from the real issues of insecurity, poor economy, poverty, series of agitation, and disunity plaguing the country.

    The candidates of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, and the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, have adjudged the candidate of the Labour Party (LP), Peter Obi, as unqualified for president, and won’t be able to secure the votes for victory in the 2023 general election.

    And Obi’s reply: “They all qualify to rule Nigeria, but I’m more qualified. I’m more prepared and more physically and mentally fit to rescue the Nigerian economy from collapse and restore the nation to a path of prosperity and glory.”

    Also, Asiwaju Tinubu, responding to Atiku’s criticism of his Muslim-Muslim ticket, has rated his running mate, former Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima, as more qualified than the vice presidential candidate of the PDP, Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa.

    But Dr Okowa respectfully advised the former Lagos State governor to leave the trivial, and address the myriad of problems confronting Nigeria, the collapsing APC, and the many unsavoury issues surrounding his candidacy.

    Lately, though, Okowa got in Mr Obi’s crosshairs, for claiming that the former Anambra State governor has little experience for the presidency, which he stresses that Atiku is more qualified, and prepared for in the 2023 polls.

    But in rapid responses, Obi’s supporters, and the LP vice presidential candidate, Yusuf Datti Baba-Ahmed, took Okowa to the cleaners for riding the tiger’s back.

    The Okowa “dare” on “Who’s more qualified” among or between the main candidates or running mates, has echoed in Obi’s camp as a flop, and a put-down of Obi.

    Really? A flop; an Obi downgrade? Maybe from those who didn’t watch or read the BBC interview from which the media uproar emanates about Okowa belittling Obi!

    From unbiased observers, Okowa acquitted himself in flawless delivery of pidgin, and was calm, calculated, frank, measured, restrained and down-to-earth.

    And a dispassionate evaluation of the interview would reveal Okowa didn’t mean to demean Obi but to assess his experience he deploys to ramrod his messaging of a “new kid on the block,” for a “New Nigeria” from 2023.

    Hence Okowa’s admonition: “I did not say he (Obi) won’t have any votes, he will have. But what I’m saying is that he’s not a new candidate. It has not been long since he left PDP. You know he was in APGA before, from APGA he came to PDP.

    “So he cannot say anything about PDP because that’s where he was before. Some of us are still here. At every party, there are good people and bad people. But today’s Nigeria is very troubled and we need the right person (as president).

    “That is why I am appealing to our youths to be wise and vote well; they should not be blinded by the concept of a false change because that is how they raved on (former President Goodluck) Jonathan in 2015.

    “His (Obi) previous experience is not enough for this one (the 2023 presidency); it will be hard. His experience is not deep enough. Even as a current governor ruling in a time of crisis, I know how hard it is.”

    Okowa toutes Atiku’s experience gained in the Olusegun Obasanjo government (1999-2007) as vice president, and says it’s worthwhile for one to have such knowledge.

    “For them (Obasanjo and Atiku) to have handled the economy at that time and made it something better, offering hope, creating jobs, and filtering the society was not easy because it’s a bigger thing,” Okowa says.

    “So someone is supposed to learn through that. If you look at Obi’s experience, you’ll know it’s small,” Okowa says, adding that himself would learn under Atiku’s presidency.

    Was Okowa fair to Obi in the interview? Not at all, says Obi’s running mate, Dr Baba-Ahmed, who hopes Okowa would retract his comment, “because it shows that he has no idea about what capacity is.”

    Baba-Ahmed, on Channels Television programme, says, “When you speak of capacity, you are talking of people like Peter Obi and with all modesty, my humble self.”

    He dismisses Atiku, Tinubu and Kwankwaso as having had “more leadership experience,” adding, “I fail to see anyone who even comes close to his Excellency, Peter Obi.”

    Baba-Ahmed adds: “The world is now at the stage where we need private sector experience and among all of them, no one has much private sector business sense, prudence, frugality, ability to manage persons, communities, interest groups. None of the other three (candidates) has as much.”

    In the BBC interview, Okowa declined repeated baits to tackle Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike, and his “godfather,” former Delta State Governor James Ibori.

    Overlooked for running mate, Wike, who came second in the primaries, has slammed Atiku and the PDP, even as his craving for “entitlement” has put Okowa on the spot.

    Okowa served as a Commissioner in the Ibori government (1999-2007), and Secretary to the State Government under former Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan, Ibori’s cousin. And Ibori reportedly influenced Okowa’s election in 2015.

    But for the 2023 PDP governorship, Okowa and Ibori have respectively propped up Sheriff Oborevwori and David Edevbie, and await the courts to anoint the “actual candidate,” for the INEC to enrol the “pick” for the polls.

    The interview was apt for Okowa to blast Wike and Ibori – both assumed capable of scuttling his 2023 ambition, and the governorship aspiration of his “godson,” Oborevwori, the Speaker of the Delta State House of Assembly.

    But on Wike, Okowa says: “We’ve been talking internally, everything is being settled. You know that when something happens and everybody can’t agree, it’s settled bit by bit.

    “That is what we’re still working on from the inside. We are finding a way to talk. I’ll say, he (Wike) is my friend, I am his friend, and we will find a way to talk.

    “For us in the party, it’s about how to bring everybody together, how all of us can work together. Wike is still a very important member of the party.

    “He has worked so hard for the party, as many of us have worked hard, too. So we pray that everything comes together and we talk. I’m sure very soon we’ll be sitting down (and talk).”

    On his bonding with Ibori, Okowa states that, “for our personal relationship, there’s no problem at all,” and acknowledges that, “Ibori is the leader of the PDP in Delta State,” and “I’m the PDP governor of Delta State.”

    And “for the politics of it,” Okowa says when the court cases arising from the primaries are decided, they (Ibori and himself) would back the eventual candidate, adding, “the PDP will have a candidate for Delta in the 2023.”

    As every politician’s word matters, and most possibly be interpreted contextually, the 2023 contestants should
    refocus attention from “Who’s more qualified” for the presidency to the bigger national issues of the day.

     

    *Mr Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria