Tag: Ondo 2024

  • APC National Vice Chairman joins Ondo governorship race

    APC National Vice Chairman joins Ondo governorship race

    Mr Issac Kekemeke, All Progressive Congress (APC), South-West National Vice Chairman, has declared his interest to participate in the Ondo State governorship primary election scheduled to hold on April 20, 2024.

    Kekemeke made this known at a press conference and public presentation of the LEKELEKE agenda of prosperity and peace organised by his campaign team on Tuesday in Akure.

    “I have received enquiries from far and near, from within and outside of Ondo State,Dr on my take in the Ondo 2024 governorship election.

    “Today, I stand humbly before you to affirm my participation in the governorship primary election of our great party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) slated for April 20, 2024.

    “I offer myself as a man tested and prepared to take on this onerous task of steering the affairs of our state as governor.

    “My antecedents and pedigree recommend me. My services to our state in the past and even now is my testimonial.

    “Evidently, as former Secretary to State Government (SSG), former Attorney General, former Commissioner, Works, Lands and Housing, Minority Leader in the State House of Assembly, I have not failed.

    “Also as National Examinations Council Board Chairman, pioneer APC State Chairman, and currently National Vice Chairman,,South-West, I have not let you down,” he said.

    Kekemeke, who said that he was better equipped than he was four years ago, declared that he would make government “seeable, touchable and feelable”, so that the pain of one would be the pain of all.

    “The state cannot afford to amuse herself with bare pettiness, low sentiment and prejudices that have rudely arrested growth and development.

    “Ondo State needs a leadership not only for a segment of the state, but for the whole state.”

    The APC chieftain said that his agenda for prosperity and peace would ensure an industrial take-off of Ondo State through prioritised investment in human and natural endowment.

    “We offer free and compulsory primary education, free secondary school education, highly subsidised tertiary education, quality health services for all including the establishment of a pharmaceutical company.

    “Our programme include availability of food and employment opportunities through the civil farmer and the establishment of small scale agro-allied industries,” he said.

  • BREAKING: After raising alarm of threat to his life, Ondo APC guber aspirant dies in Lagos

    BREAKING: After raising alarm of threat to his life, Ondo APC guber aspirant dies in Lagos

    Paul Akintelure, an aspirant under the umbrella of the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the Ondo State governorship election is dead.

    Akintelure reportedly died on Tuesday in a hospital in Lagos State after battling chest pain for four days.

    The APC governorship aspirant had days ago raised an alarm over an alleged threat to his life ahead of the gubernatorial election in Ondo.

    His death was confirmed to newsmen by the Ondo APC Publicity Secretary, Mr Alex Kalejaiye.

    “It is true, I can confirm it. We will issue a statement about it shortly,” Kalejaiye was quoted to have said.

    Details shortly…

  • Ondo 2024: APC lawmakers endorse Aiyedatiwa for governor

    Ondo 2024: APC lawmakers endorse Aiyedatiwa for governor

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) lawmakers at the Ondo State House of Assembly have endorsed Gov. Lucky Aiyedatiwa as their preferred aspirant for the state Nov.16 governorship election.

    Mr Olamide Oladiji, the Speaker of the House said this when he spoke with newsmen shortly after a closed-door meeting with the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party on Monday in Abuja.

    He said the meeting was to thank the party’s leadership for ensuring peace in the state after the death of Gov. Rotimi Akeredolu.

    Oladiji lauded Dr Abdullahi Ganduje, the APC National Chairman for playing vital role in the return of peace to the state’s chapter.

    “If not for your intervention, we wouldn’t have been enjoying the peace we enjoy in Ondo APC today,” the speaker said.

    He added that the state’s lawmakers were in support of the party’s leadership and the President Bola Tinubu-led administration and would continue to work with it to achieve the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    He said that Gov. Lucky Aiyedatiwa had been able to turn around things in the state within his few days on the mantle of leadership.

    “We will work to ensure the continuity of his government and the APC in Ondo State.

    “The state is at peace under its new governor contrary to what those outside it may say. Aiyedatiwa’s achievement just in few months in office is there for all to see.

    “He has continued the legacy of the deceased governor and had been able to bring a synergy between the judiciary and the state executive,” he said.

    Ganduje in his response, appreciated the lawmakers for the visit and expressed happiness that the party’s leadership was able to resolve the crisis in the state chapter.

    Ganduje said although the party had planned a well articulated programme to produce a worthy governorship candidate, the cooperation of its members was critical to achieve a successful primary election to pick its governorship candidate.

    The APC had scheduled the state governorship primaries for April.

    Aiyedatiwa who was late Gov. Rotimi Akeredolu’s deputy, took over as the governor after his death in December 2023 in line with the Constitution.

  • Ondo 2024: APC announces date to commence sales of forms

    Ondo 2024: APC announces date to commence sales of forms

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) says it will commence sales of its Expression of Interest and Nomination forms for the Ondo State Governorship election from April 3 to April 10.

    Alhaji Suleiman Arugungu, the party’s National Organising Secretary, stated this in a schedule of activities released, on Monday in Abuja, for the forthcoming Ondo State governorship election.

    The Ondo State governorship election has been fixed for November 16,  by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Arugungu said the release of the schedule of activities was in compliance with the Electoral Act 2022 and relevant sections of the Constitution.

    He said the party’s Ondo State governorship primary election would be held on April 25, while the primary election appeal would be on April 26.

    The APC had pegged its expression of interest form for the governorship election at N10,000,000 while the nomination form goes for N50 million.

    Female aspirants and Persons Living with Disabilities (PWDs) are to purchase expression of interest form for N10, 000,000 while the nomination form is free.

    Aspirants below 40 years of age, on the other hand, would pay N40 million for the nomination form while the expression of interest form would be free.

    According to the schedule of activities, all aspirants in the governorship race are expected to submit their completed forms by April 12.

    The screening of aspirants jostling for the governorship race begins on April 19 and end on April 20, while screening appeal, delegate congress and delegate congress appeal would hold on April 21, April 22, and April 23 respectively.

  • Edo, Ondo 2024 reechoes bitter tribal politics of 2023 elections – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Edo, Ondo 2024 reechoes bitter tribal politics of 2023 elections – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    In 2020, Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki fought the political battle of his life for a second term in office. Mid year, he’s disqualified by the National Working Committee (NWC) of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), headed by Senator and former Governor Adams Oshiomhole as then national chairman.

    In 2016, Oshiomhole had “imposed and installed” Obaseki as his successor. But the godfather-godson relationship didn’t last, as Obaseki decried Oshiomhole’s “godfatherism,” and connived to have him suspended from his ward in Etsako West Local Government Area of Edo North, and sacked by the courts as APC’s chairman.

    Oshiomhole denying Obaseki a re-election ticket prompted Obaseki to defect to opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which granted him automatic ticket, with which he contested and won the September 2020 election.

    But in the course of the campaigns, former Lagos State Governor and acclaimed “National Leader” of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu (now President of Nigeria) called on the people of Edo State to vote for the APC candidate, Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu, who’s chaperoned by Tinubu’s close ally, Comrade Oshiomhole.

    It’s a wrong political move at a time Obaseki, his campaign and supporters alleged – with no concrete evidence, and yet believable – that Oshiomhole had carried out a script written by Tinubu, to disqualify Obaseki from the APC governorship primary.

    When Obaseki’s still in the APC, he led a group of governors and party chieftains to Tinubu’s Bourdillon road home in Ikoyi, Lagos, to solicit his assistance to settle the feud between him and Oshiomhole, and Tinubu, short of shunning the parley, remained noncommittal, thus sending signals that he sided with Oshiomhole’s antic to deny Obaseki a second term ticket.

    The backlash from Edo people against Oshiomhole for “instigating” disqualification of Obaseki from the APC primary, was also extended to Tinubu for his alleged “interference in Edo politics,” and hence the coinage: “Edo no be Lagos” – a reference to Tinubu’s stranglehold of politics of Lagos State.

    So, “Edo no be Lagos” became an anthem, and the rallying cry for the Obaseki campaign, members and supporters of the PDP, and Edolites across party lines, who felt Oshiomhole (and Tinubu) committed a “political sacrilege” by denying a return ticket to Obaseki whom he’d backed for governor in 2016.

    Thus, the Obaseki campaign adopted three strategies that worked for the governor’s re-election without a referendum on his “achievements” from 2016 to 2020: Deploy Oshiomhole’s “betrayal of Edo people” – particularly the Binis of Edo South, where Obaseki hails from; replay Oshiomhole’s campaign of calumny against Pastor Ize-Iyamu during the 2016 election, to denigrate and demarket him, and promote Obaseki’s candidacy that Oshiomhole sponsored; and harp on Tinubu’s “interference” in Edo politics.

    Now to the 2024 governorship election in Edo State where another version of “Edo no be Lagos” or “Edo no be Yorubaland” – with a ting of tribalism – has emerged in the lead-up to the September 21 poll. But first, recall that the 2023 General Election in Lagos State witnessed an intense recline to tribal politics between the Yoruba and Igbo – the one trying to stave off alleged plans by the other to dominate Lagos politics by declaring the state as “a no man’s land” to be “captured” in the 2023 elections.

    True to the fears of the Yoruba, the presidential candidate of Labour Party (LP) and former Anambra State Governor Peter Obi defeated Tinubu in his Lagos homestead in the February 25, 2023, poll. So, ahead of the following March 18 governorship election, alarmed conservative Yoruba resorted to whipping up tribal sentiments, telling liberal Yoruba that the intention of the Igbo wasn’t just to takeover Lagos – where they’ve an unverified 5m population – but also to bring the entire South-West geopolitical zone under Igbo domination.

    Besides calling for “Yoruba Ronu” (‘Yoruba, Think’) – a phrase used by the legendary Hubert Ogunde “in his famous 1964 play,” warning about intra-ethnic divide among politicians in Yorubaland that could give way to external infiltration – the agitation for “Yorubaland for the Yoruba” culminated in rallying for Yoruba nationalism and supremacy in Yorubaland.

    As noted by Yusuf Omotayo in a piece, “The True Meaning of ‘Yoruba Ronu,’” first published in The Atlantic of July 10, 2023, “Yoruba Ronu has recently become the anchor on which Yoruba politicians have championed calls for fanatic support. The original core message of the phrase, however, is unity rather than ethnic disrespect and Yoruba supremacy.”

    The Yoruba agitators backed up their alleged “Igbo Agenda” with declarative statements and videos issued and posted by social media influencers, calling on members of the “Obidients Movement” – the mass of voters who backed Obi’s presidential run – to “vote massively” on March 18, for the LP to takeover Lagos State.

    And for good (or bad) measure, the LP featured as its governorship candidate Gbadebo (Chinedu) Rhodes-Vivor, who’s a Yoruba father and Igbo mother and wife – and whose utterances and actions, even on the campaign trail, tended to play up his affinity to Igbo more than to his Yoruba heritage.

    The Yoruba agitators dug into Mr Rhodes-Vivor’s social media posts – which some alleged were manipulated – in which he backed activities of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) – a group fighting for secession from Nigeria; his lead participation in the October 20, 2020, #Endsars violent and bloody protests in Lagos; and his intention, if elected governor, to dethrone the Oba of Lagos, and install an Igbo as replacement, declare an annual “Igbo Day” for Igbo to celebrate their traditional and cultural heritage, business acumen and dominance of the commercial and political affairs of Lagos, and give Igbo unfettered access to control all markets and commercial places in Lagos State.

    These and other issues worked against the LP and Rhodes-Vivor’s ambition on poll day, giving the ruling APC and the amiable but assailed Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu a landslide victory, and crowning the “Yorubaland for Yoruba” agitators’ fierce campaign for “Yoruba Ronu” with defeat of the “Igbo campaigners” of “Na we build Lagos, na we own Lagos.”

    Meanwhile – and sadly – the tribal politics of 2023 elections has resurrected in Edo and Ondo 2024 elections. In Edo, the LP candidate and former President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Mr Olumide Osaigbovo Akpata, had to do a hit music in Bini, to prove that he’s a bona fide “son-of-the soil” from the prominent family of the Akpatas of Benin Kingdom.

    Decked in traditional attire, Mr Akpata leads “the cultural troupe” in a Bini song and graceful dancesteps to trace his paternal and maternal roots to ages, and pleads with Edo people that he isn’t a stranger or a Yoruba, as his political traducers want to portray him in the intense mobilisation for the LP primary, and the  governorship poll on September 21.

    Amid lingering doubts as to Akpata being “truly” Bini and Edo, a tweep (a user of Twitter) posted “an advisory” on X (formerly Twitter) for Igbo residents in Edo State not to dabble in the local politics of who the parties field for the governorship, but to mind their civic duty of voting for their preferred candidate.

    This stirred instant reactions from Yoruba netizens (habitual or keen users of internet), who reasoned that the advisory was issued to Igbo residents in Edo State because the LP candidate’s middle name – Olumide – is Yoruba, and hence anathema to the Igbo.

    The Yoruba say what’s sauce for the goose should be sauce for the gander. If Igbo supported Mr Rhodes-Vivor with a middle name of “Chinedu” and Igbo mother and wife for the LP governor in Lagos, why should Igbo steer clear of canvassing for Mr Akpata with a Yoruba name of “Olumide” as candidate of the LP in Edo State?

    Similarly in the PDP in Edo State, governorship candidate Asue Ighodalo faces scrutiny as to his Esan roots from Ewohimi in Esan North-East of Edo Central. In 2023, Dr Ighodalo, a Lagos-based lawyer and industrialist associate of Governor Obaseki, reportedly hired “an interpreter” to convey his aspiration for governor to his ward members in Ewohimi. Now, critics query his “Edoness” for “growing up and working in Lagos, and marrying a Yoruba.”

    In Ondo State, lawyer and veteran politician, Chief Olusola Oke, has a primary huddle for marrying an Igbo named “Nkem” as a second wife, who’s reportedly “very close” to Mrs Betty Anyanwu Akeredolu, the Igbo wife of the late Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN), who died from a protracted ailment on December 27, 2023.

    Accused of being an “Iron” First Lady with a domineering streak – and allegedly advancing the interests of Igbo to the detriment of the Yoruba in Ondo State – Mrs Akeredolu’s ethnic relationship with Mrs Oke may cause Mr Oke the primary ticket of the APC, and ultimately the governorship if the agitators for “Yorubaland for Yoruba” deploy “Yoruba Ronu” in the APC yet-to-be-scheduled April primary for the November 16 election in the state.

    This is the stage we’re in Nigeria’s bitter politics, in which tribe and state of origin of spouses and their parents, living permanently or for a considerable length of time in their states of origin, and ability to speak fluently the local language, and imbibe the traditional and cultural nuances of the people, now determine one’s ambition for elective political position(s).

    It’s happened in Lagos, in the case of Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivor failing the governorship in 2023 partly because – in the estimation of the conservative indigenous Yoruba – he’s not “Yoruba enough” for having Igbo mother and wife, and “displaying disdain” for Yoruba language, traditional and culture.

    It also occurred in 2023 in Enugu State, where a resident of Ebonyi State origin was told by the locals that he couldn’t – as a “stranger” or “non-indigene” – become governor of Enugu. “A person from Ebonyi cannot be our governor in Enugu. God will not allow that” (to happen), one of the speakers – with members of the audience concurring – told the bewildered politician at a gathering to intimate the people about his governorship ambition, which died stillbirth thereafter!

    On May 4, 2022, Senator Adeola Olamilekan (alias ‘Yayi’) (APC, Lagos West), gave in to emotions when his constituents in Ogun West gifted him nomination forms, to contest in the 2023 poll to represent the district. Pre-2015 general election when Chief Olamilekan wanted to represent Ogun West – his district of origin in Ogun State – there’s strong opposition that he wasn’t a Yewa man from the district. Some even claimed he’s from Ekiti State.

    He’d to seek his political ambition in Lagos West (he’s Reps member from 2011 to 2015), which he won and represented from 2015 to 2023. But reportedly eying the governorship of Ogun State in 2027 that’s “zoned” to Ogun West, Olamilekan made attempts to switch from Lagos West to Ogun West, and met with the same resistance from APC members, three of whom filed a writ in court to stop him.

    However, majority of his constituents – who’d heard about his political exploits in Lagos West – rallied for, and 71 of them purchased the nomination forms for him to contest in the primary and election, which he won, and now represents Ogun West in the 10th National Assembly.

    There’re also instances of women, who weren’t allowed to vie for elective political offices by chieftains of parties in the states they’re married into, and asked to go look for slots in their states of origin. That’s how, for example, Mrs Daisy Ehanire Danjuma – wife of former Chief of Army Staff, and Founder and Chairman Emeritus of TY Danjuma Foundation, Gen. Theophilus Yakubu Danjuma (retd) – left Taraba, her state of marriage, to seek senatorial slot in Edo State and won in 2003 (PDP, Edo South).

    Can this bitter tribal politics in Nigeria be reversed? It’s doubtful, as the 2023 general election that’s supposed to subsume the primeval cleavage actually accentuated it, as fears of domination by residents fueled anxiety and outrage among the local and indigenous peoples across many states of Nigeria!

     

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

  • Ondo 2024: Lucky Aiyedatiwa sure of APC gov ticket

    Ondo 2024: Lucky Aiyedatiwa sure of APC gov ticket

    Ahead of the Ondo governorship race, Gov. Lucky Aiyedatiwa on Tuesday expressed optimism that he would clinch the All Progressives Congress (APC) ticket in the primary election scheduled holding April 24.

    Aiyedatiwa said this at his formal declaration of his intention to run for the governorship election in the state, scheduled Nov. 16.

    The governor, who spoke at the APC secretariat in Akure, said his vision and mission for the state were greatly enriched, having served under the late Governor Rotimi Akeredolu between 2021 and 2023.

    “My mission would focus on key developmental issues to alleviate poverty, banish hunger and make Ondo State self-sustaining.

    “My development agenda is to emplace a State Economic Empowerment Development Strategy (SEEDS).

    “Under SEEDS, we would harmonise all plans for economic development.

    “The strategy of this mission is to birth policies aimed at wealth creation, employment generation, sustenance of high standard of living and consequently eradicate poverty among the people,” he said.

    Aiyedatiwa said he paraded a very rich
    political credentials and vast experience in governance.

    He added that the trajectory of his experiences in governance as former representative of the state on the board of Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), as deputy governor, acting governor, before becoming the governor.

    “Today, I offer myself to lead, not to rule, to respect your wishes, not to dominate you, and to lead by example of humility, good character and empathy, which I have demonstrated in office since 2021.

    “I remain the epitome of ‘Omoluabi’ that you have always trusted. I urge you to vote me as the candidate of our great party,” he added.

    Aiyedatiwa later urged members of the party to entrust him with the party’s ticket and build the party together.

    In his goodwill message at the event, Speaker, Ondo State House of Assembly, Mr Olamide Oladiji, commended Aiyedatiwa for offering to serve the people of the state.

    “Your dedication and commitment to serving the people of our state are commendable, and we are confident that your leadership will continue to bring progress and prosperity to Ondo State,” he said.