Tag: Peter Obi

  • Tinubu’s camp cautions Peter Obi’s supporters

    Tinubu’s camp cautions Peter Obi’s supporters

    The Tinubu Campaign Organisation (TCO) has cautioned supporters of the Presidential Candidate of the Labour Party, Mr Peter Obi, to stop spreading falsehood capable of misinforming Nigerians.

    Mr Bayo Onanuga, Director, Media and Communications, Tinubu Campaign Organisation made the call in a statement on Wednesday in Abuja, adding that such falsehood and disinformation would not win elections.

    Onanuga, who  also asked Obi to caution his supporters urged them to allow the 2023 election circle be about issues that would advance the growth, progress and stability of the country.

    Onanuga admonished Obi to get his supporters to desist from spreading lies, malice and denigrating other presidential candidates, especially Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate.

    He expressed optimism that Nigeria would be better and the electoral process enriched if the 2023 presidential campaigns are about issues of good governance aimed at lifting millions of Nigerians out of poverty.

    He added that the 2023 electioneering campaigns should not be dominated by ”the ravings of guttersnipes”, who do not wish the country well.

    Onanuga noted that the TCO saw the need to appeal to Obi to caution his supporters after investigating the origin of a recent fake report in circulation.

    He said the report had claimed that the Ghanaian President, Nana Akufo-Addo, wrote a letter to Tinubu, APC presidential candidate, asking him to support Peter Obi and take care of his health.

    He said the Ghana president via his official Twitter account had vehemently debunked the fake news as a product of deliberate mischief with the intent to deceive the public.

    “I have written no such letter to the APC leader, and it will not occur to me to do so.Ghana and Nigeria boast of decades of cordial, strong and brotherly relations,

    “And I am not going to be the one to interfere in the internal affairs and politics of Nigeria,” Onanuga quoted the Ghana president as saying via his Twitter account.

    He added that the TCO had found out that the fake letter from Akufo-Addo was first published on June 22 by a rogue platform, whose url is worlsnews.space (sic) and site identity was World of News.

    Onanuga said a content analysis of the site clearly showed that it was a Biafra news platform.

    According to him, the fake news was reposted on Facebook by Peter Obi Support Group, same day, showing that Biafra campaigners and Peter Obi supporters are the same.

    “Both the Facebook account and the website are replete with fake stories about Bola Tinubu, including a fake story credited to former Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State.

    “Alleging that Tinubu demanded N50 billion monthly payment from him.

    “The spuriousness of the statement is in the evidence that Lagos did not begin to clock N50 billion revenue until after Ambode left office.

    “Tinubu could not have demanded N50 billion monthly payment from Ambode when the state government didn’t make such in a month throughout the tenure of Ambode,” Onanuga said.

    He added that the pirate website, which the Facebook account feeds on, also parades malicious fake news and headlines without supporting stories.

    “The big surprise in all of these is that all the headlines have no supporting stories, and clicking them may bring virus to  your computer.

    “We have come to a point where it becomes imperative to tell Obi to show leadership.

    “He should disavow his supporters who are employing fake news and disinformation as deliberate tools to deceive and poison the minds of unsuspecting Nigerians,” Onanuga stressed.

  • Ghana’s President, Akufo-Addo speaks on asking Tinubu to step down for Obi

    Ghana’s President, Akufo-Addo speaks on asking Tinubu to step down for Obi

    The President of Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo, has denied owning the post that states that the All Progressive Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Bola Tinubu should step down for Labour Party’s candidate Peter Obi.

    Akufo-Addo denied the information via a  Twitter post on Tuesday.

    He labelled the statement credited to him as false and a mischievous attempt to tarnish his image.

    The Ghana president made it clear he would never interfere in Nigeria’s politics.

    “My attention has been drawn to a disturbing post making the rounds on social media, where it is alleged I have written to the 2023 presidential candidate of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, to ‘give Peter Obi a chance and seek treatment for his health’.

    “This is completely false and mischievous, with no iota of truth whatsoever in it,” Akufo-Addo wrote.

    He added that “Ghana and Nigeria boast of decades of cordial, strong and brotherly relations,” and he is “not going to be the one to interfere in the internal affairs and politics of Nigeria.”

  • POSN Members sue INEC over termination of voter registration

    POSN Members sue INEC over termination of voter registration

     

    …says it’s disenfranchisement of millions of eligible Nigerians

    A group of Nigerians under the aegis of Peter Obi Support Network (POSN) has sued the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) over its failure to comply with the constitutional provision that requires the commission to continue voter registration until at least 90 days to the general elections.

    TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reports this was contained in Suit No FHC/ABJ/CS/1342/2022 filed on their behalf by Abuja law firm, Ikechukwu Ezechukwu, SAN & Co., the Plaintiffs argue that INEC’s abrupt termination of the voter registration exercise would disenfranchise millions of eligible voters during the 2023 presidential election.

    The suit filed at the Federal High Court Abuja on Friday, August 5, 2022, seeks, among other things, an order compelling INEC to reverse its earlier directive halting the Continuous Voter Registration (CVR) exercise across the country on July 31, 2022, and to declare as ultra vires, the commission’s decision to put a timeline on the CVR exercise outside the timeline provided by the 2022 Electoral Act, as amended.

    The Plaintiffs raised the following issues for Determination:

    “Whether having regards to the combined provisions of Sections 76(2), 77(2), 116(2), 117(2), 132(2) & (5) and 178 (2) & (5) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as Amended) as well as Sections 9(1), 9 (6), 10(1) and 12(1) of the Electoral Acts, 2022, the Defendant can or has the right or latitude to stop the continuous voter’s registration on 31st July, 2022, about over Seven and Half (71/2) months (208 days), or any other day not until ninety (90) days before the General Elections when there are millions of prospective voters including the Plaintiffs who have not Registered and are willing to do so.”

    The Plaintiffs prayed the court for the following reliefs:

    “A DECLARATION that the Defendant is expected pursuant to the provisions of Sections 76(2), 77(2), 116(2), 117(2), 132(2) & (5) and 178 (2) & (5) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as Amended) as well as Sections 9(1), 9 (6), 10(1) and 12(1) of the Electoral Acts, 2022, to continue voters Registration, update and Revision of voters register till 90 days before the General Election billed to take place on 25th February, 2023 and 11th march, 2o23.

    “A DECLARATION that it is the Constitutional responsibility of the Defendant to make sure that every prospective Nigeria voter who have shown desire to Register to vote are not derived their Civil right to Register and participate in the forthcoming General Elections Scheduled to take place on 25th February,2023 and 11th March 2023.

    “AN ORDER OF COURT directing the Defendant to Resume immediately the Registration of new voters, updating and Revision of the Register of voters until at least 90 days to the General Election slated to hold on 25th February 2023 and 11th March, 2023.”

    According to the lead Counsel, Ifeanyi Nrialike Esq, over three hundred members of the Peter Obi Support Network (POSN) across the 36 states and Abuja, contacted the POSN legal team expressing frustration over their inability to register because of the stoppage of the Voters Registration exercise by INEC.

    One of the Plaintiffs, Mr. Ernest N. Stanley, narrated how on several occasions he attended at the registration Center located at Lugbe for registration as a Voter to no avail.

    In his affidavit sighted by our correspondent, Mr Stanley stated, “That in all instances I have been to the Registration centers to get registered, I will meet a mammoth crowd of prospective voters who also came for the same purpose of which we queue under the sun for hours without being attended to.

    “That at the registration center that I have gone to get registered there are not enough personnel such as the Registration Officer to attend to the crowd that came to be Registered.

    “That on Several instances the registration would not go on with excuses that the system malfunctioned, and machine broke down being offered as the excuse and for the whole day there will be no registration exercise that will take place.

    “That before you know what is happening, and to my chagrin, the Defendant through its National Chairman announced that the continuous voters Registration Exercise will stop on 31st July 2022.”

  • Peter Obi and the Apparition of a New Nigeria – By John Uwa

    Peter Obi and the Apparition of a New Nigeria – By John Uwa

    By John Uwa

    Considering the precarious economic, religious, social, security, political, educational, mental and physical situation Nigeria finds itself in today, it may not be possible to refute the assumption that over 90% of the Nigerian population yearn for a New Nigeria. And unless one is, tragically clueless, a beneficiary of the unprecedented looting of the Nigerian commonwealth, a broad day liar like the scribe who, despite the obvious, tells us that the government of General Buhari has done well with the security and economy since 2015, or all three, the preceding assumption should be taken as fact. And by a new Nigeria, I mean a country where the culture of the Rule of Law is held as sacred irrespective of tribe, religion, ethnicity and personality; a country where mediocrity is replaced by meritocracy, individualism replaced by collectivism, sectionalism replaced by nationalism, and extremism replaced by patriotism; a new Nigeria where its citizens understand and believe that there must be punishment for vice and reward for virtue, a new nation where its citizens must live together in unity, equality, fairness and mutual respect. And without doubt, the measurements spelt out above for a new Nigeria are the indicators for qualifying great nations.

    However, the real dilemma embeds in the following questions; how do we usher in a New Nigeria? And, how do we wrestle and take back our country from the strangulating grip of a few dishonest and manipulative Nigerians masquerading themselves as politicians and statesmen? Answering these questions is as difficult as trying to understand why we stay hungry amid plenty, perennially import products that are natural to us, kill on behalf of God and celebrate the very people who plunder our commonwealth and threaten our existence as a nation as a people, and give amnesty to criminals while their victims remain unintegrated in IDP camps. However, George Orwell’s beast fable titled Animal Farm tends to provide some artistic canvass for answering the questions posed above.

    In Animal Farm, Orwell tells a story of a group of exploited animals who are moved into rebellion as a result of important factors that would change the tragic course of their destinies. The first was an inspiring dream of redemption told to them by a more experienced pig named Old Major; and the second was the highhandedness of the human farm owner, who exploits the animals for personal gain. With these two factors, the animals staged a successful revolution that sacked the human farm-owner and set up a new government where animals would be in charge. Unfortunately, the revolution was betrayed by a dictatorial government headed by a brutal pig named Napoleon. Napoleon would change the guiding anthem and rules of the farm to soothe the exotic thirsts of the ruling class and send his deadly state dogs after any animal that dares to protest against his tyrannical rule.

    Two important tools used by Napoleon in putting the other animals under subjection were the promulgation of the inspiring anthem that led to the revolution and using the state security apparatus, synonymized as the vicious dogs, to enforce compliance. The second was to use deception, lies, and propaganda to portray contrary views as enemies of the state. The novel is an allegory of the 1917 Russian Revolution which sacked the tsarist autocracy and saw Joseph Starlin betraying his comrades like Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky and the Russian people while assuming the status of a dictator. However, the events, characters and places of the novel can be deployed in explaining the tragic social, political, and economic destinies of Nigerians since the turn of the 4th Republic.

    Generally speaking, the events of the novel allude to the insidious approach to governance in Nigeria characterized by the gross abuse of power, gross disregard for the interest of the ‘people’, avarice, corruption, clannish patronage, planlessness, wastedness and gross incompetence. The first revolution which sacked Mr Jones, the farm owner, may be likened to the 2015 presidential election which ushered in the APC government headed by Gen. Buhari after the defeat of President Goodluck Jonathan. That election was particularly successful for two reasons; firstly, it came at a time when the Nigerian people wanted a change from the old order of looting, which characterized the PDP government, into a government that will usher in the dawn of a new Nigeria. Unfortunately, the expected change was never to be as the new government, turns out to be even ‘more corrupt’ and clueless than the earlier one. The tragic per capita income, plummeting exchange rate, increased corruption, overwhelming insecurity, institutional exploitation of the populace, ethnic suspicion etc. are all indexes of the disillusionment of Nigerians. Secondly, there is a general agreement that the current government rode into power through massive media propaganda, lies, intimidation, misinformation and false promises. Once it assumed power, it went 360 degrees on its promises, supervising, as it appears, the very opposite of its promises.

    For example, without realizing that no tyranny or circumstance can silence the voice of redemption and freedom, it went ahead to clamp down on the voices of the people by banning, the now reversed, use of Twitter—a tool that was very instrumental to its emergence. With this restriction on the use of social media, Nigerians found themselves in a situation not different from those of the events in Animal Farm where the pigs (the ruling class) modified the brotherhood creed to suggest that “some animals are more equal than the others”, and then put a complete embargo on the singing of the revolutionary anthem (beast of England, beast of Ireland, beast of every land and clime, harken to my joyful tiding of the golden future time…) which brought them into power. And to enforce compliance, they will send their dreaded dogs (the DSS, EFCC etc.).

    Unfortunately, with the precarious situation we find ourselves as a nation, Nigerians have reached the precipice and crossed the rubicon of silence and have proven that they can be united in the struggle for a new Nigeria. The END SARS protest is a pleasant reminder of this hope of an untied Nigeria. While that protest was brutally terminated under the pretence of ‘breakdown of law and order’, it would set a fire of freedom that no dictator could extinguish. As we inch towards the 2023 general election the Nigerian youths are reigniting the spirit of END SARS to take back their country through the instrumentality of Peter Obi who has shown promises in theory and practice through empirical examples, verifiable records, and the “no shishi” mantra. With the emergence of Peter Obi, the redemption song now has a tonic sulpha with the youth of ‘every land and clime’ in Nigeria adding their voices to make the song even more melodious. We see a youthful generation of over a Hundred million wanting to take back their country from the strangulating grip of recycled politicians of the ‘emilokan’ generation, and vesting it in the hands of a man whose main vision is to convert Nigeria from a consumption economy into a production economy, and from sharing formula into job creation formula.

    Unlike other presidential elections in the past, 2023 releases some freshness in the presidential options by presenting Nigerians with a beacon of hope hanging like an apparition in the sky, waiting for all suffering Nigerians to rise above ethnoreligious prejudices and barricades, that have set us on a roller-coaster to self-destruction, and to make the right choices in electing a new President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    From the reception trailing Peter Obi’s candidacy, there appears to be a dislocation of the ‘super structure’ required to win an election from the political parties, and relocating it in the hands of the people and civil organizations—ASUU, NASU, NUT, NUC, TUC, NANS etc. who bear the direct consequences of misgovernance and incompetency. Peter Obi’s candidacy transcends ethnic and religious prejudices to hang in the sky as an apparition of hope, waiting to rescue millions of Nigerians drowning in the lake of death, ploughed by the PDP and irrigated by the APC, through the general election of 2023. What we can do to ‘fire’ the grandfathers by whom we have been so blessed, and to usher in a new Nigeria is to request issue-based campaigns, register as voters, get our PVC and continue to sing the redemption song into the 2023 Presidential election.

     

    John Uwa (PhD) wrote from the University of Lagos

    Email: uwa.jmo@gmail.com 

  • There is no Obidient party, they are noise makers – Sen Nnamani

    There is no Obidient party, they are noise makers – Sen Nnamani

    Senator representing Enugu East Senatorial District, Chimaroke Nnamani has said that there is no party called Obidient and describes Peter Obi’s supporters as noise makers.

    Nnamani claimed that the Labour Party presidential candidate supporters, who are known as Obidients, are less than 0.25 percent of the entire 200 million Nigerians.

    In a recent post on his Facebook page, the lawmaker stated that his followers belong to the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, and that they cannot labour for another party to inherit.

    According to him, if the ‘Obidient Movement’ is for only Peter Obi, it should not have spread to other positions, including the governorship and Assembly seats.

    He wrote, “There is no Obidient PARTY! The name is LABOUR Party. A political party with candidates in all offices, including governorship.

    “Our party and platform is different and that is PDP. FACT If we blur the distinction and foolishly vote Obidient that is Labour Party for President?

    “For the minority ELITES it is easy to reverse 2 weeks later! For the majority over 98percent that is major “confuse “as they say on the Streets” Confuse Yamaru” as Umu Asadu will put it!

    “Remember these advocates are Noisy, Loud, Intolerant, Proselytizers, Condescending but less than 0.25percent of our 200 million population. That is a generous guess of those propagandists controlling the NARRATIVE. Only a narrative.

    “If Obidient is Peter Obi only why field candidates in other offices? Why do we establish foundation and beach head for Labour Party? In battle do you give invaders your beach head to Land (please forgive my war analogy, for want of more graphic example) and now seek to drive them away? ebeanoFAM answer my question. The answer is blowing in the wind”.

  • 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

  • 2023 Elections: Ayodele Fayose, Peter Obi meet in Lagos

    2023 Elections: Ayodele Fayose, Peter Obi meet in Lagos

    Labour party presidential candidate, Peter Obi met former Governor of Ekiti state, Ayodele Fayose on Sunday in Lagos.

    Obi and Fayose held a closed-door meeting at the latter’s residence in Lagos.

    Fayose’s aide, Lere Olayinka confirmed the meeting in a post on his social media handle.

    Lere Olayinka had shared photos of Fayose and the former Anambra State Governor, with the caption: “Labour Party Presidential Candidate, Peter Obi visits former Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo Fayose in his Lagos residence today.”

    Both Obi and Fayose belonged to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) before he dumped the party for the Labour party.

    The purpose of Obi’s meeting with Fayose is not yet known, but there are insinuations that the Ekiti former governor might be planning to work for him in the 2023 election.

    Recall that Fayose had always made it clear that he would support a southerner in next year’s general election for the presidency of the country.

     

  • VIDEO: I’ll break you into pieces – Dino Melaye fires at Keyamo

    VIDEO: I’ll break you into pieces – Dino Melaye fires at Keyamo

    Senator Dino Melaye has lambasted the Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Festus Keyamo over his recent outburst against the presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Keyamo had in a TV interview on Friday attacked the former Vice President, condemning his presidential ambition, saying in the interview that Atiku has nothing to offer the country.

    Keyamo further stated in the interview that the PDP candidate lacks the capacity to rule Nigeria as a president and that the Labour Party presidential candidate, Mr Peter Obi is far better than him [Atiku] in terms of capacity and experience.

    Reacting, Dino who was angered by Keyamo’s assertions, said the Minister lacks the moral bearings to attack Atiku. Dino, a former PDP governorship aspirant in Kogi State and currently the spokesperson for Atiku’s 2023 presidential campaign, countered Keyamo, saying anyone who has served as Vice President is fit for the number one position.

    In a video published on his social media handles, Dino challenged the minister to a debate where he vowed to breaking him (Keyamo) into pieces.

    He said, “Ask Nigerians today, what portfolio is Keyamo holding? Many will tell you that they don’t even know the ministry he is working in because he is redundant, inactive, and not visible.

    “Because he is not known as Minister, he is mistaking his officer as a Minister of State for the office of the Vice President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. No Nigerian who is educated, and intellectually okay will abuse the office of the Vice President of Nigeria.

    “What Keyamo attacked is not Atiku Abubakar but the office of the Vice President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the number two office in this country.

    “Because he has monetized his conscience, that is why he will not understand that the office of Nigerian VP has some ministries, agencies under its direct supervision and oversight.

    “That is why he will not know that in the absence of the president, the vice president is the acting president with executive power anytime the president is out of the country. So what he has done is that he has abused the office of Nigerian VP even as a lawyer who should understand the constitutionality of that office.

    “Anyone who has been a VP is fit to be a president. Can Keyamo also say that Atiku has not succeeded internationally as a businessman?

    “Just because you are acting under ‘sekpe’ or under the influence of marijuana, you just smoke your ganja and you think you can just open your mouth and talk? Because you are defending someone who takes drugs more than food today?

  • ‘Go and Verify’: Claims made by Peter Obi that are false

    ‘Go and Verify’: Claims made by Peter Obi that are false

    The Labour Party’s Presidential candidate in the 2023 general elections Peter Obi has made several claims that have turned out to be false, despite his popular ‘Go and Verify’ campaign slogan.

    Obi, in the latest figures quoted, claimed that annual exports from Nigeria was less than $30 billion and we have over 100 million people living in poverty.

    “Nigeria is a country with 923,000 square kilometres of land, and a population of 200 million people. God blessed us with oil and other resources.

    “But to show that we are not a producing country, last year, our total export including oil was less than 30 billion dollars, that is why we can’t find dollars today. We have over 100 million people living in poverty,” Obi said during a recent interview in Abia state.

    Obi also claimed last Monday during a Channelstv interview that about 100 out of 150 players in America’s National Basketball Association (NBA) are Nigerians.

    “If you go into American NBA, out of 150 players, almost 100 are Nigerians. These youths are so talented that they are where you need to focus to reach their talent and productive energy to turn around the country,” he said.

    How true are these claims?

    Contrary to Obi’s claim, Nigeria’s annual exports have exceeded the $30 billion mark since 2005 and US$47.6 billion worth of goods where shipped from the country around the globe in 2021.

    Between 2005 and 2021, Nigeria’s export peaked at $143. 7 billion in 2012, contributing 31.6 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    The country’s biggest export remains crude oil, representing over three-quarters (76 per cent) of its total exported goods by value in 2021.

    Latest available country-specific data shows that 70 per cent of products exported from Nigeria were bought by importers in: India, Spain, France, Netherlands, Canada, United States of America, Italy, Indonesia, mainland China, South Africa, Portugal and Ivory Coast.

    Also, World Bank data which show that 89 million Nigerians live in poverty, belies Obi’s claim that over 100 million citizens are poor. The bank projects the number of poor persons in Nigeria could rise to 95 million by the end of 2022, still less than the figure quoted by the Presidential candidate.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that a similar claim made by Obi in 2018 that Nigeria’s poverty rate was growing by 6 per cent every minute, also turned out to be false.

    The NBA, a professional basketball league in the North America founded on June 6, 1946, is composed of 30 teams – 29 in the United States and 1 in Canada – and is one of the major professional sports league in both countries.

    Available data has also shown there are over 500 players in the NBA and 109 international players from 39 countries are on opening-night rosters for its landmark 75th Anniversary 2021/2022 Season.

    For the eighth consecutive year, Canada is the most-represented country outside of the U.S., followed by Australia, France and Germany (seven players each).  Nigeria, Serbia, Spain and Turkey each have five players.

    The five Nigerian players are: Charles Bassey, Josh Okogie, Precious Achiuwa, Udoka Azubuike and Chimezie Metu.

    In addition, there are six players representing other countries who have ties to Nigeria and they are: Deandre Ayton (Bahamas), Giannis and Thanasis Antetokounmpo (Greece), Usman Garuba (Spain), Ogugwa Anunoby (United Kingdom) and Eugene Omoruyi (Canada), bringing the total number of Nigerians in the NBA to 11.

    Verdict

    False: Claims that Nigeria’s annual exports were less than $30 billion in 2021 and that there are about 100 Nigerians in the NBA are false, while his comment that over 100 million Nigerians live in poverty, is exaggerated.

  • Why I became ‘Obidient’ – retired American mental health counsellor

    Why I became ‘Obidient’ – retired American mental health counsellor

    A retired American mental health counselor Jeffrey Guterman, is openly advocating for Peter Obi’s presidency in Nigeria’s 2023 elections, raising questions about his interest in the country’s politics.

    Guterman who has been hosting online discussions that attracts thousands of participants to support Obi’s campaign, said his interest was borne out of feeling of “deep compassion for Nigerians”, following the mass shooting at the St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church in Owo in Ondo State on June 5.

    “I was mortified when I saw an image of congregants laying face down in pools of blood,” he said.

    After the church attack, the mental health counsellor said he began looking closely at the upcoming presidential election in Nigeria and researched the major candidates.

    “It became obvious to me that Peter Obi was the only choice for a better Nigeria. Bola Ahmed Tinubu, candidate for the All Progressives Congress, is a drug lord. Atiku Abubakar, candidate for the People’s Democratic Party, laundered money.

    “In contrast, Peter Obi, candidate for the Labour Party, has an exemplary educational background and he served as Governor of the Anambra State with competence. There are no flies on Peter Obi. He has a positive vision for Nigeria,” said Guterman.

    He added that his interest in Obi has given him something bigger than himself and has caused him to develop close relationships with many Nigerians.

    “I have found Nigerians to be among the nicest people. Nigerians are brilliant, creative, beautiful people. Regardless of what happens in the 2023 election, I will always treasure my Nigerian friends,” he said.

    Guterman has worked in various clinical settings since 1985 and holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology from Boston University, two Master of Science degrees in counselling psychology and family therapy and a Doctorate degree in family therapy from the Nova University.