Tag: Peter Obi

  • Everyone’s obituary is inevitable – By Chuks Iloegbunam

    Everyone’s obituary is inevitable – By Chuks Iloegbunam

    Some have called you foolish, dear Sam Omatseye. Others insist that you are plain stupid. There are those who hold you to be beneath contempt. Their howls of execration upon you are in reaction to your August 1, 2022 article entitled Obi-tuary.

    For me, however, you are a dear friend. Our friendship started in the 1980s at Newswatch magazine where both of us practised journalism before you travelled to the United States for further studies. It continued upon your return and strengthened to the point that, sometimes, you get the producers of your TV Continental programme to connect me to field questions live. Besides, living in different states, we often chat by telephone. I demonstrated our amity again last May when I was in Nigeria’s commercial capital for the Lagos International Book Fair. I phoned you and, within the hour, you were at my stand where we spent quality time reminiscing about the good old days and prognosticating on the future of our dear fatherland.

    Armed with this handle of friendship, I have just the one advice for you: Be careful. It is in elaboration of this counsel that I write all that you read hereon. Please look back to the time of the Nigeria-Biafra war of 1967 to 1970. You will find that, military or civilian, none of the political actors of that era is still in a position to fight elections today. The final curtain long fell for most of them. Of the lot that remains, some have become vegetables, or are propped up with a suffusion of drugs or would not find their way to the loo unless hired attendants or swearing relatives point it out. Together with the handful that is still blessed with something close to robust health, they have one thing in common. They are seated, restless or restive, in various existential departure halls, clutching fitfully at their boarding passes and waiting for that inevitable voice that cannot be disobeyed, to announce their flights into past tense.

    In a broad sense, the departed leave their legacies, good, bad or ugly, for those standing in line and waiting their turns to also check out. What legacies, dear Sam, are you and I feverishly working day and night to leave for those coming in our wake? When you write an article that denigrates the Igbo nation of over 50 million people, and make nonsense of some of those things that mean the most to them, do you really believe that your disposition is justified by the pay and perquisites that accrue to you at Ahmed Bola Tinubu’s The Nation newspapers?

    This is you: “The Biafran babblers are alive and well. They just swapped icons, rechristened the shrines and rewrote the rites. They left the prophet for a secular priest. They have had a switch of battle gear.” This clearly is a perfidious way of sentencing Ndigbo to the status of the bat that is neither bird nor mammal. Their fight for Biafra five decades ago was stopped. Their fight now for democratic integration impels you to call them babblers, i.e., people who are no more than endless talkers of nonsense. One would think that the bat sobriquet aptly becomes your Bola Ahmed Tinubu whose initials provide the BAT acrostic that he wears like a badge. I will sooner return to the BAT.

    This, again, is your characterisation of the Igbo: “They can say they have a legitimate tribe and rhetoric. They may pretend to love Nigeria. They may claim to embrace INEC, cling to a political party no one in the police or DSS will harangue.”

    Isn’t this the height of Igbophobia? We may go back in history. Before Tinubu, there were other Yoruba presidential candidates, including Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Chief M. K. O. Abiola, General Olusegun Obasanjo, Chief Gani Fawehinmi and Chief Olu Falae. None of these personages indexed their presidential ambition on stoking inter-tribal animosity between the Yoruba and the Igbo. As a matter of fact, Chief Philip Ezebuilo Umeadi, Igbo and one of the oldest Senior Advocates of Nigeria, was Papa Awolowo’s running mate in the 1979 presidential election.

    Why does it make sense to you and to your principal that the only route to his vaulting presidential ambition must be one that sunders two ethnic groups that have since before the amalgamation been living together in amity, harmony and peace, two peoples that have always, in peace or in peril, lent each other a helping hand?

    At the height of the Western Nigeria political crisis of the mid 1960s that pitted Chief Awolowo against Chief Samuel Ladoke Akintola, the former’s Action Group (AG) and Dr. M. I. Okpara’s National Convention of Nigerian Citizens (NCNC) entered into a coalition that birthed the United Progressives Grand Alliance (UPGA). We have it on Wole Soyinka’s authority – see page 73 of his autobiographical You Must Set Forth At Dawn (Bookcraft, Ibadan 2006) that Dr. Okpara lent the then incarcerated Awo a voice by dispatching Mazi Anyogu Elekwachi Ukonu and a complement of seasoned broadcasters that installed a transmitter right inside Awolowo’s Ibadan home.

    Ndigbo were not a part of Awolowo’s treason trial and his imprisonment for ten years. Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe even said that he was the one that insisted on Awolowo being imprisoned in Calabar, rather than in Northern Nigeria where the chief feared that poisoning could end his life.

    It was not the Igbo that nullified Chief Abiola’s victory in the 1993 presidential election. Rather, Ndigbo were in the forefront of the NADECO (National Democratic Coalition) struggle against the gross injustice. At least a third of those that formed the NADECO were Igbo, according to a list in Battlelines: Adventures in Journalism and Politics, Chief Segun Osoba’s autobiography published in 2020 by Diamond Publications Limited, Lagos. They included Commodore Ebitu Ukiwe, the late Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu, Okwadike (Dr.) Chukwuemeka Ezeife, Prof Anya O. Anya, Chief Ralph Obioha, Chief Empire Kanu, Chief Michael Anyiam, Chief E. Duru, Chief Vincent Nwizugbo and Dr. Uma Eleazu.

    NADECO had an international arm. In the United Kingdom, its meetings were held in the late Raph Uwechue’s Africa Books Limited offices in Hammersmith London. Chief Uwechue was Igbo. Dear Sam, I do not know exactly where you were at the time, and I concede that, among Nigerian politicians, there is something known as selective amnesia. If, therefore, your Tinubu, who lived in London for a portion of his exile, does not remember Uwechue’s role in NADECO, I am sure that none of General Alani Akinrinade, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi and Professor Sylvester Monye will ever forget. All the Igbo fighters for June 12 were not dissuaded by the fact that their struggle was to actualise the electoral mandate of Chief Abiola, a Yoruba politician. Apart from incarceration, harassment by security operatives and the alienation of exile, some of these men paid heavily in other ways for their commitment to cause of justice. Chief Bobo Nwosisi died in exile in London. Chief Obioha lost his bank, the First African Trust Bank Limited.

    In the light of the above, readers would have to judge for themselves whether or not it is right for you, Sam, to say the following of Ndigbo: “They have transferred the temperament of their former master into the new. And they have not spared any incoherence, any lack of finesse, and threats and tantrums, any show of rabid, primitive cants, or any ululations. They have abused, cursed, thrown imprecations. They have hugged lies about their candidate. They have pelted lies about others. They have distorted material. Obi has turned out to be an excuse for even closet Biafrans to betray open emotions about Biafra without being accused of it.”

    To be sure, your writing is not an aberrant occurrence. On July 17, 2022, an Adedamola Adetayo posted on the Internet an anti-Igbo diatribe in which he said, among other things that “They have a POLITICAL ZIONISM already in play. It is in the thing they deceptively call Obidients. That Movement is going to RALLY the Igbos of Lagos in a way that they haven’t ever been rallied. THEY ARE SET TO DETERMINE THE LEADERSHIP OF LAGOS. The priority is to remove Tinubu first. In future they will call the shot. This is what Peter Obi is all about. He has no plans for any Presidency. I can imagine that the ZIONISTS already have their IPOB/UGM all over the places in Lagos, in the Garrisons called Markets, under cover, masquerading as Igbo traders.”

    Years before this ranting Adedamola Adetayo, John Femi Kusa, who had been a script editor at The Guardian in Lagos, also showed his claws. In March 2019, he published an article on the Internet with this sentence of a title: Okota: The Igbo Question, Jimi Agbaje, Afenifere And The Rest Of Us. In it, he claimed that, “The major problem, in my opinion, is the Igbo penchant to wish to take over another person’s land…Lagos was either a colony or a part of Western Nigeria. But because of the generosity of Yorubas and the foresight of their forefathers which made this region the star region in West Africa, the Igbos would like the Yorubaman to believe that LAGOS IS NO MAN’S LAND. Can anyone say that of Benin without eating his pounded yam as raw yam?”

    Dear Sam, your Obi-tuary piece is as incendiary as the hateful views of Kusa and Adetayo. Kusa, now well into his 70s will not physically go feeding the Igbo raw yam. But all the vitriol you guys have been pushing against the Igbo is the stuff that leads the M. C. Oluomos into mindless violence and murder and arson and brigandage. You pen pushers of evil are the ones that egg on the rabble into wielding guns and cudgels and massacring innocent people for transient political offices. Is it right to promote this permittivity simply so that Tinubu will attain his wild goose chase of the presidential crown?

    Kusa schooled at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, earning a degree in Mass Communication. All through his years in the Igbo country, not once was he molested or denied his citizenship on account of his origin. Did his welcome at Nsukka lead him into believing that the town was a part of the Yoruba country? According to Facebook, the acerbic Adetayo guy schooled at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, and earned a degree there without abuse, let or hindrance. Maybe it got fixed inside his brain that Awka is an extension of Lagos, or that Azikiwe after whom the institution was named was his progenitor.

    If there are Ndigbo who say that Lagos is a no man’s land, can one Igbo person be put up who simply seized a piece of land in the metropolis and converted it to his use? If Nigerians, including Tinubu’s daughters, who have being buying up choice properties in New England, United States, can own houses in Europe, North America, the Middle East and elsewhere, why must it rankle that Ndigbo own property in Lagos? Why must ownership of landed property in one’s own country lead to calumniation and physical harm? Is it not too steep a price to pay in order that Tinubu should become Nigeria’s president?

    The Igbo were not responsible for the recent bloody massacre of congregants inside the St Francis Catholic Church in Owo, Ondo State. The Igbo are not among those sentenced to death by hanging for the murder of Afenifere leader Chief Reuben Fasanranti’s daughter. The herdsmen marauding, pillaging and plundering Yoruba land, looting, raping women, destroying farmlands and spreading death and destruction are not Igbo. The Igbo man did not kill a soul. He did not contest the governorship of Lagos. He hasn’t ever claimed ownership of Iga Idungaran. The Igbo always lived in peace with the Yoruba – until Tinubu surfaced with his divisive politics. Are the vociferous Igbo supporters of Tinubu no longer of the ethnic group because of their partisan predilection?

    Sam, informed readers of your articles are aware that your allusions to classical Anglo-Saxon, Greek and Roman mythologies and literary divergences are no more than an egregious attempt at appropriating the intellectual centre circle. Otherwise, you would appreciate the importance of adding depth to your fulminations. Any owner of a book of quotable quotes or a glossary of literary terms can fill their verbiage with citations. But that is no scholarship, my friend. Look at you: “Obi is like Zik, Kanu like Ojukwu. One is a flair, the other a flare.” Yet, it doesn’t strike you as reasonable to accord some of Zik’s aptitude to Peter Obi, a man who earned an honours degree in Philosophy from Nigeria’s premier indigenous university that was built by the great Zik of Africa. And Ojukwu is no more than a flare. By impugning him with combustibility, you forget that in January 1967, Ojukwu went to Aburi, Ghana, not with an incendiary device, but with the sole purpose of putting out the smoldering fire that was threatening to become a national conflagration. You forget that it was not Ojukwu but those that reneged on the Aburi Accord that tossed a lit match in an ocean of gasoline.

    I agree with those that have invested you with the coronet of a seasoned journalist. Except that your coronation disdains the fact that your brand of perceptive journalism is only seasonal. That explains why it bothers you that “Obi hops from church to church,” but means absolutely nothing to you that as Dele Sobowale reported in the Sunday Vanguard of July 10, 2022 “…Bola Tinubu has charged the Supreme Council for Sharia in the country to create a department of political affairs to create political awareness among the faithful towards producing a Muslim President in 2023.” Neither do you care a hoot that, as Dr. Sobowale added in the same article “Tinubu has followed up that injunction to the Supreme Council for Sharia, by making secret pledges to expand the reach of Sharia to more Southern States if elected.”

    Rather, you call Peter Obi a hypocrite. But Mr. Obi gave his date of birth, the name of his parents, the town he hails from, the schools he attended and the businesses he is into. All were found to be correct. Not being at all interested in the truth, you threw Mr. Obi’s data out of the window because you must be seen to be frantically propagating a character of disputed age, of unknown pedigree, unascertained genealogy, unsubstantiated name, uncorroborated curriculum vitae, and unverified academic diplomas. You shout from the rooftops that Peter Obi is not fit to govern. But you posit as fit for the presidential palace a specimen of incontinence, tremulous lower extremities, slurred speech, unsteady gait and memory lapses. You cannot be serious, my friend.

    Of course, it is your entitlement to advertise even ordure if that captures your fancy, but you may not carry on as though your readers are imbecilic. By raising the Biafran bogey, your intention was clearly to create doubt and apprehension. But your gambit only registered a calamitous failure. Jonathan was President of this country. It didn’t obliterate Niger Delta agitation. Buhari is president of this country; those of his people campaigning for the Islamic State haven’t thrust their swords in their scabbards. You have a fondness for excoriating Nnamdi Kanu. Excellent! Except that your seasonal flair for journalism has never prompted you into examining the Sunday Igboho phenomenon. You make yourself a laughing stock by encapsulating in ethnic strictures the pan-Nigerian Peter Obi Movement that is youth led. You reckon not one bit that the youths that are sick and tired of the sanguinary dreariness and aridity of your principal’s vanishing epoch.

    Nonetheless, you cannot contest the truism that, in the last analysis, everything goes and turns round. All metals are bound for the anvil. We are here today – those, like Peter Obi and his equally competent and credible running mate, Yusuf Datti Baba-Ahmed, that wish to place a new heart in the Nigerian nation; and others like your principal and his paid battalions of blinkered acolytes that, as Pa Ayo Adebanjo finely put it, are only interested in continuing and escalating the rot they inflicted on hapless Nigerians in 2015. Whatever tomorrow brings, you must continue to ruminate over the legacy you will leave for coming generations. Every one of us will have their entrance and their exit, it being a settled fact that obituary’s certitude rings true for all comers, not just for Peter Obi as you wantonly asserted.

     

    Chuks Iloegbunam is the author of the upcoming book on Mr. Peter Obi entitled The Promise of a New Era

  • “I’ll not abandon Nigeria, if war breaks out” – Peter Obi

    “I’ll not abandon Nigeria, if war breaks out” – Peter Obi

    Labour party (LP) presidential candidate, Peter Obi, has said he would not abandon Nigeria if war breaks out in the country.

     

    According to Obi, he would prefer to die in Nigeria than be a free man in another country.

     

    He revealed this during a virtual interactive session with more than 1,000 members of his foremost support group, the Peter Obi Support Network.

     

    Obi, who is aspiring to be Nigeria’s next President, pointed out that he has a focus on Nigeria despite having resided in the UK for over 10 years.

     

    The Labour Party Presidential candidate noted that he does not need the citizenship or residence rights of any other country because Nigeria remains his interest.

    Obi
    Labour Party Presidential candidate, Peter Obi

     

    In his words: “When I left the UK after residing there for over 10 years, I returned everything that belonged to them.

     

    “I have a singular focus on Nigeria, and I do not think I need the citizenship or residence rights of any other country when I haven’t finished exploiting my nature-given rights and privileges as a Nigerian.

     

    “If I am out of Nigeria today and there is a war in Nigeria, I will find a way to return to Nigeria because I will rather die in my country, Nigeria, than live free in another man’s country.”

     

    Obi appealed to Nigerians in the diaspora to contribute to the country’s development.

     

    The Nigerian businessman and politician served as Governor of Anambra from March to November 2006, February to May 2007, and from June 2007 to March 2014.

     

    In May 2022, he became the Labour Party nominee for President of Nigeria in the 2023 presidential election.

     

    Born in Onitsha in 1961, Obi graduated from the University of Nigeria in 1984.

     

    Afterwards, he entered business and banking, eventually rising to hold several high-ranking executive positions at banks.

     

    By the early 2000s, Obi was the chairman of Fidelity Bank before leaving the position to enter politics.

     

    The aspiring president of Nigeria ran for governor in 2003, as a member of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

     

    After three years of legal battles, Obi was declared winner in 2006 and assumed office in March 2006.

     

    He was then impeached that November before the impeachment was overturned and he returned to office in February 2007.

     

    TheNewsguru.com recalls that Obi was removed when a new election was held in April 2007 but the judiciary intervened again and ruled that he should be allowed to complete a full four-year term.

     

    In 2010, he won re-election to a second term. Obi’s terms were marked by improvements in state finances, education, and healthcare.

     

    In May 2022, Obi became the presidential candidate of the LP in the upcoming 2023 general elections, after defecting from the PDP.

  • LABOUR PARTY: Dr. Baba-Ahmed frowns over parody accounts linked to him

    LABOUR PARTY: Dr. Baba-Ahmed frowns over parody accounts linked to him

    Labour Party vice presidential candidate, Dr. Yusuf Datti Baba-Ahmed, has called on operators of fake social media accounts linked to him to take them down.

     

    He made this call at an international press conference organized to disclaim any fake media being used to demarket him, Gov. Peter Obi and the Labour Party.

     

    Baba-Ahmed literally asked social media platform operators for clean slate to enable him conduct his personal and public business on the social space without the burden of those impersonators who have hijacked his name for use in the social media space.

    Labour party

     

    The vice presidential candidate is a Nigerian economist and politician who served as Senator for Kaduna North from 2011 to 2012 and member of the House of Representatives from 2003 to 2007.

     

    From the prominent Baba-Ahmed family of Zaria, Baba-Ahmed graduated from the University of Maiduguri. After schooling, he worked in business and banking for several years before entering politics.

     

    Baba-Ahmed was elected as House of Representatives member for Zaria in 2003; while in the position, he became known for speaking out against corruption and the Third Term Agenda.

    Labour Party vice presidential candidate

     

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that Baba-Ahmed became popular for his principled activism. During the administration of President Olusegun Obasanjo, he was among lawmakers who opposed letting Obasanjo run for a third term.

     

    In May 2006 he said he would not run for reelection unless action was taken to investigate allegations that members had been bribed to support the constitutional changes needed for a third term presidency.

     

    After leaving office in 2007, Baba-Ahmed continued advocating for good governance while returning to his Baze business grouping and founding Baze University.

     

    By 2011, he moved back to politics and successfully ran for Senator for Kaduna North; however, the electoral tribunal overturned his victory and he left office in 2012.

     

    After an unsuccessful presidential campaign in the 2019 Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) primary, Baba-Ahmed joined the Labour Party in 2022 to become Peter Obi’s running mate.

     

    Baba-Ahmed was born to the Baba-Ahmed family in Zaria in 1969. He is among the thirty-three children of his father, Baba Ahmed, was an Arab cattle-trader from modern-day Mauritania who later became a notable scholar and expert on Islamic jurisprudence.

    Baba-Ahmed has a BSc and MSc in Economics from the University of Maiduguri in Borno State. He worked in the security Printing and Minting, Lagos before entering politics.

    In 2006, while a Federal representative, he earned the title of Doctor of Philosophy when he completed his PhD studies at the University of Westminster.

    Labour Party vice presidential candidate

    It would be recalled that in 2007, he took the Independent National Electoral Commission to court over conduct of past elections.

     

    Baba-Ahmed contested and won the Kaduna North Senatorial elections in 2011 under Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) which was then led by President Muhammadu Buhari; the election was challenged at the court by the candidate of the PDP, which led to Ahmed’s controversial victory being upturned.

     

    In 2018, he ran unsuccessfully for the Presidential ticket of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). In 2022, he pulled out as a gubernatorial aspirant in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) primaries for the 2023 governorship elections in Kaduna State, citing his refusal to buy delegate votes as his reason.

     

    On 8 July 2022, he was nominated as the Vice Presidential candidate of the Labour Party in the 2023 Nigeria General election.

     

    Speaking at an Islamic media forum in Abuja in September 2008, Baba-Ahmed called on journalists to fearlessly submit accurate reports. He said that corruption in the country is endemic, and special prayers and determination from all stakeholders are needed to correct the situation.

     

    Baba-Ahmed became the Managing Director of Baze Research and Data Services Ltd.

    The vice presidential candidate was founder and Pro–Chancellor of Baze University, an independent university located in Abuja in the Federal Capital Territory, Nigeria which opened in April 2011.

     

    Citing his studies abroad as a benchmark, he said that the Nigerian educational system was “appalling” and that this inspired him to start Baze University.

    In the April 2011 elections, Baba-Ahmed polled 366,398 votes in the contest for Senator for Kaduna North.

     

    Runner-up Senator Ahmed Makarfi of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), the incumbent, polled 365,043 votes.

  • 2023: LP VP candidate Baba-Ahmed blows hot says rising profile of Obi has become a bitter pill

    2023: LP VP candidate Baba-Ahmed blows hot says rising profile of Obi has become a bitter pill

    …for some people to swallow

    …knocks social media for misrepresentation of facts

    …says he’s unrepentant in his mission to rescue Nigeria

     

    Vice Presidential candidate of the Labour Party in Nigeria, Datti Baba-Ahmed on Monday revealed that the rising profile of his party’s presidential candidate has become a bitter pill for some Nigerian retrogressive status quo politicians to the extent of apparently committing huge amounts of money in creating and spreading falsehood in the name of politics.

    He disclosed this in a media parley in Abuja stating that:

    “The rising profile of HE Peter Obi, and the growing fortunes of Labour Party have become such a bitter pill for some Nigerian retrogressive status quo politicians to the extent of apparently committing huge amounts of money in creating and spreading falsehood in the name of politics.

    “My preference to remain fair and objective in the matter of wild allegations against a fellow Nigerian, the likes of which I am beginning to witness, has attracted the wrath of the same elements

    “I offer no apologies for having been deemed suitable by a team of diligent and competent head hunters in matters relating to Candidacy in 2023, but I must observe that there are more decent and honourable ways for disagreeing with the issue of preferential choice.

    “The Choice is for HE Peter Obi, then and now. All other interested parties are welcome to approach HE on how to be accommodated in the noble and patriotic plan to rescue Nigeria.

    Taking a knock at the social media operations in this clime the former Senator said ”

    Disclaimer:

    “Impostors had right from inception of the various social media platforms opened accounts in my Name without my knowledge or approval. I wrote several complaints accordingly which were never attended to satisfactorily. This situation remained for nearly a decade, and I decided to be inactive on the platforms till my complaints were satisfactorily attended to.

    “On 24 May 2022 I withdrew from Kaduna State Governorship Primaries under the PDP on grounds of divergent principles

    “From 25 Jun 2022 I began receiving indications of a possible Calling to Serve my Nation again this time under Labour Party which culminated in my Unveiling as the Vice Presidential candidate of the Labour Party on the 8th of July 2022.

    “I was interviewed by BBC Hausa immediately after the Event, only to find contents of the said interview misrepresented by another social media page. A Complaint was immediately made, and this page eventually removed the misrepresented news article, but only after much damage had been done.

    “Ever since indications began to appear about my joining the Labour Party, more impostors hurriedly opened more accounts in my Name, in most cases misspelled or in wrong format.

    “Complaints about the fake accounts have been duly lodged and registered with the relevant host platforms, while I wait and continue to suffer the consequences of mischievous and evil postings done by others falsely in my Name.

    “I must acknowledge and appreciate the diligence of well-meaning followers who were quick to observe and object to these accounts on basis of their good knowledge of me

    “I hereby dissociate my humble self from the creation, ownership, and operation of any such social media accounts.

    “I equally declare that all exchanges and communications therefrom are without my knowledge or input in any way whatsoever

    Read full text below:

    TEXT OF SEN. YUSUF DATTI BABA-AHMED PRESS CONFERENCE ON FAKE SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS

    A. Timelines

    1. Impostors had right from inception of the various social media platforms opened accounts in my Name without my knowledge or approval. I wrote several complaints accordingly which were never attended to satisfactorily. This situation remained for nearly a decade, and I decided to be inactive on the platforms till my complaints were satisfactorily attended to.

    2. On 24 May 2022 I withdrew from Kaduna State Governorship Primaries under the PDP on grounds of divergent principles

    3. From 25 Jun 2022 I began receiving indications of a possible Calling to Serve my Nation again this time under Labour Party which culminated in my Unveiling as the Vice Presidential candidate of the Labour Party on the 8th of July 2022.

    4. I was interviewed by BBC Hausa immediately after the Event, only to find contents of the said interview misrepresented by another social media page. A Complaint was immediately made, and this page eventually removed the misrepresented news article, but only after much damage had been done.

    5. Ever since indications began to appear about my joining the Labour Party, more impostors hurriedly opened more accounts in my Name, in most cases misspelled or in wrong format.

    6. Complaints about the fake accounts have been duly lodged and registered with the relevant host platforms, while I wait and continue to suffer the consequences of mischievous and evil postings done by others falsely in my Name.

    7. I must acknowledge and appreciate the diligence of well-meaning followers who were quick to observe and object to these accounts on basis of their good knowledge of me

    B. The Situation

    8. Some of these communications have been, and continue to be, premeditated and designed to set me against legitimate and established responsible religious organisations, and in some cases portray me negatively in relation to certain sentiments and core values of our society

    9. There is sufficient justification to conclude that these unholy acts against a real change agent at a politically sensitive period may be sponsored by opponents and enemies of progress to disparage me, stain my image and distract us from the noble objective of rescuing Nigeria

    10. From the issues raised in the preceding paragraphs, the poor attempt to perpetuate these condemnable and unethical acts by misguided elements also have the unfortunate tendency to compromise security

    C. Underlying Politics of it

    11. The rising profile of HE Peter Obi, and the growing fortunes of Labour Party have become such a bitter pill for some Nigerian retrogressive status quo politicians to the extent of apparently committing huge amounts of money in creating and spreading falsehood in the name of politics.

    12. My preference to remain fair and objective in the matter of wild allegations against a fellow Nigerian, the likes of which I am beginning to witness, has attracted the wrath of the same elements

    13. I offer no apologies for having been deemed suitable by a team of diligent and competent head hunters in matters relating to Candidacy in 2023, but I must observe that there are more decent and honourable ways for disagreeing with the issue of prefential choice. The Choice is for HE Peter Obi, then and now. All other interested parties are welcome to approach HE on how to be accommodated in the noble and patriotic plan to rescue Nigeria.

    D. Disclaimer

    14. I hereby dissociate my humble self from the creation, ownership, and operation of any such social media accounts

    15. I equally declare that all exchanges and communications therefrom are without my knowledge or input in any way whatsoever

    E. Call and Prayer

    16. I humbly call on the general public on and off line to disregard any and all exchanges and communications from the fake social media accounts

    17. I call on the social media platforms owners, creators, and operators to immediately realise the dangers their highly valued technologies portend in society, and quickly responsibly rise to the challenge of preventing further creation and use of fake accounts

    18. I call on the discerning general public, particularly our dear Obidient and Useful followers, to exercise patience until the resolution of these Complaints after which we genuinely communicate towards rescuing Nigeria

    I thank you all.

    GOD BLESS Labour Party

    LONG LIVE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA

    SEN. YUSUF DATTI BABA-AHMED

  • 2023: Gov Okowa belittles Peter Obi, says he lacks experience to lead Nigeria

    2023: Gov Okowa belittles Peter Obi, says he lacks experience to lead Nigeria

    Delta State Governor and Vice Presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) for the 2023 presidential election, Governor Ifeanyi Okowa as said the presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Mr Peter Obi lacks the needed experience to lead Nigeria.

    Governor Okowa, speaking in an interview with BBC News Pidgin, however, admitted that the former Vice Presidential candidate to Atiku Abubakar has experience from being a former Governor of Anambra State.

    “I did not say he 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. It hasn’t been long since he left (PDP) so he cannot say anything about PDP because that’s where he was before. Some of us are still here.

    “In every party, there are good people and bad people. But today’s Nigeria is very troubled and we need the right person. That is why I am appealing to our youths be wise and vote well, they should not be blinded by the concept of a false change because that is how they raved on Jonathan in 2015.

    “His (Obi) previous experience is not enough for this one (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. I even want to learn under Atiku because he has experience with the federal government. The thing is not easy.

    “For them 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. So someone is supposed to learn through that. If you look at Obi’s experience you’ll know it’s small,” Okowa said.

    TNG reports the Delta State Governor addressed the crisis rocking the PDP, saying Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike is his friend and that he is making an effort to reach out to him.

    “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 is my friend, I am his friend, and we will find a way to talk.

    “Atiku has said his own version of what happened, and I am sure that version he said is the true position. I am also not saying that Wike is lying, but if someone carries their anger, it is important to air your views. 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,” Gov Okowa said.

  • 2023: Some Govs in opposition parties secretly behind Peter Obi – Labour Party

    2023: Some Govs in opposition parties secretly behind Peter Obi – Labour Party

    Labour Party’s Deputy National Chairman, Bashiru Apapa has said some governors in other political parties are secretly giving support to the presidential bid of Peter Obi to emerge victorious in the 2023 elections.

    Apapa disclosed this while speaking in Ado Ekiti during a sensitization workshop for LP members and Peter Obi’s support organizations in Ekiti State on Saturday.

    He stated that the party and Obi were becoming more popular among Nigerians, which will help it win the 2023 presidential election.

    Apapa stated that Nigerians were tired of the country’s negative trend under the control of the All Progressives Congress and the Peoples Democratic Party and that Obi’s presidential campaign was daily gaining overt and covert backing from numerous governors and noteworthy leaders.

    The deputy chairman called for stronger support and mobilization for the party to win the presidential election.

    Apapa, who noted that Obi’s goodwill and past achievements were attracting Nigerians to the party, said, “There are some people who you may not believe are coming up to support Obi; some leaders up to heads of state are in support of Obi. Many governors, more than five of them, are supporting the party underneath. We don’t want to mention their names for now.

    “It is because of the way Obi performed before. Again, not all of them believe that Nigeria should continue the way it is going now. They want change, better and positive change for that matter, not like the other change we experienced in the past.”

    He added, “It is because of the popularity of the LP now that everyone is embracing the party; clearly, the APC and PDP are worried.”

    He claimed that the APC and PDP had made the LP the target of their criticisms because they were afraid of the increased support it was experiencing.

    In his remarks, Odunayo Okunade, the chairman of the LP in Ekiti State, asked members and supporters to keep organizing people “in a quest to have a government that will be sensitive to the plights of Nigerians in 2023.”

    He expressed happiness with the party and Obi’s growing support in the state.

  • Insecurity: Peter Obi joins Dunamis pastor, Enenche in prayer session

    Insecurity: Peter Obi joins Dunamis pastor, Enenche in prayer session

    The Presidential flag-bearer of Labour Party, Peter Obi and other dignitaries on Friday night joined other worshippers as Dr Paul Enenche, Senior Pastor, Dunamis International Gospel Centre, Abuja led the congregation to pray for peace and security of the country.

    Thousands of worshippers had thronged the church for its Mid-Year Praise and Worship Night, to seek the face of God over the state of security and other challenges facing the country.

    Enenche, while praying for the nation, said that Nigeria was at war with the forces of hell and prayer was a potent weapon to defeat them.

    Reading from the book of Numbers 10:9-10, he prayed for the rebirth of the nation and a new Nigeria and prayed that the nation would not go down.

    The pastor urged Christians to continue to pray for the peace of the country.

    The church auditorium known as ‘Glory Sanctuary’ over 100,000 capacity was filled to the brim.

    The church programme, which is a special praise and worship night tagged, “Judgmental Praise” drew gospel music ministers from across Nigeria and beyond.

    Among the gospel artists that attended include Nathaniel Bassey, Chioma Jesus, Buchi, Frank Edward, Mercy Chinwo, Owie Abutu, Dusin Oyekan and many in-house music ministers.

    Enenche and his family also ministered in songs as well as the Lords Trumpeter.

    The major highlight of the programme was intermittent prayer for the nation and praise and worship to God.

    Notable among personalities in attendance are Gov. Emmanuel Udom of Akwa Ibom, Wife of Delta Governor, Mrs Edith Okowa and the former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr Yakubu Dogara.

    A South African High Commissioner to Nigeria, Mr Thami Mseleku amongst others.

     

  • Thugs invade Catholic church, steal PVC reg machines in Lagos

    Thugs invade Catholic church, steal PVC reg machines in Lagos

    Less than 48 hours to the INEC registration deadline, hooligans on Friday disrupted the ongoing Continuous Voter Registration, CVR, exercise at St. Bridget Catholic Church in Ijesha, Surulere area of Lagos State.

    The thugs stole the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, and Continuous Voter Registration machines and took to their heels.

    The incident happened in the presence of some persons trying to register to beat the July 31st deadline set by INEC.

    As a result of the incident, the parish priest had to lock up the church as people scampered for safety.

    An eyewitness who identified herself as Dr. Ambassador Princess Okojie Igbemudia said the thugs stormed the church and disrupted the exercise because they thought that those registering will vote for the Labour party.

    It was learned that the police had been deployed to the area to ensure peace and order.

    INEC has said that there will be no going back on the July 31st registration deadline.

  • The shape of 2023 election – By Steve Egbo

    The shape of 2023 election – By Steve Egbo

    By Steve Egbo

    This is my projection of what the 2023 presidential election will look like. In this analysis, I will attempt to present the facts as a political scientist and not as a party man:

    First we will look at the individual candidates and their home bases:

    Starting with the APC candidate, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, he will, receive massive support in the south west. Most Yoruba of voting age will vote for him. Again the turn out on election day will be huge. The south west is politically savvy. They want power come 2023 and they are working for it. There will be serious political re-alignments on account of this.

    Atiku will do quite well among the northern voters. But he will do better in the north east than the north west. The north central will remain tentative for him. The north central has been highly unsettled by the events of the last few years and their suspicions and fears will greatly affect candidate Atiku. Atiku may be easily forgiven for snatching the PDP ticket and by so doing defacating on the PDP constitution that says “zoning” and depriving the south it’s legitimate opportunity. But the other matter will not be so easily swept under the carpet especially by those at the receiving end.

    Peter Obi will also do well among his people in the south east. But comparatively, he cannot bank on the same amount of support in the south east as Tinubu will have in the south west. His major problem in the south east will be the Governors. Hardly any one of them is enamored of the Obi project.

    The age long attachment of the Igbo to the PDP will also affect Obi’s votes. Even some who went to the polling booth to vote for Peter will end up thumping the umbrella. And again he will have to grapple with the legendary apathy for which the south east is known. However, I am inclined to admit that as far as 2023 is concerned, the Igbo are beginning to wake up from a long night of political slumber.

    Rabiu Kwnakwaso will put up an impressive outing in kano state specifically. Same cannot be said for other states in the north west. Already, the kwankwasia magic has waned considerably and his penchant for running from one party to another is not helpful. Kwankwaso knows that he is not running to win. He is more likely motivated by other hubristic designs.

    Let’s look at the other zones:

    All the four major candidates, Tinubu, Atiku, Obi and Kwnakwaso will put up some good fights in the north central with Tinubu having the upper hand followed by Atiku and Obi. The FCT could go anywhere. The FCT is the typical no man’s land.

    In the South-South, there will be a split between Atiku and Tinubu and if the Wike angst is not effectively resolved, then Atiku will have less in the south south especially Rivers state with its huge voter turnout. Obi will not do well in the south south because the affinity has never been there. So far, nothing has been done to construct one.

    In the Northwest, (outside kano which we earlier mentioned), it will be a straight fight between Atiku and Tinubu. But Tinubu will have a little advantage because, whatever one says, the APC is still very popular in the zone. And unless something happens to puncture the good relationship between Tinubu and the north west Governors, then he is safe there. The Governors will work for their party and its candidate.

    The age demographic:

    Here, it is a bit more tricky, but if precedents are anything to go by, we will say that the older generation will stick with the old parties – Tinubu and Atiku. For them, “the devil you know” scenario will play out beautifully. Traditionally, members of the older generation are more conservative and less susceptible to the populist appeal.

    The women, the largest voting unit in the country, will largely stick with their old parties. This group is not easily swayed by the antics and drumbeats of revolutionary aestheticsm. And most times, they hardly ignore the whispers of their men. Voter turnout on election day will also be a factor.

    The case of the youths will be significantly different. Here Obi has his largest support. No doubt. His populism finds great resonance among the younger generation. For now, Obi appears to be the answer to the “Third Force” which many have romanticized about. His popularity among the urban and social media youth cannot just be waved away. But how much this popularity will be transformed into election-winning strategy remains to be seen. Again there are other problems, but we will come to that shortly.

    The younger generation feels outraged, shut out and criminally short-changed by the old order. This feeling is justified. No doubt the youth of the nation have borne the brunt of years of corruption and mal-administration by the ruling elite. When prophet Ezekiel said that “the fathers have eaten sour grapes and their children’s teeth are set on edge” he must have been talking about Nigeria of the 21st Century.

    Nigerian youths are indeed angry, and justifiably so. However, how much this anger can be transformed into an effective political weapon remains to be seen. Two major factors, perhaps three, lead to this uncertainty. One, the youths are often quite malleable and susceptible to manipulations. In a society wracked by poverty and deprivation such as ours, will they be able to stand firm when the inducements are unleashed? The just concluded Ekiti election gave an indication. Osun presents its own different picture.

    Two, the case of political apathy is more widespread among the youths. Will they turn out to vote and if they do, will they have the patience required to ensure that the process runs its course. Three, the youths lack leadership and organizational management. If the mob action on social media is an indication of things to come, one would be left to wonder how all the noise will be translated to useful votes. The EndSars protest ran into a debilitating hitch because the issue of leadership was neither clear nor defined.

    Four, the youths of the nation come from different ethnic, religious, cultural, educational and social backgrounds. We cannot underestimate the influence of those background identities on their voting behavior. Also, the educated among them are not likely to vote on the basis of emotion and group waves. They will interrogate issues and know who or where their votes would make impact. Again the Osun election has demonstrated this.

    5. Another point worth mentioning is the market strategy of Obi’s followers – the Obedients. Their bellicose and antagonistic approach is wrong. In a democratic contest, you sell your candidate through a clear-cut amalgam of factors – comprising logical ideas, facts, appeal to reason and superior argument. So far, what we see especially on the social media are threats, insults, abuses and bellicose rhetorics. It is either you conform or be damned. This strategy is a put off. It alienates a lot of people.. Someone must educate them – help them to know that such toxic politicking does not yield results. And unless they change tact, they will hurt the Obi campaign very grievously.

    Counting the votes – who wins?

    On the whole, Tinubu and Atiku will meet the constitutional requirement of 25% geographical spread in at least 2/3 of the states of the federation. This is 24 states. Obi and Kwankwaso has no chance of meeting that all important requirement. No chance at all. But if the youths work very hard, Obi may come close. Otherwise this provision will deal the knock-out punch to Obi and Kwankwaso. If these two had eschewed personal egotistical hubris and agreed to work together, the scenario would have been very significantly altered. I need not go into further details.

    With Obi and kwankwaso out, choice of the winner of the presidential election automatically narrows down to Tinubu or Atiku – originally the two protagonists. Both candidates will have no problem attaining the mandatory 25% in 2/3 of the states. The winner will now be determined by the candidate with the highest number of eligible votes cast.

    On the issue of the highest votes scorer, a few factors will be considered. These are:

    1. Voter turn-out in the Southwest will be huge, and Tinubu is not going to share the south west votes with anyone though Peter Obi will do reasonably well in Lagos. The Osun victory has provided the PDP with a much needed fillip. But how this will manifest in the presidential election remains to be seen.

    2. The vice presidential candidate of the PDP will not make much impact on the electoral fortune of the party in the south south and south east. PDP will have to struggle for votes here, despite that this has been it’s traditional strong hold in previous elections. The Obi factor will see to that.

    3. The choice of Tinubu’s running mate will not make much impact as some people fear. Religious leaders from the south have tried to impute acrimony and bad blood based on faith matters, but Tinubu is better off with the choice he has made. By deciding to imput bigotry and acrimonious intolerance into a purely political matter, CAN went beyond its ecclesiastical and doctrinal brief. No doubt CAN is pandering to a special political interest well outside the realms of religion and faith. Many have seen through the CAN grandstanding and many have spoken against it. Eventually, the uproar will die down and when campaign begins, Nigerians will have to look at the things that really matter. Those things that matter are simply, the capacity to do the job. The big question is “Who, among these men has the ability to salvage Nigeria from its broken state?”

    4. Atiku will make his largest kill in the north east but the choice of Shettima as Tinubu’s running mate will be a force to reckon with. Again, despite his money, his influence and political sagacity, the fact remains that Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, the Turakin Adamawa, is not an integral member of the northern political establishment or the feudal oligarchy that controls the levers of power in the core north. Truth is Atiku does not belong to the sanctum sanctorum. So, despite his money, achievements and clout, organically, Atiku remains an outsider.

    5. The north west will be split between Tinubu and Atiku, but Tinubu will perform much better. Two factors will determine this: One is the unity of the APC Governors in the zone. The second factor is Buhari himself. For despite the pervading atmosphere of gloom around the country and the chaotic security situation in the zone, Buhari remains their favorite son and they will heed his call. Notwithstanding, the APC scorecard is a major constraint. APC leaders and their candidate must be losing valuable sleep on this account. The deteriorating security and economic situation in the country defies logical explanation and Nigerians are angry.

    6. Given all that has been discussed, the election will not go into a run-off. If the Obi and Kwankwasia movements are not punctured before the election, (and the possibility cannot be taken off the table), they will divert a chunk of votes from Atiku and Tinubu in the north central, south south and south east but the dent will not be enough to change the outcome of the election results in those three zones. So, given that Tinubu and Atiku will meet the required spread, the winner of the election will be determined on the first ballot.

    Conclusions:

    It is my view that given the factors analysed above, the 2023 presidential election is a one off battle between two political dinosaurs. Tinubu and Atiku have so much in common. Their similarities, ironies and contradictions are hugely apparent. Both men belong to the same generation and both are self made. They are beholden to no one. They were able to claw their way to the top by sheer grit and iron will. Both men have amassed stupendous personal wealth even if the source remain shrouded in mystery and conjecture. They are no push overs in any manner of speaking and both enjoy abundant loathing yet grudging admiration across the land.

    Tinubu and Atiku belong to a generation that is on its way out. At the Departure Lounge if you like. But they are so powerful and resourceful that they have survived the intrigues and conspiracies of their fellow men. This will be their last appearance on the stage. Whoever wins will serve out his tenure while the loser will step into the night of oblivion. The winner may not even have the appetite for a second tenure.

    Long before the primary elections, I had argued that the 2023 presidential election should and would be the final battle between Tinubu and Atiku. They emerged the candidates of their respective political parties, not because they were the most admired or the most proficient, but simply because they were the most capable. Capable in various degrees and anecdotes.

    These are two old enemies and friends who have now found themselves in the ring for the final battle of their lives. In politics, there is no draw. Therefore, a winner must emerge.

    So on day of election, when the results begin to come in, Tinubu will defeat Atiku on the first ballot and emerge the winner of the presidential election. He will win as the highest scorer of the total votes cast.

    This is my analysis and my projection. This is my reading of the political temperature. For now this is how it stands, essentially. If along the way other fact changing variables emerge, we will update accordingly. By February, 25th, I will be vindicated or disproved.

  • Gov. Sule dismisses chances of Peter Obi, says 2023 Presidency between APC and PDP

    Gov. Sule dismisses chances of Peter Obi, says 2023 Presidency between APC and PDP

    Governor Abdullahi Sule of Nasarawa state has dismissed the chances of Peter Obi winning the 2023 Presidential Election, stating that the Election is between the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    He stated further that the Labour Party (LP) Presidential candidate, Peter Obi, and the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), Rabiu Kwankwaso missed their chance to be strong contenders in the 2023 presidential election when they failed to come together.

    Speaking in an interview on Channels Television on Monday, July 25, the Governor said both parties are scantily popular and lack the national spread to win a presidential election.

    He said;  “He is not even popular in Nasarawa State, so I don’t know of the nation. At the national level, based on what we read, there are four political parties that are strong, definitely the APC because we are the ruling party, and the PDP because they have an excellent candidate.

    “Peter Obi was at one time a governor so he is there also alongside Kwankwaso’s party.

    “If you look at all these candidates, with all sense of humility, there are only two candidates at the top and they are Asiwaju and Atiku Abubakar.”

    Insisting that he is not writing off Obi and Kwankwaso, Sule however maintained that the two will find it very difficult to break through.

    He added that he is certain that the only way Peter Obi and Rabiu Kwankwaso could have staged a huge upset as if they had earlier merged their parties.

    Sule added;  “Going in they will do very well, I have no doubt in certain regions, but to have the national spread is going to be very difficult because it is people who move political parties, not just the name or the individual at the top.”