Tag: Peter Obi

  • PDP: Politics of survival and bad manners – By Chidi Amuta

    PDP: Politics of survival and bad manners – By Chidi Amuta

    Nigeria’s troubled opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has scored a pre-election own goal. It has forced its presidential aspirants to retreat into factional enclaves. These are roughly: the Northern, Gubernatorial and Igbo formations.

    How to engineer a consensus out of these conflicting interests has become the defining burden of a party that has neither federal incumbency nor the quantum of cash required to wage the imminent presidential battle. Yet the struggle for a consensus has become desperate and urgent. It has also become existential because the party has only this election season to survive or dissipate into irrelevance and inevitable death. But it is approaching its battle for survival through ancient bad manners.

    Easily the most consequential outcome of the PDP’s untidy house keeping is its handling of the bid for a president of Igbo extraction on its ticket. The tacit rebuff of this identity political pressure is telling on its cohesion. The Igbo presidential aspirants in its fold have gone into an unusual protest trade union mode. As a result, when the PDP special committee on zoning rejected the extant principle of rotating the presidency between north and south, the Igbo aspirants in the party felt betrayed. They have staged a curious trade union -like protest in Abuja. At a joint press briefing, the gathering of red cap politicians decided to pose for a group photo opportunity with all of them holding hands in political solidarity. My good friends Anyim Pius Anyim , Peter Obi, Sam Ohuabunwa and the others came clad in befitting red caps and national tunics. We were witnessing a symbolic descent from national partisan politics to glorified ethnic trade unionism. That was a first in recent Nigerian politics. If care is not taken, that photo may go down in record as the beginning of the end of the PDP which used to be Africa’s largest political party.

    The PDP was once a great vibrant party. It still retains the institutional memory and residual grassroots support of an ageing population of political followers. It’s current followership is mostly a fellowship of discontent. But time used to be when the PDP under president Obasanjo proudly waved its kindergarten colorful umbrella as next to the ANC of South Africa as Africa’s most consequential party. Obassnjo had dreams as big as his ego for the party. He envisaged a political behemoth that would dominate the leadership of Nigeria for far in excess of 24 years. In his retirement, he schemed a far reaching amendment to the party’s constitution in which he would be the life chairman of the party’s Board of Trustees and an honorary life ‘father of the party’ and invariably of the nation. This was an autocratic prescription for an otherwise Democratic Party. But Obasanjo was hardly out of the exit door of Aso Rock Villa when his adolescent potentially authoritarian scheme was toppled and thrashed. His telephone calls to the Villa were soon limited. His all too frequent unsolicited counsels to the new president became less in demand.

    By the time the leadership of the PDP went into the hands of Jonathan as president and Bamangar Tukur as party Chairman, Mr. Obasanjo could hardly recognize his political edifice as it came crumbling, one step at a time. He shredded his party card in televised public view.

    The incremental meltdown continued unchecked. By the eve of the 2015 elections, the PDP had degenerated into a political contraption, a machinery of corruption and vast enabler of disastrous governance. Before then, it had midwifed its own systematic and irreversible disintegration. The classic visual was unmistakable. The demise of the great party was televised.

    In full view of a sitting President in the televised splendor of Eagle Square and a well attended party event, a powerful faction of five governors and many influential party faithful walked out on a sitting president and mainstream party faithful . The rebels trooped out to the Shehu Yar’dua Centre to found what became the New PDP (nPDP), a powerful breakaway faction of the ruling party. Mr. Atiku Abubakar was present and in the forefront of this rebellious birthing which led him into the then fledgling opposition APC. He is now a leading contender for the 2023 presidential ticket in his original PDP!

    From then on, the end of PDP’s hegemony was a foretold crash landing. It went from friction to factions, from division to decline and, more disastrously, from unbridled corruption to wholesale organized and licensed evacuation of the commonwealth . Under Mr. Jonathan’s effete watch, government degenerated into a badly organized crime syndicate. A surviving memento to this infamous era is perhaps Diezani Madueke’s trove of underpants, braziers and Imelda Marcos sized jewelry box now on display auction by the EFCC.

    By a combination of crass incompetence and political naïveté, the PDP ended up scoring an African record at the 2015 election. It became one of the few major African parties to lose power from an incumbent position. A couple of years prior, Kenya’s KANU (Kenya African National Union ) had been chased away by an opposition coalition led by Kibaki.

    Thus routed from power, the PDP has spent the last seven years plus in an arid political zone, learning how to be an opposition party and also learning how to survive and be relevant without federal incumbency and the patronage and power that goes with it.

    As an opposition platform since 2015, the PDP has divided its time between remaining electorally relevant and protecting its leading lights from Buhari’s skewed and selective anti corruption sniper operation . Somehow, the PDP has been more alive in times of general elections than in times of normal governance. In the 2019 elections, for instance, the PDP acquitted itself well as a credible threat to the emergent APC oligarchy of Buhari’s vicious sectional hegemony. It won a total of 15 governorships as against the APC’s 20.

    But as a credible and sustainable opposition party in normal governance time, the PDP has been a woeful nuisance. It has not been able to challenge the APC on policy issues, basic competence and simple political ethics. Of course it has been a rather predictable and noisy ensemble of discordant voices of disjointed criticism . Its critique of the failings of the incumbent APC government has been routine, run of the mill and hardly superior to street corner jive. It has never displayed any superiority of strategy let alone tactics compared to its equally bumbling opponent. The PDP has never confronted the incumbent party with superior data on public matters nor advanced alternative approaches to the many headaches tormenting the nation.

    Some have observed that in the absence of any ideological identity for almost all Nigerian parties, it would be asking for too much to expect the PDP to be different from its APC rival. They are ultimately one and the same party with different acronyms and battle colours. A free movement of members including governors, across party divides, has become a normal feature of a free for all jamboree of inter party migrations largely condoned by a pliant and mercantile judiciary.

    Yet, by their respective acronyms, Nigeria’s two dominant parties ought to represent the main strands in the nation’s tendencies. The APC should ordinarily be the progressive left of center party while the PDP should represent a nationalist right of center strand. This distinction is only academic. Neither the leaders nor the faithful of both parties understand or attach meaning to either acronyms or ideology.

    This is the effective backdrop to the PDP’s current logjam. In the run up to the 2023 presidential scramble, the party is caught between playing politics and playing pranks. It had a ready made answer to the contest if only it could manage to obey the rules it made on its own. Its extant zoning formula could have placed it in a competitive position. It could have retained that principle and used it to match the APC. But the party has allowed itself to be blackmailed by a combination of gubernatorial authoritarians and geo ethnic myth makers. While a handful of wealthy state governors are intent on imposing themselves on the party as presidential candidates, a masked squad of northern dark knights and political marksmen are marketing the ancient script that there exists a northern majority of voters that will dutifully vote PDP once the party shows up with a northern Muslim presidential candidate.

    Moreover, since the incumbent APC has zoned its 2023 presidency to the broad south, the lazy logic in the PDP is that a north-south presidential contest between both major parties will inevitably produce a northern Muslim president. No thoughts on the mood of the nation after eight years of Buhari’s divisive sectarian hegemony. No thought about the sectarian undertones of the industrial killings in some parts of the north. No consideration of the geo politics of the nuisance of killer herdsmen and Miyetti Allah. No consideration of the drift of current significant northern political opinion that agrees that northern rule under Mr. Buhari has been a disaster that requires a pause and an intervening rescue period under southern leadership.

    Under its prevailing illusion, the PDP’s zoning committee has foolishly jettisoned its zoning formula. The naive recourse seems to be to a Middle Belt or North Central consensus candidate with a make belief Igbo Vice President. The consequences of either an outright northern presidential candidate or hybrid northern Muslim one are the same. A humiliating defeat in 2023.

    Waiting in ambush is the direct tragic consequence of ignoring the Igbo question. The PDP will self destruct if it buys into the current fallacy among some of its strategists that the Igbos will be content with yet another number two slot. The consequences are predictable. Apathy or outright voter revolt against the PDP in the South West, South South and South East zones are in the horizon.

    The presumptive northern demographic majority is a myth of the past. It is simply no longer there. It is the perpetuation of a tradition of lazy politics and fraudulent strategizing.

    Courtesy of Mr. Buhari’s divisive politics and legacy of political nativism, the north today is splintered along all kinds of lines: Fulanis, Hausas, Kanuris, Christians, Shiites, Wahhabis, Sunnis have all come into political reckoning. Among the so -called Muslim north, pro Buhari cultists remain the strongest faction going by the results of both the 2015 and 2019 presidential elections. That followership is not automatically transferable to just any ‘northern’ presidential salesman that shows up.

    Unfortunately, the PDP has merely activated and animated existing divides both in the north and in the nation at large. Both areas are vastly consequential for the party in 2023. If the party insists on a northern presidential candidate, it will alienate the major southern zones to the advantage of the APC who have zoned wisely and is likely to sweep the south and possibly inherit the Buhari northern cultic followership.

    Therefore, a new political consequence is staring the PDP in the face. The party has for long remained the political reserve bank of the South East . The matter of Igbo presidency has now come to the fore in the 2023 presidential race. The Igbo expect a draw down from its PDP political bank. In addition, the Igbos want to harvest the national moral burden of an Igbo alternative in our national political leadership. Incidentally, the proposition of Igbo presidency will not quietly go away any time soon. How it is resolved will have huge political implications and consequences especially for the PDP. Justifiably, the Igbo political elite in the PDP has developed a higher sense of political entitlement than in the APC. To that extent , the success or failure of the Igbo presidency bid will help determine the future of the PDP. If that project founders on the altar of the PDP’s internal dysfunctions, that may be the end of the party.

    The Igbo presidential project has become an albatross around the neck of the PDP. It is one which the APC will easily mine by nominating a hybrid Igbo presidential candidate. That will still be a superior strategy than the PDP’s impending outright rebuff of the Igbo question . The Igbos will prefer a hybrid Igbo President and commander in Chief than a pure breed Vice President.

    For the opposition PDP , then, this imminent election season may be one of endless insomnia and a struggle to fend off imminent suicide. If the PDP out of its own narrow vision loses the 2023 presidential election, that might be the party’s last presidential election. If on the other hand it miraculously manages to oust the APC, the day after will be the political equivalent of resurrection morning.

  • Ask all presidential aspirants to state their past achievements – Peter Obi

    Ask all presidential aspirants to state their past achievements – Peter Obi

    Ex-governor of Anambra State, Peter Obi has tasked Nigerians to ask aspirants pertinent questions about what they have achieved in time past in the various offices held before aspiring to vie for political offices.

    Obi tasked some of the aspirants to speak out on their achievements so far before thinking of 2023 general elections.

    Obi, who is also a presidential aspirant, made the call on Monday while meeting with some stakeholders of the main opposition party, Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital.

    Read Also:

    Peter Obi berates Willie Obiano, says he left huge amount for him

    Obi has urged the entirety of Nigerians to do a thorough background check of candidates so as not to put the country through another route of pains and agony, saying security problems must be tackled with drastic measures.

    He said, “Anybody who comes here and says to you that he wants to be President, ask, where he was 25 years ago and what he has done, where is he coming from?

    “Ask questions about his achievements in the past. Where have you worked? Which school did he go to? Let us know how he managed public money that was given to him in the past”.

    Bola Tinubu, Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo, Rivers State governor, Nyesom Wike , Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi, Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello are among those who have declared to succeed President Muhammadu Buhari in 2023.

  • Obi, Anyim, other Igbo PDP aspirants unite, insist on zoning

    Obi, Anyim, other Igbo PDP aspirants unite, insist on zoning

    Former Anambra Governor- Peter Obi, former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, SGF- Pius Anyim Pius, Mazi Sam Ohuabunwa and Dr. Nwachukwu Anakwenze, have met in Abuja, to ensure that the southeast emerged the PDP presidential flag bearer.

    The four southeast Presidential aspirants, at the weekend, met to fashion a plan to ensure the South East secures the presidential ticket of PDP in the 2023 general election.

    The four Presidential aspirants who spoke to journalists through the former senate President, Pius Anyim Pius said “all of us from the South East, who have declared intention to run for the office of president of Nigeria and have obtained the nomination form of our great party the PDP, met in Abuja.

    “The main purpose of our meeting was for us to resolve to work together to promote understanding, unity and collaboration among the four of us and any other person from the South-East zone who may later join in the race. We had a very fruitful meeting in an atmosphere of friendliness and respect for one another.

    “We have agreed to work together as a team. We will work together to ensure that a South Easterner emerges the PDP flag bearer; we intend to consult with other zones on this issue and it is based on fairness and equity.

    “In doing so, it is important to note that we have always supported other zones and we now expect them to reciprocate.

    “We are committed to working with our party leadership and party members from across the country to ensure that the founding principles and ideals of our great party are upheld.

    “This is to reassure Nigerians that PDP is ready to rebuild and reunite our dear country. We ask Nigerians to give us the chance to fix this country. Together we will get Nigeria to work again” he stated.

  • Group delivers PDP presidential nomination form to Peter Obi

    Group delivers PDP presidential nomination form to Peter Obi

    A political pressure group, Like Minds for Peter Obi, delivered presidential nomination form of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the aspirant in Onitsha, Anambra, on Friday.

    The group bought the form for N40 million at the party’s Abuja secretariat on Thursday and delivered same to Obi at his Niger Drive residence in Onitsha.

    Those who joined Obi to receive the form were National Assembly members, including Sen. Uche Ekwunife and Rep Chinedu Onwuaso.

    Mr Oseloka Obaze and Mr Valentine Ozigbo both former governorship candidates in Anambra and other party stalwarts were also in attendance.

    Mr Daniel Wilbert, Coordinator of the group, made up of professionals and entrepreneurs, said the gesture was to support Obi in his aspiration to make Nigeria greater.

    Wilbert of Delta extraction, said that the group had scanned the credentials of those aspiring to occupy the president’s seat in 2023 and arrived at the conclusion that Obi, vice-presidential candidate in 2019 was the best.

    “We are working class people; not just young people who are desirous for positive development in Nigeria.

    “We have looked around and found you to be the best man for president of Nigeria and that is why we are committed to you.

    “I am proudly Itsekiri from Warri; this is the first time I am coming to this part of the country,’’ he said.

    Responding, Obi thanked the professionals for their strong belief and commitment to a better Nigeria.

    He also thanked them for believing in him, adding that he would soon make a formal declaration and unveil his manifesto.

    “I want to sincerely thank you for your commitment to Nigeria. It is not easy to be a young professional in Nigeria today, and I thank you for believing in me.

    “Be assured that I am committed to building a better Nigeria. I am committed to securing the future of the youth; we must make this country work.

    “Thank you for going out of your way to purchase these forms for me. In the coming days, I will formally declare and unfold my manifesto, and everything I am going to say, I will do,’’ Obi said.

    He observed that Nigeria needed to pay serious attention to the 2023 leadership recruitment process, adding that he was confident to emerge the fittest for the job and consensus candidate of the PDP.

    “I still say clearly that the country is at its lowest in cohesion, the starting point is to begin to build confidence.

    “We will tackle insecurity through the economy; we shall make people productive and gainfully employed and make crime unattractive, Obi said.

  • PDP: Okupe withdraws from 2023 presidential race to drum support for Peter Obi

    PDP: Okupe withdraws from 2023 presidential race to drum support for Peter Obi

    Presidential hopeful and former presidential aide, Doyin Okupe, has stepped down from contesting in the 2023 presidential election to support the ambition of ex-governor of Anambra State, Peter Obi.

     

    He made this known on Wednesday at a press conference held at the Iwe Iroyin Press Centre in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, saying that leader of socio-political group, Aferenire, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, appealed to him to withdraw from the race.

     

    Okupe also enjoined all other Peoples Democratic Party aspirants from the South including Dele Momodu, Pius Anyim, and Nyesom Wike to team up with Obi, who is from the South-East geopolitical zone.

     

    He also accused the PDP leadership of driving presidential aspirants to “fait accompli”, saying “those at the helm of affairs of the party are trying to hoodwink those of us aspirants from the South to commit ourselves to obtain the requisite forms before coming up with the original position that ‘every zone can contest the presidency’.

     

    “This position is politically fraudulent, unjust and inequitable.”

     

    The ex-presidential aide to former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan said he had consulted far and wide with the political stakeholders in the South and decided that power be zoned to the South-East in the spirit of fairness.

     

    Okupe, who turned 70 recently, said, “Two weeks ago, Pa Ayo Adebanjo called me for the first time into his bedroom and admonished me that no matter what circumstances we Yorubas find ourselves in the ever gyrating political circus of Nigeria, I must uphold the truth and follow the path of equity and justice.”

     

    Adebanjo had earlier backed South-East Presidency for 2023.

     

    Continuing, Okupe said, “In aligning myself with the wish of our elders and in the interest of equity and justice, I publicly admit that the 2023 political race must be conceded to the South-East; that is, the Igbos.

     

    “I, therefore, here and now proclaim that I am, as I have said publicly several times, withdrawing from the presidential race and I am declaring my support for the best aspirant not only in Igboland, but in Nigeria as a whole.

     

    “I and my supporters within and outside the PDP are teaming up with His Excellency, Peter Obi.

     

    “At the same time, I want to enjoin all other aspirants from the South; Chief Dele Momodu, Senator Anyim, and His Excellency, Governor Nyesom Wike to come with me and let us team up with Peter Obi. So we can give the South the best possible chance.”

     

    There has been clamour from many quarters that power be zoned to the South-East in 2023.

     

    Members of the PDP from the north who have declared interest in the 2023 Presidency include ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar; ex-Senate President, Bukola Saraki; Sokoto State Governor, Aminu Tambuwal; and Bauchi State Governor, Bala Mohammed.

     

    The PDP National Chairman, Iyorchia Ayu, had also said that the party won’t abandon its tradition of zoning political offices in the 2023 elections.

     

    The 17 Southern governors including Wike as well as sociopolitical groups such as Ohanaeze Ndigbo and Afenifere have consistently maintained that political parties should zone their presidential tickets to the South for a candidate to replace the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), who is from Katsina State, in the North-West and whose two-term would end in May 2023.

     

    Other presidential hopefuls from the South include All Progressives Congress leader, Bola Tinubu; Governor of Ebonyi State, Dave Umahi; ex-Governor of Imo State, Rochas Okorocha; former Governor of Abia State and Majority Whip of the Senate, Senator Orji Kalu; former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Kingsley Moghalu, among others.

     

    Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has also been rumoured to nurse an ambition to succeed his boss through the 2023 election but the professor of law has not officially made his intention known.

  • Challenges of insecurity is too much of a burden on Nigerians already battling with hardship and poverty-  Peter Obi

    Challenges of insecurity is too much of a burden on Nigerians already battling with hardship and poverty- Peter Obi

    Vice-presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in 2019, Peter Obi, has said challenges of insecurity is too much of a burden on Nigerians “already battling with hardship and poverty”.

     

    Obi, on Tuesday tweeted: “The terror attacks on Kaduna Airport and on Abuja-Kaduna bound train, with several persons reportedly abducted is depressing and disheartening and underscores the worsening level of insecurity across the country.

     

    “The challenges of insecurity is too much of a burden on Nigerians already battling with hardship and poverty. Sadly, the worsening level of insecurity only further aggravates the negative performance of Nigeria’s economy.”

    Peter Obi

    While condoling with the families of the bereaved, Obi sympathised with the traumatised passengers.

     

    He urged security agencies in the country to remain resolute in the fight against terrorism in the country.

     

    “The terror attacks in Kaduna and different parts of the country, have become very worrisome and should serve as wake up call to the government to beef up the country’s security and be more proactive in handling security issues,” Obi asserted.

  • 2023: Peter Obi’s lavish education, career profile

    2023: Peter Obi’s lavish education, career profile

    The upcoming presidential contest looks set to parade a crowded field of formidable contestants in both the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), the main opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and other political parties.

    However, only one aspirant from any of the parties will eventually fly the banner of the party in the presidential contest and, if elected, the person will take over President Muhammadu Buhari’s plum job next year.

    Consequently, we will run a profile of all the aspirants to enable the electorate to make informed choices in the 2023 general elections.

    A presidential aspirant on the platform of the PDP, Mr Peter Obi, has released his bio-data, showcasing a copious profile that casts him as standing tall among PDP presidential aspirants.

    Obi, born on July 19, 1961, in Onitsha, Anambra, had his early education at the famous Christ the King College, Onitsha, from where he gained admission to the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, one of Nigeria’s first generation universities.

    The former governor of Anambra is viewed by political analysts as a top contender in the equally crowded PDP camp, which parades over a dozen contenders for the top job.

    Obi is the fourth son of a devout Catholic and entrepreneur mum and dad, who ran a popular supermarket in Onitsha, the commercial hub of the Southeast more than 50 years ago.

    Young Obi took to international trade after leaving university, where he studied philosophy.

    Now 61, Obi made a huge success in his business endeavor and subsequently, ventured into politics.

    He was later to enroll at the Lagos Business School in Ajah, near Lagos, where he undertook a course designed for chief executives.

    Obi also attended the Harvard Business School in Boston, Massachusetts, for the mid-to-mid marketing course and another short course on Changing the Game in same school.

    He was later to attend the London School of Economics for a course in Financial Management and Business Policy as well as the Institute for Management Development in Switzerland.

    Obi also attended the U.S. Kellogg Graduate School of Management and Oxford University in England, where he attended a course in Advanced Management and Leadership.

    He had a short stint at Cambridge University’s George Business School in Cambridge, England.

    Obi got elected as governor of Anambra State from 2006 to 2014, shaping the economy of the state and positioning it as first among equals, especially in the secondary education sector.

    As governor, Obi was also a member of the Presidential Economic Management Team as well as Special Adviser to the President on Finance.

    He was also vice-chairman of the influential Nigeria Governors’ Forum and Chairman of the South-East Governor’s Forum from 2006 to 2014.

    The PDP presidential aspirant was also a former chairman of the board of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    He was chairman of Fidelity Bank Plc., Guardian Express Mortgage Bank and chairman of Future Views Securities Ltd.

    The presidential aspirant was also a former chairman of Chams Nigeria Plc.; Paymaster Plc. and Next International Ltd., the expansive supermarket chain, located in Abuja and Port Harcourt.

    Obi is a member of many professional bodies, including the Nigerian Economic Summit Group; Nigerian Chartered Institute of Bankers and a member of the British Institute of Directors.

    In 2012, Obi received an award by the Methodist Church of Nigeria for his prudent management of public resources and in 2013, he along with former Gov. Babatunde Fashola of Lagos State were named Silver Bird Men of the Year.

    Analysts are waiting anxiously to know who will emerge the flagbearer in the PDP as the countdown to the high-stakes presidential election gets underway.

  • Peter Obi eyes Presidency in 2023 election

    Peter Obi eyes Presidency in 2023 election

    The former Governor of Anambra State, Peter Obi, on Thursday night, informed Nigerians that he is aspiring for the post of President of Nigeria in 2023.

     

    Obi, who Anambrarians would not forget following his works in the state, tweeted: “Dear Nigerians. I am here to inform you all that I will be aspiring for the post of President of Nigeria in 2023.”

     

    The former governor is a Catholic Church Papal Knight of the Order of St. Sylvester.

     

    Obi spent eight years and seven months as the governor of Anambra State. He was sworn in as governor of Anambra State on 17 March 2006.

     

     

    However, on 2 November 2006, he was impeached after seven months in office. He took the matter to court, he won and was reinstated on 9 February 2007.

    After his dramatic first term, Obi contested for the position of governorship again and won a second term in office, which ended on the 7th of March 2014.

    He was appointed the Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission by former President Goodluck Jonathan in April 2015.

  • 2023: Peter Obi declares interest in presidential race

    2023: Peter Obi declares interest in presidential race

    Former Governor of Anambra State, Peter Obi has declared his interest to contest the 2023 presidential election.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Obi made his interest public during a visit to Anambra Traditional rulers on Thursday in Awka, the capital city of Anambra.

    “My job here is simple, to inform you people as my own fathers that I’ll be aspiring for the post of President of Nigeria.

    “I am not contesting because I want political appointment but to serve this country and unite Nigeria and I am the only person that can unite Nigeria.

    “The state of our country today is deplorable, the level of insecurity is indeed unfortunate and Nigeria has fallen to the lowest ebb in the committee of nations and I am the only one that can restore security in Nigeria.

    “As President, I want security of lives and property in Borno State, in Minna and Niger states, as I want it to be in Onitsha and in Kano or Ekiti State.

    “My interest in the presidency of Nigeria is to restore security and revamp our educational sector and also revive the health sector and I have seriously studied our country and I have come to discover that all that we need is to ensure security so that foreign and local investments would thrive in all parts of the country.

    “I have come to serve Nigeria and I what it takes to restore the dignity of our country and to unite the country because if there is no unity in Nigeria, we cannot move ahead.

    “You all know me very well. I do not need any further introduction. You all know what I did as governor of Anambra State and Anambra is like Nigeria and anybody who is able to manage Anambra State can manage Nigeria and I am calling for your support and I have confidence in you all that you will support me,” Obi said.

    His declaration comes a day after former Vice President Atiku Abubakar also declared interest to contest the presidential election.

    Recall that Obi was running mate to Abubakar in the 2019 presidential election. They would now be vying for the presidential ticket of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) for 2023.

  • Why am qualified for leadership at any level-  Peter Obi

    Why am qualified for leadership at any level- Peter Obi

    Former Anambra State Governor, Mr Peter Obi has given reasons he is qualified for leadership at any level and could help Nigeria to “rediscover herself”.

    In a press release by his media aide, Mr. Valentine Obienyem, the former Anambra governor said he saved massively for the state.

    Obi had, during the twilight of his tenure as governor of Anambra State, announced that he was leaving behind N75 biliion for his successor, Chief Willie Obiano.

    The explanation by the ex-governor on why he saved is coming after the incumbent, Prof Chukwuma Soludo recently stated on national television that he met only a paltry N300 million in the coffers of the government, with a debt of over N100 billion.

    He said: “Often some people who are not experts in finance and statecraft question the rationale behind savings which Obi embarked on out of mischief, display of continued opposition, hatred or pure ignorance.

    “I often express surprise at their viewpoints, because even among animals, we see the practice of saving for tomorrow out of today’s surplus. However, among the human family, we need not save only when there is surplus.

    “If, for example, one plans to buy a car next year, would one not start saving money for that? Savings is about planning and, as Obi always said, “If you do not plan, you have planned to fail.”

    “As for those in the habit of arguing against what they do not understand, I hope you will commend the debt burden that will weigh Anambra down as revealed by Prof. Charles Soludo. May I present to you the rationale behind Obi’s savings in the State as he himself explained.

    “Unfortunately, we live in a system where people do not think about tomorrow and do not plan for future generations but would prefer to obliterate accumulated income and put the state in debt before exiting the office.

    “These are the reasons he is qualified for leadership at any level. In fact, we need such a man for Nigeria to re-discover herself.”