Tag: Sheriff

  • Open letter to Sheriff for shedding light – By Abraham Ogbodo

    Open letter to Sheriff for shedding light – By Abraham Ogbodo

    Dear Governor Sheriff,
    I have chosen to write instead of seeking to see you to deliver my message. The message is a bit urgent. It cannot wait for the protocols of your office. Don’t be offended by the way I have addressed you. As you know, in Warri, especially in our side of it, we don’t do too much protocol. It is either a senior man is Ose (father) or Big Bros. And it is either a senior woman is Malee (mother) or Big Sis. Against me, you are neither Ose nor Big Bros. But you are my Governor and nothing will take away anything from that. It remains constant. Back in Osubi, you are my neighbour. We were flowing steady before you left for Asaba, first for legislative duties before the beautiful migration to your current executive station. We still dey flow anyhow.

    Once, Ose Prof. Sam Oyovbaire had to refer my matter to you to handle. The boys in Okuokoko didn’t know me too well because I was still sojourning in Lagos. They were crossing red lines regarding the naming of Obomeyoma Close by Okpe Local Government. You had decisively stepped in to fix the matter. This was almost a decade ago. I still recollect your exact line when you called to say the boys had been briefed to dey their dey and strictly maintain their lane. “Bros, you would have called me first, instead of escalating this kind of small matter to Prof.’’

    It is like I am talking as if we have not crossed more paths since that engagement. Yes, we have. And the most significant and recent one is the operation of an Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp in Ewu to care for the displaced indigenes of Okuama. Although that one is still an unfinished business which you must finish, it is not why I am writing you this letter.

    In short, let me go straight to the point. I am writing to thank you for signing the Delta State Electricity Bill into law last week. I don’t use to drink beer like that. I mean, I am not a beer drinker in the sense of beer drinking men in the bar. But I had sent for two bottles at once when the news hit me. I added a plate of fresh fish pepper soup to make it a complete package. The bill had been with you for some months and I was beginning to feel one kind. To me, it was the intending state law of the century and I couldn’t understand why the signing delayed till last week. But as they say, things may endure to either get better or get worse. I thank you for finally signing the bill into law.

    You see, Your Excellency, you may not understand why I am talking like this. I don’t even know how to tell you about my experience with public electricity in Ughelli and even Nigeria as a whole because it wasn’t any better in Lagos where I came from. My story, therefore, is the story of every Nigerian. I am sure your own story may not be too different in spite of the massive insulations offered by official paraphernalia. We are all victims of some set-ups called Electricity Distribution Companies and DISCOS for short. They are truly discotheque dancers who do their unconventional dancing at our expensive. But I will limit it to my experience with the one called Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC).

    As you already know, the Federal Government had woken up some time in 2005 with this fantasy that supply of public electricity would be better if what used to be NEPA or PHCN was dismantled into pieces. They called it privatisation and unbundling of the power sector and the hitherto Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) was accordingly unbundled into 18 successor companies including 11 electricity distribution companies of which BEDC is one. It was the new private company to distribute public electricity in the four states of Delta, Edo, Ondo and Ekiti. That was how we all became yoked with it.

    Your Excellency, I wasn’t part of the unbundling and so, I wouldn’t know the actual terms upon which the unviable bundle, in the first place, became unbundled into even more unviable pieces of companies. I have only been impacted negatively by the operations of the BEDC. I stand at the downstream end and from my stand point, I can say without fear of being contradicted, that BEDC exists only to guide us, and for an exorbitant fee called electricity bill, on how to generate and distribute our own electricity. Nothing more.

    Let me be more specific. Late last year, the distribution transformer in my area of town got bad. The fault was promptly reported at the BEDC office in Ughelli. Almost immediately, they generated a power consumption and payment analysis that returned a debt of N80 million, by way of unsettled bills, against us and insisted that until the debt was cleared, the fault would not be rectified. I was like, how? Why the ambushing? Why hadn’t there been a determined drive on the part of BEDC, before the fault happened, to recover its money? And where are the upscale households and companies in a lay-out of community folks living in their bungalows as landlords and tenants to consume this much power?

    It is a pattern Your Excellency. The BEDC and other Discos understand the helplessness of Nigerians. They know for sure that we are exposed not to the so-called market forces in a competitive economy, but a blood-sucking cabal of rent seekers that has everything, including government, going for it. They reap where they do not sow and nothing happens to them.

    We could not sustain any action against the BEDC. I had reached out to the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) in Abuja. It listened but that was like going to the court in Nigeria where even what is obvious, would be required to be proved beyond reasonable and unreasonable doubts. Also, all straight-forward processes would be required to be proved beyond all technical limitations to avoid being ambushed by technicalities. Whatever NERC would do, and it has not been too known for taking hard decisions on DISCOS in support of consumers, would not assuage the pressing issue.

    To cut the long story short, Your Excellency, residents rallied and provided a new 500kva transformer. We paid sundry fees that were not receipted, and with I beg and the patience of a vulture, to get BEDC technicians to install the new transformer for us. We have also repaired the faulty transfer and working day and night to install same to separate the area into two transformer feeders.

    This is still hanging because we have not been able to provide the funding, in spite of our best efforts, for the contractor to conclude the process. Outside the transformer which was generously donated by one us, residents have so far raised about N11 million to achieve all the ancillary services and incidentals. And wait for this Your Excellency. Could you believe that to move forward with BEDC, we were whitemailed (some African scholars are saying we should not be using blackmail again in both verbal and written communication) into signing off these massive private investments as donations from us to BEDC?

    I don’t know who these scholars are, but they seem to believe that, there is a correlation between our being called black and all the dark, dark things, happening to us in this part of the world. It has been very frustrating sir in our area in Ughelli. To God who made me, If we had the guns, guts and the clout like those soldiers under Ikeja Disco, we would have stormed the Ughelli or Warri offices of the BEDC to beat sense into some of the staff. The BEDC is treating us anyhow as it likes. The faulty transformer and the entire distribution infrastructure, including aluminium conductors and concrete poles, that bring electricity into the area, were procured by us years ago. BEDC has done practically nothing for us outside collection of bills. It does not deserve its name.

    Yet, bad as it sounds, our situation is better. Are you surprised sir? Agbarha-Otor, a whole kingdom with about 30 satellite settlements and a functional university, has not had public electricity for almost a decade now. You are aware of this Your Excellency, and in fact, trying hard to work out a solution. Meanwhile, our wonderful John Player Disco dancer is patiently waiting in the background for all problems to be resolved and then resume its money collection ritual by way of baseless electricity bills to consumers. Is this fair to all parties, Your Excellency?

    I guess, you now understand why I am particularly interested in the state electricity law you have just signed. You do not have any way of knowing how relieved some of us are. Sir, I beg of you, don’t ever mix this beautiful endeavour with politics. Deploy the same pragmatism with which you have been handling the urban renewal scheme in Warri and elsewhere in the State. It shouldn’t be an open call to eat free ukodo . It requires utmost sincerity of purpose. The liberalisation of power generation, transmission and distribution is one big achievement that can be recorded for President Mohammadu Buhari. Just before he returned to Daura from Aso Rock, Buhari had okayed a law to terminate the grid hegemony in Nigeria. What you have done with the State Electricity Law is to key into the Electricity Act and free Deltans from the albatross called the national grid system.

    This is also saying that law is not definite performance. The real sense in all of this is in operationalising the law. Therefore, the expectation in the weeks and months ahead is for the proper regulatory and bureaucratic frameworks that will sound the whistle for effective investors to step in, to be created.

    Your Excellency, I don’t want this signing of this critical bill to end at the level of optics. The sweetness of this electricity law will not have Part Two like Nollywood movies, if you do a little more to move it from law to service. That is, to take it beyond mere aspiration and a declaration to a concrete discription. It will not take much to get to destination. Gas is everywhere in the state and creating ebbed power clusters to speak to the issues is more of a question of will than capacity and favourable conditions.

    With steady electricity, the private sector in Delta State will kick into life and its options shall become visible to all. Worrying to fix up every jobless youth in the state, that professes some measure of partisanship, into the governmental structure as Special Assistant, would become a thing of the past. There can never be a better demonstration of street credibility.

    Thanks and God bless you sir.

    Yours sincerely,
    Bros AB.

  • Delta 2023: Sheriff won, not Omo Agege – By Tony Okoh

    Delta 2023: Sheriff won, not Omo Agege – By Tony Okoh

    By Tony Okoh

    Governor Sheriff Oborevwori versus Obaisi Ovie Omo Agege is an intriguing narrative- the struggle between reality and illusion.

    Since the triumph of Oborevwori in the March 18, 2023, Delta governorship election, Omo Agege has been asking for the impossible. He wants the moon!

    It is a laughable longing.

    Heavy facts mock Omo Agege’s fantasy. Oborevwori won fair and square in 21 out of 25 local government areas in Delta, under the ticket of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Aniocha North, Aniocha South, Oshimili North, Oshimili South, Ika North East, Ika South, Ndokwa East, Ndokwa West, Ukwuani, Ethiope West, Ethiope East, Sapele, Okpe, Warri South, Warri North, Warri South West, Bomadi, Patani, Burutu, Isoko South and Isoko North.

    Omo Agege of the All Progressives Congress, APC, could only claim 4 local government areas. By plain statistics, the margin of victory was overwhelming.

    Oborevwori secured a whopping 360,234 votes to lead Omo Agege who trailed behind with 240,229 votes.120,005 ballots, far apart.

    Assailed by defeat, he headed to the courts protesting flawed voting.

    A bizarre irony.

    The most disturbing irregularities in the Delta governorship polls were recorded in Omo Agege’s local government area – Ughelli North. At Evwreni community, thugs went on rampage, attacked and wounded INEC officials, destroyed over three BVAS machines, and set electoral materials on fire.

    The murderous thugs prevented a team of journalists monitoring the elections from entering the community.

    Armed hoodlums disrupted voting in several polling units in Orogun, the birthplace of the former deputy senate president.

    Five persons reportedly lost their lives on election day at Mosogar and Oghara, both in  Ethiope West Local Government Area.

    Reports indicated that some security personnel, deployed to the communities compromised, and allegedly supervised the disruption process.
    The persons died after an exchange of gunfire between security operatives and angry youths.

    This brazen hooliganism manifested in varying intensity in other parts of the state, staged by vile agents of destabilization allegedly acting on the orders of the APC candidate.

    This episodic violence all happened in Omo Agege’s constituency as the then senator representing Delta Central senatorial district.

    It took the uncommon tenacity of Deltans and supreme will of God to stop and defeat the reactionary anti-democracy forces.

    Local and international observers had since documented the tragic electoral occurrences.

    Credible debates across Delta and even discussions on the streets invariably assert that Omo Agege did not win the March 18, 2023, gubernatorial elections.They insist that the votes he managed to garner were manufactured through massive rigging and heightened violence, perpetrated by his alleged supporters in desperado fashion.

    Majority of the people wished the votes he snatched are annulled, and stiffer measures of prosecution is meted, to save democracy from one man’s famed impunity and terror.

    Now guess who is seeking justice!

    Where is morality? Where is law and the lawyers? How can the aggressor become the aggrieved? The bully, the bereaved?

    While it is better at this time to be circumspect in a matter before the courts, it is safe to conclude that Deltans know who they voted for on Saturday March 18, 2023.

    The symbolism is embedded in the hearts of the Urhobo, Anioma, Itsekiri, Ijaw, and Isoko people among others.

    The divine lifting of Sheriff Oborevwori is untouchable by grace.

  • I am the frontrunner of Delta State 2023 gubernatorial election- Oborevwori

    I am the frontrunner of Delta State 2023 gubernatorial election- Oborevwori

    Speaker of the Delta State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori, has said he is a frontrunner in contesting the State governorship election in the 2023 general elections.

    The Speaker who spoke through his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Dennis Otu, commended Deltans for their massive support for his gubernatorial race.

    He berated a faceless author circulating a mischievous and malicious publication on his political aspiration.

    Oborevwori asserted that he is still contesting the State governorship election in the 2023 general elections.

    At no time have I been invited by any anti-graft agency for questioning of fraud-related issues

    According to the malicious publication, he has been persuaded to step down to pave way for a better aspirant to pick the governorship ticket of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).”

    The Speaker noted that the evil machination of the author is to deliberately promote falsehood and deceive Deltans.

    “However, Deltans are wiser and cannot fall for such cheap blackmail,” he opined.

    Oborevwori called on Deltans to ignore the wicked publication purporting that he has stepped down from the race, saying “politics should be issue-based and not attack personalities”.

    The Speaker further said that at no time has he been invited by any anti-graft agency for questioning of fraud-related issues.

  • UCL: Real Madrid coach urges calm after Sheriff shock

    UCL: Real Madrid coach urges calm after Sheriff shock

    Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti urged cam after their shock 2-1 Champions League defeat at home to Sheriff Tiraspol.

    The visitors jumped to a 1-0 lead, but a strong second half from Los Blancos, including a Karim Benzema penalty conversion, had everyone believing that the 13-time European champions would pull through.

    But the match was turned on its head by a wonder goal from Sebastien Thill to secure the 2-1 win.

    Ancelotti said: “We’re feeling down rather than being worried because we had the chance to have got the three points. The team did its job and played with great intensity and commitment and the fine margins have ended up costing us the game. We had lots of chances and could have done better in the final 30 metres. It’s difficult to explain the defeat when you look at the performance we put in.

    “This could be a good lesson for the future. We’re talking about a defeat when the team didn’t deserve to lose, given how we performed. Sheriff defended really well and were tight at the back. We linked up well and broke through their backline many times and sent over many crosses. Where we let ourselves down was on the fine details. We’ve lost the game because we had a bit of bad luck.”

    Ancelotti was booked during the game and added: “It was something with the fourth official, because I felt he didn’t show me enough respect. At the end, I told him that I’d managed 130 Champions League matches and it was the first time I had been booked for doing nothing. He told me I had gone onto the pitch, but the game had stopped because they were checking the VAR system.

    “It’s a lack of respect and I told him so and I also told the delegate. I don’t want to speak about the refereeing.”

  • Supreme Court Judgement: Sheriff’s Southwest supporters dump PDP for Mega Party

    Sequel to a Supreme Court declaring Senator Ahmed Makarfi as the recognised and legal chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Southwest supporters of the ousted chairman, Senator Ali Modu Sherif, on Wednesday dumped the party for the Mega Party of Nigeria (MPN).

    Led by a former PDP chairman in Ondo State, Mr Ebenezer Alabi, and the Director General of Omo Ilu Foundation, Otunba Leke Adekoya, the politicians told reporters at the office of the new party on Old Ife Road in Ibadan, Oyo State capital, that they left the PDP because the Ahmed Makarfi group was not magnanimous in victory.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that Omo Ilu Foundation is the mass mobilisation arm of Senator Buruji Kashamu’s political organisation.

     

     

    Alabi noted that as followers of Ali Modu Sheriff, they could no longer cope with the impunity in the PDP, which he said was the original cause of disagreement between the two groups.

    In his words: “The purpose of the struggle was to stamp out impunity in the party. We thought the Supreme Court judgment would teach us a good lesson, but it did not. PDP has now been taken over by vampires that we cannot co-habit with.

    We, who believe in the leadership of Senator Ali Modu Sheriff have, therefore, decided to move en masse to the Mega Party of Nigeria (MON). It was registered in 2010 as Mega Progressives Party (MPP) but we are transforming it to the new name to show the strength. The name will change officially next week.”

    Alabi said members of his group left the PDP for the likes of Fayose, who he accused of bragging over the party’s control in the Southwest.

    The former PDP chief said the party would soon realise that power belongs to the people who determine the destiny of candidates through the ballot, not a few individuals who overestimate themselves.

    He said the leadership was already talking to all members of the group in the five other regions to come over to Mega Party in order to show their strength in the next general election.

    According to him, happenings in the few months ahead will confirm that the PDP has been overtaken by events.

    Alabi said though the Supreme Court judgment was a surprise, the members expected the Makarfi group to reconcile with the other group to reposition the party for the 2019 election.

    He said: “But the Makarfi group chose not to be magnanimous in victory. First, they talked about offering us amnesty, as if we were militants. Recently, the Acting National Secretary also said he would not be surprised to see Sheriff join the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    While Governor Fayose was also returning from Abuja, he stopped at Ikere-Ekiti, where he addressed people, making reckless statements. It was a display of arrogance of the highest order.”

    Alabi said the group would soon make public the names of their leaders in the Southwest.

     

  • PDP sets up disciplinary panel to sanction Sheriff,  Ojougboh, others for party’s crisis

    PDP sets up disciplinary panel to sanction Sheriff, Ojougboh, others for party’s crisis

    Sequel to a 14 month leadership crisis that befell the former ruling party, Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, allegedly fueled by the sacked chairman, Senator Ali Modu-Sheriff, the National Executive Committee of the party in Abuja, on Tuesday, agreed to set up a Standing Disciplinary Committee to sanction its erring members.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that apart from the disciplinary committee, the NEC also agreed to set up a Standing Reconciliation Committee to bring aggrieved members of the party back into the fold.

    Spokesperson for the party, Dayo Adeyeye, said these were part of the decisions taken at the 74th NEC meeting, which was held at the party’s national secretariat.

    It was gathered that majority members of the NEC voted for the establishment of the two committees, especially the disciplinary committee.

    The members insisted that the former National Chairman of the party, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff, and his followers be sanctioned for the roles they allegedly played in the 14-month crisis that rocked the party.

    Apart from Sheriff, those likely to be drawn before the proposed committee, include a former National Secretary, Prof. Wale Oladipo; the Deputy National Chairman, Dr. Cairo Ojougboh, and the acting National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Bernard Mikko.

    It was gathered that some members of the past National Working Committee also played important and what a prominent member of the party described as “strategic roles in the Sheriff camp.”

    Some of the identified members were said to have started making overtures to the Senator Ahmed Makarfi-led national caretaker committee.

    Apart from that, they were said to have attended the Expanded National Caucus meeting of the party on Monday night in Abuja.

    Though Adeyeye was not specific about those to be invited by the disciplinary committee when it is inaugurated, he alluded to the fact that the last crisis necessitated the need to set it up.

    He said, “People know that this party was rocked by very terrible disciplinary issues which nearly brought the party down completely.

    NEC decided to set up standing Disciplinary and Reconciliation committees; and the National Caretaker Committee has been directed to establish and inaugurate these committees immediately.”

    The former Minister of State for Works did not say when the two committees would be inaugurated.

    He also said that the meeting agreed that the party should hold its national convention on August 12, at Abuja.

    He, however, stated that the convention would be non-elective.

    Adeyeye said this was because the party needed to give the statutory 21 working days notice to the Independent National Electoral Commission, adding that the party members also needed a reasonable notice.

    He said this would not be possible because the tenure of the present members of the caretaker committee would expire on August 16.

    It was however gathered that the convention would extend the tenure of the caretaker committee and might also fix a date for the national convention, where new national officers would be elected.

    He said, “We took a decision on the national convention. So, the prolonged litigation of the national leadership tussle ended only last week on July 12 when the Supreme Court gave judgment in favour of the National Caretaker Committee, leaving barely one month for the conduct of proper elective national convention.

    Taking into account the relevant statutory notice that we need to give to INEC and the requirements of the PDP Constitution 2012 (as amended), practically, it is going to be impossible to have an elective national convention before August 16 because we need to give certain statutory notices to INEC.

    And our own has some special provisions that we have to meet and there’s no time to meet up with those provisions.

    Therefore, NEC took a decision that in view of all the circumstances, NEC invoking the powers conferred on it, decided to convene non-elective national convention on August 12, 2017 in Abuja.”

    On the removal of state caretaker committees, Adeyeye said those that were sacked by Sheriff, when the Court of Appeal gave a judgment in his favour on February 17, had been directed to return to office.

    The PDP spokesman added, “All state caretaker committees and state parallel executives, set up after the Court of Appeal judgment of February 17, 2017 at Port Harcourt, had been removed and replaced by the duly elected officials in the affected states.”

    Adeyeye disclosed that the meeting took a decision on constitution amendment, which he said would affect those to be elected at the national convention later in the year.

    Meanwhile, Sheriff has said he was not invited to any of the four meetings.

    Sheriff, who was reacting to some reports that he was absent from the caucus meeting, appealed to members of his camp not to leave the PDP.

    He said this through the former spokesmen for his National Working Committee, Bernard Mikko, adding that he would address a world press conference on the way forward, after studying the Supreme Court judgment that removed him from office.

    Mikko stated that Sheriff was neither in the country nor invited to the meeting at Wadata Plaza on Monday evening.

    He said, “However, he will address a world press conference on the way forward after we have received and studied the full judgment of the Supreme Court and analysed its import on our democracy.

    We therefore appeal to all our loyal supporters nationwide not to defect as we are still committed to bringing the party back to the grass roots.

    We assure them that we will not only give them a voice, but they will also be heard. We will collaborate with global anti-corruption networks to bring all corrupt politicians in Nigeria to book, including the PDP members having criminal cases bordering on dishonesty and malfeasance.”

     

  • Supreme Court ruling: ‘For now, we are members of PDP’ – Sheriff’s Faction

    The Deputy National Vice Chairman of the defunct Ali Modu-Sheriff faction of the PDP, Cairo Ojouigboh, has said they are still members of the party despite the recent Supreme Court judgement.

    Mr. Ojouigboh said this in an interview with journalists on Sunday in Warri shortly after meeting with some members who were loyal to the former Chairman of the party.

    Mr. Ojouigboh, however, said that they were awaiting the receipt of the Supreme Court judgement for their lawyers to study and advise appropriately.

    “For now, we are still members of the party and we will be ready to work for the success of PDP in future elections.

    “We are PDP members and faithful ones. We are awaiting the written judgement and wait for the advice of our lawyers,” he said.

    He urged the party faithfuls in Delta to return to the grassroots and woo people to strengthen the party while they await directive from the former executive of the party.

    On his part, the Delta factional chairman of the party, Austin Ogbabunor, urged the former leadership of the party to note the challenges of the party in the state and integrate them into the party.

    Mr. Ogbabunor, however, said that they would not hesitate to form their own party should the PDP in Delta refuse to absorb them.

    Caretaker committee chairman of PDP, Sen. Ahmed Makarfi speaking to newsmen after Supreme Court sitting in Abuja on Wednesday

    The Supreme Court declared the Chairman of the National Caretaker Committee, Ahmed Makarfi as the authentic leader of the party.

    (NAN)

  • PDP S’Court Judgement: Sheriff disowns social media account, says ‘I did not congratulate Makarfi’

    …Says party now in the hands of looters

    Former National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff, has disowned a social media account on Twitter where he purportedly congratulated Senator Ahmed Makarfi as the authentic party chairman following the Supreme Court judgement on Wednesday.

    Sheriff also noted that that the party has now been handed over to those he described as treasury looters.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the Supreme Court on Wednesday sacked Senator Ali Modu-Sheriff who had hitherto held sway as the party’s chairman. The court reinstated Senator Ahmed Makarfi as the authentic and recognised chairman.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that as part of efforts to start a national reconciliation process to bring aggrieved members of the party who had either defected to other parties or distanced themselves from the former ruling party, the spokesperson for the Makarfi-led committee, Prince Dayo Adeyeye, had on Thursday said it was offering Sheriff and his group “amnesty”, adding that nobody would be punished for the loss which the party had suffered since the beginning of the crisis. He, however, warned that the party would not condone further negative actions by Sheriff and his group.

    But Sheriff, who spoke through the spokesperson for the National Working Committee sacked by the Supreme Court, Mr. Bernard Mikko, said it was wrong for the Makarfi-led caretaker committee to have said the PDP would grant him and members of his former executive committee “amnesty”.

    Others in Sheriff’s camp include the party’s former National Secretary, Prof. Wale Oladipo; Sheriff’s deputy, Dr. Cairo Ojougboh, and some members of the National Assembly.

    The Sheriff-led faction also had the support of some state chapters of the party and some governors.

    Mikko, in a message sent to our correspondent, described Adeyeye’s statement as reckless, saying that “amnesty” ought to be given to those who had committed offence against the party.

    He said that Sheriff and his group did not occupy the national secretariat of the party illegally, adding that the party belonged to all.

    He said, “I take exception to the reckless statement credited to Prince Dayo Adeyeye, suggesting that amnesty has been granted to Senator Ali Modu Sheriff, his National Working Committee and supporters. Amnesty is a reprieve for those who have committed offence under our statute.”

    According to Mikko, Sheriff and his camp were forced to vacate the party’s national secretariat by the police.

    He said, “However, the office was officially reopened for us after we presented the Certified True Copy of the judgment of the Court of Appeal, Port Harcourt Division, to the Inspector- General of Police.

    I am, therefore, concerned about the future of our party in the hands of some of those who are known to have pending criminal cases, bordering (on) fraud, treasury looting and dishonesty, with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission.

    The Supreme Court of Nigeria is the highest court in our land and we await the copy of the full judgment delivered on July 12, 2017.

    No one owns the party and those making unguarded and reckless statements in the public domain should realise that the solution to the problem of Nigeria is beyond any political association. Unacceptable and unjustifiable means cannot lead to a justifiable and acceptable end.”

    On the alleged congratulatory message to Makarfi and his group, Mikko described “the alleged congratulatory message credited to an imaginary Twitter handle of Sheriff” as a fraud.

    He said, “For the avoidance of doubt, Senator Sheriff does not have or own a Twitter account and could not have tweeted any message.

    We, therefore, view the said message as fake and mischievous and should be regarded as that of evil doers.

    We further warn all mischief-makers to desist from trying to exploit the huge political capital of Senator Sheriff for selfish gains.”

    In its reaction, the Makarfi-led committee said it would no longer allow Sheriff and his group to distract it, adding that it would henceforth devote its time to building the party.

    It also said its time would be spent constructively criticising the APC-led Federal Government.

    Adeyeye also said the PDP no longer had factions.

    He said, “I will no longer engage them. Supreme Court is the final arbiter and it has pronounced that there is no faction in the PDP.

    We have done the right thing by offering our hands of fellowship to them. We won’t engage them any longer because we are now one.”

  • I would have burnt my PDP card in court if Sheriff won – Fayose

    Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State on Friday said he would have burnt his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) membership card if the court had declared Ali Modu Sheriff chairman of the party.

    He said that he would have also destroyed the party’s flag in his possession.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the Supreme Court on Wednesday sacked Senator Ali Modu-Sheriff who had hitherto held sway as the party’s chairman. The court reinstated Senator Ahmed Makarfi as the authentic and recognised chairman.

    Fayose, who returned to the state on Friday after the Wednesday’s Supreme Court session, stated this while addressing PDP supporters in Ado-Ekiti.

    He said that he would have destroyed his membership card of the party and the flag right at the court premises if the verdict had been in favour of Sheriff.

    “I never imagined myself being in the same party with impostors,” he said.

    The governor, however, said that Sheriff and his followers had been forgiven but won’t go scot-free for causing the party members so much pain.

    “I went to court with a perfume which I wanted to use to spray my cards and party flags and set them ablaze even within the court premises if Sheriff had won; that was why I went to court.

    “Although I believe that we remain the same PDP family, no one can cause our party such pains and embarrassment and expect that he will go without being asked to account for his actions.

    “The `no victor, no vanquished’ that we said was a mere political slogan. Whoever that participated in this charade must show some reasonable level of remorse for his actions,” he said.

     

     

    NAN

  • PDP grants amnesty to Sheriff, others

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has said it would grant “amnesty” to members who participated in the crisis that slowed down the party.

    The Chairman of National Caretaker Committee of the party, Senator Ahmed Makarfi, stated this in an interview with reporters in Abuja on yesterday.

    Makarfi was reacting to to a question on whether the party would sanction the sacked National Chairman of the party, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff and his followers.

    He said there was no need to punish them, as the party is focused on getting back on its feet.

    Speaking through the spokesperson for the caretaker committee, Mr. Dayo Adeyeye, Makarfi called on those with pending cases against the party at state levels, to withdraw them.

    He stated, “No, we won’t punish anyone for what had happened in the past. Our doors are open for everyone, including those who are not members of the PDP.

    “It is general amnesty for all. It is when you begin to commit fresh sins or causing fresh troubles that we will then look at it.

    “We want to appeal to everybody, those who have cases in courts, to withdraw them in the interest of the party. You can see that everybody is happy because of the outcome of the case.”

    In his reaction, Sheriff said he was not sure that Makarfi could be calling for amnesty for him and his group.

    Sheriff said, “He said that he was going to grant us amnesty? Are we criminals? No, he couldn’t have said that.

    “Let’s wait and see. If he said that, then you would hear from me tomorrow. We are not criminals and how can someone be talking of amnesty?”