Sunday, 22 March 2015

PDP Chieftain Beaten Up Over "GEJ's Money" Recounts Ordeal

Last week, the South West Zonal Secretary of the party, Chief Pegba Otemolu, was almost lynched by about 708 PDP campaign co-ordinators drawn from the 236 wards across Ogun State.
According to the Premium Times, Mr. Otemolu, at a press conference at the PDP secretariat in Abeokuta on Saturday, denied collecting any money from the presidency or the campaign headquarters of the party in Abuja.
“I’m here to let the whole world know that I’m a loyal and honest member of our great party and at no time, anybody in the party, right from the National Secretariat of our party or the Presidency has given me one kobo,” he said.
The party leader said he met with the national leadership of the Presidential Organization Committee (on) Mass Mobilization headed by Prof. Jerry Gana last week. The organization arranged a national training tagged ‘Operation Win Your Ward”.
He added that representatives from all the states attended the training and that he and two others -Adepegba Otemolu and Dapo Adeyemi – represented Ogun State PDP.
After the training was over, “all the materials in terms of educational materials were handed over to them so that they’ll go back to the state and organize the same training for three persons per ward”.


“The training programme was to take place last Monday, the 16th but Jerry Gana sent a text message to me that due to non-availability of funds, the training programme should be rescheduled for Wednesday 18th of March and that willy-nilly, the fund for the training programme would be made available,” he said.
According to Mr. Otemolu, he called the chief organizer, Dapo Adeyemi, and said him that “we should not go ahead with the training since the fund has not been made available”.
Later, the national auditor who is my superior officer, Alhaji Wole Adeyanju, called Mr. Otemolu, saying that he had just landed at Murtala Airport, and that the training must go on whether I like it or not.
The crisis which led to the assault on Mr. Otemolu started several hours after he made accreditation of 756 attended, gave a lecture on the achievements of President Goodluck Jonathan at Imperial Hotel, Quarry Road.
“But at the end, around 2 p.m., we had not received one kobo from the national committee headed by Jerry Gana. Then I called the national auditor who is the most senior person, please address our people. Tell them that the funds for the honorarium has not been made available. They should exercise patience as soon as the money is available, it would be given to their local government coordinators,” he said.
“Before he finished that statement, there was an uproar and they started throwing chairs. They said unless they were given money, none of us would leave the venue. We were held hostage for four hours and towards the end, I appealed to them and that they should allow us to go and that as soon as the money is available, we’ll let them know,” he added.
The protesters, however, refused to bulge. They damaged his car, Honda Pilot: the windscreen, the rear light, the side glass are damaged.
Explaining how he was assaulted, he said: “They beat me mercilessly, they tore my dresses, they were shouting Ole! Ole! I could not believe that people from my party could treat me in that manner. They are from my party.
“I was stripped half-naked and beaten. They stole my personal money, wrist watch, my necklace, my bead and total cash of about N80,000.”
Mr. Otemolu said neither he nor any of the organisers received the money meant for the protesters. Mr. Otemolu also confirmed that the presidency later intervened in the crisis.
“So, in short the National Security Adviser to the President is aware of the maltreatment given me. And I want to make it known that the same training exercise took place in some South West states,” he said. Details on the Premium Times.

PDP National Leader Declares Support For APC Candidate



It was a shocking event as the immediate past governor of Akwa Ibom and one of the founding members of the Peoples Democratic Party, Victor Attah openly launched a public attack on his successor, Governor Godswill Akpabio during a campaign for the All Progressives Congress.
PDP National Leader Declares Support For APC Candidate
Victor Obong Attah
Premium Times reports that for the first time since the ex-governor left office in 2007, he Saturday, publicly attacked Mr. Akpabio, describing the latter’s senatorial aspiration as not only hypocritical, but deceitful. The ex governor, who is a founding member of Nigeria’s ruling Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, and is a member of the party’s Board of Trustees, spoke at a rally of the opposition All Progressives Congress, APC, in Uyo, the state capital.
Though he said he remained a member of the PDP, Mr. Attah said he had to campaign for the APC due to “compelling circumstances” to lead Akwa Ibom residents to make and implement a succession plan in the 2015 elections in the interest of the state. Justifying his actions and words, Mr. Attah reiterated President Goodluck Jonathan’s statement during Akpabio’s campaign rally in Akure, Ondo State, on January 28, saying that because politics is about people, he cannot be a leader if he fails to do what his people want.
He also said the overwhelming wish of Akwa Ibom residents in the April election was to support a governorship candidate of their choice and not one imposed on them.
“I am a leader of my people. My people do not want anyone to be imposed on them as governor. They want Umanah Okon Umanah as their governor,” Mr. Attah stated.
Surprisingly, Mr. Umanah, who served as a commissioner in the administrations of both Messrs. Attah and Akpabio, is the governorship candidate of the APC. He was said to have joined  APC after he had a fallout with Akpabio. His main challenger is Udom Emmanuel of the PDP who is proudly supported by the outgoing Mr. Akpabio.


Defending his decision to support the opposition candidate, Mr. Attah said, “As a prime advocate of power shift (zoning) among the major component tribes of the state, I always believed it was logical to assume that after Uyo and Ikot Ekpene senatorial districts produced the governor, it should be the turn of Eket.
“But, the present posturing of those now parading themselves as champions of zoning is not only hypocritical, but deceitful,” he said in apparent reference to Mr. Akpabio who has made reference to the zoning as one of his reasons for anointing Mr. Emmanuel.
Mr. Attah also pointed out the example of Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan of Delta State, who he said not only withdrew his support for a governorship candidate, but also abandoned his senatorial ambition in 2015 in the interest of justice, equity and fair play, in order to save the PDP in Delta from crisis.
In Akwa Ibom, everybody knows that it is the turn of Abak Federal Constituency to produce the next senator. So, why is His Excellency, Governor Godswill Obot Akpabio insisting on contesting that position, if at all he believes in zoning?” Mr. Attah asked rhetorically.
Criticizing his successor’s ambition as “very provoking and totally unacceptable”, the former governor urged all indigenes of Ikot Ekpene senatorial district to team up with the people of Abak and support the APC senatorial candidate against Mr. Akpabio.
On the governorship election, Mr. Attah said political leaders in the state had resolved to resist any form of imposition after they failed to get a level playing field that would allow the people’s collective will to prevail.
According to the former governor, Mr. Emmanuel, the PDP candidate, was not nominated by the PDP but by Mr. Akpabio.
“The governor told us that in fact it was the wife, the so-called ‘Mother Theresa’ of Akwa Ibom State that discovered and sponsored Udom Emmanuel. And he, ‘The Imperial Majesty’, is determined to impose him on us as puppeteer on the throne,” he told the crowd.
“A surrogate of Godswill Akpabio must not be allowed to govern us” the former governor said. “Akwa Ibom, listen to what I say, Umanah Okon Umanah is the man.”

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Armoured Carriers Parade Tinubu’s House

Just few days to the presidential election, soldiers have been spotted in full force around the house of the national leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Bourdillon Street in Ikoyi, Lagos.
Armoured Carriers Parade Tinubu’s House
APC’s National leader, Bola Tinubu.
The soldiers, just like in February 8 and 10 were seen also in many parts of Lagos State yesterday in a show of force ahead of the nation’s general elections. Leadership reports that the soldiers in full fatigue and helmets carried out their display in many parts of the State, including the front of the private residence of the national leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Bourdillon Street in Ikoyi, Lagos.
The soldiers were said to be in 10 armored trucks, patrolling repeatedly  the frontage of the residence of Tinubu who’s revealed not to be in his house. The soldiers  however put the family members of the politician in distress with their looks and the manner in which they patrolled the whole environment.
A media aide to the former Lagos state governor confirmed the news saying that “The soldiers were first noticed on Sunday about 3:50pm. They were stationed about 500 meters away from his(Tinubu) gate. But Asiwaju (Bola Tinubu) is not in Lagos and there is nothing to bother about,” he added.
Between February 8 and 10, a similar siege was laid on the residence of the voluble politician. APC has been concerned about the security of Tinubu whom they alleged has been penciled down for arrest before next Saturday’s presidential polls. Leadership however made it known that the “show of force” was carried out by a joint team drawn from army, Navy, Air force, Nigeria Civil Defence, State Security Services and the Police.

Catholic Bishops To Investigate Reverend Mbaka's Life Threat Clement Ejiofor,

Catholic priests in the Enugu Diocese are reportedly going to meet up with controversial clergyman Reverend Father Ejike Mbaka to investigate possible life threat. President Goodluck Jonathan and his wife allegedly plan to assassinate him.
Several days ago, Reverend Mbaka said that after the President attempted to bribe him using the deputy senate president, Ike Ekweremadu, and he rejected the money, his life is in danger.
The priest, who leads the Adoration Ministry, had made these allegations during a sermon he delivered in his church last Sunday.
On Saturday, March 21, in a statement released by his spokesperson, Ike Maximus Ugwuoke, the priest said that “strange hoodlums in a black Hilux besieged his parish compound but they left disappointed when they could not see him”.
However, the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria said Reverend Mbaka is yet to report the allegations to it, hence why several bishops have decided to make the visit.
One representative of the Enugu diocese said investigations are ongoing to determine the legitimacy of Reverend Mbaka’s threat. He added that they will decide on their next course of action after today’s meeting.

Kidnapped Emir Begs Family To Pray For Him

The Emir of Bukukuyum in Zamfara state, northern Nigeria, Muahmmadu Usman, who was kidnapped from his palace by unknown gunmen on March 20, Friday, has urged his family to intensify prayers for his safe return.
According to Daily Trust, a reliable source in the emirate said the Emir’s pleas for prayers to his family was made when he spoke to his family members via telephone.
He however could not tell them his location but was quoted as saying he was well and safe at the hand of his captors.
His captors are yet to demand any ransom for his release and there are no indications whether his abduction was connected with the activities of armed bandits that have been terrorizing the rural communities in the state in the past three years.
In the meantime, the state Police command has intensified efforts to rescue the Emir by dispatching a special team to search for the kidnapped Emir in and outside the state.

DSP Sanusi Amiru, the Police spokesman has assured people of the state that the police would not relent in its effort to ensure the Emir was rescued and the perpetrators of the heinous crime brought to justice.
Kidnapping which started in the southern Nigeria as a means to get government attention to the people of Niger delta region has now become a daily occurrence in the country.
Kidnapping is now seen as a lucrative venture with some unemployed youths manning the business. Daily, tens of Nigerians are kidnapped for various reasons ranging from economic, political and personal grievances among others.

Insight: Why Nigeria's Restive Oil Region Will Only Accept Jonathan

BY TIM COCKS, OTUOKE, Nigeria (Reuters) - The most impressive building in Otuoke, Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan's home town in the oil producing Niger Delta, is the multi-storey mansion complex he has built for himself and close family while in office.

A few hundred meters away, the street where he grew up is a jumble of rusting iron-roofed shacks. Down a dirt side alley, Happiness Ebi smokes fish on a charcoal barbecue, a staple in this swampy southern region.

"We haven't really seen much benefit since our brother became president, except the university," she says, referring to the shiny Federal University Otuoke, completed in 2011, that has about 1,000 students and nearly a third more staff.

"But there's no light, no water here. We're disappointed."

Yet she will vote for him again in a presidential election set for March 28. "Of course," she says, "He's our brother."



Her answer reveals why the delta, historically one of Nigeria's most marginalized regions although its oil provides three quarters of government revenue, could erupt again if Jonathan leaves office.

Otuoke, on the banks of a sand-colored river, does not feel particularly favored, although the few cars, well-clothed inhabitants and thriving petty trade show it is doing better than many places.


But having one of its own in the top job for the first time has helped pacify a region long incensed by a feeling of being left out of political power despite its oil riches.

"We have been oppressed, we have been sidelined, and we are the people feeding this country," militant leader 'Ex-General Pastor' Reuben Wilson told Reuters over a whiskey and Coke at his office in Yenagoa, capital of Jonathan's Bayelsa state.

Militants like Wilson fought for a greater share of the oil riches and fairer representation until an amnesty deal in 2009.

The deal provides militant leaders with multi-million dollar monthly payouts they are meant to share with their men. They also get lucrative government contracts. The amnesty was due to expire last year but payments were extended for fear of a backlash. Under Buhari both payments and contracts could end.

"With Goodluck as President we achieved what we are fighting for. It's our right. If they refuse us our right, by rigging the election, I don't think there will be peace," Wilson said, holding an 'appreciation award' from Miss Niger Delta 2010.



"HE WHO PAYS THE PIPER"

It is not only militants who feel it is the delta's right to field a president for another elected term despite an informal deal that power should rotate between north and south every two terms.

There is a broadly felt sense of entitlement to the oil riches that have fattened up corrupt governments but brought little to the region except environmentally catastrophic oil spills.

Nigeria's tensions are often seen as between a largely Muslim north and mostly Christian south. This contest between opposition leader Muhammadu Buhari, a Muslim northerner, and Jonathan, a southern Christian, does appear to fit that picture.

But in a nation the British carved a century ago out of peoples speaking 500 languages, rivalries are more complicated.

From the Niger Delta perspective, since independence in 1960, Nigeria has been ruled by two Christian Igbo easterners, a Middle Belt minority military ruler, two northern Fulani generals, two southwestern Yoruba rulers, a Hausa northern general, a Kanuri northeastern general and a Fulani civilian.

The only part of Nigeria that has completely missed out on this merry-go-round is the Niger Delta -- until Jonathan.

"Someone from the Niger Delta got to be president by accident, and despite it generating all the money, it is, or at least was, about as poor as you will find in any part of the country," said Antony Goldman, head of PM consulting. 

Jonathan's critics say the delta benefits disproportionately from his presidency, but evidence does not stand up the claim.

The highway Yenagoa connecting to the oil hub of Port Harcourt is now so smooth traffic whizzes along it dangerously fast, but roads in other parts of Nigeria have also been fixed.

Jonathan's flagship reform policies -- power and farming -- have not hugely benefited the delta. Power privatization has yet to translate to more kilowatts on the grid anywhere, while reforms to farming, especially cutting corrupt middle men out of a state fertilizer scheme, has disproportionately benefited the north, where the vast majority of agriculture happens.

Even so, the mere fact the president is from the delta is enough for many to feel historic injustices are being righted
.

The north's parallel discontent at losing political power is in focus because of the Boko Haram Islamist insurgency that has killed thousands and destabilized Africa's top oil producer.

But if Jonathan loses an election that his delta supporters feel was not fair, or if he is pushed out by a faction within his party that opposes him -- Nigeria could well have two insurgencies on its hands.

"The bigger tribes ... feel they have the divine right to rule others," said Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, head of the Niger Delta People's Volunteer Force which pushed oil prices to record highs in 2004 with attacks and threats on the oil industry.

"Then one man from a tiny community in Ijaw comes. He's not Yoruba, Igbo, or Hausa. They can't bear it," he told Reuters in the opulent Bayelsa state government guest house.

"He who pays the piper must dictate the tune, and the delta has been paying the piper for so very long. If they make war, we can make war. We have the capacity to take what's ours.

The extent to which this is bluster will be crucial in determining how easy it will be to pacify the delta, and some analysts assume that a Buhari government would be able to buy off the ex-militants, some of whom, like Asari and Tom Polo, have become multimillionaires off government contracts.

About a month ago, the governor of Bayelsa state, Seriake Dickson, met with the militants in an effort to calm them down.

"I made it clear that the way forward is peace, and I wanted a commitment from them to keep it," he told Reuters over a lunch of peppered snails, yams and bean cakes in the capital Abuja.

"I know what their fears are, but they agreed to work with me to keep the peace. And I believe they will."


http://news.yahoo.com/insight-why-nigerias-restive-oil-region-only-accept-140521762.html

Election: ‘Why The North Should Wait Their Turn′ - Former APC Member

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Election: ‘Why The North Should Wait Their Turn′ - Former APC Member

The National Chairman of the Third Republic National Republican Convention (NRC), Chief Tom Ikimi who was a former member of the All Progressives Congress (APC), but now in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
Ikimi in this interview with Vanguard explains why the North should wait till 2019 to come back to power.
Election: ‘Why The North Should Wait Their Turn′ - Former APC Member
Tom Ikimi
He also went forward to point out APC flaws in thinking they would win the forthcoming polls overwhelmingly in the South-west and North-west geo-political zones.
Excerpts
How Nigeria got to this frightening state after avoiding it since 1993.
Following the overthrow of the Shehu Shagari democratically elected government in 1983 by General Muhamadu Buhari, we had ten long years of military rule before the annulled June 12, 1993 election took place.
The build-up to that election, contested by two popular national political parties, the NRC and SDP, saw three northern-born popular presidential candidates, General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, MallamAdamuCiroma, and AlhajiUmaruShinkafi among others summarily disqualified and taken into detention.
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In the circumstance, while it may be convenient to characterize the June 12, 1993 election as the freest and fairest, behind that facade rested deep tribal resentment, mostly from the North, of what had occurred. In some other parts of the country, mainly in the South West, protesters, not necessarily confined to the leadership of the SDP, found the Abiola cause a convenient platform on which to organize overt resistance.
In the midst of all this restiveness erupted among southern minority elements, particularly in the Niger Delta area, mostly for reasons of apparent grievances. They commenced challenging what they described as a reckless plundering of the natural resources from their native soil – oil.
The coincidence of the sudden deaths of General Abacha and Chief MKO Abiola did not put the firestorms sparked by these crisis to rest. The emergence of General Obasanjo, on the platform of the PDP in 1999, by virtue of an arrangement conceived and executed by his top military colleagues did not really fulfill the intention of the inventors to assuage the anger of the South West whose leading political figures distanced themselves from Obasanjo’s candidature.
Unfortunately the OBJ personal agenda, which included a plot to position himself for an indefinite presidential reign, rather than work to unite the country, created massive asssault on the peace and orderly progress of the new democratic structure. OBJ was virtually forced out of office. He departed with a vengeance, ceding power to an ailing successor, the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, from northern Nigeria.
President Goodluck Jonathan assumed the presidency in the midst of escalating unrest and crisis in his indigenous area, the Niger Delta. Simultaneously, parts of Northern Nigeria was gradually being criss-crossed by Muslim religious fundamentalist, who took advantage of Nigeria’s extensive, porous borders with neighboring Niger ,Chad and Cameroons. The sectarian-fomented crisis in North Africa and parts of the Middle East started sipping through to Nigeria.
Although President Jonathan successfully brought the Niger Delta crisis to an end, political fortune hunters as well as mischief makers inside and outside the PDP invoked the tribal card as a means of challenging the President’s legitimate second term bid. In the circumstance, the genuine effort by some of us to unite the opposition in order to produce a strong alternative political platform, which should ensure a balanced polity with adequate checks and balances was suddenly hijacked by a crop of desperate political contractors.
On the North and South untalked of presidential arrangement
Nigeria celebrated one hundred years of the amalgamation of northern and southern Nigeria last year but, since independence in 1960 and the political party elections from 1963, the struggle for ultimate leadership of the country between the North and the South has remained a hard nut to crack. The situation has been complicated not only by the multiplicity of ethnic groups on both sides but the emergence of Islam as the dominant religion in northern Nigeria and Christianity as the dominant religion in southern Nigeria. The formation of alliances has been one way of ensuring that a balance is retained.
However, the PDP, which has retained national power over the past 16 years, operates a system of rotating the presidency between the North and South of Nigeria on a two terms eight year basis. This arrangement never envisaged a President dying in office and so the passing of President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua after two years in office has presented controversies over putting back the rotation principle on track.
I am sure the North would certainly be comfortable with the South-South as their long standing reliable ally. In the circumstance, it would make for national peace for President Jonathan from South-Southern to complete his two elected terms so that the presidency may revert to the North in 2019 when hopefully they will field a healthy nationally acceptable candidate.
Tom Ikimi talks about the strenght of the opposition, heading into election week.
The entry of the APC into the nation’s political firmament was received across the nation and beyond with great joy and happiness. We proclaimed a new party with a clarion call of CHANGE as we strongly believed that we had created a party that would pursue democratic principles with an emphatic culture of internal party democracy.
I thought we had finally broken loose the shackles of tribal, regional and religious politics unlike the NNA of 1960s that was founded on the premise of securing national electoral power through a coalition of fundamentally ethnic-based parties involving the intrinsically “North for northerners”, Hausa-dominated NPC and the essentially schismatic Yoruba party, the NNDP. That assumption which seemed feasible under the regionalist Independence Constitution was that this sectionalist alliance as a formidable political party would win federal power.
Those who hijacked the APC dwelt on that erroneous assumption based on the archaic 1960 theory that a Yoruba South West and a Hausa-Fulani North West Nigeria alliance will produce electoral victory. The APC democratic credentials were put to test in its very first convention where the self-styled “leader of the party” successfully plotted and executed the installation of cronies as the party’s National Executive. In a desperate effort to build a team that was solely designed to unseat President Goodluck Jonathan, PDP break away governors were recruited.
It should be noted, as it is already evident, that the assumption of automatic and unanimous votes from the two zones, the North West and South West, for the APC is not realizable. Today, the hold of the APC over the South West has been dented in states such as Ekiti and Ondo; its hold has crashed in Ogun State – due to the soaring profile of the SDP and PDP in that state; in Oyo – due to the PDP and ACCORD, while in Lagos, a major break through has been secured by the PDP, not only because of the very diverse electorate, the charismatic PDP governorship candidate – Jimi Agbaje, but the total rejection of the Lion of Bourdillon.
President Jonathan has an airtight support in the South-South and South-East where Buhari would not secure the mandatory 25%. President Jonathan will secure more than 60% of the votes in the North Central and not lass than 50% in the North East and North West. His return as President of Nigeria for a second term is assured.
APC’s Choice of Buhari as candidate and why he was chosen by the party
General Muhamadu Buhari, contesting the presidency for the fourth time, was in office as Head of State some 32 years ago when he dethroned the democratically elected government of President Shehu Shagari.He is remembered as the ruthless military leader who seized power and would not entertain anyone discuss any plan to return the country to civil democratic rule. Politicians remember him, how aggressively he hunted down key politicians across the length and breadth of the country.
This hunt was selective as he manipulated the escape of selected tribal friends. He was the author of the infamous Decree 2, an instrument used to muzzle the press. Tunde Thompson and Nduka Irabor, among others were imprisoned. Death sentences were recklessly passed on civilians through the instrumentality of a hurriedly enacted decree back dated! Plea for mercy from inside and outside Nigeria on some of the condemned civilians, including a woman, was ignored. He ordered the selective trial of politicians for alleged corruption and jailed those from a part of the country to ridiculous terms of hundreds of years each.
Buhari has failed to make the presidency three times. After the 2011 elections, he wept publicly and announced that he was not going to present himself again in contest for the presidency. It is true that over the past 16 years, he has managed to acquire a good crowd of die hard followers from a number of his homeland constituencies.
Political contractors from southern Nigeria, particularly from a South West state, cashing in on the North-South political rivalry, the religious issue and the insecurity in north eastern Nigeria, have virtually recruited the general and persuaded him to recant on his 2011 proclamation not to contest again. These political contractors see Buhari’s candidature as the convenient route for them to grab Nigeria.
Those parading Buhari, singing a song of CHANGE, have now been challenged by many to define the change they are really talking about and whether they are talking of moving Nigeria from the digital age of today back to the analog age of 1983. The media is now awash with the Transformation projects executed by President Jonathan and many are arguing that those successful projects are indeed the change that you can see.
The GMB handlers, who advised the general to steer clear of an open debate with Jonathan, have tried hard to formulate a platform for their man creating a false image of him as an anti-corruption man. This is pure balderdash!! My first assignment as adviser to government in 1994/95 was to prepare the memo on which basis the PTF – Petroleum Trust Fund-was created. As Chairman of this juicy portfolio over which the general enjoyed unfettered control, the PTF was funded with a total of around 180 billion Naira between 1994 and 1999.
The general failed to curb stinking corruption in the organization but authorized more than 70% of the funds to be spent in his own part of the country. An Interim Management Committee, headed by his own kinsman, Haroun Adamu, discovered that over 25 billion Naira was stolen under GMB watch in PTF. I suppose this fact is recorded in the OBJ watch since he set up the Haroun Adamu Interim Chairmanship. GMB cannot claim to be an example of anti-corruption.
As Federal Commissioner for Petroleum Resources, it was discovered that $2.8 billion of Nigeria’s oil money was withdrawn from the Midland Bank London and the funds lodged into an account in a bank where it generated interest amounting then to over 400 million pounds which vanished into private pockets.
The entire anti-corruption and integrity campaign has collapsed and the final nail on the coffin of that campaign was the airing of The LionOf Bourdillon. As for the issue of security as it pertains to the menace of Boko Haram ravaging the North East, it is now also clear who really were supporters of the Muslim fundamentalist attacks on Nigeria but mischievously turned around to blame President Jonathan. President Jonathan was left to equip a military, army, air force and navy, over night. He has done a yeoman’s job that during the last four weeks the insurgents have been virtually cleared from Nigerian soil.
The overwhelming opinion across the country at this time has swung in favor of President Jonathan and it is obvious that the overall peace and stability of Nigeria will be guaranteed by his election.
On if he regrets his decison to leave the APC to join the PDP
It was an experience of great joy and satisfaction for me to host and lead the process that gave birth in February 2013, at my Abuja residence, to the All Progressive Congress (APC) with the successful unification of the major opposition parties – ACN, ANPP, CPC and a part of APGA.
Several failed attempts had been made by various people since 1999, to strengthen the opposition by uniting a number of the opposition parties. This had not been successful for a number of reasons prominent among which was always personal interest and ambition. Consequently, most well known leaders, particularly in the ranks of the former ACN, never thought it would be possible to achieve the unification. As soon as it became apparent that we would succeed, a number of them, notably the current self proclaimed leader of the party moved in to seize control of the party and has since employed every means to retain his hold.
Tinubu-newIt became clear to me that an agenda was brewing as the main objective of the new party. This included a move to install General Muhamadu Buhari as President with Bola Ahmed Tinubu as Vice President notwithstanding the facts that both men are Muslims with credentials I do not agree with. Most of my colleagues in the top leadership of the party also became aware of this trend. They merely grumbled about it but seemed not able to muster the courage to openly fight against it.
The first National Convention was an abysmal failure. The event was a mere charade at which a cabal succeeded in installing a group of cronies as the party National Executive. Core leaders of the legacy parties found themselves trapped in this arrangement, which turned out to be the construction of a framework dedicated to just one objective, which was to bring down President Goodluck Jonathan and install Buhari and Tinubu.
Notwithstanding Tinubu’s failure to make the ticket recently for this election, I am convinced that Professor Osinbajo has only been brought in as a stepping-stone and much has been spoken about this already. I observed the negotiations between ACN and CPC in 2011 at which Tinubu insisted that Pastor Bakare, who was already picked as running mate to Buhari by CPC, should provide an undated letter of resignation as Vice President. The pastor refused and so the negotiations broke down.
My quest for an alternative political platform in the country was not motivated towards fulfilling any personal ambition to contest for executive power but I hold firmly that it is in the best interest of our country to have a credible structure of two strong political parties that would guarantee the necessary checks and balances in the system. Notwithstanding the negative trends exhibited by the APC at this time, I believe a robust political contest has, at last, arrived. But this is not the time to cede government to a desperate upstart commanding a vengeful army of flatterers all with a mission of stampeding an illusory enemy.
In conclusion, I have no regrets at all leaving the APC as I have always viewed a political party as a congregation of like-minded persons who become welded together in a close-knit brotherhood in a manner beyond mere friendship. I find the APC now a collection of strange bedfellows of very ambitious people of diverse interests all constantly plotting against each other.
Tom Ikimi move from the APC to the PDP took the nation by suprise but he has given his full support to President Goodluck Jonathan.

Global Spotlight is Firmly Fixed on Nigerian Elections - Op-Ed by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and U.K. Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond(March 21, 2015)

igeria’s more than 70 million voters will soon go to the polls to choose their country’s leader for the next four years. Whether the victor is incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan or opposition challenger General Muhammadu Buhari is entirely for Nigerians to decide. Around the globe, Nigeria’s friends will be united in hoping that the vote will be peaceful, transparent, and fair and that—win or lose—all sides will respect the outcome.
There are good reasons why the international spotlight is firmly fixed on Nigeria during this critical period and why we have come together to support an open and credible electoral process. Nigeria is Africa’s largest democracy and what happens there will have an impact well beyond its borders. A successful election, free from violence and with wide participation, accurate vote counting, and responsible leadership from the candidates would inspire the region and spur future progress and prosperity. It would also be a historic show of support by Nigerians for democratic values and an equally firm rejection of the brutal terrorist group, Boko Haram, and others who advocate or perpetrate violence.
As friends and democratic partners of Nigeria, we urge that the voting for president and parliament go forward as scheduled on March 28; there should be no further delay of this crucial vote. We are heartened by the fact that Nigerians from across the political spectrum appear to recognize the necessity of inaugurating a new president by the constitutionally mandated deadline of May 29.
Obviously, we share Nigerians’ concerns about violence, both related to elections and more generally. In 2011, more than 800 people died in post-election clashes, and a recent survey shows that half of Nigerians are concerned about political intimidation this time around.  The good news is that President Jonathan and General Buhari have repeatedly and publicly stressed their commitment to nonviolence before, during, and after Election Day. Both candidates have affirmed their intent to act solely through legal channels in pursuing any concerns that might arise regarding the fairness of the vote. It is imperative that they—and their backers—live up to this pledge. Elections should be decided at the ballot box and, if necessary, in the courts; not through efforts to coerce others. Respect for the constitutional process and the independence of Nigeria’s Independent National Election Commission, INEC, is the right approach, and the only one that offers a sustainable way to address Nigeria’s many challenges.
The countries we represent, the United States and the United Kingdom, strongly support the pledges articulated by the Nigerian candidates. The elections must be decided in accordance with the rule of law. It follows that any person who incites violence at any stage in the electoral process, or who seeks power through unconstitutional means, should be held accountable and should understand that the consequences will be severe, both domestically and internationally.
After an election, it is natural to focus attention on the winner, but in any democracy, the unsuccessful candidates also have critical roles to play. No one expects any political leader to retreat from firmly-held policy positions or beliefs, but a losing candidate owes it to his or her country to acknowledge defeat as soon as the popular verdict is clear, to urge supporters to accept the outcome, and to advocate unity in the face of national threats. That is the kind of leadership Nigeria needs.
A free, fair, and peaceful presidential election does not guarantee a successful democracy, but it is nevertheless an essential ingredient—especially now in Nigeria. This is a country rich in resources and blessed by a creative and dynamic population. Its leaders can be extremely effective as evidenced by their swift action to prevent Ebola from establishing a foothold in their nation—thus saving thousands of lives. Overall economic growth rates are healthy and parts of the country are doing well. And yet, Nigeria has been held back by local tensions, a wide disparity between rich and poor, the lack of an adequate safety net for the disadvantaged, shortages of electricity, a rigid bureaucracy, and widespread corruption. These challenges have made the country vulnerable to internal conflict including the kidnappings, murders, and other atrocities perpetrated by Boko Haram. Nigeria’s next government will need the support of all its citizens to address these challenges, and its unity will make it easier, on the security side, for regional neighbors and the larger international community to provide necessary help.
We urge all eligible Nigerians to vote, to resist those who attempt to incite violence, and to come together as one country to defend against terrorist threats and to build the shared prosperity and enduring freedom all Nigerian citizens deserve.

APC HAS NO CHANCE IN IBO LAND -PDP

Adamu Mu’azu, national chairman of the Peoples Democractic Party (PDP), has described the southeast of Nigeria as a “no-go area” for the All Progressives Congress (APC).

In a statement on Saturday, Mu’azu maintained that APC has no chance of winning votes in Igboland despite the mind games of John Oyegun, national chairman of the opposition party who chided Igbo chiefs for adopting President Goodluck Jonathan in the presidential election.

“The Igbo know what they want and how to go about getting it and don’t need a lecture from the opposition party leader on how to go about their political life,” he said.

While welcoming some Igbo leaders from the 19 northern states who pledged their support for Muhammadu Buhari, APC presidential candidate, in Abuja on Friday, Oyegun had advised the Igbo people not to “put their eggs in one basket” by aligning 100 percent with the PDP.

But Mu’azu said: “The Igbo people in their wisdom know that a bird in hand is far better than hundreds in the bush. Since 1999, the Igbo have supported the PDP; it’s their party and they have their stake in it.

“The APC and their propaganda is not their piece of cake and they know it will not work for them. The government of Okorocha that forced itself like a military coup on Igbos will soon be rooted out of the land of the rising sun by Emeka Ihedioha’s barnstorming political machine of the PDP.

“Therefore, the Igbo people know where their bread is buttered and don’t need a lecture from the APC leader to tell them how to play their politics. The southeast is a no go area for the opposition and their so-called progressive politics. Where was Oyegun when the Igbo, through the NCNC, formed the federal government with the NPC in the First Republic and with NPN and NPP in the second republic? The APC attempts to win Igbo hearts in the 2015 elections has come to naught and no amount of Oyegunspeak will change anything.

“Under the Jonathan administration, the second Niger Bridge is on the way and the Onitsha port complex is becoming a reality while the Niger River is being dredged. President Jonathan has pledged to give roads in the southeast a face lift and the evidence is there to show.

“What the Igbo need is a caring government that gives them support to do their business and not promises that will never be realised. The people of the southeast want a government they can trust and not castle builders in the air, which the APC is all about.”

GAIDAM EXPLAINS WHY BUHARI WAS ABSENT YOBE RALLY

Yobe State Governor, Alhaji Ibrahim Gaidam today revealed that reason why the  presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.) failed to come to the rally in the state.
Gaidam revealed that the former president’s non attendance was due to the insecurity problem in the state.
Gaidam Explains Why Buhari Was Absent At Yobe Rally
Ibrahim Gaidam
He said that the opposition Peoples Democratic Party ”fabrication of falsehood” that Buhari’s absence at the rally was due to the alleged sour relationship between him and the APC presidential candidate was wrong.
Gaidam said that the APC has a candidate with proven integrity.
“Buhari is a straight forward person, whom Nigerians will benefit from under his leadership,” he said.
He asked the nations citizens to come out during the polls and vote en mass for the APC.
The governor also told supporters that despite the insurgency in the state, he had performed creditably, and deserved to be re-elected.
He said with a renewed mandate, he would take Yobe to a new height, lamenting that the insurgency had limited the developmental strides of the state.
Meanwhile former governor of the state and senator representing Yobe East, Senator Bukar Ibrahim, said Buhari would address three things if elected president of Nigeria on March 28, which he listed as insecurity, corruption and the state of the economy