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Achonu, Sylva, Win Imo LP, Bayelsa APC Governorship Primaries Tickets

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By Adesina Soyooye

The immediate past Minister of State for Petroleum, Sylva Timipere, has won the Governorship Primary of the All Progressives Congress, APC. He will, therefore, be the candidate of the Party in the November 11, 2023 elections.

And, in Imo State, the much anticipated Primary for the Labour Party Governorship Candidate was won by Athan Achonu, popular as One Arm General.

Sylva surprised not a few people when he, last month, resigned from office and joined the Governorship race in his State. He had, before now, expressed interest in the Presidential race but chickened out after paying the sum of N100 millions for the forms.

He was a one-term Governor of the State under the Peoples Democratic Party which denied him the ticket for a second term in office in favour of Senator Seriake  Dickson. He decamped to the APC from where he contested again, and failed.

But in 2019, he backed David Lyon against the now incumbent Governor, Senator Duoye Diri.

Lyon won the election, but was sacked on the eve of his swearing-in ceremony by the Supreme Court over inconsistencies in the documents of his running mate.

Many people thought the Party was going to field Lyon again as compensation, but Sylva threw in his hat into the ring.

Athan Achonu
Athan Achonu: Wins Imo State LP Governorship Primary.

In the Direct Primary held in the State over a period of two days – Friday and Saturday, Sylva won in a landslide. He scored a total number of 52,061 votes to defeat Joshua Maclver, his closest rival who scored 2,078 votes.

And, in a surprise in LP, Imo State, which emanated from a very keen contest, Achonu  defeated a solid field to emerge the Candidate of the Labour Party.

Not a few people put their bet on either Major General Lincoln Ogunewe, rtd, or Chief Martin Agbaso, both from the Owerri Senatorial Zone, but Achonu, the only Candidate from Okigwe Zone, Imo North, beat Ogunewe and Agbaso.

While Achonu scored 134 votes, Ogunewe scored 121 votes, and Agbaso, an unbelievable 13 votes.

Achonu had, in 2015, won the Senatorial election for Imo North, but was removed by the Supreme Court in favour of the late Benjamin Uwajimogu.

With the Primaries of the three major political parties – APC, LP, PDP – in Imo over, the battle field is set for their three Candidates – APC’s Governor Hope Uzodinma, LP’s Athan Achonu and PDP’s Senator Samuel Anyanwu to slug it out on 11, November, 2023.

In Bayesa, Sylva will slug it out with the incumbent Governor, Senator Diri of the PDP.

Defeated Aspirants In Kogi APC Primary Election Reject Outcome, Say It’s Sham

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By Ayodele Oni

Some of the aspirants that participated in last Friday’s All Progressives Congress, (APC) governorship primary in Kogi state have rejected the outcome of the exercise.

Ahmed Usman Ododo, a former Auditor General for Local Governments in the state, regarded as annoited candidate of the incumbent Governor Idris, was declared winner of the election.

Secretary of the Kogi State APC Primary Election Committee,  Patrick Obahiagbon, on behalf of the chairman of the panel, Governor Bello Matawalle of Zamfara State, had announced Ahmed Usman Ododo as the APC standard bearer for the election fixed for November.

However, at a press briefing in Abuja on Saturday, four of the aspirants discribed the process that produced Ododo as a “sham”.

The aspirants that lost and rejected the results include, Senator Smart Adeyemi, Prince Shuaibu Audu, Prof. Stephen Oseni and a member of the APC National Working Committee, Yakubu Ajaka.

The Senator representing Kogi West said no election took place as he maintained that the team sent to conduct the direct primary and officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC) were nowhere to be found.

He appealed to the APC NWC to disregard the outcome.

“It was scheduled for yesterday (Friday) The election was supposed to be concluded by 2 pm. Results were prepared even before the commencement of voting.

“This is the worst form of rigging, it was unprecedented. There was no election. For somebody to have audacity to write results, we are saying the INEC should be prepared to tell Nigerians if election was conducted.

“None of the officials of INEC and the panel led by Zamfara state governor came out.

“We are aware that Governor Matawalle wasn’t happy with the sham and that was why he left.

“There is a guideline that in the absence of the Chairman, that secretary should not announce the result. What we had was allocation of votes. The purported winner is the Auditor General of Kogi.

“We have no problem with the Governor but the level of his involvement. There was no election at all. It was supposed to be a direct primary, people were mobilized but there was no election.”

Adeyemi, who admitted that aggrieved aspirants organized a parallel Congress was however silent on the winner.

“Some of us have to organize a parallel Congress. If the APC refuses to do what is right, it will be difficult for people to vote for us in Kogi. What happened was a betrayal of democracy. People were not allowed to vote, results were written.

“I want to call on the leadership of the party to avoid the collapse of the party. The tenets of democracy is one man, one vote.”

Audu also spoke in same vein as he urged the President-elect, Bola Ahmed Tinubu to prevail on the Senator Abdullahi Adamu-led NWC not to submit Ododo’s name to INEC.

“I was at my Polling Unit, I waited till 6pm, no election materials, no INEC officials .It was a sham of a process, the election did not hold.

“I will like to appeal to the NWC to take a look at the sham that happened on April 14. I will like to call on the President elect and Vice President to take a look at it. It was a sham of a process and we don’t want it to stand.”

Another aspirant,  Ajaka accused the team that conducted the process of betrayal of trust.

He told newsmen that the APC NWC of which he is a member would not allow ratifying the outcome of the Kogi primary.

“The people who perpetrated this have no character, I am sure that the NWC won’t allow it to happen. The people know their leaders, they know who they want. By next week, the leadership of the party will take a decision.

“The NWC will meet, they can’t present a name without ratification of the NWC. We are standing on justice. We aren’t desperate to be Governor but we are desperate for our party to win.”

The aggrieved aspirants also gave reasons why they were yet to present petitions before the appeal panel set up by the party’s national leadership.

“We have resolved not to petition the appeal committee but the NWC. We learnt they are trying to attack us if we approach the appeal panel. So, we have resolved to avoid going there.”

There May Be Disappointments In Governance – Gov Oyebanji

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By Ayodele Oni

Ekiti state Governor, Biodun Oyebanji has reminded the church that there is no perfection in Governance as mistakes are bound to occur at any point.

The Governor, while addressing a synod of Ekiti Anglican Communion at Ise, explained that there was no smooth sail in the journey of life as there would always be days of disappointment, turbulence and fears stressing the need to join hands together in faith to save a bad situation rather than aggravate it.

“I have personally reflected on the theme of this synod and its central significance to the Christian faith, “Peace, be still” illustrates the agility of a man in the face of danger and desperation that often sprout therefrom.

“This shows that all of us freight and troubled in the face of dangers to our lives to the extent we forgot that God is always around us, we often forget to exercise faith or to remember the goodness of God in the past.

“Finally, people of God, I want to reiterate before you that I am committed to the development of our dear state, we are doing everything possible to ensure life is made abundant for all our people and that Ekiti becomes the land of opportunity and prosperity as conceived by the founding fathers. I therefore crave for your support, cooperation and prayers.

“Nonetheless, I know inspite of our best intentions, there will still be situations where our best may proof insufficient, even then, we should not become paralytic in faith nor desperate in our reactions.

“At that moment of our disappointment, when it seems our best is not scratching the surface of your expectation, I say to you peace, be still.”

The Governor commended Ekiti Diocese for its historical leading roles in the Christian missionary works in the state, as well as the invaluable contribution of the church to the development of Education and the promotion of the Ekiti pastor-hood, which today was being honoured for its integrity, self-esteem, independence and contentment.

He promised residents of the state that no one would be allowed to suffer any undue harm as government would always ensure it takes the best decision in general interest of the people adding that he was committed to working assiduously for the development of the state that would bring the desired result of shared prosperity to all and sundry.

Oyebanji urged Nigerians to always have total faith in God in their moment of crisis and seek the face of God adding that everyone should understand that God is so powerful to deliver them from any problem or challenges they may be facing at any point in time.

President of the Synod and Bishop of Ekiti diocese, Rev Andrew Olusola, lauded the administration’s giant strides in the areas of infrastructure and human capital development of the state.

The leadership of the Hutch in Ekiti State said at the 19th Synod of the church that Oyebanji’s efforts are aimed at repositioning the state through prompt payment of salaries and pensions, comprehensive renovation of schools and hospitals, as well as rehabilitation and construction of roads in the state.

Bishop Olusola pointed out that the  administration had started on a positive note by focusing on infrastructure and human capital development which had become evident in the improvement in the quality of life of the average citizen.

He, however, urged the government to enforce stoppage of hawkers from the streets of Ado Ekiti.

Rev. Olusola, who appealed to the Governor to expedite action on the completion of the International Cargo Airport to give residents the opportunity to fly from Ado Ekiti to all parts of the world, urged government to take full charge of the Internal Revenue Service and allow residents’ ability to pay online directly to government coffers in order to reduce the hardship people go through to pay taxes.

Delta: Okowa Approves Pension Scheme For Self, Other Former Governors

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By Ayodele Oni

Preparatory to his exit from government after two tenure of eight years as Delta state Governor, Ifeanyi Okowa has signed a bill stipulating entitlements for former Governors of the state.

Titled “Delta State Pension and Other benefit laws for ex Governors”, details of the packages include N50m yearly, furnished duplex in Delta State or any other state in the country worth over N300 million.

Others are 350 percent gratuity of his basic salary for the first tenure;

Gratuity of 450 percent of his basic salary for second tenure; and Pension of 70 percent salary of first term.

The bill also gives ex Governors Pension of 80 percent salary of second term; Medical treatment for him and members of his immediate family and two vehicles, including a utility vehicle, not below the sum of N20 million each, every two years.

Other entitlements are two armed policemen and one Department of State Security officer; 15 days’ annual vacation in any place of his choice; an office with four aides, each of the four domestic workers will earn N100,000 monthly.

Investigation revealed that the bill will be the first law to be passed to stipulate entitlements to former governors of the oil rich state.

Okowa, who was the running mate to the presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party, (PDP), Atiku Abubakar during February poll, will be leaving office next month and is expected to be succeeded by another candidate from the PDP.

Ballot-Box Snatching, Missing Result-Sheets Mar Ogbaru House of Reps Supplementary Election

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Snatching of ballot boxes by thugs and missing of results sheets characterised the conduct of the supplementary election for the Ogbaru Federal Constituency, Anambra state, today.

The polls also witnessed invasion of the areas where elections held, by top political appointees of the Anambra state government, including the Special Adviser on political matters to the state governor, Professor Chukwuma Soludo, Dr. Alex Obiogbolu, Commissioner for Local Government, Community and Chieftaincy Affairs, Hon. Tonycollins Nwabunwanne, as well as, his Works Commissioner counterpart, Mr. Ifeanyi Okeoma among others.

Ironically, the above mentioned political appointees are not residents of any of the wards housing the about 45 polling units where the make-up elections held.

They strangely were seen moving round different polling units with security operatives.

Also thugs suspected to be working for the candidate of the ruling All Progressives Grand Alliance, APGA, in the state were said to be behind the snatching of the ballot boxes at polling units 021 and 052, Okpoko V1 where the result sheets were suspected to have been hijacked by the agents of the ruling APGA in the state.

Voters at polling unit 052, Okpoko Ward V1 complained that INEC officials did not deploy voting materials in the area.

As at noon, no INEC officials were sighted at the polling unit.

INEC officials also cancelled the exercise at polling unit 019, Okpoko Ward 3 after thugs snatched the ballot box there immediately after voting ended and sorting of votes was about to commence.

Also, the polling unit located at Umueri town hall in Ward Okpoko Ward V1 was also invaded by thugs who made away with the ballot box.

Sorting of votes had commenced at polling unit 009, Okpoko Ward five before the Supervisory Polling Officer, SPO, came and stopped the exercise insisting that it should wait until 2.30pm official closing period for voting. Thugs were later to storm the polling unit and made away with the ballot box shortly after Dr. Obiogbolu and Okeoma arrived the area.

Result sheet for polling unit 058, Okpoko Ward V1 was also missing.

Meanwhile, the Certified True Copy, CTC, of the results of the election where the polls were conducted in the federal constituency during the main election of February 25 presidential/ National Assembly elections as issued by the INEC showed that the candidate of the Labour Party, LP, Hon. Victor Afam Ogene was leading, followed by his All Progressives Grand Alliance, APGA, counterpart, Hon. Arinze Awogu while the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, and, incumbent representative of the federal constituency, Hon . Chukwuka Onyema placed third.

Though Obiogbolu declined granting any interview the Works Commissioner insisted that the ruling All Progressives Grand Alliance, APGA, in the state should win the election.

Abia Guber: Ikpeazu Asserts Professor Oti Compromised; Points At Gifts She Received; Abia Elder Tackles Him

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Ikpeazu and Nnenna Oti

By Charles Igbo

“You know that bribe can come before or after the event. If I tell you do this, or if this is the outcome, this is what you get, it is an inducement. It is, also, an incentive to behave in a certain way. So, could this be a fulfilment of a promise that if this is the outcome, this is what will happen? I think it is unprecedented” – Ikpeazu on gifts received by Professor Oti after the Election

There seems to be no end to the outcome of the Abia State Governorship election held on 18th March 2023.

In the election which the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC,  Returning Officer was Professor Nnenna Oti, the Vice Chancellor of the Federal University of Technology, Owerri, the candidate of the Labour Party, Alex Oti, won, defeating the Candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, the preferred Candidate of the Governor of the State, Dr Okezie Ikpeazu.

It is widely assumed that the uncompromising stand of Professor Oti, was what helped the LP Candidate to win. According to Oti she refused to be blackmailed, intimidated, and/or bribed. She said she rejected all because of ”the mother and Pastor” in her.

She has since, then, been celebrated, even by Presidential Spokesperson, Femi Adesina, and is now held as the poster girl for not just the much-criticised 2023 General Elections, but especially, for Nigerian women.

FUTO students and Staff gave her a heroic welcome on her return from Abia. And in appreciation, Professor Oti has been showered with,  at least, one luxury car and millions of Naira by appreciative Abians.

But Ikpeazu, who lost his Senatorial bid, and, also, failed in producing his successor, is crying foul. He says that Professor Oti was compromised. He has challenged her to name those who tried to bribe her. And more importantly, Ikpeazu  queries the story behind the gifts Oti received in appreciation of her sterling performance as the Abia Governorship Election INEC Returning Officer. He more than hinted that those gifts could be in fulfilment of promises made to her before the election. He insinuates she was bribed for the job she did.

Governor Ikpeazu: “You know that bribe can come before or after the event. If I tell you if you do this, or if this is the outcome, this is what you will get, it is an inducement. It is, also, an incentive to behave in a certain way. So, could this be a fulfilment of a promise that if this is the outcome, this is what will happen.  I think it is unprecedented.”

He accused Professor Oti of betraying his confidence in INEC because of her actions “during and after the election.”

“Oti clearly came to execute a ‘hatchet job’ against the PDP in the State considering her utterances after the election”, Ikpeazu told Journalists in Umuahia. Otherwise, he asked,

Why she, allegedly, participated “in the victory dance of the governorship candidate of the Labour Party, Dr. Alex Otti, through her actions after the election.” Her participation, Ikpeazu opined, is a “contradiction of the expected neutrality of INEC officials.”

Ikpeazu also emphasised that he had never met the Professor before, and does not even have her phone number.

Ikpeazu: “I wish I knew those who bullied her. I think she has been making too much noise out of nothing. The Returning Officer’s duty is essentially to tally results already collated from the wards through the Local Government and declare them. She can’t change results because she has no right to do that unless she went ahead and did something like that.

“But her reactions have betrayed the fact that she was overly excited about something. When you come to that kind of position dispassionately, whatever the outcome should not excite you.

“But the victory dance she participated in and her statements which are akin to confessions have betrayed the fact that she came for a hatchet job. It could be to reject or accept some results.

“I want the world to know that she is celebrating what she has no right to. I have never met her before; I don’t have her telephone number but I’m aware that if she came to do the right thing, she has no right to change anything. In fact, she has no right to even reject results because those results were generated from the polling units and wards.

“Her celebration is unfortunate and unbecoming of somebody who was given that kind of responsibility at that level.”

Commenting on the much publicised gifts of a vehicle and cash showered on Professor Oti by a couple of appreciative Abians, the Governor said: “You know that bribe can come before or after the event. If I tell you if you do this or if this is the outcome, this is what you will get, it is an inducement. It is also an incentive to behave in a certain way. So, could this be a fulfillment of a promise that if this is the outcome, this is what will happen. I think it is unprecedented, I don’t know where this has happened in Nigeria before.”

Ikpeazu is a member of the G5, a rebellious group of five PDP Governors, led by Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State, who fought the PDP and Atiku Abubakar, its Presidential Candidate. Many believe that their anti-party, anti-Atiku stance cost the PDP the Presidential Election. But it also cost the Governors – Samuel Ortom, Benue, Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, Enugu, and Ikpeazu their aspirations. The three lost their Senatorial bids to either the LP or APC.

Only Governor Seyi Makinde, Oyo State, a member of the Group, succeeded in his second term bid.

Said an Abia PDP Chieftain who pleaded anonymity, “Ikpeazu should blame his woes on his poor performance in office and his ill-advised romance with Wike and company, not on the very disciplined Professor Oti. Most Abians foretold his fate. The Peter Obi-effect worsened his case.”

Obi: Group Demands Explanation On London Heathrow Fiasco

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Peter Obi

The public policy think tank, the NEO AFRICANA CENTRE, has said that Nigerian authorities have questions to answer over the identity cloning incident which led to the detention and questioning of Mr Peter Obi at London’s Heathrow Airport. It therefore demands that relevant Nigerian authorities, particularly the Nigeria Immigration Service, should explain to Nigerians what it knows about the incident. The Centre said it is insisting on this explanation since reports have confirmed that the International Passport of the impostor who has been passing himself off as Peter Obi was issued by the Immigration Service.

It wondered how a government department which is fully digitally compliant and which harbors the identity and bio data of Nigerians can duplicate anybody’s identity, let alone that of a prominent citizen of Nigeria.

In a statement by its Director of Public Affairs, Jenkins Udu, the Centre said it is deeply concerned by the series of mischievous pranks being played around Peter Obi by the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government of Nigeria. The think tank said that it recalls with worry the frame-ups and blackmail which the APC and the Government at the centre have been heaping on Mr Obi.

This includes, among others, the allegation that Obi was promoting insurrection and should therefore be charged with treason, the unwarranted invasion of his privacy by tapping into and distorting the conversation between him and Bishop David Oyedepo of Living Faith Church, and now the cloning of his identity. All these ugly incidents, the centre said, revolve around the ruling party and its government as well as the agencies of the same government. It therefore holds that in order to clear the shadow of doubt and uncertainty around these incidents, government should address Nigerians on them.

The statement reads in part:

“The Neo Africana Centre is concerned about the frame-ups and a web of lies being woven around the presidential candidate of the Labour Party in the February 25 elections, Mr Peter Obi, by the federal government and its agencies.

Regrettably , all the incidents, so far , are scandalous and border on character assassination.

“More than any other, we take serious exception to the humiliation and embarrassment which Mr Obi suffered last week at London’s Heathrow Airport over the cloning of his identity. This incident must not be glossed over. The concerned authorities, particularly the Nigeria Immigration Service, should take interest in the matter and explain to Nigerians what really happened. The impostor who cloned Obi’s identity did not issue himself Nigeria’s International Passport. The authorities who issued it should speak up.

“We warn that the frenetic turn of events since the February 25 elections leaves much to be desired. Government should not look the other way while anarchists rule and reign. A clear line must be drawn between politics and war.

“The ceaseless hunt for a candidate who participated in the elections is suggestive. It leaves the public with the impression that Mr Obi is seen as a threat to whatever the government and the APC represents. This reinforces the widely received impression that he won the election but was forcibly rigged out. Otherwise, why are his detractors desperate to put him out of circulation?

“This Peter Obi phobia is both pathetic and reprehensible. It portrays government as complicit in the drama of the absurd playing out almost on a daily basis around Obi.

“A Government which chooses to play the ostrich should have no one but itself to blame if things get out of hand.”

Uzodimma Sweeps Imo APC Nov 11 Guber Election; Dedicates Victory to God Almighty

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Hope Uzodimma

Governor Hope Uzodimma on Friday polled 63, 618 votes from 64,667 accredited delegates drawn from 305 Electoral Wards and 27 Local Government Areas in Imo State to sweep the All Progressives Congress Primaries held in Owerri that produced him as the Party’s candidate for the November 11, 2023 governorship election.

The APC direct primaries which took place at the  Rear Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu Square Owerri, also has in attendance APC stalwarts from Imo State and representatives of the National Working Committee (NWC).

In his acceptance speech, Governor Uzodimma dedicated his victory to God Almighty for making the day possible and for touching the hearts of APC leaders and its members to unanimously choose him as their Governorship candidate for  second tenure.

He thanked the delegates from the 305 wards in the State and the 27 LGAs and all Party members who came out to vote and for following the laid down regulations.

Governor Uzodimma who was excited over the victory and trust by his Party promised not to betray the confidence reposed on him.

He expressed gratitude to the Party members and reminded all to see Imo State as their own, noting that “we have no other State we can call our own.”

He told the mammoth crowd that “democracy is the best form of government and we cherish democracy because it is the only Government that is for the people that we can call our own.”

He recalled how he prayed to God before coming to contest and emerging as Governor of Imo State, saying “from that date till now God has never disappointed me.”

He expressed confidence in what God can do, noting that “on assumption of office I met some challenges but God in his infinite mercy handled the challenges in his own way.”

This, according to him, could be observed from the difference his administration has made in the development of Imo State before assumption and now.

The Governor reiterated that “political party is a vehicle” and prayed God to “use him as the driver of the vehicle to take Imo State to its destination.”

He recalled the challenges of insecurity in the past three years of his administration in Imo State and regretted the huge expenditure in that area.

“But for insecurity Imo State would have witnessed much more development than is experienced today.”

Furthermore, he noted that “APC is a Party at the National, in Imo State and by July when this administration will conduct the Local Government elections APC will be everywhere in the Local Government.”

Highlighting the influence of his achievements,  the Governor said: “Strategic communication is the best way of informing the people which translates to seeing is believing.”

He charged the APC members in the State not to be afraid because “God will take charge of the battle” in their favour.

Governor Uzodimma said what the opposition is presenting to his administration as obstacles will be converted into opportunities, assuring that victory will be theirs come November 11, 2023.

The APC Deputy Chairman South, Chief Emma Eneukwu, who represented the  National Chairman, Sen Abdullahi Adamu, eulogised the Governor for his unusual capacity that has benefited the Party and her members, and proceeded to hand over to him, the APC flag as the candidate for the coming poll.

Addressing the APC delegates that gathered for the exercise earlier, the Chairman of the Governorship Primary Election Committee for Imo State, Rear Admiral Williams Kayoda (rtd) said they were in the State “to witness the accreditation and voting of APC delegates in line with the Party constitution, guidelines of the Electoral Act of 2022 as amended and the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria as amended.”

He said though the Party and the State House of Assembly have granted the Governor the right of sole candidate in the coming election, “the APC must follow the due processes so that they will be in tandem  with the requirements of extant requirements.”

In his words: “The process must be followed to the letter in line with the mandate of the constitution.”

Rear Admiral  Kayoda added that his team of seven members for the primary elections, six members for the Appeal Committee and Eight members that constitute the Secretariat were divided to cover the 305 INEC Wards and the 27 Local Government Areas of the State, insisting that the Polling and Returning Officers for the Primaries not only did well but “are fantastic.”

The Chairman said in “the Nigerian clime there are three instruments that guide every activity- legitimacy, legality, and morality- and affirmed that “once the three are followed it will align with the democratic process.”

He commended Governor Uzodimma for the good jobs he is doing in the State and APC in particular that endeared him to the Party members that made them choose him as their Sole Candidate.

He also gave credit to the organization of the exercise they came for and thanked the Chairman of the Party and the State Working Committee Members (SWC) for making their job easy and seamless.

He thereafter called for the affirmation of the results from Local Governments by the Ward Leaders after moving a motion to that effect which was seconded by two delegates, one from Ahiazu and another from Ideato, before proceeding to declare the Governor elected as the APC Governorship Candidate for Imo State in the November 11, 2023 election.

Welcoming the delegates to the exercise,  the Chairman of APC in Imo State, Dr. Macdonald Ebere thanked all for coming for the event, particularly those who came from Abuja APC headquarters and expressed happiness that all went well as directed.

He expressed joy that Imo APC unanimously agreed to return the Governor for the second term.

OPINION: Welcome To The New APC Republic

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Chidi Amuta

By Chidi Amuta

The period between a general election and the swearing in of a successor administration ought to be filled with excited anticipation. It is usually a time of pleasant speculations on the new faces that will soon grace television screens and newspaper front pages. For the masses in a polity in virtual captivity, it is time to begin getting used to new overlords and masters. For the elite, this ought to be time to debate policy perspectives and options for the new administration.

There is so much in the present atmosphere that defies the tradition of a civilized political transition season. Instead, the incumbent All Progressives Congress (APC), which is also the incoming triumphant squad, is consumed by an overwhelming nervousness. Instead of engaging the public in sensible debates about policy options and directions, the APC appears to have retreated into a perpetual campaign mode.

Party hawks and attack hounds are still busy insulting our public sensibility. They are berating, abusing and profiling their election season opponents. It is as though the elections are not yet over. In the process, two dangerous things are happening. First, the polarization and bitter divisions in the country is being further deepened. Second, the groundwork for a new climate of tyranny and authoritarianism is being laid. Clearly, we are in the throes of an imminent administration that is likely to invest in tormenting the opposition and abridging the liberties of citizens. Otherwise, why has Mr. Tinubu not disbanded his abusive and divisive campaign propaganda machinery?

After a bitterly fought election, the nation requires soothing words and healing hands to mend broken bonds and assuage wounded feelings. But unfortunately, all we are getting from APC’s front line propagandists is an overdose of negativity and sickening ethnocentrism. They are still fighting the ghosts of Mr. Bola Tinubu’s opponents in the presidential election. Consequently, in the prelude to May 29th, the nation still wears the appearance of a landscape of war with hate as the dominant language of public discourse.

By some unwritten law of tyrannical power consensus, however, all the post election hostile barbs have now found one common target: Mr. Peter Obi and his political movement. Hardly any one in the APC and the incumbent government (one and the same) mentions Mr. Atiku Abubakar who came second in the INEC presidential election vote tally. It is now all about Peter Obi, Datti Ahmed and the Obidients. This systematic narrowing down requires further investigation.

To give official stamp to the concerted targeting of Mr. Obi, Buhari’s Minister of Information, the famous Lai Mohammed has gone junketing to far away Washington DC to announce that Mr. Obi could be guilty of treason. His crime? Just expressing his reservations about the credibility of February 25th presidential elections ‘won’ by Mohammed’s party, the APC. He has followed this by getting the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) to slam a fine of N5 million on Channels Television for hosting an interview with Obi’s running mate in which the gentleman expressed strong reservations about the conduct and outcome of the presidential elections.

Quite interestingly, the rhetoric of the APC/Tinubu campaign trumpeters has opted for the same choice of words as the government organs in characterizing Peter Obi and his followers. ‘Treason’ is the word of common choice. Insisting that the election of 25th February was not free and fair is now treasonable. Going to court to challenge the outcome of that election is now also ‘treason’. Pointing out anomalies in INEC’s procedures and processes is also ‘treason’.

They have gone several steps further. Government and APC propagandists and pro-Tinubu enthusiasts on the social media have begun linking Peter Obi with IPOB and ESN, even if there is no evidence to that effect and in spite of the man’s repeated dissociations from these groups. Implicit in these mischievous associations and linkages is the assumption that Mr. Obi is just another Igbo politician. There is also an ongoing feverish attempt to use paid party jobbers in the Labour Party to destabilize the party and discredit the Obidient movement. The desperation is to disentangle the Obidient movement from the Labour Party and return the party to its previous small time status. In Imo state, the party has been factionalised and its offices shut down by factional hoodlums supervised by the police. In Abuja, a renegade faction claims to have ousted the party chairman and forced its way into the party headquarters.

The Department of State Security (DSS) has joined this nattering choir of scare mongers by issuing a yet unsubstantiated warning against those planning to disturb the peace by plotting to emplace an interim Government in preference to the swearing in of the elected new administration on May 29th. The Defence Headquarter and the Army have sounded the same warning. All Nigerians agree that we do not need any interim arrangement. It is uncalled for.

What unites all these voices is that they are in one way or the other tied to the incumbent power setup. They are all either officials of government or affiliates of the APC in one way or the other. They are united in a strange consensus that the most consequential adversary of the Nigerian state at this point in time is the combination of Mr. Peter Obi, his running mate and of course the Labour Party respectively. This writer foretold this eventuality as the campaigns unfolded.

In the run up to the last presidential election, I wrote in a piece in this column, “What If Macchiavelli Votes” in which I speculated on what the victory of each of the three front runners would mean for the power equation in Nigeria as we know it.

On the threat posed by the possible emergence of Mr. Peter Obi Obi of the Labour Party, here is what I wrote in January 2023, a few weeks before the presidential election:

“With Mr. Obi of the Labour Party, we come face to face with a real threat to Nigeria’s power nexus. Mr. Obi is challenging the political establishment, the traditional architecture of parties and the ethos of old politicians. He is challenging the bastions of vested interest, the organized crime syndicates of fuel subsidies and inflated state contracts. He has openly indicated a desire to run a people oriented administration that is accountable, frugal and open. All these grate on the nerves of the deep state and the warlords of enshrined corruption. He wants to reorganize national security and thus curb the crime dividends enjoyed by the security high command.

Peter Obi and his OBIdients movement could have been dismissed with a wave of the hand if they were not so consequential, menacing and expanding.  In a relatively short space of time, Mr. Obi has had a movement grow around him and his counter narrative. He has become the emblematic poster “man in black” of this season with a targeted appeal mostly to the youth.

He is the convergence of moment, message and messenger. His message is simple: ‘It is time to take back our country’. That message has resonated with the youth and the disenchanted majority of urban poor and unemployed.  The desire to create a new Nigeria transcends the barriers that have held Nigeria hostage. There lies Obi’s real threat to the power establishment.

The system is not going to sit idly by while Mr. Obi and his followers sweep vested interest out of power. Therefore, he will be the meeting ground of all the dark forces intent on maintaining the status quo. In quick rehearsals, financial blackmail of Mr. Obi has been tried and did not work. Ethnic profiling has not stuck.

As the campaign season progresses, more sophisticated antics may be rolled out if Mr. Obi and the OBIdients sustain their appeal and gather momentum.

But the ultimate triumph of our democracy will remain a function of the state of health of our democratic institutions: a truly independent and credible INEC, a judiciary of honest judges, a media of fair and truthful journalists and a non- partisan state structure.

In a sense, the speculative possibility of a Machiavelli vote in 2023 is another way of posing the great universal question of history: What if?

The moment prefigured in that prophetic excerpt has arrived. We have crossed the junction of “What if?” The election has produced an outcome. INEC has pronounced Mr. Bola Tinubu as the President-elect on the basis of its best judgment of what transpired and the summation of the information and other procedural outcomes. As required by law, those who lost have since filed their objections in the form of petitions to the relevant tribunals and courts. It would therefore be a natural course for the winners to set about setting up their programmes, policies and unique governance procedures and structures so that the business of Nigeria could proceed unhindered.

The losers in that disgraceful election should be busy putting our judiciary to an ultimate test of their credibility. The pursuit of justice according to law should be the final berth of the journey of democracy. Peter Obi was not pronounced winner by INEC but somehow, his political presence and electoral feats have earned him unusual attention by the Octopus of the Nigerian power behemoth.

We must make some concessions. Admittedly, there have been a few incensed and even careless  statements by both the losing PDP and the LP. Peter Obi’s running mate, Mr. Datti Ahmed, may have been a bit too emphatic and irreverent in his Channels Television interview on a matter that should be left to the judicial finality of the Supreme Court. But Mr. Dino Melaye of the PDP has been even more unguarded. Not to talk of the serial indiscretion and incendiary incitements of Mr. Fani-Kayode and Festus Keyamo of the APC. Mr. Bayo Onanuga of the Tinubu campaign has been even more vitriolic and dripping with ethnic hate in his choice of utterances.

In the heat of the campaign, some fringe elements of the Obidients movement may have overstepped the bounds of decent assembly in response to the hooliganism of the APC in places like Lagos for instance. Even then, with the Labour Party and the Obidients, we are dealing with uncharted territory. A populist movement that finds itself as the rave of the political moment has a capability to go overboard. But critics of the Obidients have hardly spared a thought for the many of them that were killed, maimed and seriously injured in parts of the country by APC professional thugs.

Nonetheless, in spite of coming third in INEC’s ranking of the presidential candidates in the last election, interest in Peter Obi and his movement has recently been on the increase. Obi is lately being demonized systematically. The Obidients are being rebranded as urban terrorists by people who should know better including, most regrettably, Mr. Wole Soyinka. The threat level has become so intense that Mr. Peter Obi recently hinted that he has come under pressure to leave the country for fear of his personal safety.

The reasons for the special interest in Peter Obi by the Nigerian power establishment are multiple.

Of all the presidential candidates, he posed the most credible threat to the Nigerian power status quo. By side-stepping the established bipartisan architecture of the political structure and stepping  forward to directly seek the top power slot, he audaciously upset the tripodal ethnic architecture of Nigerian power. He threatened the existing political order by challenging the old money politics of African Big Men. By openly challenging the system to name his wrongs, if any, he was calling out the decadent moral edifice of traditional Nigerian political culture.

Perhaps most importantly, Mr. Peter Obi evolved a message that appealed to a cross section of Nigerians across ethnic, religious, class and geo-political divides. As it turns out, what unites most Nigerians is the hunger for a better country in which the leadership presents a moral and performance example that most citizens can emulate.  Obi embodied that message and it conferred on him an automatic charisma and electrifying appeal especially among the youth.

Peter Obi thus threatened the hegemonic dominance of power fundamentalists and regional/religionist hegemonists. His electric popularity attraction came as a rude shock to those who had come to take the youth and urban detribalized Nigerians for granted. A man who joined a small party and, in less than a year transformed the Labour Party into a serious power contender, a populist magnet and an electoral threat cannot be written off casually.

Like a bolt out of the political blues, Peter Obi and the Labour Party trounced Mr. Tinubu and his thriving thuggery industry in Lagos. He swept the Federal Capital Territory like a political hurricane, leaving his rivals no room for even a miserable 25% vote score. He demonstrated the truism that every politics is first local by sweeping through the whole of the South-east and South-south as well as the bulk of the Middle Belt states of Nasarawa, Benue and Plateau.  From Nasarawa and Southern Kaduna, Obi and his rampaging political train menacingly eyed the conservative Northern bastions with the force of a powerful national message. INEC announced a Bola Tinubu win with 12 states; so also did Peter Obi win in 12 states and perhaps more.

These electoral milestones should frighten the traditional political establishment. They were achieved without a so called political structure. They were achieved without lorry loads of ‘stomach infrastructure’ or bullion vans of Naira or dollars.

However, because of his surname, Peter Obi has also become a strategic threat to both the Nigerian power machinery as well as the political elite of his home base South East. Aspirants to the trade mark ‘Igbo presidency’ slot in the big parties were thoroughly rattled and shredded.

To the political elite in the rest of the country, Peter Obi, perhaps unconsciously because of his surname, also became the unspoken voice, the uncomfortable variable and indeed the ominous face of something that at once frightens and attracts the Nigerian imagination.  All those factors that have held Nigeria hostage since 1970 have remained curious of what Nigeria could become under the leadership of the Igbo people who have been absent from the central seat of Nigerian power for 57 years.

There is in the Nigerian subconscious a certain envious curiosity and yearning about the difference that the Igbo ethnic identity could make in the way Nigeria is run. But Nigeria is also united by a baseless fear of what the Igbo could become if Nigeria were to let them add apex power the entrepreneurial and mercantile sagacity and expansive spirit. There lies their strength and also their weaknesses as a people.

But Peter Obi is a completely detribalized Nigerian. He is also above everything else an Igbo man, a quintessential one at that, one who is both a catholic, a trader, a politician and a man of Spartan discipline. Nigerian youth and the urban majority believed in the power of his example and shared his vision of a new better Nigeria.

The many pluses of the Peter Obi and Obedients phenomenon has engendered a fear in the political consciousness of both the incumbent and incoming  dispensations. Fear of the man in black has replaced normal opposition allergies. Having commenced a programme of repression and harassment of Mr. Obi and his followers, we can look forward to a coming dispensation ruled by fear and that will therefore  rely on authoritarian methods to silence an opposition that is already in place as an alternative power contender. Unfortunately, the incoming government can only fix the economy through unpopular policies.

When trouble erupts in the streets because of hardship, the natural first recourse would be to blame it on Mr. Obi and the Obidients. Welcome to the new APC republic!


Amuta, PhD, is an Academic, Administrator, Columnist, and member, ThisDay Editorial Board

Northern Christians Appeal To Tinubu To Help  Rescue Remaining Chibok School Girls

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Chibok Girls

By Akinwale Kasali

For over Nine Years, the whereabouts of about 100, out of 276 students of the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, remain unknown since they were abducted by Boko Haram terrorists on April 14, 2014.

The abduction sparked outrage worldwide. activists putting pressure on former President Goodluck Jonathan to rescue the girls.

The pressure was transferred to President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration and, inspite of the spirited effort and intervention put in by Government to facilitate their freedom 100 of the girls remain missing.

Now, the Northern Christian Youth Professionals has turned their attention to President-elect, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, to work toward securing the release of the remaining abducted school girls.

In a statement issued in Abuja, on Friday, the Chairman, Northern Christian Youth Professionals, Isaac Abrak, joined Nigerians and the rest of the world to commemorate the ninth anniversary of the schoolgirls’ abduction.

While concluding that the Buhari Government tried its best, by having some of the girls released, Abrak enjoined the president-elect to make the freedom of the remaining captives one of his priorities.

Abrak said, “We remember the pain and trauma that the families and loved ones of the abducted girls have had to endure over the years. Our hearts go out to them on this solemn occasion.

“We commend the outgoing government of President Muhammadu Buhari for securing the release of some of the Chibok girls, but we urge the incoming government, led by Bola Ahmed Tinubu to prioritise the safe return of the remaining girls from Boko Haram captivity.

‘We also urge the incoming government to strengthen security in schools, particularly in Northern Nigeria, to prevent the continued abduction of school children. The recent abduction of 10 school children in Awon community, Kachia Local Government Area in Kaduna State on the 4th of this month is a sad reminder that this problem is still with us,” Abrak sadly noted.

He stressed: “Protecting schools from terrorism will encourage education in the region, which will ultimately empower the minds of our children and youths to reject the falsehoods that foster terrorism in our country. This will naturally weaken and eventually defeat Boko Haram and other forms of terror in our land.