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2014/2015: PDP’s battle to regain S’West

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The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in the South-West has been singing it everywhere that it is ready to reclaim the states in the zone from the opposition Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN (now fused into the newly registered All Progressives Congress, APC) come 2014/2015. But this dream seems to be still born with the avalanche of crises bedeviling the party in the zone. OLAJIDE OMOJOLOMOJU writes on the implication of this situation for the party as the 2014 governorship elections in Ekiti and Osun states beckon.

The major question agitating the minds of stakeholders in the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, and political analysts across the country is: Will the ruling party at the centre make any return to the South-West geo-political zone in the series of forthcoming elections, starting with the 2014 governorship elections in Ekiti and Osun states?

The reason for this agitation is not farfetched, as the PDP at the national level and the zone have been shouting it at the rooftops that it is poised to reclaim the South- West and return to the pinnacle of power in the zone.

At the advent of the present political dispensation in 1999, the Alliance for Democracy, AD, held sway in the South-West, courtesy of the political marriage between the party and the pan-Yoruba socio-cultural group, Afenifere, which actively was involved in the politics of the zone.

This was to change in 2003, when in an alliance with former President Olusegun Obasanjo, in the bid for him to have a base in the South- West, the AD governors, except the former governor of Lagos State, Bola Tinubu, agreed to back Obasanjo’s second term bid.

When the dust settled after the 2003 elections, only Lagos State stood as an AD state. The other five states of Ogun, Oyo, Osun, Ondo and Ekiti fell to the superior firepower of the PDP.

This was to be repeated in 2007, but following series of legal fireworks, the PDP lost three states: Ondo, Ekiti and Osun in that order to the Labour Party, LP, and the Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN. In 2011, the PDP lost its hold on the remaining two states of Ogun and Oyo to the rampaging ACN, largely due to internal wrangling within its fold.

It was also alleged that Ondo, Ekiti and Osun states were also lost at the tribunals due to internal crises that rocked the PDP in those states. But immediately after the elections, the PDP began what it called reconciliation moves to bring peace to an already fractured house and has since then been singing it to all who cared to listen that it is poised to reclaim the South-West.

But despite all the noise about reclaiming the South-West, political analysts are of the opinion that the bid would remain a pipe dream unless urgent steps are taken by the leadership of the PDP to resolve all the crises bedeviling the party in the states of the zone.

From Lagos to Ogun, Oyo, Osun, Ekiti and Ondo states, the PDP has remained factionalised. It has been moving from one controversy to the other and this cost it the office of the National Secretary of the party, which was zoned to the South-West and which was after its March, 2012 National Convention occupied by the former governor of Osun State, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola. Oyinlola was sacked from office by the ruling of an Abuja Federal High Court, following a suit filed by members of the party from the zone.

Also affected in the sack gale that swept through the party was the entire zonal executive committee of the party in the South-West, headed by the former governor of Ekiti State, Engr. Segun Oni as the National Vice Chairman (South West).

At first, it was alleged that members of the zonal executive were allies of former President Olusegun Obasanjo and that their sack was to checkmate the former president by the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan, who was alleged to be having a running battle with the former President.

After the sack, an interim zonal executive committee was put in place, but the composition of that committee, rather than bring cohesion to the party has rather polarised it the more, as the appointment of the acting National Secretary, Dr. Remi Akintoye, has pitched the interim National Vice Chairman (South-West), Ishola Filani against many chieftains of the party in the zone, particularly the former Deputy National Chairman (South) and member of the party’s Board of Trustees, BoT, Chief Bode George. Similarly, the adoption last month of Prof. Wale Oladipo to replace Oyinlola has thrown further spanners in the wheel of cohesion of the party in the South-West.

This development has also set some members of the party in Osun State against the acting zonal executive committee, even as the Lagos State chapter of the party, from where Akitoye came from had dissociated itself from the purported adoption.

The court which sacked Oyinlola from office had among others ruled that “an order is hereby granted directing the 3rd defendant (Independent National Electoral Commission) to rectify the records of the 2nd defendant (PDP) by deleting the name of the 1st defendant (Oyinlola) as the National Secretary of the 2nd defendant; aAnd replacing same in accordance with the provision of the constitution of the 1st defendant with candidate nominated at a valid congress of the South West zonal chapter of the 1st defendant to be held within 21 days of the order of the court.”

In justifying the affirmation of Oladipo, the interim zonal chairman of the PDP in the South-West, Filani berated George, for facilitating Akitoye’s appointment in the first place, questioning the rationale behind picking a Lagosian for an office already zoned to Osun State.

His words: “Bode George has been taking wrong steps. How he came about putting a Lagos man in the position belonging to Osun State in line with the court order was not known to us. We have no quarrel with Bode George, he is a member of the BoT, but he is not an officer of the party in the South West zone.”

In a recent interview, Filani said of George: “All I want to say about Bode is that he has a problem. He has personality problem. I sympathise with him. All we should do is to sympathise with him, pity him and pray to God to help him solve his problem and we are praying to God to help him solve the problem.”

In a swift reaction, a group within Lagos PDP, the Lagos Collectives fired back, carpeting Filani for his comments on George. In a statement signed by the chairman of the group, Prof. Tejumade Akitoye – Rhodes and made available to National Mirror, the Lagos Collectives said: “We read with consternation and even sadness the unprovoked and gratuitous attempt by Mr. Ishola Filani to denigrate the committed leaders of our party in the South-West with his false, reckless and outlandish utterances. “It appears Mr Filani is now living in cuckoo-land.

But how else does one describe a man who has raised one Buruji Kashamu to the level of a mentor and even idolisation? Mr Filani, who lives and dines in Kashamu’s hotel, at least knows where his bread is buttered.”

Accusing him of relocating the PDP South-West secretariat to Kashamu’s hotel room, the Lagos Collectives said that Filani has surrendered all ethical values and abandoned all tempering logic of integrity for transient base values.

The Lagos Collectives added that it could not fathom why Filani, “an unelected transient actor has chosen to pick on a great party stalwart like Chief Olabode George simply because he was pointedly told that the party’s constitution cannot be compromised for him to succeed himself.”The group said that Filani has not only succeeded in sowing discord in the PDP from Ekiti to Ogun states, he has also planted his “agent, who now is prowling aimlessly in desperate bid for relevance.”

Decrying that at various opportunities, Filani has poured “invectives on former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, Chief Segun Oni, Otunba Gbenga Daniel and several other leading lights of our party,” the Lagos Collectives called on the national leadership of the PDP to “exercise exemplary contemplation and tactfulness whenever they consider people to occupy sensitive positions.”

As the battle of wits rages, the forthcoming governorship elections in Ekiti and Osun states, scheduled for early 2014 has further widened the gulf in the South-West PDP, following the plan by the party to pick its candidates from the two states through a consensus arrangement.

The consensus arrangement has continued to deepen the crises rocking the party, to the extent of leading to a bloody fracas in Ekiti State, where no fewer than 25 aspirants have picked nomination forms for a single ticket, with about 19 coming from Ekiti South senatorial district, which had been claiming that it was its turn to produce the next governor of the state, having not produced any governor since the creation of the state.

The zoning arrangement had polarised the party, before the Presidency was said to have advised the party to adopt a consensus arrangement in picking its candidate. Already, the PDP in Ekiti was already polarised into three factions loyal to former governor, Oni, former governor and a governorship aspirant, Ayodele Fayose and Police Affairs’ minister and an aspirant to the governorship seat, Navy Captain Caleb Olubolade (rtd).

The bloody fracas, which left a former Speaker of the state House of Assembly in a pool of his own blood among other casualties, took place right at the party secretariat on a day the Consensus Screening Committee of the party to pick its candidate was to be inaugurated, was also said to have been masterminded by one of the gubernatorial aspirants.

While some aspirants like Fayose kicked against the consensus option vehemently, others like Senator Gbenga Aluko agreed that it was a right step in the right direc-tion. Fayose in a statement by his media aide, Idowu Adelusi, said that he believed that President Goodluck Jonathan’s aim was to reduce possible problems in the build up to the governorship election.

The statement said: “I am sure that in the mind of the President, he does not want a process shrouded in secrecy and compromised. It is obvious that some individuals are taking advantage of this advice to cause mischief and disaffection in the party for personal gains, which will be resisted.

It is clear by the composition of the committee that there is a clear agenda. I hereby reject the 11-man committee and I will not appear before it or have anything to do with whatever decision they reach because some of them are known supporters of some aspirants and a free and fair selection cannot be guaranteed under the committee.”

But in lending support to the arrangement, Senator Aluko said: “We should not be in this game for the sake of being the PDP candidate.

There are so many parties where you can go to if you are desirous of being a candidate. People like us are in this game to win election for the PDP and take it to the Government House in 2014. If all the aspirants are adopted by groups in the PDP won’t that create confusion and disunity in the party?

So, nobody should think he could play a fast game here. We have to respect the voices of our leaders and we should not portray ourselves in an undisciplined manner.”

The outcome was the suspension and counter suspension orders placed on some party stalwarts in the aftermath of the fracas. Last week, seven members of the executive, including the secretary, Dr. Tope Aluko, publicity secretary, Pastor Kola Oluwawole, women’s leader, Busola Oyebode, PDP vice chairman, Central, Femi Ogunleye, organising secretary, Lateef Agbaje, the treasurer, Aluko. A. O. and the Youth Leader, Hon Tayelolu Olatunji, at a press conference, announced the suspension of the state chairman, Makanjuola Ogundipe, over his roles in the consensus arrangement brouhaha, blaming him for setting up the committee without adequate consultation. Ogundipe was accused of collecting N5 million from one of the aspirants in order to favour him in the race to getting the party’s ticket.

They asked the deputy chairman, Femi Bamishile to take over as the acting chairman, but Bamishile declined, declaring his support for Ogundipe, saying that the purported suspension of Ogundipe was unconstitutional.

This was followed by the indefinite suspension of Fayose by the state Working Committee, SWC, last Tuesday. Also suspended were the secretary, Aluko, publicity secretary, Oluwawole and women leader, Oyebode for alleged anti-party activities and insurbodination to constituted authority.

But reacting to his suspension, Fayose said that Ogundipe lacked the power to suspend him, arguing that only members of his ward can suspend him.

His words: “You can only suspend from the ward. Suspending Fayose from the PDP is like suspending PDP from Ekiti. Ogundipe must learn from the past. Fayose is an institution in Ekiti politics and it will be funny for anybody to suspend him from party.”

Also the publicity secretary, Oluwawole said his and others’ suspension was an aberration, because, Ogundipe, having been suspended cannot suspend anyone, but should rather clear himself of all the allegations levied against him. While members in the state were wondering what has befallen their dear party in the “Fountain of Knowledge,” the interim zonal executive, led by Filani, who hails from the state waded in, last Wednesday, when it announced in Lagos that “all the spate of suspensions recently announced by various groups are hereby set aside and status quo ante maintained.”

Filani said that the zonal executive committee would not fold its hands and allow individual interests to destroy the party and set up a five-man committee to wade into the crises with the aim of resolving them.

While Fayose embraced the peace move by the zonal secretariat of the party, Ogundipe said he was not aware of the meeting and its resolution to lift the suspension of Fayose and others.

This means that an end to the crises in Ekiti State is not in any way near, as analysts are of the opinion that the battle may get messier as anti-consensus arrangement aspirants have returned to the trenches to strategise and brace up for fresh battle with the state executive committee.

As it was in Ekiti, so it is in Osun State where governorship election is expected to hold shortly after that Ekiti next year. Apart from the controversies trailing the adoption of Oladipo as Oyinlola’s replacement, which rather than thaw, has continued unabated, the race to pick the flag bearer of the PDP in Osun has also set the party against itself.

Already, there are disquiets among the aspirants over allegation that some party leaders have resolved to give the party ticket to a former deputy governor of the state, Senator Iyiola Omisore in the spirit of the consensus arrangement.

It was alleged by competent party sources that the Presidency has been lobbied to back Omisore because he is said to have the structure and the financial muscle to battle the opposition ACN, but other aspirants are already kicking against this, vowing to resist any form of imposition.

According to them, Omisore he is not the most appealing candidate amongst the lot.

This is just as the payment of N8.5 million by 12 of the aspirants jostling for the ticket, in 2011 has also created another round of intractable crisis. Some of the aspirants are asking for the refund of the money which they paid as intention and registration fees then.

They argued that in the alternative, they should be allowed to freely participate in the process to pick the flag bearer now at no further cost to them, “in the interest of justice and fair play.”

National Mirror findings revealed that about 12 aspirants paid N5.5 million to the national secretariat of the PDP in Abuja while another N3 million was also paid to the state chapter of the party and they include: Omisore, Fatai Akinade Akinbade, Peter Babalola, Akinrogun Tunde Odanye, Gbenga Onigbogi, Lateef Bakare, Segun Bamigbetan, Alafe Aluko, Gbenga Owolabi, Lere Oyewumi and Diran Odeyemi. One of the aspirants opined that he is still in the race since the money he paid in 2011 is still valid as the aspiration is yet to be actualized.

His words: “Those of us who aspired for the governorship position on the platform of the party before the Court of Appeal ruling of November 2010 which sacked Oyinlola’s government, as a result of which no governorship election was held in the state in 2011, are still much qualified for the 2014 governorship race.”

New entrants into the race have also said that the party leadership should allow all aspirants to go to the field to test their popularity instead of the consensus arrangement which they said would not augur well for the party. One of the party leaders in Osun said: “In the Southwest, the PDP want to avoid post-primary crisis, which often militates against the success of the party at the general election. The mood of the party favours consensus candidate.

The puzzle is who the candidate should be. In Osun, the aspirants are aware of the consensus option, but they feel that the Presidency wants to tilt the pendulum towards Omisore.

They believe that he has the experience, money and other credential to rub shoulders with the incumbent governor. Seriously speaking, other aspirants are not disposed to Omisore’s candidature.” Oyo, Ondo, Ogun and Lagos states are equally not free of crises as various groups continue to battle for the soul of the party in these states.

Internal wrangling, which was the bane of the party in 2011 has continued to fester without any solution in sight similar scenario is playing out. In Oyo State, former governor, Adebayo Alao-Akala is locked in a supremacy battle with leaders of the PDP in the state.

The root cause of the battle in the “Pacesetter State” is none other than the 2015 governorship election, a development which has made the former governor to seek an alliance with his former boss, Rashidi Ladoja, in the Accord Party, where he hopes to realise his senatorial ambition come 2015. In Ondo State, despite series of denials of polarisation and factionalisation, the party in the “Sunshine State” remains in disarray.

Apart from not having gotten over the October 2012 governorship election results, there was the general belief in the state PDP that there was deliberate sabotage by the party leaders, not only in the state, but at the federal level against the party’s candidate in the election, Olusola Oke.

Party leaders at the state and federal levels were alleged to have supported the incumbent Governor Olusegun Mimiko, who was allegedly favoured by the Presidency to win the election, as one of the strategies for the re-election bid of President Goodluck Jonathan in 2015.

In Ogun State, the internal bickering has continued unabated without any solution in sight. The Buruji Kashamu faction of the party has held the party by the jugular, relegating former President Obasanjo to the background.

Also, the crises that bedeviled the party in the run up to the 2011 governorship election are yet to be resolved, leading the former governor of the state, Otunba Gbenga Daniel to now pitch his tent with the Labour Party. Daniel has founded the Peoples Party of Nigeria, PPN, in 2011, on which platform his faction of the PDP had contested all the elections in 2011.

It would be recalled that the state chapter of the party was responsible for the suit which sacked Oyinlola from office as the National Secretary.

The party is yet to speak with one voice since aftermath of the 2011 crises, leading to many prominent members defecting to other parties as the crises remain intractable. Lagos State, popularly touted as the “Centre of Excellence” has not fared better.

The PDP is polarised into the George and former Minister of Works, Adeseye Ogunlewe factions. Despite that early in the year, both George and Ogunlewe publicly admitted to a truce, there is yet to be true reconciliation in the state.

Also with the running battle between the Filani-led acting zonal executives and the George faction of the party on the one hand and George and various stakeholders and interest groups within the Lagos PDP on the other hand.

The Elders’ Council of the PDP and the zonal youth leadership of the party came down heavily on George over what they termed “Bode George’s attempt to bring down the roof over his inability to pocket the zonal leadership of the party.”

In a statement by the Chairman of the PDP Elders Council, Dr. Oluyemi Finnih, the council berated George for trying to undermine the authority of the Filaniled committee appointed by the National Working Committee, NWC, of the party in February.”

Expressing disgust at “the incessant aggression being perpetrated by the Chief Bode George group of the Lagos PDP against the South West zonal committee,” Finnih said: “It is extremely unthinkable that a caretaker committee put in place by the NWC could be subjected to unguarded abuses and harassment” by George and his group.

In another statement, the zonal Youth Leader, Hon. Bolaji Jeje, said that insinuations by the George faction that members of the interim caretaker committee have been barred from contesting elections at the forthcoming zonal congress was “mischievous,” saying that the ban only affected members of the Interim Management Committee of the PDP at the national level who were appointed in acting capacities.

Jeje said: “First, from inception we were not told that if we took the appointments, we would be precluded from contesting future elections. Again, we were not appointed in acting capacities.

Although we were appointed into a caretaker committee, it was in substantive capacities. Meanwhile, the National Chairman of the PDP, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur has lamented the continued domination of the South-West by the ACN and the Labour Party, vowing that the ruling party would reclaim the zone from the opposition.

Speaking at the inauguration of the 31- man Reconciliation Committee headed by the Bayelsa State governor, Seriake Dickson, Tukur said: “Painfully, the entire South West zone except Lagos was under PDP governments and there can be nothing more tragic than the present disturbing reality of losing that entire zone to the opposition.

“The birth of our problem in the South West and indeed other zones can be attributed to the inability of our people to manage our past successes. “The present leadership of the party is determined now more than ever, to reclaim the dominance of PDP in the South West. The people in the grassroots are nothing but PDP.”

This was just as the acting National Publicity Secretary of the All progressives Congress, APC, Alhaji Lai Mohammed has described as the dream by the PDP to reclaim the South-West as nothing but what it is – “a pipe dream.”

He said this during a chat with National Mirror, saying that the people of the zone are already tired and would not want to return to the years of the locust under the PDP in the South-West. On the claim to reclaim the South-West come 2014/2015, the Director of Publicity of the ACN in Ekiti State, Mr. Segun Dipe, said: “The PDP has refused to jettison their colonial mentality.

They have failed to realise that you cannot reclaim a people that do not belong to you in the first place. “The people of the South-West have tasted both sides of the divide and they know which one pays them the more. The people of the South-West have come to identify the PDP for what it is – looters who would come and loot their commonwealth and run away. As they say, ‘once bitten, twice shy’, the people cannot fall prey to the antics of the PDP another time.

“Besides, the South-West geo-political zone has never thrive well whenever they align with the central government with conservative leaning.

When Lagos State was the only state not under the PDP, it thrived and became a model for other states in the country. “Let them continue in their day-dreaming.

The South-West is not a colony to be claimed and they cannot re-claim what does not belong to them anyway.” With array of crises bedeviling the PDP in the zone, it is yet to be seen according to political analysts, how it would uproot the ACN and reclaim the zone, especially on the backdrop of how the party shot itself in the foot during the 2011 election and is now on another path of selfdestruct as the march towards the 2014 elections in Ekiti and Osun states gathers momentum and the party is yet to put its house in order.

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Posted in Nigerian Newspapers. A DisNaija.Com network.

Source: National Mirror Newspaper

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Tribune

Nigeria records 55 new COVID-19 infections, total now 165,110

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Tribune Online
Nigeria records 55 new COVID-19 infections, total now 165,110

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has recorded 62 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the total number of infections in the country to 165,110. The NCDC disclosed this on its official Twitter handle on Friday. “55 new cases of #COVID19Nigeria; Lagos-21, Yobe-19, Ogun-6, Akwa Ibom-3, Kaduna-2, Plateau-2, FCT-1, Rivers-1.” YOU SHOULD NOT MISS THESE HEADLINES FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE COVID-19: Nigeria Recorded […]

Nigeria records 55 new COVID-19 infections, total now 165,110
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This Day

Military, Police Ring Abuja to Forestall Boko Haram Attack

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•Deploy more personnel as army chief vows to wipe out terror group
•Security beefed up at N’Assembly

Deji Elumoye and Kingsley Nwezeh in Abuja

Abuja, Nigeria’s seat of power, is under a massive security cordon following threats of attacks by insurgents and the increasing wave of banditry in the contiguous states of Kaduna, Kogi, Nasarawa and Niger States, THISDAY’s investigation has revealed.

There has been a wave of kidnappings in the outskirts of the federal capital, notably Pegi, Tuganmaje and Kuje among others, which the police have battled in recent times.

The security situation in and around the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) was heightened by the pronouncement of the Niger State Governor, Mr. Sani Bello, that Boko Haram fighters who he said sacked 50 villages in the state and hoisted the terror group’s flag, were about two hours drive away from the FCT.

Security has also been beefed up at the National Assembly as operatives, yesterday, thoroughly screened every vehicle approaching the National Assembly complex in Abuja.

The deteriorating security situation nationwide prompted the National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Prince Uche Secondus, to warn that the 2023 general election may not hold, demanding the declaration of a state of emergency as well as the convocation of a national conference.
However, the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru, yesterday restated the Nigerian Army’s determination to annihilate Boko Haram.

But the Governor of Katsina State, Hon. Bello Masari, cautioned against declaring a state of emergency, saying doing so isn’t the solution to combat the security challenges facing the country.
The security of the nation’s airports was also in focus yesterday as the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) said there was no threat to them.

THISDAY’s investigations showed increased presence of troops, police, Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) personnel and intelligence operatives at the three strategic entrances to the city notably, Keffi, Zuba and Gwagwalada.

More checkpoints were also mounted around Gwagwalada and Keffi.
THISDAY also observed increased intelligence deployment at the entrance and the borders of FCT with contiguous states.

Beyond the borders, there were more deployments and police patrols inside the city and increased intelligence deployments as well.
Security sources told THISDAY: “There are deployments here and there but they are routine. Alertness is key to a secure environment.”

It was also learnt that security agencies were involved in frenzied meetings throughout yesterday.
The meetings, coordinated by the office of the Chief of Defence Staff under the new joint operational strategy of the armed forces, were aimed at coordinating a joint response to possible threats of attack to the FCT.

“I understand the security teams have been meeting for some days now and if you look around you, you will notice that there are increasing patrols and numbers of security personnel. The threats are not been taken lightly,” a source said.

National Assembly workers, lawmakers and visitors also had a harrowing experience accessing the legislative complex due to heightened security in the area.
Security operatives thoroughly screened every vehicle approaching the National Assembly complex in Abuja, impeding both human and vehicular traffic.

The Sergeant-at-arm of the National Assembly and other security agencies supervised the operations, leading to huge traffic build-up inside the complex.

Legislative staff, visitors and lawmakers were seen patiently waiting for their cars to be searched so that they could go ahead with the business of the day.
Some staff and visitors at some point got tired of waiting and were seen alighting from their cars to trek from the gate to the complex.

Meanwhile, the ONSA has said there is no threat to the nation’s airports.
A statement by the Head of Strategic Communication, Mr. Zachari Usman, said the reports of threats to the airports were an internal correspondence of security threat assessment misconstrued as security threat to the airports.

PDP Demands State of Emergency

In a related development, the PDP National Chairman, Prince Uche Secondus, yesterday demanded the declaration of a state of emergency, warning that the 2023 general election might not hold if the federal government failed to tackle insecurity.

He called on the federal government to summon a national conference to address the spike in insecurity.
Secondus added that the national caucus of the party will meet today to discuss the state of the nation.

Addressing members of the National Executive Committee (NEC) in Abuja, Secondus said: “We are worried Abuja is not even safe. It is no longer politics. We got alert of plots to bomb and burn down our airports.

“We urge the federal government to declare a national state of emergency in security. There is the need to call a national conference to discuss the insecurity in the country.

“There may not be any election in 2023 in Nigeria due to insecurity. This government must listen to the people. The Buhari government should call a national confab to discuss security and state of the nation. It is no longer politics. This time we are not playing politics. Let’s keep politics aside and move the nation forward.”
He said the country had been grounded, regretting that there had been no matching response from the federal government.

Secondus said in the past, terrorism in the North was confined to the North-east, but with the report of Boko Haram occupying villages in Niger State, terrorism had spread to the North-central
“Herdsmen are also menacing in the West; gunmen causing havoc in the East; and the militants in the South; all killing, looting, raping, maiming and burning down homes. The situation is bad; Nigerians all over are living in fear,” he said.

The Senate Minority Leader, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, said the problem of Nigeria was outside of the PDP headquarters, while pledging the support of the Senate to the declaration of state of emergency in security.

Abaribe said he deliberately decided not to speak on the floor of the Senate but to allow the APC senators to speak so as to avoid being accused of giving a partisan colouration to the issue of insecurity.

He stated that only electoral reforms would give victory to the opposition party in the 2023 general election and ensure a democratic defeat of the APC-led federal government.
Also, the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, Hon. Ndudi Elumelu, commended the NEC and the PDP leadership for their collective efforts at resolving the House leadership crisis.

The NEC meeting adopted the position of Secondus, calling on the federal government to convoke a national conference to discuss the state of insecurity in the country, according to a communiqué read by the National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Kola Ologbondiyan.

Army Chief Vows to Wipe Out Boko Haram

The army yesterday reiterated its commitment to wipe out Boko Haram.
Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt. Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru, told reporters in Maiduguri, Borno State that Boko Haram had been defeated in many encounters and would continue to be defeated until it’s annihilated from Nigeria.

“We will take on Boko Haram decisively, and we are committed to the focus of the operations, which is the total annihilation of Boko Haram from Nigeria,” he said.

The COAS, who was visiting the headquarters of Operation Lafiya Dole in Maiduguri for the fifth time since his appointment four months ago, said the visit was to boost the morale of the troops, reassure them and listen to any issues affecting them.

Earlier, the Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Maj. Gen. Farouq Yahaya, lauded the visit, which he said had continued to boost the morale of the troops.
“We are honoured, we are grateful, we are encouraged by those visits. You provided us guidance, logistics and other things we required. We are most grateful for those visits,” Yahaya said.

State of Emergency Won’t Solve Security Challenges, Says Masari

Katsina State Governor, Hon. Aminu Masari, has, however, said declaration of a state of emergency won’t solve the security challenges facing the nation.
Masari, who spoke yesterday with journalists after meeting with the Chief of Staff to the President, Prof. Ibrahim Gambari at the State House, Abuja stated that he was against the recent call by the House of Representatives for the declaration of a state of emergency in the security sector as it would not solve the problem.
According to him, declaring a state of emergency will not achieve the desired effect as the security structure and personnel to be used to execute the emergency are already overstretched in a bid to safeguard lives and property.

Sourced From: THISDAYLIVE

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Insecurity: Lagos bans occupation of abandoned buildings

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The government said that no worker should stay back beyond 6:00 p.m. within premises of buildings undergoing construction.

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Attacks on S’East: We must explore all options of negotiation — Stakeholders urge Igbo

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By Olasunkanmi Akoni

The people of the South East region have been urged to explore the power of negotiation and mutual settlement in the face of ongoing killings and security challenges in the zone because the east can not afford another war at present.

Stakeholders from the South-East geo-political zone made the remark on Thursday, at the unveiling of the book, “Igbo, 50 years after Biafra,” written by Special Adviser to Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu on Drainage Services, Joe Igbokwe, held at Ikeja G.R.A.

Speaking at the unveiling of the book, the chairman of the occasion, Mr. Cutis Adigba,
urged the people of the South-East to learn to build bridges across the country, so that they can realise their ambition of producing the next president of Nigeria.

Adigba urged leaders from the zone to discourage the move and agitation by some youths in the South East to go to war and secede out of Nigeria.

Also read: Banditry: Disregard viral video, Niger State gov’t urges residents

He said that Igbo have always found it difficult to rule Nigeria because they refused to build bridges across the six geo-political zones that made up Nigeria.

While describing the agitation as uncalled for, Adigba noted that after two decades that Nigeria returned to civil rule, the Igbo has predominantly identified with only one political party.

He maintained that remaining in one party can not advance the cause of the people of South East and cannot make them realise their objective of producing an Igbo man as president.

He maintained that the publisher of the book, Igbokwe played politics outside his state, so that the Igbo race can be integrated with one another race.

Adigba said the failure of the Igbo to reintegrate with other ethnic nationalities politically was responsible for the retrogression of the race in Nigerian politics.

Igbokwe, also addressing guests on the occasion, maintained that the Igbo are not advancing politically because they refused to be integrated into National politics, lamenting that, despite their success in business, they are not successful in playing politics at the national level.

Corroborating Dimgba, Igbokwe noted that there was the need for the Igbo people to stand up and build bridges so that their objective of producing the next president of Nigeria could be realised.

According to him: “I have decided to raise my voice, I hope my people will hear me while trying to quell the effect of the war, our people are spoiling for another war, mayhem is being unleashed in Igbo land, and there is palpable fear.

“Those who could speak have lost their voice, mindful of the consequences of their actions, I am calling on all Igbo leaders to speak up because all actions carry consequences, consequences of the silence will be too dastardly to sustain.

“Those silently supporting the wild wind should be careful or else they hand over to their children,” he said.

Igbokwe urged those spoiling for war to jettison their plan and embrace dialogue, urging them to learn from the South West region that despite the challenges faced after the annulment of the June 12, 1993, election, they did not go to war, and the region had the opportunity of producing two of her sons for presidential position in 1999.

“You have to build bridges to become president of Nigeria, but it is unfortunate the Igbo are burning bridges.”

Speaking at the event, Chief Uche Dimgba who is the coordinator of Igbo in All Progressives Congress, APC in Lagos, described Igbokwe as “a Frank, fearless and reliable leader, who based his views on issues and stand by his opinions, and we the Igbo have confidence in him and believe he can lead us aright.”

“He is a leader we Igbo believe in and we will follow him. If he can serve all the governors produced in Lagos State since 1999, he is a better man to follow because he possesses all the experience that can be of benefit to Igbo both at home and in the diaspora.”

Vanguard News Nigeria 

The post Attacks on S’East: We must explore all options of negotiation — Stakeholders urge Igbo appeared first on Vanguard News.

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