Monday, 14 April 2014

Riot Averted After Nyanya Blast

Nyanya Abuja bomb blast

Youths at the scene of yesterday’s bomb blast in an Abuja suburb almost took the frustration on security personnel who were battling to control the crowd that had thronged the Nyanya Motor Park, scene of the incident.
It took a combined team of Army, Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, FRSC, and anti-riot Police to control the crowd, who blamed the incident on government’s inability to provide the area with adequate security.
One of the youth who craved anonymity told LEADERSHIP that they were angry that the government had been paying lip-service to security matters and should be blamed for the insecurity.
“We are very angry about what just happened. It is really bad that the
masses get no protection from our government. We would not tolerate
this if the government cannot protect us, we would find means to
protect ourselves,” he threatened.
Another lady at the scene was seeing raining insults on the military men, obviously pouring the frustration of losing her brother in the blast on them as she cried out, “My brother, my brother, why did this happen, security you have failed us.”
Meanwhile, eyewitness account has put the amount of dead people from the Nyanya bomb blast yesterday at over 400, even as several others were injured and several vehicles destroyed.
An eyewitness who was on ground around 6:45am when the bomb exploded, explained that several of the victims that were in the Abuja Urban Mass Transit Company (AUMTCO) that were about 15 within the cordoned area, were students, traveling to Gwagwalada to write their SSCE exams.
Scores of vehicles were completely burnt, with no traces of the
occupants, who were burnt beyond recognition.
As at time of filing this report, the identity of the mastermind was
yet to be known, but eyewitnesses said that the car that was used for
the attack was a golf 2, with Lagos State registration number plates.
Early sympathisers who visited the scene include President Goodluck
Jonathan, accompanied by top security chiefs.
Leadership

Abuja blast: Jonathan vows to end insurgency

Abuja blast: Jonathan vows to end insurgency

President Jonathan looked at one of the blast victims during his visit to the Asokoro General Hospital on Monday.

by: Augustine Ehikioya, Abuja

President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday vowed to do everything possible to end insurgency in the country.
The President spoke while being conducted round the scene of the Abuja motor park blast on Monday morning.
He maintained that the issue of Boko Haram is temporary and that Nigeria will overcome it.
Jonathan, who was accompanied to the scene by the Senate President, David Mark, Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Adamu Muazu, National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, condoled with the families of those who lost their lives and ordered best medical services to be given to the injured.
He also ordered tight security around the city. From the scene, Jonathan also visited some of the victims hospitalized at the Asokoro General Hospital, Abuja. He was conducted round the emergency wards of the hospital by the Chief Medical Director, Dr. Abubakar Adamu.
At the scene of the blast, he said: “You can see that I’m here with the Senate President, David Mark and Chairman of PDP, Ministers, CDS and service chiefs, and all other very senior government functionaries. Let us collectively express our condolences to the families of those who suffered directly on the incident.”
“I am also commending security services for their prompt action. Though we lost quite a number of people, we condole our countrymen and women. We will continue to work very hard.”
“The issue of Boko Haram is temporary. Government is doing everything to make sure that we move our country forward in spite of all the distractions that want to take us backward. We promise that we will get over it.” He went on:
“We also want to use this unique opportunity to plead with the media and our great men and women, to come up with enlightenment programme for our people. Those countries that face terror they have developed great awareness. If there are unusual movement of vehicles and bags, they called security and base on this a lot of incidences are contained.”
“So we believe that if people will become observant and all of us become security conscious by the movement of people, we will be able to reduce some of these incidences.” “We will do our best, the security services will continue to work very hard, God willing we will get over it. The issue of Boko Haram is temporary surely we will get over it.”
TheNation

How Archbishop Idahosa died – Wife


Church of God Mission International Incorporated died and left his wife,
Margaret Idahosa and four children behind.
Here, the wife and the first female Pentecostal Archbishop in Africa recounts the last moments of her husband and how she had coped with bereavement. Excerpts…
You once said you thought you were finished when your husband died. How exactly did you mean?
I knew late Archbishop Benson Idahosa when I was young and we were friends for eight years before we got married. He was not only my husband, he was my brother, my friend and a confidant. In addition to these, he was my bishop and archbishop.
Archbishop Margaret Benson-Idahosa
When he died I was in a confused state and honestly I didn’t know where to begin and what the future held for me. I thought to myself after the burial I would
just recline to myself.
By then my children were all abroad and I said I would be staying with them one after the other and then come over to Benin to see how the ministry was being run. But God who knows the heart of man directed my path to where I am today.
When my husband was alive I was with him and the best I could do was to encourage him and pray for him. I was a great supporter of his vision. So when he died I just wanted to remain in my cocoon. But God had a different plan for me.
You were 55 years when he died. How easy was it for church members to accept you then?
As a matter of fact when I was called the day I was ordained a bishop; I thought they called me just to pray for me. I came out and the archbishop who ordained me said he did not confer with flesh and blood but that the Holy Spirit had directed him to ordain me as a bishop.
When he made that declaration there was a thunderous response from the audience. Before then I must confess that my mind was not in ministry. But to my greatest surprise there was a great acceptance of the ordination.
Honestly, I was not looking forward to it and after a while I had to pray and God spoke to me and said He had called me and He would give me the enablement and the strength to do the task that has been set before me.
And I said okay; God it is a deal. And I said let us try. If I’m successful fine and if I do not then God would understand. Before my husband’s funeral ceremony, God has spoken with a lot of people about who succeeds him.
I recall that when my husband was alive he used to travel a lot and there were times he took people out for lunch in some of the countries he went to and those people were used to asking him questions.
One of the questions by one of his friends was whether he was preparing somebody to take over from him and he said he was not preparing anybody because the anointing breaks the yoke and that anybody who had the anointing would definitely be put in place. But he said I think my wife will fit into my shoes.
Somebody brought the video and we watched it. There was a general acceptance of my person when I was ordained and God has been helping us in the ministry.
What were the things that you did to equip yourself with the task ahead?
What I did was to give the ministry’s constitution to men with experience. I wanted them to help me interpret it because people were giving different interpretations and when they did it I was comfortable that I was not usurping anybody’s position.
And I called all the pastors of the church and said, “Our Daddy has gone, do we want this ministry to go on or it should die with him and majority of them said they wanted the ministry to go on. That was how we started working.
What were the initial challenges concerning the issue of remarriage when your husband died?
There were challenges in this area and I told God that I wanted him to direct my affairs and my life. And I think God heard and He gave me the ability to do what I’m doing now.
I had a husband and I enjoyed him and I think there was nobody else that could match up to him. I told God that I want Him to take the desire for another man from me. I never wanted to think about remarriage. God gave me so much to do that after a hard day’s work I just go to bed and sleep. I don’t have a desire to marry. To be married to who?
Let us look back to the time you married your late husband. Was he already in ministry when you met him?
I met him already called into the ministry. There was a book he wrote called, Fire in his bones. Everything about his life is in that book. And those are the things I know about him. And he kept saying to me that I should focus my attention on God.
He said when he gave his life to Christ a lot of things happened and that God showed him some visions. In one of the visions God showed him a big dry tree with branches that had no leaves but it had branches and God put him under the tree.
When he lifted up his eyes he saw an old woman carrying a huge load and he got up from under the tree to help that woman to where she was going and there was a tiny leaf on the tree after he had rendered the help and he opened his eyes.
He saw another person and he helped the person and there was another leaf on the tree. The more he helped, the more the tree had leaves. And God told him that the more he helped people the more he will get protection and shade.
Benin is said to be a peculiar place. What does it take being in ministry here?
When you are called of God, He gives you the boldness you need to withstand anything. When God called him, for 14 days he went round Benin City praying and asking God to take the city for the gospel.
Benin was so bad that if a native doctor told you that you would die by 2 o’clock there is nothing you can do about it except you run to Christ because that thing will surely happen.
When my husband finished the 14 days marathon prayer round the city he started a small fellowship with students all over the place. What were his dreams that he could not accomplish before he died?
I don’t think there was anything he wanted to do that he didn’t do. He died in March. In February he called me and said, ‘Margaret, I think I have done everything God had asked me to do’.
And I said it is because we were still in February and that because he had not traveled. I said he needed to travel and if he did that he would come back with a fresh idea. And he said he would travel in March and that he would be by himself and will not interact with anybody. I was abroad when he died.
I was planning to travel that night to Nigeria when the report came that he had gone home. That, to me was a great shock. Before he died, he had preached a message titled The benefit of death and he preached so hard and made death so useless. He made it clear to us that he had finished the work God gave him in that message.
He is referred to as father of Pentecostalism in Nigeria. What do you make of what is going on in PFN now?
When he came on the scene, ministry work was not a joke. It was hard. It was difficult. Even the orthodox churches waged war but he stood his ground.
He cleared the land for all of us. Many years ago it was a taboo for women to hold the microphone not to talk of preaching in the church but he encouraged us to move in the spirit of God. He encouraged us to preach and do the work.
That was the last message he preached to the women. He preached also at the Bible School before he went to lunch with a team from Oral Roberts University.
He gave instruction to all the members of the team and they were all glued to him! After a while a gentle breeze was blowing and everybody set their gaze on him.
He was saying thank you Jesus and those on the table thought he was praying and they all closed their eyes and started saying thank you Jesus along with him but suddenly they did not hear anything again and one of the team members opened his eyes and found out that archbishop was gone.
They tried all they could to revive him but he was gone. He was not sick. He never had high blood pressure. He was never down. Each time we came back from foreign trips doctors were always there to take our blood pressure. I was the one that was the sick once. Even the doctors were surprised that he died because he was not sick at all.
How did the children receive the news?
All the children were in school when he died. I was in America and the children were in London. One of our friends told our eldest child that I was on the way to meet him.
We met and we held hands and cried at the airport in London. We didn’t mind who was looking at us. My first daughter was in law school in Britain then.
I called her and said she should tell her lecturer that her father had just died and that she should come. My two daughters in America also had to come and they all cried. I believe everything that God asked him to do he did. He said he had done all what God wanted him to do.
How do you feel being the first ordained female archbishop in Africa?
I don’t know how it came. For many years I belong to different Christian bodies but in the last 10 years I have been functioning in the position of archbishop and the bodies that I belong to said it was time to recognize me.
I don’t feel any difference but I feel the responsibility. And I have asked God to give me the ability to perform and do what I’m called to do and see and hear the hurt of those around me.

DjbudeteeWorldChronicles

Allegations of Fraud: EFCC tackles Akoko-Edo LG Boss


By Victor Uwagor
 
Officials of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, have stepped into the allegations of fraudulent government transactions and alleged looting of council funds, following the petition of a former Supervisory Councillor in Akoko-Edo Local Government Council, Hon. Samuel Oyewole, against incumbent Council Boss, Hon. Folorunsho Akerejola.
            The fraud-bursting officials of the Commission were responding to a petition by counsels to the petitioner, Ray I.D. Okezie & Co., dated 30th September, 2013, a copy of which was made available to The Navigator, in which the council boss was alleged to have, among other things, misappropriated the total sum of N726million being total summary of statutory revenue to the Akoko-Edo Local Government Council, for the months of May – August, 2013.
            The petitioner, while crying blue murder over a majority of the items of expenditure undertaken by the council administration, further alleged that “the roads claimed to have been graded and filled in Agbanishimu, Akpama, Omumu, Ogugu Ayauza, and Ibillo, an 18km stretch for N16million, are non-existent and no grading of roads or filling of same has taken place in the communities mentioned.”
            The petitioner averred that their client, Hon. Samuel Oyewole had evidence of facts to prove the council chairman’s claims wrong that the council built a 3-classroom block and a headmaster’s office at Okuma Primary School, Ogugu, for N9.6million and the construction of 2 units of open market at Ososo, without toilets or any other facility, could not have been built with N5million.
               Other items of alleged fraudulent questioning listed in the petition, include the council chairman’s claims of spending N6million to clear refuse dump at Ibillo Ekpesa Community and accumulated cow dung at Ibillo and Igarra abattoir; organizing football competition for male and female for N4million; purchase of two metal doors at the council for N121,500; procuring of 110 units of DEKA Bench for various Primary schools in the locality for N1.9; A maternal labour and child health week, which petitioner argued never took place, for N2.8million; provision of logistics to organize a cultural festival, which petitioner claimed was never held, for N4.5million. 
All these claims, apart from being frivolous, according to the petitioner, were never retired, several weeks after 31st August, 2013 as required by the Civil Service Rules of Edo State.
            The petitioner, Hon. Samuel Oyewole, who spoke with newsmen, shortly after the inspection of projects by the officials of the EFCC, maintained that he was moved by the grandiose magnitude of the alleged fraudulent acts to write the petition, insisting that his action was not out of malice, but a social responsibility to curtail corruption and sound as a wake up call on public office holders to invest government allotted funds for the development and wellbeing of the people.
            He, however, lamented the uncomplimentary role played by the Edo State House of Assembly, in promptly investigating the issues raised, even after he submitted the petition to the House in September, 2013.  Hon. Oyewole, described as “empty boast” the alleged claims of the council chairman that he was unperturbed by the EFCC’s investigation as, according to him, the state government would stand by him. The petitioner noted that the Comrade Governor was a prudent and development-driven governor who has zero-tolerance for misappropriate of public funds.
            He, therefore, enjoined the Edo State House of Assembly to work in tandem with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, to investigate and establish the truth in the petition. 

TheNavigator 

Haven’t we allowed government to fool us enough?

The Pendulum

By O’Ray Osawe
 
It is almost a curse; but it sounds more like an uninterrupted statement of fact; a declaration that comes right from within, that nothing, absolutely nothing, can be done to change the situation.
Nigerians have been suffering untold hardship, prompted by unwholesome government policies, manifesting in the sorry socio-political and economic backwaters we have found ourselves.
Social infrastructures, where they exist at all, are in terribly neglected conditions; graduate unemployment continues to yearly quadruple, giving the ludicrous impression that we do not have need of them any long. This is because, as a result of their presence and the nation’s inability to productively engage them, we have had to face all sorts of debilitating criminal activities, including armed-robbery, drug, human trafficking, and only recently kidnapping.
It is a truism that we, as a nation, have a preponderance of almost everything, from human resources to mineral resources. Recently, we have become so divinely blessed with prostitutes that they have become exportable commodities for marketing abroad!
Hope has no meaning to us again because the present conditions that ravage us, without mercy, have promptly beclouded our vision of the future. Those in government, that are supposed to come to our aid, have willingly turned their back on us, regaling themselves in corruption and debasing the sanctity of a national constitution that is believed to have spelt out the way and manner we should have been properly governed.
In essence, government has become an added problem, a vice that continues to assail the consciousness of Nigerians. It has become an intimidating incubus that has continued to oppress and keep us in the enveloping darkness of all manners of criminality against humanity. Government, which is supposed to be the representative of the people in the use of our commonwealth for the progress and happiness of our country and people, has become our number one enemy.
Our roads, especially our highways, have become death traps. Nigerians have lost count of the numerous quality lives that have been lost through road mishaps that ordinarily could have been prevented by putting such roads in order. Our educational and health institutions have continued in their mere existence as government’s negligence has ravaged their very souls. Understandably, children of those in government do not patronize any of these mere institutions that are left to exist as relics of what should have been government’s responsibility.
However, the greatest of all of these problems bisecting us today in this country is we, ourselves. We are our greatest enemies. Someone once said that the problem of man is man himself. Man needs to cure himself; the society, from among which these reckless leaders of today emanate, must sanitize itself, heal itself and chart an endearing course for itself. The sin we have committed against ourselves is that of ignorance and a non-recognition of the potent powers we have in our grip, that sovereign powers reside with the people and not with their leaders, who have clearly missed their political calling.
Whenever it is time for Nigerians to elect their new set of leaders at the different tiers of government, the politicians would begin to cook their poisonous concoctions to dazzle the public with. They then would begin to run, from pillar to post, begging for votes. Funny, and ignorantly enough, Nigerians would be waiting for these politicians to beg them to register to vote. A majority of Nigerians would shun INEC’s Voters’ registration centres, thereby allowing politicians to hijack the process.  The politicians would then take it upon themselves to house, feed and fend for INEC registration officials. What do we expect from all of these? Right from day one, INEC would have, by this, compromised its reputation and aloofness. The onus would then be on INEC to do their bidding when the voting and election proper come. 
Nigerians are starkly ignorant because we have failed to know our rights, and recognize the fact that our fumbling leaders are, in truth, our servants, who are supposed to be told what we want, and they would be compelled to do our bidding. Should they fail in that regard, we are at liberty to get them kicked out of public office promptly. This is the naked truth we have, so far, failed to realize.
Rather, and most abjectly, we see today’s leaders as masters, instead of the looters and plunderers that they are. We fret when they dehumanize us; we get apathetic where issues and matters of government are concerned, erroneously holding the view that they do not concern us.  For this apathy and detachment, we have continued to suffer, and we will continue to suffer more stringent privations, if we continue to refuse to know, and act in consonance with our exclusive rights to sovereign powers and self determination.
It was Fela Anikulapo Kuti, that Late Afrobeat King with caustic lyrics for our oppressive leaders, who once sang: “policeman go slap you, you no go talk. Army man go whip your yansh, you go do like zombie!” This is the reality of our situation, so much so that when a gang of government-backed exploiters, in the name of whatever committee, would harass us unlawfully, we cower in fear and timidity. Absolutely preposterous!
There is the urgent need for us to begin to express the knowledge of our rights. To speak out against the ills perpetrated by an irresponsible government, which we should not allow to stay in office a day longer than when our confidence in them expires! In advanced, more civilized and knowledgeable societies, the people, who know their rights, do not even have the patience to wait for another election time before demanding, and securing, the exit of reckless and irresponsible government functionaries. That aptly demonstrates the possession of the peoples’ sovereign powers. The tenure of government functionaries should be determined by the collective grace of the people, who would gauge the relevance of the public officers with their (the peoples’) collective wellbeing.
It is high time we realized this fact and act in its consonance. Otherwise, this ignorance of ours would continue to cow us, and one day soon, would transform us into dummies. Haven’t you heard it said, that the rich masters once submitted all they had got to their slaves, and the slaves later turned around to chastise them with whips and scorpions? It is the pathetic tale of the Nigerian people in relation to the kind of government we have allowed to preside over us all these years.

TheNavigator


Edo APC Ward Congresses: Who is lying to Edo People? *Oshiomhole, Odubu or Compol?

 
By Ken Edokpayi
 
The much expected ward congresses of the All Progressives Congress, APC, across the state may have come and gone, but it was obviously one exercise that left soured taste in the mouths of quite a number of party leaders and members.
            The reasons for this sad tale are not far-fetched: there was a complete abandonment of the rationalizing principles of internal democracy and fair-play, coupled with an amazing theatrical enthronement of thuggery, back-biting, witch-hunting and the absence of due process.
            Almost in all the wards across the state, the congress exercises, meant to elect the party officials at the ward levels, were characterized by glaring, deliberate irregularities, which further brought to the fore, and escalated the sectional interests of the different contending factions in the party.  Expressions of violent disagreements as a result of calculated disenfranchisement of bonafide members of the party by these contending forces, to freely and willingly choose their preferred officials, defined the order of the day.  These were further heightened by sporadic firing of tear-gas that later degenerated into staccato gunshots that scared away scores of party members from the venues of congresses, and with quite some others going away with different degrees of injuries.
With these scenarios playing out in several other locations across the state, especially in Edo South senatorial districts, Edo people woke up the next day to unbelievable commendations of the exercise by some high ranking party leaders in the state, including the State Governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole and his Deputy, Dr. Pius Odubu, who said the congresses held across the state were peaceful and orderly!  What is more, the State Police Commissioner, Mr. Foluso Adebanjo also surprisingly labeled the congresses as free and peaceful across the state, underscoring the seeming, vicious connivance of a section of the APC party leadership and membership to fool Edo people and subject them to ridicule.  Pray, tell me, would the Commissioner of police in the state classify the gun-shots that rented the air in several of the congress centres across the state fireworks to celebrate the peaceful congresses?  This, truly, is sacrilegious.
However, as if to indict these people that they were lying brazenly, the APC leadership, rising from a hurriedly scheduled damage-control stakeholders’ meeting on Wednesday, 9th April, 2014, said, in a press statement signed by its Interim State Publicity Secretary, Comrade Godwin Erhahon, that congresses held in Edo South senatorial district be cancelled and that Saturday the 12th of April had been fixed for rescheduled congresses in the seven Edo South local government areas of Oredo, Ikpoba-Okha, Egor, Ovia North East, Ovia South West, Orhionmwon and Uhunmwode.  This he maintained was sequel to the complaints and protests by the various contending factions.
In the Edo Central senatorial district, the congresses were relatively peaceful, as the contending interests may have properly harmonized before the Tuesday ratification day.  A former Transition Committee Chairman in Esan North East, Mr. Anslem Adima, described the congress in the locality as 95% successful and peaceful, urging those who lost out in the position grabbing, to align with others who won to move the party forward in the senatorial district.  However, a former youth leader of the APC in Uromi, who simply gave his name as Ebosele, said the congresses were not free and fair, and insisted that the aggrieved APC members were likely to find their ways back to the PDP, which he said “are now effectively practicing internal democracy.”
            Meanwhile, on Thursday, 10th April, 2014, some protesting members of the APC in the Edo South senatorial districts gathered at the Oba Ovoranmwen Square, at the gate of the Edo State House of Assembly, specifically, to register their displeasure at the decision of the party leadership to cancel congresses held in Edo South senatorial district. 
The irate party members, brandishing banners with various inscriptions chanted “we no go gree o, we no go gree!” in obvious disenchantment at the cancelled congresses.  The crowd had to disperse as it became obvious that the leadership of the House were equally locked up in another damage-control meeting at another location in the state capital.
In the interim, as expected by political watchers in the state, the leadership of the APC has fingered the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, as responsible for its woes and inability to conduct a free, fair and peaceful congress across the state.  Interim State Publicity Secretary, Comrade Godwin Erhahon, noted in the party’s recent press release that the APC was aware of attempts by the PDP to infiltrate its ranks through the congress.
Read part of the press release: “The APC is particularly monitoring PDP bargain with one of its faction in Edo South, whose leader PDP has promised Senatorial ticket for himself, UBTH Chief Medical Director for his wife and lucrative role in Jonathan/Sambo Campaign Organization under which some of his supporters have been shortlisted for different assignments, if the outcome of the congress does not favour his governorship ambition in APC,” insisting that all the premature press statements issued by some of the APC protesters, to disparage and blackmail the party, even before they complained formally to the authority, were part of the grand plot to bring down APC for PDP.
Erhahon noted that the allegation that the State Congress Committee from Abuja, appointed ward congress committees from supporters of one faction only, was equally part of the destabilization agenda “because all APC stakeholders, including those who are now complaining, unanimously mandated the committee to pick names randomly from list of ad-hoc staff who performed APC membership registration exercise in February.”
Meanwhile, it would be recalled that even the membership registration exercise of the APC in February 2014, was yet another sore point in the life of the fledgling party in the state, as accusations and counter-accusations equally characterized the exercise.
The contending issues during the  membership registration exercise and the ward congresses have always been the violent clashes of interests between party forces loyal to the State Governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, and others loyal to Pastor (Barrister) Osagie Ize-Iyamu-led faction.
            It had earlier been speculated by political watchers that the registration exercise would be as tension-soaked as well as it would be crisis-ridden, because long before the exercise, and especially in anticipation of the party congresses and primaries later in the year, the Edo APC had been factionalized along the Oshiomhole, Ize-Iyamu and Odubu lines.
            Said a political commentator, Mr. Sunny Ighede, in a chat with The Navigator, shortly before the membership registration exercise, in February, “the crisis that has consumed the state APC today was long expected. As an out-going governor, Comrade Oshiomhole is hell-bent on nominating and anointing his successor, irrespective of what other party leaders would say.  From his actions all this while, especially after the first two years of his first tenure, Oshiomhole became somewhat of a dictator, trying and succeeding in imposing his will, thoughts and body-language on all and sundry in the party.  Soon, it became very clear that he wanted to anoint a successor, which unfortunately was not anyone amongst those very many of the party leaders and members were suspecting. 
“At a time, the Deputy Governor, Pius Odubu, could no longer hide his dreams to succeed Oshiomhole; that dream was natural, at least a Deputy trying to take over from his former boss, is healthy thinking.  Then also was Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu, a powerful and influential leader in the party, who had been nursing the gubernatorial ambition long before the arrival of Comrade Oshiomhole on the platform of the then Action Congress. 
“So, before the commencement of the membership registration exercise, these three forces and personalities were expected to play highly decisive and crucial roles.    So, the tension, crisis and violence, really, did not come to me as a surprise.”
Mr. Ighede traced the crisis to the “selfish” fight over what he called “the ownership of the political structure.  “Every politician,” he noted, “who feels he is a leader who should be calling the shots, should establish, control and fund his own structure, men, women and youths who would answer him night or day.  Granted in 2007, Oshiomhole practically had no political structure in the Action Congress, which he crossed to from the Labour Party.  He took part in the AC congress that threw him up as the gubernatorial candidate of the party, merely two weeks to the congress in a party, where Matthew Atamah, Kenneth Imazuagbon and Charles Idahosa, had established and firmed up their supporters.  Without mincing words, Pastor Ize-Iyamu, who effectively called the shots in the AC party then, availed Oshiomhole the opportunity of using his own (Ize-Iyamu’s) structure.  I do remember that that was how Oshiomhole emerged the gubernatorial candidate of the AC at that time.”
Mr. Ighede opined that Oshiomhole may have had to contend with so many other issues, one of which was probably the dearth of key, loyal members, whom he could influence to deliver his candidates at the congress and primaries, where these members would be the authorizing delegates.
In his words, “This reasoning actually fuelled the desperation to appropriate members to himself by all means, including fraudulent ones, to out-scheme other contending influences and leaders in the party.  It explained why, for instance, at the same registration centre, there would be two canopies: one for his own supporters and the other for supporters of Ize-Iyamu!  It even got to a point where thugs of both divides unleashed violence on themselves, with some reportedly engaging in a shooting spree right there at the governor’s office when the atmosphere became too charged.  We saw cases of membership cards’ booklets, which were supposed to contain a hundred membership cards, reduced to 40 and in some cases 30 for a unit! Obviously some persons had yanked off some of these booklets before bringing them to the registration centres; this could only mean fraud in capital letters.”
            In his own interview with The Navigator, a Benin-based social critic, Mr. Pius Igiehon, lashed at Gov. Oshiomhole for “his obvious hypocrisy and anti-democratic antics” insisting that as the leader of the party in the state, “a party that prides itself as different from others,” he was supposed to ensure that “things went well, fairly and appropriately.  In fact, right now, he should be ashamed that his leadership in the state could not conduct a simple membership registration of his political party.  If he could not supervise an exercise, supposedly as simple as that, what temerity has he to venture into criticizing the INEC over election time-table?”
            He noted that what the crisis-ridden membership registration exercise and party ward congresses had shown was “a deliberate unpreparedness of the Oshiomhole-led leadership of the APC in the state to depart from the odious path and mistakes of past political alliances, and forge the expected change needed to emancipate our people from the apron string of political jobbers and corrupt leadership.  This failed membership registration exercise has taken the APC back to the starting block, where we would begin to ask questions about the readiness of the alliance to bring about the change it mouths.”
            Igiehon explained further, “To identify members of a political party, there is need for documentation. Documentation of members of a political party is the simplest exercise any party can carry out.  Therefore, membership registration is a responsibility a party can exercise.  The All Progressives Congress, APC, is a party that says it wants to bring about change.  It is surprising to note that the just concluded registration exercise of the party in Edo State is a huge disappointment, particularly in Oredo local government area, where you have a Comrade Governor.”
            While maintaining that since the inception of his government, Comrade Oshiomhole had always professed democracy and the rule of law.  “The party’s membership registration exercise and the ward congresses,” Igiehon remarked, “was another opportunity that presented itself for the governor to make amends to several other anti-democratic antics held against his name and person in the past; but yet again he failed to utilize the chance, preferring instead to exhibit his uncouth, anti-democratic whims.  It is a huge disappointment.   How can he explain a ward congress exercise which equally ended in gun-shooting and scores of injuries to party members? ”

TheNavigator

Abuja Explosions: A cruel act of merciless slaughter - ‪#‎Buhari‬


The Nigerian former Head of state
and APC National Leader, General
Muhammadu Buhari has discribed
that early Monday morning Bomb
attacks in the FCT, Abuja as a cruel
act of merciless killings of innocent
Nigerians by the perpetrators
Buhari said: "The attack today at Nyanya
was horrific, heartbreaking, and a cruel
act of merciless slaughter. My thoughts
and prayers are with the families of those
who lost their lives. I also pray and hope
for the full and speedy recovery of those
wounded."
"My heart breaks every time I take to this
platform to offer condolences in this
tormenting season of seemingly endless
violence. I understand that it is difficult
for the government to prevent every
terrorist attack, but we can always do
more to protect our defenseless citizens
by boosting our intelligence and counter
terrorism capabilities."
"Words alone cannot express the full
solemnity of our grief. We can only honor
the memories of our country men and
women by winning this war against
terrorism and bringing to justice the
perpetrators of those dastardly acts."
APC National Leader said, "The security
and stability of Nigeria is inviolable. No
individual or group can hold the security
and stability of this country to ransom.
Our security and stability cannot be
conditioned on any ideology or partisan
agenda. Every Nigerian reserves the right
to his own security, to his own freedom
and dignity, and no amount of terrorist
blackmail can make us surrender these."
"May God unite our hearts as we
confront this evil," he concluded.