Chief Edwin Kiagbodo Clark, Ijaw leader, is the
convener of the South-South Peoples Assembly and co-convener of the Southern
Nigeria Peoples Assembly, SNPA.
In this interview, the former Federal Commissioner
for Information and senator bares his mind on the general elections slated for
March 28 and April 11, why Nigerians must vote for President Goodluck Jonathan,
INEC and its National Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, how Senator Ifeanyi Okowa
emerged as the PDP governorship candidate for Delta State, among other national
issues.
EXCERPTS:
2015
elections have been fixed for March 28 and April 11 respectively. How prepared
are we as Nigerians?
This
question should be taken in two parts. How prepared is INEC? How prepared are
the people of Nigeria? Well, I think Nigerians are prepared for the elections
if all the materials are provided by INEC. A situation whereby we do not have
PVCs for about 23million Nigerians particularly in Lagos and other places, that
is not good enough.
INEC
has made it difficult for people to have voter cards. They are discriminating
against certain areas where they think Jonathan has support.
How
do you describe a situation whereby Lagos State, the most sophisticated and
educated state in this country, has not been able to secure up to 50% of voter
cards compared to Borno, a war ravaged area where the people have left their
homes and non-indigenes have deserted but which has 80% voter cards? Let INEC
explain that situation.
That
is the reason the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly, SNPA , addressed a press
conference to let the world know that at a meeting between some INEC officials
and northern leaders, they decided that where Jonathan has strong base, they
should be very strict in registering people.
And
we alleged at that conference that some northern leaders collected money from
some governors who parted with N167,000,000 and that has helped the northern
leaders to secure 150 laptops for each state of the North. They gave them to
some INEC officials to use to have double registration, to increase the
registration in the North. Why did Jega not allow similar things to happen in
the South?
But
apart from these irregularities, in the PVCs distribution, INEC is not ready
for the polls. For instance, producing the PVCs, INEC awarded the contract to a
local contractor from Kano and they decided to produce this material in Abuja.
We have the video, the photographs of that mini-factory, where they were
producing the PVCs.
But
when they couldn’t cope, they decided to contract it out to a company in China.
And, as we are talking, some of the PVCs have not arrived. Some arrived Lagos
sea port two weeks ago. So what we are saying is that Jega was not ready; one,
he has not been able to start the training of about 700,000 ad- hoc staff all
over the country. If he has started in some places, majority of the areas have
not been covered.
And
having regard to the technology involved in PVC, the card readers are not
ready. The few that are ready have manufacturing defect, some of them are not
functioning and they have not been tested to see whether they can do the job
for which they were acquired.
So
against the back drop of all these, what do you suggest?
The
elections would be held.
What
about Jega?
Jega
should go. We believe he should go not only because of inefficiency; we believe
he is working with some northern leaders to declare a northern presidential
candidate the winner of the March 28 election, that’s Buhari. And to do that,
he is not thinking about the success of the election of that day. If there is
confusion, he will still declare Buhari the winner and say any aggrieved person
should go to court.
The
northern leaders are alleged to have boasted that they had set up a committee
to liaise with the judiciary, northern judges in order to give them favourable
judgment. And they have employed 34 lawyers 14 of which are Senior Advocates of
Nigeria, SAN. In fact, they have started going to court. So everything we said
in our press conference has come to pass. They have started taking Jonathan to
court that he is not qualified. The number of SANs prosecuting that case shows
clearly that it is no ordinary person that took President Jonathan to court. It
is being done between the APC and the northern leaders.
After
the press conference by the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly, what next ?
Jega
is not indispensable, he is just first among equals. There are about 13
national commissioners in INEC. If Jega has lost the people’s confidence to
conduct election, any one of the others can be made to act to oversee the
elections on March 28 and April 11. We are not running away from the elections
despite all the intrigues.
Even
if President Goodluck Jonathan who appointed him refuses to remove him, the
elections should still hold?
They
should hold. We will watch him.
And
you will believe him?
We
will not believe him, but we will see what will happen. If we say without Jega
the elections would not hold, they will say we want elongation of tenure which
Jonathan is not contemplating. But we have asked that he should go.
And
if the President does not want to remove him, he should have the honour and
feeling that he is no longer wanted by the people of Nigeria to conduct free,
fair and credible elections.
We
have the APC presidential candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, and the PDP presidential
candidate, President Goodluck Jonathan. How which has become international.
There
are comments from some quarters that some supporters of President Jonathan are
overheating the polity with threats and, for this reason, a former Minister of
Defence, General Theophilous Danjuma, called for the arrest of Tompolo,
Dokubo-Asari, among others. What is your perspective?
My
comment is very simple. It is true that anybody who makes a statement to
threaten the very existence of our country should be condemned. I have always
maintained this statement.
More
than a year now, when Kingsley Kuku, Special Adviser to Mr President, and
Dokubo Asari were alleged to have made such statements, the House of
Representatives passed a motion that these two men should be arrested by the
Inspector General of Police and tried. There was nothing wrong about that
motion.
But
what I said is that it should be total, don’t be selective. Others in the North
have made similar statements. Lawal Kaita said there will be no Nigeria if
there is no northern president in 2015 and somebody who said that he would
declare war, which of the statements is stronger?
If
you declare war like the Biafran war and Nigeria is fighting, Nigeria will
still be there. But if you say there will be no Nigeria if a northern president
is not installed in 2015, which statement is stronger? Buhari himself said that
if a northern president is not elected, Nigeria will become Somalia. Others
said they will make Nigeria ungovernable for Jonathan, Atiku said so.
All
I am saying is that anybody who has made such statements, be he a minister, be
he an ordinary man, he should be arrested and tried. Don’t say only
Dokubo-Asari, Kingsley Kuku and Tompolo should be tried. When you make
provocative statements and there is a reaction to such provocative statements,
people should not be selective.
All
I said, I have high respect for T.Y. Danjuma, he is one of the persons who have
been helping this government. But it was not fair for him to refer to these two
people alone, when he knows that some of the utterances of his colleagues and
northerners who have been governors, ministers, vice presidents were equally
provocative.
Last
month, you called on the PDP to expel former President Olusegun Obasanjo but
the party did not heed your advice. Now he has dumped the party by tearing his
membership card. How do you react to this development?
You
asked me earlier whether some of the party leaders surrounding Jonathan are not
contributing to some of the problems that people alleged have been committed
and I said yes. Some of them were with Obasanjo, past governors; some ministers
who were appointed by Obasanjo during his tenure see nothing wrong with
Obasanjo. They continue to beg him when they know that the man has taken a
position against the PDP. When people like us criticize Obasanjo, they say we
are controversial, that we heat up the polity.
Today,
Obasanjo has told them; he did not only dump them, he told the public, ‘here is
your membership, take it’, and he tore it into pieces. Is that action normal?
But it is now clear to the PDP men, leaders who were protecting Obasanjo when I
called that he should be expelled. They said that there was no reason for me to
say that. But now it has happened, it is now clear.
As
far as I am concerned, Obasanjo has been engaging in anti-party activities and
should have been expelled since then. Immediately he resigned the chairmanship
of the BoT, he engaged in anti-party issues.
Will
his leaving affect the PDP?
It
will not. The man, even in his ward, PDP could not win election in 2011. Nobody
takes notice of him politically in Ogun State not to talk of Nigeria. In fact,
his going will strengthen the party.
In
Delta State, before the primaries, we were hearing of endorsement of Obuh,
Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan was going to the Senate to replace Senator James
Manager, in fact, Okowa was not in the reckoning. But at the end of the day,
the governor dropped his senatorial ambition, Obuh did not get it, Sen. Ifeanyi
Okowa is now the PDP candidate. As a father, what role did you play?
As
a father, I contributed to the peaceful primary elections that took place in
Delta. When the governor was said to be supporting Obuh, on two occasions, I
invited him and he said he was not supporting Obuh. Yet he was the one
providing everything for Obuh. I asked him, ‘I learnt Obuh has been your
Permanent Secretary for the past 10years’, he said yes. ‘But it is not fair for
you to push aside all the politicians, some of them were Obuh’s bosses when
they were commissioners. It is not fair for you to do that, Obuh is not a
politician’; he continued to say no, he was not. Until the last two days, to
the primaries he came to me to accept that he was the one promoting Obuh, but I
said ‘we cannot take Obuh’.
The
next thing he did was that he went home, met with the Urhobo Progressive Union,
UPU, to present a candidate and he told me personally that the candidate they
produced was Mr David Edevbie. That after he went to the northern senatorial
zone which refused to take Obuh, he decided to move down, that was why he asked
for an Urhobo candidate. And he thought it should be Mr David Edevbie , who was
James Ibori’s Commissioner for Finance, he was Ibori’s nominee to Umaru
Yar’Adua’s cabinet as Principal Secretary.
So
when we saw that the governor had left Obuh and he was now trying to divide the
place by going to take a candidate that we were not expecting, I decided to
team up with Okowa because we had agreed that the governorship should go to the
north senatorial zone to give everybody a fair opportunity. That is why I
supported Okowa. But we have now settled.
All
the governorship aspirants at the time have now taken it that way and they are
working together, except some that have gone to contest elections as senatorial
candidates in other parties. Otherwise everything went very well.
But
I must comment on one thing, Uduaghan was responsible for the peaceful and
democratically conducted primary. He phoned me that every aspirant was going to
get his ward or his local government and there was not going to be a winner
takes all. Every aspirant was given the opportunity to retain his ward and his
local government and, for that, I must commend him.
Nigerians
are going to the polls; Nigerians will decide on March 28, that is the main
election. What message do you have for Nigerians especially against the back
drop of the peace accord signed by the presidential candidates. And even after
the peace accord, we have been having some cases of attacks especially on the
convoy of Mr President. What message do you have for Nigerians, for the
parties, for the two parties, the presidential candidates? And is Jonathan
winning the election?
Jonathan
will triumph, he will sail through based on his record of performance,
achievements. Jonathan has the qualities, he has performed, he has built
schools, built universities which nobody else did. The number of federal
universities established by Jonathan surpassed the number of federal universities
established by all the rulers of this country since 1960 put together.
The
railway was abandoned throughout the period. People no longer travel by rail.
In the past, when I was the commissioner, I used to follow my governor
travelling by rail to Gusau in Zamfara State, to Maiduguri, to Kano. But it is
Jonathan who has now refurbished and re-established the railway lines and
people are now travelling.
Agriculture,
today, fertiliser is supplied at a cheap rate, no middlemen again. Farmers now
get fertilizer at very cheap price.
On
power, people may say Jonathan has not improved in the generation, that is not
true. After Obasanjo had spent billions of Naira to resuscitate the power
sector and failed, Jonathan had a master plan and he was able to privatize what
we used to call NEPA and various companies took up the distribution and
generation of power.
No
government had the courage to privatize the power sector in this country. Give
him some time, but people are very impatient. I believe these companies will
perform and government continues to seek foreign assistance for power to
improve.
If
you are talking about corruption, we have looked into records, statistics;
there are more conviction of corrupt persons in Jonathan’s government than they
were in previous governments, including Obasanjo’s government. It is not enough
to say ‘I will detain you, I will do this’, perhaps corruption has now taken a
turn for the worse and you need new ways to fight corruption and Jonathan is
doing it.
So
I believe Nigerians should be patient, they should assess the various
candidates who have done what for Nigeria, what does that person offer for
Nigeria? And my advice to the voters is that they should not vote on sentiment,
they should not cast their votes on religious or ethnic basis.
Look
at the man, is he the man who will rule Nigeria, who will take Nigeria forward?
Not the man who will return you to darkness, who will not practice democracy,
who remains what he was before.
Two,
Nigerians should realise that we have no any other country to go to, we all are
Nigerians and we have a duty to remain as one country. Politicians will come
and go, but Nigeria will remain. If there is no Nigeria, then you have no way
to contest elections. You cannot be president where there is no Nigeria. So we
should emphasize what will bring Nigeria as a united country, a Nigeria which
is free from ethnicity, free from religious bigotry. Nigeria will not break,
nothing will happen to Nigeria come March 28 and April 11.
do
you look at these two individuals?
In
what way?
Generally,
by telling Nigerians who they are.
Without
being biased, Jonathan has been a deputy governor in a democratic system of
government. He has been governor of Bayelsa State in a democratic set up and he
was prepared to contest to be re-elected as a governor of Bayelsa State. He
became Vice President to the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. He contested
elections in 2011 and he was elected by the people of this country.
So
he has always been qualified and he has always been part of a democratic
system. He is a very well educated Nigerian, he has a good background, he has a
Ph.D. He is humble; he is a man who respects the feelings of others. How many
journalists have gone to prison since Jonathan took over? How many of them have
been arrested? Jonathan is the most abused President in this country, but he
doesn’t care; he is going on with the job. He has done a lot for the people of
this country.
For
instance, I have just received an Almajiri delegation; they came to show their
appreciation to Jonathan. These were young boys moving around in the North
begging for money and food. None of the northern rulers ever thought of their
welfare, but Jonathan established 120 schools for them. Jonathan has given
northerners 12 universities, nobody has done it before. Jonathan cares for the
unity of this country and he believes in the democratic system.
Whereas
the other man, Gen. Buhari, contested elections in 2003, Nigerians rejected
him; he contested elections in 2007, Nigerians rejected him; he contested
election with Jonathan in 2011, Nigerians rejected him. What change is he now
bringing to Nigeria?
This
is a man who is not well educated, Nigeria is a sophisticated country. It is
true he was a general in the army, but the Constitution of Nigeria says you
must have a minimum of school certificate. Buhari hasn’t got it.
The
first time, he swore to an affidavit. That affidavit says his credentials are
with the army where he served and the army said they did not have it. The next
thing we saw was a testimonial from Katsina Government College, showing the
number of subjects Buhari was to take. Thereafter, we saw a statement of result
with the picture of Buhari in his old age, which cannot be said to have been taken
at the time that statement of result was said to have been issued. To show
again that INEC is working with APC, the same man went and submitted his
documents to INEC when the date of receiving the documents had elapsed. How did
he submit them? Why should INEC accept them from him? That is another area we
believe constitutes the continuation of the conspiracy to force out Jonathan.
Buhari
is not a democrat. I was asked the question if Obasanjo, a soldier, a general,
could become President for eight years; I said Obasanjo is a democratic. In
1979, he voluntarily handed over to a civilian government under Shehu Shagari.
And it was the same Gen. Buhari who overthrew Shehu Shagari and locked the
second republic politicians up. When did he become a democrat?
One
of the things the main opposition party (APC) said they want to change is that
they want to fight corruption. What is your take?
Who
is going to fight corruption?
The
APC people or Obasanjo? They only pay lip service to fighting corruption.
Buhari
himself is not clean. What is corruption? Malpractices, parading questionable
certificates, swearing to false affidavit, they are all part of corruption. And
in the 1970s when Buhari was federal commissioner for petroleum, about
$2.8billion oil money went missing. It was later discovered that this amount
was paid into a British bank where it yielded about N400million interest,
nobody knows where that money is. Buhari said he did not know about it.
Yet
they accuse Jonathan of being corrupt. Does Jonathan know the type of
corruption going on in this country? Buhari could not account for $2.8billion
paid into a British bank.
Secondly,
he was appointed by Abacha as the Chairman of PTF. My own brother, Prof. J.P.
Clark, was a member. In fact only, Prof. J.P. Clark and Buhari are still living
members of PTF. Buhari brought his brother-in-law as a consultant and later
handed over the entire administration of PTF to him and others. They had the
authority to execute all projects. At the end of it all, they left and Obasanjo
dissolved the board and removed all of them.
Then
Obasanjo set up a Commission of Enquiry to probe the PTF and the report, which
has just been published by some newspapers, shows that N25billion could not be
accounted for by Buhari and those who administered the place. Yet Obasanjo came
out to say the only thing he found against him was that instead of building
roads and houses, he was busy buying mosquito nets with PTF money.
There
are insinuations from some quarters that what may not work well for President
Jonathan is the fact that some people around him, even the party itself, the
people around him and then decisions taken in the past, even at the party
level, the National Working Committee, NWC, especially issues like Bamanga
Tukur and five governors leaving and they could not manage the issue and the
governors forum election issue where 17 was more than 19.
I
am a member of PDP, but I am not in the leadership of the party. Like every
other party in Nigeria, they also have their problems. I agree to a certain
extent that some of the people who are in the PDP leadership have not done
their job properly. For instance, the National Chairman was praising Obasanjo
last week, saying nothing was wrong with Obasanjo, that he was a true party
leader, that he would not say that he is not supporting Jonathan, that it is
not true that he was supporting Buhari.
Some
of these leaders in PDP were Obasanjo’s men. So they see nothing wrong with
Obasanjo. Some of them have double loyalty. But the party must go on; you have
good people and you have bad people. But the PDP has continued, from 1999 to
this day, to rule this country.
Whereas
APC is a parchment of all sorts of things with the sole aim of removing
Jonathan from office and installing a northern president, Buhari. If Buhari is
not there, there is no APC. Buhari is the only thing that put them together and
their sole aim is to secure power for the North, that’s all.
The
issue of Boko Haram is another issue some people are saying Mr President did
not handle well. Critics say Mr President abandoned the North- east to
insurgents. Do you agree?
I
do not. Boko Haram started about 2002. It was in 2003 to 2009 that it spread
from Bauchi to Gombe, then to Yobe and finally to Borno and so many people have
been killed during that period. In 2009 when Jonathan was the Vice President,
there was trouble between Boko Haram and the security forces and, as a result,
their leader, Yusuf, was killed. At that time, Umaru Yar’Adua was still in
government, that was 2009. When Jonathan took over, he started to attack them.
But some northern leaders, including Buhari, said they should not be fought by
Jonathan, he should leave them alone. There are documents to that effect, that
government should negotiate with Boko Haram. Jonathan appointed a committee,
under the chairmanship of the Minister of Special Duties, Alhaji Kabiru Tanimu
Turaki, SAN, that went round the whole of the North and Boko Haram asked for a
representative because the people were faceless. Boko Haram nominated Gen. Buhari
to represent it. Thereafter, even though Gen. Buhari did not accept the offer,
he continued to encourage them.
Jonathan
told Nigerians and the whole world that the military he inherited was not
properly equipped. Nyako accused him of genocide, asking why should he fight
Boko Haram. Nyako, a former governor of Adamawa State, Obasanjo’s henchman and
Gen. Buhari’s colleague, said Jonathan was carrying out genocide against
northerners.
And
some of the northern governors went to Washington to criticize Jonathan,
claiming he was waging war against northerners, and that is one of the reasons
the American government is not willing to sell arms to the Nigerian government
because they said he was just killing people.
Jonathan
has done his best. Now, the president has secured arms, weapons and they will
soon settle the problem of Boko Haram.
Chief
Edwin Kiagbodo
Clark, Ijaw leader, is
the convener of the South-South Peoples Assembly and co-convener of the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly, SNPA.
Clark, Ijaw leader, is
the convener of the South-South Peoples Assembly and co-convener of the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly, SNPA.
In
this interview, the former Federal Commissioner for Information and senator
bares his mind on the general elections slated for March 28 and April 11, why
Nigerians must vote for President Goodluck Jonathan, INEC and its National
Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, how Senator Ifeanyi Okowa emerged as the PDP
governorship candidate for Delta State, among other national issues.
EXCERPTS:
2015
elections have been fixed for March 28 and April 11 respectively. How prepared
are we as Nigerians?
This
question should be taken in two parts. How prepared is INEC? How prepared are
the people of Nigeria? Well, I think Nigerians are prepared for the elections
if all the materials are provided by INEC. A situation whereby we do not have
PVCs for about 23million Nigerians particularly in Lagos and other places, that
is not good enough.
INEC
has made it difficult for people to have voter cards. They are discriminating
against certain areas where they think Jonathan has support.
How
do you describe a situation whereby Lagos State, the most sophisticated and
educated state in this country, has not been able to secure up to 50% of voter
cards compared to Borno, a war ravaged area where the people have left their
homes and non-indigenes have deserted but which has 80% voter cards? Let INEC
explain that situation.
That
is the reason the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly, SNPA , addressed a press
conference to let the world know that at a meeting between some INEC officials
and northern leaders, they decided that where Jonathan has strong base, they
should be very strict in registering people.
And
we alleged at that conference that some northern leaders collected money from
some governors who parted with N167,000,000 and that has helped the northern
leaders to secure 150 laptops for each state of the North. They gave them to
some INEC officials to use to have double registration, to increase the
registration in the North. Why did Jega not allow similar things to happen in
the South?
But
apart from these irregularities, in the PVCs distribution, INEC is not ready
for the polls. For instance, producing the PVCs, INEC awarded the contract to a
local contractor from Kano and they decided to produce this material in Abuja.
We have the video, the photographs of that mini-factory, where they were
producing the PVCs.
But
when they couldn’t cope, they decided to contract it out to a company in China.
And, as we are talking, some of the PVCs have not arrived. Some arrived Lagos
sea port two weeks ago. So what we are saying is that Jega was not ready; one,
he has not been able to start the training of about 700,000 ad- hoc staff all
over the country. If he has started in some places, majority of the areas have
not been covered.
And
having regard to the technology involved in PVC, the card readers are not
ready. The few that are ready have manufacturing defect, some of them are not
functioning and they have not been tested to see whether they can do the job
for which they were acquired.
So
against the back drop of all these, what do you suggest?
The
elections would be held.
What
about Jega?
Jega
should go. We believe he should go not only because of inefficiency; we believe
he is working with some northern leaders to declare a northern presidential
candidate the winner of the March 28 election, that’s Buhari. And to do that,
he is not thinking about the success of the election of that day. If there is
confusion, he will still declare Buhari the winner and say any aggrieved person
should go to court.
The
northern leaders are alleged to have boasted that they had set up a committee
to liaise with the judiciary, northern judges in order to give them favourable
judgment. And they have employed 34 lawyers 14 of which are Senior Advocates of
Nigeria, SAN. In fact, they have started going to court. So everything we said
in our press conference has come to pass. They have started taking Jonathan to
court that he is not qualified. The number of SANs prosecuting that case shows
clearly that it is no ordinary person that took President Jonathan to court. It
is being done between the APC and the northern leaders.
After
the press conference by the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly, what next ?
Jega
is not indispensable, he is just first among equals. There are about 13
national commissioners in INEC. If Jega has lost the people’s confidence to
conduct election, any one of the others can be made to act to oversee the
elections on March 28 and April 11. We are not running away from the elections
despite all the intrigues.
Even
if President Goodluck Jonathan who appointed him refuses to remove him, the
elections should still hold?
They
should hold. We will watch him.
And
you will believe him?
We
will not believe him, but we will see what will happen. If we say without Jega
the elections would not hold, they will say we want elongation of tenure which
Jonathan is not contemplating. But we have asked that he should go.
And
if the President does not want to remove him, he should have the honour and
feeling that he is no longer wanted by the people of Nigeria to conduct free,
fair and credible elections.
We
have the APC presidential candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, and the PDP presidential
candidate, President Goodluck Jonathan. How which has become international.
There
are comments from some quarters that some supporters of President Jonathan are
overheating the polity with threats and, for this reason, a former Minister of
Defence, General Theophilous Danjuma, called for the arrest of Tompolo,
Dokubo-Asari, among others. What is your perspective?
My
comment is very simple. It is true that anybody who makes a statement to
threaten the very existence of our country should be condemned. I have always
maintained this statement.
More
than a year now, when Kingsley Kuku, Special Adviser to Mr President, and
Dokubo Asari were alleged to have made such statements, the House of
Representatives passed a motion that these two men should be arrested by the
Inspector General of Police and tried. There was nothing wrong about that
motion.
But
what I said is that it should be total, don’t be selective. Others in the North
have made similar statements. Lawal Kaita said there will be no Nigeria if
there is no northern president in 2015 and somebody who said that he would
declare war, which of the statements is stronger?
If
you declare war like the Biafran war and Nigeria is fighting, Nigeria will
still be there. But if you say there will be no Nigeria if a northern president
is not installed in 2015, which statement is stronger? Buhari himself said that
if a northern president is not elected, Nigeria will become Somalia. Others
said they will make Nigeria ungovernable for Jonathan, Atiku said so.
All
I am saying is that anybody who has made such statements, be he a minister, be
he an ordinary man, he should be arrested and tried. Don’t say only
Dokubo-Asari, Kingsley Kuku and Tompolo should be tried. When you make
provocative statements and there is a reaction to such provocative statements,
people should not be selective.
All
I said, I have high respect for T.Y. Danjuma, he is one of the persons who have
been helping this government. But it was not fair for him to refer to these two
people alone, when he knows that some of the utterances of his colleagues and
northerners who have been governors, ministers, vice presidents were equally
provocative.
Last
month, you called on the PDP to expel former President Olusegun Obasanjo but
the party did not heed your advice. Now he has dumped the party by tearing his
membership card. How do you react to this development?
You
asked me earlier whether some of the party leaders surrounding Jonathan are not
contributing to some of the problems that people alleged have been committed
and I said yes. Some of them were with Obasanjo, past governors; some ministers
who were appointed by Obasanjo during his tenure see nothing wrong with
Obasanjo. They continue to beg him when they know that the man has taken a
position against the PDP. When people like us criticize Obasanjo, they say we are
controversial, that we heat up the polity.
Today,
Obasanjo has told them; he did not only dump them, he told the public, ‘here is
your membership, take it’, and he tore it into pieces. Is that action normal?
But it is now clear to the PDP men, leaders who were protecting Obasanjo when I
called that he should be expelled. They said that there was no reason for me to
say that. But now it has happened, it is now clear.
As
far as I am concerned, Obasanjo has been engaging in anti-party activities and
should have been expelled since then. Immediately he resigned the chairmanship
of the BoT, he engaged in anti-party issues.
Will
his leaving affect the PDP?
It
will not. The man, even in his ward, PDP could not win election in 2011. Nobody
takes notice of him politically in Ogun State not to talk of Nigeria. In fact,
his going will strengthen the party.
In
Delta State, before the primaries, we were hearing of endorsement of Obuh,
Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan was going to the Senate to replace Senator James
Manager, in fact, Okowa was not in the reckoning. But at the end of the day,
the governor dropped his senatorial ambition, Obuh did not get it, Sen. Ifeanyi
Okowa is now the PDP candidate. As a father, what role did you play?
As
a father, I contributed to the peaceful primary elections that took place in
Delta. When the governor was said to be supporting Obuh, on two occasions, I
invited him and he said he was not supporting Obuh. Yet he was the one
providing everything for Obuh. I asked him, ‘I learnt Obuh has been your
Permanent Secretary for the past 10years’, he said yes. ‘But it is not fair for
you to push aside all the politicians, some of them were Obuh’s bosses when
they were commissioners. It is not fair for you to do that, Obuh is not a
politician’; he continued to say no, he was not. Until the last two days, to
the primaries he came to me to accept that he was the one promoting Obuh, but I
said ‘we cannot take Obuh’.
The
next thing he did was that he went home, met with the Urhobo Progress Union,
UPU, to present a candidate and he told me personally that the candidate they
produced was Mr David Edevbie. That after he went to the northern senatorial
zone which refused to take Obuh, he decided to move down, that was why he asked
for an Urhobo candidate. And he thought it should be Mr David Edevbie , who was
James Ibori’s Commissioner for Finance, he was Ibori’s nominee to Umaru
Yar’Adua’s cabinet as Principal Secretary.
So
when we saw that the governor had left Obuh and he was now trying to divide the
place by going to take a candidate that we were not expecting, I decided to
team up with Okowa because we had agreed that the governorship should go to the
north senatorial zone to give everybody a fair opportunity. That is why I
supported Okowa. But we have now settled.
All
the governorship aspirants at the time have now taken it that way and they are
working together, except some that have gone to contest elections as senatorial
candidates in other parties. Otherwise everything went very well.
But
I must comment on one thing, Uduaghan was responsible for the peaceful and
democratically conducted primary. He phoned me that every aspirant was going to
get his ward or his local government and there was not going to be a winner
takes all. Every aspirant was given the opportunity to retain his ward and his
local government and, for that, I must commend him.
Nigerians
are going to the polls; Nigerians will decide on March 28, that is the main
election. What message do you have for Nigerians especially against the back
drop of the peace accord signed by the presidential candidates. And even after
the peace accord, we have been having some cases of attacks especially on the
convoy of Mr President. What message do you have for Nigerians, for the
parties, for the two parties, the presidential candidates? And is Jonathan
winning the election?
Jonathan
will triumph, he will sail through based on his record of performance,
achievements. Jonathan has the qualities, he has performed, he has built
schools, built universities which nobody else did. The number of federal
universities established by Jonathan surpassed the number of federal
universities established by all the rulers of this country since 1960 put
together.
The
railway was abandoned throughout the period. People no longer travel by rail.
In the past, when I was the commissioner, I used to follow my governor
travelling by rail to Gusau in Zamfara State, to Maiduguri, to Kano. But it is
Jonathan who has now refurbished and re-established the railway lines and
people are now travelling.
Agriculture,
today, fertiliser is supplied at a cheap rate, no middlemen again. Farmers now
get fertilizer at very cheap price.
On
power, people may say Jonathan has not improved in the generation, that is not
true. After Obasanjo had spent billions of Naira to resuscitate the power
sector and failed, Jonathan had a master plan and he was able to privatize what
we used to call NEPA and various companies took up the distribution and
generation of power.
No
government had the courage to privatize the power sector in this country. Give
him some time, but people are very impatient. I believe these companies will
perform and government continues to seek foreign assistance for power to
improve.
If
you are talking about corruption, we have looked into records, statistics;
there are more conviction of corrupt persons in Jonathan’s government than they
were in previous governments, including Obasanjo’s government. It is not enough
to say ‘I will detain you, I will do this’, perhaps corruption has now taken a
turn for the worse and you need new ways to fight corruption and Jonathan is
doing it.
So
I believe Nigerians should be patient, they should assess the various
candidates who have done what for Nigeria, what does that person offer for
Nigeria? And my advice to the voters is that they should not vote on sentiment,
they should not cast their votes on religious or ethnic basis.
Look
at the man, is he the man who will rule Nigeria, who will take Nigeria forward?
Not the man who will return you to darkness, who will not practice democracy,
who remains what he was before.
Two,
Nigerians should realise that we have no any other country to go to, we all are
Nigerians and we have a duty to remain as one country. Politicians will come
and go, but Nigeria will remain. If there is no Nigeria, then you have no way
to contest elections. You cannot be president where there is no Nigeria. So we
should emphasize what will bring Nigeria as a united country, a Nigeria which
is free from ethnicity, free from religious bigotry. Nigeria will not break,
nothing will happen to Nigeria come March 28 and April 11.
’I warned PDP leaders to be wary of Obasanjo’
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Rating:
No comments: