Politics
National Security And Political Mudslinging …Politicians think of the next election, while statesmen think of the next generation – James Freeman Clark
Last week, Nigeria’s two leading political parties brought to limelight the above long held axiom by engaging each other in political mudslinging over the nation’s security. In what seems as a well orchestrated strategy to outwit each other ahead of 2015 general elections, the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the main opposition party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) resorted to a blame game over the insurgency that has held the nation captive for the past three years.
The parties’ inclination to profit from a national tragedy started sometimes last year when the PDP accused the APC of sponsoring the Boko Haram insurgency in the North. It, however, reached its tragic crescendo last week, when the ruling party launched another verbal attack on the opposition, accusing it of egging on terrorists through the utterances of its chieftains who, according to the PDP, were obsessed with wrestling power from President Goodluck Jonathan in 2015 at all cost. The PDP’s accusation came a few hours after the Abuja bomb blast that left no fewer than 75 people dead and 124 others seriously injured at the popular Nyanya Motor park in the early hours of last Monday.
According to the PDP, the utterances and comments of the opposition party were aimed at undermining and discrediting the present administration and making the nation ungovernable for Jonathan.
In a statement signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh, the PDP said; “We stand by our earlier statement that these attacks on our people are politically motivated by unpatriotic persons especially those in the APC, who have been making utterances and comments, promoting violence and bloodletting as a means of achieving political control.
“Nigerians are also aware of utterances by certain APC governors which have been aimed at undermining our security forces and emboldening insurgents against the people.
“Those who have been promoting violence through their utterances can now see the monster they have created. They can now see the end product of their comments; a country flowing daily with the blood of the innocent.”
The PDP was apparently referring to recent statements made by Governor Kashim Shettima of Borno State and former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Mallam Nasir el-Rufai. While Shettima, apparently frustrated by the frequent insurgents’ attacks in his state, noted that Boko Haram terrorists were better equipped than the nation’s security forces, El-Rufai warned that any attempt by the ruling PDP to rig the 2015 general elections would be met with bloodshed.
The ruling party has also made consistent reference to the statement credited to the former Head of State and national leader of the APC, Gen. Muhammad Buhari (rtd) during the 2011 election campaign, that “he who makes peaceful change impossible makes violent change inevitable.” Buhari was at that time warning the ruling party not to rig the 2011 general elections.
But the PDP has, at every opportunity, taken advantage of APC’s verbal slips to hang the reign of terror in the country on the opposition’s neck.
Knowing the weighty implications of the PDP’s accusation, especially a few months to the 2015 general elections, the APC did not waste time to throw back a heavier punch at its accusers. In a quick response, the opposition party described the PDP’s accusation as baseless, despicable and infantile, adding that it was an attempt by the PDP to trivialise a serious national issue and thus make the opposition the fall guy for its (PDP) egregious failure.
In a statement by its interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the APC accused the PDP-led federal government of lacking the capacity to tackle the orgy of insurgency in the country.
Expressing shock and sadness at the savagery of the Nyanya bomb attack and several other mindless killing in the country, the APC said, “It is now obvious that all efforts so far to tackle the insurgency have not yielded much fruits, meaning that the PDP-led federal government lacks the capacity and has clearly run out of ideas on how to tackle the violence.”
The party continued: “Trying to blame the opposition for the attack, as the harebrained PDP has irresponsibly done even when the bodies of the victims are still lying in the morgue, cannot advance a genuine push to end the insurgency.”
APC suggested a new approach to stop the insurgency, urging the Federal Government to urgently convene a national stakeholders’ security summit to help find a lasting solution to the state of insecurity in the country.
Lending voices to their party’s stand, the governors on the platform of the APC, said the tragic death of about 1,000 people in the last two weeks alone, were indications of a major failure on the part of the PDP-led federal government.
In a statement by the Progressive Governors Forum (PGF) chairman and Imo State Governor, Chief Rochas Okorocha, the APC governors said, “In the last two weeks alone, about 1,000 Nigerians have perished. The tragic deaths indicate major failure of government.
“Without meaning to gain political capital out of these unending disasters, it is plain the government has run out of ideas in the fight against insurgency, ethnic and communal clashes as well as the spate of armed robberies and kidnappings across Nigeria.”
APC also made a case out of Jonathan’s visit to Kano 24 hours after the Abuja bomb blast. The party accused the President of exhibiting the traits of an insensitive and utterly hard-hearted leader who according to the party, prefers keeping his plum job at all cost than “the security and welfare of the same people who voted him into office. Otherwise, the President would not have rushed back to his illegal campaign trail at a time he should be leading the nation in mourning the dead.”
The party urged Jonathan to take a moment of deep introspection to reflect on his actions, saying, “perhaps he will realize that long after the glitz of office would have dimmed and the retinue of lick-spittle aides would have vanished, a leader would be remembered more for his humanity than his vanities.”
Kano State Governor, Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso who was among the five PDP governors that defected to APC last year, also threw similar brickbat at Jonathan for embarking on what he called “merry making trips,” 24 hours after the Abuja bomb blast.
“At a time when several innocent lives have been lost, when many of the victims are in hospital seeking blood donations to survive, the President is gallivanting round the country in the name of PDP Unity Rally,” Kwankwaso contended.
While Kwankwaso’s comments could pass for a payback remark to the President who had earlier, at a PDP Unity Rally in Kano last Tuesday, chided him for deliberately denying Kano State delegates their mobilisation fund and refreshment given by his campaign headquarters in 2011, that of the APC’s interim chairman in Kogi State, Kasim Mabo was more instructive.
Mabo who spoke with the newsmen in Lokoja, last week said: “A President who said his ambition is not worth the blood of anyone is now dancing gleefully on the graves of over 70 of his compatriots. What is so important about the illegal campaign stop in Kano on Tuesday that could not have waited for the smoke to clear from the scene of the deadly blast on Monday? Who will President Jonathan rule over when his countrymen and women are being badly mowed down under his watch?
“Without mincing words, President Jonathan erred badly by not showing enough sympathy for the victims of Monday’s blast. More people died in the blast than from Kenya’s mall shooting last September, yet President Uhuru Kenyatta declared three days of national mourning during which flags at public buildings flew at half mast and the people of Kenya prayed for the dead and the injured.”
He also recalled that, “In 2012, General Muhammed Buhari ordered the immediate postponement of all activities long planned to mark his 70th birthday, following the death of General Owoeye Azazi, Governor Patrick Yakowa of Kaduna State and others in a helicopter crash in Bayelsa. Such is the stuff of a great leader.”
But the PDP described the APC’s accusation as another demonstration of the party’s support for terrorist agenda in the country. Buttressing claims that Jonathan was sensitive and responsive to the plight of Nigerians, the PDP in a statement by Metuh, recalled that Jonathan cancelled his planned trip to Ibadan and also visited the scene of the blast and the injured in the hospital, last Monday.
The party also accused the APC of seeking to cow the President, dictate the tempo of government and ultimately shut down governance.
“The leadership of the PDP and the government we formed shall not be cowed, intimidated, harassed or tele-guided by acts of terrorism,” the party said.
There is no gainsaying that the exchange of verbal missile between the PDP and the APC is aimed at gaining political capital ahead of the 2015 general elections. But while this continues, the political class has wittingly or unwittingly promoted political mudslinging to a level of crass opportunism, thereby undermining national interest. Where this leads the nation in the months ahead remains a question only time can tell.
Boye Salau
Politics
Rivers Political Crisis: PANDEF Urges Restraint, Mutual Forbearance
Accordingg to the statement, the Board and National Executive Committee of PANDEF, noted with very grave concern the recent spate of political developments in Rivers State.
“Regrettably, these developments have now degenerated into the decision of the Rivers State House of Assembly to commence impeachment proceedings against the governor and deputy governor.
“This is a deeply disturbing situation that demands urgent attention in order to forestall further escalation and breakdown of law and order.
“This concern is heightened by the critical importance and strategic centrality of Rivers to the Niger Delta region and to the broader socio-political stability and economic wellbeing of Nigeria as a whole”, the statement said.
The Forum called on all parties involved in the resurgent political imbroglio to sheathe their swords and embrace peace.
“This should be guided by the principles of give-and-take, dialogue, tolerance, and political equanimity.
“All stakeholders must place paramount importance on peace, development and the welfare of the people of Rivers.
“We must now focus squarely on good governance and development of the state,” the Forum said.
PANDEF commended President Bola Tinubu, the leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC), respected elders of Rivers State, and other well-meaning Nigerians for their previous and ongoing efforts aimed at restoring peace and stability in the state.
Politics
Wike’s LGAs Tour Violates Electoral Laws — Sara-Igbe
Speaking in an interview on Saturday, January 10, Chief Sara-Igbe alleged that the minister had flouted regulations governing the commencement of electioneering campaigns by moving from one local government area to another to galvanise political support.
According to him, the action amounted to a clear breach of electoral guidelines being carried out with a troubling sense of impunity that could undermine the rule of law.
“Wike has violated the electoral laws of campaigning by going from local government to local government to talk to the people. He travelled from one local government to another. As a result of his visits to local government areas, he has broken election regulations and continues to do all these things without fear of repercussions”, Chief Sara-Igbe said.
The remarks came as Chief Wike was set to round off a state-wide “thank-you” tour that covered all 23 local government areas of Rivers State.
Although the minister had described the tour as an appreciation visit following support for President Bola Tinubu in the 2023 general elections, critics say the engagements have assumed an overtly political character.
Observers note that during several stops, including recent visits to Andoni and Bonny local government areas, the minister rallied supporters across party lines under what he termed a “Rainbow Coalition,” a move widely interpreted as part of a broader political strategy.
During these engagements, Chief Wike was also reported to have made remarks perceived as a veiled challenge to the authority of Governor Siminalayi Fubara, while repeatedly referencing the 2027 elections and urging supporters to prepare to “correct the mistake” of 2023.
Chief Sara-Igbe warned that allowing such activities to continue unchecked could erode public confidence in Nigeria’s electoral process and called on relevant authorities to enforce existing laws without fear or favour.
Politics
EFCC Alleges Blackmail Plot By Opposition Politicians
The Commission, in a statement on Wednesday, claimed that there were plans by the same group to escalate a smear campaign against its Chairman, Ola Olukoyede, to frustrate ongoing investigations and prosecutions involving prominent individuals.
The statement endorsed by the agency’s spokesman, Mr Dele Oyewale, claimed that the action was intended to distract the Commission through unfounded allegations of political bias in the discharge of its duties.
The EFCC warned that it would not stand by and watch “those recruited into this ignoble enterprise” or allow any attempt to derail it from “the patriotic task of improving public accountability in Nigeria.”
The Commission made it clear that those recruited into this venture were under close watch, adding that it would not tolerate any attempt to distract it from the patriotic task of improving public accountability in Nigeria.
“The EFCC reiterates its non-political stance in all its activities. Facts on the ground clearly show that any political actor belonging to the ruling party or opposition party, with corruption baggage, has no hiding place from the operational radar and dynamics of the Commission.
“As a matter of fact, several strong members of the ruling and opposition parties are either facing trial before the courts or being investigated by the Commission.
“It is needful that Nigerians appreciate the fact that the Commission is keeping faith with its Establishment Act in all its operations.
“Therefore, the Commission reiterates its commitment to justice, without fear or favour, in the fulfilment of its mandate,” the statement pointed out.
