Politics
INEC Needs Education – Amb George

As Rivers State elector
ate prepare to go to the polls to conclude the legislative re-run elections on July 30, 2016, the National Secretary General of the Universal Peace Builders Association, the body that runs the Ambassadors of Peace Corps, Ambassador Isaac George, gives tips for a peaceful exercise and related matters in this interview. He spoke with Opaka Dokubo in Port Harcourt.
Excerpts:
What has your association been doing in Rivers State?
Unfortunately, we have not been supported by government but, here and there, well-meaning, peace loving people have been supporting our progammes. We have programmes for the youths, we have programmes for couples, we have programmes for singles as well. Every Saturday, we organise workshops on family values to educate the entire populace on the need for peace. Our education is centred on conflict prevention because prevention is far cheaper than resolution. But whereby we could not control it and conflict erupts, then we go into resolution.
Give and assessment of the environment in Rivers State from your background.
The environment is tensed and the federal government has not made matters any better. Mr president should take everyone, whether you voted for him or not, as his son and daughter because he his now the leader of this nations. God has put him there to be the leader, so he must see everybody from God’s perspective and not see wayward children and try to condemn them and say”, I will deal with you, we will exterminate them,” or we will do all kinds of things to you. But he should be able to call them and say “my children, what’s your problem? Let’s talk.” Then he’ll get to understand where they’re coming from and they will also understand his own position.
There’s no time in human history where violence has solved any problem. No matter how prolonged the violence may be, they ultimately go to a round table to resolve conflicts.
What have you found as the causes of conflict situation?
People have been deprived for so long of their basic means of living and when you disposes anybody of what his fundamental rights are, … By right we are supposed to control the resources we find here but government will be involved in the control of the resources in the sense that government knows that we are not going to cheat government and we pay appropriate tax. But whereby somebody comes and gets the oil blocks, gets all the allocation and walks away, the people are improvised. Definitely, they will stand up one day because they will get to a point where they cannot return anymore and they will want to fight they way they’re fighting.
Do you see politics playing any role in this situation?
The founder of my NGO said that there’s no legislation that can bring about peace. Peace, as Kofi Anan said, will come one day at a time, one person at a time. Our founder also said that we must be educated in order to be able to take responsibility for peace. If I own peace and you own peace, them we will never fight over anything because everybody will be contented, everybody will be happy with the environment and with one another.
Right now, the environment is so polluted. In some communities, I saw on television the other day, people can’t even have water to drink, their children can’t even go to school, they’re displaced because of crisis and all of that. So government should be able to support NGOs, like us so that we can put out messages that touch the heart. And then, if government makes a deliberate policy whereby peace, character education, family values will be taught from the primary school so that children who are five years old today, by the time they get to thirty years and they keep hearing such words of peace and they are living for the sake of one another, they will not digress from that.
The Bible clearly says that “teach the child the way to go and when he is old, he will not digress from that. But right now, it is when we become politicians or when we become public figures that we talk about peace and all of that. We ourselves that are talking about the peace don’t have the ingredients of peace.
We are going into another round of rerun elections in Rivers State and we need peace. What have we been doing wrong and how do we get it right?
Some of the things we’ve done wrong is that basically, we’ve not had proper education – education on how to live with one another, education on how to be peaceful yourself because you cannot give what you don’t have. Peace has to come from the heart. Once there’s love in the heart, peace will naturally follow.
UNESCO says that since the construction of wars begins in the heart, the defence of peace should also start in the heart. So the heart is the problem. If we take the responsibility to educate every heart from age four, age five, by the time that generation grows up to be 30,40,50 years, peace must have come to this environment because everybody will be living for t he sake of the state and the state will be living for everybody.
The governor gets there and he knows that he cannot enrich himself, he has gotten there to be able to live for the sake of the people and in return, the people will live for his sake. That’s how peace can quickly come.
What do we do about the situation that we have to remedy now?
It still boils down to education. We need to create a culture of peace. A culture of peace simply means that we’re educated even before we go to hold political positions even if it’s a two-moths or three-months education. Once you pick up your form that you want to contest any public office, you should go through a two-months or three-months governance training, leadership training, peace training, inter-faith training so that when you get there, something in your subconscious will be telling you “No you cannot do this, this is wrong , this is right.”
What has happened over the years is that some people have decided to ignore their conscience because the conscience is always telling us what is right and what is wrong and some of us have decided to totally ignore the conscience. We only start regretting after we’ve done so many evil things. So, education is the key thing – education of the heart.
Even within this short period to the elections, a one-week educational programme will go a long way. It may not totally eradicate whatever ugly incidents that may happen in the elections but it will reduce it considerably. The target should be the youths. If we give the youths character education now, their conscience will be pricked. They will not want to go the direction of the politicians and so on. They will say where are your own children or we don’t want to destroy the state or we don’t want to kill innocent souls. So, even a one-week education to the youths from age 17 to 35 will go a long way.
Are you by any chance asking for support for your organisation to embark on this campaign?
No, not only my organisation. There are so many organsiations, there are so many peace NGOs and if government can reach out to us and we all come together and put heads together, it will do a lot of good particularly for this election and then if it’s a continuous thing whereby in the school curriculum, in the primary school, in the secondary school and even in the university we have this kind of education.
In fact, I was so happy when I heard that in some universities, they’ve started taking peace studies. In a nation like Costa Rica they have a whole university called the United Nations Peace University. What do they do there? They brainstorm on how peace can come to that particular nation and then how it can also be exported to other parts of the world. So, if government buys into this sensitization programme, we can organize a one week education and sensitisation programme on the need for peace during the election, on the need to live for the nation.
What message do you have for stakeholders in this election?
INEC also needs this kind of education we’re talking about because we have to be conscientised, everyone of us, whether you’re INEC, whether you’re police. In the election, INEC is like a father and umpire, they’re the ones guiding us. They have more critical role to play in terms of educating their staff on leadership, on good governance, on peace and all of that.
The police should also see themselves as fathers and mediators. As mediators, you have to be fair to every party and you don’t have to get your emotions involved. So they also need the kind of education that will position them to truly mediate. Essentially, education on family values will help everyone.
Anything else society in general stands to benefit if you get desired support and encouragement?
One of our flagship programmes is the Ambassadors for Peace Corps. Our founder said most of the problems in the world are actually created by educated people, so if we reach educated people with peace education, with character education and family values, even though they’re above 35 years old, it will go a long way. Each family should take responsibility for their family in the sense that the family should own peace.
Our founder says that every family should become a peaceful family. So if the father, mother take responsibility for peace, their children will naturally follow. That’s why the government and other corporate bodies need to empower NGOs to be able to educate families and we need to introduce family education in our educational institutions.
In this regard, do you think the church is not doing enough?
The truth is that the church needs to do more, the church is not doing enough. So we’re also calling on the spiritual fathers of the state, of the nation, of the community to do more because they are supposed to give spiritual guidance. Peace is a spiritual thing. It is not a political thing. It is not a physical thing whereby you can pass a legislation… No legislation can bring peace. So, peace must be blended into spiritual matters and that way, we will be able to get the right leadership.
Politics
Kwankwaso Agrees To Rejoin APC, Gives Terms, Conditions
The former two-term governor went down memory lane to recall how they founded the APC but were used and dumped.
In his words, “…those calling on us to join APC, we have agreed to join the APC but on clear agreement that protects and respects the interest of my party, NNPP and my political movement, Kwankwasiyya. No state where you go that you don’t have NNPP and Kwankwasiyya. We have gubernatorial candidates, senatorial candidates and others.
“We are ready to join APC under strong conditions and promises. We will not allow anyone to use us and later dump us.
“We were among the founding fathers of the APC and endured significant persecution from various security agencies while challenging the previous administration.
“Yet when the party assumed power, we received no recognition or appreciation for our sacrifices, simply because we didn’t originate from their original faction.
“We are not in a hurry to leave the NNPP; we are enjoying and have peace of mind. But if some want a political alliance that would not disappoint us like in the past, we are open to an alliance. Even if it is the PDP that realised their mistakes, let’s enter an agreement that will be made public,” Sen. Kwankwaso stated.
Politics
I Would Have Gotten Third Term If I Wanted – Obasanjo
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has dismissed long-standing claims that he once sought to extend his tenure in office, insisting he never pursued a third term.
Speaking at the Democracy Dialogue organised by the Goodluck Jonathan Foundation in Accra, Ghana, Chief Obasanjo said there is no Nigerian, living or dead, who can truthfully claim he solicited support for a third term agenda.
“I’m not a fool. If I wanted a third term, I know how to go about it. And there is no Nigerian, dead or alive, that would say I called him and told him I wanted a third term,” the former president declared.
Chief Obasanjo argued that he had proven his ability to secure difficult national goals, citing Nigeria’s debt relief during his administration as a much greater challenge than any third term ambition.
“I keep telling them that if I could get debt relief, which was more difficult than getting a third term, then if I wanted a third term, I would have got it too,” he said.
He further cautioned against leaders who overstay in power, stressing that the belief in one’s indispensability is a “sin against God.”
On his part, former President Goodluck Jonathan said any leader who failed to perform would be voted out of office if proper elections were conducted.
Describing electoral manipulation as one of the biggest threats to democracy in Africa, he said unless stakeholders come together to rethink and reform democracy, it may collapse in Africa.
He added that leaders must commit to the kind of democracy that guarantees a great future for the children where their voices matter.
He said: “Democracy in Africa continent is going through a period of strain and risk collapse unless stakeholders came together to rethink and reform it. Electoral manipulation remains one of the biggest threats in Africa.
“We in Africa must begin to look at our democracy and rethink it in a way that works well for us and our people. One of the problems is our electoral system. People manipulate the process to remain in power by all means.
“If we had proper elections, a leader who fails to perform would be voted out. But in our case, people use the system to perpetuate themselves even when the people don’t want them.
“Our people want to enjoy their freedoms. They want their votes to count during elections. They want equitable representation and inclusivity. They want good education. Our people want security. They want access to good healthcare. They want jobs. They want dignity. When leaders fail to meet these basic needs, the people become disillusioned.”
The dialogue was also attended by the President of the ECOWAS Commission, Dr. Omar Touray, Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah of the Sokoto diocese of Catholic Church among others who all stressed that democracy in Africa must go beyond elections to include accountability, service, and discipline.
Politics
Rivers Assembly Resumes Sitting After Six-Month Suspension

The Rivers State House of Assembly yesterday resumed plenary session after a six-month state of emergency imposed on the state by President Bola Tinubu elapsed on Wednesday midnight.
President Bola Tinubu had lifted the emergency rule on September 17, with the Governor of the state, Siminalayi Fubara, his deputy, Ngozi Odu, and members of the state assembly asked to resume duties on September 18.
The plenary was presided over by the Speaker of the House, Martins Amaewhule, at the conference hall located within the legislative quarters in Port Harcourt, the state capital.
The conference hall has served as the lawmakers’ temporary chamber since their official chamber at the assembly complex on Moscow Road was torched and later pulled down by the state government.
The outgone sole administrator of the state, Ibok-Ete Ibas, could not complete the reconstruction of the assembly complex as promised.
Recall that on March 18, President Bola Tinubu declared a state of emergency in Rivers following the prolonged political standoff between Fubara and members of the House of Assembly loyal to the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike.
He subsequently suspended the governor, his deputy, Ngozi Odu, and lawmakers for six months and installed a sole administrator, Vice Admiral Ibok-Ete Ibas (rtd.), to manage the state’s affairs.
The decision sparked widespread controversy, with critics accusing the president of breaching the Constitution.
However, others hailed the move as a necessary and pragmatic step.
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