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APC will defeat PDP in Bayelsa, Edo – OshiomholeBY ONUOHA UKEH
Edo State Governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, has dismissed President Goodluck Jonathan’s claim that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will take over the state in the next general elections.
Speaking to a select group of journalists, during his sixth anniversary celebration in Benin City, Edo State capital, Oshiomhole faulted Jonathan for saying Edo would fall, saying it was unbecoming of a civilian president to say so.
According to him, state’s only fall in war and, therefore, Edo State will not fall to PDP. He stated that his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), will rather defeat the PDP in Bayelsa and Edo.
He spoke on this and other things.
Excerpts:
It could be said you are in the last lap of your administration. What are the things you are doing that you must complete before leaving office?
Government is a continuum. So, you can’t say you will complete all your projects because the truth is government is always in progress. There is a couple of projects under construction, which we hope to complete. There are roads under construction. There are one or two projects, which we are hoping to start and I hope to complete. We have the central hospital under construction. We are going to complete, equip and commission it and also sustain some of the social policies that we have in place. We will sustain our free education that has gone beyond basic education, which now includes full secondary SSS1 to SSS3, in addition to the conventional basic education, which terminates at JSS 3.
We are also going to sustain the campaign of one-man, one-vote, so that the people will have the power to hire and fire their political leaders. Democracy doesn’t promise that people will elect angels but it does provide opportunity for the ordinary people to punish or reward those they have elected, depending on the evaluation of their scorecard. So, those are the things we are concerned about and I believe by the special grace of God, we will attain them so that we can finish much stronger than we started.
The states are suffering financial crunch at present, as allocations from the Federal Government are dwindling. How is your government coping with the present economic climate vis-à-vis project execution?
Ironically, this has been the case in the past two to three years. Even though oil has been stable at an average of $108 in the last three years, the Federal Government has never been able to fund the federation account in full. For over two years, even the so-called excess crude account that ought to have accrued from the difference between the benchmark used for budget and actual receipt – the excess crude – has been spent and not because it was distributed. There are all kinds of excuses. To my knowledge, we have not yet received in full what was budgeted at $78 dollars over the past one and half years. So, the budget has never performed.
As we speak, the price is inching towards the mark that was used for the budget in the past. If the Federal Government can decisively stop the oil theft, pay to the federation account all that we earn, even at $80 a barrel, we shouldn’t be worried. It just means that the excess crude available for people to play with would no longer be available for anyone to play with.
Some people believe that the crisis in the state House of Assembly was caused by undue interference by the state’s executive. It was said your government panicked when it realised that the PDP was plotting to win over members of the assembly to its side. What do you say?
My problem here is that the media pick stories from the mouth of whoever they choose. The fact is there is no question of panicking. PDP actually bought; so it is not a speculation. By now, you should be aware that PDP bought. They have four members in the house and they bought five and this was openly stated; so, it is not a secret that they bought some members with huge sums of money. What have I done differently? I don’t panic. When I assumed duties here, we had a House of Assembly that was controlled by the PDP, two-thirds of it, while the rest was ACN and I worked with them. I didn’t panic when two thirds of the members in the House were in PDP. So, why should I panic when PDP bought just five to add to the four they had, to make nine?
All I need to run the state and get laws passed by a simple majority is 13 and we have 15. So, where is the panicking coming from? It is the PDP that was so desperate that what they lost at the polling booth, they sought to procure, which is a shame. Now, how has it become a crisis? Again, it is a media creation. Media do not choose to educate people of the facts; they report falsehood, almost with the same authority with which they report facts. That, for me, is very worrisome. When the media become the instrument for disinformation and confusion, there is problem.
I’m not a journalist but I read statements by editors and they say the role of the Fourth Estate is to inform, hopefully, to inform about the truth. Two, to educate those who are not aware and, three, to entertain. To inform should be based on facts. For example, The Guardian tells us that conscience is an open wound only truth can cure, which means that the media do not only just report, they must try to report the truth. So, if a House of Assembly suspends three members based on the rule of the house and the members disobey the house because they are in the House of Assembly chose to follow the rule of law by approaching the court to look into the matter and the court upheld and restrained the members from parading themselves, as members until those issues are resolved. These three members, because they belong to the ruling Federal Government, even though they are in the opposition in Edo State, chose not to obey the court order. They went to the court of appeal and the court of appeal said go and obey the order. They disobeyed the Court of Appeal’s order – three members, how is that a problem in a house of 24? And if because they believe they belong to the federal ruling party, therefore, they are above the law, if the remaining six now chose not to attend to proceedings in the house and the remaining 15 are sitting in a house of 24 members, for me, that is okay.
You can’t compel people to work. Even in the constitution, this situation was envisaged when it was provided that a member of parliament may not come to work every day. They could choose to absent themselves. However, there is certain minimum of days he must attend sitting and if he doesn’t, then the seat becomes vacant. So, for the House of Assembly members to choose not to sit is expected but that does not lead to crisis. The problem is that the PDP members have this complex that we belong to the federal ruling party and, therefore, we are above the law and I get surprised when a section of the media reported that there are factions in the house. Can you have a faction in the parliament? You can have tendencies in the parliament, not faction. Now, if some people decide to support a particular legislation, either for partisan reasons or personal conviction, that is not crisis. But if people choose to now sit separate in solidarity to those who are suspended because they belong to different political parties they procured with money – and they chose to do that – in so far as the official parliament is able to sit in a comfortable majority, there is no crisis there.
We learnt that you wrote to the Presidency about the attack on the legislators’ quarter. What was the reaction?
It is not about me claiming. The media reported generously what happened, including the visuals, showing bullet holes and so on and so on. It is like writing to the president to inform him that the fact that there is insurgency in different parts of the country. For whatever reason, I wrote. I think it was recently that they arrested one of the guys, who supervised the shooting. Even though they charged him, it was not for using arms to kill. They charged him with being in possession of firearms. They didn’t charge him with using firearms with intent to kill. They charged him for unlawful possession of firearms. My question is, if the House of Assembly becomes a place where unlawfully possessed gun is displayed, are we safe? What happened was that firearms, including AK47 and pump action rifles, were used and the bullet holes and shells were there. They fired at peoples’ residence, the doors and the windows. Their intention was clear: To kill; even if in the end, he didn’t succeed in killing, that is attempted murder.
President Jonathan was in Edo recently and threatened that Edo would fall to PDP. What are your plans to resist the PDP from capturing the state?
Well, the president’s choice of words, for me, was regrettable. No part of Nigeria should fall. I will not wish that the president’s state, Bayelsa, falls. What we are campaigning for is that the president is defeated through proper votes cast in a transparent election and if we win, that does not mean that Bayelsa has fallen. May Bayelsa never fall and Edo will not fall. I know because he is the commander-in-chief; the words that he chose to employ are of importance to us. So, if a commander-in-chief says a particular territory or part of the territory of his country shall fall, it will appear to mean military attack, the way Mubi fell to the insurgents. Mubi fell and they captured it. They hoisted their flag and installed a new traditional ruler allegedly. So, if the insurgents claimed Mubi had fallen to them, it is a military language.
I hate to believe that the president intends to use the military to forcefully fall Edo and whether he wants to preside over a fallen territory. However, these are my own explanations to his choice of words because, as a democrat, he should be talking about making effort to win in any state. That will be legitimate, but not to say Edo will fall. Edo will not fall.
It is also suggestive that states that are under the PDP can be said to have fallen. So, when a state is misgoverned and the people are impoverished, well, you might say they have fallen. Edo, if you like, was led by the PDP between 1999 and 2008, until we came on board to rescue and reposition the state. It can’t fall again. Edo will stand. In 2011, 95 per cent of people in Edo State voted for the president. In this coming election, he will not get five per cent because we have nothing to show for the votes that we captured for him. If we come under armed attack, that will be unfortunate, but we know that the world is no longer what it used to be. When leaders are too strong for their country and they misuse the armed forces to kill people, it calls for concern. We have international court, so the world is governed by law. I expect that in 2015 what will happen in Nigeria is not a warfare, where some will fall. I expect, and this is an obligation the president owes to Nigeria, that elections are conducted according to the Electoral Act and that every Nigerian that is eligible and qualified to vote is enabled to vote in a conducive environment that will enable them to vote for who they want and that those votes counts; that is his irreducible minimum responsibility and his language must be seen to recognise these responsibilities.
Within our West African neighbours, the ruling parties in Ghana have been defeated twice by the opposition. President Rawlings’ party has been defeated and at some other times his party won. Ghanaians have been able to defeat the ruling party and in other election, that party has also been defeated by the opposition; that is the logic of democracy. We have had in America despite reports in the media, showing that the economy is improving and about 450,000 jobs created within two months; yet they went to midterm elections and the American people thought that they would prefer the Republicans and they voted against the ruling Democrats, like the PDP in Nigeria. President Obama did not deploy American armed forces to prevent that defeat.
Jonathan has to recognise that he has to persuade; he must not capture because he is the commander-in-chief, and if he does, then he will have another kettle of fish. So, I’m shocked by his choice of words. APC will be defeated by PDP in Bayelsa and Edo State. These states will not fall to PDP or APC, but we’ll defeat them. We have to be wary of our language. The language of our president must not be violent; we mustn’t borrow military language in describing democratic issues.
Lastly, when the president said Edo would fall, did he produce the particulars of PDP record of performance in Edo State, as a foundation that led to that conclusion? When he gave N2 billon to PDP states from the national ecology fund, which is provided for under the constitution – funds that should be used for ecology, whether soil erosion, wind erosion, desertification etc. – he gave to PDP states, where he lost election in 2011, in Edo State where he won 95 per cent he did not give us a dime; yet we have written to the Federal Government under PDP, over and over to draw the attention of erosion problem in parts of the state, which has destroyed schools, homes, farmlands and others. This erosion is the result of the Federal Government negligence because it emerged from the poor divide of the Benin-Asaba Road. In the course of dualising it, they created that problem. We have just succeeded in obtaining a World Bank loan and we are going to spend N2.7 billion, as a state government to fix that erosion that was caused by the Federal Government.
He did not give us a dime but he gave money to some of our neighbouring states, which do not have a problem as serious as that. Auchi has protested, even blocked the federal highway to draw attention of the Federal Government to the menace of the erosion that has consumed many homes and farmlands. Yet that did not attract the attention of the president and I have raised it with him that our people voted for you; why should you punish us? Must we be PDP? Do we want one party state in Nigeria? Some of us who struggled for democracy did not struggle for one party state because military government is like a one party state; the party is the military. So, the logic of democracy is that you want a multi-party state where people can choose. Edo people voted for the PDP presidency, but what are we benefiting? Nothing. Just the resurfacing of Benin-Ofosu Road. For 15 years, that is our reward. So, when the president said he would win Edo, I was surprised. We will fight back because he will lose his deposit here.
When you came on board, you vowed to end godfatherism and the attendant imposition of candidates that goes with it. Six years thereafter, there are reports that your government is involved in imposing candidates in virtually all the councils. How true is this?
I think you chose to listen to the opposition rather than doing your own independent investigation, which is why you are pushing negative questions that flow from the mouth of the PDP. What is the evidence? Your reporter can find out. As we speak, in my local government, two of my aides, amongst others, are contesting for the House of Assembly. I haven’t told any of them to step down for the other. Each of them came to me and I told them, you better go and campaign to the people, they will choose who they want. So, how can anybody say that? Here in Edo South, many of them, working with me are contesting against themselves. If I can’t tell you directly to step down, I can do what other governors are doing at the federal level, resign. I have not told anybody to step down. All I tell them is, I’m not going to discourage you but I’m not going to help you out; let the party choose who they want – and that is why you still have people contesting election in my cabinet.
How do you see the chances of the APC winning the presidency in 2015?
See, the last time PDP won, they had 24 million votes. The opposition had 12 million votes or something like that. Part of the 24 million that the president got was from Edo. He is not getting it this time. Part of that 24 million was two million rigged votes from Rivers. I want to see the amount of armed forces he is going to deploy to rig two million votes in Rivers. I just gave you two isolated examples. In the South-west, he won couple of votes and the South-westerners are asking what do we have to show for it? I read from your papers that Vanguard can’t get to their office because the road is blocked – including THISDAY – because of the port. Who controls the oil industry? Who approves allocation for farm tanks, etc? I don’t know how you print your papers now? Are you using the privatised power supply or still running generators? After 15 years of not having NEPA, if it was your son that was trying to acquire a university degree for 15 years and he keeps failing, will you continue to support him? One PDP man told me: ‘If your son can’t pass after 15 years, you tell him, o’ boy go and learn trade.’ PDP has run short of stories. They have no new story to tell again.
Look at the level of unemployment and they are creating distortions that are detrimental to the future of this country. When you take taxpayers money and you give it to individual political leaders to be paying to some boys, who are considered, quote and unquote, strong boys who you hope to use during election, when the state funds thuggery in the name of Sure-P, you know there’s problem. You are not appropriating funds to the National Directorate of Employment to create jobs, skills and train people as it used to be the case – you prefer to appropriate money, and sadly, through the National Assembly – they give this money to individuals to do what is now called PDP alert.
Should government create such illusion of empowering people with no job description? Next time you see a PDP ma, ask him: These guys they give Sure-P alert of N10, 000 a month, what is it for? It is very wrong to give a young man the impression that you don’t need to work, just wait for Election Day. When the rainy season is over, what happens to these guys? So, I think we need rigour to interrogate some of these policies because if it doesn’t work for the good of this country, all of us are liable.
In my view, what people voted for in President Jonathan was more for his gentlemanly outlook, his looking innocent. I remember the campaign slogan was ‘Fresh Air,’ that was his selling point. The Edo people bought into that selling point but some people around him have now convinced him that he needed to instill fear and that is why his language has suddenly changed, believing that if the commander-in-chief talks tough, people will submit and that is why, rather than talk of one-man, one-vote, he says Edo will fall. He also said so in the East. I think in Imo State where he said PDP would no longer be this generous. If people want to vote to remain in the dark, if that is the wish of the majority of Nigerians, we’ll have to accept; but I will be surprised when the real question comes -when the real APC presidential candidate emerges.
I believe, in terms of the specific, on the economy, unemployment, incoherent industrial policies that 15 years down the road, we are still importing petroleum product. We are still debating how much we use to subsidise kerosene. Nigerians who want these to continue can vote for this same old dish. Fifteen years of PDP Nigeria is clearly over ripe for change, even in the interest of PDP people. We just need to have a change.
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