Better Tomorrow

Better Tomorrow Eugene Dibiagwu

09/07/2017

APC gave us a President that's not available to do his work.

- Gave us a Governor that believes meningitis is spiritual punishment.

- Gave us an ajekun iya Senator.

- Gave us a Minister that wants to manufacture pencils in 2017.

- Gave us a Governor that boasts of owing 15 months salaries.

- Gave us recession.

- Gave us an Acting President that can't swear in ministers.

- Gave us a comical anti-graft agency.

- Gave us a Police Force that can't arrest killer-herdsmen.

- Gave us global date-stealing embarassment.

- Gave us Babachir Lawal

- Gave us propaganda as governance.

-Gave us national punishment of a government.

-Gave us a foreign President and street credibility seeking vice President who comes to talk grammar on air and goes behind to be dealt with by cabals.

-Gave us cabals as govt appointees.

-Gave us Gov. Ortom of Benue state who only knows how to empower Benue youths with wheel barrow.

-Gave us "technical defeats", "budget paddings" and "comical arraignments" at the CCT!.

-Gave us a minister of agriculture that said the price of rice is high because nigerians eats too much.

-Gave us a P**N STAR as a Senator from Borno state.

Bunch of clowns and professional Looters!!

My fingers are hurting, please tell us what this government has given you in 2 years either good or bad.

09/07/2017

WHY "PDP" WON OSUN WEST
ONWUASOANYA FCC JONES
The recently concluded senatorial rerun election which returned the PDP candidate, Mr Adeleke as overwhelmingly elected has a lot to teach politicians going forward to 2019. While the PDP under Senator Ali Modu Sheriff would understandably beat its chest on this victory, it will be wrong to conclude that it was really a PDP victory. From a distance, these are some of the factors I have identified as having contributed to the victory of Mr Ademola Adeleke, a brother to the deceased former Senator.
1. THE ALI MODU SHERIFF FACTOR: Hate or love him, the former governor of Borno State, former Senator of the Federal Republic, former BOT Chairman of the ANPP and one of the few politicians who withstood the Olusegun Obasanjo onslaught against opposition parties in 2003-2007, is one of Nigeria's most formidable political leaders. He is deft at the chess board of power and knows how to turn situations around to his advantage. One of his best selling points is that he has a very sharp eyes for opportunities. Poaching up Ademola Adeleke from the APC on the eve of the APC's badly fought primaries is the beginning of this victory dance. Left to the old PDP dribblers, the PDP ticket would have been reserved for the fattest moneybags, but Sheriff literally took the PDP ticket to Ademola in his bedroom, while the latter was still disoriented about his fate in the hands of Aregbesola. Sheriff's ability to bring warring factions of the PDP in Osun West together for this project is also a big credit to his political credentials.
2. THE APC NWC: Technically, the ruling All Progressives Congress should get more credit for this victory than any other group. Most of those who were deployed to the field during the election are APC members. Recall, that the NWC of the Party had earlier disqualified Mudashiru Hussain during screening only for the State Working Committee of the Party to reinstate him and as it is alleged, impose him as candidate of the Party. In politics, some people work best when they are not working. The apathy on the part of, at least, most members of the APC's NWC made the terrain easier for the younger Adeleke to bulldoze his way to victory. It goes without saying that had the APC NWC been passionate about the victory of their Party's candidate, the news this morning will be different.
THE APC CAMPAIGN TEAM: This is not unconnected with the Party's disagreement with the candidate of Mudashiru Hussain. Any good political observer would have noted that the Party's campaign team was mostly made up of people without any serious electoral credentials. To put it more bluntly, a good number of those who made it to the campaign team for Osun West Senatorial rerun do not have any enviable history of electoral successes. The team is what may be described as the Party's team D.
THE ISIAKA ADELEKE FACTOR: The suddenness of Senator Isiaka's death and the many insinuations about who was responsible for his death has a lot to do with the outcome of this contest. For a man who commands an intimidating popularity among his constituents, it will be stating the obvious to say that Osun West voters saw Ademola's victory as a way of rewarding him for his efficient representation and another way of disappointing those they accused of complicity in his death. One will not be far from the truth to say that 98% of late Senator Isiaka's supporters- even though they might still be in the APC- voted for and also worked for the victory of Senator-elect Ademola Adeleke. For a people who believe in the value of experience in political leadership, Ademola is seen as the most fitting heir to his brother's political dynasty.
TEMPERAMENT OF INCUMBENCY: For a Party that has been in power for close to eight years now, it is expected that its popularity would have waned, more, as a result of the failure of a good number of the electorate to understand some of its policies, rather than as a result of the failure of the Party to meet the people's aspirations. The electorate are more inclined to new options every election year than a woman of easy virtue is inclined to trying out new s*x styles. Even in the world's most advanced democracies, the chances of opposition political parties winning elections are usually higher every election year than that of the incumbent. For example, neither of the Democratic Party or Republicans has been able to succeed itself after eight years in the saddle. The chances of an opposition winning in an election is so good that the electorate may not mind voting for a failed politician who managed to get the nomination of a new Party outside the one in power.
2018 ELECTION: There will be a governorship election in Osun come 2018 and this election provided a good opportunity for different political blocs to test run their capacity and also renew political allegiances. Considering that politics is mostly a game of reciprocity, some politicians, especially of the PDP who are interested in the governorship seat next year must have coalesced with the Ademola camp to ensure his victory, expecting the Senator-elect to return the favor by next year. Also, the opposition would have seen this election as an opportunity to make a strong claim to the governorship come next year and there is no doubt that they achieved that. It will be unwise if the ruling Party to take a Party that shellacked it this way for granted. Winning in nine out of ten LGAs in an election is not a mean feat and the APC in Osun had better sat up than relax.

05/07/2017

BREAKING NEWS-
Senator Hope Uzodimma just emerged as the unopposed Chairman of southern Senators forum. Congratulations. The forum is made up of all senators from South South, South West and South East.

03/02/2017

Exactly two years ago, Rt.Hon.Goodluck Nanah Opiah campaigned to be elected as a member representing Oru-West/Oguta/Ohaji Egbema Federal Con...

I HAVE NO PLANS OF LEAVING PDP– UZODINMANigerian News from Leadership News / Kreazetofa Odey / 1 hour agoSenator Hope Uz...
06/01/2017

I HAVE NO PLANS OF LEAVING PDP– UZODINMA
Nigerian News from Leadership News / Kreazetofa Odey / 1 hour ago

Senator Hope Uzodimma represents Imo West Senatorial District in the Upper Chamber of the National Assembly where he doubles as Chairman, Senate Committee on Customs, Excise & Tariff. In this interview with a select group of journalists in his Omuma country home in Imo State where, he speaks on the challenges facing his party, PDP, his much touted governorship ambition and other sundry issues. EMMANUEL MGBEAHURIKE was there for LEADERSHIP.

There are reports that your speculated governorship ambition in 2019 is one of the reasons there are problems in Imo PDP?

I am happy that you said speculated, meaning that people are just guessing. There is no way something that is not yet certain can be the cause of our differences. In other words, it is a cheap talk. We should look for concrete issues to address, not mere speculations. I have not told anybody that I will run for governor in 2019 but since you are talking about it, why should my own speculated ambition be the issue? Are there no other people in the Imo PDP that have governorship ambition even if it is also in the realm of speculation?

Probably, because you come from the zone that seems to have monopolized the governorship position in the state…

It is wrong to say that any zone has monopolized the governorship seat in Imo State. What we have are the forces of democracy at work. In 2007, the forces of democracy took the governorship to Okigwe zone. In 2011 the same forces of democracy were at play. You saw what happened in 2015, the PDP governorship flag bearer who is from Owerri zone got a lot of support from even the same Orlu zone we are talking about. When you say monopolize, it would appear as if some people sat down somewhere and said, “We hereby monopolize the governorship position”. It must be made clear that no zone in Imo can win the Governorship without the support of others. Imo people generally are desirous of having the governorship go around and I believe we will get there but we should not make enmity over that. I personally stayed away from contesting the governorship contest in 2015 because of the same sentiments. Having said that, we are concerned about the survival of our party and yes, we are all brothers and sisters from the same state but we are talking about party politics. Democracy is hinged on party politics.

For 2019, so much will be at stake for both the PDP and the entire state that there will be need for pragmatism. Like I said before, we are all one and for there to be equality, there must be stability. We have to see ourselves first as one people, not necessarily on the basis of zones, to be able to make progress. You can see that the insistence that the governorship must rotate has tended to destabilise the state. We have to find some stability by looking at the state as one constituency. As I said earlier, the same forces of democracy will eventually restore rotation and at that time, it will be effortless.

There has been so much speculation over plans that you and a few other chieftains of your party, in Imo state,are planning to leave the party.

The true position is that there are no such plans by me to leave the PDP. Those are mere speculations as you have said.

People became worried because though the rumour has been quite strong, nothing has been heard from you directly, only some of your associates have been speaking on the matter.

I am now speaking. I have no plans to leave the PDP. What am I leaving PDP for? People move from one party to another out of desperation in search of political office or patronage from those in power. God in His infinite mercies has blessed me and I am not complaining, though, I have become poorer since coming into politics proper. So, I am not desperate for anything to warrant going from one party to another. Rather, I am taking it as a challenge to ensure that PDP bounces back. It doesn’t matter how long it takes but I am personally determined to stick to the party that gave me the opportunity to serve.

The rumour is probably based on the protracted crisis that has bedeviled the party and which seems to have defied solution.

It is not true that the problem of the PDP has defied a solution. A solution is in the offing, in the sense that very soon our other brothers and sisters will express their support for Senator Ali Modu Sheriff’s leadership and we will move ahead. From the present situation, will rise a greater PDP. What we are witnessing today is only a reflection of the fact that the PDP is a citadel of democracy in which different interests want to make their voices known. I want Nigerians to realise the fact that for a party that exercised power for over 16 years, a lot of powerful blocs had been created, each with its understanding of how things should be done. . PDP has what it takes to grow democracy in Nigeria.This is our longest republic since independence and it is to the credit of the PDP that our democracy has been sustained this long. Under the PDP, Nigeria produced three different presidents through a democratic process. The party supervised an election from which power transited from one political party to another, for the first time in Africa. Remember that before the 2015 general election, there were all sorts of speculations that Nigeria will collapse. But that did not happen and the credit goes to the PDP.

There is this speculation about a mega party being put together by the Makarfi-led faction in conjunction with other top politicians in the APC.Is your own faction not frightened by that?

PDP is recognized as one corporate entity, not two. So, any other party can only merge with the PDP as one corporate entity, not with a part of it. So, there is no fear. Politicians in APC or whatever party know full well that for the mega party idea to work, there has to be involved the entire PDP which is the only party apart from the APC that has a national structure as of today. Having said this, my belief is that Nigerians would rather prefer that the PDP remains on its own. There really can be no mega party that can be bigger than the PDP. But, of course, politics is a dynamic thing and ideas rule the world.

Let’s come to your state, Imo. The people, I mean the members and supporters of the party in the state are confused and afraid. What do you have to tell them?

Let me ask you, is anybody still occupying the party secretariat at 47 Okigwe Road, Owerri? If your answer is yes and you know it is yes, then that is where to find the leadership of the party in Imo state. You should ask yourself why the others who claim leadership of the party are not operating from the registered secretariat of the party. The other so-called groups have no addresses and you cannot lead a party or a people by being a fugitive. So, if they are genuine members of the party, let them return to the known address of the party so that together we can build the party.

Are you not worried that PDP members may begin to leave in droves out of anger and frustration?

Where will they leave to? If they would leave, they would have done so long before now. It is not a hidden matter that ‘Imolites’ are not enthusiastic about any other political party than the PDP because of the character of leaders of other parties in the state. Of all people in Nigeria, Imo people are perhaps the most progressive. They will not follow a party that has shown gross insensitivity to the feelings of Imo people.

I can assure our teeming members and supporters that PDP remains their best bet. I thank them for their support and solidarity with the party.

They should remain steadfast and resilient. We will soon overcome.

There is the talk that even if reconciliation takes place at the national level, it will be difficult if not impossible to achieve such in Imo. What do you have to say about this?

There is nothing to reconcile in Imo. I told you earlier where to find the leadership of the PDP in Imo state. That is where ultimately everybody will return to. Contrary to the fear you have just expressed, the Imo matter is quite easy and simple to handle because the people know where to find their leaders in the state. By the grace of God, I am the most senior political office holder on the platform of the PDP in Imo state today, being a ranking senator with due respect to my colleague, Senator Samuel Anyanwu. Together, we are the party’s highest representatives from the state. It is therefore wrong to ask members of the party in the state to look elsewhere for leadership. The Imo people don’t do things like that. So, that is where we are now and like I said earlier, the PDP leadership in Imo state is one and the same. People know where to find their leaders; not in make shift attachments scattered all over Owerri.

OKOROCHA HAS NOT DONE MUCH –EX-SPEAKER— 5th January 2017PDP will take over  from himBy Henry AkubuiroFormer Speaker of t...
06/01/2017

OKOROCHA HAS NOT DONE MUCH –EX-SPEAKER
— 5th January 2017
PDP will take over from him

By Henry Akubuiro

Former Speaker of the Imo State House of assembly and current House of Representatives member for Ohaji/Egbema, Oguta and Oru West, Goodluck Nana Opia, bares his mind on how the oil producing communities of Imo have been denied the 13 percent derivation fund allocated to the state. He said the situation has led to an increased militancy and youth restiveness in the area.

Towards the end of your tenure as the Speaker, you were reportedly impeached. What led to that?

I was never impeached, by the way. There was some form of rascality on the parts of the members of the House we belonged and on the part of the new government of Imo at that time under Owelle Rochas Okorocha, who won the 2011 election over Ikedi Ohakim. I was still the Speaker when he was sworn in, and, as soon as he was sworn in, he embarked on a fruitless journey of dismantling our legacies in that administration –our legacy in the legislature and our legacy in the executive. One of the measures he undertook was to rubbish my person and my achievements in the House of Assembly. So, he tried to garner the minority members in that House of Assembly –about nine or eleven of them – to sign impeachment letter against me in his house in Ogboko. Of course, majority of that House refused to be part of that intrigue, and abandoned the House and relocated with me to Abuja. He didn’t understand the futility of the voyage he embarked on, and they went ahead to pronounce that I had been impeached and that a new speaker had been elected –this was five days to the end of our tenure. So, you could see that it was a very questionable exercise. However, we didn’t take it lying low. We took up the matter at the court in the state under his administration, and we finally got justice, and State Chief Judge of the state, BA Njamanze ruled that the action was null and void and of no effect, and no impeachment took place; and there was no appeal as I speak to you. I think they were reasonable enough to understand that that judgment was flawless and was supposed to stand anywhere even at the Supreme Court. There was no impeachment. I was never impeached. I was the only Speaker in the Imo State House of Assembly between 2007 and 2011.

The federal constituency you are representing, is the most problematic in Imo State in terms of youth restiveness, and it is the only oil producing bloc in the state. Given the constant escalation of violence, do we begin to see oil as a blessing or a curse?

Well, naturally, the abundance of any economic natural resources in an area is supposed to be a blessing if well harnessed and well managed in such a way that both government and the host communities have value for that resource. The presence of crude oil in Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta local governments hasn’t been a blessing to us, and it is the same virtually everywhere in the Niger Delta where oil is being explored and exploited. It has been so because of the attitude of governments at all levels. It has been so because oil multinational companies are in partnership with government to do the business of oil, and, for them, priority is about getting the oil dollar and managing it, to the exclusion of host communities and their detriment; and they seem to forget the fact that business of oil itself goes with so much hazard and causes a lot of environmental degradation and pollution. The very worrisome hazards of oil exploration and exploitation are the fact that it has the capacity to dislocate the traditional economic source of livelihood of the people and leave them poor and hungry.

We in Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta are blessed with fertile land. The oil exploration and exploitation has eroded the soil fertility. That area is predominantly a fishing area, and the water and fishing ponds have been polluted and, therefore, aquatic life has been destroyed; farmers can’t get high yields from their farms, fishermen don’t catch enough fish any more to continue to sustain their families in school and other economic activities. To worsen the situation, even the oil companies and governments are not even engaging the people in meaningful employment. So, we have, in those areas, very capable unemployed graduates who roam the streets because they don’t have jobs, and you know that an idle mind is the devil’s workshop. So, you don’t expect anything less.

Besides, it is quite provoking. They (youths from these areas) come around Abuja and other cities of Nigeria to see the level of development going on in those cities, and they know the source – oil is the mainstay of Nigerian economy, accounting for more than 80 percent of economic activities –and nothing is given to them in return. So, they come back and became aggressive. That’s the reason for militancy and all sorts of security challenges we have now in the oil producing communities of Niger Delta, and I think it is important the government realises this now and begins to show a positive attitude towards the development of those areas where the Nigerian money comes from.

Your constituency also falls within the NDDC catchments area, but the level of NNDC presence is insignificant. What are you doing to up the ante?

I must appreciate the initiate and wisdom of our former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, who, on assumption of office in 1999 as a democratically elected president of Nigeria, initiated an executive bill that gave rise to the Niger Delta Development Commission. That commission was well intentioned to give a new lease of life to the oil producing communities. Unfortunately, these communities, especially of Imo State, have not been able to reap the benefits of that commission.

Why?

The reasons are many. We find ourselves in Imo as a minority group –I am talking of the local governments of Ohaji Egbema and Oguta –and we have also not been privileged to take charge of affairs. The highest we have had in Imo was the No. 3 citizen that I was between 2007 and 2011, which was basically a legislative position –I never awarded a contract of N1,000 to anybody. I never had the opportunity of directing where project must go or not. So, these NDDC positions are being influenced outside my federal constituency (Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta) that are oil producing. You find projects running into billions of naira being built in areas outside Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta; and you come to this constituency, you find only little projects like health centres, classroom blocks, water boreholes, and a kilometre road here and there. It has been quite difficult, and I pray God that we can come out of it.

Presently, one of the challenges I have is how to stop the diversion of NNDC projects to non-oil producing areas, and I am working extremely hard to ensure that we change this. If we can do this, then Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta, as well as Oru West, because they are in the same federal constituency, will be better for it. We want a situation whereby we have mega projects in Ohaji/Egbema, Oguta and Oru West being put in place by NDDC. We want to see our youths benefit from scholarship awards. We want to see mega hospitals being built and managed by NDCC in our area. We want to see the environmental challenges in our area being addressed by both NDDC, government and oil companies themselves. That has been the challenge.

Why I was a lawmaker in Imo State House of Assembly, that challenge motivated me, and caused me to begin to look inwards, especially with regards to the 13 percent oil derivation being paid by the Federal Government on monthly basis –that fund was meant for oil producing communities, because, if out of the 36 states in Nigeria and Abuja, nine states are chosen to benefit from the 13 percent oil derivation fund, those states are chosen on the strength that they are oil producing. The spirit of that part of the constitution dictates, therefore, that even the states should use that fund for the oil producing local governments. Unfortunately, it is not so, because in some states, virtually all local governments are oil producing, for instance, in Rivers State. The same applies to Bayelsa and Delta states. But it is not the same in places like Edo, Imo and Abia. In the case of Imo, we have just two out of the 27 local governments are oil producing. So, do you use 100 percent of the 13 percent derivation to develop non-oil producing areas. Between 1999 and 2007, that fund was 100 per cent being used outside the oil producing local government areas. So, I initiated in 2006 a bill that gave rise to what we have today in Imo State as the Oil Producing Area Development Commission (ISOPADEC).

That bill was passed by the magnanimity of my colleagues (the 2003-2007 set) during the tenure of Kelechi Nwagwu as the Speaker and Chuma Nnnaji as the Deputy Speaker. The then governor, Achike Udenwa, signed it into law in May just a day before he handed over to Governor Ikedi Ohakim. Fortunately, I became the next speaker, so it was easier for me to checkmate the implementation of that law, and it was a huge success during my four-year tenure. Unfortunately, when Governor Ohakin left government and Owelle Rochas Okorocha took over, the law was amended out of relevance, and, as I speak today, ISOPADEC has no capacity to deliver any form of developmental programme or project in either Ohaji Egbema or Oguta. This is not right; very unfair. I just pray that this government of Owelle Rochas Okorocha, which has two years to go, should see sense in allowing ISOPADEC to function. Even, if the government, as usual, has no interest in developing the area from the budget of the state and federal allocation which runs into billions of naira, he should be magnanimous enough to, at least, set 40 percent aside for the development of the oil producing communities of Imo State. That way, we will be able to complement what comes from NDDC. We can synergise to ensure we have good roads, good source of water supply, good health centres, scholarships to encourage our youths to go to school. Of course, we will, by so doing, be creating employments for our teaming youths. That way, militancy will reduce and insecurity in that area will reduce.

What are the chances of PDP reclaiming power in Imo State in 2019? Currently, the party is embroiled in crisis of leadership. Given the track record of Rochas Okorocha and the disaffection within PDP, do you think your party can make any headway?

What kind of record are you talking about? Record of achievements? What are the achievements of Rochas Okorocha? If you talk of roads in Owerri, for instance, the Musa Yar’ Adua Road was constructed by the Ohakim administration. In fact, the Ohakim administration developed the New Owerri the way it is. I am yet to see what he has done. Maybe you have to call me to order. I don’t want to be in a hurry to assess the administration of Owelle Rochas Okorocha. Towards the end, we should be able to do a proper appraisal. I want to believe that the administration will have time to wake up. I don’t have anything to assess him right now. I have spoken to you about my federal constituency, and, believe me, there is no presence of the state government anywhere in our local governments.

You mean for the six years he has been the governor?

There is no state presence anywhere. Ogbaku-Oguta Road was built many years ago by the Sam Mbakwe administration. Ejemekwuru-Agwa-Obokofia (Egbema) was constructed by NDDC. Even right now, the rehabilitation of that road was by NDDC. Adapalm-Egbema Road is no-go area. Before we left office in 2011, we were able to attract NDDC to dualise that road; work commenced, but it hasn’t been properly funded, so the contractor hasn’t been on site. As I talk to you, that road is almost impassable. How can I sit down and praise a government that it has done well. Done well to whom? How? I will only assess him holistically at the end of his eight years.

Talking about PDP, I can tell you that PDP is a very large family, very big political party. So, if you have a large family or a big political party, you are bound to have some misunderstanding, sometimes minor misunderstanding; sometimes major. PDP has a major disagreement, and it is working hard to come out of that problem, and it will take over governments at all levels. That’s my hope. It doesn’t matter any perceived achievement anybody thinks he is putting in place.

We have just entered 2017; against the backdrop of the underdevelopment of your federal constituency, which you hinted a while ago, what are you hoping for in 2017?

I will like the completion by NDDC of the dualisation of the road that runs from Ahoada to Oguta. I want to see a bridge across Oguta Lake; I want to see a dualised road from Oguta to Mgbidi up to Orlu. I want to see my Federal constituency properly linked up such a way that you can wake up in Egbema under two minutes, you are in Mgbidi. I want to see a road from Avuu to Egbema fully completed; I want to see in my federal constituency a road passing from Umuapu, Ohaji, into Obokofia, Egbema, and then into Agwa; I want to see a road crisscrossing from Agwa to Izombe; I want to see network of raods from Ukwuoji to Oguta Motel properly completed in such a way that we can travel anytime; I want to see a network of roads across Oru West, Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta; I want a new lease of life for my federal constituency; I want to see tension reduce in these areas; I want to see less interference by people who have no oil resources in their area in NDDC projects; I want to see that NDDC is left to develop the oil producing communities of Ohaji/Egbema, Oguta and Oru West.

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