Connect with us

Politics

I SUPPORT OBI, ATIKU GOING TO COURT WHILE I PREPARE TO BE PRESIDENT – TINUBU

Published

on

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

This is inherent to the democratic process. We defend their right to seek legal recourse.

PRESS RELEASE

Nigeria: At the Cusp of Renewed Hope
By Bola Ahmed Tinubu, President-elect, Nigeria.
 
A fair, credible election has been held and has been won. The honor of that victory and the steep responsibility it entails has fallen on me. I say this not to gloat or boast because there is no room for such behavior. I merely state the facts as they are.
 
I realize many good and well-meaning Nigerians voted for other candidates. They are naturally disappointed that their favored candidate did not win.  Other candidates have voiced their dissatisfaction, stating they will go to court to contest the election.  This is inherent to the democratic process. We defend their right to seek legal recourse. While they exercise the legal rights afforded them in our democracy, I have set my course and mind on the leadership of this nation. We have important work to do and I am committed to getting that work done for the benefit of all the people, whether or not they voted for me or even voted at all.
 
This is not the time for continued acrimony and partisan recrimination. These negative things can incite strong passions; but they are not the pathway to a better nation. Only unity and national commitment can serve that purpose..  
 
Critics of Nigeria have been too quick to conclude that our political system is fragmented because of the impressive showing of new parties and their candidates. These critics are wrong. The emergence of the new parties and their candidates underscores the dynamic strength of our democracy. People want democracy to work and they want to have their voices heard and interests met within it.  This is a good thing to be promoted,  not something to be feared.
 
What must concern us is not the growth of parties but the regrowth of old prejudices  and bigotries such as  ethnicity, creed and place of origin.  As a nation and as individuals imbued with the love of God and of our fellow man, we are better than this. At some point we must decide whether we shall be enticed by the ills of the past or shall we more bravely and nobly be encouraged by the eminent prospect of a brighter future.    
   
There have been times in our past when our governing institutions created more questions than they answered. But the arc of our political history gives me confidence that we can overcome that past. We have walked through the thick of the night to emerge into the light of  brighter days to come. There is no good reason to retreat into the darkness of years past.
 
We must begin to repair and rebuild this national home of ours. There is time to complete the task,  but time is also of the essence. We must not tarry or fret over the enormity of what we face.
 
We are able of mind and body. Now, we must show the spirit and willpower to accomplish the historic things that lie within our grasp.
 
As your incoming president, I accept the task before me. There has been talk of a government of national unity. My aim is higher than that. I seek a government of national competence. In selecting my government, I shall not be weighed down by considerations extraneous to abiilty and performance. The day for political gamesmanship is long gone. I shall assemble competent men and women and young people from across Nigeria to build a safer, more prosperous and just Nigeria. There shall be young people. Women shall be prominent. Whether your faith leads you to pray in a church or mosque will not determine your place in government. Character and competence will.
 
To secure our nation and to make it prosperous must be our top priorities. We cannot sacrifice these goals to political expediencies. The whims of politics must take a backseat to the imperatives of governance.  
 
We have bridges and roads to build not just for commerce and travel but to connect people of different faiths, parties and different outlooks in harmonious dialogue and common purpose. We have families to feed not just to eliminate hunger but to nurture enlightenment, civic responsibility and compassion.  We have jobs to create not merely to put people to work but to afford all a better standard of living by which families and communities are improved and democracy deepened. We have water to replenish not just to quench physical thirst but to ignite a thirst for creative and better solutions to society’s challenges. We have a nation to protect such that we eliminate danger and even the fear of danger. May all of our people be able to live their lives in the light of peace and the glow of broadening prosperity.
 
An important step toward restoring economic normalcy has been taken by the Supreme Court’s decision on the parity of old and new notes . This restores both the rule of law and economic decency. But this is not the end of the story. It is merely the beginning of a more comprehensive solution to our economic challenges.  
 
Our Renewed Hope Action Plan outlines goals for greater economic growth in our cities and rural communities. We are committed to an economy of double-digit GDP growth, greater food security and one with a strengthened manufacturing base as well as an active digital economy where young people will have ample space to fulfill their dreams and aspirations.
 
I realize that I am the servant of a larger purpose. As such, I have gone straight to work.
 
My team and I have been daily engaged in discussions and meetings refining our ideas and policy solutions so that we can begin actively working toward the common good the very first day we assume office.
 
This great project called Nigeria beckons to us all.
 
I ask that we work together as Nigerians for Nigeria. Those who voted for me, I ask that you continue to believe in our policies and plans for the country. I also ask that you reach out to your brothers and sisters who did not vote as you did. Extend to them the hand of friendship, reconciliation and togetherness. To those of you who did not vote for me, I ask you to believe in Nigeria and in the capacity of your fellow citizens, even those who voted differently than you. The better Nigeria I seek is not just for me and my supporters. It is equally yours.
 
I do not ask you to abandon your political preferences. That would be undemocratic.  I do beseech you to answer the call of patriotic duty as the loyal opposition.
 
Remain loyal to the cause of a greater, more tolerant and just Nigeria. I too shall keep faith with this objective.
 
If we all play our proper roles, we shall begin the task of rebuilding our national home together, day by day, brick by brick notwithstanding our political differences.
 
As such, the victory of national progress will belong to all of us. The triumph of our nation’s democracy shall cite all of you as its very authors.  This is how things should be.
 
Dear Nigerians, this is our country. This is our moment. We dare not waste it. Nor do we back away to accept a lesser version of ourselves and of our collective fate. We can no longer be satisfied with calling ourselves the giant of Africa.  We must devote ourselves to doing those great and historic things only a giant can do. As your president elect, I shall do my utmost in this regard for this is my sworn duty.
 
I call upon you to come bravely forth as well, not for me but out of abiding love of country and for the people who inhabit it with you. We are so much better than we have been.  Now is the time to stand fast and have faith in what this nation can be.
 
I, for one, am standing. But this time, i shall not be the last or only one standing. Imagine how great  we can be if over 200 million other souls stand with me. Let the world see  a Nigeria that nothing can stop.
 
Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu
President-elect, Nigeria.

Facebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinyoutubeinstagrammail
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Politics

APC SUSPENDS NDDC CHAIRPERSON, LAURETTA ONOCHIE

Published

on

Lauretta-Onochie-NDDC

The Delta State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has suspended the chairperson of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Ms. Lauretta Onochie, from the party.

Following a review of what the party described as her conduct during the just-concluded 2023 general election in the state, the executive members of the party in Onicha-Olona Ward 4 in Aniocha North Local Government Area of the state, approved her suspension from the party.

A copy of her suspension letter made available to journalists stated that she was allegedly found campaigning for candidates of other political parties, especially the rival Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

Her allies and supporters were said to have also worked for the PDP, thereby causing APC to lose the elections in her polling unit and other places.

A vote of no confidence was passed on Onochie by the Ward executives of the APC, who alleged that she had never met her financial obligations to the party and had never attended the Ward and LGA meetings or any of the party’s engagements.

The suspension letter signed by 27 ward executives reads thus: “We, the under listed are the ward executive members of the APC in Onicha-Olona Ward 4, Aniocha LGA, Delta State. We have painstakingly reviewed the conduct of the just concluded general election at all levels and have noted, with dismay, that Lorretta Onochie, who is one of the leaders of our great party, worked against the success of the party in Onicha-Olona Ward 4 and beyond.

 “Information available to us shows very clearly that she was openly campaigning for the candidates of the opposition parties, especially the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), in the run-up to the presidential and National Assembly, as well as the governorship and state House of Assembly election.

“It was also observed that all her allies and supporters were working for the PDP in the state. The evidence of this could be seen in the fact that the party lost in her polling unit (unit 8, ward 4) in the presidential, senatorial, House of Representatives, governorship, and state assembly elections.

“We also noted that she has also failed to fulfill her financial obligations to the party and has never attended any ward and LGA meetings or other party engagements.

“In the light of these grievous infractions discovered in her as stated in Article 21.2(i), (ii), we have lost confidence in her membership of the party and hereby suspend her from the party with immediate effect.”

Facebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinyoutubeinstagrammail
Continue Reading

Politics

GUBER POLLS: NO EVIDENCE OF VOTER INTIMIDATION, VIOLENCE IN LAGOS -APC

Published

on

Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu and lady attacked during elections

Mr Oladejo urged the opposition to stop playing the victim.

The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State has dismissed rivals’ claims that its members perpetrated violence during the just-concluded elections.

“It is sheer falsehood that cannot be substantiated,” State Publicity Secretary Seye Oladejo declared at a news conference in Ikeja on Thursday.

Mr Oladejo urged the opposition to stop playing the victim.

He said that the conference was to review the election and comment on some of the false allegations the opposition parties had been spinning in the media space.

He said: “Many false narratives have been put in the public space by the aggressors in the last election, who have turned round to shed crocodile tears in their bid to play the victim.

“The elections have been won and lost. It is time for all patriotic citizens to concentrate on building our dear state and, by extension, the nation.

“But, this is not the thinking of the opposition, who have shown that they lack the true spirit of sportsmanship.”

The APC spokesman, who noted that ethnicity and religion remained anathema to democracy, said that such had never been a factor in the voting pattern in the state.

He alleged that the Labour Party introduced and orchestrated ethnicity and religion into the electioneering, saying that the intention was to pit a section of the populace against another.

Mr Oladejo added that the allegations of threat and intimidation of voters during the polls was a weapon deployed by the opposition currently playing the victim.

“It is on record that there are 13,325 polling units in Lagos State and there were reports of disturbances in about 130 or one per cent of all the polling units.

“I think that is too infinitesimal for anyone to rely upon to say that the election was not free and fair.

“In other words, under no circumstance can we say the incidents invalidated the credibility of the elections.

“We also need to state that the false alarm that members of the APC perpetrated violence during the election cannot be substantiated.

“The party has loyalists, members and sympathisers in all nooks and crannies of the state. It has no reason to embrace violence.

“On the contrary, our members were mostly the victims of intimidation and violence. Many are still in hospitals where doctors are battling to save their lives,” Mr Oladejo said.

The spokesman, who opined that February 25 and March 18 elections were free and fair, regretted that there had been futile efforts to discredit the elections with some of the losers and their sympathisers alleging that it was the worst election in the history of the nation.

Mr Oladejo said that INEC’s introduction of Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) had helped tremendously in ensuring that only registered voters accredited and captured by the machine could vote.

He said that the BVAS machines recorded 88 per cent success rate in the 176,606 polling units across the nation and malfunctioned in nine per cent of polling units.

“Even those that malfunctioned were fixed.

“BVAS machines were replaced in two per cent of polling units where they malfunctioned. In our view, INEC deserves some applause for this feat. The reforms also ensured that violence was reduced to the barest minimum.

“It is very sad and unfortunate that 13 deaths were recorded in electoral violence in the 2023 elections. No life should be lost at all.

“Every death mocks our humanity, but compared to 150 in 2019, 100 in 2015, 800 in 2011, 300 in 2007, 100 in 2003 and 80 in 1999, we have made some progress.

“The security agencies should be commended for a job well done.”

Commending security agents for their conduct during the elections, Mr Oladejo said that they were professional, especially in Lagos State, “despite attempts by some people to create an atmosphere of fear and violence”.

He, however, said that the security agents needed to go a step further by curbing the excesses of warmongers and scaremongers desperate to foment trouble in the state.

“We condemn the post-election hate speeches and fake news still being promoted in various media spaces.

“It should be noted that the general election was held throughout the nation and the law provides for those not satisfied with the conduct of the exercise to approach the court of law as it is done in civilised climes.

“Anything contrary to this under any guise should be viewed seriously,” he added.

Congratulating Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu and his deputy, Dr Kadri Obafemi Hamzat, on their victory, Mr Oladejo said that the feat was a recognition of their giant strides in the last four years.

Also speaking, the Commissioner of Information and Strategy, Gbenga Omotosho, said that allegations of violence by the opposition parties was to fan up sentiments and cause anarchy.

(NAN)

Facebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinyoutubeinstagrammail
Continue Reading

Politics

LABOUR PARTY NATIONAL CHAIRMAN, JULIUS ABURE SUSPENDED

Published

on

The Executive Council members of the Labour Party (LP) in Ward 3, Arue in Esan North East Local Government Area of Edo State has suspended the chairman of the party, Julius Abure, over alleged forgery and anti-party activities.

Speaking at a press conference on Friday, the Ward Chairman, Martins Osigbemhe, claimed that Abure connived with the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to truncate the chances of the party in the February 25 presidential poll.

Osigbemhe added that Abure was suspended by the executive, pending the determination of the numerous petitions and cases against him in courts.

He said: “We, the Labour Party Ward Executive Council in Ward 03-Arue, in Esan North East Local Government Area O4 of Edo State (12), do hereby suspend Barr Abure Julius Odianosen indefinitely as the National Chairman of the Labour.”

Native Reporters

Facebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinyoutubeinstagrammail
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © Estreet On TV 2023