Friday 7 December 2012

2014 poll: Preventing needless crises in Ekiti

A girl arrested for an alleged electoral offence
hreatened by the violence which is gradually being reintroduced ahead of the 2014 governorship poll. Although the Independent National Electoral Commission has not released the timetable for political activities, politicians in the state have started subterranean moves and open campaigns for support ahead of the election. The campaigns are pronounced especially among those jostling to pick the ticket to contest under the umbrella of the Peoples Democratic Party.
The ruling Action Congress of Nigeria came into power on October 16, 2010 with the declaration of Dr. Kayode Fayemi as the lawfully elected governor of the state by the Court of Appeal which was headed by Justice Ayo Salami. The court sacked Mr. Segun Oni of the PDP after a prolonged legal battle, which lasted three-and-a-half years. Though Fayemi, who has just spent two years in office, is yet to declare publicly his second term interest, his party chiefs including the Speaker and members of the state House of Assembly have asked him to continue in office after 2014. They have agreed that the performance of the governor in the past two years is unprecedented and the best thing to do is to allow him to continue with the job of developing the state. Based on his acceptance, nobody within the ACN has declared their intention to contest the ticket against the governor.
However, the PDP, which is the only vibrant political party among the opposition in the state, has started the process that will lead to the emergence of its governorship candidate.
The party seems to have jettisoned its zoning idea with the coming of politicians who are not from the Ekiti South Senatorial District into the governorship race. This senatorial district is yet to produce a governor for the state since 1999 except when former Speaker of the state House of Assembly, Mr. Tunji Odeyemi, from Gbonyin Local Government Area, acted for less than three months during the rerun governorship poll in 2009.
Some of the governorship aspirants in the PDP include former Governor Ayo Fayose, former Chairman of SUBEB during Oni’s administration, Mr. Dayo Adeyeye, former Deputy Governor, Chief Bisi Omoyeni; Senator Ayo Arise and Mr. Femi Bamisile. Although the Minister of Police Affairs, Navy Capt. Caleb Olubolade (retd) has not declared his interest publicly, some of the leaders of the party are asking him to contest. Olubolade, since he was appointed by President Goodluck Jonathan as a minister, has been the sole financier of the PDP in Ekiti State. They are of the opinion that his liberality and experiences in military and politics will give him an edge over others.
Fayose, who has gone round some political parties in the state since his removal from office in 2006, returned to the party which brought him into power. He returned to the PDP in Sept. 2011 and a year after, he was given a waiver paving the way for him to contest any political office.
The former governor has since declared his intention to return to the Government House from where he was removed based on the allegations of corruption. His supporters and the supporters of the ACN have since been clashing and the violence being reintroduced to politics in the state is threatening to plunge the state into another round of crisis.
An attack was first reported in Oye-Ekiti when Fayose went to the town to meet with his supporters ahead of the PDP primaries.  Supporters of the ACN and those loyal to Fayose were said to have engaged one another in a violent clash which left six persons injured while some vehicles were damaged.
The Director-General of the Ayo Fayose Campaign Organisation, Mr. Gboyega Oguntuase, while narrating the story to journalists, said that the PDP was holding a meeting when hoodlums he claimed to be supporters of the ACN unleashed terror on them. He said six of their members were injured while four vehicles belonging to them were vandalised.
Oguntuase said, “They have been laying siege to us for a long time.  But this one in Oye was very violent; six of our members were injured. If the attacks continue; then they are inviting the declaration of a state of emergency.” He accused the ruling party of planning to either kill Fayose or force him to jettison his ambition. According to him, the ACN considers the former governor as the only strong candidate hat could challenge them.
But he said that the Commissioner of Police in the state, Mr. Sotonye Wakama, led other police officers to Oye, adding that it was their efforts that prevented the crisis from degenerating.
However, the Director of Publicity of the ACN in the state, Chief Tai Oguntayo, denied the allegation levelled against the ruling party. He said the ACN members were known for their decorum and peace while blaming Fayose for the crisis in Oye. According to him, the ACN and the PDP members have been co-existing in the town for a long time without any fight. He alleged that violence was introduced into the town when Fayose went there to campaign.
Oguntayo said, “The ACN is not known for violence. Everyone knows that violence trails Mr. (Ayo) Fayose wherever he goes. Why was it that the violence happened the day he went to Oye-Ekiti?”
He urged the people of the state to “disregard Fayose’s antics.”
After the clash in Oye, the police stepped up their vigilance and prevented another clash in Ilawe-Ekiti although some of the aides of Fayose climed that security agents advised him against going to Ilawe that day because some hoodlums had laid in ambush for him. But Oguntuase later told our correspondent on the telephone that Fayose still went to the town. 
Crisis also trailed Fayose’s visit to Ikere as some youths were said to have blocked the road leading to the town to prevent the former governor from campaigning there.
Fayose’s driver told journalists on the telephone that he was attacked at Ilupeju on his way back from Abuja where he had taken his boss to. The driver said that he was returning to Afao-Ekiti when the hoodlums attacked him and started asking him for Fayose’s whereabouts. He claimed that he was thoroughly beaten but they let him go when they discovered that his boss was not in the vehicle.
Fayose, in an interview with Sunday PUNCH, said that he had been under constant attacks from the ACN, which he helped during the rerun governorship poll since he declared his intention to contest against Fayemi. Although he said that he would not speak against Fayemi, he blamed his (Fayemi) party for these attacks.
He said, “Since my party gave me a clearance, the ACN has continually waylaid me with their touts, because they know I’m their headache. They say I’m not popular, I agree. I lost a senatorial election, I agree. I was impeached, I agree. But they should stop attacking me.”
The Chairman of the ACN in Ekiti State, Chief Jide Awe, described Fayose’s allegations as lies and an attempt by the former governor to draw attention to himself and to blackmail the ruling party. He explained that Fayose’s return to the PDP had further worsened the crisis within the ranks of the opposition party. The ACN chairman said that there was no way a political party would be enmeshed in crisis of that magnitude and a faction would be organising rallies and others would watch it to go on unmolested. He exonerated the ACN from the attacks on Fayose while he accused the former governor of perpetrating the violence.
Awe said, “The Action Congress of Nigeria knows nothing about the attacks on Fayose. The ACN is the party in power and we cannot be hurting the people we govern. Before Fayose’s entry, Ekiti was one of the most peaceful states in the country. When he was removed as governor, we started living peacefully. Now that he has entered again, violence is erupting. We are calling on the police and other security agencies to check him. We have written to them on this.”
The recent eruption of political violence in the state has made many to believe that the state is gradually reverting to the era of holocaust, which claimed the lives of promising indigenes of the state including a World Bank Consultant, Dr. Ayo Daramola; Tunde Omojola; Kehinde Fasuba and others. Political observers in the state are of the opinion that the breeding violence needs to be promptly nipped in the bud to stop the descent of the state into a state of anomie.

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