The Governor of Bayelsa state, Seriake Dickson, has lambasted his
colleague governors, especially Chibuike Amaechi and Jonah Jang of
Rivers and Plateau States respectively, for ”destroying” the
governors’ forum.
He tackled the outgoing governors for their role in
the crisis that engulfed the forum since 2013, and for attempting to
hold fresh elections for new leaders just days before end of their
tenures.
Mr. Dickson urged his colleagues to shelve the idea of
electing a new set of officials for the Nigeria Governors Forum until
after the handover of power on May 29.
The
NGF is billed to hold its first meeting as a unified group since 2013
when it split into two after the election of new leaders.
Rivers
Governor,Mr. Amaechi, had defeated his Plateau state counterpart, Mr.
Jang, by 19 votes to 16, but Mr. Jang refused to accept defeat, alleging
irregularities. He subsequently formed a parallel body with his
loyalists.
The Director General of the NGF, Ashishana
Okauru, informed PREMIUM TIMES on Sunday that the body would meet Monday
by 8 p.m. in Abuja to review its activities and elect new
officials.
Mr. Dickson issued a statement on Monday saying holding
an election when many of the governors have completed their two terms in
office amounts to imposing officials on new governors elected on
April 11.
Read the full text of Mr. Dickson’s statement below:
It
has come to my knowledge that my distinguished and respected senior
colleagues, i.e out-going governors, governors whose tenures will be
ending May 29, 2015, have summoned a meeting of the purported Nigeria
Governors’ Forum for Monday, the 18th of May, 2015. Among other things
on the card for discussion, I understand, may be the selection of a new
leadership of the forum.
Having participated in the activities of the
NGF at the period during its crisis with my respected colleagues, most
of whom are now ending their respective governorship tenures, and having
also known the roles played by most of the key actors of the forum in
the orchestration and mismanagement of a needless crisis at such a
critical phase in our nation’s political journey, I owe it as a duty to
our country and its fledgling democracy to alert the nation and caution
my respected colleagues, especially the in-coming governors of the
dangers in allowing themselves to be railroaded by the out-going
governors, most of whom created the NGF crisis, to foist on our country
and political system another NGF contraption (in their own image and
likeness) that will in due course threaten the stability of our
democracy and be a distraction to citizens and the leadership of our
country, as the NGF tussle has done between 2012 till date.
They
failed to show leadership when it mattered most. They played politics
with everything and put their personal ambitions and egos above the
national interest. As a democrat, I believe in robust dialogue,
disagreement and the need to accommodate a variety of opinions and
consensus building where the national interest so dictates. Therefore,
as true democrats and nationalists, whether we agree or disagree, it
must be in the national interest. These they did not show throughout the
crisis, even after the tireless and fatherly intervention of former
President Olusegun Obasanjo who held series of late night meetings with
us. Most took the view that both Governors Jang and Amaechi should step
down for a neutral candidate to emerge. Again, they disagreed.
The
NGF is neither a political party nor a trade union but a voluntary
association of governors who are the heads of federating units in our
country. I believe that the duties are to provide a mechanism for peer
review, a platform to collaborate with the federal government and
amongst ourselves on issues of national security, law and order,
management of the economy of the federation and strengthening our
democratic values and practices. But contrary to these lofty ideals, the
forum was used as a trade union and an alternative ‘federal government’
or an opposition platform.
The leaders of the NGF from the majority
party have always tried to use it as a stepping stone to seeking higher
office, and an instruments of the enforcement of their will on their
political parties and the nation. From experience, the seeds of
instability in NGF are always sown by out-going governors, foisting
their favourite candidates on the in-coming ones. I disagree with this
practice. The leadership of NGF has to be consensual, not by a divisive
election and I agree that its chairman should come from the majority
party with a vice chairman from the minority party and it should respect
the principle of rotation between the north and the south for a period
that the members may determine, not more than two years and not subject
to re-appointment. The process of consultation by the existing PDP
Governors’ Forum and the APC Progressive Governors’ Forum should
commence regarding the desirability and procedures for bringing about
its leadership after May 29, when the new governors would have taken
office and therefore become active members.
From inception of the NGF
till date, the leadership has always been surreptitiously put in place
without the input of all members, especially the in-coming governors as
new members, thus short-changing them. This is what the out-going
members who have destroyed the forum plan to do. I disagree with this. I
believe that the out-going members, most of whom allow themselves to
tear the NGF apart, should just let things be.
One may ask, what is
the hurry in summoning a moribund and divided NGF under its multiple
leaderships, especially in the dying days of its actors whose clash of
egos and ambitions brought about the crisis in the NGF in the first
place?
Our nation and democracy cannot afford another NGF whose
leaders will develop ambitions and use same to undermine the federal
government or be a threat to the stability and peace of our country and
their political parties. I have shared this views with Governors
Amaechi, Jang, Akpabio and others. I have also shared it with some of
the in-coming governors. Let all the issues of the NGF be handled by the
governors who will be left after May 29. The secretariat should be told
to receive the handing over notes from the two leaders and be prepared
to give account when the need arises.
I appreciate the contributions
and sacrifices made by our out-going governors and indeed, the
sacrifices every one of us has made and will continue to make in the
building of a prosperous, stable and democratic Nigeria. Happily, a
number of the out-going governors will still be around in one form or
the other. With their guidance and that of others, let the governors who
are left after May 29 rise to the occasion.
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