...Falana, Durotoye, others canvass paradigm shift
In a new realignment to end the recycling of old
generation political leaders in the country, no fewer than 10 candidates in the
2019 presidential election on Monday agreed to join forces against the aspiration of
President Muhammadu Buhari and his main challenger, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar.
The candidates, who include Donald Duke of the
Social Democratic Party (SDP); Dr. Olusegun Mimiko of the Zenith Labour Party
(ZLP); Dr. Oby Ezekwesili of the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN) and
Mr. Gbenga Olawepo-Hashim of the Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN), also agreed to
produce a consensus candidate.
Other candidates involved in the third force
movement are Prof. Kingsley Moghalu of the Young Progressive Party (YPP); Mr.
Obadiah Melafia of African Democratic Congress (ADC); Dr. Sina Fagbenro Byron
of the Kowa Party (KP) and Mr. Ali Soyode of Yes Party (YP), among others
The Nigeria Intervention Movement (NIM), a third
force movement of new political actors in Nigeria, brokered the agreement at a
roundtable held with the presidential candidates in Abeokuta, Ogun State capital,
at the weekend.
In a communique after the roundtable, the NIM under
the chairmanship of former President of Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Dr.
Olisa Agbakoba, noted that the presidential candidates “have already perfected
plans to shortlist and settle for a fresh breed consensus Presidential
candidate for the 2019 elections.”
The communique said the roundtable resolved “to
align all serious presidential candidates of the third force political parties
into a common platform for the purpose of upstaging the two presidential standard
bearers of the old order in All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) at the 2019 elections.”
It added that the agreement was inspired by the
recent pacts for structural merger signed by the Peoples Trust (PT) and African
Democratic Congress (ADC) on one hand and the strategic alliance ratified last
month between the Peoples Trust (PT) and the Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN) on
the other hand.
The communique said the third force political
parties had already set the tone for the emergence of a consensus presidential
candidate of the third force against Buhari of APC and Atiku of PDP.
It added that the movement to shortlist consensus presidential
candidate of the third force “is billed to hold in Abuja in the last week of October
to be chaired by a frontline leader of the civil society and Chairman of NIM, Agbakoba.
“We have to come to a very firm realisation that
none of us in the third force, fresh breed political parties in Nigeria, can go
it alone against the two behemoth hence the necessity for a consensus among
third force political parties to take the country back to the people in 2019
from the ruthless grip of APC and PDP.”
Also at a symposium in honour of the late Afro-beat
king, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, at the NECA House yesterday, pro-democracy actors
canvassed a generational shift of power from the old to the new in 2019.
The actors are a human lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana,
Omoyele Sowore, presidential candidate of the African Action Congress (AAC);
Fela Durotoye, Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN); Eunice Atu-Ejike, National
Interest Party (NIP) among others.
Speaking at the symposium, Falana said the struggle
for the Nigerian presidency was not about age, saying the time was ripe for the
young generation to take over power in 2019 as the country was currently in
crisis.
“The country is in crisis and we will not get
solution by repackaging distorted views of the ruling class. Our country
remains one of the richest in the world but our people are poor,” he lamented.
Falana said the President Buhari’s government
claimed to be fighting corruption with few money recovered so far, but lamented
that the real criminals had not been touched.
He said out of the over 80 million eligible voters,
about 60 million of them “are youths and that such a huge population of young
voters could swing the pendulum to the side of the youths. We have more young
people in the voting population; we can change the equation if we can get it
right.”
In his presentation, Durotoye, who spoke so
eloquently said since the older generation refused to step aside, they would be
overtaken by the new generation, as the younger generation needed to take the country
to the land of glory.
He observed that God “has blessed Africa, and
recent research showed that 60 percent of resources required by the world in
21st century are in Africa. Nigeria is blessed and we have not been able to tap
our potential. This is because we only have rulership in Nigeria and not
leadership.
Also at the symposium, Sowore explained that Fela
was in charge of his destiny when he was alive, saying Nigerians did not always
celebrate theirown people who had contributed immensely to the development of
the nation.
But Atu-Ejide had a contrary view from Sowore and
Durotoye’s assertion that the old generation must be phased out, saying what
should be looked at was not whether young or old but better leadership driven
with ideas.
She said Nigeria should be grateful that it never
had presidents, who had spent up to 10 years in office unlike in many African
countries where sit-tight presidents spent decades of years in power, saying
what was important in governance was to pick the right leader, whether old or
young.
“If we make the mistake of picking people who don’t
care but just talk, we will put the wrong people in there and it is not just
about age. Even younger age, we have some evil people. Better is not
necessarily younger,” Atu-Ejide said.
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