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2015 campaign: APC wants INEC to sanction Jonathan’s wife
The All Progressives Congress, the umbrella of major opposition
political parties, on Friday asked the Independent National Electoral
Commission to investigate media reports that stated that the wife of the
President, Mrs. Patience Jonathan, campaigned for her husband’s
re-election during her visit to Rivers State, and sanction her
appropriately.
Several media reports on Tuesday, quoted the President’s wife as
asking the people of Obio Akpor Local Government Area of the state to
support President Goodluck Jonathan when he seeks re-election in 2015.
This, APC noted, occurred less than two weeks after INEC warned
politicians against starting campaign ahead of the 2015 general
elections.
The spokesmen for the Action Congress of Nigeria and the Congress for
Progressive Change, the two leading parties in APC, Mr. Lai Mohammed
and Mr. Rotimi Fashakin, respectively told SUNDAY PUNCH that INEC
had no moral right to sanction any other person, if it failed to
sanction Mrs. Jonathan, and others who had started drumming up support
for the President.
Mohammed said, “If it is true that Mrs. Patience Jonathan has started
campaigning for her husband, then INEC’s attention should be drawn to
that because just two weeks ago, INEC warned against campaigning of any
kind. If INEC does not sanction her for campaigning, then it will lose
every moral right to sanction any other person who starts campaigning.”
Similarly, Fashakin said the action of the President’s wife was a
display of the culture of impunity, which he said had characterised the
Jonathan administration.
He said, “The bane of our society is the culture of impunity that has
become very pervasive. It has become even worse under Jonathan than any
other time in the country’s history. That is the kind of thing you
would see. The fact is that Jonathan has brought down the level of
leadership in the country. We have not had it this low.
“Past Nigerian leaders, both military and civilian, were able to keep
their spouses in check, but we have not seen that under President
Jonathan. If the Jonathan administration prodded INEC to give the
warning against campaign, and the same administration has gone on to
flout the warning; then there is a problem.”
Fashakin said the APC expected INEC to analyse Mrs. Jonathan’s
comments and if found to be open campaign, appropriate sanction should
be applied.
He said, “We believe INEC should have monitors. INEC is the regulator
of the political parties. It is to regulate the conduct of political
parties. If it does not have a mechanism to monitor this kind of thing
and give sanctions appropriately, then it should close shop. It is not
for us to tell the regulator its job.
“The President’s wife’s speech was well reported. So, if anything in
that speech constitutes open campaign for the President, and since it’s
not yet time for politicking, then it’s an infraction of a subsisting
regulation and it is anctionable. INEC should know what to do.”
Also, a former Minister of Information, Chief Edwin Clark, on Monday
said he and some groups decided to start campaigning for President
Goodluck Jonathan’s re-election in 2015 despite his directive to the
contrary because of the disposition of those opposed to the President’s
second coming.
Clark said the position of his group, which was formed in August
2010, was that all Nigerians were equal, irrespective of which side of
the country they hailed from.
In its reaction, the Presidency on Friday said it was wrong to
describe the mobilisation of support currently being done by wife of the
President as campaign ahead of the 2015 elections.
Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters, Dr. Ahmed
Gulak, made the Presidency’s position known in a telephone interview
with one of our correspondents.
Gulak said what Mrs. Jonathan was doing was to mobilise support for
President Goodluck Jonathan in order for him to continue to deliver on
his agenda for national transformation.
This, he explained, did not translate into campaigning for the 2015 elections.
He said, “What the woman is doing is to ask citizens of Nigeria to
support the President because he actually needs their support.
“The President is revamping the railway; he is tackling insecurity;
he is tackling power problem; he is constructing roads and bridges. In
all these, he needs the support of the citizens to succeed. He cannot do
it alone.
“What we have been saying and what the First Lady is saying is that
Nigerians should give the President their support. That does not mean we
are campaigning.”
Apparently concerned with the campaigns that had started for his
reelection, Jonathan, during the 61st National Executive Council meeting
of the Peoples Democratic Party in Abuja on Thursday, advised his party
leaders against defying the INEC’s ban on any form of politicking for
now.
Section 99 (1) of the Electoral Act 2010 (as Amended) states that,
“For the purpose of this Act, the period of campaigning in public by
every political party shall commence 90 days before polling day and end
24 hours prior to that day.”
When contacted the spokesman for the chairman of INEC, Mr. Kayode
Idowu, told one of our correspondents to give him some time to confirm
the media reports before responding.
However, he did not answer subsequent phone calls and did not reply to a text message sent to his mobile phone as of press time.
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