Chief Bisi Akande, the Interim Chairman, All Progressives Congress (APC) on Wednesday August 21, 2013 in Abuja presented the Manifesto of APC with a seven point cardinal program covering the areas of electricity generation, war against corruption, food security, integrated transport network and free education, devolution of power, accelerated economic growth and affordable health care. The program envisions a progressive state anchored on social democracy. The chairman projected electricity generation and distribution of 40,000 megawatts up from the current 3,311 MW by making power available from renewable energy sources such as coal, solar and wind.
The APC Interim Chairman stated that as a change agent, APC would halt the dangerous drift of Nigeria into a failed state; with a conscious plan for a post-oil-economy. “The country can only succeed when all of us have equal rights, where no one is above the law; where the culture of impunity is abolished and where there is a level playing field.” APC would restructure the country and devolve powers to the units with the best practices of federalism and wage a stringent war against corruption. On agriculture, the APC noted that Nigeria, which used to be a leading exporter of agricultural produce, had become import dependent. The future lies in embarking on a massive and progressive re-organization and revolution of the agricultural industry. APC envisions a national infrastructural development program through a private-public sector partnership involving the construction of 4,000 kilometers of “super highways,” revitalization of the railway system, with a projected building of 200 kilometers of rail lines annually. Ten percent of the country’s annual budget will be devoted to education. On Health, it will reduce infant mortality rate by 2019 to three per cent and reduce maternal mortality by more than 70 per cent while providing free ante-natal care for pregnant women and free health care for babies and children up to school going age. Free health care would also be provided for the aged and people living with HIV/AIDS. APC will conduct a census of ailing industries in the states and create an industrial resuscitation fund and new development banks that would make affordable credits available for industrial growth. APC would maintain “a sound macro-economic policy environment, run an efficient government and preserve the independence of the Central Bank of Nigeria.” APC promised to amend the 1999 Constitution and the Land Use Act “to create freehold/leasehold interest in land matching grants.”
Chief Akande remarked that during the past over 50 years of its Nigeria’s independence, the country had suffered seven coups d’état and endured 28 years of military rule. “Trapped in a vicious cycle of political crises, social upheavals and economic under-development, Nigeria has become, not only one of the most unstable countries in the world, it is also, regrettably, one of the poorest despite its huge human and material resources.” APC would therefore confront the seven major challenges facing the country which include: national unity and integration; perennial threats to security, law and order; ensuring rapid economic growth with equity people-centered economic management, consolidating Nigeria’s emerging democratic tradition; human development; and instituting a sustainable management of the environment. “The philosophy underpinning the coming into being of the APC,” Chief Akande continued, “therefore is the determination to bring the country back from the brink of collapse, despair, and possible disintegration; reposition it decisively on the route to emerging into a modern stable democratic nation, with a productive economy that is based on equity and justice for all citizens.” APC would further harness the abundant energies, enterprise and intellect of all Nigerians, particularly the Nigerian youth and women, to move the country forward so that Nigeria can assume its proper place in world affairs commensurate with its size and status as the leading black nation in the world.
All Progressives Congress Interim National Executive Committee on Tuesday, August 6, 2013, met in Abuja, Nigeria and set up a committee, headed by former House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Bello Masari to build a structure for the All Progressives Congress (APC).
The National Chairman of the party’s Interim National Executive Committee, Chief Bisi Akande stated that APC was ready to draw members from all groups, including the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and that even President Goodluck Jonathan was free to join APC whenever he is fed up with the crisis-ridden PDP.
Chief Akande observed that Nigeria was politically heading towards a two-party system. “Our major preoccupation is to set up the structure of our party – the All Progressives Congress.
“It is after that, maybe in November or December when we hold our national convention where our national executives will be elected. There is no idea about who becomes president or who becomes a governor. But the only exemption is Anambra State where the committee is already working on that.” “We are going to register our members in Anambra State, we are going to conduct congresses and we are going to elect a candidate that will contest on the platform of the All Progressives Congress. I think these are the very few things I have to tell you that we did at today’s meeting,” he continued.
Chief Akande indicated that several committees were set up to advise the party on how to go about the elections in some states, such as Anambra and Delta as well as some local government elections in Kwara, Anambra, Cross River, Enugu and other places. “If you know the INEC timetable, you will appreciate that we are going to work within that frame work and we are going to be ready, before INEC closes their door to nomination in Anambra State.”
The APC Interim National Chairman said the party has banned those arrogating to themselves some political offices or positions when the APC structure is yet to be erected. “But because the party has not been given the directive,” he added, “some people are just talking on behalf of the party. We are putting a stop to that. Any statement about the party should emanate from the Publicity Secretary of APC and that is Alhaji Lai Mohammed. And whatever he tells you, you should know it is the mind and decision of the All Progressives Congress.”
“We are warning people that are arrogating to themselves chairmanship of APC in the state or in the local government, they are all unauthorized. All those who are printing papers, printing forms, calling rallies in the states in the name of APC, are not yet authorized. The authority will soon begin to flow down from the national level to the state level, and to the local government. And when it is going to be done, the National Publicity Secretary will keep you informed.”
From Left Senator Annie Okonkwo, Deputy National Chairman South, Chief Bisi Akande, APC National Chairman, Tijani Tumsa, National Secretary and Aminu Bello Masari
He said the mobilization of members into the new party will begin from the bottom to the top and the membership would be thrown open to all Nigerians, including President Goodluck Jonathan. “If Jonathan is tired of the crisis in the PDP, he is welcome in the APC.”
He said: “We have just finished the first meeting after the INEC registration of the merger of the five committees that came together. And we know our duty as the Interim Leadership of the APC is to mobilize people into APC. Our duty is to register members into the party. “Our duty is to stage congresses, from ward level to local government level, at state level and at the national level. It is to hold a convention to establish a proper structure for the All Progressives Congress. And until that is done, we are having the party in the interim. I hope you will understand that.” Former House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Bello Masari has been chosen to head the committee to advise the party on its structure.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has approved the application by three political parties – the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) and the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) – to merge into one, to be known as the All Progressives Congress.
On considering the application, the Commission found that the applicant-parties have met all statutory requirements for the merger, and has accordingly granted their request.
Consequently, the Commission has approved the withdrawal of the individual certificates of the applicant-parties, and the issuance of a single certificate to the All Progressives Congress.
“A positive storm is brewing” – Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu speech at the ACN party dissolution convention which took place at the Onikan Stadium, Lagos, Nigeria on April 18, 2013.
SACRIFICING THE PARTY TO SAVE NIGERIA
1. History is upon us, asking something bold of us. Those who hear must respond to its call because history is impatient. If we tarry, history shall not. If we fail to act as the situation requires, history will still move forward and its pen will write an unanswerable verdict against us. All the prior achievements and feats we have recorded in the past will matter little unless we now answer the challenge now facing us.
We have come to the place where things must change or we shall sink. For the nation to continue as is constitutes nothing less than an invitation to doom. Such a fate we shall not abide. (more…)
Speech By General Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR, Chairman Of The Board Of Trustees Of The Congress For Progressive Change, CPC, At The Party’s National Dissolution Convention In Abuja, May 11, 2013
With your permission, Mr Chairman, I would like to begin by welcoming all the CPC delegates to this historic occasion. And our special welcome goes out to our friends and colleagues from sister-parties, notably Chief Bisi Akande, Chief Audu Ogbeh, Musa Gwadabe, Dr. Yakubu Lame, Governors Raji Fashola and Ibikunle Amosun, former Governors Achike Udenwa, Segun Osoba and Chris Ngige, Alhaji Lai Mohammed of the ACN, Senator Ahmed Sani, Yariman Bakura, of the ANPP, and Owelle Rochas Okorocha of APGA.
2. But before I deliver my speech, I would like all of us here and across the country to reflect on the seriousness of the security situation in the country today. Some areas of the nation are virtual war zones in a country supposedly at peace. Whole local governments in some states in the North East are no-go areas to representatives of constituted authority. Marauders of every description armed to the teeth with all manner of sophisticated armaments roam the national landscape with total and murderous impunity. The patience of this nation and the various communities within it has been severely tried and stretched to its limits. And there is no end in sight.
3. Anarchy is knocking on the door of many sections of this country and the Federal government has not demonstrated that it has the good sense to understand what is going on, or the competence to check it. The nation is hopelessly adrift. But, if we are to survive, this vicious circle of violence that has engulfed this nation must be brought to an end; and we implore the National Assembly to take the lead in this quest for peace. I am sure everybody in this gathering will join me in expressing sympathy for, and solidarity with, the good people of Borno, Yobe, Kano, and now, Nasarawa and Benue states on their suffering and travails.
4. Mr. Chairman, distinguished guests and fellow delegates, we must explore every opportunity to save our country. This is a historic moment when several different political parties have resolved to come together to change Nigeria for the better and stop the mindless drift that has been going on for the last fourteen years. We must understand and accept that we are here gathered to make history or forever stand accused and condemned by it. We must seize this moment that calls for patriotism and sacrifice—it is time to sacrifice everything—time , resources, ambition and ego—for the greater good. We should carry this process through to a successful conclusion, and leave our legacy and foot-prints on the history of Nigeria.
5. Many political analysts have long stated that the only way to stabilize the country is for opposition parties to merge and oust the ruling PDP. In 2010, during the run-up to the elections of 2011, ACN and CPC inaugurated committees to explore ways and means of merging into a single political party.
6. We have gone to the extent of developing a flag, a logo, a name and have even proceeded to discuss with the Independent Electoral Commission, INEC, about the modalities of consummating our plans; but time proved too short, and we were not about to give too many hostages to fortune.
7. So the present move is really a continuation of the efforts begun in 2010; and this time we have started early, following the rules step by step. On its part, the CPC has, within the last two months, established the following committees with appropriate terms of reference:
Merger Committee;
Convention Committee;
Membership and Registration Committee;
Contact and Mobilization Committee; and
Publicity Committee;
8. The objective of these committees is to prepare CPC for the proposed merger; and these committees have satisfactorily concluded their assignments and their proposals have been submitted to NEC and to the Board of Trustees, and these are now being presented to you, the National Convention, the highest policy making body of our party. Other parties have fast-tracked their processes and some have even held their conventions. So far, so good. No doubt, all the parties joining to form APC are coming in as equals; but, realistically, we all know that some are more equal than others. Nevertheless, every joining party will bring its peculiar strengths to this union and together we will, in every sense of the word, be too strong for the ruling party to resist. With this, we believe the time for real change has finally come to Nigeria—and it must change now before it become too late. The government has failed in almost everything; it has proved unable to secure the nation’s internal environment: there is insecurity everywhere. There is spiraling lawlessness all over the country. There is widespread and rising poverty and unemployment across the length and breadth of the country. There is a complete and total decline in the quality of social services and an irremediable dilapidation in the nation’s socio-economic infrastructure across board.
9. There is an unprecedented fall in the nation’s standard of living and an astronomical rise in the standard of dying. In short, today, there is nothing going right; and we have become a nation in which nothing works as it should, that is, if it works at all. When they said they have what they call a Transformation Agenda, we didn’t understand, but we now know better; because, within the space of three years, they have transformed the country into a veritable wilderness, where everything that should work, doesn’t; where everything that can get broken, has.
10. They promised to give the nation credible elections; they couldn’t deliver. They promised to fight corruption, they couldn’t deliver. They promised to stop the insurgency, and they couldn’t deliver. This nation is witness to the fact that whenever we promised, we delivered. And today, I promise you most solemnly that we shall confront and eliminate corruption in the electoral process. We shall confront and eliminate corruption in the judicial process; and we shall most assuredly confront and eliminate it in the conduct of government business.
11. All these evils derive and draw inspiration from a government that is itself immersed to its neck in a cesspool of corruption; and is best characterized by its own favourite catchphrases: whether it is ‘Do or die,’ or ‘We will rule forever,’ or ‘No vacancy in Aso Rock,’ or they want to ‘fight to finish,’ it is the same thing—something that could never be uttered by true democrats. Their behaviour, language and body language are in complete and total disregard for democratic norms and the ordinary decencies of civilized conduct.
12. We intend to provide a government of different quality and tone to the people of Nigeria, one that will tackle the problem of insecurity, solve the perennial issue of incessant power failure, arrest the shameful deterioration in the standard of education, confront the decline in agricultural production head-on, and stop the collapse of commerce and industry.
13. Ladies and gentlemen, fellow CPC members on behalf of the Board of Trustees of our party, I commend the proposals shortly to be put before you. The best way to eliminate this government that has not brought anything to Nigerians except thievery of resources and violence is to accept to merge our parties. And we only elect to do this because that is what we believe to be in the best interest of the majority of the people of this country.
14. And I would like to end by once again thanking our steadfast supporters—you, the ordinary folks—who have been the unbreakable backbone of this struggle, from the time we started this journey in APP to ANPP and then to CPC. You did not do it for material gain; otherwise, you will have turned your backs on us. No doubt, you decided to stay the course as a mark of respect for our stand, and possibly knowing that we would never let you down. You relied on our judgment to forge ahead through the thicket of the country’s corruption-lade n politics. This we have tried to do to the best of our ability, and will continue to do so until the masses of this country secure a fair deal from those who lead them. What we desire is democracy and freedom for all our people. And in this struggle, we think we have done our bit.
15. At its formation, the CPC became the greatest crowd-pulling party in the nation’s political history; and within six months of its registration, and in spite of all the rigging of the poll and the snatching of its votes, it was still able to get more than 12 million votes in the 2011 presidential election. After the merger, the sky will be the limit.
16. While thanking you again, I implore you not to relent as we embark on yet another move in the search for a better tomorrow for our country, Nigeria. We are now in the final stages of the move that will culminate in the merger of our party—the CPC—with three other parties. We join this effort compromising none of our principles but yielding to the belief that our diverse efforts, applied in unison, will help arrest the rot that has become our lot.
17. We go into this new arrangement still loyal to you and committed to what you stand for.
From L to R: Chief Tony Momoh, Gen. Buhari & Dr. S. Okechukwu Mezu
We go into this arrangement conscious of our responsibilities to you and grateful for all the sacrifices you have been making since the beginning of our journey. We count on you, as we have always done, to guide, support and defend our position. We will strive to work hard to expand and level the democratic playing field in accordance with the dictates of the rule of law. We declare that we are in this together—and together we shall remain to the end.
18. We played by the rules and we accepted to play alongside those who didn’t; because
Brigadier General Buba Marwa and Mallam Nasir El Rufai
we believed our participation was giving millions hope that positive change will come along the way. Now change has finally come; and they cannot stop it. And we are putting the current leadership of this nation on notice that our people will no longer tolerate its corruption or the rigging, vote thievery and general impunity that have become the norm and standard practice during elections in this country.
19. We have resolved that henceforth our votes must all be counted—and they must all go on to count. And we declare that this nation has now resolved, through its united opposition, that it will never again tolerate or allow to pass the mayhem the government deliberately creates in order to cover up its guilt, obscure the issues and then blame the opposition in order to deceive gullible folks. And we will no longer be intimidated by anyone.
Thank you very much for your patience and attention. May God bless us.
General Muhammdu Buhari, GCFR
Delegates at the CPC ConventionConvention crowd at Eagle SquareSalim Farouk and Dr. S. Okechukwu Mezu in Abuja- US Delegates to CPC Dissolution ConventionMore Delegates at CPC ConventionMore Delegates at CPC Convention
Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, National Chairman of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), on Saturday, May 11, 2013 as party members during the ANPP dissolution convention in Gusau, Zamfara State unanimously resolved to endorse the ongoing merger with the two major political parties in the country, stressed that time has come for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to start preparing to be in opposition come 2015. He stated that the Merger Party, All Progressives Congress (APC) came at the right time to rescue the country from imminent collapse and incessant bomb blasts and violence.
Over 6,000 delegates from the thirty six states and Abuja, who are members of the All Nigeria Peoples Party, ANPP, converged in Gusau, the capital of Zamfara State, Saturday, May 11, 2013 to unanimously approve the recommendation of its merger committee, to merge with the Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN; and the Congress for Progressive Change, CPC; to form a mega party, the All Progressives Congress, APC. The motion for the merger was moved by Suleiman Argungu, former Deputy Governor of Kebbi State. It was seconded by the party’s chairman in Cross Rivers State, Martins Bisson. The party’s national legal adviser, Salisu Fagge, who moderated the session thereafter asked the delegates to raise their hands if they agree to the motion moved by Mr. Argungu. The motion was unanimously passed.
The national chairman of the party, Ogbonnaya Onu, in his speech, said the National Working Committee under his leadership restored the party’s image in the eyes of Nigerians. He stated that when the present party administration took over two and a half years ago, many had difficulty, distinguishing ANPP from the ruling party PDP but now however, the ANPP has a distinct image as an independent political party full of promise
Mallam Ibrahim Shekerau, ANPP 2011 Presidential Candidate
while promoting strong internal democracy. Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu also said the 14 years of PDP rule has brought nothing but unnecessary killings: “Nigeria at the moment knows no peace, yet we are not at war. People go to Churches and Mosque, unsure if they will return alive, most families cannot provide lunch and dinner, and many children go to bed on empty stomach.” Despite Nigeria being rich, most Nigerians are poor.
Dr Ogbonnaya Onu reiterated that politics without opposition is in vain and is like business without competitors. Opposition is necessary for a healthy and enduring democracy in Nigeria. He said that imposing one political party on the citizens of a country often degenerates and leads to disaster as has been the case and the sad experience of some Arab nations and other countries facing internal crises and social disasters resulting from denial of transparency and democratic justice. “We as a nation,” he insisted, “agree to strand firm for a change from the existing reign of confusion, injustice, selfishness and focus-less leadership of the ruling party.” A total of 6,054 delegates from the 36 states of the federation and Abuja attended the event at the Zamfara Trade Fair complex.
Participants at the ANPP dissolution Convention
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