The Rivers Elders and Leadership Council (RELEC) has called on the people of the Niger Delta state to massively vote on Saturday for the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Dakuku Adol Peterside.
The leaders insisted that another Ikwerre person would not be allowed
to succeed Governor Rotimi Amaechi, an Ikwerre from Ubima in Ikwerre
Local Government Area of Rivers state.
RELEC, through its Chairman. Chief Albert Horsfall, a former
Director-General of the State Security Service (SSS), Wednesday in Port
Harcourt, stated that the upland/riverine dichotomy in the state must be
respected.
The Rivers elders were apparently referring to the state’s
governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief
Nyesom Wike, an Ikwerre, a former Minister of State for Education, who
hails from Rumueprikom in Obio/Akpor LGA.
RELEC said: “It is the considered directive and advice of the RELEC
elders that all Rivers people should vote Dakuku Peterside for governor
and accordingly urge Peterside and all other riverine candidates to
enter into immediate consultations to collaborate, in order to avoid
splitting the votes for single riverine candidate.
“We must not sleep-walk into another avoidable catastrophe. We must
ignore anyone or group who tries to instigate us to violence, with the
erroneous impression that what we could not do when we were in authority
and power for six years, we could do now if we remain in power another
day or year.
“Is it not sad and disgraceful that since 1999 when civilian
democracy returned to this country, this state has never had a proper
democratic election, where-as other states have all tried, successfully
and started to do so? For us, it has been the same practice of ‘carry
go’; stuffing of ballot boxes; intimidation and violence, and writing
false results, after illegal thumb-printing of ballot papers.
“We are pre-dominantly Christians in this state and we must not allow
religious politics or politicking to grow in the state. Christ and
Christianity is our chosen and cherished belief; nothing must be done to
subvert or undermine our own way of life. The rights, traditions and
culture of our people must be respected and recognised.
“Dear Rivers people, can we once again remain in opposition to the
Federal Government and see our people continuously deprived in a land
where we have made so much contribution and sacrifice? That is what we
get when we vote a PDP candidate for governor. So, think again, our dear
Rivers people.”
The elders also stated that a successful, but partly rigged election
for governorship was conducted in 1998, and a stable administration
emerged after that election in 1999, stressing that the sailing was okay
and there was a peaceful and trouble-free conduct of affairs in Rivers
state throughout 1999 and most of year 2000, lamenting that from 2001,
killer gangs were organised by top politicians in the state government,
first under a serving police officer, to hunt down and kill imagined
opponents.
The Nation
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