Thursday, April 25, 2024

Delta APC carpets Cairo Ojougboh over comments on Omo-Agege

The All Progressives Congress in Delta State has described as tissue of lies allegations by expelled chieftain of the party, Cairo Ojougboh, that Deputy Senate President and Delta APC governorship candidate, Ovie Omo-Agege, factionalised the party and did not carry everybody along.

Ojougboh had linked the party’s loss in the March 18 governorship election in Delta State to this.

The Director Communications and Media Strategy, Delta APC Campaign Organisation, Ima Niboro, however, revealed the party’s position while speaking during a television programme on Tuesday night.

Giving a detailed trajectory of what transpired in the party prior to the 2019 elections, Niboro exposed how Ojougboh chose Omo-Agege and Great Ogboru faction of the APC to contest the governorship primary election of the party, because he believed it was the winning side.

Niboro posited that it was only after he lost out that he began to wage a war against Omo-Agege.

Niboro, also a former Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria, explained that in 2019, the party had two factions, one led by the founding leader in Delta, Otega Emerhor, and the other led by Omo-Agege and Ogboru.

“Before our reunification, the APC had broken into two – the mainstream APC led by Olorogun Emerhor and the faction that was led by Senator Omo-Agege and Chief Great Ogboru. I happened to be with the Emerhor faction. In fact, I ran for the House of Representatives position, Emerhor ran for Senate but because of the crisis, we were outmaneuvered and we lost out.

“But Emerhor, myself and two others I will not name sat down and took a deliberate decision that we were not going to throw away the baby with the bath water; that we were going to put the party together. The other two didn’t agree and they quit the party. But I stood with Emerhor, because he and I had agreed on our direction even before we invited the other two persons. That is how the process started and the APC came together and today we are one big happy family.

“However, Ojougboh was with us in 2019. In fact, our faction needed a candidate for governorship who’s from Delta North. He was our candidate for the mainstream APC. We didn’t support Ogboru; we wanted equity, that look, we have accepted rotation of power in Delta State, it was Delta North’s turn and the next Governor to come in to complete the remaining four years of the Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa’s administration, if we are to get him out, should come from his own place, Delta North, so that in 2023, which is now upon us, we can confidently back an Urhobo, Delta Central, person.

“But on the morning of the primaries, Cairo Ojougbouh called to say he was joining the Senator Omo-Agege side to contest the governorship primary and that was what he did. So he willingly joined the Senator Omo-Agege faction then, and it was only after he lost out that he started this long talk about Omo-Agege factionalising the party,” Niboro said.

Rather than the faction theory advanced by Ojougboh, Niboro said the PDP led by Governor Ifeanyi Okowa penetrated the state with huge amount of money after allegedly borrowing N250 billion to prosecute the 2023 elections.

“Some of us still had basic trust in the human character, not believing that they would ever attempt to tamper with something so transparent as the BVAS, but we were caught out by the PDP using money to influence INEC officials to upload fake results into the IRev.

“In my local government, at the end of collation, they gave APC 15,620 votes and PDP 15,613 votes, a difference of seven votes. I sat down and calculated the figures that were right there on the final result sheets. I discovered that what PDP actually scored was 14,513 votes, so they undermined 1,100 votes right on the result sheet and they declared it and this is how they ‘won’ their so called 21 local government areas.

“ So, we need now to go and verify the results they claim gave them this dubious, fake victory, ” Niboro insisted.

According to him, the APC had promptly petitioned INEC about these and other observations and requested the election umpire to review the results but they refused. Thus, the INEC position as to the declaration of the disputed result has to be tested in court, he said.

He explained that what happened in Delta on March 18 was an electoral heist, assuring that the court would definitely give judgement to the APC and overturn the INEC position because, “we have evidence to prove that the election was a sham.”

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