Officials of the much criticized Independent National Electoral
Commission [INEC] recently issued the electoral calendar for next year’s
polls and indeed aimed towards scoring what seemed like a major goal to
win the hearts and minds of the majority of Nigerians when they fixed
February 14th [Lovers’ Day] as the date for the conduct of the
Presidential and other elections of national significance.
The symbolism in that epochal date which hasn’t, however, gone down
well with the youthful members of the Nigerian electorate is not lost on
observers of the electoral process particularly those with a bent
towards working to actualize the legendary campaign of achieving gender
mainstreaming in the political life of Nigeria. There is no gainsaying
the fact that the women folk have suffered prolonged period of political
marginalization by the dominant patrilineal political class in Nigeria.
Campaigners of political equality are also deeply concerned about
putting pressure on the political authorities to erect the enabling
environment to guarantee equal access to all Nigerians irrespective of
gender and other status to political offices. This is because quality of
service and professional excellence is not the sole birth right of the
male gender and other developed democracies have opened up their
political space to accommodate all interest groups.
Aside the topical and thematic issue of gender mainstreaming and
equality of access to all political offices in the polity with specific
reference to the next general elections, majority of Nigerians are also
of the considered view that there is need for what is generally regarded
as the charter of equity to be applied in deciding the candidates to
run for the various offices in the land particularly because of the
feelings and bottled up anger that in some states certain ethnic
nationalities that constitute the numerical majority of the population
have often always manipulated the electoral process to ensure that only
candidates of their ethnic stocks run for the important office of state
governor.
Some of the states whereby issues of charter of equity and the need
to allow the most marginalized segments to produce candidates of the
seriously committed political platforms for the coming governorship
elections have often cited certain basic provisions of the Nigerian
constitution that speaks to the issue of promoting and protecting equal
opportunities such as the much talked about federal character component
of composition of political office holders across board.
In Imo State for instance, the Owerri senatorial zone and the Okigwe
senatorial zone are of the contention that Orlu senatorial zone has
monopolized the office of governorship in over two decades even as
Owerri zone seems determined to ensure that it wrestles power from the
Orlu political establishment under the ruling peoples Democratic Party.
Delta state is one of such states whereby the Northern senatorial zone
made up largely of Igbo speaking nationalities have never held the
position of state governor.
So much campaign is in the air on the urgent need for the application
of the charter of equity to be respected by the power brokers
especially in the 2015 governorship election. There seems to be a
unanimity of opinion among major political stakeholders that the Delta
North Senatorial zone should be allowed to produce the next occupant of
the esteemed office of state governor.
The first indigenous governor of Delta state since it was created on
August 21st 1991 and administered between the date of creation up till
January 1992 by Luke Chijiuba Ochilor a military officer is Mr. Felix
Ibru who ruled from January 1992 to November 1993. From May 1999 to May
29th 2007, James Onanefe Ibori from the same zone with Felix Ibru became
the elected governor even as he handed over to his cousin Dr. Emmanuel
Uduaghan who will hand over to another elected governor by May 29th next
year.
With the above facts, it has become increasingly imperative that
Delta North senatorial zone is allowed by the major political platforms
to produce their governorship candidates in next year’s election.
Already highly reputable sons and daughters from Delta North Senatorial
zone are already engaged in democratic consultations with the people of
the grassroots and leading stakeholders from across the state to
convince them on the need for the charter of political and
constitutional equity to be applied in the coming primaries of the
leading political parties so that Delta North is allowed the opportunity
to produce the best hand to run for the next year’s election and to
build upon the legacies to be left behind by the current administration
of Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan.
As a consummate party loyalist, Dr. Uduaghan is expected to support
constitutional fairness and justice so that the Peoples Democratic
Party’s candidate could emerge from Delta North senatorial zone which
hasn’t done that since the creation of that state nearly twenty five
years ago
From the Delta North senatorial zones comes such heavy weight
political players like Mrs. Ngozi Olejeme, Dr. Sylvester Monye, Hon
Ndudi Elumelu among other key players but majority of people who support
democracy and the practice of the constitutional principle of charter
of equity are of the opinion that the only lady among the few immensely
loyal members of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party with a lot of moral
credentials, Mrs. Ngozi Olejeme stands many miles ahead and therefore
should be supported to become the candidate of the party in the coming
governorship election in Delta State.
Dr. (Mrs.) Ngozi Juliet Olejeme is said to be a woman of many parts
and an an acute administrator. Ngozi by dint of hard work and resilience
has achieved the academic and professional prowess as a
consummate Finance and Insurance expert, an entrepreneur, management
consultant, philanthropist, Politician, social mobilizer, human rights
activist, nationalist and a devout Christian.
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