Drama
as Alams is being courted
By DANIEL ALABRAH
Sunday,
May
11, 2008
Former Bayelsa State governor, Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, has
ostensibly become the ‘beautiful bride’ now being
courted by both the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the
Action Congress (AC) in their frantic bid to clinch the governorship
seat in the May 24 re-run poll.
Although the impeached ex-governor was expelled from the PDP
by the immediate past Ahmadu Ali-led executive on the orders
of erstwhile President Olusegun Obasanjo, it is generally
believed that he is still popular among the masses in the
state.
The PDP is, therefore, said to be relying on his clout to
reclaim the Creek Haven seat of power in Yenagoa following
last month’s ruling by the Appeal Court in Port Harcourt
for a fresh election in the state.
The AC is, however, said to be counting on the ‘biological
link’ between the Governor-General of the Ijaw nation
and its candidate for the poll, Ebitimi Amgbare. Both politicians
are said to be cousins. Amgbare served as Commissioner for
Sports under Alamieyeseigha.
Indeed, Alamieyeseigha is being touted to hold the ace over
who emerges winner in the re-run election, despite being disgraced
out of office through a controversial impeachment on December
9, 2005 and eventually convicted in 2007 for money laundering
and corrupt enrichment.
It is not yet clear whether the PDP wants Alamieyeseigha back
in its fold. Sunday Sun, however, gathered that the party
is uncomfortable with feelers that the man regarded as a ‘master
strategist’ was backing Amgbare.
Our source said the PDP National Chairman, Chief Vincent Ogbulafor,
personally visited the expansive villa of the ex-governor
in the Asokoro area of Abuja on Monday night to solicit his
support and to fine-tune strategies to return Chief Timipre
Sylva as governor.
Although the party’s stalwarts refused to confirm or
deny the visit, another source claimed that Ogbulafor delivered
President Umaru Yar’Adua’s message to the ex-governor
to be “physically present” during Sylva’s
campaign flag-off on Saturday (yesterday) in Yenagoa.
Yar’Adua was said to have earlier telephoned Alamieyeseigha
to inform him of his (Yar’Adua’s) visit to the
state for the event. He also reportedly requested the ex-governor
to be present.
At press time on Friday, efforts to confirm Alam’s renewed
relationship with his former party were futile as several
calls to Alamieyeseigha’s mobile phone did not go through
and even when it rang once, he did not pick it.
One of his aides, however, quoted the former governor as saying
that Obasanjo cannot expel him from PDP, as the party does
not belong to the former president.
“A greater majority of Bayelsa and Ijaw people still
love Alamieyeseigha. We still regard him as the Governor-General
of the Ijaw Nation. It is just a tiny percentage of the elite
that ganged up with Obasanjo to humiliate him,” the
source stated.
A delegation from the AC in the state, which included Amgbare,
also reportedly visited Alamieyeseigha’s home in Abuja
last Monday to seek his ‘go-ahead’ for the election.
A source at the meeting said the ex-governor assured the AC
candidate of his support, which, according to him, was important
because of “Alamieyeseigha’s key position in the
state.”
The Appeal Court sitting in Port Harcourt last month voided
Sylva’s election of April 14, 2007 and ordered a fresh
poll to be conducted by the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC) within 90 days.
Regardless, the AC has filed papers in court seeking to stop
the May 24 poll until INEC displays the state’s voters’
register and properly delineate wards in the state.
Its other prayers include replacement of the INEC staff in
the state, especially those that conducted the voided April
poll, as well as dissolution of the state executive council
constituted by Sylva.
Amgbare, who confirmed this in an interview with Sunday Sun,
said they were expecting a favourable ruling at the court
tomorrow (Monday) even as he expressed lack of confidence
in the electoral body.
“INEC is lawless,” he said.
The AC candidate dismissed insinuations that they went to
court again because they were jittery and not prepared for
the election.
“We are not jittery but we are also not comfortable
with the May 24 date fixed for the election. Why the rush
by INEC? The court said 90 days, and May 24 is barely a month
after the Appeal Court ruling.
“If INEC does what is proper and allows a free and fair
contest, I will emerge victorious because I have the people
behind me,” Amgbare boasted.
|