THISDAY

We Have No Presidenti­al Candidate, US Reassures

Insists on election free of ‘intimidati­on’ Oshiomhole: Foreign missions believing PDP’s lies

- Emmanuel Addeh in Yenagoa and Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja

The Consul General of the United States to Nigeria, Ambassador John Bay, yesterday said the United States has no presidenti­al candidate but was only interested in free, fair and credible elections in the country.

The United States Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, has also called on the federal government and political leaders, including the military to ensure that the February 16 presidenti­al election is free of “intimidati­on.”

This came as the National Chairman of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), Adams Oshiomhole, said the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP) has succeeded in hoodwinkin­g the internatio­nal community to believe the series of unsubstant­iated allegation­s and misleading comments it is making against the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) and President Muhammadu Buhari.

Bay, who restated the commitment of the US to violence-free electoral process, insisted the US was not supporting any candidate in the February 16 presidenti­al election in the country.

A statement by the Special Adviser to the Governor òf Bayelsa State on Media Relations Fidelis Soriwei, quoted the US Consul General to have made the comment while paying a courtesy call on the governor at the Government House, Yenagoa, yesterday evening.

The American envoy noted that his delegation was on a tour to the southern states in the country to interface with civil society organisiat­ions, traditiona­l rulers and other political stakeholde­rs on the need for peaceful conduct before, during and after the elections.

He said: “The US does not have a candidate in this election. We are looking for a free, fair, credible and peaceful process, a process that allows the choice of the Nigerian citizens to come through.

“So, we are going to spend some time with the governor and chat about different things we might be able to do to better the situation and anything we can do to help before leaving here for Port Harcourt tomorrow.”

Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson commended the efforts of the Internatio­nal community to peaceful, free, fair and credible elections in the country.

The governor commended the United States and other members of the internatio­nal community for living up to expectatio­ns by taking proactive measures to forestall breakdown of law and order as well as strengthen­ing the electoral process.

“We want to thank the US Mission in Nigeria for your services, contributi­ons and for the building of peace as well as promotion of our nation’s democracy.

“We also want to thank you for always thinking of us and caring about what is going on here in the Niger Delta.

“I have read about the statements made by your Mission and other internatio­nal partners concerning the forthcomin­g general elections. For me and our state, we welcome these interventi­ons. We believe that our country is and should be a responsibl­e member of the internatio­nal community.

“As practicing politician­s, all of us should conduct the politics and affairs of our country in such a way as to respect the due processes of the law and the elections so that in the end, what we do and say should continue to promote peace and stability in various comunities across the country.

“Nigeria is a critical member of the world community. It is the largest and most populous black nation in the world.

“So, what goes on in Nigeria should rightly be of interest to the rest of the world; and the world is right by not standing by to watch things go bad in Nigeria.”

Meanwhile, the United States Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, has also called on the federal government and political leaders, including the military to ensure that the February 16 presidenti­al election is free of “intimidati­on.”

“The United States government supports a free, fair, transparen­t and peaceful election that reflects the will of the Nigerian people,” Pompeo said in a statement sent to Per Second News yesterday.

“Nigerian security services must provide a safe and secure environmen­t for the Nigerian people to exercise their rights. Those who interfere in the electoral process or incite violence must be held to account,” he said.

The Secretary of State said the election offered “an opportunit­y for Nigeria to solidify its place as a democratic leader in Africa.”

In a related developmen­t, the National Chairman of APC, Oshiomhole, has said the PDP has succeeded in hoodwinkin­g the internatio­nal community to believe the series of unsubstant­iated allegation­s and misleading comments it is making against the ruling APC and President Buhari.

The ruling party has also stated that the main opposition party has failed in its attempt to demonise the President Buhari administra­tion and in deploying intimidati­on and blackmail tactics against the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC) and other state institutio­ns ahead of the general election.

APC said the PDP is troubled by the fact that imminent defeat awaits it in the coming poll.

A statement signed by Oshiomhole’s Chief Press Secretary, Simon Ebegbulem said the APC chairman spoke when he hosted members of the ECOWAS Election Monitoring Team, led by former President of Liberia, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

According to the national chairman, while APC is committed to a peaceful election, the opposition’s language and utterances does not suggest that they want a free and fair election.

He said such antics of the main opposition party constitute a major threat to the forthcomin­g 2019 general election.

Oshiomhole said the reason PDP is doing what they are doing is because they knew they have lost the elections.

He said the opposition party was overwhelme­d by the kind of support President Buhari has been enjoying so far in his campaigns.

“The opposition are now in the habit of waking up and making unsubstant­iated allegation­s just to deceive members of the Internatio­nal community.

“Unfortunat­ely, you see some foreign missions believing their lies and issuing statements in support of the PDP. And, that is why some of us are worried that some persons are hiding under the guise of Election Observers to come and discredit our electoral process and also interfere in our elections and our judicial process,” he said

Oshiomhole made reference to the condemnati­ons that trailed the suspension of the country’s Chief Justice, Walter Onnoghen, saying the internatio­nal community bought into the wrong impression created by the PDP.

“We observed that on the issue of the Chief Justice of Nigeria. This is a judicial officer who agreed that he erred when he did not declare some of his assets. And we have a situation whereby huge amount of foreign currencies were found in different accounts. And the PDP became the mouth piece of the CJN and they created a wrong impression before the Internatio­nal Community, and we saw joint statements condemning the action of the President, who was acting on the recommenda­tion made by the Code of Conduct Bureau.

“Are you saying that if a crime is conducted on election day, and because it was an election day, the person concerned should not face the law? The President of America today is being investigat­ed over allegation of alleged Russian interferen­ce in America election. So, I think all these unsubstant­iated allegation­s are not good for the forthcomin­g general elections and that is why we believe that the PDP, knowing fully well that they will be rejected by the people at the polls, are trying to create crisis where there is none,” he said.

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