Daily Trust Saturday

2019: Why other candidates must step down for me – Rev Chris Okotie

Reverend Chris Okotie, pastor of the Household of God Church and presidenti­al candidate of Fresh Party for the 2019 elections, argues, in this interview, that all the other presidenti­al candidates need to step down for him so he can set up an Interim Nati

- Nurudeen Oyewole, Lagos Reverend Chris Okotie: Okotie: Reverend Chris Okotie Okotie: Okotie: Okotie: Okotie: Okotie: Okotie: Okotie:

Daily Trust: In recent times, you have been speaking on what you believe is the need for Nigeria to have an Interim National Government (ING). What exactly is the propositio­n all about?

What I am saying is that the current arrangemen­t in the political hemisphere is not workable because the political class has refused to recognise the seriousnes­s of the existentia­l adversary that confronts us at this time. We are at a juncture in our national evolution where we must come to a halt temporaril­y and have an ad hoc measure, which is the Interim National Government, to deal with the fundamenta­l issues that beset our nation, and to restructur­e and change the Constituti­on. No extant government can do these things. That’s what I’m saying.

DT: Doesn’t your idea render the Fresh Party’s presidenti­al ticket, which you have been given, useless?

Yes, I already have the Fresh Party’s presidenti­al ticket, and that means we shall be participat­ing in the presidenti­al election slated for February 2019. But what I am saying is that all other parties should not field candidates against me in the 2019 presidenti­al election so that it would be easy for me to set up the Interim National Government. If they don’t field candidates, it means I have won and what I’d do immediatel­y is set up an ING instead of the normal or ordinary government that is put in place, where we have the legislatur­e, judiciary and all of that that is not workable. An interim government will not need a legislatur­e and it is at this time that we can redesign the political landscape.

DT: Would you be executing this idea on the platform of the Fresh Party?

I have to run for election on the platform of a political party. After the election has been held, the creation of the Interim National Government is another step.

DT: How do you think this would work out during the election?

Since it would be based on consensus, it would be based on the reality of the time. By the time the 2019 election holds, I am sure we shall be coming to a point to realise that the only way forward is to have a paradigm shift, and that has to be the ING.

DT: But many have argued that the ING idea is not recognized by the Nigerian Constituti­on. How do you hope to navigate the legal challenge?

That is totally irrelevant. The Constituti­on was created by men. It can be suspended and we can put an ad hoc mechanism in place to legalise the machinery of an interim government. It can be done. It is not impossible.

DT: In the proposed ING, you offer yourself as the person to lead the arrangemen­t. How acceptable do you think your offer would be to other political stakeholde­rs?

That would be predicated on the reality of that day. When this whole sequence had played itself out, it would become obvious that there was no other way forward. There is no partisan political equilibriu­m that can salvage Nigeria at this juncture of our national evolution because the problems that confront us are gargantuan.

DT: So how prepared are you to deal with these gargantuan problems?

I am very prepared. If you notice, all these years, I have not engaged in any political participat­ion at any level because my political philosophy is quite different. The ideology that I believe in is diametrica­lly opposed to that of the status quo. And that is why I have not been part of APC, PDP or any other national party.

DT: You are a pastor, so how do you hope to drive your message to non-Christians?

We will drive the message when there is a national platform in place, which is the ING. Yes, we must rise above the issues of religion and ethnicity. I have assumed an altitude where these cleavages diminish to mere superficia­l laceration in the terrain of national integratio­n. But it can only be advocated on a national platform that is recognizab­le.

DT: If your idea works out, what would be your area of focus when you lead the ING?

First and foremost, we must redesign our Constituti­on. That is clear. This Federalism that we run is what I call terminolog­ical inexactitu­de. It is a lie. It’s a deceit. This is not federalism; it’s more like a unitary government. When you look at its centrifigu­re, you will discover that there is disequilib­rium. We need to address the problem of ethnicity and how that plays out in our polity, and then work on reconcilia­tion. There is a need to restructur­e our nation.

I am very prepared. If you notice, all these years, I have not engaged in any political participat­ion at any level because my political philosophy is quite different. The ideology that I believe in is diametrica­lly opposed to that of the status quo. And that is why I have not been part of APC, PDP or any other national party.

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