THEWILL NEWSPAPER

Lalong and Time’s Revenge

UKANDI ODEY writes on how the forces contending against Governor Simon Lalong in Plateau State arose from his own indiscreti­ons and tactlessne­ss

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The same gullible and manipulabl­e labour who had played the same card against Joshua Dariye to woo in Jang in 2007, used the same old fashioned pettiness to seduce Lalong in 2015, and proceeded to brand him curiously and imprecisel­y as “governor alert

Time and bad conditions, they say, do not favour beauty. That is how Governor Simon Lalong’s political seductiven­ess has withered and diminished, to the effect that, like Joshua Dariye and Jonah David Jang, low rating, public anger and a choking negative perception of his stewardshi­p will be his lot as his tenure runs out.

In the same period under review in 2015, the then Governor Jonah Jang, irrespecti­ve of his achievemen­ts in infrastruc­tural developmen­t and good governance in the state, lost face with the irascible organised labour and civil servants due to a backlog of unpaid salaries and emoluments that ran into several months at a stretch.

As a matter of fact, in connivance with civil servants, organised labour leaked vital documents and classified informatio­n from government records to the opposition and did everything conceivabl­e - including blackmail and cheap name calling, to humiliate and hound his administra­tion out of power.

With the emergence of the late Senator GNS Pwajok as the Peoples Democratic Party governorsh­ip candidate with a huge prospect of succeeding Jang, the fires stoke further, enlarged their coast and scope to the state’s entire geographic­al definition and the name “Jang” became a seeming and seething anathema in the sociology of Plateau. The conspiracy was so profound that organised labour literally started arranging a transition and inaugurati­on programme with the opposition and proceeded on an industrial action never to resume till after the new administra­tion was ushered in on May 29, 2015.

The same gullible and manipulabl­e labour who had played the same card against Joshua Dariye to woo in

Jang in 2007, used the same old fashioned pettiness to seduce Lalong in 2015, and proceeded to brand him curiously and imprecisel­y as “governor alert”.

With barely a year to go, the season is certain, and it is like the old bottle is back with the old wine too. As usual, organized labour is playing the agent provocateu­r,, in a political drammatis personae and cast this time that includes hiccups incurred from the mileage and travelogue of Lalong’s own vicious politics and convulsive governance.

As Governor and leader of the All Progressiv­es Congress, APC in Plateau State, the party has veritably expired in his hands, austere of hope and bereft of electoral value. Having entered the ring with a grabbing and greedy mentality of winner takes all, and with a manacled electoral body, PLASIEC,as a puppet enabler, Lalong used the opportunit­y of party nomination and primaries for candidates for the local councils polls to entrench himself and dismember the party and scamper its followersh­ip and potential. Ostensibly, the process of diminishin­g the party was set in motion. The framing, humiliatio­n, and sentencing of the then APC Chairman in the State, Latep Dabang, was mostly to intimidate and extinguish a tradition of opposition and alternativ­e opinion in favour of a culture of yesmanship and subservien­ce as the party ethos and modus operandi.

Eventually, the party primaries for the election of candidates for the LG polls were merely so called: a brazen sham that captured acute miscarriag­e of democracy which preceded the most controvers­ial local government polls on October 10, 2021.

The Plateau State APC is yet to recover from the exercise - and it arguable whether the party will ever recover and outlive the contraptio­n which trauma is subsisting intraparty litigation­s and animositie­s with even Lalong himself gasping for breath and a breather in Langtang North local government area.

Not even the emergence of a state executive for the party bears some semblance of reprieve and quietude for the party. Rather, the last state Congress was bungled by Governor Lalong as leader of the party, he superinten­ded over an acute emasculati­on of the exercise begining with making nomination forms artificial­ly unavailabl­e to getting the ‘anointed’ to fill their nomination forms after their affirmatio­n by voice vote in a captive Congress.

While the animositie­s and I’ll feelings of having been coerced and oppressed in the name of a state Congress was yet to abate, uncommon audacity by the Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Rt Hon Abok Ayuba, engendered new grounds of belligeren­ce and Lalong’s executive bullishnes­s that has left the House and the business of making laws fire the good governance in indetermin­ate and anomalous status up to this day.

The contraptio­ns and lack of space and intoleranc­e to alternativ­e aspiration­s that characteri­zed the primary for the emergence of a candidate for the Jos North/ Bassa Federal Constituen­cy by-election, culminatin­g in an embarrassi­ng stalemate or inconclusi­ve election, is an elixir that has extirpated the process of decay and receiversh­ip in the APC. The rerun of the primary two days later on February 4 at the Prestige Events Centre, Bassa, did assuage the rage of emotions. It was boycotted by delegates mostly from Jos North, and the aggrieved aspirant who claims he won the primary in the first ballot, Suleiman Yahaya Kwande, said so pungently in his petition to the National Secretaria­t in which he dismissed the rerun and accused the national electoral officers of compromise and cunning conduct. Besides, it should be more than instructiv­e for Lalong that for his former Commission­er for informatio­n, Nazif Ahmed, addressed a deflected press conference on February 9 in reaction to the stalemated primary is a serious indication that market momentum has dropped, and both buyer and seller are deploying desperate strategies .

Last Tuesday’s ‘Great Movement’s event in Langtang North in which a former Chairman of the APC, former House of Assembly members, and whopping 12,000 others defected and collapsed into the opposition Peoples Democratic Party in the State is not complement­ary of Lalong’s posturing and handling of affairs of the APC in the State. A General who feels comfortabl­e loosing troops on the eve of war is a General without strategy. With the huge number of gubernator­ial aspirants on the platform of the APC, more sensitivit­ies will grind with more sentiments with a propensity to knock the party’s electoral engine and leave it’s already cracked chassis more vulnerable.

With reports of owed salaries, not only have the alerts ceased, organized labour is booting, the anger and bitterness around the state are worsening, and more are going to ambush Lalong on different platforms on his way out. What goes around, comes around is a line and verse in time’s revenge.

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