By Segun Adebowale
Until about 48 hours before the primaries, the thinking in the PDP was
to run with the perceived compromise candidate of the party and former
Permanent Secretary in the Delta State Government House, Tony Obuh
More facts have emerged on the surprise that the governorship primaries
of the Peoples Democratic Party in Delta State turned out to be.
The primaries, which took place on December 8, 2014 was won by Senator Ifeanyi Okowa.
However, a few days and hours before the primaries, the name of Okowa
did not feature highly on the list of aspirants favoured to clinch the
ticket.
Until about 48 hours before the primaries, the thinking in
the PDP was to run with the perceived compromise candidate of the party
and former Permanent Secretary in the Delta State Government House, Tony
Obuh.
Obuh is from Delta North Senatorial District, which has never
produced the governor of the state and was largely regarded to have the
backing of the state Governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan and the
Presidency.
A day before the primaries, the name of a former
Commissioner for Finance in the administration of former Governor James
Ibori, David Edevbie, came up.
Edevbie was believed to have become the candidate of the Presidency after Ibori indicated interest in supporting him.
Though there was no complete compromise, there appeared to be an
unwritten agreement before the primaries that Edevbie should emerge the
party’s candidate.
However, Okowa emerged the candidate of the PDP.
Sources hinted that the major force behind Okowa during the primaries
was ex-Niger Delta militant, Government Ekpemupolo, who is popularly
known as Tompolo.
Ekpemupolo, now a billionaire by every standard, reportedly gave Okowa $3 million to prosecute the primaries.
The money was said to have been released to him on the eve of the election.
The fund was believed to be the game changer.
While some other aspirants openly at the primaries gave delegates
$4,000 and N500,000, Okowa dished out N1 million to each of the
delegates.
It was gathered that Ekpemupolo’s support for Okowa was obtained with some promised concessions.
One was that the deputy of Okowa, who is from Delta North Senatorial District, will be nominated by Ekpemupolo.
The ex-militant leader, who recently purchased six warships to
implement a security contract awarded to him by the Federal Government,
is said to have positioned a candidate for the deputy governor’s
position from his ethnic stock, the Ijaw of Delta South Senatorial
District.
If this comes to play, the Ijaw, one of the three major
ethnic groups in Delta South Senatorial District, would have taken up
virtually all elective and appointive positions for the area.
The other ethnic groups in the senatorial district are the Isoko and Itsekiri.
Already, the chairmanship seat of one of the local government areas in
the senatorial district has been conceded to Ekpemupolo’s brother,
George, by the PDP.
That decision became a source of controversy as
the initial person pencilled down for the PDP chairmanship position was
Weyimi Omadeli.
However, in order to give room for equity, the
leadership of the party had to, a day before the primaries, cede the
ticket to George.
At the time, the thinking was that if the Ijaw
should produce the chairman of a local government area, an Itsekiri man
in the person of Uduaghan would go to the Senate, while an Isoko man
would emerge as the deputy governorship candidate to a governorship
candidate from Delta North Senatorial District.
However, after the
concession of the chairmanship seat to Ekpemupolo, the representative of
the senatorial district in the National Assembly, Senator James
Manager, also of the Ijaw stock, insisted on retaining his seat after
his request to be given the governorship ticket did not materialise.
Uduaghan, an Itsekiri man, who had initially indicated interest in the
Senate seat, was said to have conceded the seat to Manager.
This was
based on the arrangement that a governorship candidate will emerge from
Delta North Senatorial District, with the Isoko getting the deputy
governor’s slot.
Informed sources said the unwritten agreement was for the senatorial seat to be rotated among the Ijaw, Itsekiri and Isoko.
Manager, of the Ijaw ethnic stock, will be returning to the Senate for the fourth time.
And with the push for an Ijaw to emerge as Okowa’s deputy, the
implication is that the Itsekiri and Isoko will have no elective and
appointive positions in the next political dispensation.http://theeagleonline.com.ng/how-tompolos-3m-ijaw-agenda-swung-delta-pdp-governorship-ticket-to-okowa/
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