May 29, 2024
Press Release
PDP Releases Updated Edo State Governorship Election National Campaign Council List
The National Working Committee (NWC) of our great Party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), in the exercise of its powers, and pursuant to its commitment of ensuring victory for our Party in the Edo State Governorship Election scheduled for Saturday, September 21, 2024; hereby releases the updated list of member of the Edo State Governorship Election National Campaign Council.
The members of the Council are as follows:
1 H.E. RT. HON. AHMADU UMARU FINTIRI CHAIRMAN
2 H.E. RT. HON. SHERIFF OBOREVWORI FRANCIS DEPUTY CHAIRMAN
3 H.E. DR. KEFAS AGBU CO-DEPUTY CHAIRMAN
4 H.E. ALH. ATIKU ABUBAKAR FORMER VICE PRESIDENT
5 H.E. ARCH. NNAMADI SAMBO FORMER VICE PRESIDENT
6 H.E. SEN. ADOLPHUS WABARA, Ph.D BOT CHAIRMAN
7 H.E. AMB. UMAR ILIYA DAMAGUM AG. NATIONAL CHAIRMAN
8 H.E SEN. BALA MOHAMMED MEMBER
9 H.E. ENGR. SEYI MAKINDE, FNSE MEMBER
10 H.E GODWIN OBASEKI MEMBER
11 H.E SEN. DOUYE DIRI MEMBER
12 H.E. SEN. ADEMOLA J.N. ADELEKE MEMBER
13 H.E PST. UMO ENO MEMBER
14 H.E SIR. SIMINALAYI FUBARA, GSSRS MEMBER
15 H. E. DR. PETER NDUBUISI MBAH MEMBER
16 H.E. BARR. CALEB MUTFWANG MEMBER
17 H.E. DR. DAUDA LAWAL MEMBER
18 H.E. OMOBAYO GODWINS MEMBER
19 BARR. DR. ASUE IGHODALO GUBER CANDIDATE
20 OSARODION OGIE, ESQ DEPUTY GUBER CANDIDATE
21 H.E. DR. JAMES IBORI MEMBER
22 SEN. STELLA OMU MEMBER
23 RT. HON. PATRICK NATHAN IFON MEMBER
24 A.V.M LARRY KONYIA MEMBER
25 H.E. SEN. LIYEL IMOKE MEMBER
26 PROF. SAM OYOVBAIRE MEMBER
27 CHIEF MIKE OGHIADOMHE, CFR MEMBER
28 CHIEF FERDINAND ALABRABA MEMBER
29 DR. MRS. ESTHER UDUEHI MEMBER
30 SEN. ABBA MORO PATRICK MEMBER
31 SEN. OSITA UGWU NGWU MEMBER
32 SEN. OYEWUNMI OLALERE MEMBER
33 RT. HON. KINGSLEY O. CHINDA MEMBER
34 RT. HON. (DR) ALI ISA J.C. MEMBER
35 H. E. AMB. TAOFEEK ARAPAJA MEMBER
36 SEN. SAMUEL NNAEMEKA ANYANWU MEMBER
37 HON. ARCH. SETONJI KOSHEODO MEMBER
38 HON. AHMED YAYARI MOHAMMED MEMBER
39 HON. DEBO OLOGUNAGBA MEMBER
40 HON. UMAR M. BATURE MEMBER
41 DANIEL WOYENGIKURO MEMBER
42 HON. SIR. OKECHUKWU OBIECHINA DANIEL, FCA MEMBER
43 KAMALDEEN ADEYEMI AJIBADE, SAN MEMBER
44 HON. AMINA DARASIMI D. BRYHM MEMBER
45 MUHAMMED KADADE SULEIMAN MEMBER
46 CHIEF DR. ALI OBASI ODEFA MEMBER
47 HON. THEOPHILUS DAKAS SHAN MEMBER
48 CHIEF DAN ORBIH MEMBER
49 DR. EMMANUEL NKAVOA BOVOA MEMBER
50 NDUBUISI ENEH DAVID MEMBER
51 ALHAJI IBRAHIM ABDULLAHI MEMBER
52 HON. ADAMU D.U. KAMALE MEMBER
53 HON. MARYAM GARBA BAGEL MEMBER
54 HON. TIMOTHY OSADOLOR MEMBER
55 HON. ABDULRAHMAN MOHAMMED MEMBER
56 BARR. OKECHUKWU OSUOHA MEMBER
57 H.E. CHIEF LUCKY IGBINEDION MEMBER
58 H.E. DR. EMMANUEL UDUAGHAN MEMBER
59 H.E. SEN. SERIAKE DICKSON MEMBER
60 H.E. UDOM EMMANUEL MEMBER
61 H.E. SEN. DR. IFEANYI OKOWA, CON MEMBER
62 HIGH CHIEF TOM IKIMI MEMBER
63 MRS. HERBATA OKONOFUA AYU MEMBER
64 CHIEF EMMANUEL OGIDI MEMBER
65 HON. EMMANUEL IBESHI MEMBER
66 SEN. ALLWELL ONYESOH MEMBER
67 SEN. BARINADA MPIGI MEMBER
68 SEN. MRS. IPALIBO HARRY BANIGO MEMBER
69 SEN. JARIGBE A. JARIGBE MEMBER
70 SEN. BENSON F. KONBOWEI MEMBER
71 SEN. AGADAGA BENSON MEMBER
72 SEN. SAMPSON EKONG MEMBER
73 SEN. ANIEKAN ETIM BASSEY MEMBER
74 SEN. NWOKO CHINEDU M. MEMBER
75 HON. MARK ESSET UDO MEMBER
76 SEN. CLIFFORD ORDIA MEMBER
77 SEN. EHIGIE UZAMERE MEMBER
78 SEN. FRANCIS ALIMIKHINA MEMBER
79 SEN. ODION UGBESIA MEMBER
80 SEN. VICTOR OYOFO MEMBER
81 RT. HON. TUNDE AKOGUN MEMBER
82 RT. HON. NDUDI ELUMELU MEMBER
83 RT. HON. IME BASSEY OKON MEMBER
84 HON. UNYIME JOSIAH IDEM MEMBER
85 HON. MARTINS ESIN MEMBER
86 HON. UDUAK A. ODUDOH MEMBER
87 HON. ETTEH OKPOLUPM IKPONG MEMBER
88 HON. EKPO PAUL ASUQUO MEMBER
89 HON. AGBEDI YEITIEMONE FREDRICK MEMBER
90 HON. EBIKAKE MARIE MEMBER
91 HON. OBUKU ABONSIZIBE. OFORJI MEMBER
92 HON. OBORDOR MITEMA MEMBER
93 HON. AMBAOWEI RODNEY E. MEMBER
94 HON. MR. AKPANKE PETER A. MEMBER
95 HON. BARR. GODWIN OFFIONG ODEY EKPO MEMBER
96 HON. JULIUS PONDI GBABOJOR MEMBER
97 HON. NWOKOLO VICTOR ONYEMEACHI MEMBER
98 HON. MUTU NICHOLAS EBOMO MEMBER
99 HON. EZECHI NNAMDI MEMBER
100 HON. ERHIATAKE IBORI – SUENU MEMBER
101 HON. UKODHIKO AJIROGHENE JONATHAN MEMBER
102 HON. THOMAS EREYITOMI MEMBER
103 HON. SOLOMON BOB MEMBER
104 HON. AWAJI – INOMBEK ABIANTE DAGOMIE MEMBER
105 HON. VICTOR OBUZOR CHUKWUEMELE MEMBER
106 HON. BOMA GOODHEAD MEMBER
107 HON. CYRIL GODWIN HART MEMBER
108 HON. KELECHI NWOGU MEMBER
109 HON. BONIFACE SUNDAY EMERENGWA MEMBER
110 HON. DUMNAMENE DEKOR MEMBER
111 HON. ALABO VICTOR TAMUNOMIEKAYE MEMBER
112 HON. BARR. CHIMA BOMS MEMBER
113 HON. BARR. MRS. BLESSINGS AMADI MEMBER
114 HON. FELIX NWAEKE UCHE MEMBER
115 HON. BARR. OMOSEDE GARBRIELLA IGBINEDION MEMBER
116 CHIEF EARL ONAIWO OSARO MEMBER
117 HON. DR. TONY AZIEGBEMI MEMBER
118 HON. SOLOMON E. AGWANA MEMBER
119 IKEM VENATIUS AYABIE MEMBER
120 OLOROGUN BARR. KINGSLEY ESISO MEMBER
121 HON. AARON CHUKWUEMEKA MEMBER
122 HON. ANIEKAN AKPAN MEMBER
123 SEN. MRS. DAISY DANJUMA MEMBER
124 CHIEF MRS. ADUKE MAINA MEMBER
125 MR. FESTUS OSAIGBOVO MEMBER
126 YEYE YETUNDE ODUBOTE MEMBER
127 ERELU TOYIN OLUMILUA DAVID MARK MEMBER
128 IYOM JOSEPHINE ANENIH MEMBER
129 SEN IGHOYOTA AMORI MEMBER
130 MRS. LAURENTIA MALLAM MEMBER
131 PRINCE AJIBOLA OLUWASEYI ADEPOJU MEMBER
132 ALH. HAMZA JIBIA MEMBER
133 COMRADE JUDE IMAGWE MEMBER
134 OSE ANENIH MEMBER
135 BARR. ANTHONY EHILEBO MEMBER
136 COMRADE YINKA SOTADE MEMBER
137 DR. IMAFIDON SAMSON MEMBER
138 HARRISON OMAGBON MEMBER
139 HENRY DUKE TENEBE MEMBER
140 TONY ANENIH, JR. MEMBER
141 PRINCE WALE GOMEZ MEMBER
142 FIDEL IGENEGBALE MEMBER
143 MRS. MEMUNAT JOHNSON ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY
144 HON. PASCHAL ADIGWE COUNCIL SECRETARY
All Council Members are kindly requested to be available for inauguration as follows:
Date: Tuesday, June 4, 2024
Venue: National Executive Committee (NEC) Hall, PDP National Secretariat, Wadata Plaza, Wuse Zone 5, FCT, Abuja.
Time: 12:00 Noon
Signed:
Hon. Debo Ologunagba
National Publicity Secretary
NIGERIA, WE HAIL THEE: Stirring Saga of our National Anthem(s): Historical Perspective or Voice of a New Dawn?
By Otega Ogra, FCIM
- The year was 1959. As the clock ticked towards 1960, Nigeria stood on the precipice of a monumental shift—its emancipation from British colonial rule. This was a time when our nation was more a line item in a colonial ledger than a free state.
The country, once treated less as a nation and more as a commodity in an unholy alliance with the infamous Royal Niger Company, was gearing up to redefine its identity. Our founding fathers had waged a long, arduous struggle not just against colonial domination but also against the indignity of having to pledge allegiance in compulsory renditions to a distant monarch with the anthem, “God Save the King.”
- To solidify this newfound autonomy, a call was issued, inviting both Nigerians and international participants to pen a national anthem that would encapsulate the vision of the impending free and independent Nigeria. The call for entries reproduced below, was a clarion call to articulate the collective aspirations and spirit of diversity of our soon-to-be sovereign nation:
“COMPETITION FOR NATIONAL ANTHEM”
“The National Planning Committee for Independence is thrilled to announce a competition to select a National Anthem to commemorate the Federation of Nigeria’s independence on October 1, 1960.
A prize of $280.00 will be awarded for a National Anthem that resonates with the spirit of a free Nigeria, standing proud among the nations of the world. We invite submissions of no more than three verses, each comprising six lines in English. This lyrical representation should capture the essence of our nation (the setting to music will be announced later).
Please send your entries by March 31, 1959, to: Independence Celebrations Officer, c/o Ministry of Internal Affairs, Lagos.”
- This call for entries drew a staggering response of over 1,000 entries, culminating in the selection of “Nigeria, We Hail Thee” as Nigeria’s inaugural anthem, penned by a British expatriate living in Nigeria, Lillian Jean Williams, with music by Frances Berda. As the anthem echoed through the celebrations on October 1, 1960, it marked a fitting tribute to the aspirations of our nation and reflected the broad diversity of the various nations that made up the New Nigeria.
Unity was its key message.
- However, the years that followed brought with them trials that tested the nation’s resolve: a military coup in 1966, a subsequent civil war, and the onset of an oil boom that reshaped the economic landscape. By the late 1970s, amid the throes of change and under the leadership of then former dictator and military Head of State, General Olusegun Obasanjo (who was part of the military coup that brought Gen Murtala Mohammed into power before his demise in a failed coup that saw Obasanjo become head of state), a new anthem was sought to reflect what they believed was a maturing nation’s identity. This led to another anthem competition, to reflect the nationalistic fervor of the time, resulting in “Arise, O Compatriots,” adopted in 1978 and penned by a quintet of Nigerian writers – John A. Ilechukwu, Eme Etim Akpan, B. A. Ogunnaike, Sota Omoigui and P. O. Aderibigbe. The music was created by the Nigerian Police Band directed by B. E. Odiasse.
- Years of political tumult continued until Nigeria returned to civilian rule in 1999, with reformed President Obasanjo (now a civilian) at the helm. The turn of the millennium saw calls from across the country for restructuring, a topic that Obasanjo largely sidestepped, focusing instead on other reforms. This decision to ignore those calls would plague him all through his presidency.
- It wasn’t until 2014 under President Goodluck Jonathan that a National confab was convened, bringing together 492 Nigerians to a National Conference inaugurated on March 17, 2014 which was somewhat representative. I say somewhat because, some strongly believe President Jonathan only decided to convene the national confab to earn sympathy points for his then re-election bid which he still lost to President Buhari in 2015.
- During this conference with retired Chief Justice Idris Legbo Kutigi as Chairman, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi as Vice Chair and Dr Valerie Azinge as Secretary, one poignant resolution from this conference amongst others was to revert to the old anthem, “Nigeria, We Hail Thee,” seen as a true reflection of Nigeria’s foundational values. According to a report by Premium Times @premiumtimesNG, “The conference resolved for Nigeria to abandon its anthem and return to the old ‘Nigeria we hail thee’ anthem”. Details of the report can be found on the National Repository Site. Direct Link to document here: https://nigeriareposit.nln.gov.ng/…/eb70724c-6da2-447e…
- Page 295, National Conference Report, text reproduced below:
“11 – NATIONAL ANTHEM”
“Conference decided that:
Nigeria should revert to her old National Anthem which embodies unity, peace and prosperity as follows:
Nigeria, we hail thee,
Our own dear native land, Though tribe and tongue may differ, In brotherhood we stand,
Nigerians all are proud to serve
Our sovereign Motherland.
Our flag shall be a symbol
That truth and justice reign, In peace or battle honoured, And this we count as gain, To hand on to our children A banner without stain.
O God of all creation,
Grant this our one request, Help us to build a nation
Where no man is oppressed, And so with peace and plenty Nigeria may be blessed.”
NOTE: some of the 2014 national conference outcomes have already been passed into law by the National Assembly since 2014 and have been part of the various constitution review processes since then.
- This idea recently gained legislative traction, and as of May 29, 2024, the switch back was officially enacted—25 years post the establishment of uninterrupted civilian governance.
- I have seen many questions and whilst I may not have all the answers, I personally believe in the power of an anthem to engender national pride and values.
- Reflecting on this issue, I am also of the personal opinion that ‘Nigeria We Hail Thee’ anthem speaks to our diversity and urgent need for unity. Not that Arise O compatriots doesn’t, but given the challenges we face as a ‘federating unit’ the first Nigerian anthem speaks more to me. There is a unique power of a national anthem in fostering a sense of pride and unity!
- As a Senior Aide in President Bola Tinubu’s office, I daily witness his commitment to these national ideals firsthand. President Tinubu, is no doubt a figure synonymous with dedication to national unity and progress — and he continues to inspire me.
Some have shared old videos of Mr President, President Bola Tinubu speaking about his preference for ‘Nigeria We Hail Thee’. This is what I have to say: President Tinubu has never hidden his vision of seeing a more united Nigeria. His stance on restructuring, devolution of powers to fedeeating units and non-interference are clear.
President Tinubu remains someone who doesn’t hide from his beliefs in the name of politics – a case of He says what he does, and does what he says! This is something that continues to endear me to him – first in his stint as governor, where I was a beneficiary of his free SSCE exams as a bright student of the Lagos state-owned Lagos State Model College, Kankon and years after when I watched in close proximity, his organisation of the 2011 ACN Nuhu Ribadu/Fola Adeola Presidential ticket.
Fast forward to a couple of years ago, I worked closely with him leading to his declaration to run for the office of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Today, he is our President.
IN SUMMARY: President Bola Tinubu will always put country first – even over himself. I have seen it in private over the years. I still see it daily as a senior aide in his office.
- Nigeria belongs to us all regardless of tribe, religion, or any demographic grouping – “/Though Tribe and Tongue may differ, In Brotherhood We Stand/”
May God grant us a “Nigeria that is blessed”
#iStandWithNigeria #IstandWithTinubu.
Amen.
*Otega Ogra is a Senior Aide to President Bola Tinubu. He oversees the Presidential Office of Digital Communications and New Media Strategy