Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
03LAGOS239
2003-01-30 15:41:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Consulate Lagos
Cable title:  

NIGERIA: AD PARTY - CONSENSUS OF YORUBA NATION?

Tags:  PREL PGOV KDEM SOCI KWMN NI 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 LAGOS 000239 

SIPDIS


LONDON FOR GURNEY
PARIS FOR NEARY


E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/21/2008
TAGS: PREL PGOV KDEM SOCI KWMN NI
SUBJECT: NIGERIA: AD PARTY - CONSENSUS OF YORUBA NATION?

CLASSIFIED BY CONSUL GENERAL ROBYN HINSON-JONES FOR REASONS
1.5 (B) AND (D).




C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 LAGOS 000239

SIPDIS


LONDON FOR GURNEY
PARIS FOR NEARY


E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/21/2008
TAGS: PREL PGOV KDEM SOCI KWMN NI
SUBJECT: NIGERIA: AD PARTY - CONSENSUS OF YORUBA NATION?

CLASSIFIED BY CONSUL GENERAL ROBYN HINSON-JONES FOR REASONS
1.5 (B) AND (D).





1. (C) SUMMARY. Despite recent factionalization, the Alliance
for Democracy (AD) in Lagos State presented the public with a
face of party consensus in their January 8 gubernatorial
congress. Following his challengers' disqualification,
incumbent Governor Bola Tinubu took the nomination unopposed.
Tinubu used the occasion to announce that Femi Pedro,
managing director of First Atlantic Bank plc, will replace
the embattled Senator Kofoworla Bucknor-Akerele as his deputy
governor. The congress promised much but revealed little
about the AD's potential as a cross-regional party. END
SUMMARY.


--------------
THE INCUMBENT'S RUBBER STAMP
--------------



2. (C) Incumbent Lagos State Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu
received 100 percent of the 304 delegates' votes on Jan. 8.
The two gubernatorial challengers had been disqualified from
the contest by the internal AD screening committee.
Reportedly, the first challenger, David Olasumbo Onitiri, had
failed to produce proper tax documents while the second,
Babatunde Olowu, was unable to prove his AD credentials.
(The local chapter of which he claimed to be a member told
the screening committee their records showed no sign of
Olowu's membership.) One or both of the challengers
allegedly misrepresented material facts on the nomination
forms. Tinubu expressed his disappointment at the lack of
competition in his acceptance speech but called the exercise
free, fair, and transparent. (Comment. Tinubu himself,
however, has been known to play fast and loose with the facts
and has been caught in the past embellishing his educational
achievements. A current rumor on the street is that Tinubu
has a criminal record in the U.S. which would
constitutionally disqualify him for elective office. In
fact, he never had a criminal arrest, but the rumor is too
juicy to let die and we may hear more during the course of
the campaign. End comment.)


--------------
NEW DEPUTY GOVERNOR APPOINTED

--------------



3. (C) Tinubu concluded his acceptance speech with the
announcement that Olufemi Pedro, managing director of First
Atlantic Bank plc, was his choice to fill the hole left by
embattled Senator (Ms.) Kofoworla Bucknor-Akerele's bitter
resignation as deputy governor late last year. A source
confirms that State Commissioner of Economic Planning and
Budget Yemi Cardoso was offered the position of Deputy
Governor but declined. Source alleges that Cardoso, a "quiet
Christian," is highly talented as a government official but
is "not a big politician." Tinubu and Pedro claim to have a
strong working relationship and mutual respect.


-------------- --------------
DELEGATES' DEMOGRAPHY AND REPRESENTATIVES' SELECTION
-------------- --------------



4. (U) Delegates included state commissioners, AD executive
committee members, senators, and members of the houses of
assembly and representatives. AD voting procedures call for
delegates to line up in front of their candidate of choice.
Since Tinubu ran unopposed, the party chairman asked
delegates to indicate their vote for the incumbent by
"standing up to be counted" when their local government was
called. Delegations from Oshodi/Isolo, Surulere, and Ikorodu
local councils were absent and therefore not represented at
the congress. "Logistical reasons" prevented these three
councils from appearing at the congress, according to the
congress organizers. Onitiri posits that the missing
delegates "were not allowed to participate in the exercise
because they knew their votes would not be for Tinubu."
Delegates from the other 17 local governments of Lagos gave
unanimous support to Tinubu: Agege 16, Animosho 18, Ajeroni
18, Apapa 17, Amuwo 16, Badagary 15, Epe 24, Eti-osa 19,
Ije-Lekki 15, Ifako 16, Ikeja 18, Kosofe 16, Lagos Island 28,
Lagos Mainland 16, Mushin 19, Ojo 14, and Shomolu 19. The
entire process took less than an hour and a half. Election
observer Chief Kemi Odebiyi registered just one complaint
with PolOff the polling began six hours behind schedule.



5. (C) ETHNICITY, AGE and GENDER. PolOff's search for
non-Yoruba delegates was fruitless, despite enlisting the
help of INEC observers and the governor's aide, Folorunsho
Folarin-Coker. Delegates ranged in age from their 20s to 60s
and upwards. Often, the delegate who appeared to be eldest
among the delegates of a given local government was elected
unopposed as the constituents' nominee to the House of
Representatives. Where the candidate ran unopposed, the most
senior voter would stand paunch to paunch with the candidate
in a show of apparent solidarity. Other times, younger
candidates were supported by aging delegates. Although many
elections involved no choice of candidates, several proved to
be a real contest. In cases where a winner could not be
determined, delegates were asked to consult amongst
themselves and prepare for another vote at the end of the
contest.



6. (C) According to some analysts, single women are more
likely to participate in politics than married women, whose
husbands frequently "prohibit" them from such activities.
Financing a campaign is also a consideration, and currently
there are very few women with the desire to enter politics as
well as the money to invest in a campaign. As a result of
these constraints, the vast majority of the delegates and the
contestants were male. Nonetheless, a few daring females ran
for the party's nomination to the House of Representatives.
Like their male counterparts, most of the female contestants
withdrew at the last moment in the name of "peace and harmony
for the good of the party," hinting at strong influences in
decision-making from beyond public view and across gender
lines. Of the other females who had had the nerve to contest
for local seats, two received no votes while a third received
a single vote against overwhelming support for their male
competitors.



7. (C) Adefunmilayo Smith-Tejuoso, (Mushin Local Government,
Lagos State) however, managed to gain all but one of her
fellow delegates' votes to beat her sole male opponent for
the post of Mushin's AD Representative. An exuberant
Smith-Tejuoso told PolOff that she barely had been able to
stand from her chair to walk forward and contest after
watching one after another of her fellow women step down from
their contests. Still struggling to catch her breath after
the vote, Smith-Tejuoso reflected, "I felt like I should win.
I knew I understood the issues better than my opponent and I
had really worked to gain the support of each of the voters.
But, you know, in an election you never know for certain what
the outcome will be!"


--------------
VIOLENCE MARS SENATORIAL NOMINATIONS
--------------



8. (C) Violence accompanied the January 9 primaries for the
Lagos AD senatorial candidates. Incumbent Senator for Lagos
Central Tokunbo Afikuyomi defeated former Mushin Local
Government Chairman Alhaji Ganiyu Solomon and Barrister
Adegbesan to gain the nomination for the Lagos West
senatorial candidature. Protesters against Afikuyomi's
victory allegedly barricaded the entry and exit points at the
venue. Although Afikuyomi won 122 of the 143 votes, his
opponents argued that as a non-resident of the area, he is
ill-suited to represent the district. Protesters reportedly
doused two police anti-crime squad members with "a substance
which appeared to be acid," provoking an exchange of gunfire.
Protesters "smashed" several vehicles and caused other
mischief against official property. Tinubu countered reports
that the demonstration resulted in his being held hostage at
the venue for several hours, saying the atmosphere was
"carnival-like" and democratic. (Comment. Folarin-Coker,
however, admitted that the convention had been "held hostage"
with delegates "barricaded" inside the hall. He blamed the
incident on local "area boys" (street gangs of young,
unemployed men who can be paid to engage in political
violence) who had a "number of ill-defined complaints"
against the local government. He continued saying that these
"supporters" of the losers did not say the poll was rigged.
They just engaged in open violence following the outcome.
End comment.)



9. (U) Former Lagos State Commissioner for Home Affairs and
Culture Musiliu Obanikoro won the Lagos Central senatorial
nomination with 72 of 85 votes against Lanre Towry-Coker (who
received four) and Dapo Durosinmi-Etti (who received nine).
Dr. Olorunnimbe Mamora, Speaker of the Lagos State House of
Assembly, won the Lagos East senatorial nomination unopposed
when his challengers stepped down from the competition.


--------------
NATIONAL SCENE: WAITING FOR PRIME TIME
--------------



10. (U) At the state level, AD is dominated almost
exclusively by Yoruba ethnic nationals. At the executive
council level, major AD players are northerners. The party's
upper echelons appear to slowly be building a national
political strategy. Since Governor Mala Kachallah defected
to the AD, Borno State has joined Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Osun,
Ondo, and Ekiti states as AD ruled. AD is hoping to gain
ground in Plateau, Kaduna, and Kwara States this round and
hold those states it currently controls. The AD has not
declared a manifest "bill of rights" yet because it "wants to
take things a step further," a source argues.


-------------- --------------
PDP MERGE? REACTION TO OBASANJO'S PDP NOMINATION
-------------- --------------



11. (C) AD leaders continue to refute allegations that the
party intends to merge with President Obasanjo's party, the
PDP. A source from Tinubu's camp confirms a deal was in fact
struck not to contest the presidential election and to throw
AD support behind Obasanjo. Two out of Lagos' three national
senators decamped from AD to PDP long ago, an embarrassment
the AD has yet to live down.

12. (C) Had Obasanjo lost the nomination, one Yoruba source
asserts, AD fully expected former President Ibrahim Babangida
to have "come straight out to contest" while the Yoruba
people sat back and "yawned." In contrast to other pundits'
views that an upset over Obasanjo at the primary would have
sent Yoruba youths into fits of violent rage across Lagos,
the source stated that this would have been unlikely given
that militant groups such as the O'odua Peoples' Congress
(OPC) had not been mobilized. "If (former Vice President
Alex) Ekwueme had won," he argues, "part of us would have
been relieved. 'OK, let (the Igbo) have their turn,' we
would have said. 'Then, in 2007 we can go for president or
VP.' Now, we will have to wait years before it will again be
our turn."


-------------- --------------
OLD BOYS' POLYARCHY MIXED WITH HOMEGROWN POLITICS
-------------- --------------



13. (C) COMMENT. Although the vote was conducted openly,
the violence accompanying the Lagos senatorial west contest
reveals cracks in the legitimacy of the AD selection process.
Much of the negotiating in AD politics appears to take place
between the eight or nine "wise men" of the party, while the
details are worked out between contenders in the form of cash
pay-offs or other political concessions. AD issued a
statement that the challengers' nomination fees would be
refunded. Disqualified challenger Onitiri protested the
screening committee's disqualification of himself and Olowu,
claiming that his tax certificate was in fact valid. "The
whole arrangement was dictatorial," he later asserted to the
to AD's South-West zonal appeal panel in Oshogbo. Echoing
Alex Ekwueme's denunciation of the PDP convention, Onitiri
called the Lagos AD convention a "charade."



14. (C) COMMENT CONTINUED. On a more positive note, the
Lagos AD showed signs of cohesion and political
sophistication reminiscent of political parties with an
identifiable grassroots base. Lagos State House of Assembly
Speaker Mamora was placed in the Lagos East senatorial
contest due to AD's expectation of a tough battle in that
district in the general election, and his colleagues
supported him. Instead of the bags of money prominently
carted around the PDP convention, bags of hats with
pro-Tinubu and AD propaganda were disbursed amongst the
delegates. The voting venues were not grandiose, lavishly
paid for by the government, but practical locations obtained
at discounted rates through party contacts. The party looked
more like, well, a party. But this union could be difficult
to sustain cross-regionally and cross-ethnically. For now,
AD officials insist they have the political know-how to
overcome national obstacles. At least Tinubu's acceptance
speech was able to draw reference to concrete initiatives he
had conducted during his governorship, including governance
figures that would warm the heart of any policy wonk.



15. (C) COMMENT CONTINUED. While the AD took great pains to
appear to have zen-like consensus behind their candidates,
fierce competition appeared to take place behind the scenes.
The facade of complete unity may intimidate candidates of
other parties, but the AD could be hurting its long-term
national competitiveness by inhibiting its members' chances
to practice the art of losing gracefully in public. This
political skill will likely prove as vital to the
sustainability of Nigerian democracy as that of winning
emphatically.
HINSON-JONES