Nigeria has not changed since 1979, Fayose says in explosive interview

0
275
Ayo Fayose

Former Governor of Ekiti State, Ayodele Fayose, has on Thursday insisted that nothing has changed in Nigeria since 1979 amid the outcome of the 2023 presidential election.

Fayose said this while fielding questions from journalists on Arise Television’s Morning Show.

The two-term Ekiti governor said there is a lot wrong with Nigeria, and blamed the majority of issues plaguing the country on stakeholders and politicians.

- Advertisement -

Recall that the All Progressives Congress, APC’s Bola Ahmed Tinubu recently won the 2023 presidential election, beating close rivals Peoples Democratic Party, PDP’s Atiku Abubakar and Labour Party’s Peter Obi.

Atiku and Obi have since headed to the courts to challenge the victory of Tinubu.

- Advertisement -

Fayose, however, said that nothing was wrong with the election, insisting that the system of governance in the country was facing foundational issues.

Fayose said, “There is a lot wrong with Nigeria. Since 1979 nothing has changed. I blamed the majority of the problem on stakeholders and politicians.

-Advertisement-


“When you asked Buhari in 2015 if you lose the election, would you concede defeat, he said I would win. He never conceived he would lose.

“I told you the senators, House of Rep members are returning to the House of Assembly. The system is sick. Nobody is protecting it. INEC is just one party to the parties of this whole issue on ground.

“INEC does not carry guns; does not have powers to do certain things other than ensure the free and fair election in the country. The police and military are to blame and largely the politicians.”

“Rather than blaming INEC, we need to draw a red line like the army. Nothing was wrong in the election.”

Fayose then went on the offensive during the live TV interview when he was accused by Arise News Anchor, Rufai Oseni, of being heard in a secret recording in 2014 hatching an election rigging plot.

READ ALSO: Ekweremadu, wife found guilty of organ trafficking 

Rufai made the claim after Fayose finished praising the election that produced the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, as the President-Elect.

Fayose had dismissed the allegations about the malpractices around the presidential election, arguing that it was one of the most credible.

Rufai, in a prelude to his question to Fayose, claimed that the former Ekiti Governor was secretly recorded in 2014 hatching a rigging plot when he was the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

However, Fayose dismissed his claims, further confronting Rufai for breaking traffic rules and confronting police officials when he was flagged.

“That shows that you, as a journalist and public analyst, who is supposed to live above board, are not really living above board. And he that must come to equity must have clean hands,” the ex-governor rebutted.

On his support for the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, Bola Tinubu, Fayose said he has done nothing wrong, adding that it was a corporate decision of the G5 Governors to support a southern candidate since the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) refused to honour the power rotation agreement that should have given its 2023 presidential ticket to a southerner.

We do everything possible to supply quality news and information to all our valuable readers day in, day out and we are committed to keep doing this. Your kind donation will help our continuous research efforts.

-Advertisement-

-Want to get the news as it breaks?-