Take a fresh look at your lifestyle.

Election: How Dickson, Bayelsans resisted APC dark forces – Aide

0 112

Get real time updates directly on you device, subscribe now.

The governorship election in Bayelsa, according to Iworiso-Markson, the CPS to Governor Henry Seriake Dickson, was

The December 5 2015 and January 9 2016 governorship election in Bayelsa State, according to Daniel Iworiso-Markson, the Chief Press Secretary (CPS) to Governor Henry Seriake Dickson, was “not just an election, it was war.” 

His contention is contained in a new book in which he chronicled and documented how patriotic Bayelsans crushed federal might of the All Progressives Congress (APC). 

The book entitled: “Bayelsa’s Landmark Election: How Dickson Deployed People Power To Defeat Federal Might” – will be launched in February to coincide with the one year anniversary of Dickson’s second term in office. 

In this interview, Iworiso-Markson, speaks on the book and why Nigerians should not allow dictatorial and retrogressive forces to drag the county back to 1984. Excerpts!

You recently published a book entitled: “Bayelsa’s Landmark Election: How Dickson Deployed People Power To Defeat Federal Might”. What prompted the book?

By February 14, which is less than six weeks away, the Restoration Government will be marking its one year in office in the second term of Hon. Henry Seriake Dickson as governor of Bayelsa State.

Since he first contested and won the governorship election in 2012, I have been an active participant and close watcher of events, especially the politics of Bayelsa State.

My appointment by Governor Dickson as his Chief Press Secretary only exposed me to greater understanding of the dynamics shaping the politics of the state, which regrettably were to underscore the complex web of intrigues which characterised his reelection in 2016.

As part of the activities lined up to commemorate the anniversary celebration, I have endeavoured to write this book to promote democracy in the country because as the reader would also discover, and corroborated by Governor Dickson convincingly, what took place in Bayelsa was more than an election; it was war.

You will recall that the governor had said after his victory that ‘this election that brought me back for the second term was not just an election. It was more than an election and more like warfare. Getting through it was actually like surviving a war.

We were against a full display of the totality of power at the centre, deployed to the fullest. All elements of national power were displayed to take over Bayelsa by force and my opponent’s campaign was appropriately nicknamed ‘Operation Takeover Bayelsa.’ He called it a ‘takeover mission,’ a tag that appeared innocent at first but in retrospect, we now understand what it meant from day one.

This book is a definitive account of an election where the leadership in government at the centre and its candidate acted out a script that transformed a mere election into a warfare and perpetrated acts of violence against public morality, violation of human rights, kidnapping, shooting, maiming and intimidation under the rubrics of elections.

The ‘Operation Take Over’ slogan of the Federal Government-backed candidate was put to real action but scuttled by the greater will of the people. Before the election, there were reports that the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Bayelsa State was stockpiling weapons to perpetrate violence during the election, but little was done to tackle this concern.

Thus the true account of what happened in the 2016 Bayelsa governorship election and the sordid interplay of some ‘dark forces’ which conspired to make it so painful to us as Nigerians are what is presented in the book for history and posterity.

What are the key lessons you want the public to take away from the book?

Basically, it is to show how the people could help themselves to reject political imposition by being active in the defence of their votes as Bayelsans did by even throwing their bare bodies to challenge armoured tanks on the day of election when it was clear that the army of occupation were desperate to rig the election. Let me state very clearly that democracy is very much on trial across board and it is our collective responsibility as active and patriotic citizens to save the situation because the development of the nation’s democracy has an important relationship with our economic development. Hence, democracy must be given a chance to survive and really flourish.

Likewise, the state must as a matter of fact survive without which there can be no democracy.

As we have seen in the Bayelsa election and even most recently, the Rivers re-run national and state assembly elections, what is clear to the unbiased observer is that the conscious attempt to rig elections caused such unscrupulous activities that resulted into the mayhem in the state. We were helplessly shocked to see such loss of lives and property. But this shouldn’t have been the case in a democracy.

It is an issue which hopefully will continue to be reflected upon by all concerned because of its implication in the advancement of our democracy and mutual co-existence as a people.

This is why we must never allow its recurrence in any part of the country. It is a challenge to our moral and spiritual beings that we as a people should not be involved in this kind of cruel action which was so dehumanizing and unjust against our fellow human beings all in the name of politics. But politics itself is an act meant to serve and not to kill and destroy.

Thus as a civilized act of engagement, it craves for superiority of argument in a peaceful atmosphere and driven by sane and honourable people who are fired into participation because of the common good. This is the irony of our democracy which is bastardised by the elite that only seeks to maintain the interest of the few in society.

Having won the governorship election against all odds, how is the governor settling down to deal with the challenges of governance in an economy that is in recession?

Continues…

Get real time updates directly on you device, subscribe now.