Former senator representing Kaduna Central at the national
assembly, Shehu Sani has said that he was surprised that he got 2 votes at the
recently concluded Peoples Democratic Party governorship primary in Kaduna
state.
Speaking in an interview with Punch,
he stated that "internal democracy is one of the most important areas of a
democracy that needs to be clean and reconfigured".
Sani said;
I am not a new politician and I am not a starter but something I have found out and that has been attacked by the society is the delegate system where delegates bribe delegates to vote for them. A primary, a democratic process where leaders emerge should be clean and transparent but what has been going on in the politics of this country is that we have accepted what is wrong, decadent and negative as a political ghost ritual.
Internal democracy is one of the most important areas of a
democracy that needs to be clean and reconfigured. A society cannot have
credible and honourable leaders when the process that led to their emergence is
corrupt and decadent.
It appears that we have accepted a corrupt and fraudulent
process of governance where people are selected as delegates and paid money to
vote for a particular candidate. We are in a situation where hundreds of millions
and sometimes billions are spent on a few people for them to elect candidates
whom the rest of the public are now being urged to select from. I have said
before I went to the primaries that I am not going to give a dime to any
delegates and they should vote for me based on my credibility, accountability
and my agenda for the people of Kaduna state and I stood by my words despite a
lot of pressure for me to part with money and give to delegates to get votes.
But I insisted that I would not do it. We need to have
references who are going to revolt against the system to rescue our democracy
from being suffocated by moneybags and criminals because the delegate system
only makes it possible for moneybags, and god-fathers to impose candidates and
have strongholds on our society through the influence of money.
My experience is well expected, I knew that it was going to
be difficult for the delegates to vote for me. But I want a turning point and
somebody needs to sacrifice to open up the political space for and clear the
corruption that both the ruling and opposition parties have accepted as a norm.
Sani also claimed that the primary in Kaduna was marred by
politicians giving money to delegates to get their vote.
He added;
I have made it clear then and I stand to be challenged by
any executive member of the APC in Kaduna. When the delegates gathered before
the election in 2014, I told them in black and white that I was not going to
give any kobo for me to be elected into any office. And at that time, the opposition
party was desperate to win.
And this time around, I repeated the same thing but
unfortunately, I couldn’t make it. What I always do is bring the issue to the
front burner of national discourse. That if we are to clean and respect our
country, we must begin with the home politics. If our politics is dirty, there
is no way we can have clean people in the position of power. One of the reasons
people in power feel that they are not accountable to anyone is that they feel
everybody has a price. And that people did not vote for them but that they
bought the seat/ position that they occupy.
I want the people to discuss, how can we achieve anything as
a country when the process through which the leaders get to the seat of power
is laced with corruption? I can say it without mincing words that I have never
bribed any delegate or executive of the party to be the candidate of the party
in 2014, I won my primaries
As a candidate, you can make contributions for things like
the furniture for the office or pay the bills of those who are working in the
office. You can pay the bills for some of the other activities of the party;
you can contribute to those aspects. But for you to line up delegates and you
go into an auction or billing system where they say candidate A has given us
N100,000, you are to give us N200,000. It was so dirty in Kaduna State that
some delegates have got to as far as N3m per candidate, and some are even
collecting $5000 in National Assembly elections in Kaduna state. So how
do you expect people who pay delegates to respect the electorate? Impossible!
Our politics is becoming too expensive and elitist to the point that younger
people are being denied the opportunity to appear in a position of authority
because we do not have the finances.
So the sacrifice, which I made, is to make it
possible, first for Nigerians to discuss the delegate system and the corruption
that is inherent in it. Secondly to make it possible for the younger generation
to participate in politics if we now put a screen to focus on how politicians
gather money before primary elections and for them to win elections.
If we say delegates should be paid money and it is right,
then we have no right to challenge the electorate when they say they should be
given the right to their salt from the boat. It is the political system of that
the politicians that are corrupting the general public. We have got to the
point where aspirants have to share rice, motorcycle and cars to get votes. You
know that at a certain point in time, some of the aspirants that lost elections
have to use hunters and vigilantes, moving house to house hunting for delegates
to return their money. So what kind of system is this?
I did not expect to have any votes. Because I did not just
write that I was not going to pay, I faced delegates one to one and told them
that I am not going to pay. Who voted me, I don’t know. I wish to know
those who voted for me.
An hour before we went into the primaries, I faced the
delegate in the hall and told them that I will not give them money to vote for
me, so I was expecting zero votes. Why I did that is because I want Nigerians
to know that this is not the path for which election should thread. Our
politics is highly corrupt. It is too expensive. And it is impossible to
produce a clean set of new leaders in Nigeria, in a system that embraces,
endorses and accepts corruption in the primaries. Corruption is
institutionalised in our politics to the extent that it has polluted the seats.
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