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Jonathan takes poll drive to key oil region

Published: 29 Jan 2015 - 12:01 am | Last Updated: 18 Jan 2022 - 02:52 am

Muslim women walk past a Mosque in Kaduna. All that’s left of the Muslim neighbourhood in Madakiya, in Nigeria’s northwestern Kaduna state, are decomposing bricks and graffiti-covered walls standing in fields of charred grass. Muslims and Christians once lived together in the village but Madakiya’s entire Muslim population fled to a nearby town in rioting after the 2011 presidential election.

Port Harcourt, Nigeria: Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday took his re-election campaign to the Niger Delta, knowing that victory in the key region will help determine the winner of next month’s vote.
The head of state, who is looking for a second, four-year term, was in Port Harcourt, the capital of Rivers State, which is controlled by the opposition and seen as a pivotal election battleground.
Rivers State was run by Jonathan’s Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) until the defection of its governor Rotimi Amaechi in late 2013 to the main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC).
It has since been a flashpoint for violence between supporters of the two parties, with long-standing complaints from Amaechi about a personal campaign against him by the government in Abuja.
The PDP spokesman in the oil-producing hub, Emmanuel Okah, said the party was “on a mission to reclaim what was fraudulently stolen from it by the APC”.
He told AFP: “Apart from retaining the presidency, the PDP will also take over the Rivers government house from the usurpers.”
Thousands of people thronged the 40,000-seat stadium where Jonathan was expected to address a rally under tight security.
As a southerner and Christian from neighbouring Bayelsa state, he would ordinarily be expected to count on widespread support from his kinsmen.
But apparent momentum for the APC on the campaign trail — and predictions that the party could even seize power — has given added importance to control of the major urban centre.
APC chairman for the state Davies Ibiamu Ikanya said he was confident of victory in the February 14 presidential and parliamentary polls, as well as the governorship and state assembly vote two weeks later.
“President Jonathan won massively in the state in 2011 but he has lost that goodwill because of poor performance in office,”
he said.
“The people are clamouring for a change which is the APC is ready to bring about.”
Political commentator Chris Ngwodo said regaining control of Rivers State — traditionally held by the ruling party — was vital for Jonathan and could help determine the outcome of the election.
“Losing Rivers is going to be a very, very significant loss in terms of votes, in terms of sheer numbers... and will add to the APC’s national strength,” he said.
“It (the APC) already controls Lagos and Kano. It would be disastrous for the PDP.”
There were few doubts about Jonathan’s chances, however, in his hometown of Otuoke, where a huge billboard of the president dominates the only road into the sleepy farming and fishing community.
Jonathan is the first president from the Ijaw minority ethnic group and is seen as a figure of hope for his people clamouring for a fair share of oil extracted locally.
AFP