 
 
Chief Ralphs Nwosu
Chief Ralphs Okey Nwosu is the National Chairman of the African Democratic Congress (ADC). In this interview with journalists in Lagos, he spoke on the Anambra elections and other current political issues.You recently told journalists in Abuja that the APC, PDP, and APGA should be disqualified from the Anambra poll. Why?
I did not say so. The three parties disqualified themselves by their own
 volition. They disqualified themselves through their own actions, 
bordering on abuse of processes and rules set by the electoral bills, 
the constitution, INEC, and even their own party policies and doctrines.
 By their sheer impunity and indiscipline, they have offended their 
members and the people of Anambra and Nigeria. 
How long do you want our democracy, our country, and people to suffer this type of indignation, callousness and fraudulent tendencies? It is time we moved on. Enough is enough. After 23 years of our democratic regime, should the system be degenerating and not improving? The parties failed themselves and their members in not doing the right things.
The level of greed and ineptitude displayed by their leaders and some of the contestants are other disturbing issues. Imagine the kind of money being brandied and used in trying to corrupt everyone, including structures and institution in the entire ecosystem in Anambra and across Nigeria. Look at the judiciary with court orders and rulings from all the courts in the lands. As we speak, APGA is split into four bodies and each has court orders or judgment emanating from different courts.
Last week, some judges were held hostage and more or less forced to give judgment in a case that they had earlier adjourned for hearing in September. This is notwithstanding the fact that INEC had said from the beginning that the APGA had not nominated or elected delegates according to their constitution to conduct an indirect primary. The PDP is caught up in the same web because of the rancorous nature and effects of too many greedy and inordinate godfathers within the party. Up on till the primary date, the list of delegates continued to change, until they conducted a process in which they had 16 candidates that had invested billions of Naira campaigning across the state succumb to an imaginary super delegates of less than 230 persons. The aspirants paid over N400million officially and a lot more to private pockets and numerous others in Abuja and God knows where else, and they spent over N10billion lobbying delegates at ward levels. Then, finally, the party leaders came up with an unconstitutional super delegates list that continued to change, in a deliberate mode to continue scamming political merchants posing as governorship aspirants. That of APC is beyond voodoo. Quote me. They were supposed to be conducting a direct primary where supposedly over 500,000 of their registered members were to vote in the different wards, and some cabals, led by Governor Dapo Abiodun of Ogun State, manufactured dud results in the most bizarre and insulting manner, in absolute disregard to the wishes of Anambra APC members and stakeholders.
What is ADC’s strategy to win the Anambra governorship election?
One of our strategic paths is continuous public enlightenment and 
leadership by example. The APC, PDP and APGA think that the way of 
democracy is in corrupting every institution of the nation, weaponising 
poverty, and using the machineries of state to coerce and intimidate the
 people. Our authenticity is giving Nigerians confidence and hope. This 
country still has a good number of patriots in the intelligence and 
security agencies. INEC seems to be learning from their past mistakes. 
The efforts of INEC so far has thrown up the decadence in the so-called 
powerful parties. 
In spite of the offensive noise within the political space, our people have become aware of the effects of parochialism in public policy and national development. To help us in the ADC navigate within the fluid terrain of Nigerian politics, we are beginning to reframe the prisms in national discourses and development paradigms. Instead of continuing with the lenses that have kept most of us hostages of ethnic and religious biases, the horizon for us in ADC is continental and global. The ADC mission in this Anambra election is to crystalise our third-force position and establish a clear credible alternative status by winning the election and making Anambra state the Ijele of Africa.
Our DNA does not permit parochialism. It has taken us many years to arrive where we are at this moment and we are delighted to have reframed our political and development paradigm to a more audacious pan-African and global perspective. While the ruling parties at the national level and in the states have corrupted and divided Nigeria beyond anything imaginable, the ADC will deepen the solidarity and inspire boldness in our public policy formulation. A nation enmeshed in infighting and clannishness can never come to a point of reckoning. The syndrome of North versus South, East, and West, Niger Delta, and Middle Belt should be off our radar. Kano and Maiduguri cities, over 300 years ago, were centres of trans-Saharan and intercontinental trade. But the myopic politics of recent times have reduced Kano and most Nigerian flourishing cities of old to poverty-stricken ethnic enclaves where terrorists, bandits, and ethnic militias are causing havoc. Think of Kano again as an intercontinental business hub of peculiar nature and Lagos as a global centre and epicentre of global commerce. Calabar, Port Harcourt, Jalingo, Minna, Ibadan, Sokoto, Lokoja, and Abakaliki – all have their strong positioning to gain continental and global acclaim.
The ADC candidate is said not to have the muscle to run a 
good race. How does your party fund an effective campaign in Anambra, 
considering the heavyweights in the race?
I have heard all forms of concoctions and lies about the ADC and our 
candidate. Our strength has never depended on money but character, 
integrity – and do not forget that all Nigerian youths adopted the ADC 
in an online poll this year and also our strategy of 35% women 
inclusion. These are values and disciplines that money cannot buy and 
virtues that are unquantifiable. People must also consider the debt 
profile of the other candidates – they all come with heavy baggage. All 
of them are either heavily indebted to AMCON or are under EFCC radar. 
The ADC candidate, Akachukwu Nwankpo, may not have all the money but you
 can go to the bank with his integrity and competence. 
The people of Anambra and the new Nigeria we aspire for have become wiser and ready for the third force with fresh ideas, the people desire newness which ADC, as the third force, provides.
The National Assembly recently voted against electronic 
transmission of results and electronic voting. How will that affect your
 party and what is ADC’s position?
Frankly, the National Assembly members are playing Russian roulette of 
our democracy and with all of our life. It is foolhardy for legislators 
to be so blinded and shameless in passing bills to leave gaps for frauds
 or infuse corruption into our bills. Wisdom demands that a people build
 integrity into their systems. By now, we must be consolidating our 
democracy. Integrity, transparency, and credibility in the electoral 
system will ensure sustainability and build resilience into our body 
polity. We need to move beyond quality of elections to improving quality
 of governance. Electronic transmission of results ensures that the 
results are not tampered with when agents move from one point to 
another. Electronic voting is another matter altogether. We support this
 but, in addition, there must be paper trail for all elections. That is 
the practice in the most advanced democracies. After 22 years, we should
 have refined and dependable electoral system.
What are your chances as a party in the Nov 6 Anambra State governorship election?
I must tell you that, by all standards, the ADC candidate is best 
qualified in terms of background, experience, and record of performance 
in public service and character. Ndi-Anambra, just like all Nigerians, 
are tired of the two parties because of the adverse situation of the 
country and the polarity and culture of corruption that these people 
have foisted on the country. In the 36 states and the FCT, if you 
conduct surveys in the streets across all the constituencies, ‘No PDP 
and No APC’ have become a singsong. In Anambra State, it is the same for
 APGA. After 16 years, the people want them out. So, Anambra intends to 
bequeath Nigerians with the third force. ADC has penetrated deeply in 
Anambra State and across Nigeria. Again, if you have followed elections 
in Anambra since the beginning of the democratic regime, some of us have
 played major roles in enforcing regime change or changing nonperforming
 parties in Anambra. In this case, APGA, APC and PDP have shut 
themselves out of this election.
What do you think of INEC, and do you expect free and fair election?
So far, INEC has done well. They have insisted that the parties keep to 
the rules in their internal processes and primaries. INEC has been clear
 that APGA did not conduct a delegate’s election. INEC has also issued a
 CTC to the fact that the APC did not conduct primary election in 
Anambra. They have also waved the red flag against the super delegates’ 
election of the PDP. The institution is showing the boldness not minding
 whose ox is gored. INEC fought alongside the people against the 
National Assembly on electronic transmission of results and they are not
 giving up, not minding the recalcitrant parliamentarians. I want to 
believe that leaving a legacy for posterity now resonates with Prof. 
Mahmood. So, irrespective of the court orders being bandied, INEC has 
provided all parties sufficient evidence to ensure they get justice at 
the end of the elections even if court orders make them to include these
 three political parties that have shown absolute disregard to processes
 and established protocols. So, for now, we are working hard and we are 
trusting INEC.
-guardian.ng 





 
 
 
 

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