The
People’s Democratic Party, PDP’s Vice Presidential Candidate, Mr.
Peter Obi, and the Lagos State Governorship Candidate, Mr. Jimi
Agbaje, visited four business hubs in the city on Wednesday, assuring
traders of a robust economy should their party come into power.
Agbaje,
who expressed misgivings about the President’s failure to sign into
law the new electoral bill passed by the National Assembly, recalled
that after the 2015 elections in Lagos, PDP had headed to the
Electoral Tribunal, Appeal Court and Supreme Court, which all ruled
that card reader machines were compulsory for an acceptable election.
He
said his case on the 2015 governorship election, in which Mr.
Akinwunmi Ambode was declared winner, had been based on the premise
that contrary to the INEC regulation, the election had been majorly
conducted without card readers and therefore should be declared null
and void.
However,
the Supreme Court finally ruled that although the INEC regulations
approved the use of card readers, the method lacked the backing of
any extant law.
Upon
this, he said that the National Assembly passed a law to back the use
of card readers that President Muhammadu Buhari had presently refused
to sign.
Accompanied
by the Deputy Governorship, Mrs. Haleemat Busari, and legislative
candidates, the PDP entourage received tumultuous receptions when
they held town hall meetings with businesses at the Computer Village
in Ikeja, Games Village in Surulere, Ladipo Auto Spare Parts Market
in Ladipo and FESTAC Town.
Obi
placed the blame for country’s recession on the government of the
All Progressives Congress (APC), whom he charged with lacking
capacity to manage businesses.
“How
can a man who does not have a shop aspire to be the chairman of the
traders in the market?” Obi asked rhetorically at Computer Village.
“I have always been a trader. You know that Jimi Agbaje too is a
trader. So we understand your needs.”
According
to him, Nigeria’s problem began when her administration was placed
in the hands of people who neither participated in nor understood
business and trading.
“You
know that the Vice President runs the economy,” he said. “With
me, you have someone who understands business and understands your
need.”
Describing
ICT as the future, Obi said that Nigeria’s exchange rate would
regain health when the country became an exporter of computer
technology.
Agbaje
blamed the Lagos government for Google corporation diverting to Ghana
and Uganda a plan to provide free Wi-Fi in all schools, pointing out
that, if the scheme had succeeded, it would have created more
business for Nigerians in the sector.
“If
all the schools get free Wi-Fi, Computer Village go benefit abi e no
go benefit?” he
asked, to which his audience roared, “We
go benefit!”
He
said that it had been proved that when internet use increased by 10
percent, the GDP of the benefiting country rose by 3.8 percent, which
he described as a significant addition to the economy.
According
to him, the current regime in the state had put stumbling blocks of
corruption to telecommunications companies and had failed to
appreciate the impact ICT would make on the economy of the state.
Criticising
Lagos State’s current tax system that had given room for multiple
taxation, Agbaje assured the business representatives that his
government would put in place a tax regime that would eliminate
double taxation.
Lamenting
that there had been no improvement in Ladipo since his last campaign
visit in 2015, Agbaje promised that he would not indulge in the
current APC’s government rhetoric of threatening to shut down the
market, but rather he would improve access roads to and facilities in
the market.
General
Chairman of the Ladipo Auto Spare Parts Market, Mr. Jude Nwankwo,
said that the place had suffered neglect from the current regime.
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