Aluko said the money was used to defeat
the then Governor of the state, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, who was the
governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress.
Aluko, who spoke with reporters in Abuja on Sunday, also revealed how the PDP rigged the governorship election.
Aluko, who said he was part of the team
that prosecuted the election, added that he was the Chairman of the
Intelligence and Security Committee for the Fayose Campaign
Organisation.
He explained that he handled the waiver
Fayose got from the PDP at the national level to enable him to qualify
to take part in the governorship primary.
To buttress the roles he played in the
emergence of Fayose, Aluko said he delivered the congresses that
produced Fayose and was also the governor’s principal witness at the
Election Petitions Tribunal.
He said Jonathan initially gave Fayose
$2m in March 2014 for the primary election, pointing out that this money
was collected at the NNPC Towers, Abuja.
Aluko said, “It was about $35m, which is
about N4.7bn he gave us for the real election and for the primaries, he
released $2m to Fayose. I have details of all I am saying and I was
present when they brought the money and it was Senator Musiliu Obanikoro
that brought the money, the $35m, which he delivered to Fayose at
Spotless Hotel.
“I can name eight people that were
there. We were all there because he said he would want us to take
delivery so that there will be transparency and accountability.
“Let me just stop there for now, but I
am just trying to say that both the security and the funding came from
the Presidency and even the primaries money we collected at the NNPC
Towers in Abuja here and they took $300,000 from the $2m for courier
which was on Monday, 23rd of March 2014 and we took it to Prince and
Princess, Fayose’s house, but the N4.7bn came into Ekiti on June 17,
2014.”
He said the $35m was “taken to a bureau de change in Onitsha where it was converted to N4.7bn.”
In his reaction on Sunday, Fayose said
he would not take issue with Aluko because he was (Aluko) bitter, adding
that he got money from different sources.
He, however, did not deny that the former President gave him the amount being alleged by his accuser.
Fayose’s Special Assistant on Public
Communications and New Media, Mr. Lere Olayinka, said Aluko was already
beclouded by his desperation to seek revenge against Fayose because of
the governor’s refusal to make him his Chief of Staff, such that he
(Aluko) was not mindful of committing the criminal offence of perjury.
“As per his claim that $37m was given to
the governor for the election, the governor got financial support from
various sources as it is usual of anyone contesting election and it is
not for us to begin to advertise in the media the level of support the
governor received from individuals, corporate organisations or groups.
“However, if money belonging to the APC
is missing and they suspect that the money was stolen by Dr. Goodluck
Jonathan to fund Ekiti State governorship election, they can approach
the EFCC.”
The governor’s aide asked whether it was
also soldiers that rigged the 2015 presidential, senatorial, House of
Representatives and state House of Assembly elections that the APC lost
in Ekiti.
He said, “For Aluko to be taken
seriously, he must first have to report himself to the police to be
tried for perjury and committed to prison for three years, since what he
is now saying is different from what he said under oath at the election
tribunal, being the only witness called by the PDP and Fayose.
“If after giving evidence under oath at
the tribunal that the election was free, fair and credible and that
security agents, including soldiers, performed their duties creditably
well, saying something else more than one year after is admittance by
Aluko himself that he is not a stable character.
“They will probably need to pay INEC to
tell Nigerians that an election it conducted, in which an incumbent
governor lost in his own local government, was not credible.”
Giving an insight into how the military
and other security agencies were drafted into the Ekiti election, Aluko
said the Ekiti PDP and Fayose first ensured that the headship of the
security apparatus in Nigeria was changed.
He said that the former President agreed
with Fayose on the need to change the leadership of the nation’s
security apparatus because of his desperation to win the presidential
election.
Aluko added that Jonathan quickly summoned a security meeting at the Presidential Villa for the purpose of the election.
He said, “Those at the meeting were the
former Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshall Alex Badeh; then Chief
of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Kenneth Minimah; and a former National Chairman
of the PDP, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu.
“Others included Fayose, Senator Iyiola
Omisore, then Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan and Minister
of State for Defence, Musiliu Obanikoro.
“At that meeting, the former President
made it clear to the ex-Chief of Defence Staff that Fayose would stand
for him (as Commander-in-Chief) in terms of providing security for the
election.”
According to Aluko, Jonathan’s directive
made the military chiefs to take orders from Fayose throughout the
duration of the election.
Aluko said Fayose then approached the
former Commander of the Army Brigade in Akure, one Brig. Gen. Dikko to
take charge of the election for the PDP.
But Dikko, he said, rejected the
proposal, adding that the army officer “stated bluntly that he would not
be available for such operation.”
“So, Fayose sponsored a petition against
him which led to his replacement with another officer (name withheld)
who was amenable to our plans.”
This, he said, made it easy for the PDP to use soldiers to suppress the opposition APC.
“We went into the election with 1,040
recognised soldiers and another batch of 400 unrecognised soldiers
brought from Enugu by a serving senator from the South-East(name
withheld).
“In addition, we raised 44 special
strike teams brought in Toyota Hilux buses from Abuja and Onitsha. We
made special stickers for the vehicles that conveyed members of the
strike team and we gave each of them a black handband for
identification.
“Each strike team was made up of 10
members headed by a soldier and comprising soldiers, policemen, DSS
operatives and Civil Defence corps. They were detailed to attack and
arrest prominent APC chieftains in all the local governments.
“We set up anchorage, mainly in
residential houses, in every local government where the strike team
members collected their welfare and other allowances.
“To encourage the strike team members,
we gave them orders to share money and other valuables they could lay
their hands on in the houses of the APC chieftains they raided.
“Then we set up detention camps, mainly
in primary schools where most of the APC chieftains were detained.
Others were detained in police stations where the DPOs were friendly
with us. We let them off after the election was over.
“A day to the election, we used the
military to block all routes in the local governments and prevented the
APC chieftains, including former Rivers State Governor, Mr. Rotimi
Amaechi, from coming into Ekiti.
“So, we ensured that no APC chieftain
was in sight on election day. We provided polling agents for the APC in
most of the polling units so we had no problem getting them to sign
election results in the units.
“All these local and foreign observers
that described the election as free and fair only witnessed the voting
exercise on election day without knowing what transpired before the
voting.”
Aluko, who was the Chief Returning
Officer and signed the results of the election, said he was fully
involved in the plot with Fayose from the very beginning.
According to him, he was forced to
divulge the information because Fayose betrayed him, moreover, he said
his conscience was disturbing him.
He said, “I am using this medium to
apologise to Ekiti people for bringing in someone like Fayose and I have
done that at many meetings and I want to stand up to many of those
things.
“Before the election, Fayose, Femi
Bamishile and I jointly swore with the Holy Bible on a sharing formula
after we must have won the election. We agreed that Fayose would be
governor, Bamishile his deputy and I, as Chief of Staff.
“But the moment he got into office,
Fayose reneged on the agreement and left me in the lurch. More worrisome
is the fact that Fayose has derailed from the original Ekiti project we
envisaged.”
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