I Have Never Stopped Campaigning Since The 2019 Election, Sowore

Presidential candidate of the African Action Congress, Omoyele Sowore has said he has never stopped campaigning since the 2019 elections. He made this statement at an interview with Jamz FM Ibadan. According to the human rights activist, the difference this time around is that there is an alliance with another political party with similar ideology and the people who believed him more than the last time would entrust their votes in electing him.
“If for instance you didn’t believe me when i said in 2019 that there is police brutality, you would probably believe after #Endsars. If you did not believe in 2019 when i said the economy is hard, you are probably feeling it now because you’ve seen what the value of naira has become. I’ve kept speaking about these issues and putting out ideas to solve them and nobody can say it didn’t come to pass. However, I am not in this race to become a certified protester or a prophet. I am here to change the narrative because of history, he said.”

Mr Sowore refutes that he has always been talking about education, sports, economy and not only corruption and insecurity. He said he is the only presidential candidate that has joined the students in fighting for the reopening of their schools and as a sportsman, he is always involved in sports. He has talked about how to solve electricity problems and varieties of things as to challenges facing the country. Corruption in Nigeria is aided by the refusal of the system to advance the processing of wealths, he made mention in response to his explicit talk on corruption without touching other aspects.
“We can blog our contracting with blockchain technology such that the e money that is involved can be tracked to the last person. This will reduce corruption significantly, he said in addition.”

Addressing the statement that people see him more as a human right activist than a politician, comrade Sowore replied that the primary job of a politician is to protect the rights of people who have elected them. “I am an honest person, that’s why I don’t like being referred to as a politician.
You should trust me because I have demonstrated over three decades that I can be trusted. Anybody who puts his life on the line for a course should be trusted. Politicians don’t do that. They will rather sacrifice the country for their own personal interest.
He said he has no blemish record. He has never been involved in any shady business nor collected any contract before. He said one of the decisions he took when he founded Sahara reporters was never to collect any government advertisement.
My activities have shown character, integrity and resilience. Someone who has all these qualities combined together can be banked with, he said.”
He further asked a rhetorical question, “who would you keep your money with, atiku tinubu or sowore?”

Addressing the question on trust, the presidential candidate said individuals should be judged based on what they choose to do in life. He said his calling is to fight for the rights of others and durings his time he brought about something that was scarce in Nigeria for a long time which was democracy.
He has stopped powerful people from abusing the rights of others. He has been a university lecturer who impacts knowledge. He has built a brand(Sahara Reporters) that employs and trains young people.
He said he has done what he chose to do very well and if he was to be a soldier, he would be a general by now.
He claimed his opponents who once governed a state before had nothing to show for it.
He said he wants to project a different example on how to be a public servant either officially or unofficially. “I have served the public as a citizen of this country and if I have the chance I will serve in an official capacity as the president.

AAC Is A Party Created And Dominated By Youths, Says Sowore

Speaking today at Impact Radio, Ibadan, Presidential candidate of the African Action Congress has said that his party, the AAC is a party created and dominated by young people.
He said, “AAC has no youth leader because it was created and dominated by the youths. He said the youths have always been at the frontline of political activities in nigeria. The youths fought for independence and won. They also fought for democracy and won.
He mentioned that other political parties should also allow their youths to take up important positions in their parties.

Addressing the identified problems of the country, he said the problems are two-fold; Institutional problems and foundational problems which is the bigger problem.
To resolve the issue of foundation problem is to create a brand new constitution which would be agreed upon by all Nigerians.
He said the constitution currently in use was created by the military using a decree, without considering if people want to coexist peacefully.
“Restructuring for a lot of people depends on where they come from. It has different definitions for different people. Nigeria is a diverse country. While some people want state police, some want to control their resources, some said it’s about devolution of power, whereas all these are not enshrined in the constitution. Amending the constitution is a waste of time and resources. A brand new constitution that is all encompassing is what is needed, he said in a response to a question on restructuring.

Speaking on structures, Sowore said the structures of a political organization are the people. The people form their own structures and pledge allegiance to candidates from time to time as it suits their own agenda. The structures on display are the transactional structures which are only used in election period. That is not a structure but a stomach infrastructure. He urged the people to constitute the structure of any genuine political movement. Any structure that is not rooted in the in the minds of the people is not worthy to be called a structure, he said.

Revealing his plans for the people as president, he said, “Our plans are based on SPICERHEATT, an acronym of our blueprints. It starts with SECURITY, POWER because no country in the world has ever industrialized and prosper without electricity. INFRASTRUCTURE, dealing with CORRUPTION, ECONOMIC system that allows nigeria to participate fully in the economy progress of the country and RESTRUCTURING, HEALTH, EDUCATION AGRICULTURE, TOURISM and TECHNOLOGY. This can be found on www.sowore 2023.org, he said.”
Sowore said implementing these ideas is very easy. There are several sources in which electricity can be generated, like biogas.
He also mentioned that the waste generated from Lagos State alone can generate electricity for the whole southwest.

Concerning education, he said he will properly invest in education and make education free at all levels. It is not rocket science. It has happened before, he said.

He also reiterated thee plan of the AAC to pay one hundred thousand study allowance to students every semester. He said ASUU could be allowed to go on strike because the government is less concerned about the common man and they don’t want the common person to get educated while they keep sending their wards to private schools and abroad.

I Was A University Professor In The US For 10 Years: Sowore

Addressing a question about his credentials and his source of income today on Space FM Ibadan, Presidential candidate of the African Action Congress, Mr. Sowore said he went to the university of lagos for his B.sc degree(1982-1995), he obtained his masters degree in public administration, columbia university. He founded Sahara reporters, an online media platform and he has also taught in two universities in the United states of america.
He said his political activities are also being sponsored by the people, using fundraising.

He proceeded further to make a case for electronic voting as a panacea for electoral malpractices.
Mr. Sowore said the way forward to rigging of election, over voting, ballot snatching, and electoral violence in Nigeria is electronic voting.
He said if people can do money transactions on their mobile gadgets, they should also be able to vote their leaders online like it is done in Brazil, instead of going through the stress of traveling interstates and queuing.
He mentioned that nigeria leaders are not ready for this advancement because it would be hard for them to rig and get involved in other forms of electoral malpractices to help them win.

Addressing questions on insecurity, he said mobilization of armed forces can only do little. Instead, the roots of the problem, which is the high rate of unemployment, poverty and education underfunding should be looked into and resolved.

Mr. Sowore further urged the people of Nigeria to forsake the structures that have brought them and the country by extension to no good.
He said the person that should be given the opportunity to govern the country should be someone of unquestionable character. The one who has pro people ideas and emotional intelligence, exposure and intellectual capacity, irrespective of the tribe, ethnic and religion should be elected to change the status quo.

FULL TEXT OF SPEECH DELIVERED BY COMRADE ABDULMAJID YAKUBU DAUDU AT THE PEOPLES REDEMPTION PARTY, NORTH-WEST MASS MOBILISATION CONGRESS, ON THE 16th JANUARY 2023 AT MAMBAYYA HOUSE, KANO

WHAT Is The State of The Nation?

– In six weeks time, if INEC does not change its calendar, there will be a general election in this country.

– General Elections are moments of national decision making in any representative democracy.

– Nigeria opted for a civilian government in this republic after 15 years of military rule: from one General to another.

– Military rule did not improve citizens standard of living; nor did it give us freedom; it only gave us a few big men who became wealthy and unaccountable at our expense. It produced the billionaire generals. And you know them, don’t you?

– Yet some people say that military dictatorship gave us security, law and order. But they forgot that it also gave us coups, firing squads, and counter coups. Is that stability?

– The military itself accepted its own failure when it bowed to pro-democracy pressures mounted by the people to hand over power to civilians in 1999.

– Twenty Two years of civilian rule has not produced the benefits of democracy that we all dreamed of.

– The two dominant political parties that have been in power in the last 22 years are the PDP and the APC.

– Between the two of them the result has been the same for the Nigerian masses:

› Enriching politicians and impoverishing the people; making their families prosper and the rest of us wretched; and using their associates to siphon off public money, while the rest of us sink deeper into poverty.

› Insecurity is now a regular way of life.

› Crimes, criminality, drug abuse, prostitution, and urban violence no longer shock anyone.

› Youth unemployment is at an all time high, and growing side by side with the population.

› Family income for the majority can’t provide their daily bread. Many homes are facing starvation on daily basis.

› Government itself has accepted that poverty has increased in the country. What it is yet to accept is the fact that wealth has greatly increased among its ranks, especially the fat cats.

THE Question is, what did they promise us when they first assumed office?

Remember?

– To improve the economy, the value of the Naira, the quality of life.

– To create jobs for the youth.

– To defeat terrorism and reclaim territories occupied by terrorists in the North-East.

– To drastically reduce, if not eliminate, corruption in government.

President Buhari’s famous quote was: ‘If Nigeria does not kill corruption, corruption will kill Nigeria’.

Where are we today?

HAS the regime not failed?

Look at your lives and ask yourselves, are we better off?

Surely, we are not.

THEN we must ask, what is wrong with the Nigerian ruling class that it cannot produce development?

– What is wrong with the PDP, the APC, and the leadership of the Labour Party (that is an offshoot of both), that collectively they have produced the worst form of poverty in just 22 years? while in that same period the Chinese were able to lift four times Nigeria’s population (850 million) out of absolute poverty in their land.

THE answer is part of the reason why we have assembled here.

WHY This Mass Mobilisation Congress?

1. We are here to say No to poverty as a permanent way of life.

2. We are here to say that we cannot cooperate in our own exploitation by voting for the same people and political parties that have ruined our present and stolen the future of our children.

3. We are here to say that we are opposed to the four weapons that the dominant parties have used to entrench poverty amongst our people. These are:

1. Taking government property, under the cover of privatisation, and turning it into private property for the benefit of greedy billionaires.

2. Rreckless borrowing from abroad, and at home, in the name of ghost projects that add little or no value to the lives of the masses, and yet impose a debt burden on us for generations to come.

3. Grand corruption at every level and tier of government, making it it impossible to transact normal business with government agencies without undue cost to the citizen.

4. Using public office to acquire large expanse of land at the expense of the ordinary people; while absentee farmers now rule the rural areas; with unoccupied luxury mansions spread across our major cities, where homelessness has become a common currency. Urban poverty is a breeding ground for violent crimes and political thuggery.

In short, less than one percent of Nigerians now own nearly all the property in the country, while the rest of us struggle over what is left.

This kind of unjust social system cannot guarantee democracy, human rights, freedom or good quality of life to the masses. It can only waste people from generation to generation.

How long can this continue?

OUR Alternative Program is the answer.

This is based on our diagnosis of the core problem.

– First will be security sector reform. We will purge corrupt and self serving officers from all branches of our security architecture; and promote exemplary officers, giving them quality training and good reward; including security of tenure and guaranteed welfare in retirement. In essence, world class professionalism is our security sector reform mission. But this will be citizens friendly and community embedded.

– We will reverse and probe the privatisation exercise, and seek to bring back strategic national assets such as electricity, telecommunications, iron and steel industry, and petroleum under purposeful state control and shared management.

The big private sector will exist and complement the public sector, but it will not profit at its detriment.

– Thirdly, we will probe all foreign and domestic state debts; and freeze further borrowing, while ditching all unverifiable and dubious debts. Let those who procure them pay with their stolen assets.

– Fourthly, we will restore government to its leading role as regulator and essential public service provider; common owner and manager of the strategic sectors of the economy. This will give a new lease of life to the public service, and restore its prestige and sense of purpose, unlike today where civil servants go to the office not knowing what they are there for, as they have lost all sense of purpose under a deliberate programme of public sector destruction, disguised as public sector reform.

Our fifth policy proposal is to decisively deal with grand corruption. Here we intend to introduce the death penalty for anyone who embezzles N50 million and above. Amounts below this threshold will attract between five years and life imprisonment, depending on the gravity of the offence and the sum involved. In all instances there will be no option of fine. And assets recovery will be fully enforced. This is to make grand corruption very costly to the life of the corrupt, and fighting it attractive to the state.

Corrupt free and technically competent officials will be the Brahmins of the public service. As stated earlier, reward, tenure security, and retirement benefits will be made competitive and assured. For us, pensioners will co-manage their pension schemes, and seniors who have served the nation well will not be left to die as paupers. To so do is a crime against public service ethics.

Item six is the core. It is education. This is a human right. It is not a privilege in this century. Without it Nigeria will have no future. Therefore public education at all levels will function as a human right. That means, it is not a free favour of government, it is your justiciable right as a citizen to have it from pre-primary to university level.

Then there is land reform. Agriculture cannot prosper if peasants don’t have access to land, or if our land tenure system is not transformed. Here we will beat down the steps and procedures for peasants to access cooperative land and certificates of occupancy that can be used to acquire farming loans and related benefits.

And then we will bring back life into local governments and rural cooperatives as vehicles for improving farming and transforming agriculture generally.

There is more to be said. But this is what I can offer in 15 minutes. We will print out party program in our own tongue for all of you to digest and propagate.

With what I have said you can now see why our politics must be one of opposing the system and not joining it.

Our alliance with the AAC is therefore built around shared interest in the politics of uplifting the living standards and social rights of the working masses. It is this same politics that produced the historic PRP governments of Kano and Kaduna states in the second republic. We not only have done it before, we can do it again by, using the language of Aminu Kano, which is to say, “Na ki”, that is, “No” to oppression and exploitation.

We will not vote for more poverty and economic collapse, as the World Bank have forecasted for Nigeria in 2023.

We must protest by voting for the Alliance of Redemption: that is, the PRP-AAC Alliance. This is the beginning of the left front that we have been trying to build across the country. It is the beginning of the ballot revolution to transform Nigeria into a country fit for the good life in this century.

PRP NASARA!
PRP VICTORY!

PRP-AAC ALLIANCE NASARA!
PRP-AAC ALLIANCE VICTORY!

Sowore Attends Massive AAC, PRP Town Hall In Kano, Vows To Deliver Nigeria From Decades Of Misrule

The African Action Congress, AAC and the People’s Redemption Party, PRP today sealed their alliance at the Malam Aminu Kano house in Kano.

The town hall meeting which saw massive participation of the people of Kano had in attendance, states’ and national leadership of the Abdulmajid Yakubu led PRP– Vanguard. Also attendance is the Governorship candidate of the AAC, Engr. Sanni Yankasai, state and national leadership of the African Action Congress led by it’s Presidential candidate, Mr. Omoyele Sowore.

In a speech delivered on behalf of the PRP by it’s national chairman, Mr. Abdulmajid Yakubu, he acknowledged Omoyele Sowore’s effort in fighting for the people of Nigeria including #Endsars where he took a lead role, and also secured the release of scores of young people arrested in the course of the massive youth uprising. He urged all members of the PRP and the entire people of Nigeria to come out in their numbers to elect the AAC’s candidates’ Omoyele Sowore as President, and Engr. Sanni Yankasai as Kano state governor.

The Northwest coordinator of the PRP said the alliance was possible based on both party’s ideologies that tilt towards socialism.

Delivering his speech, Sowore said, “Today we are very happy to be in kano. Kano is the home of the truth for nigeria. Kano is one of the liberal city for development and democracy and we are happy that we are not among the politicians you know and call ‘munafik bazan’. PRP from time immemorial has been a party of truth. AAC is also a party of truth, but we are younger than PRP.

He said the alliance that happened today has been prophesied by Alhaji Balarabe Musa in 2018 at kaduna, where he invited them to come and join the PRP.
“Our conviction is that we will defeat the elements that have brought poverty to the north, east and south, insecurity and all the problems that the apc, pdp and their affiliates have brought to nigeria.
He said he is very proud that within the shortest period of time, this country has witnessed an alliance it has never witnessed before.
“They keep decamping, they pay for decamping everyday but ours is an alliance and it is so strong.
He assured the people that as soon as he takes over power in 2023, poverty and insecurity will come to an end and prosperity will come to light.
“We will build a fast railway from Lagos to kano. We will ensure that young people go to university which will not be shut down due to nonpayment of staff. We will make sure education is free, he said.”
“Our combination is the most powerful kinetic combination in the history of nigeria and we will make sure we deliver nigeria from the hands of the buccaneers that have ruined nigeria. Those corrupt people that have made Nigeria a laughing stock and poverty headquarters of the world.

A major highlight of the event was when both parties signed a memorandum of understanding for the alliance after which Omoyele Sowore was officially announced as the Presidential candidate of the historical alliance between both left leaning parties.

One of the stakeholders in an interview with a journalist said “It is fantastic, this is a history in nigeria. The beginning of the end of exploiters, those who stole our money and left us in poverty.

Addressing the press, the vice presidential candidate of the AAC/PRP alliance, Barr. Haruna Magashi esq said, “We are here for a purpose and we have achieved it. We have signed the memorandum of understanding on the alliance between AAC and PRP here in kano. It is a national accord and with this, we have a high chance to be able to rescue nigeria.”

Honourable, another member of the PRP leadership said “We are here today for this business to take back nigeria. And the best thing that has happened recently in the political realm is this alliance.
He said very soon, people will begin to see the truth coming forth.
“We have signed life, prosperity, security and a sound economy. We are now supporting these young men( Sowore/Magashi) to take back what belongs to us, honorable said.

Sowore with the press said “ It is a historical day for the Nigerian people. This is an alliance of the oppressed. The alliance of the most ideological party to have roamed the surface of the Nigerian political space. We are proud to be part of it and we believe we will deliver real victory and justice to nigeria of our dream. It is a pleasure that this is happening, thank you.”

OGUN 2023: AAC Inaugurates 4,000 Campaign Committee In Four LGs, Reveals How To Tackle Unemployments

African Action Congress (AAC), Ogun State Chapter has vowed to fight unemployment, as it inaugurated a 4,000 campaign Committee in four Local Government and constituencies in the State.

The AAC Governorship Candidate, Hon. Adeyemi Harrison vowed to fight unemployment in the state by employing 10,000 youths every month, if elected as the Governor.

Adeyemi said this at the 1,000 man committee inauguration on Sunday, which was held in Abeokuta South and Odeda Local Government Area in Ogun State

While addressing journalists, Harrison disclosed that he is interested in reviving Ogun State as he promised to employ not less than 10,000 youth every month.

He explained that youths in every district would be employed, stressing that he would complete all the road projects of the former Governor Ibikunle Amosun across Ogun State.

Meanwhile, the Party Chairman in Ogun State, Mr Adesina Afolabi, added that the inauguration of 1,000 man campaign committee at each local government has covered four major local governments so far, and would span into other local government areas in the course of the campaign.

He explained that the 4,000 man campaign committee inauguration would see to the mobilisation of electorates for the party and it’s candidates.

In his words, “1000 Campaign committee are meant to sensitize the voters accross there LG Area and we have done four local governments so far.

“Abeokuta South, Odeda Local Government, Ijebu North and East LG, Ijebu Ode LG and we have Inaugurate 4,000 so far in 4 LG area

“The expectations are to go to various community to mobilize voter’s and to Mobilize more members into the party and ask them not to vote for Thieves.” Afolabi submitted.

In the same vein, the Candidate, Harrison lamented the denial of local government autonomy, saying traditional rulers and local communities would be affected.

He added that during his administration, Local Governments in the state would be given autonomy, fostering progressive development in the communities.

Speaking on agriculture, Hon. Harrison pledged that he would revive the nine reserve areas for Cotton, Rubber and Timbers in Ogun State, lamenting that only one is functioning among the nine reserves.

He also stated that he would make education free for tertiary institutions in Ogun state and also make sure both federal government roads and the state-owned roads in Ogun state are motorable.

He therefore urged Ogun residents not to vote for the wrong party as they have done in the past.

credit: eagleforesight.com.ng

Flash: Sowore Arrives Kano Ahead Of PRP/AAC Northwest Congress

Presidential candidate of African Action Congress, Mr. Omoyele Sowore arrives Kano today in preparation for the Northwest congress of the People’s Redemption Party scheduled to hold on Monday, 16th of January, 2023.

The National congress amongst other things has been convened to mobilize support for the Sowore/Magashi ticket, and seal off the alliance between both political parties — the AAC and PRP.

Recall that an earlier congress of the PRP held in Northeast Gombe had declared support for the Presidential candidate of the AAC, Mr. Omoyele Sowore. This was then followed by a joint press conference of the two aligning political parties at the NUJ secretariat, Abuja.

Also expected to be in attendance are the Northwest chairpersons of the African Action Congress and some principal officers of the AAC.

Flash: Sowore Arrives Kano Ahead Of PRP/AAC Northwest Congress

Presidential candidate of African Action Congress, Mr. Omoyele Sowore arrives Kano today in preparation for the Northwest congress of the People’s Redemption Party scheduled to hold on Monday, 16th of January, 2023.

The National congress amongst other things has been convened to mobilize support for the Sowore/Magashi ticket, and seal off the alliance between both political parties — the AAC and PRP.

Recall that an earlier congress of the PRP held in Northeast Gombe had declared support for the Presidential candidate of the AAC, Mr. Omoyele Sowore. This was then followed by a joint press conference of the two aligning political parties at the NUJ secretariat, Abuja.


Also expected to be in attendance are the Northwest chairpersons of the African Action Congress and some principal officers of the AAC.

My ultimate goal is total liberation for Nigeria: Sowore

The presidential candidate of African Action Congress AAC in a roundtable discussion with Punch newspaper said, “Politics is about ideas, competence, relevance, pedigree and integrity. That is what I am here to do and not to use one of the sentiments that are frequently used in politics.

He said politics ought to be played about a leader who is passionate about the future of the country, with all intent be given the opportunity and people should have inclination towards them.

“We do ourselves serious injustices when we reduce very serious matters of life and death to people who have not demonstrated in any capacity or have background that shows they are able to pull this country out of the doldrums,” he said.

Sowore said the press decides who to put at the frontline and they keep promoting them to such an extent that the people with the brightest idea don’t even get enough mention. “This is a race that should be about ideas, considering that Nigeria has failed consistently with the same set of people who pundits claim are at the frontline.
“For you to be a frontliner in the academic sector for example a professor, you must publish books to show that you are qualified, it is a criteria. Same thing ought to apply to the political sectors.
“A person who has never passed any kind of test should not be regarded as a frontliner, but Nigerians have been manipulated to believe their worst should be their best,” Sowore said.

Speaking further he said, we have shown that we can speak to the issues, we have fresh ideas that nobody can fault. So why do you keep putting people who don’t speak to any issue as the front liners? So that when the whole thing collapses again, you will bring us to the front liner of resistance, asking where is sowore?

He said when Gani Fawehinmi ran in 2003 people opted for Obasanjo. “Gani would have governed the country better.

Still addressing the term ‘frontliner’, “The press got it wrong and It is a disservice to the Nigerian people and the nation to keep putting the people that we describe as the dregs of the society as its best hands,” Sowore said.

In response to him being in the senate, he said It doesn’t make any sense that the person who doesn’t remember his name should be president while the most vibrant person goes to the senate.

“The worst among us should not be picked to handle the most important position and then relegate the best to the less important position.

He urges people to stop saying that and he also challenges other presidential candidates to debate, to show people who is more qualified.

“The job of a president of a country is to fundamentally lead the country to progress and prosperity.
He said he is more capable of leading the country. He can ensure that children goes to school, pay people’s salaries, speak to the issues affecting people, represent the country well, grow the country in a way that is technologically futuristic, represent the aspiration of people, provide jobs, fight for them, build roads and hospitals that will work for them and make them proud as citizens of this country.

“Maybe my crime is because I did not delve into a criminally wealth accumulation. I came here to build people and not to build houses for myself, he responds.

“It should never have happened that any citizen is restricted to any part of the country because not only that it is unconstitutional, it is criminal to allege that somebody committed a crime they didn’t commit,” he said this in a response to how he was restricted.

Sowore said what keeps him going is his ultimate goal for total liberation.

“There is no alliance that is possible between light and darkness, sowore responds to a question of his possible alliance with APC.

“We are in alliance with PRP vanguard. We do not need the kind of alliance APC is looking for. Those are transactional alliances.

“Ours is mostly ideological. We align with people who believe that this country must experience growth, development, peace, prosperity and progress, and it is also important that the personalities involved have stood the test of time. However, our first alliance is with the oppressed,” he said.
Rich history of the AAC. Building a revolutionary party. Perspectives by Baba Aye

Rich history of the AAC. Building a revolutionary party. Perspectives by Baba Aye

African Action Congress (AAC) was registered as a political party by Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission two years ago. From its radical roots it set itself apart as a platform for the struggle of the popular masses within and beyond the electoral sphere of politics. It has flourished unapologetically into a party for revolution. The AAC’s immediate fount and its scaffold to date is the Take It Back (TIB) movement, founded in the beginning of 2018. It has inspired tens of thousands of young working-class and professional/middle-class people across the length and breadth of the country and indeed globally among the Nigerian diaspora. This movement’s alliance with revolutionary socialist groups gave birth to the Coalition for Revolution (CORE) and the launch of its #RevolutionNow campaign.

The birth of the party

The Take It Back movement emerged at the beginning of 2018 in the contradictory context of radical politics in Nigeria. The world, as I pointed out while looking at the soil from which TIB/AAC germinated in an earlier article, had changed since the Great Recession of 2007-2009. The status quo’s hegemony or apparent legitimacy was fractured. Beyond Nigeria, mass movements spread across the world were bursting out as revolts, and in the Middle East and North Africa region, revolutions threw hitherto invincible dictators into the trashcan of history.

The “Occupy Nigeria” uprising in January 2012 was part of that moment of global rising. But the tragedy of the radical movement is that unlike the situation in many other countries this did not translate into organization to take the fire forward for deepening popular struggle in an anti-systemic manner. Four years after “Occupy Nigeria”, you could still put all self-avowed revolutionaries in the country into a molue (long bus) and still have to pe ‘ro s’oko (call in passengers to fill empty seats).

This partly accounted for an equally bankrupt party of the one percenters emerging as the apostle of “change” to steal power from the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), which had held the reins of government for 16 years and that felt it would for 44 more years. The All People’s Congress victory in 2015 spoke more to the failure of a credible revolutionary party’s emergence from the flames of Occupy Nigeria than to the resilience of a fortified bourgeois opposition at the time.

The seething mass anger, which burst out in 2012, continued to bubble below the surface like a dormant volcano, and the reality of the “change” party being nothing but one of “all promises cancelled” dawned on people within a few years of the APC coming into power. These combined to kindle the interest of a broader swathe of forces and persons in the 2019 elections than in any before this century. These included not a few (self-avowed revolutionaries and middle-class careerists alike) that take mobilization to win power only as seriously as they take watching Tom and Jerry on television. There were also quite a few who really did seriously think that they were taking power seriously.

Between March 2018 and the elections in February 2019, the TIB movement and the AAC organized no less than 500 political events across virtually every state in the federation, as well as 15 countries spread over all the regions of the world. Most of these had packed halls, with many people having to stand up or peer in from the window due to limited space. Unlike the rented crowds that the big—and of course bourgeois—parties, which alone could also amass followings of any significance, these were Nigerians who rather paid their way to the activities and were happy to support what they saw as a serious alternative project. The core message of the movement was clear: we need much more fundamental change than any of the parties involved in serious politics thus far could offer. And we are not going to get that on our knees. We will fight and win our liberation on the streets as much, if not more than, through the ballot.

Mass mobilization, including with the use of new information and communication technologies, went hand in hand with the establishment of movement or party structures. Inspired Nigerians of all walks of life at home and in the diaspora saw and became part of a movement that offered much more than they had dared hope for, even as much as they yearned for it. They chipped in their bits to sustain the hurricane.

The party raised 157,884,938 Naira (about US$408,000) as donations—most of these very small donations from tens of thousands of people. Never since the period of parties like the Action Group (AG) and Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU) had any political party raised such kind of money from “inconsequential” Nigerians. This is noteworthy, particularly for the mischievous, such as Adams Oshiomhole (a former trade unionist, governor of Edo State and national chairperson of AOPC), who try to reduce #RevolutionNow to a post-election afterthought.

The truth is that even during the electoral campaign the AAC did not reduce its politics to one of simply canvassing for votes. The party was on the streets organizing demonstrations for press freedom, extension of voter registration, and against demolitions of informal settlements. The ruling class was conscious of the problem that AAC constituted to them and they took action to suppress the party. As early as December 2018, five of its activists were arrested while pasting campaign posters in Lagos. They were charged with defacing other parties’ posters, even though this was demonstrably false. The state was sending out a clear message that it would not tolerate revolutionaries.

By the end of 2018, the TIB formed a coalition with the Alliance for the Masses Political Alternative (AMPA), which was coming together of Socialist Workers & Youth League (SWL) and Socialist Vanguard Tendency (SVT). The two groups had worked within the National Conscience Party (NCP) for a few years as the NCP Socialist Forum (NSF). The TIB had favored the NCP among myriad parties it held discussions with on which to float its electoral bid. The treacherous collapse of the NCP bureaucracy into an alliance with the PDP made real this possibility. Taking a principled stand, the two groups constituting the NSF pulled out of that party to form AMPA, which later brought on several other groups. The TIB-AMPA Coalition would later become known as the Coalition for Revolution—CORE.

After the elections, TIB/AAC-AMPA played a critical role in building resistance to wildly inflated power bills and epileptic power supply in working-class communities. Its activists, as part of CORE were also at the barricades in solidarity with rank and file workers during struggles, such as those of non-academic staff at Lagos State Polytechnic.

As radicalization of the party deepened in the immediate post-election period, the right-wing of the party played its hand as Esau for the Jacob of the state. The illegitimate splinter group that emerged under Leonard Ezenwa, the AAC national secretary before his suspension, was proclaimed to be representative of the party in a questionable court ruling in July. But even as the legal battle rages, the facts on the ground have made it tedious, if not outrightly impossible, for the state to stick to the fairy tale of an Ezenwa-led AAC.

The actuality of #RevolutionNow

The  CORE’s launch of the #RevolutionNow campaign on August 5, 2019 was a milestone in the development of AAC and the history of Nigeria. It went beyond the 1948 Zikist Movement’s “A Call for Revolution,” to demanding “Revolution Now!” on the streets. On the launch day, a record five million people in the country searched the word “revolution” online. The movement thus placed revolution as a popular question in the minds of many more Nigerians than the left groupuscules preaching to the choir had done in decades.

Alas, the state repression was swift and brutal. Party chair, Omoyele Sowore, was arrested on the eve of the nationwide protest and all venues scheduled for rallies in every state of the federation were taken over by combined teams of the army, anti-riot police, and state security service (secret police), among others. In several states they took to flexing their muscles with patrols through the major roads and possible sites of mass gatherings. Notwithstanding, this brazen show of strength demonstrations was held in 14 of Nigeria’s 23 states. #RevolutionNow activists also took action in Berlin, Geneva, Johannesburg, London, New York and Toronto.

The largest of the demonstrations was in Lagos. About 150 activists had a faceoff with the police in front of the national stadium in Surulere, where the flag-off rally for the revolutionary campaign was meant to take place. At the end of the day 57 activists were arrested in six different cities across five states, and many of them were badly beaten up.

This hour marked not just the deepening of AAC’s radical politics. It was equally a watershed in its transformation into the driving force of a mass-based revolutionary movement. As with all such moments, there was confusion, even within the ranks of the left, as to what was happening. More than a few condemned such (in their view) rash declarations of revolution—as if revolutions were singular events and not processes that include affirmation around mobilization.

To some, it would have made sense for the August nationwide action to have been described as a “protest,” to avoid prematurely falling foul of the state. Obviously, such ideas, incidentally from comrades on the left, were backwards compared to those of Maureen Onyetenu a Federal High Court judge. On May 4, 2020, she ruled that the nationwide #RevolutionNow action was well within the realm of even bourgeois democratic rights, irrespective of what it was called. She further declared the state’s disruption of the protest as “illegal, oppressive, undemocratic and unconstitutional.”

The detention of Sowore for almost five months, and the absurd theatrics of the state security service in flouting rulings and respect for the courts, including the invasion of the federal high court premises at Abuja to re-arrest Sowore, also showed state suppression for what it is. The bail condition of restricting him to Abuja is partly face-saving by the ruling class, as well as a desperate attempt to try to take the winds from the sails of the emergent revolutionary movement.

Despite the COVID-19 lockdown, TIB/AAC continued with revolutionary agitation on important political issues with skillful use of social media. As soon as the confinement restrictions were lifted in June, TIB/AAC and its allies constituting the CORE continued organizing on the ground. This included a series of demonstrations in June in five cities against police brutality and the rising incidence of rape and femicide. The protesters also declared their solidarity with the global #JusticeForGeorgeFloyd movement.

Branches of the AAC in localities where police violence against poor citizens is rife—for example, in Oworonshoki where 16-year old Tina Ezekwe was killed by police in May—promptly organized community-based protests. Political education for party cadres was also introduced in this period, in the Lagos state chapter, where the first of a series of “education for revolution” programs are now running. The party is also back on the electoral trail with its radical agenda for the polls. It conducted well organized primaries to produce candidates for the forthcoming gubernatorial elections in Edo and Ondo states. Also, in May, The Socialist Workers and Youth League initiated a seven-week process for democratizing and consolidating the structures of CORE. The TIB and all but one affiliated organization supported these genuine aims. For the first time in its history, an inclusive and democratically elected leadership of the coalition emerged.

The new CORE leadership had barely one month to prepare for the commemoration of the launch of the #RevolutionNow campaign with the #August5thProtest. Despite myriad challenges, these were a success. In fifteen states, including Niger and Yobe where there was no action the previous year, activists took to the streets. Though most demonstrations were not large, the movement’s showing in Abuja and Lagos, the two main cities, outmatched the previous year’s demonstrations. More than 60 people demonstrated at the Unity Fountain Abuja. A busload of activists from a satellite of the capital was turned back at a checkpoint while trying to enter the city center. In Lagos, between 400 and 600 protesters took over the Ikeja roundabout compared to barely 150 persons in front of the national stadium a year earlier. Twice the police dispersed them and twice they regrouped, with popular support from traders, commuters, and residents where they rallied.

The state machinery of coercion was no less active in attempts to suppress these activities. More than 100 people were arrested in different parts of the country for participating in the demonstrations. These included 42 in Abuja, 22 in Lagos, seven in Osun, five in Abeokuta and the AAC Kano Chair in Kano city, who was released only recently. Working assiduously with the Revolutionary Lawyers Forum (RLF) and the Radical Mandate Agenda for the Nigeria Bar Association (RAMIMBA), the party and the CORE leadership ensured the release of all the arrested comrades.

Building the party—what is to be done?

The COVID-19 pandemic has driven home sharply the failures of the profit-before-people-basis of capitalism. The worst is yet to come. As the capitalist world lurches into what could very well be its worst social-economic crisis in history, the bosses will attempt to make the mass of poor people bear the brunt of an exploitative system. Working-class people and youth will have no choice but to fight back. Sparks of discontent will set off moments of spontaneous mass movements on the streets, in workplaces, and across communities. But these massquakes will dissipate like hot steam and the bosses will still have their way, if there is no mass-based revolutionary organization that like a steam engine, can turn the steam of mass anger into motion of lasting struggle for system change. But there is still so much to do in building the party, movement, and coalition for revolution.

Probably the top priority is a systematic and intensive approach to cadre education. As we learn from Che Guevara, “the first duty of a revolutionary is to be educated.” The education he means of course, is not that which you acquire in the four walls of school, but rather questioning why society is how it is, what alternatives could be constructed from concrete reality to change how society is, and how we go about struggle to bring to birth the better society we desire. This education is one which we get from the largest university in the world—the school of life.

However, the dominant ideas through which the direct lessons from life are perceived are shaped by the interests of the dominant classes of oppressors in any society. What immediately appears to us as “common sense,” even the most radical of such, tends to be inadequate for the thinking we need to overthrow the oppressive system we find ourselves in. To forge the “good sense,” which alone can help us grasp the tasks and strategy for what is to be done as revolutionaries requires education to deepen our theoretical understanding. That is precisely why Vladimir Lenin said, “without revolutionary theory, there can be no revolutionary movement.” The time is ripe to consider establishing a living party school and research center, which harnesses and enriches decentralized education for revolution programs in all branches.

The party must build its capacity for producing, distributing, and facilitating the study of revolutionary literature. Pamphlets, leaflets, and books must be part of the mental staple food of party cadres. The fantastic use of social media, and other audio-visual means have to be taken to a new level to ensure deeper cadre and mass political education. We must also learn from the strengths (and weaknesses) of historical and contemporary revolutionary party-building projects. Drawing from some of these and contextualizing them concretely, the party has to develop intervention programs that have meaning to working-class people and youth in their daily lives.

For example, AAC cadres across the country could set aside a day every few months for “environmental sanitation” exercises. Free tutorial/coaching for children of poor working-class people could be organized. This could include e-learning through webinars, with children from poor working-class homes who might not be able to afford data being provided airtime to join. Physical contact sessions must however be prioritized as much as possible.

Free breakfast programs could be developed, as the Black Panthers in the US did. These, and similar programs, are not to be conducted in the supposedly non-political manner that NGOs render services. Our politics must run as the thread that ties these expressions of alternative power as much as service delivery together, and link the party’s social provision intervention with its more partisan political mobilization for revolution work. The party program and our class orientation are two vital issues that must be clearly addressed at this point.

The AAC manifesto as adopted at the 2018 party convention reflected a shotgun marriage arrangement with the party’s right-wing at the time. As we pointed out in the January-February 2019 edition of Socialist Worker:

The movement of #TIB is moving more and more to the left. There are internal struggles with a party right-wing in AAC ready to uphold the status quo of capitalism, merely with some “decency”, so to speak. But what the movement as a whole seeks is the revolutionary upturn of the exploitative system and as it gets more engaged in mass work, this orientation deepens.

Events thus far have confirmed this analysis. An overhaul of the AAC manifesto to reflect its politics of struggle for social system change is now imperative. This must be a program that addresses the social, economic, political, and ecological problems of the day with a view to bring about fundamental transformative change. This change must break from the logic of growth and development that has pauperized the majority of the population and put the earth in the perilous state of climate crisis. We need to formulate a revolutionary program for a party of revolution.

The orientation of AAC to working-class people has never been in doubt. The party membership includes young professionals; middle-class change-seeking Nigerians, who are fed up with the disaster life has become for all but the 1% of super-rich people in the country. It also includes students as well as working-class people, who constitute a significant proportion in the ranks of the party. Revolutionary political parties can lead revolutions, but revolutions are never waged and won by any one party. Revolutions are massive anti-systemic uprisings of the mass of working-class people. AAC has to strengthen its ties with all strata of workers, artisans, poor farmers etc. We must be the tribune of all exploited and oppressed sections of the population.

AAC activists in several states have joined workers on strike at the barricades, supported and fought alongside the people in poor working-class communities for electricity rights and against police brutality, and organized political education programs for workers in both the formal and informal sector. Such activities must become generalized, a normal part of revolutionary politics across all states of the federation.  Organization for revolution requires unification-in-action of many social forces, parties, and other groups committed to struggle, with the aim of bringing down the oppressive system of exploitation that determines the status quo. This entails building united fronts. CORE is the united front for revolution now. Building CORE with other affiliates of the coalition must be a key priority for AAC’s revolutionary activists. This will involve constituting CORE in all states where we have TIB structures along with other affiliates’ chapters, and expanding the coalition’s affiliation base to include all organizations who stand for revolutionary transformation today.

The unfolding revolutionary movement that TIB/AAC/CORE sharply manifests in Nigeria is an integral wave in the global tsunami of popular risings against exploiters and their oppressive system. Internationalism must thus be woven into the fabric of our struggle. The primary devil we confront is at home, but our battle is against all the powers and principalities of the hellish exploitation of the masses. An injury to one is an injury to all. We must continue to call on our sisters, brothers, comrades, and revolutionary organisations across the world to stand with us as we fight our battles for #RevolutionNow.

The mission of our generation, rising from the obscurity of neoliberalism, is global revolution—to build a better and more just world. We must not betray it. Working-class people united and determined cannot be defeated!

This is an edited version of a paper presented for the second anniversary webinar of the African Action Congress. An abridged version was published in the Socialist Worker of August-September 2020.