A former presidential candidate of the Peoples Trust in the 2019 general election, Gbenga Olawepo-Hashim, on Wednesday, congratulated the President-elect, Bola Tinubu and the vice president-elect, Kashim Shettima, on their victory in the election held on February 25.
While praying that God should grant them the wisdom to “bring the nation badly divided together and to bring succour immediately to the poor people of Nigeria who have suffered so much”, he advised the Independent National Electoral Commission to sit up and get its facts right.
Hashim, a presidential aspirant of the All Progressives Congress in the 2023 election said this in a statement by his media office.
He demanded that “the business of national reconciliation and healing is urgent and cannot be delayed to move the nation forward.,
He said, “Asiwaju’s government must not be the government of the victors alone but an inclusive government, a government of every useful hand for the task of national unity and prosperity.”
The APC chieftain also commended the security agencies for their work to create an environment of peace.
“Our democracy must mature beyond the perennial problem of voter intimidation, especially voters who are considered as non-indigenes.
To the INEC, Hashim said “the election agency has to work harder. It has to get its acts together as its conduct almost marred the election.”
He congratulated other participants particularly the Waziri Adamawa, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar former Vice President and candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party; and the candidate of the Labour Party, His Excellency, Peter Obi, former Governor of Anambra state, who were very competitive in the presidential election.
“Despite their reservations about the conduct of the election, particularly the collation of results, they have continuously conducted themselves as patriots and democrats they are using all legal and legitimate channels to ventilate their grievances. This is the way of democracy.
“State governors must end the ugly practices of putting citizens under pressure to change their political choices through traditional rulers.
“We are a Republic and the franchise of all citizens must be protected regardless of their ethnic descent anywhere they have chosen to live.
“The democracy that my colleagues and I some three and half decades ago fought for and staked our lives for, is to allow the equality