Ada Chenge is a renowned politician in Benue State and presently, the
only female gubernatorial aspirant in the contest for the 2015 Peoples
Democratic Party, PDP gubernatorial ticket. Mrs. Chenge who contested
and lost the 2011 primaries of the PDP, is the first female mechanical
engineer from the state, the first female managing director of Lower
Benue River Basin Development Authority, in this interview speaks on how
she would become the first female governor of Benue State.
Do you see yourself standing a chance in a male dominated world like ours in Nigeria?
I will answer this question with a question; is it also very easy for a
fellow man to hand over power to another man? Power is not handed over
to person, if the people you are leading accept you as their leader,
whether a male or female, you take it.
Even the male folk as well
don’t get power easily. It is always a contest. It is not strange. And
once in a contest, the people decides who becomes their leader and they
look out for quality.
For me, it is not strange because I’m the
first female Mechanical Engineer of Benue state origin. Mechanical
Engineering is purely a male dominated world but I made that record.
I was a student of the commercial pilot school in Zaria as far back as 1998.
I have been in the male dominated world all my life, so I don’t think
sex is an issue in terms of leadership. I believe that if you are able
to make your mark, both male and female will vote you. Don’t forget that
the women vote even more.
You sound so optimistic about your
chances in the coming elections. Don’t you think the zoning arrangement
may likely affect your prospect considering that you hail from the Benue
South zone (Idoma land) by birth?
That is if everybody throws
tradition away but you can’t throw it away. I’m from Benue south zone by
birth and the tradition of Idoma people says that the woman still
remains a property of her father irrespective of her marital status.
That is why you see that the likes of Maria Aikolola whose husbands are
Yoruba picking a two-time House of Assembly ticket from her birth place.
How do you intend to fund your campaigns because we know that running election in this country is very expensive?>
The people who are yearning for Ada Chenge are always there to give the
needed support. Barrack Obama ran the most expensive election in the
history of the United States of America but he did not do so with his
finances.
He ran the election based on the fact that the whole of
the black nation yearned for a black president in a white man’s country.
So,
for me I don’t think I have stress about the funding of my campaign
because the people including youths, women who are actually yearning for
unity will support me.
I represent the symbol of a mother and every
fighting person would lay down their arms as long as a mother is there.
Everybody will support me as a mother. Funding of the campaign would
not be an issue for me.
Your party is known for imposition of candidates, if you go in for the primaries and you are denied…?
(Cuts in…) I have lived by example. And you know that a party is an
association for people to come together to think as one and then forward
ideologies.
For instance, if five persons come together and all
of them want same thing, if they reason together, then come to agreement
to pick a particular person, I think the sportsmanship in others should
prompt them to respect the decision. For me, the word imposition used
against my party should be withdrawn. My party doesn’t impose
candidates.
The party usually comes together to weigh people’s
opinion and then the majority of the opinion becomes the peoples’
decision. If I feel that I’m the best and five other people feel not so,
then I shouldn’t see myself as the best. I had a similar experience in
2006 when I contested the PDP primaries and lost the election in the
field, I gave my manifesto to Gabriel Suswam who eventually won the
election.
We worked for him throughout the election. I’m a woman
of a lot of respect and believe in the resolution of crisis. I don’t
believe in walking away because I have an issue.
That was why I
stayed behind at that time and by the grace of God, Suswam is now
completing his tenure. I have already lived the example, so I can now
only appeal to those who may lose the election to my own candidature
that when they lose out, they should kindly do what I have done for
somebody else.
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