I am firmly in the race for President of Nigeria in 2019.
I wish to inform members of my “To Build A Nation” (TBAN) movement, the Kingsley Moghalu Support Organisation (KIMSO) nationwide, the Kingsley Moghalu Volunteer Force, Youth for Kingsley (Y4K), Women for Kingsley (W4K), Kingsley Moghalu Disciples,...
... the Young Progressive Party (YPP) and my other supporters nationwide and in the diaspora that I am pressing ahead with my plan to contest the 2019 presidential election.
This is despite the arrangement for a consensus candidate among the young presidential aspirants under the aegis of Presidential Aspirants Coming Together (PACT), which today produced an outcome that has left many Nigerians expressing surprise and disappointment.
The reasons I have pulled out of the PACT arrangement are as follows:

1. The arrangement had unraveled even before the final selection of the consensus candidate.
Only seven aspirants participated in the final voting out of the original 18 aspirants, mainly because many of the aspirants had withdrawn from the process.
Four candidates who were present in the meeting this morning withdrew from the process even while the voting process was ongoing. Therefore, PACT did not produce a true consensus candidate.
2. Clause 13 of the PACT Memorandum of Understanding asserts the supremacy of the constitutional rights of the aspirants to pursue their political aspirations.
I therefore have chosen to continue without distraction to pursue my vision in the presidential race for 2019 in the national interest and in deference to the overwhelming outpouring of support for my candidacy from all parts of Nigeria.
I will remain focused on the objective of providing a competent leadership that will help unite our country and build a nation, wage a decisive war against poverty and unemployment, and restore respect for Nigeria in the society of nations.
It is my humble and well-considered view that the Office of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria requires competence and experience in these three vital areas.

Thank you.

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More from @MoghaluKingsley

2 Sep
I decided at 13 that I would have a global career @UN. My friends in secondary school laughed at me and called me a “dreamer”. I joined the UN at 29. In the 16 years in between, my vision never wavered. I passed up a chance to join a new bank in Lagos to go abroad for a master’s
in 1991. I knew where I was going, and applied the principle of delayed gratification- the long view. When I wrote to the US Embassy in Lagos that I’d been accepted @FletcherSchool and needed a visa, they were impressed. “Many of our best were trained there”, I was told.
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Corruption is to be found in developing and developed nations. But in countries like Nigeria it is as pervasive as the air we breath. Thus so central, it blocks development. “Fighting corruption” is often just politics. In the West it’s peripheral, and they’re already developed.
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