UCHENNA AWOM
The first signs that the ruling Peoples Democratic Party feels
threatened by the merger of the major opposition parties have started to
emerge with Vice President Namadi Sambo making clandestine moves to
scuttle it.
LEADERSHIP reliably learnt that the vice president on Monday
approached former Borno State governor Ali Modu Sheriff to map out plans
on how to get state party chairmen of the ANPP to denounce the merger
of the four opposition parties and pull out of it.
While the vice president and Sheriff met in Abuja, LEADERSHIP also
learnt that this was not the first meeting they held in their efforts to
kill the All Progressive Congress, the joint platform adopted by the
opposition parties.
We were unable to confirm if Sheriff had accepted the offer.
But the office of the vice president has denied that any such meeting
took place. A media aide to Sambo, Umar Sani, told LEADERSHIP
yesterday, “I read it on twitter and I laughed. I showed it to the vice
president and he laughed. How can he stop a merger? The merger is moving
on. All we can do is get more supporters.”
Sani however made no categorical statement suggesting that the vice
president and Sheriff did not meet. He said, “I did not ask on other
issues. All I asked the vice president was whether he met with Sheriff
to scuttle the merger and he said no.”
Nonetheless, the governors of the merging parties, who established
zonal contact and mobilisation committees yesterday, also unfolded the
new party’s priority areas that have as base the aim to rescue Nigeria
from decay. The governors declared the new grouping as “Social
Democrats”.
Also, the governor of Edo State, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, debunked
speculations over his seeming lukewarm attitude towards the merger
plans. He declared, at the end of over five hours’ meeting at the Lagos
State Governor’s Lodge, Asokoro, Abuja, that he was all for it, since it
is appropriate at this point to have a credible alternative platform
for Nigerians.
This was even as Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State insisted that
his party, the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), is in the merger
despite some minor internal problems.
However, LEADERSHIP learnt of a clandestine plot allegedly being
championed by Vice President Sambo not only to undermine the successful
launch of the APC, but also to discourage any cohesive merger of the
political parties.
Sources disclosed last night that Sambo had allegedly been holding
secret consultations that could culminate in dissuading top members of
the ANPP, including the state chairmen, from being part of the merger
arrangement.
“The idea is to encourage the members of the party to protest and
issue statements disowning a section of the leadership of the party, who
are at the forefront of the alignment. They simply want to paint an
image of a still-birth and create an impression that the merger is in
disarray,” said the source.
The source added: “We understand that some of the state party
chairmen may be in Abuja tomorrow (today) for a press conference to
discredit the All Progressive Congress and the merger.”
It was also learnt that there are also moves to reach out to
Sherriff’s close allies like Mallam Ibrahim Shekarau, former governor of
Kano State, and former of governor of Sokoto State, Alhaji Attahiru
Bafarawa.
An aide of the former governor of Kano State, Sule Yau Sule,
confirmed the plot to LEADERSHIP, though he distanced his boss from it.
He said: “Yes, we are aware of the plot to scuttle the merger, but it
will not succeed because Nigerians including even a large segment of
the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) are in support of the
realignment. We know that the government will deploy the apparatus of
government to scuttle the merger. They will not succeed; Nigerians are
already dissatisfied with the way PDP is governing. So they will not
succeed by the grace of God.”
However, the governors of the merging parties told newsmen, at the
end of their second meeting over the merger process, that based on the
overwhelming support that greeted the announcement of the merger, they
were compelled to announce the establishment of the zonal contact and
mobilisation committees headed across the six geopolitical zones by
Governor Ibrahim Geidam of Yobe State (north-east), Governor Tanko
Al-Makura of Nasarawa State (north-central), Governor Abdulaziz Yari of
Zamfara State (north-west), Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State
(south-east), Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State (south-south) and
Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State (south-west).
Speaking through Governor Al-Makura, the governors declared that the
committee would mobilise support for the party across political, social,
religious, ethnic and professional interest groups in the country.
“We reiterate our clarion call on all Nigerians to understand and see
this initiative as a credible process to deepen democracy and for
national renewal,” he said. “Given the desire of Nigerians for change,
our party will undertake to facilitate radical social, economic and
political reformation of the country. Our programme priorities shall be
agricultural development, jobs creation, free education, affordable
healthcare, infrastructural development, adequate power supply,
eradication of poverty and corruption and rapid technological
advancement and industrialization.”
He said the members of the new group would pride themselves on being
social democrats that are committed to organise the society based on the
values of justice for all and individual freedom where everyone’s basic
needs are fulfilled
On the name, the governors said they were pleased with the name
adopted by the merger committee because it captures the spirit of
cooperation and compromise that “we espouse and it underscores the
imperative of rescuing Nigeria from decay”.
Meanwhile, Governor Okorocha said the authentic APGA is in the
merger, adding that when the time come Nigerians would know the APGA/PDP
and the real APGA.
“All the regional parties like ACN, CPC and the ANPP are all in the
merger; so APGA cannot be an exception,” he stated. He spoke against the
backdrop of the dissention in his party over the merger arrangement and
the question of what he was doing to bring them along.
Leadership
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