PDP Governors to Jonathan: Tukur must go
THE
internal strife within the Peoples Democratic Party deepened on
Thursday with President Goodluck Jonathan’s intervention failing to
pacify the PDP governors who are adamant in their resolve to remove
their party’s National Chairman, Bamangar Tukur.
Jonathan’s three-hour meeting with the governors at the Villa on Thursday, sources confirmed to The PUNCH, failed to extract a commitment from the states’ chief executives to sheathe their swords in the battle against Tukur.
Myriads of assurances from party
chieftains to the contrary notwithstanding, the governors were said to
be bent on removing Tukur over his alleged meddling in the Adamawa PDP
politics and unilateral dissolution of the executive council in the
state chapter of the party.
Many members of the NWC, led by the
Deputy National Chairman, Mr. Sam Jaja, had denounced and rescinded the
dissolution of the Adamawa exco.
At the end of their meeting in the
Federal Capital Territory on Wednesday evening, the governors had called
for the immediate convening of the National Executive Committee meeting
of the party as well as endorsed the decision of the NWC rescinding the
dissolution of the PDP Adamawa State Executive.
Sources close to the Nigeria Governors’
Forum confided in our correspondents that the state chief executives
were tired of Tukur, a second republic governor of old Gongola State,
and that he must go.
Sensing that the governors, who are said
to have influence on majority of members of the party’s NEC, could
eventually have their way in sacking him, Tukur was said to have vowed
that almost all the members of the NWC would go with him.
Tukur is seen as an appointee of the President, who foisted him on the party at its National Convention in Abuja in March, 2012.
The governors, especially those from the
North-East, had voted for another aspirant, Dr. Musa Babayo, at their
shadow election in Bauchi as the zone’s candidate, but the President
insisted that he would only work with Tukur.
Since his emergence, Tukur has shown that
he is ready to take revenge, especially against his home state
governor, Murtala Nyako of Adamawa State, for not wholeheartedly
supporting his aspiration.
His sacking of the state executive
committee of the party is being viewed by the governors as the
President’s hidden agenda to take over the party’s structures in states
whose governors are considered not friendly with either the President or
the party’s chairman.
Already, Jonathan and the leadership of
the PDP are said to be in dilemma over how to meet the demand of the
party’s governors on the need to have a NEC meeting.
The last NEC meeting of the party was held in July 2012.
The NWC, especially Tukur and the
President, are of the opinion that the governors, who control majority
of NEC members, could use the opportunity to remove Tukur by passing a
vote of no confidence in him.
The party has however, admitted that there is crisis in the party but said the crisis has been settled by its Board of Trustees.
A statement by the National Publicity
Secretary of the Party, Chief Olisa Metuh, said the PDP remained the
only political party in the country where differences in the leadership
of its various organs could be resolved within a record time
He said, “In a political party as large
as the PDP, divergent opinions on issues are normal but in the ability
of its leaders to resolve and find a common ground on such issues,
dwells the strength and dynamism of such an organisation.
“In this instance, it is only in the PDP that misunderstandings are not just resolved but done in matter of hours.
“The National Working Committee of the
PDP therefore wishes to commend the Board of Trustees of the party for
proving its role as the conscience of the party.”
The statement added that the NWC members
had already closed their ranks and that they remained united under the
leadership of Tukur.
Jonathan had met with the members of the
NWC on Wednesday in his effort to reunite the party said to be having
crises on many fronts.
At the end of the governors’ meeting with
Jonathan on Thursday, Chairman of the governors’ forum, Rotimi
Amaechi of Rivers State, was heard asking his colleagues to move from
the Presidential Villa to an undisclosed venue within the FCT for
further discussions.
Akwa Ibom State Governor, Godswill
Akpabio, who spoke to journalists after much pressure, described the
wrangling within the party as normal “in a big party like the PDP.”
He, however, assured Nigerians that the issues would be resolved amicably.
Specifically on the Adamawa crisis, the
governor expressed the conviction that the issue would be finally
resolved by the time the Governor Sule Lamido-committee set up on the
matter submits its report in about a week.
He said, “You know the PDP is a very
large party. The party may have its own internal challenges; of course
we have our own modus operandi: ways of resolving all these issues.
“Various committees have been set up from
the Board of Trustees to the National Working Committee. I believe that
at the end of the day, in the next one week, all those issues will be a
thing of the past.”
When confronted with the report that the
PDP governors were not happy with party’s chairman, Akpabio said, “There
is nothing like the PDP governors not being happy. We identify with the
party; we have confidence in the party and all the internal wranglings
you are hearing are normal in any democracy.”
“The governors are happy with the party
and we are sure that under the leadership of President Goodluck
Jonathan, all the issues pertaining to the party will be resolved
amicably and the party will come out stronger.”
Via Punch
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