By Abba Adakole
It is a shocking surprise that the cracks that
many feared were appearing on the seemingly impregnable walls of the All
Progressives Congress (APC) are being proved to be true daily with
goings-on in that enclave of strange bedfellows. It was speculated that,
at one of the meetings of the APC, when the going was good, two former
governors, including the one that recently jumped ship, there was a
blow-out between the two, which resulted in a funny exchange in which
one said something that gs like this: you are a former senator; I am a
former senator; you are a former governor, I am a former governor; you
have money, I have money; you take cocaine, I take cocaine¦.
The
story gs further that a former army General who was at the meeting did
not find the reference to cocaine funny and he clearly made it known.
That was said to be one of the dramas that led to the departure from the
party of that chieftain, who is now battling to save his neck from an
alleged association with a notorious terrorist group.
And recently
while boasting of plans to overrun the ruling Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP), Musa Rabiu Kwankwaso, who undeniably has changed the face of Kano
City (not Kano State) for good, was at a loss to explain the
conspicuous absence of political heavyweight, General Muhammadu Buhari,
at the North-West rally of the opposition party. None of the General's
own generals were there and a representative did not speak for him. It
was obvious the show in Sokoto was put together by the hijacking
Governors who seem to have the backing of the Asiwaju.
The
desperate situation in which the Party finds itself with the loss of
some bigwigs was manifested in the beggarly plea of Kwankwaso calling on
Babangida Aliyu and Sule Lamido of Niger and Jigawa States to return to
the fold of the rebel governors. His words, I am calling on the G7
governors that we started this journey and movement together, especially
Lamido and Aliyu to leave the PDP and join us…. We have been meeting
and sharing ideas with Kaduna State Governor, Ramalan Yero, and as such,
we are calling on our brothers to come back home because this is where
they belong.”
For some inexplicable reason, the Governor made
reference to alleged discussions with Kaduna Governor in his ploy to
show that the North-West was going the way of the APC, a tactless
revelation that sounded more like blackmail than anything concrete. And
did he pound and throw mud at the PDP? “PDP has been ruling Nigeria for
16 years but left this country in ruins with insecurity challenges
ravaging the North. We have the numbers and the large population to give
us the required votes and we are ready to mobilize our people in the
North-West to humiliate PDP in the 2015 polls, he thundered.
His
opponents may suggest that his reiteration of the situation in the north
is a confirmation of the oft-repeated accusation that APC was the
political wing of Boko Haram, using its military wing to exacerbate the
trouble there for political gains; but it is hoped that with the
movement of the creator of that wing from the APC to the PDP, peace may
soon return. In Ogun, the chinks in the APC wall are widening to an
embarrassing level with the newspapers daily publishing the widening gap
among gladiators, with some lining up behind Governor Ibikunle Amosun,
and others behind one of his former predecessors, Segun Osoba. In
Adamawa, it is a sad tale for former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, as
he could not deliver his own preferred choice of APC flag bearer for the
gubernatorial elections next month.
Already, one of his followers
has been grumbling loudly, accusing the former number two man of
insincerity. Yakubu Tsala, who claims he has been a faithful follower of
Atiku for three decades, said he felt betrayed by the former Vice
President, who he claimed did not keep his word not to back any of the
candidates. He claims “his people” have been vehemently opposed to his
political relationship to Atiku, but did not say what benefits kept him
close to the man for 30 years.
To my surprise despite all the
promises made, Atiku was the person who bought form and drafted the
candidate into the race. However the candidate also lost like I did. But
I am not happy with the betrayal meted to me by Atiku because if there
is any candidate that he should support I should be the one because I
always followed and kept my part of the bargain to him and I have never
betrayed him all these years, he disclosed.
While one of Atiku's
media aide, Paul Ibe, was busy denying that his boss supported a
particular candidate, another, Garba Shehu, appeared to be confirming it
when he told Daily Trust, Well, there is no denying the fact that Atiku
has a soft spot for him (Mijinyawa), but you are also aware that of the
seven aspirants, Atiku bought form for four of them, so there is no big
deal.”
Treachery may be the lot of politicians, but Atiku himself
has suffered the same in the hands of the hawks he now hobnobs with,
with one clearly telling him, in the ACN days, that he was not the
leader of the party since he could not deliver his constituency of
Adamawa to the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN). Efforts are on to
assuage his bruised ego from this recent Adamawa experience, according
to newspaper reports that say leaders of the party want to extract a
commitment from him to back its candidate, Senator Bindow Jibrilla, in
the forthcoming elections.
With the myriads of troubles besetting
the APC, the South-East zone of the party impoliticly denigrated the
Youth wing of the Ohaneze Ndigbo by insisting it did not owe it any
apology for asking that an Ndigbo son, General Azubuike Ihejirika, be
tried over the comments by Australian negotiator, Dr. Stephen Davies,
that he was fingered as a sponsor of Boko Haram. While it may be obvious
that the APC has no foothold in the geopolitical zone, save for the
pretensions of Governor Rochas Okorocha, the party in the zone should
have tapered its language to the Igbo youths.
Nonetheless, with
the Adamawa election approaching; the APC primaries to pick its
presidential candidate knocking on the door; party heavyweights leaving
all too frequently; Buhari distrusting rebel governors from the PDP, it
may just be time to compose APC's dirge.
Adakole contributed this piece from Abuja via abbaadakole@gmail.com
The post The cracks in APC's walls appeared first on Pointblank News .
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