Despite the intervention of President Muhammadu Buhari, the
All Progressives Congress (APC) governors have returned to the trenches
in their bid to unseat the National Chairman, Mr. Adams Oshiomhole,
zeroing in on the former governor of Zamfara State, Alhaji Abdulaziz
Yari, as his replacement.
THISDAY learnt last night that about 10
of the party’s 17 governors have resolved to deepen their push against
the national chairman, who has been under intense pressure to stand down
over sundry accusations, including his style of leadership, which his
traducers claim has left the APC more divided than ever.
Pressure
from the governors had forced Oshiomhole to summon the meeting of the
National Executive Committee three weeks ago, having not been held since
August last year contrary to the provision of the party’s constitution,
which mandates a quarterly meeting.
Preceding the NEC meeting
was the National Caucus, where the president was said to have provided
the national chairman with a lifeline, requesting all the combatants to
sheath their swords and recommended that a reconciliation committee be
set up to douse the raging inferno he warned could consume the party. But
at the NEC meeting, Oshiomhole’s opponents still drew blood. He was,
however, saved by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation
(SGF), Mr. Boss Mustapha, who called the attention of the meeting to
Buhari’s proposal for reconciliation and pleaded that the process be
allowed to run its course.
The president’s thinking, according to
THISDAY’s sources at the meetings, was that the national chairman
should be given another chance to retrace his steps by reconciling with
aggrieved leading members, including in the party’s National Vice
Chairman (North-west), Alhaji Inuwa Abdulkadir, who had been suspended
by his Sokoto State branch; Governors Rotimi Akeredolu and Godwin
Obaseki as well as former governors Rochas Okorocha and Ibikunle Amosun.
Buhari was also said to believe that fences could still be mended between Oshiomhole and his Edo State Governor, Obaseki.
But
weeks after the lifeline NEC meeting, the president has been slow in
setting up the reconciliation committee, a development, THISDAY
gathered, has displeased the national chairman’s traducers, who have now
returned to the trenches.
THISDAY gathered that the antagonistic
governors led by the Progressive Governors’ Forum, Alhaji Atiku Bagudu
of Kebbi State were sharpening their strategy for the ousting of
Oshiomhole. With him in trench, it was learnt, are Dr. Kayode Fayemi
(Ekiti), Malam Nasir el-Rufai (Kaduna), Alhaji Ibrahim Badaru (Jigawa),
Mai Mala Buni (Yobe), Alhaji Inuwa Yahaya (Gombe), Alhaji Abdullahi Sule
(Nasarawa), Alhaji Abdulrahman Abdulrazak (Kwara), Mr. Simon Lalong
(Plateau) and Obaseki.
Behind Oshiomhole are governors Babajide
Sanwo-Olu (Lagos), Dapo Abiodun (Ogun), Gboyega Oyetola (Osun) and
Babagana Zulum (Borno).
Those on the fence, preaching peace,
THISDAY learnt, are Alhaji Bello Masari (Katsina), Alhaji Abdullahi
Ganduje (Kano) and Akeredolu, who were said to have abstained from a
recent meeting of the governors called to discuss the issue.
However,
a member of the National Working Committee (NWC) told THISDAY last
night that there was no cause for alarm as he was certain that the
national chairman would survive the plot.
“It is true that some
of the governors have issues with the national chairman, but they have
an uphill task achieving their objective of removing him,” he said,
adding: “They don’t have the numbers.”
According to him, “Let
them get a majority among themselves first. Then we shall see if they
get the required number at the NEC. I doubt if they can.”
His
confidence apparently derives from the support Oshiomhole enjoys from
the state chairmen of the party, who dominate the critical NEC. With
majority of this caucus coming from non-APC states that are immune from
the influence of APC governors, the source thinks, all the national
chairman needs is the continued support of the National Leader, Senator
Bola Tinubu, who is believed to be playing behind-the-scene to achieve
reconciliation and maintain the status quo.
The source also
doubts the viability of the opposing governors’ strategy of proposing
Yari as replacement, saying although the party has no zoning policy,
practical politics dictates that the president and the national chairman
could not possibly come from the North, talk less of the same
North-west.
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