I’m Not Ready To Meet PDP Members – Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari said he is not ready to meet members of the Peoples Democratic Party (nPDP) bloc within the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).
The president made his position known at a meeting with APC governors
in the Aso Rock Presidential Villa in Abuja last week, Daily Trust
learnt last night.
Members of the nPDP, who defected from the People’s Democratic Party
before the 2015 general elections, had recently protested, among other
things, what they called their marginalisation in the ruling APC.
Sources at last week’s meeting revealed that President Buhari
insisted that the nPDP members’ grievances were for the party to settle
and that he would not interfere.
The president was however said to have told the governors that the
fence-mending move initiated by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo should
continue.
One of the sources at the meeting said while some of the governors
urged Buhari to ignore the nPDP members, others canvassed that Osinbajo
should continue to discuss with them.
The president, the sources added, also asked the governors, as party
leaders in their own right, to handle the issues and that if need be,
the leadership of the party could wade in.
Buhari was quoted as telling the governors: “It is a party matter. I
am not ready to sit down with any faction. If they have problems, they
should go to the party.
“I will not interfere. Governors as party leaders in the states
should deal with all issues. Where there is need, the party leadership
can come in. I will not get involved.”
The nPDP members, led by Kawu Baraje, had on May 29 met behind closed
doors with Osinbajo at the latter’s official residence, Akinola Aguda
House, in the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
After that meeting, Baraje had told journalists that it was too early for his group to talk about leaving the APC.
Those present at the meeting included Senate President Bukola Saraki;
Speaker of the House of Representatives Yakubu Dogara; Leader of the
nPDP Baraje; Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso; former Governor of Adamawa State
Murtala Nyako; a former leader of the PDP, Senator Barnabas Gemade; and
former Governor of Gombe State Senator Danjuma Goje, among others.
But a fortnight ago, the nPDP had halted further talks with the
Presidency which, they alleged, was not interested in the talks and
might have been negotiating in bad faith.
The group alleged, among other things, that Senate President Bukola Saraki was being persecuted.
The nPDP also faulted by the decision of the APC leadership to ratify
all the congresses from wards, local governments, states and zones
where many of its members had complaints.
The group, in a statement by Baraje, had said the prevailing political environment in Nigeria was “fouled and toxic”.
The statement had partly read: “The public may recall that there have
been ongoing talks between members of the former nPDP, the APC and the
Presidency in recent days.
“Nigerians may further recall that a team from the former nPDP led by
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and four others,
were to meet with the Vice President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo today.
“However, while we are truly and earnestly committed to achieving
reconciliation, harmony, truce and cohesion in the APC as we approach
the 2019 general elections, it appears that the Presidency is not
interested in the talks and that they may have been negotiating in bad
faith.
“We were alarmed that immediately after our meeting with the Vice
President last week, the Presidency misrepresented what transpired at
the meeting by trying to blackmail some of the principal actors involved
in the discussions in a national daily.
“Similarly, the leadership of the party (APC) went ahead to ratify
all the Congresses from ward, local governments, states and zonal where
many of our members have complaints, effectively presenting us with a
fait accompli.”
In the statement, the nPDP had also picked holes in implication of
the Senate President and Kwara State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed in the
April bank robbery in Offa.
“The persecution of our members, using state security apparatus, have continued unabated.
“We recognise the powers of the police to conduct criminal
investigations but by rushing to the public with the issue even when
they have unfettered access to the leadership of the National Assembly
suggests an attempt to undermine, caricature and humiliate the
institution of the legislature.”
Sources had earlier informed Daily Trust that the nPDP members may
collectively dump the APC on June 23 – the day of its national
convention – to make a big impact. The nPDP leader Baraje however said
the group had not issued any official statement concerning that
(quitting the APC).
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