National Chairman, Peoples Democratic Party, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur |
The
National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Dr. Bamanga Tukur,
on Tuesday told those seeking his removal from office that his job was
not vacant.
“Chairman is there dam! dam! The
chairman is not only in office, he is also in power. In PDP, there is
no vacancy in the national chairmanship,” he boasted to State House
correspondents after the party’s National Working Committee meeting with
President Goodluck Jonathan in Abuja on Tuesday.
Ahead of the PDP National Executive
Council meeting scheduled for Thursday, there had been reports that
Tukur and other members of the NWC of the PDP had been directed by
Jonathan to resign.
Tukur told the State House
correspondents that he would not resign as the national chairman of
the party because “we are here to run the PDP.”
“It is not true that I am resigning.
Resign for what? It is not true at all. We will continue to run the
PDP,” he added, but went ahead to confirm that eight members of the
NWC whose elections were faulted by the Independent National Electoral
Commission would resign.
He said himself, the National Financial
Secretary, the National Auditor and the National Secretary whose office
is already vacant were not affected.
Those who will resign, according to Tukur, are all the deputies, and all ex-officio members.
He said, “The meeting with the
President was about regularising the family of the PDP because there was
INEC observation that some of the members of the NWC were not properly
elected; so it has to be regularised.
“Those who have not been elected will resign and they will go back; they will have the opportunity to regularise.
“About eight people are affected. There
are people that are not affected, these are the National Chairman, the
National Financial Secretary, National Auditor and of course the
National Secretary which is vacant now.
“The other eight people, all the
deputies, and ex-officials and the rest of them whose election in the
convention was not voted for are affected.”
In preparing for fresh elections for
the affected party officials, Tukur said, “We are going to have party
caucus tonight (Tuesday), we are going to have BOT tomorrow (Wednesday)
and we are going to have our NEC on Thursday.”
Those who will resign are the National
Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh; Deputy National Chairman, Sam Jaja;
National Organising Secretary, Abubakar Mustapha; Deputy National
Organising Secretary, Okechukwu Nnadozie; Deputy National Publicity
Secretary, Binta Goje; National Youth Leader, Garba Chiza; Deputy Youth
Leader, Dennis Alonge Niyi; Deputy National Auditor, Umar Ibrahim;
National Women Leader, Kema Chikwe; Deputy National Women Leader,
Hannatu Ulam; Deputy National Treasurer, Claudus Inengas; and National
Legal Adviser, Victor Gwom.
One of our correspondents gathered
that in spite of Tukur’s insistence that he would not resign, some PDP
governors, including Sule Lamido, were pushing for his removal.
A member of the NWC, who pleaded
anonymity, said, “The governors and other leaders of the party that are
against us are insisting that all of us must go. If he (Tukur) does
not resign, they will boot him out on Thursday.”
But The PUNCH gathered in Abuja
on Tuesday that Tukur was not leaving anything to chance in order to
retain his job. He was said to have asked some ‘friendly” governors of
the party to lobby the President for him.
Investigations showed that the
governors, led by the Chairman of the PDP Governors’ Forum, Godswill
Akpabio, had already commenced their “assignment.”
Tukur was said to have told the
“friendly” governors that his removal would open the party to those he
allegedly referred to as “anti-Jonathan forces.” He was also said to
have argued that if he was eventually humiliated out of office, it would
be difficult for the President to get a replacement who would be
loyal to him.
Apart from this, he allegedly argued
that since INEC did not query his election, he should not be asked to
leave with those whose elections were faulted by the electoral body.
His reason to keep his job also includes Ramandan, which he said might commence anytime from the middle of July.
If this happens, he reasons that it
might be difficult to hold the party’s mid-term convention where new
officers are to be elected.
Another issue raised by him with the
Akpabio-led lobby group was that the constitution of the party does not
recognise a caretaker committee.
Already, Akpabio met with some members of NEC in Abuja on Tuesday, where he allegedly persuaded them to support Tukur’s stay.
The meeting, which was held with a group called G.84 and statutory members of NEC, was called at Tukur’s instance.
When contacted, the Special Assistant to Tukur, Oliver Okpala, declined to speak on the issue.
But the Deputy President of the Senate,
Ike Ekweremadu, said leaders of the PDP were still consulting over
the fate of Tukur and other party executives whose jobs were on the
line.
Ekweremadu spoke with State House
correspondents after a meeting Jonathan had with the leadership of the
National Assembly on the crises in the party.
He said though the meeting was a routine
one, it dealt specifically with the party’s issues since the leaders
were all members of the party.
“We are still consulting on the matter
(resignation of party executives) in the evening (Tuesday), we are going
to have a meeting of the national caucus of the party and look at all
the options available to the party. This is part of the consultation so
that by tomorrow (Wednesday) or later this evening (Tuesday), we will
have a position of the PDP on this issue,” he said.
President of the Senate, David Mark;
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwwal; and some other
leaders of the National Assembly were absent at the meeting.
Asked if the National Assembly which is
dominated by the PDP was not worried by the crises, he replied,
“every family has their own issues, the PDP is not an exception.”
Also reacting to Tukur’s travails, a
former National Vice-Chairman (North-West) of the PDP, Senator Danladi
Sankara, said Tukur needed to go for sanity to return to the party.
“Our party is bigger than Bamanga Tukur.
His tenure as national Chairman has been nothing but disaster for the
party,” he told one of our correspondents in Abuja on Tuesday.
He explained that Tukur and members of his team had dragged the party’s reputation to its lowest ebb.
Meanwhile, the Wadata Plaza
headquarters of the PDP in Abuja has been in total darkness because of
the inability of the party’s leadership to pay its bill.
A member of staff said the party owes supplier of diesel about N9.6m, which he said was accumulated in the last six months.
“We are owing the supplier the sum of
N9.6m for the past six months and the supplier said there would be no
more supply if we refuse to pay,” he added.
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