Chief Victor Umeh |
The
All Progressive Grand Alliance has threatened to sue the
newly-registered All Progressives Congress and the Lagos State Governor,
Babatunde Fashola (SAN), for listing it in an advertorial as one of
the four parties that merged to form the new party.
The National Chairman of APGA, Chief
Victor Umeh, stated this on Thursday just as the African Peoples
Congress described the recognition of the APC by INEC as “a black
market registration.”
Umeh, at a news conference in Abuja,
gave Fashola seven days’ ultimatum within which to publish a retraction
in the newspapers where he published the advertorial congratulating
the APC for a successful registration.
He said,” Coming from a senior lawyer,
we are sure that the governor knows the obvious implications of this
advertorial which we detest. It is a mischief contrived to deceive all
our teaming supporters in Nigeria and worldwide that APGA has now become
part of the APC. Governor Fashola cannot claim not to know that APGA
never submitted itself to any merger talks with the three parties(Action
Congress of Nigeria, Congress for Progressive Change and All Nigeria
Peoples Party) and other interest groups that came together to form the
APC.
“He is aware that at no time did any
APGA official appear in any meeting where merger talks were held. He is
also aware that APGA leadership has consistently made it clear to
Nigerians that it was never part of the merger talks and will never be a
part of it.
“Surprisingly this (Thursday) morning,
our party’s logo was so fraudulently inserted in an advertorial with
the intention to deceive all our supporters.”
Umeh recalled that INEC while announcing
the registration of the APC named the parties that merged as the CPC,
the ANPP and the ACN, adding that the commission did not say it was
withdrawing the certificate of APGA, unlike the other three parties.
Umeh said, “How could a SAN, who is
also a governor of a state go and insert an APGA logo in a publication.
We want to make it abundantly clear that this was a clearly
orchestrated, premeditated action by Governor Fashola to deceive
supporters of APGA. On behalf of our party, we are calling on Governor
Fashola to publish a retraction of the advertorial removing APGA logo
in all the newspapers that our logo appeared today(Thursday) within
seven days.
“In addition to our demands for
retraction of the publication, we are also referring the matter to our
lawyers to formally write Governor Fashola to pay us N2bn in damages or
face legal action.
“While we congratulate the APC for
realising its dream of becoming a mega party called APC, fraudulently
using APGA logo will not be accepted by our party. Politics of confusion
must be avoided in Nigeria. Anybody can meet to do whatever he likes
but it must be within the law. The process of merging of political
parties is clearly known to everybody.
“ACN had its convention where they
approved that they would become part of the APC. ANPP had a convention
where its members also approved that they would become part of the
APC; the same with the CPC. But APGA was not known to have organised
any convention to approve joining the APC.”
The APGA chairman added another
dimension to the controversy over the dumping of over 70 destitute
persons in Onitsha, saying it was an attempt by the APC to plan
electoral malpractice during election in Anambra State.
He warned that any attempt to use the
destitute whom he claimed were non-Nigerians to perpetuate electoral
malpractice in the state would be resisted.
Also in Abuja, one of the groups that
constituted a stumbling block to the registration of the APC, the
African Peoples Congress, accused INEC of favouritism.
Vowing not to relinquish the use of
APC as part of its logo, it said the true ownership of the acronym
was still being contested in the court.
The National Chairman of the group,
Chief Onyinye Ikeagwuonu, insisted at a news conference that his
members were the first to apply to INEC for registration using the
acronym.
Ikeagwuonu said, “The decision of INEC
to reject our application for registration was baseless in view of the
fact that we complied with the provisions of the law and provided them
with the address of our national officers.”
“At the time INEC registered the APC,
the acronym, APC, was not available and up till now, it is still not
available as we, the original owners, are still pursuing the last phase
of our registration with the ongoing judicial review which the court
will soon rule on.”
He warned that when the court rules in
favour of the African Peoples Congress, Jega “would have led Nigerians
into an avoidable political landmine and a monstrous political disaster
that would reverberate in Nigeria’s political history for years to
come.”
But reacting to the allegations, the
Chief Press Secretary to the INEC Chairman, Mr. Kayode Idowu, said Jega
would not join issues with Ikeagwuonu on a matter that is in court.
He said, “My response is that INEC is
reluctant to join issues with him in matters that are already before the
court. INEC respects the court and because the matter is already in
court, it will be very improper to take up issues in the public. We look
forward to the processes in the court.”
Meanwhile, two prominent legal
practitioners, Femi Falana (SAN) and Fred Agbaje, have said that INEC
deserved no commendation for registering the APC.
In their separate reactions to the action, they said INEC had no choice but to register the APC as a political party.
Falana said instead of celebrating,
the APC “members should appreciate that the oppressed people of Nigeria
are desperately looking for genuine and far-reaching changes.”
He said, “The registration was anchored
on the fact that the merging parties in the APC met the
conditionalities stipulated by the Electoral Act. In the circumstance,
kudos should go to the defunct ACN, the CPC and the ANPP. The
deserving parties deserve to be congratulated for merging to challenge
the dominance of a reactionary political party that has threatened to
continue to capture power for 100 years.”
Agbaje, who had on Monday obtained a
judgment voiding the deregistration of 28 political parties, said, “
Our people can now make unhindered choice and this is where INEC
should be ashamed because it is the same INEC that is registering a new
party. Meaning that INEC has no busisness deregistering political
parties in the first place.
“I see the APC registration as an
opportunity for Nigerians to come out en masse and join political
parties of their own choice. This will ultimately deal a death blow
to the political monopoly of a particular political party that has held
the jugular of the nation in the last 14 years.”
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