President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan
President
Goodluck Jonathan and the Peoples Democratic Party have begun a fresh
plot to win the South-West states in the 2015 elections.
Saturday PUNCH learnt that developing an
acceptable modality to check the All Progressives Congress and
eventually win the zone topped the agenda of a meeting between the
President and the South-West PDP leaders at the Presidential Villa,
Abuja on Wednesday.
A former Chief of Staff to ex-Governor Segun Oni, Mr. Segun Ilori, was said to have served as the secretary at the meeting.
Saturday PUNCH learnt that Jonathan was disturbed by various crises rocking the ruling party in the zone.
It was gathered that as part of efforts
to dislodge the APC in the 2015 elections, participants at the meeting
resolved to settle the crises facing the party.
The crises, it was gathered at the
meeting, were identified as obstacles to the electoral success of the
President and the PDP in the South-West.
Party leaders from the South-West were
said to have complained again about the marginalisation of the zone by
the Jonathan administration.
The PDP held political power in the
South-West between 1999 and 2003; an era when the party produced all the
governors in the region, except Lagos.
A PDP chieftain, who attended the meeting, said that the President promised to redress the marginalisation of the zone.
The party chieftain, who pleaded
anonymity stated, “The President acknowledged the need to ensure more
representation of the people in the South-West zone but he was reminded
that he had once promised to redress the marginalisation.
“He was told that without addressing the
marginalisation of the South-West, it would be difficult for the
President and the PDP to win the zone.”
Another issue that featured at the
meeting, according to the source, was who should be recognised as the
leader of the party in the zone.
It was learnt that the party leaders,
who were present at the meeting, expressed displeasure that a financier
of the PDP in Ogun State, Chief Buruji Kasamu, seemed to be the leader
of the party in the South-West.
The PDP chieftain, who confided in Saturday PUNCH,
said, “From all indications, the President is taking Kasamu as the PDP
South-West leader. If we are to win the zone, we must resolve who should
be the face of the party in Yorubaland.”
It was gathered that some stakeholders
at the meeting were pushing for an ex-convict and a former PDP Deputy
National Chairman, Chief Bode George, to lead the party in the zone.
It was learnt that others at the meeting opposed the candidacy of George.
The PDP chieftain said, “Some
stakeholders opposed Bode George on the grounds that he was old and
because of the need to allow younger people to take charge.’’
But our correspondents learnt that
Jonathan appealed to the party leaders to cooperate with the
reconciliation committee headed by the Bayelsa State Governor, Mr.
Seriake Dickson.
It was gathered that the party’s
decision to suspend the South West congress was part of efforts aimed at
resolving the crisis in the zone.
The party NEC at its meeting suspended the South West Zonal Congress of the party scheduled for August 24, 2013.
The Acting National Publicity Secretary
of the PDP, Mr. Tony Okoke, announced the suspension of the congress
scheduled for Saturday after the party’s National Executive Committee.
He cited a court injunction restraining the PDP from conducting the congresses as the reason for the decision.
He said that the PDP was committed to the rule of law and upholding the sanctity of the courts.
Confirming the plot, a member of the PDP
Board of Trustees, Chief Ebenezer Babatope, said that the ruling party
would do everything to ensure victory for Jonathan in the 2015
presidential election.
Babatope, who spoke with one of our
correspondents in a telephone interview, also said that the PDP would
bounce back to political reckoning in the South-West from next year.
He said, “Everything will be done to
ensure victory for President Goodluck Jonathan. The PDP is poised to
take over the South-West.”
Babatope, who was at Jonathan’s meeting
with South West leaders, described Bode George, as a “spokesleader”
in the South-West, adding that “Chief Bode George’s views carry great
respect.”
When contacted, a former Governor of
Ekiti State and an ex-national chairman, Mr. Segun Oni, refused to
comment on whether the President could win in the South West or not.
Asked to comment on the growing
influence of Kasamu in the South West PDP and the strategy that could
win the zone for Jonathan, the former governor, who spoke through his
media aide, Mr. Lere Olayinka, said he would not comment on the issue.
Olayinka , in his response to enquiries sent to him via email said, “ Oga’s position on all the issues raised is silence.”
Efforts to get the reaction of the
Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters, Ahmed Gulak, on
the telephone did not yield positive result at press time on Thursday.
Attempts made to get Kasamu’s reaction
were unsuccessful as he did not answer calls to his mobile phone. He
also failed to reply the text messages sent to him.
His aide, Austin Oniyokor, said he could not speak on behalf of his boss.
But a former governor of Ogun State,
Otunba Gbenga Daniel, said Kasamu could not be a leader of the PDP in
the South West, alleging that he was only in politics for personal
gains.
When contacted, the APC National
Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said, “The PDP has been unable
to sleep soundly since the registration of the APC three weeks ago.”
He said that the ruling party was day dreaming.
According to him, the PDP has been gripped with panic and has become uncoordinated.
Mohammed said, “How will the PDP
convince the enlightened and politically- sophisticated people of the
South-West to re-elect a President, who has betrayed their trust in all
respects? A president under whose watch they have seen the quality of
their lives ebbing away with unprecedented economic decline, youth
unemployment; dilapidation of infrastructure, insecurity, decline in the
educational quality, untold hardship and despair. The PDP must be day
dreaming.
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