There is tension in the yet-to-be registered main merger
opposition party, All Progressive Congress, over distribution of offices. Read more
The APC is a product of a merger between the Action Congress
of Nigeria, Congress for Progressive Change, All Nigeria Peoples Party and a
faction of the All Progressives Grand Alliance and it has an avowed mission to
dislodge the PDP from power in 2015.
Already, sources within the APC on Sunday confided in our
correspondents that there had been disagreements over the sharing of party
offices among the stakeholders from the different parties.
Investigations showed that the CPC and the ANPP disagreed
over the post of the National Secretary, which the former insisted must be
given to it.
A source within the APC confided in one of our
correspondents that, “the ANPP, specifically Malam Ibrahim Shekarau, wanted the
position of the protem National Secretary but was schemed out.
“The CPC and
the ACN conspired. The CPC insisted on the position of secretary or nothing.
Those in the ANPP are not excited about this.
“There is also
a proposal that the CPC in addition to producing the secretary will get the presidential
slot while the ACN gets the chairmanship of the party in addition to producing
the Vice-Presidential candidate.”
Shekarau was the ANPP presidential candidate in the 2011
elections and he has been one of
the major forces behind the merger agreement.
The ACN, CPC and ANPP have already scheduled a meeting for
this week to resolve alleged disagreements over sharing of offices.
National Publicity Secretary of the ANPP, Chief Emma
Eneukwu, however said he was unaware of any such disagreement.
According to him, there is nothing to suggest that the ANPP
has any disagreement with the arrangement made by the leadership of the APC.
He said, “I am not aware of this. I know of the arrangement
that we have with regards to the constitution of the Interim Management
Committee. If there is any disagreement, my party has not told me about it.
“But I know
that there is an agreement that each of the three parties will produce one
member each in the IMC.
“There are only
three positions: Chairman, Secretary and Treasurer, so there is no way one
party can take two positions out of three.”
He noted that the desperation of those who are scared of the
rising profile of the APC could be responsible for the spreading of deliberate
falsehood and misinformation.
Speaking in the same vein, National Publicity Secretary of
the ACN, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, accused the PDP and some unnamed “jittery forces”
of peddling the rumour about the disagreement within the ranks of the
opposition on the sharing of offices.
He said there was no iota of truth in the rumour making the
rounds that the ranks of the APC had been polarised because of this.
“That is the
handiwork of the ruling party and those jittery because of the coming together
of the opposition political parties under the banner of APC,” Mohammed said.
Asked about when the yet-to-be registered party would submit
its application to the Independent National Electoral Commission for
registration, he said that would be done “soon.”
The National Publicity Secretary of the CPC, Mr. Rotimi Fashakin,
said the main business before the proposed party at the moment was the issue of
registration.
According to him, it is when the party becomes duly
registered that the issue of the distribution of offices will come to play.
“It is when the issue of registration is settled that we can
discuss other issues. Even at that, we recognise the fact that no sacrifice is
too much to remove this indignity that the (President Goodluck) Jonathan
administration represents,” he said in a telephone interview with one of our
correspondents on Sunday.
He also took time off to explain that the national
leadership of the party was doing everything within its power to ensure that no
loose end was left untied.
Fahakin said, “What we have done is that the national
leadership of our party reasoned that, look, since we don’t have a template,
even INEC doesn’t have a template to hand to us; you know the concept of merger
is a novelty in this country.
“That is why
everybody is looking at the Constitution and the Electoral Act, we are trying
our best to ensure we get things right.
“For now, the
National Chairman, Secretary and Treasurer of each of the merging political
parties making a total of nine, have been saddled with the responsibility of
writing to INEC.”
He explained that only political parties who had held their
conventions and had agreed to the merger at this level were entitled to write
INEC.
The ACN, ANPP and CPC are expected to write INEC, signifying
their intension to merge this week.
In a related development, there are strong indications that
APGA may not field candidates in the next set of elections in 2015.
This is due to the protracted crisis rocking the party.
Informed sources within the factionalised party confided in The PUNCH that
APGA’s internal crisis is not likely to end soon.
Chief Victor Umeh leads one faction of the party while Chief
Maxi Okwu leads the other.
A leading member of the party and Governor of Imo State,
Rochas Okorocha, has approached the leadership of the APC signaling his
intension to drag APGA into the merger.
Culled from Punch newspaper
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