The Peoples Democratic Party has said that it will not force former President Olusegun Obasanjo to return as its member.
It said it would respect the decision of
the former President, but added that whether he returned or not, it
(the party) would not die.
Obasanjo had on Tuesday vowed never to
return to the party, saying he would rather remain a statesman, working
for the interest of the nation.
He spoke with journalists after he held a
meeting with the National Caretaker Chairman of the party, Senator
Ahmed Makarfi, behind closed doors at the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential
Library, Abeokuta.
He had said, “I have told the chairman
that I was in the PDP before but not now. God forbid, se when dog
vomits, it will go back to eat its vomit, no.
“I have said no partisan politics for me
again, but Nigeria is my passion until death do us apart. And anything
that concerns Nigeria, the good of Nigeria, you’ll see my involvement.
“So, the chairman has come to greet me
and I greet am, and now that we have greeted ourselves, the chairman
will be going, you gentlemen and ladies of the press, you can now go,
leave the chairman alone.”
Reacting, the spokesperson for the PDP,
Prince Dayo Adeyeye, said Obasanjo had earlier said that he would not
return to the party, adding that as an individual, the party would
respect his views.
He said, “He has said it before (that
he won’t return to the party). We are not going to force him. No
individual is bigger than the party.
“Obasanjo has the right to hold his opinion. But the PDP will not die, either he joins us or not.
“We respect his opinion. There’s nothing to say more than that. He is an individual and we respect him.”
Meanwhile, as the countdown to the
December 9 elective convention of the party draws nearer, the
South-West geopolitical zone has been warned on the danger of losing the
national chairmanship of the party if it failed to agree on a consensus
candidate.
A former Minister of Police Affairs
Minister, Adamu Maina Waziri, gave the warning in Abuja on Wednesday at
the declaration of a former governor of Ogun State, Chief Gbenga Daniel,
for the office of the national chairman of the party.
Waziri warned that the zone would be the
loser in the event of the inability of any of the aspirants from the
zone to emerge victorious at the December convention.
He said, “If, for any reason, Gbenga
Daniel fails in his bid to become the national chairman, it is Daniel
that would lose. But if none of the about six aspirants from the
South-West fails to win, the South-West will be the loser.”
He called on the aspirants from the zone
to close ranks and present a common front at the convention in the
interest of the party.
Also speaking at the declaration event, a
former Aviation Minister and a chieftain of the party, Chief Femi
Fani-Kayode, lauded the leadership acumen of Daniel even as he charged
the PDP to shun divisions within its ranks.
Fani-Kayode, who described all aspirants
from the zone as his personal friends, however, insisted that Daniel
remained the first among the equals in the pack.
In his speech titled, “Let’s start
afresh…Together we can do it,” Daniel said he was in the race to make a
difference having taken stock of the troubles that rattled the PDP in
the past couple of years.
He said, “I have come to the conclusion
that the challenges which face our political party are not permanent.
They could be rectified through a careful deployment of resources, the
will power and ability to work through difficult situations, concessions
and compromises if need be, and ability to move all our people into one
disciplined accord on all matters.
“I declare before you today to contest
for the office of the national chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party
at the national convention.
“I come to this resolve after a careful
analysis of the challenges confronting the PDP and on the strength of
clear understanding of my personal ability to provide the needed
leadership in our collective search for solutions.”
But the senator representing Ogun East
Senatorial District, Buruji Kashamu, has said it will be “a monumental
disaster” to elect Daniel as the PDP national chairman.
Kashamu said in a statement on Wednesday that Daniel was the least qualified among those aspiring for the post.
The statement read in part, “When I
heard that he was vying for the post, my initial reaction was that it
was a joke. But, now that he has decided to make a formal declaration, I
would say it is a joke taken too far.
“Let me say with all sense of
responsibility that Daniel does not have what it takes to lead our great
party. He is the least qualified among all those vying for the
position.”
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