Following the simmering crisis in the
All Progressives Congress, the National Leader of the party, Asiwaju
Bola Tinubu, has started reaching out to his former political foes in
the South-West in order to consolidate his influence in the region.
The multi-layered crisis in the ruling
party is threatening the erstwhile chummy relationship between Tinubu
and President Muhammadu Buhari.
The crisis in the ruling party started
before the 2015 general elections but became full-blown after Buhari was
sworn in as president. There has been discontent within the Tinubu
camp. Sources said that members of the group and their principal were
not happy with what they saw as attempts by the party leadership and the
presidency to diminish Tinubu’s premium contributions to Buhari’s
emergence as president and undermine the former Lagos State governor’s
leadership in his South-West power base.
But it was learnt over
the weekend that some of Buhari’s closest associates have been pushing
back by telling those who are close to Tinubu that Nigeria cannot have a
‘co-presidency.’
Although the two leaders had tried
futilely to keep the frosty relationship away from public knowledge,
things came to a head a few days ago when Tinubu wrote an open letter
lambasting the National Chairman of the APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun,
who is believed to enjoy the support of the president.
Tinubu, who faulted the way the party’s
governorship primary was held in Ondo State, accused Odigie-Oyegun of
conducting a fraudulent primary and he asked the former Edo State
governor to resign as the national chairman of the party.
After the letter was published, Oyegun
refrained from responding to Tinubu. But he later visited President
Buhari in Aso Rock and photographs of the duo laughing and sharing
banters was made public. Shortly thereafter, Oyegun replied Tinubu and
described the latter’s open letter as ‘reckless.’
Tinubu’s harsh denunciation of the party
chairman has been widely interpreted as a direct protest against
Buhari. In private, Tinubu’s loyalists are complaining that his
political capital is being eroded by the hostile actions of the
president’s men and the inactions of the president.
Tinubu’s loyalists in the South-West
have listed Buhari’s hostile actions against the APC national leader to
include the exclusion of his candidates from Buhari’s final ministerial
list, the gang-up against his candidate in the Kogi governorship
election, James Faleke, who was the late Audu Abubakar’s running mate;
and the alleged fraud against his candidate in the Ondo governorship
primary, Olusegun Abraham.
Until the recent crisis, the party had
successfully managed the growing discontent within its leadership as
insinuations were rife that some of Buhari’s closest political
associates had perfected a plan to destroy Tinubu politically.
But pro-Tinubu elements within the party and other sympathisers have vowed to resist any attempt to humiliate Tinubu.
Some of Tinubu’s close associates spoke but pleaded anonymity because of possible reprisal.
A chieftain of the party in Osun State,
said, “This is the beginning of the end of the APC. The party will
shatter into smithereens. We are ready for them. They are going nowhere.
“We know the political leader of the South-West and that person is unmistakably Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. They are envious of Tinubu’s achievements, but they don’t have Tinubu’s clout. None of those scrambling to wear Tinubu’s shoes have the clout to do so. These ingrates are the people that have benefitted immensely from Tinubu’s large-heartedness. Now, they are stabbing him in the back. We are in the South-West together, we shall see.”
Speaking in a telephone interview on Friday, Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele
Fayose, said he would not hesitate to fight against any anti-Yoruba
policy by the Buhari-led administration. He said he would team up with
like-minded leaders in the South-West to resist attacks on any of the
region’s political leaders. Fayose said, “I will resist any policy that
is formulated by the Buhari administration against the interests of the
Yoruba. Some people may say it is too early to criticise them now, so,
we are watching.
“We will keep our fingers crossed and our gunpowder dry. We won’t be hasty in our condemnation; when you put water on fire, you wait for it to boil. We don’t want it to appear as if we are looking for an opportunity to nail them. Let them continue their governance, we are watching.”
A pro-Tinubu stalwart in the ruling party also told one of our correspondents that the plot to ridicule Tinubu and reduce his standing in the South-West had “already failed.”
Another top APC leader in the South-West told us
that apart from trying to destroy his political structures, many in
Tinubu’s camp believe that one of the ways the national leader’s
opponents would attack him is to go after his business interests and
associates.
“We won’t be surprised if the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission wakes up tomorrow to say they are probing Tinubu or his associates. They may even send the Department of State Services after him because that is the step the Buhari government has taken against all their perceived enemies. Asiwaju knows that they may come for him.”
Similarly, a chieftain of the party said
in a telephone interview on Friday that a former Governor of Osun
State, Chief Bisi Akande, had warned Tinubu against the alliance with
the North.
The chieftain said,
“Baba Akande
didn’t like the idea of teaming up with the North. He had advised that
the APC should concentrate on the South-West and seek ways to develop it
massively.
“But the emerging political scenario at
the time made the possibility of the Yoruba coming into the mainstream
of Nigeria’s politics a reality. Baba Akande was of the opinion that we
should not participate in governance at the centre.”
A party source, who said he was privy to
the earliest events that signaled trouble for Tinubu, added that the
president had assured Tinubu that he would be shown the list of
ministers before it would be made public so that the latter could have
his own input. He added that the president, however, sent a copy of the
list to Tinubu and the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, at the same
time.
“By sending the list to Asiwaju and Saraki at the same time, Buhari subtly undermined the promise he made to Tinubu because he knew that with the copy of the ministerial list in Saraki’s hands, there was no way Tinubu could make any input into the list.”
A chieftain of the APC in Ondo also
explained that Tinubu was deliberately undermined in the Ondo
governorship primary with Abuja’s backing of Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN),
who emerged the winner of the primary.
It was gathered that Tinubu had reached
out to prominent Yoruba leaders, such as Chief Ayo Adebanjo, Chief
Mojisoluwa Akinfenwa, Chief Olanihun Ajayi, among others, in the bid to
reposition himself and the South-West.
Also, it was gathered that an attempt at
rapprochement was ongoing between Tinubu and the Ondo State Governor,
Dr. Olusegun Mimiko.
It was learnt that some Yoruba leaders
had volunteered to broker a truce between Tinubu and Mimiko as the
echoes of their disagreement during the countdown to Mimiko’s
re-election is still fresh.
Osun State Governor, Rauf Aregbesola, a
staunch Tinubu loyalist, is said to be the arrowhead of the move to
reconcile Tinubu and Mimiko.
A top member of the APC, who is in the know of the developments, said that it was public knowledge that Tinubu had been sidelined at the national level.
The source said,
“Those leading the rebellion against Tinubu are politicians who lost their wards and constituencies in elections, even when they were governors. His loyalists are not in government, despite the contributions of Asiwaju to the 2015 electoral victory. Asiwaju has realised that they are ready to go to war with him so he is consolidating. This is not a time to hold on to past wounds and we are glad Yoruba elders who were critical of Tinubu before are rallying round him because they understand that this is a South-West matter. It is beyond our national leader.
“The elders have held several meetings
with him and they are realigning. Don’t forget what Pa Ayo Adebanjo
said; he said any insult to Asiwaju is an insult to the Yoruba race and
Adebanjo is not known to be flippant in his choice of words.”
Also, a former leader of the Yoruba
socio-political group, Afenifere, said in confidence
that Tinubu had reconciled with some Yoruba leaders. He said the former
Governor of Lagos State now needed the leaders in the ongoing political
realignments in the South-West.
The source said,
“I am aware that they (leaders) have held meetings. One of such meetings was held in Asiwaju’s home. The 2015 electioneering was a solo game for Tinubu. The Yoruba leaders did not agree with him on the formation of the APC and the choice of the presidential candidate (Buhari). Now that the game is turning against him (Tinubu), he has to manoeuvre. However, I’m not sure that all the people he is realigning with can help him.”
Another Yoruba leader confirmed that
some Yoruba leaders, who were opposed to Tinubu up till the 2015
elections, had been holding meetings with him lately.
The ex-Afenifere chieftain said,
“The whole thing is shocking to some of us. How come those who knew all Tinubu did to them politically have suddenly made a U-turn in an attempt to save him from the onslaught on him in the APC?”
A founding member of the Obafemi Awolowo-led Yoruba socio-political organisation, Sir Olaniwun Ajayi, confirmed
that the leaders of the region met with Tinubu recently. He stated that
the meeting was to reconcile all political divides in the South-West
and chart a common course for the Yoruba race.
The nonagerian had
strongly criticised Tinubu and other governors of the Alliance for
Democracy, a party founded by Afenifere leaders, alleging that the
governors dumped the AD after gaining power and went ahead to form the
Action Congress. He further alleged that the same group of governors,
led by Tinubu, destabilised Afenifere for political reasons.
Speaking on Friday,
Olaniwun said,
“Yes, we had a meeting with him in the recent past. Yes, the meeting was about the Yoruba coming together for the benefit of the Yoruba nation. We have for long been on our separate ways, which is not good for the Yoruba nation. We went to him and the Governor of Lagos State (Akinwunmi Ambode); we met the two of them together. We decided to see (meet with) the former governors and the current governors.”
When asked if Afenifere leaders had
forgiven Tinubu, whom they had always accused of leading the rebellion
against the group, the elder statesman said, “He has not offended me, if
you are referring to me as a person.”
Olaniwun denied that the reconciliation was to protect Tinubu politically.
-PUNCH
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