Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has called on President Goodluck
Jonathan to submit himself to a transparent and fair presidential
primaries in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP, stressing that the
guidelines tactically proposed by Chief Tony Anenih for automatic
nomination are unconstitutional and capable of throwing the party into
deep crises.
During a dinner party marking the 2013 Democracy Day, Chief Anenih, the
chairman of the party’s Board of Trustees, disclosed the possibility of
automatic slots for Jonathan and the party’s other governors. “The
president and governors who are seeking their second term should be
given automatic tickets to contest the second term,” he said.
Calling for “repositioning” of the party,” he described as an
embarrassment recend developments in the Nigeria Governors Forum. It is
an embarrassing situation which must be urgently addressed. The
leadership of the party will not tolerate a situation where it will
preside over a divided house.”
In statements in which he seemed to contradict himself, he said, “If a
party is strong and there is discipline and those who work hard are
rewarded, our government will be stronger. Our problems are not
insurmountable. After the tour of the Board of Trustees, we will collate
the opinions and make appropriate recommendations to the president as
leader of the party. But what I would like to say is that the president
and governors who are seeking their second term should be given
automatic tickets to contest the second term.”
In a direct response, Atiku said in a statement issued by his media
office in Abuja, “By foreclosing free and fair process of selecting its
presidential candidate, the PDP might be sending the wrong message to
Nigerians about its commitment to conduct free and fair elections for
the entire country.”
He warned that any attempt to change the party's rules so as to favour
the President as a sole candidate in the event of his willingness to
re-contest is unconstitutional, adding that the contest should be open
to all desiring to pursue an ambition on the platform of the PDP.
Anenih’s suggestion is a reminder of the powerful anti-democracy forces
within the PDP that have seen the party use rigging and manipulation to
remain in power. Anenih, the party’s “Mr. Fix-It” is known to have
deployed rigging in various elections in the past.
It would be recalled that last year during Ghana’s national election,
former president and PDP Bot chairman, Olusegun Obasanjo, was castigated
by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), which vowed
never again to invite him to work in an observation mission in the
future.
Obasanjo had written an anti-democratic recommendation to the ECOWAS
commission that the media be curtailed in election observation
activities.
“ECOWAS was only fortunate to have [been] at an election of an advanced
and stable democracy,” a senior official said. “Were it to be a volatile
country, his disposition, recommendations and utterances are not only
capable of truncating the electoral process, they are capable of
jeopardizing the security and safety of our 250 monitors mobilized from
across the sub-region.”
Anenih’s remarks at the dinner is an indication that the PDP is poised
to use any means it pleases to place in office any officials it pleases.
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