NGF election postponed to thwart Amaechi’s landslide
By Niyi Odebode, John Alechenu and Olusola Fabiyi
Governor Rotimi Amaechi and President Goodluck Jonathan
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THE
Nigerian Governors’ Forum, against all expectations, suddenly postponed
its election on Monday, saying the incumbent chairman of the Forum,
Governor Rotimi Amaechi, should be allowed to finish his tenure in May
before a successor is elected.
But beyond the official reason, however, The PUNCH
learnt that the postponement was the outcome of intense Presidency
manoeuvring vis-a-vis President Goodluck Jonathan’s 2015 ambition.
Sources said supporters of Jonathan
pushed for the postponement when they received signals that the
President’s candidate for the NGF chairmanship, Katsina State Governor
Ibrahim Shema, was heading for a defeat against Amaechi.
“When it was clear that Amaechi would
have easily won re-election, they (Jonathan’s loyalists in the NGF)
quickly called for the postponement of the election, saying that the
current leadership should be allowed to finish its tenure in the spirit
of democracy,” a governor-participant at the NGF meeting in Abuja on
Monday told one of our correspondents.
The denial by the Presidency on Sunday,
notwithstanding, the NGF under Amaechi was said to have constituted a
burden to Jonathan who is said to be doubtful of the Rivers State
governor’s loyalty.
“President Goodluck Jonathan does not
have anything to do with who is or who becomes the chairman of the
Nigerian Governors’ Forum. The group is not a constitutional organ,
though members have constitutional rights of freedom of association,”
Jonathan’s Special Adviser on Political Matters, Ahmed Gulak, had said
in an exclusive interview with one of our correspondents in Abuja on
Sunday.
On the eve of the stalemated governors’
poll, the Peoples Democratic Party Governors’ Forum was born during a
meeting presided over by Jonathan in Aso Rock.
Akwa Ibom State Governor, Godswill
Akpabio, a known loyalist of Mr. President, is the chairman of the new
forum that has continued to excite the PDP leadership and Jonathan’s
men.
Feelers from the governors’ meeting
which held at the Sokoto State Lodge, Abuja, on Monday, indicated that
the Presidency persuaded one other governor from the north who was
interested in leading the NGF to step down for Shema.
Besides Shema, the Benue State Governor, Mr. Gabriel Suswan, was said to have indicated interest in the NGF chairmanship.
A northern governor, who pleaded anonymity, said Shema was picked after the intervention of the Presidency.
He said, “The chairmanship of the NGF
and the PDP governors’ forum will play a big role in who emerges as the
president in 2015. The Presidency sees Shema as a moderate.
“Suswan, who is also close to the
President, was persuaded to step down. He may be compensated with the
Chairman of the Northern Governors’ Forum.”
Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu is
the incumbent chairman of the the Northern Governors’ Forum. Apart from
nursing a presidential ambition, it was Aliyu that recently challenged
Jonathan to respect an agreement he purportedly reached with governors
in 2011 to serve only one term as president.
It was gathered that the Presidency
pushed for the emergence of the Akwa Ibom State, Governor, Mr. Goodswill
Akapbio, as part of the move to stop Amaechi.
Amaechi, after the NGF poll was
postponed on Monday said, “Members reviewed the affairs of the forum in
the past 21 months detailing the activities, achievements and challenges
experienced during the period.
“After the exhaustive deliberation of
the issues of filling vacant positions, the forum resolved that
elections in this regard be postponed till May when the chairman initial
two tenures will expire.”
His deputy, Anambra State Governor, Peter Obi, also said that the incumbent chairman of the NGF was entitled to another term.
A governor told one of our
correspondents that it would be an impossible task for Amaechi to retain
the post as the election of Akpabio of Akwa Ibom, also in the
South-South, is seen as a move to stop him.
But Obi, in an interview with one of our
correspondents faulted the argument that the emergence of the PDP
governors’ forum would affect the election of the chairman of the NGF.
He said, “The affairs of the PDP do not
concern the NGF. The PDP has the right to have its chairman. Even the
ACN (Action Congress of Nigeria) has its own forum. Even APGA has its
own forum of Governors.
“We are not bothered about the PDP forum. Of course, the Chairman of the forum (NGF) has the right to re-contest in May.”
Besides Shema and Suswan, two Southern
governors, Amaechi and the Abia Governor, Theodore Orji, were also said
to be interested in the NGF chairmanship.
With the tipping of Shema by the 19 northern governors, the PDP might have succeeded in breaking the ranks of the opposition.
Prior to Monday’s meeting, 10 opposition governors, including the ones from the North, were reported to be rooting for Amaechi.
The governors, who were said to be
backing Amaechi before Monday included Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto); Usman
Dakingari (Kebbi);Sule Lamido (Jigawa); Musa Kwankwaso (Kano); Abdulaziz
Yari (Zamfara); Kashim Shetimma (Borno); Ibrahim Geidam (Yobe); Murtala
Nyako (Adamawa); Ibrahim Dankwambo (Gombe); Babangida Aliyu (Niger);
Andulfatah Ahmed (Kwara); Tanko Al-Almakura (Nasarawa); Idris Wada
(Kogi); Babantunde Fashola (Lagos); Abimbola Ajimobi (Oyo); Ibikunle
Amosun (Ogun); Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti); Rauf Aregbesola (Osun); Adams
Oshiomhole (Edo); and Rochas Okorocha(Imo).
The northern governors among Amaechi
supporters were said to have made a U-turn when the northern leaders
intervened and argued that the South could not produce chairmen of the
PDP Governors’ Forum and the NGF
Amaechi has had a running battle with Jonathan over the former’s rumoured Vice- Presidential ambition.
The frosty relationship between the two,
it was gathered, deteriorated with the public spat between Amaechi and
one of Jonathan’s closest associates, the Minister for Niger Delta
Affairs, Godsday Orubebe.
Amaechi took on the administration when
he accused the minister of failing the people of the Niger Delta with
the failure to complete the East-West road.
Orubebe in return accused Amaechi of, among other things, failing to deliver on the mandate given to him by the Rivers people.
Meanwhile, Akpabio has said that the PDP
Governors’ Forum was formed to stand as a check on the new alliance
party, the All Progressives Party. The APC’s founders have said that the
party would wrestle power from the PDP in 2015.
“We are of the opinion that we should
take steps to set up structures to meet the emerging challenge of APC,”
Akpabio told journalists after the maiden meeting of the forum in Abuja
on Monday.
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