Politicians are known to be boastful.
The former National Chairman of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party,
Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, is not an exception. Even when it was clear that
the drummers who were playing music for him had since dropped their
drums and were no longer ready to sing his praises, Tukur soldiered on.
He believed that the tide could still change and he would retain his
much-treasured exalted position.
Thus, when he had even dropped his
resignation letter, Tukur said he was still in power. He told the
unsuspecting journalists at the State House that he had not dropped his
resignation letter.
Perhaps, he had thought that the tide
could still change and those who wanted his downfall would have a change
of heart. How wrong he was.
While he was not sleeping, his enemies
were also planning. Just as he set up a panel of eminent persons from
his home state to reach out to Governors Jonah Jang of Plateau State,
and Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State, his enemies were also plotting
how to thwart that move.
The two governors were picked for
strategic reasons. Those reasons, according to investigation, included
the fact that Jang is heading a faction of the Nigeria Governors Forum,
which is recognised by President Goodluck Jonathan while Akpabio is the
chairman of the PDP Governors Forum.
The committee was made up of retired Air
Commodore Dan Suleiman, General Anthony Haladu Hanaiya, Dr. Umar Ardo
and Wilberforce Juta.
Before the committee could reach the two
governors, Tukur’s enemies had mobilised the 37 state chairmen of the
party, who at an emergency meeting, passed a vote of no confidence in
him.
One of the chairmen, who spoke with our
correspondent but asked not to be named, said with this decision, Tukur
would have no option but to resign before or at the National Executive
Committee meeting that was held in Abuja on Thursday.
He said, “You can see what we have done
tonight. The passing of vote of no confidence in Tukur signifies the end
of his tenure. We are going to meet with the President tomorrow and
tell him our resolution. We won’t allow him to kill the party before
asking him to leave. Enough of this rubbish.”
As this was going on, majority of the
members of the National Working Committee of the party, which Tukur was
heading, were also laying ambush for him. They had refused to be part of
the meeting he called on Monday.
Our correspondent, who was at the
national secretariat of the party in Abuja, observed that majority of
the national officers of the party were within the premises but refused
to honour the meeting called by Tukur. Tukur was however joined by three
other officers namely, National Secretary, Prof. Wale Oladipo; National
Treasurer, Bala Buhari; and the National Auditor, Mr. Adewole
Adeyanju.
But the four party officers were unable
to deliberate on any issue because they didn’t form the needed quorum as
stipulated in the party’s constitution. The NWC consists of 12 people
and to form a quorum, eight of them should be in attendance at the
meeting. Part V111 (4) of the constitution says that “The quorum of the
National Working Committee meeting shall be two-third of membership
drawn from at least two third of the zones in the country and a simple
majority shall pass any motion.”
Investigations by our correspondent
showed that after waiting till 12.43pm, Tukur decided to call off the
meeting. He drove in his convoy with his security details out of the
party secretariat around 12.46pm. The national chairman refused to
acknowledge greetings from security men and employees of the party while
leaving. However, as soon as the national chairman left, other national
officers of the party, apart from the Deputy National Secretary, Mr.
Solomon Onwe, called another meeting where they met briefly.
Onwe, who was seen briefly within the
party’ secretariat, was said to have “cleverly left” as he was said not
be seen to be fraternising with any of the groups. Those in attendance
at the second meeting were the Deputy National Chairman, Prince Uche
Secondus; National Youth Leader, Abdulahi Mainasira; National Publicity
Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh; National Financial Secretary, Mr. Bolaji
Anani; National Organising Secretary, Alhaji Abubakar Mustapha; and the
National Legal Adviser, Mr. Victor Kwon.
Tukur had stepped on so many toes in his
short stay in office. Apart from the numerous grudges by the NWC
members over his leadership style which they silently described as being
high-handed, he was also accused of not holding meetings regularly and
not carrying them along while taking major decisions like the sacking of
state executives, equating his (Tukur’s) personal assistants with them
and others.
Before then, the five governors that
defected from the party had also complained about his leadership. The
governors, Rotimi Amaechi(Rivers); Rabiu Kwankwanso (Kano); Murtala
Nyako(Adamawa); Abdulfatah Ahmed (Kwara); and Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto) had
defected to the All Progressives Congress, claiming that the leadership
of the PDP was autocratic. Few weeks ago, 37 members of the House of
Representatives also left the PDP to join the APC while 27 out of the 30
members of the Sokoto State House of Assembly also left the ruling
party.
Even with this, the governors of the
party and the Presidency were not moved. However, it was learnt that
Tukur incurred the wrath of the governors when he started courting the
enemies of some of the serving governors with the hope of giving them
the party’s governorship ticket in 2015.
The governors became apprehensive,
thinking that they might not be allowed to have a say in who succeeds
them. That was the last straw that broke the camel’s back. The governors
met, took a decision that it would be suicidal for them if they would
not have any say on who succeeds them.
That was why they joined hands with
Tukur’s enemies and supported those clamouring for his removal. When
they did, the pleas by his supporters led by the wife of the President,
Mrs. Patience Jonathan, were ignored. Now, Tukur has joined the league
of former national chairmen of the party who left office
unceremoniously.
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