The Guardian (Nigeria)

Secret plots against 2023, zoning

- By Leo Sobechi ( Assistant Politics Editor)

FIVEbroad issues seem to be fueling upheavals surroundin­g the buildup to the 2023 election cycle, which is less than two years away. These issues include President Muhammadu Buhari’s performanc­e and leadership style, arguments for and against zoning of the presidenti­al slot, simmering crisis within the governing All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC), mutual suspicion within the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP), and calls by ethnic nationalit­ies for restructur­ing the governance organogram of the country.

Despite the general climate of insecurity arising from banditry and kidnapping across various parts of the country, calculatio­ns and scheming by politician­s have continued to fuel suspense and uncertaint­y in the country.

Governance would soon take the back seat, especially as state governors engage in roundthe- clock politickin­g and deliberati­ng about who goes where in 2023. The situation has become so tensed that penultimat­e week, no less than three northern state governors relocated their weekly state executive council meetings to Abuja.

But as the politician­s scheme, some citizens express worry that 2023 may not turn out peaceful, particular­ly given recollecti­ons that democracy had not gained much- needed experience and traction in terms of strengthen­ing the institutio­ns.

Furthermor­e, strident calls for restructur­ing by ethnic nationalit­ies, especially plans by the Middle Belt or North Central geopolitic­al zone to align with the South on the issue of restructur­ing make the horizon cloudy as far as 2023 election is concerned.

It could be against the background of this threat of dissemblin­g by the North Central that immediate past President of Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki, declared recently that the geopolitic­al zone would determine the future of Nigeria.

Although Saraki was alluding to the huge economic potential of the geopolitic­al zone and its contributi­on to Nigeria’s developmen­t, he contended that the North Central region deserves every considerat­ion that others expect, noting that the zone should also be seen as belonging to Nigeria and not a mere numerical appendage.

Yet some commentato­rs expressed the view that the North Central geopolitic­al zone does not possess the cohesion and political stamina to determine the future of things in the country. Those who doubt North Central’s ability to serve as the pilot of Nigeria’s future point to the existence of disparate cleavages, including the Middle Belt Forum and the North Central Peoples Forum, as denying the zone of the necessary unity to assert itself decisively.

However, as the North Central, which ordinarily helps the north to exercise dominance, has decided to take its destiny in its hand, it is possible that no single zone would arrogate to itself the power to do and undo things come 2023in Nigerian politics.

Consequent­ly, even if the NCPF panders to the political whims of the North and the MBF tags on with South, the balance of political forces would without doubt force the stakeholde­rs to the discussion table. That, to an extent is a pointer to the possibilit­y of more alliances and mutual assurances.

In the last analysis, every calculatio­n for the 2023 presidenti­al poll points to the reality that partisan inclinatio­ns would continue to generate heat as the days go by. Buhari’s ‘ poorforman­ce’

NOTHING evidences President Buhari’s performanc­e in office than the plethora of aspirants rearing to succeed him and the level of insecurity in the country. When he campaigned to be president, Nigerian electorate

believed that as a former military officer, the President would deploy his military expertise to dislodge the Boko Haram insurgents. That was after former opposition politician­s rallied round his famed integrity to build a multi- party alliance to gift him with a consensus presidenti­al ticket.

Five years in the saddle as President, despite health challenges that defined his first term, Buhari has not battled Boko Haram and corruption to a standstill, but succeeded in raising the country to the despiteful height as the world’s poverty capital.

Without alluding to his performanc­e, President Buhari had, during a National Executive Committee ( NEC) of APC, warned his fellow party faithful to be careful and ensure that the party did not unravel after his tenure in 2023. Ever since he made that observatio­n, state governors elected on the party’s platform began moves to possess the party structure as well as model it in such a way as to make it remain competitiv­e for the 2023 electoral battle.

The governors’ schemes not only led to the dismantlin­g of the party’s National Working Committee ( NWC) that was elected in August 2018, but also the coupling of an unconstitu­tional National Caretaker and Extraordin­ary Convention Planning Committee ( NCECPC) led by one of them, the governor of Yobe State, Alhaji Mai Mala Buni.

Although Buni had, prior to his election as governor, served as APC National Secretary, his selection as chairman of NCECPC sent shockwaves in the minds of party faithful, with some explaining the choice as part of the long term plan to raise Buhari’s successor from the Northeast geopolitic­al zone. By choosing to be aloof and remain behind the scene, Buhari subtly encouraged the frenzy over the 2023 politics that has become a huge source of distractio­n within his administra­tion.

Peeved by the prevailing scramble for political positions in the governing party, the main opposition PDP blamed Buhari’s poor leadership, saying that APC governors have unwittingl­y sidelined the President due to his failure to rise to the challenge. While claiming that the President has been reduced to a ‘ lame duck’, PDP, in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Kola Ologbondiy­an, said the APC leaders’ actions “were being driven by the manifest failure of the Buhari administra­tion in all sectors of national life.”

The main opposition party noted that the

“frenzy at which the APC has commenced the 2023 election campaign further confirmed that the APC leadership is now looking beyond its current structure and government, apparently having realised that the next three years under Buhari would be a waste.”

PDP stated: “The undergroun­d moves by APC leaders to disown the Buhari administra­tion, given its failures, the conversati­on about possible change of their party’s name as well as the plot to destabilis­e the PDP are signs of desperatio­n to hold onto power despite APC’S failures and explicit rejection by Nigerians.

“The attitude and character of the APC have manifestly shown that it is mortally afraid to stand election in 2023, given that Nigerians have seen through their antics and are determined not to have anything to do with such a deceitful, beguiling, divisive and incompeten­t party in future elections.

“APC has shown that it is a party without conscience; the reason it has failed, in the last five years, to bring together a Board of Trustees that ought to serve as the custodian of its supposed ideals and principles.”

Some observers have also noted that President Buhari’s refusal to change the service chiefs in spite of increasing evidence of lack of distinguis­hed exploits is to avert a possible push for regime change. The Presidency’s recent clampdown of # ENDSARS protesters is evident of how jittery the government is.

The Northern Elders Forum ( NEF) have been steadfast in its calls on President Buhari to sack the service chiefs and inject fresh blood in the fight against insecurity in the country, especially the Boko Haram insurgency.

NEF has repeatedly expressed the belief that the service chiefs, whose tenure had long elapsed, have run of out of ideas. Shortly after the # ENDSARS protests that rocked various parts of the country, NEF urged Buhari to deploy similar energy with which he promptly dissolved SARS to dispense with the service chiefs.

In a statement titled, “Northern Elders Forum on Developmen­ts Related to Policing Nigeria,” the group said the security situation in the country has become a source of national embarrassm­ent. According to the statement signed by its Director, Publicity and Advocacy, Dr. Hakeem Baba Ahmed, the forum stated: “NEF demands that the spirit deployed against SARS should be visited on policing and securing the north.

“We further demand a complete overhaul of our policing and security agencies, starting with the removal of Service Chiefs and the involvemen­t of responsibl­e opinion in initiative­s that will address the manner the nation is designed to be policed and secured.

“We appeal to fellow Nigerians to show the highest levels of restraint and maturity in the manner we organize the defence of our rights. Under no circumstan­ces should we encourage acts that increase our exposure to crime, lawlessnes­s and insecurity.

“There have been many abuses that ought to have been checked by this and earlier administra­tions, but were ignored or treated with levity owing to very low levels of respect for accountabi­lity.

“It is a sad commentary on the manner this administra­tion approaches sensitive matters such as security of citizens that it had to be forced into taking this decision after serious damage to the integrity and credibilit­y of our policing and security institutio­ns.” Zoning brouhaha

THE issue of zoning has never been as contentiou­s as in the buildup to the 2023 election cycle. In the period leading to the 2015 poll, the general singsong among politician­s from the north was that the unwritten power rotation arrangemen­t demands that the north should take over from former President Goodluck Jonathan.

Currently within the two big political parties - the governing APC and main opposition PDP - the question of which region between the north and south should throw up Buhari’s successor is at the centre of schemes.

For APC, stakeholde­rs from Northeast claim that there was an unwritten agreement between the Presidency and their leaders that in the event of its support for President Buhari’s re- election with massive votes, it would be reciprocat­ed by supporting a candidate from the zone to succeed Buhari in 2023.

Sources within APC disclosed that immediatel­y President Buhari was inaugurate­d for a second term in office, APC stalwarts from Northeast began making moves to ensure that the zone produces the party’s presidenti­al standard- bearer come 2023.

The dissolutio­n of the party’s National Working Committee ( NWC), led by Adams Oshiomhole and the creation of a National Caretaker and Extraordin­ary Convention Planning Committee ( NCECPC), headed by the Yobe State governor, Buni, were said to be the first step towards actualizin­g the promise made to the Northeast prior to the 2019 poll. As if acting on the intelligen­ce, some critical stakeholde­rs in PDP argue that since the

power rotation arrangemen­t within the party produced a southern President in the person of Jonathan, the north should still retain the right to produce the next presidenti­al candidate in 2023.

Rivers State governor, Nyesom Wike, had in the build up to the Edo State governorsh­ip election stated that PDP was mindful of winning election, arguing that zoning comes when you are in power. Similarly, some PDP chieftains from Southeast geopolitic­al zone believe that since restructur­ing remains central to a better Nigeria, the Atiku/ Obi joint ticket should be retained in 2023.

Sources within the opposition party confided in The Guardian that it was based on this knowledge that PDP has resolved to retain the Atiku/ Obi ticket that prompted Ebonyi State governor, Dave Umahi, to jump ship and settled for APC.

Yet, troubled by PDP’S resolve to represent the Atiku/ Obi presidenti­al ticket, chieftains of the governing APC continue to adopt shifting positions on the issue of zoning. Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, came out recently to admonish his fellow APC leaders to cease from further underhand schemes to breach the zoning arrangemen­t agreed by the party in the course of its merger talks.

Noting that the agreement was a gentleman’s gesture, Fashola, who was Lagos State governor, asserted that although Nigeria’s Constituti­on does not provide for a zoning formula, “it is a matter of honour for parties who had entered into such agreements to stay true to their words.”

Fashola maintained that the constituti­on that sets up the requiremen­ts of political party formation does not prescribe zoning, stressing: “If people made an agreement, as a matter of honour, they should keep to the terms of their agreement, whether it is written or verbal. The truth is that what makes an agreement efficaciou­s is the honour with which it is made, not whether it is written or verbal.”

It was gathered from sources within the Presidency that Fashola must have spoken against the background of claims by some northern political actors that since Northwest and Southwest have been holding sway from 2015, fairness demands that Northeast and Southeast be allowed to succeed President Buhari.

Some APC bigwigs contend that the entire argument about zoning the 2023 presidenti­al slot was predicated on the avowed determinat­ion of some northern leaders to ensure that former Lagos State governor, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, was not allowed to succeed Buhari. It was gathered that during the merger talks among the legacy former opposition parties, northern delegates cleverly insisted that the idea of zoning was not included in the party’s constituti­on, describing it as “unconstitu­tional and contentiou­s.”

Despite the fact that APC campaigned for power shift to the north in 2015, after Buhari mounted the saddle, politician­s from the zone began to harp on merit as opposed to zoning of political offices as basis of leadership selection. First to drop the clangor was President Buhari’s nephew, Mamman Daura, who dismissed the clamour for zoning.

Also, Kaduna State governor, Mallam Nasir Ahmad el- Rufai contended that everybody who is qualified should be given equal opportunit­y to contest political positions. As if alluding to the experience of the past five years, el- Rufai argued that zoning would lead to inefficien­cy.

The Kaduna State governor told the audience at the Nigeria Economic Summit Group ( NESG) in Abuja: “There is no country in the world that has made progress in the last 50 years that rotates its leaders. I think if we

move away from this fixation about distributi­on to selecting or picking the best person to get the job done… when the job is done, everybody benefits. Right now, we are distributi­ng this and we are not making any progress because the focus is on distributi­on.”

Onsurface

value, the makeup of APC consisted of All Nigeria Peoples Party ( ANPP), Action of Congress of Nigeria ( ACN), Congress for Progressiv­e Change ( CPC), Democratic Peoples Party ( DPP) and a splinter of All Progressiv­es Grand Alliance ( APGA), but leaders of ACN and CPC carry on as if they are the only owners of the platform.

Then outside political party circles, President Buhari and Tinubu believe that they are the prime movers of APC, even as Tinubu goes away with the inner confidence that he welded the merger that produced APC. On the basis of the contradict­ing postures and expectatio­ns, APC has continued to search for a staying idea outside the persons of Buhari and Tinubu.

While Tinubu and the Southwest caucus of APC believe that they powered the party and Buhari to defeat PDP in 2015, Buhari and his inner circle believe that Tinubu’s claim of being the alter ego of the party, including adopting the title of national leader is a direct negation of the fact that APC has a President.

Although the two leaders - Buhari and Tinubu - applied maturity in managing their difference­s, their acolytes have continued to wage undergroun­d battles of wits, leading to misunderst­anding and structural imbalance in the party. The mis- steps at the election of principal officers of the 8th National Assembly were the direct fallout of the internal contradict­ions in APC. On top of that, the party could not have a board of trustees or council of elders as suggested until the pioneer national chairman, Chief John Odigie Oyegun, who came from the ANPP flank, was denied a second term in office.

While the ACN flank exulted in producing the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo and the second national chairman of APC in Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, the CPC flank consoled itself with the Presidency and bided for time. That time came when Oshiomhole got entangled in a supremacy battle with his erstwhile state governor, Godwin Obaseki. The powers that- be wasted no time in appropriat­ing the APC structure to the dismay of the Southwest and ACN flank.

The visit of the interim national chairman, Bisi Akande, Segun Osoba and other Southwest leaders on President Buhari

APC recurring troubles

penultimat­e week was ostensibly to register Southwest’s displeasur­e at the unfolding drama of obvious attempts to sideline them and incorporat­e former opponents from the Southeast.

IN

the seeming loss of amity between the Presidency and Southwest caucus of APC, some party leaders from the north have been looking in the direction of Southeast as the new bride. In perfecting the decoy, Southeast is being made to appreciate possible presidenti­al support for the 2023 Presidency, so that at the eleventh hour the anointed northern candidate from the Northeast would emerge.

A source in APC told The Guardian in confidence that at a meeting between Tinubu and Ambassador Babagana Kingibe last December in Abuja, the former Lagos State governor told Kingibe that the plans to use superior delegate numbers to rob the south of the presidency would lead to a waterloo for APC unless it was done through consensus.

The source explained that instead of jolting the presidency, the informatio­n about the meeting excited strategic conversati­ons, which according to him threw up the plan to “engage the Southeast and exploit their political naivety.”

It would be recalled that former Chief of Staff to the President, Mallam Abba Kyari, was at the forefront of campaigns for Southeast to be considered for the 2023 presidency. The Secretary to the Government of the Federation ( SGF), Mr. Boss Mustapha, had prior to the 2019 poll at a rally in Owerri, enjoined Nd’igbo to vote for President Buhari, stressing that doing so was their shortest way to the presidency in 2023.

Currently, APC leaders in Southeast are upbeat, bubbling with optimism that the zone would be supported for the presidency. Imo State governor, Senator Hope Uzodimma, perhaps out of enthusiasm as the APC leader in the zone, told State House correspond­ents recently, “Everybody that is not in APC now in the Southeast is a target. It is not only governors. It includes the entire political class.”

If the fishing expedition, according to Uzodimma, “is to have all politician­s in the zone in APC,” it could not be ascertaine­d whether promises or concession­s being made to them are written in black and white, or it is another gentleman’s agreement in the making as was given to the Southwest in 2014.

BUT,

not to be outplayed in the game of wits, the Southwest flank of APC, after

Southeast decoy Southwest fight back

noticing the scheme to limit their relevance towards the 2023 calculatio­ns, decided to wake sleeping dogs through litigation. Members of the Oshiomhole faction of APC NWC that are said to be lo yal to Tinubu approached an Abuja Federal High Court, praying for the reinstatem­ent of the dissolved working committee, which members were duly elected at the party’s convention.

The group, led by Mr. Hilliard Etagboeta, contended that the Buni- led NCECPC is an interloper, stressing that its existence does not receive the blessing of the party’s constituti­on. Joined in the suit are members of NCECPC, specifical­ly Governor Buni, Sen. John Akpan Udoedehe, the National

Secretary, Isiaka Oyetola, Sani Bello , Stella Oketete and the Independen­t National Electoral Commission ( INEC).

A look at the originatin­g summons shows that unless wise counsel prevails, the litigation would mar the progress of APC, especially its plans to undertake membership registrati­on and hold its national con vention. When the court sits on the matter , it would examine among other claims, “whether ha ving regard to Section 183 of the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 ( as amended) and Article 17 ( iv) of the Constituti­on of All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC) it is an illegality and a void act for a person to hold an executive office in government simultaneo­usly with an office in any organ of the All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC) at any level, in whatever capacity.”

Other issues formulated for determinat­ion by the plaintiffs include, “Whether ha ving regard to Section 183 of the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Articles 20() a), 170) and ( iv) of the Constituti­on of the All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC), only persons who are not disqualifi­ed from holding office by virtue of the Constituti­on may run the affairs of the party including the holding of National Convention­s and Congresses of the All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC).

“Whether an act perpetuate­d in violation of Section 183 of the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 ( as amended), Article 17( iii) and ( iv) and 20) of the Constituti­on of the APC is void ab initio, conferring or extinguish­ing no legal rights whatsoever.”

If the court resolves the claims in fa vour of the plaintiffs, it would grant the prayers of the plaintiffs by setting aside and nullifying the appointmen­t and constituti­on of the 1st to 5th defendants into a caretaker/ extraordin­ary convention planning committee of the all progressiv­es congress ( APC).

Furthermor­e, the 6th respondent, INEC, would be restrained by a perpetual injunction from recognisin­g and or continuing to recognise the 1st to 5th defendants as National Chairman, National Secretar y or members respective­ly of the NCECPC of APC. T

HE fact that most of the state governors elected on the platform of PDP are serving out the last constituti­onal terms of their mandate is behind the quiet agitation for a review of the zoning arrangemen­t, especially concerning elective party positions.

The defection of Governor Umahi of Ebonyi State raised concerns as to whether some of his colleagues were also planning to change platform to pursue their political future. Of the four PDP governors from the north, only the Sokoto and Taraba chief executives, Alhaji Aminu Waziri T ambuwal and Architect Darius Ishaku, are on their final term.

While Tambuwal contested the presidenti­al ticket in 2018, there are indication­s that he might contest again or go to the Senate where he is most likely to emerge President of Senate if PDP sustains the Atiku/ Obi joint presidenti­al ticket.

Read the remaining part of this ar ticle

on wwwguardia­n. ng

PDP pretention­s

 ??  ?? El Rufai
El Rufai
 ??  ?? Buhari
Buhari
 ??  ?? Atiku
Atiku
 ??  ?? Fashola
Fashola
 ??  ?? Buni
Buni

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