The Guardian (Nigeria)

••• Exercise Leaves Kwara APC In Three- sided Battle

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THERE

are indication­s that ongoing political imbroglio within the governing All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC) in Kwara State might lead to realignmen­t of forces before 2023, as top political juggernaut­s in the state plot each other’s downfall. Initially, the crisis started like a child’s play only to snowball into a ball of fire as hostility flares from each of the warring blocs amid invectives. Governor Abdulraham­an Abdulrazak, Minister of Informatio­n, Lai Mohammed and Minister of State for Transporta­tion, Senator Gbemi Saraki, seem to be entangled in a three- sided power play. There are fears that the imbroglio involving the troika might stoke internal fissures. Ordinarily, the existing camps within Kwara APC include Governor Abdulrazak ( AA), Lai Mohammed, Gbemisola Saraki and Sunday Fagbemi, but AA and Fagbemi have come together as a group.

The real cause of the rift could not be officially disclosed but sources linked it with alleged refusal by some chieftains of the party to release to Abdulrazak for campaign, raised funds by “APC friends” during his quest for the seat of Governor.

“He, ( Abdulrazak) as the Governorsh­ip candidate, had to use his private funds for the campaign and election proper. He was denied access to the money. But, because of the people’s love for him, and his strong capital base as an industrial­ist, he solely bankrolled his campaign before his emergence. Again, some people want him to start seeing them as his godfathers, a proposal he had since rebuffed.

“Afterwards, those who deprived him of the funds started putting on Babanriga and obsolete suits savouring the victory they never participat­ed in. Put yourself in the shoes of the Governor, will you be at peace with such people? In fact many of them did not give him any chance but not with God,” said, a source from the state government house, Ilorin.

Besides, it was alleged that the same fate of deprivatio­n of raised funds befell the entire 24 member APC House of Assembly candidates forcing Abdulrazak to come to their aid financiall­y. The entire 24 but one eventually cruised to victories in the polls.

A House of Assembly source, speaking anonymousl­y said: “This show of insincerit­y to the lawmakers’ candidates of the party, led them to be in the lurch until the interventi­on of Abdulrazaq. That is the main reason the State House of Assembly is lending its supports to ‘ AA’ group in such a time like this.”

In all this, the governor refused to openly speak on the developmen­t, before and after his electoral victory. But, his body language suggested his outright rejection of Bashiru Omolaja Bolarinwa as the chairman of the party in the state. This did not go down with other groups within the party, which felt that the governor, already in control of both the Executive and Legislatur­e, could become too powerful for them to tackle in future. However, Governor Abdulrazak was said to have outsmarted them by securing the removal of Bolarinwa, the alleged lackey of Mohammed, as the party chairman, as well as facilitati­ng his replacemen­t with his Deputy, Alhaji Abdullah Samari.

While that was happening, some outsiders to the squabble accused the governor of sidelining the party from affairs of his government. But, Senator Makanjuola Ajadi, who is seen as the governor’s lackey, could be waiting for an opportunit­y. The developmen­t could have led to the recent emergence of Samari as the acting party chairman in the state.

Lai Mohammed took an exception to Bolarinwa’s removal just as the group led by Oyedepo, as they promptly organised press conference­s by themselves or proxies and sharply criticized the “calculated attempt by the governor to hijack the party structure.” For Oyedepo, the alleged exclusive control of the party structure was not part of the ideologies of the ‘ O To Ge’ movement that uprooted the age long political hegemony of Kwara State, under the dynasty of late Olusola Saraki.

He told The Guardian: “We are open to peaceful moves, there is no doubt on that. But, what will guarantee peace is the return of Bolarinwa. The national body should urgently intervene to save the soul of the party in the state.”

Similarly, Dr. Rex Kolawole Olawoye, a pharmacist turned politician said, the solution “lies with the governor. He is number one member in Kwara APC, he should therefore call all the aggrieved to a round table conference and for once proffer amicable solution to the raging crisis. If this is not resolved before the next general elections, the APC should forget about retaining power in the state.”

One other recent event that revived the rift in the party is the membership registrati­on. Those opposed to the ‘ AA’ group have called for the outright cancellati­on of the exercise in the state. And the Minister of Informatio­n and Culture, while justifying the clamour for the cancellati­on, cited alleged non- compliance with the laid down procedures of the party.

Mohammed at a press briefing at his Oro, Irepodun Local Government Area ( LGA) of the state conceded to the polarisati­on of the party in the state, but said only a section of what formed the entire membership of the party was unduly favoured in the exercise.

The Minister alleged that the exercise, which started in the state on Tuesday February 9, this year and scheduled to last for the next two weeks was devoid of diligent attention by the officials to the members as according to him, “many of the officials appeared just once” since the beginning of the exercise.

But reacting to the allegation­s, the interim state chairman, Alhaji Abdullah Samari, said the fact that Mohammed could be captured at his polling unit, ‘ PU 006, Oro Ward 2,’ for the re- registrati­on, “it means all the allegation­s are baseless as the exercise is not only credible, but a huge success.”

According to the Minister, “we had sent out our people to monitor the process to ensure compliance with the guidelines stipulated by the party. The reports from our monitoring teams are out, and I wish to inform you, gentlemen, that sadly, the whole exercise did not comply with the stipulated guidelines.

“The guidelines stipulate consultati­on with all stakeholde­rs by the Registrati­on Officials from Abuja. After the botched attempt to have a meeting of stakeholde­rs, due to orchestrat­ed violence, the Registrati­on Officials failed to consult with all stakeholde­rs before the commenceme­nt of the membership registrati­on exercise, opting instead to work with only one of the four tendencies here in Kwara, the Fagbemi Group to which the Governor belongs, thus excluding the three other tendencies - The Akogun Group, the Gbemi Saraki Group and the Lai Mohammed Group, without which the ‘ O To Ge’ Movement would not have succeeded.

“Ironically, the Fagbemi group, which is seen as the weakest of the four tendencies.

Out of the 193 wards in the state, the group has only nine ward chairmen and does not have even one local government chairman. Even at the state EXCO, the Fagbemi group has only four members. Also, the recruitmen­t of officials for the registrati­on has been a one- sided affair and indication­s are that the handpicked officials are under strict orders ‘ from above’ as to how to carry out the exercise. We have evidence to corroborat­e this.

“The guidelines are also clear on how registrati­on materials are to be handed over and distribute­d. It says officials for the assignment are prohibited from handing over registrati­on forms, other materials inclusive of registrati­on data in a manner not prescribed by the exercise to unauthoriz­ed persons, and that the materials ( forms, registers and others) are to be distribute­d directly to the Registrati­on Officers, and records of the distributi­on are to be captured and reported accordingl­y. Well, I regret to say that these particular provisions of the guidelines were not complied with.

“When the Registrati­on Officials from Abuja landed in Ilorin, they simply handed over the registrati­on materials to an individual, not recognized by the provisions of the guidelines, who has decided to hoard them instead of distributi­ng them to the wards ( we also have evidence to back this up).

“The implicatio­n is that the registrati­on is being carried out without Party Membership Register, while temporary membership slips, to be signed and detached from the forms after registrati­on, are not being given to those who have purportedl­y registered.”

He went on: “According to our findings, since the commenceme­nt of the registrati­on, over 80 per cent of the registrati­on units do not have either membership register or membership registrati­on slip. In the few places where they are available, they are kept in private apartments of some political office holders.

“In Baruten, the registrati­on materials were handed over to the Speaker of the State House of Assembly, who is from there. In Oyun, the materials were given to one Olayiwola Ojo, a member of the State House of Assembly. In Shao, in Northern Kwara, the registrati­on materials were taken to the police station, where the DPO of that station presided over membership registrati­on, in contravent­ion of the party guidelines.

“It was only when the people mobilized against the use of the police station for registrati­on that the illegality was stopped. What happened in Shao is the clearest indication yet that the police and other security agencies may be complicit in the mess being made of the membership registrati­on in Kwara State.

“Gentlemen, instead of membership registers, conniving registrati­on officials are using exercise books or foolscap sheets to register members. Even senior Kwara government officials and State House of Assembly members were made to write their details in the exercise books or foolscap sheets, in clear violation of the guidelines. We have pictorial and video evidence of this.”

 ??  ?? Kwara State Governor, Abdulrazaq Abdulrahma­n ( right) and Minister of Informatio­n and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed
Kwara State Governor, Abdulrazaq Abdulrahma­n ( right) and Minister of Informatio­n and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed

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