The Guardian (Nigeria)

Alao- Akala’s death renews crisis in Oyo APC

- From Seye Olumide and Rotimi Agboluaje, Ibadan

THEsudden death of former governor of Oyo State, Chief Christophe­r Alao- Akala must have altered political calculatio­n and contest for the soul of All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC) in the state.

Until his death, the Ogbomosho- born politician was chairman of the Elders Advisory Council of Oyo APC and was believed to have been calling the shots in the party he joined after APC lost 2019 governorsh­ip election to Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP).

Oyo State APC has been in deep crisis over the alleged attempt by PDP decampees, including Senator Teslim Balogun, often refereed to as conservati­ves, to hijack the party structure from old members that perceive themselves as progressiv­es.

The Guardian gathered that immediatel­y the death of Alao- Akala came to the knowledge of Senator Folarin, who is representi­ng Oyo south senatorial district in the Senate, he broke down in tears, just like Isaac Omodewu, who Alao- Akala installed as new chairman of the party in a controvers­ial congress held in the state.

The new executive put in place by Alao- Akala has not been inaugurate­d due to plethora of petitions against the congress that produced them.

Observers say the progressiv­e tendency in APC may not be blamed for rebuffing Alao- Akala’s leadership because in the build up to the 2019 governorsh­ip election, the former governor left APC to the Action Democratic Party ( ADP), where he contested for the office of governor alongside Prof. Abideen Olaiya as his running mate.

After the elections, AlaoAkala returned to APC and was later made the chairman of reconcilia­tion committee of the party by the late governor Ajimobi.

The unending reconcilia­tion of Oyo APC

ONE of the questions pundits continue to ask since Alao- Akala died is the impact his demise would have on the lingering crisis in the party, ahead of the planned February national convention.

Recently, Governor Gboyega Oyetola of Osun State was assigned to mediate and reconcile the conservati­ves, led by AlaoAkala and the progressiv­es led by the outgoing chairman Caretaker Committee,

Chief Akin Oke, but that has not been achieved before the former governor breathed his last on Wednesday.

The progressiv­es have insisted that the minority conservati­ves should be stopped from bringing PDP style of politics to displace custodians of progressiv­e politics in Oyo State, whereas the former governor had declared that era of impunity, dictatorsh­ip, lack of equality, justice and fairness in sharing of political positions, especially in the executive will not happen under his leadership.

In his projected new executive, Alao- Akala ensured that all the 33 local government­s in the state are adequately represente­d.

He said, “There are 33 Local Government­s with 36 executive positions. Each of the local government will produce a member each in the executive while the three remaining positions would be shared among the three senatorial districts.”

He also dismissed the insinuatio­n that he wanted to seize the party structure to help Folarin emerge, as the governorsh­ip candidate in 2023 while his son, would be presented as running mate. He described the allegation as figment of imaginatio­n of some members of the party.

On his alleged roles during the political turbulence in the state that led to impeachmen­t of former Governor Rashidi Ladoja when he was deputy governor, he said, “People don’t know what happened that time. I have tried to explain it in my memoir, which by the grace of God, will soon come out. For those who executed the plan to remove my boss, if they were to have their way and if not for constituti­onal barrier, I wouldn’t have been their candidate for the governorsh­ip position. But there was no way they could breach that constituti­onal provision, and there was no way they could remove both of us at the same time because I was not doing anything.

“I was hiding as a deputy governor. If they had their way, they would want another person to be the governor. I did not play any role in the impeachmen­t. I was in Ogbomoso when the impeachmen­t was done. I was not in Ibadan. I wouldn’t have allowed that impeachmen­t to take place. I would have just advised them to let us talk to my boss. My boss was adamant; he was fighting on all fronts that time and that was why they were able to hit him. He thought I was part of it, but I was not. I left Ibadan for all of them when I was about to be killed on December 18, 2005. I nearly lost my life; my office was bombarded. They fired bullets at my office. Luckily for me, I was not hit. The whole of governor’s office was deserted. I narrowly escaped being killed. I just used my experience to manoeuvre out of there. My then orderly also helped me to get out of the office.”

The most tedious battle Alao- Akala fought and won before he departed was his Appeal Court vindicatio­n over N11.5 billion corruption charges against him by the EFCC.

Whatever Alao- Akala’s shortcomin­gs in life and politics may be, he did not die with the label of a corrupt politician.

He was born on June 3, 1950, at Ogbomoso in the Ogbomoso North Local Government Area of Oyo State.

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Alao- Akala

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