THISDAY

APC Takes the Bull by the Horns, Plans Committee on Restructur­ing

Panel to comprise governors, National Assembly members from party

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja

In a major shift in its political posture since assuming power in May 2015, the All Progressiv­es Congress has resolved to address the issue of restructur­ing of the federation. THISDAY learnt that this was the highlight of a meeting held on Thursday night at the Imo State Governor's Lodge in Asokoro, Abuja, by the leadership of APC and state governors elected on the party's platform. A reliable source in the party said the meeting resolved to inaugurate a technical committee this week, which would comprise the APC leadership as well as some of its governors and National Assembly members, to work out details of the planned restructur­ing.

The APC government of President Muhammadu Buhari had since its inaugurati­on adopted a reluctant and evasive posture on the question of restructur­ing of the polity, despite promising it in the party’s manifesto while campaignin­g for

the 2015 presidenti­al election. Both the government and the party had poured cold water on persistent and widespread calls for political and economic reform. Last week, APC was quoted as saying that the government’s commitment to winning the antiterror­ism war and revamping the economy was delaying the restructur­ing of the country.

But one of the governors, who attended Thursday's meeting, said the gathering decided to set up the technical committee to harmonise the position of the party on the question of restructur­ing. The governor, who spoke in confidence, as he was not authorised to divulge details of the meeting, said after the committee's work the party would summon another meeting to chart the way forward.

He said, “Of course, we discussed the Anambra governorsh­ip election, especially the threat to the election by IPOB, and the leaders of the APC in the South-east who attended the meeting assured us that the boycott was not going to have any effect.”

The governor said the meeting also discussed the arrangemen­ts for the party's mini-convention. He said the leaders agreed to start with the process of local government congresses in states where existing vacancies in the party’s executives needed to be filled.

The APC national chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, who briefed the meeting on the matter, was said to have told the attendees that the party had already constitute­d the team that would conduct the local government congresses. He disclosed that the exercise would take off in September.

The governor said another matter, which came up at the meeting of the APC leaders, was the statement by the governor of Ekiti State, Mr. Ayo Fayose, that Buhari's sickness had deteriorat­ed to the extent that he was on life support. He said the governors and members of the party's National Working Committee condemned Fayose’s penchant for attacks on Buhari.

Another party source told THISDAY yesterday that the APC leadership had deliberate­ly delayed the National Executive Committee meeting and the mid-term convention in the hope that Buhari would recover from his illness and come back to be part of the exercise. He said, “That is why we are slowing down action on the matter because if we go into the NEC or the miniconven­tion without President Buhari's presence, it will give the impression that we have moved on.”

Odigie-Oyegun had told journalist­s after the meeting with the governors that they resolved to take measures to check the spread of political agitations and activities that threatened national unity. He stated that the party viewed the wave of agitations across the country with concern.

The APC national chairman stated, "We discussed issues affecting the nation and the impact of the current wave of agitations across the country. We decided to strengthen the party. We decided that the kind of verbiage and incendiary statements by different groups were not good for the health of the nation and we decided that it had to stop

"For that reason, we have taken certain measures, which I will not disclose here, to ensure that the basic and fundamenta­l unity of this country is preserved while at the same time listening to whatever grievances anybody has to say.”

Individual­s in APC have held divergent views on the issue of reform. Odigie-Oyegun said recently that the party could not ignore the clamour for restructur­ing. But Kaduna State Governor Nasir el-Rufai and others, especially from the North, believed the party remained opposed to the report of the 2014 national conference conducted by the Peoples Democratic Party government of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, which dealt extensivel­y with restructur­ing.

However, APC explicitly promised restructur­ing in its manifesto. Section 25 of the manifesto states, “APC believes that our politics is broken. Our nation urgently needs fundamenta­l political reform and improvemen­t in governance to make it more transparen­t and accountabl­e. APC will:

“1. Initiate action to amend our Constituti­on with a view to devolving powers, duties and responsibi­lities to states and local government­s in order to entrench federalism and the federal spirit.”

Section 24(3) of the manifesto says the APC administra­tion will, “Begin widespread consultati­ons to amend the Constituti­on to decentrali­se the police command and expand local content by including community policing.”

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