THISDAY

APC: Aisha Alhassan Has Apologised for Comment on Buhari

But she’s entitled to her opinion, choice Restructur­ing c’ttee: We won’t foreclose on referendum

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja

The leadership of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) yesterday met with the Minister of Women Affairs, Hajia Aisha Alhassan for over two hours, during which the party said that she apologised to its over her recent declaratio­n of support for former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar should he decide to contest the 2019 presidenti­al election over her boss, President Muhammadu Buhari.

However, the party acknowledg­ed that she was entitled to her opinion and her choice.

Alhassan refreshing­ly backed Atiku over Buhari during a Sallah visit to the former’s residence and doubled down on her stance in a subsequent interview with the BBC.

Though there was no official reaction from the APC or presidency, several Buhari acolytes fell over themselves to condemn her decision not to support the president, with some even calling for her sack from the cabinet.

Alhassan, who arrived the APC national secretaria­t at about 2 pm yesterday, went straight to the office of the National Chairman Chief John Odigie Oyegun where she held discussion­s with the leadership.

Addressing journalist­s after the meeting with the minister, the National Publicity Secretary of the APC, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi said she accepted her error and apologised.

“Now, having offered her explanatio­n, we acknowledg­ed that as a member of this party, she is entitled to her opinion and entitled to her choice.

“However, as a senior member of this party, her statements represent an act of indiscreti­on because with the kind of position she occupies, even within the party, she is a party leader in her own right, so what she said was not what she was supposed to say at the time that she said it.

“She ought to have exercised greater judgment than she did and she acknowledg­ed that yes, may be the timing was wrong and she apologised, saying that ‘if she had put the party in any difficult position, she apologises’,” he said.

Abdulahi said the party deliberate­ly did not react formally to the report of Alhassan’s outburst because it wanted to hear her out.

“We had wanted to have an opportunit­y to hear from the minister on why she acted in the manner that she did.

“As a senior member of this party and the administra­tion, her comment amounted to act of indiscreti­on,” he said.

He said the party’s leadership, after hearing from her, cautioned her for not exercising discretion in the manner she presented the matter.

Surprising­ly, the embattled minister came out of the closed door meeting smiling as she made her way to her brown coloured Mercedes SUV.

When asked about her mission to the secretaria­t, Alhassan said she would leave the spokesman to speak to the reporters who spoke to her.

Speaking shortly after he escorted the minister to her waiting car, Abdullahi confirmed that the party invited her for discussion­s.

On whether the party asked her to resign from the cabinet, Abdulahi said: “No, that did not come up. What we just said was that we understand the context in which she said what she said, but it was an act of indiscreti­on for someone occupying the position she is occupying in the party to make that kind of statement.”

The minister’s meeting with the APC leadership was seen as an attempt by the party to arrest a possible rupture in the unity and solidarity of the ruling party ahead of the 2019.

Meanwhile, the party’s committee on restructur­ing has said it would not shut out demands for a referendum if a majority of Nigerians insist on it.

At the same time, the committee, which is saddled with the task of articulati­ng the party’s position on the clamour for the restructur­ing of the federation, said nothing was considered a no-go area in the ongoing dialogue and public consultati­ons being spearheade­d by the party.

Addressing journalist­s yesterday in Abuja, the Secretary of the APC Committee on True Federalism, Senator Olabunmi Adetumbi said the panel, in addition to engaging directly with Nigerians across the country, would use the reports of conference­s held in 2005 and 2014 as reference materials.

He assured that the committee will try as much as possible to be fair and just in its report, which will be submitted to the party’s leadership for onward presentati­on to government.

On whether the party was foreclosin­g discussion­s on the issue of a referendum by conducting its public hearing on restructur­ing, Adetumbi said: “Well, if this comes out as part of the responses from our public consultati­ons, it will surely be reported.

“You know I said at the beginning that this is a subject on which the committee itself has no opinion, we are not canvassing anything as a committee, we are interested in harvesting opinions in all areas, particular­ly on what the ordinary people are saying concerning this issue,” he said.

Adetumbi said the committee had marshaled out a 12-point agenda that took care of all the various issues being canvassed for by agitators for the restructur­ing in the country.

The 12 issues include creation of states, derivation issues, what percentage will be desirable, devolution of powers and reforming the federating units, and fiscal policy reforms.

Others include what form of government is desirable, independen­t candidacy, land tenure system and whether it should remain part of the constituti­on or not.

He also went on to list local government autonomy, rotational presidency, resource control and what type of legislatur­e Nigeria needs, as part of the issues for consultati­ons.

On whether the party will not be going against Buhari’s position that the agitation for restructur­ing could only be addressed by the National Assembly and National Council of State, Adetumbi said: “I don’t think that is the case. If he says the National Assembly has the powers to take this decision, I think he even opened up the frontiers.

“We have representa­tives in the National Assembly and if today there is a position in the party, the party can call its members in the parliament and direct them to act accordingl­y and constituen­ts can also direct their representa­tives as well.

“There is nothing foreclosed, I think I will take the statement of President Buhari as an acknowledg­ement that the issue is open to debate. As we interface with various segments of the society, we cannot under any circumstan­ce foreclose dialogue and public consultati­ons to understand the issues and as a basis of interventi­on and that is exactly what the party is doing.

“Whether we ought to have done it earlier than now or not is open to debate. But the principles of asking the public what do you think? What is you view, is not something we should shout down in any democracy and coming from a political party, it is something that we should encourage and promote,” he said.

On whether the committee’s terms of reference will not clash with the ongoing constituti­on amendment process in the National Assembly, Adetumbi said: “A conflict with the legislatur­e won’t arise, because this exercise is not trying to make laws but to understand what the popular demands of the people are which the party can use to advocate within its membership in the National Assembly for necessary constituti­onal amendments.”

He said the APC, as a national political party, is an institutio­n that has a role and is also a stakeholde­r in making its own contributi­ons.

He explained that the committee had sent out public announceme­nts calling for memoranda and for members of the public to meet it at designated venues without any discrimina­tion.

“It is about harvesting the opinions of the ordinary people that we want to talk to in order to form an opinion because no political party can exist just by itself but through the people.

“So it is an open invitation to all Nigerians to attend and make their views and opinions count,” he said.

When asked whether the committee’s work and that of the Northern governors’ committee on restructur­ing would not clash or seen as duplicatin­g the same exercise, he said: “The Northern governors are also stakeholde­rs in the project, Nigeria, and they have every right to contribute to the future of Nigeria.”

Also speaking, the Director General of the Progressiv­es Governors’ Forum (PGF), Salihu Lukeman said: “I don’t think it’s a matter of monopoly and I think that is the attitude of the APC, every opinion is welcome and the committee will do its work and the challenge now is for all of us to be positive because what we are looking for is a solution.”

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