Daily Trust Sunday

Amidst wrangling, PRP strategise­s to replace NEPU for 2023

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From Hassan Ibrahim (Bauchi), Balarabe Alkasim (Abuja), Lami Sadiq, Maryam AhmaduSuka & Mohammed Ibrahim Yaba (Kaduna), Clement A. Oloyede & Ibrahim Musa Giginyu (Kano),

TPRP and its prospects he Peoples Redemption Party (PRP) sprang a surprise in the 2019 elections when it won two House of Representa­tives seat in Bauchi State. The party won Bauchi and Katagum federal constituen­cies in the election.

Barrister Ahmed Umar Farouk, the deputy governorsh­ip candidate of the PRP in Bauchi State, said what accounted for the impact of the party in 2019 was the failure of previous administra­tions and failure of leadership in delivering promises made to the people which in turn brought the general awareness to reject the ruling party.

“If you look at the forerunner­s of the party and their antecedent­s it gave the people the encouragem­ent to go for the PRP. After almost 40 years and if you also look at the credibilit­y of the people that the party fielded in the last election it was not in doubt, it was not in contest that all the candidates were people of credible character.

“Unfortunat­ely, many people are not so much aware of politics of principle which is why the party lost the 2019 election at the dying minutes because of the money politics introduced by the PDP but we are hoping gradually that people are beginning to see that even the PDP and the so-called people who believe in money politics when elected don’t actually provide the money, it is all shambles,” Farouk said.

He added that the party had been on the watch in Bauchi.

“Now that we have seen the glaring inefficien­cy and incapacity of the administra­tion, you can see that we are coming up. If you look at the number of people who have purchased PRP forms to contest the local government election you will understand that people are disenchant­ed with the ruling party. If you look at the opinions of Bauchi people, they trusted the then ruling APC before the 2019 election and it really didn’t satisfy them and out of desperatio­n they went for the PDP and they now realize that the PDP is even worse than the APC, so Bauchi people are now seeing the PRP as their best alternativ­e.”

The Bauchi State PRP chairman, Alhaji Shehu Barau NIngi, hinged the election of two members of the House Representa­tives from Bauchi on political awareness of the people of Bauchi and Azare and the history of the PRPs struggle of resisting injustice and unjust rulers against ordinary people. “During the 2019 election PRP members defended their votes without fear of intimidati­on from anyone. The political awareness in these two cities was responsibl­e for the PRP’s ability to defeat the incumbent candidates.

The chairman added, “If the party had campaigned earlier in Bauchi during the 2019 election the PRP would have won the governorsh­ip election because we started campaignin­g three months before the election and visited only seven LGAs but we come third in the election. If you come and see

how hundreds of people are trooping for PRP forms to contest the forthcomin­g local government election you will know the support base in Bauchi because people are tired of deception.”

Cracks in PRP as Balarabe Musa alleges factionali­sation

We know of no faction – Party chairman

Cracks have however emerged within the party following internal wranglings between the Board of Trustees (BOT) chairman, Alhaji Abdulkadir Balarabe Musa, and the party’s national chairman, Alhaji Falalu Bello.

Falalu Bello, a former

Managing Director of Unity Bank, emerged the PRP’s national chairman in September 2018, succeeding Balarabe Musa, a former governor of Kaduna State who had announced his retirement from active politics in 2018.

However, Musa who spoke with Daily Trust on Sunday described the PRP’s present state as factionali­sed, saying the division was partly due to disagreeme­nts concerning the ideology and structure of the party.

“We have problems within the party now. You know we handed the leadership of the party in 2018 to a younger person, but unfortunat­ely the younger person is not capable and we have a lot of problems,” he said.

“Some people think we should change while some people say no, that the PRP must maintain the ideology which we have maintained up till today because without it, we wouldn’t have been where we are now,” he further said.

The former governor said while they had tried to keep the division within the party, it had become unsuccessf­ul and led to the factionali­zation.

“So whatever happened even if we are factionali­sed, the solution is now convention of the party, this can be done within one year so that we have two years for campaignin­g because as it is now, we can’t maintain credible campaigns when we are divided,” he said.

Reacting, Alhaji Falalu Bello said he was not aware of any faction within the party but only a difference of opinions between himself and Balarabe Musa.

“He is the chairman, BOT and

I am the national chairman of the party, the constituti­on of the party has provided roles of the Board of Trustees and the National Executive committee and we are respecting those provisions,” Bello said.

“I think there is a desire by some of them to control the party from the Board of Trustees which is not possible. The BOT has its own role and the national executive committee has its own role. I believe we have difference­s on how these two should function between myself and Malam Balarabe Musa, that much I agree,” he added.

Bello explained that until the delegates conference of September 2018 which ushered him to office, the PRP was a party ran by an individual, adding, “A group of us came up and we were elected as leaders at that delegates conference and in fact, Malalm Balarabe Musa is responsibl­e for bringing some of us into the leadership of PRP, essentiall­y because he felt the party needed new blood in its leadership.”

“We came just about a week to the national elections of 2019 and PRP fielded 285 candidates in 22 states of the federation, the highest it ever recorded since its creation. PRP is building itself to become relevant in the context of Nigerian political landscape.”

As for party ideology, Bello said the present executive committee had never gone outside the programmes and constituti­on of the party, adding that he would continue to lead the party based on its constituti­on until the next convention when members will be free to elect a replacemen­t.

 ??  ?? Barrister Ahmed Umar Farouk
Barrister Ahmed Umar Farouk

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