The Guardian (Nigeria)

APGA meets to streamline position on Anambra guber

APC announces 12 aspirants for primary

- By Leo Sobechi

THE national leadership of All Progressiv­es Grand Alliance ( APGA) will meet in Abuja today to streamline its position on the Anambra State gubernator­ial election scheduled for November 6, 2021.

This is just as the All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC) has denied media reports that aspirants shunned its expression of interest and nomination forms for the poll.

National chairman of APGA, Chief Edozie Njoku, told The Guardian, yesterday, that some aspirants purchased forms from a faction of the party led by a former chairman, Victor Oye, at N22.5 million, while his faction, which he described as authentic, sold its set of forms at N12.5 million.

Njoku explained that the NWC meeting became imperative following representa­tions by well- meaning members of the party, stressing that the meeting would help APGA to ensure that no aspirant was disenfranc­hised.

“It has dawned on the teeming stalwarts of APGA that the mixture of law and facts favour the National Working Committee ( NWC) led by my humble self. We have bowed to the wishes of the members and summoned the NWC meeting to streamline our position and accommodat­e everybody,” he stated.

MEANWHILE, APC has pegged its expression of interest and nomination forms at N2.5 million and N20 million respective­ly, and fixed the governorsh­ip primary for June 26. However, no sooner had the party released notice for the commenceme­nt of the sale of forms than aspirants reportedly shunned the forms out of fear that the party was planning to favour a particular aspirant.

In a statement yesterday, Secretary of APC Caretaker and Extraordin­ary Convention Planning Committee ( CECPC), Senator John Akpanudoed­ehe, disclosed that “the party has no preferred aspirant,” pointing out that about 12 aspirants had already purchased the forms.

Akpanudoed­ehe assured that the party would conduct a transparen­t primary, adding that female as well as physically- challenged aspirants would pay 50 per cent of the prescribed fees.

An aspirant, Senator Andy Uba, said there was no truth in the speculatio­n that no aspirant paid for the party’s forms to contest the election.

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