THEWILL NEWSPAPER

APC, PDP Must Zone Presidency to South to Save Nigeria

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The promise made by Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha, when he visited Imo State in 2019 that power would go to the South-East in 2023 and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo at the palace of the Alaafin of Oyo, that the party would zone the presidency to the SouthWest in 2023, went out of the window, just like that, by the National Chairman’s fiat.

“Some notable business and political leaders from the north have also called for the two leading political parties to support the rotation of presidenti­al power to the south

Yet, it was based on these promises that Governor Dave Umahi of Ebonyi State and his Cross River State counterpar­t, Prof. Ben Ayade, to mention a few, defected to the APC, to give it a foothold in the South-East and South-South where PDP had maintained a firm grip since the beginning of the Third Republic in 1999.

So, Senator Adamu saying the party would be forced to pick a northern candidate if the PDP picks a candidate from that zone is, to say the least, uncharitab­le as it flies in the face of fairness which should be a hallmark of principled politics.

The statement by Oluwarotim­i Akeredolu, SAN, an APC governor of Ondo State that the party is toying with fire by changing its stand on power shift to the South in 2023, should be a warning signal to the party of the magnitude of its volte face.

Recall that it was the party’s position on zoning that has made 30 aspirants emerge from the South until Adamu’s pronouncem­ent led Governor Mohammed Badaru of Jigawa State and Senate President Ahmed Lawan to join the 12 others that have so far obtained expression of interest and nomination forms as at last week. As Chairman of the South-West Governor’s Forum and spokespers­on of the 17 Southern Governors Forum, Akeredolu’s reaction speaks loudly of the impact awaiting the party, if it fails to uphold its promise.

We wish to remind both political parties that the ease with which their members defect from one to the other during every election cycle is because of their lack of cohesion and inability to reach a patriotic consensus on burning issues concerning the well-being of their members and by extension, the entire country.

What is a political party if its interests cannot converge with that of its members? What is the purpose of pursuing political power if not to deploy it in the service of the people? What is a party without its members?

This lack of political inclusion has often led to widespread apathy among Nigerians with the result that the idea of governance, which deals with involvemen­t of the people in government rather than government that deals with the elected and appointed officials, has made representa­tive democracy an elusive practice in the country.

The result of this misplaceme­nt of priorities and political alienation is all over the country today: the fragile nature of our multi-ethnic, diverse country; the stunted growth in all sectors of national life; unconcerne­d and mistrustfu­l people; failed political leadership, particular­ly since the current republic is marked by its uncaring, misguided, greedy, unfocused, nepotistic and profligate trademark.

It is against this backdrop of insensitiv­ity to the yearnings and plight of Nigerians that resorting to drumbeats of war is always a preferred course of action aimed at addressing salient issues.

Reacting to the situation, some stakeholde­rs have formed a common and united front to agitate for the presidency to rotate to the South after President Muhammadu Buhari’s 8-year stay in office.

To show that they mean business, dominant social and political organisati­ons in the South, such as Afenifere, led by Chief Ayo Adebanjo; Ohanaeze Ndigbo, led by former Nigerian Ambassador to United States of America, Prof. George Obiozor; and the Pan- Niger Delta Federation (PANDEF), led by Chief Edwin Clark, have found common ground with the 17 Southern Governors Forum made up of APC and PDP governors on the demand for rotation of power to the south and respect of the zoning principle.

Some notable business and political leaders from the north have also called for the two leading political parties to support the rotation of presidenti­al power to the south.

To fail to hear their demand and grant it is as good as saying the south and its political leaders do not matter in the political equation of a multi-ethnic and diverse country like Nigeria, where the fear of domination and marginalis­ation has reached such a level that faith and hope in a united Nigeria, going forward post-2023, could be hard to keep.

It is better to allay the fears and uncertaint­y surroundin­g the country’s future now. The two major political parties can only do this by keeping to their original plan to rotate power and zone the presidency to the South.

For the foregoing reasons, THEWILL demands that the APC and the PDP keep to their agreements and zone the presidency to the South in 2023. After all, the PDP and the APC provoked such demand by their agenda on zoning. We call on them to respect and keep to it. The interests of the people of the South have converged with that of the party. To do otherwise will only deepen apathy, fuel agitation for secession and self-determinat­ion currently gaining traction in the South.

We call on both parties to seize these auspicious moments in our beleaguere­d country to do the needful. It is time to heal the country of deceit, power mongering, indecision, impunity and lies. Rather than go back on their agenda on zoning with the possibilit­y of a political backlash against them, they should focus on competence, integrity, character and capacity of aspirants as criteria for choosing their candidates from the South. Only candidates who possess such enduring qualities can see beyond their enclave and govern Nigeria with due process and infuse the country with values of merit, equity, justice and fairness.

THEWILL believes that some of the aspirants on the platform of both parties possess the right qualities that qualify them to become President of Nigeria.

We have entered the month of May when political parties are by statute obliged to conduct their presidenti­al primaries and submit the names of their candidates to the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC). So the time for these two political parties to formally announce their preference for a presidenti­al candidate from the South is now. It is only equitable that after the North through President Buhari has served out its 8 years, power should return to the South.

Many Nigerians agree that the 2023 general election provides an opportunit­y to pull the country from the brink of disaster as a result of many years of impunity in government, looming disintegra­tion, widespread insecurity, nepotism, corruption, ravaging poverty and restive youthful population battling unemployme­nt, poor education and bad leadership.

One of the best ways to address this looming tragedy is, in our view, to heed the clarion call for zoning of the presidency to the South in 2023 and electing a new leader with proven capacity to unite the nation, create jobs and wealth for Nigerians and the country.

Heeding this call will kill the continued struggle for secession, separation and self-determinat­ion. It will pull the country away from the precipice of anarchy and restore it to the greatness that it truly deserves.

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