
Obasanjo and Jonathan
There
are indications that President Goodluck Jonathan and former President
Olusegun Obasanjo are set to clash again over the chairmanship of the
Peoples Democratic Party’s Board of Trustees.
Though the presidency had denied it,
there have been reported instances of alleged disagreements between
Jonathan and Obasanjo in recent times.
Our investigations on
Sunday showed that while Jonathan was pushing the candidacy of a former
Minister of Works, Chief Tony Anenih, chieftains of the party, including
Obasanjo, were said not to be comfortable with Anenih.
It was learnt that while Jonathan had
not openly pressured BoT members to vote for Anenih, he was said to have
shown that he had confidence in him.
A member of the National Working
Committee of the party, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Anenih
“should be contented with the headship of the Nigerian Ports Authority
for now and allow a younger and energetic person to head the board of
our party at this crucial time.”
Anenih, once known as “Mr. Fix It” in
the nation’s politics was recently appointed by Jonathan to chair the
board of the NPA, the same position occupied by a chieftain of the
party, Chief Bode George.
George was found guilty of corruption as
chairman of the NPA and sentenced to prison by Justice Joseph Oyewole.
He completed his jail term in February 2011.
The PDP NWC member, who spoke to one of
our correspondents in Abuja also said that if Anenih should become the
BoT chairman, he (Anenih) would work against settling the alleged rift
between Obasanjo and Jonathan, thus leading to further polarisation of
the party.
He said, “You know we are trying to
settle the rift between the President and Obasanjo. You know Obasanjo
would not want Anenih as his successor and I think the President should
just allow Anenih to go and manage the NPA, after all he is a former
chairman of the board.”
Obasanjo succeeded Anenih when the PDP constitution was amended to allow only a former President to head the PDP BoT.
But Jonathan, through his spokesman, Reuben Abati, denied that he had a preferred candidate for the BoT chairmanship.
In a telephone interview on Sunday,
Abati said determining who becomes the BoT chairman was that of all
members of the board and not a one-man affair.
He said, “People should stop
speculating. The President is not working for or sponsoring any
candidate. The President is a democrat, it is most unfair to say that he
is backing a candidate.
The BoT secretary, Senator Wali Jubrin,
had spelt out the modalities for the election and promised that it would
be conducted according to the party’s constitution.”
Nonetheless, the NWC source said an
impending clash between Obasanjo and Jonathan could be averted if the
former could persuade a former chairman of the PDP, Ahmadu Ali, who is
believed to be Obasanjo’s choice, to step down.
“There is so much tension on who will emerge as the chairman of the board on Tuesday night,” the NWC member said.
It is not surprising therefore that the
rank of the leadership of the PDP is divided over who should be
supported to assume the position of the chairman of the board of
trustees.
Investigations by our correspondents on
Sunday indicated that as at Sunday, other zones had refused the
overtures of the South -West that it should be allowed to produce the
BoT chairman.
Jubrin told one of our correspondents on
the telephone that contestants for the position had been engaged in
campaign of calumny.
The position of the chairman of the
board became vacant in April when Obasanjo, who was its former occupant,
voluntarily resigned.
Some top shots of the party were said to
be against Anenih occupying the office because they believe that he
should be satisfied with being the chairman of a juicy Federal
Government organisation as the NPA.
Apart from Anenih and Ali, some of those
contesting for the BoT chairmanship are another former National
Chairman of the PDP, Dr. Okwesilieze Nwodo; business mogul, Chief
Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu; Chief Shuaib Oyedokun, Chief Don Etiebet and Chief
Harry Akande.
Our correspondent also gathered that
both the South-West and the South-East caucuses of the party had been
insisting that the position be zoned to them.
For example, the Zonal Publicity
Secretary of the party in the South-West, Mr. Kayode Babade, said, “our
appeal is that the national leadership of the party should honour our
zone with true position”.
It was gathered that the South-West
hinged its claim to the position on the alleged marginalisation of the
zone by the Jonathan administration.
It said nobody from the area was among the top four government officials in the present administration.
Besides the President who is from South-
South; Vice-President Namadi Sambo hails from North-West; the Secretary
to the Government of the Federation, Anyim Pius Anyim, South-East;
Senate President David Mark, North-Central; and Speaker, House of
Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, North-West.
Although none of the top four is from
the North-East, the zone produced the National Chairman of the PDP ,
Alhaji Bamanga Tukur. The post is regarded as a powerful one in the
party.
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