Twelve governors have endorsed the merger plan “to rescue Nigeria”, it emerged yesterday.
Ten of them met at the Lagos House,
Marina to seal their resolve for a new party, which, according to them,
will save Nigeria by kicking out the ruling Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP).
Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN),
Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and All Nigeria Peoples Party
(ANPP) are the major parties in the merger talks.
The surprise face at the meeting was Imo
State Governor Rochas Okorocha, who was elected on the platform of the
All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA).
Okorocha said the merger would prevent Nigeria from being turned to a one party state.
“The merger has become very necessary in
order to save our democracy and the likelihood of turning Nigeria into a
one-party state does not augur well for democracy. Therefore, I
personally fully endorse this movement and this new merger, at least to
rescue the nation, and we say we are on a rescue mission here and to
make sure Nigeria gets better. The essence of this merger is to make
Nigeria a better nation,” Okorocha said.
Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola
hosted the meeting, AC N governors – Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti), Rauf
Aregbesola (Osun), Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun) and Abiola Ajimobi (Oyo) were
present at the meeting.
There were also Abdul-Aziz Yari
(Zamfara), Kashim Shettima (Borno) and Ibrahim Gaidam (Yobe), who was
represented by Senator Dejare Alkali – all ANPP governors – and Tanko al
Makura (Nasarawa), who is of the CPC.
Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole and
his Anambra counterpart, Peter Obi, telephone to endorse the talks. They
had urgent state matters to attend to.
Fashola said after the meeting:
“Well…scepticism is one thing; the commitment that we bring to the table
will certainly override any scepticism. I am convinced that the full
weight of 10 of us governors and many more who, unfortunately, could not
make it today, is a much stronger force. The underlying reason is
clearly how to make this country a better place. This is not the best
that this country can have and we intend to deliver Nigeria’s best.”
Shettima, who read the communiqué of the meeting, said:
“As progressive and patriotic leaders of
our people across party, religious and geo-political zones, we are
extremely concerned about the state of the nation and we put our heads
together in the interest of our people to deliberate on what can be done
to rescue our country”.
“As governors, we fully endorse the
merger initiatives already commenced by our various political parties
and we will put our full weight behind these efforts. Nigeria is greater
than all of us and we have a duty to make it work for our people and
the future of our children yet unborn.”
Amosun said more progressive-minded Nigerians would come on board, once they see the sincerity of the merger plan.
“A lot of other people will come on
board once they see our sincerity; that is why we are not taking this
lightly. We are very determined and I am sure that with the support of
all Nigerians, this merger will work.”
Yari is optimistic that the brains
behind the merger will offer a better political option to what the
nation has witnessed since the return to democracy.
“The objective is to fix Nigeria in the
right perspective. It is a duty for all of us as leaders to drive our
people right and we believe the PDP has done less, so we have the idea,
the knowledge and we have the progressive ideas to move the country
forward. So, if you say we intend to move the PDP out of power, yes; we
are ready to do that.”
Fayemi said the merger is aimed at rescuing Nigeria from bad governance.
He said the representation from the
various political parties and geo-political zones is a proof that the
merger plan is aimed at nothing but rescuing the future of the country
and its citizens.
The ANPP was rallying its members to back the plan yesterday.
Former Presidential candidate Mallam
Ibrahim Shekarau, Chairman of the party’s National Rebuilding and
Interparty Contact Committee, told party members at a meeting in Kaduna
that the ANPP would not accept any pre condition for the merger.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports
that former Kano State Governor Shekarau and other ANPP leaders from
the zone were in Kaduna to take a common stand on the merger.
He said the meeting was to aggregate the
opinion of all stakeholders in the North west that would guide the
party in taking a final stand on the issue, adding that the merger would
not be an “Abuja round table affair”.
Shekarau said that the essence of the
interparty contact committee was to receive the endorsement of party
stakeholders and generate ideas that would strengthen the party.
“ANPP is presently undergoing
transformation; if all opposition parties involved reach a successful
conclusion, the ANPP with definitely be transformed.
“We would have had the interparty tour
in all the states but because of the April deadline given by opposition
parties, we have decided to have it in the four geo political zones,
simultaneously today.
“After this, conclusion would be drawn on the way forward with all the opposition parties involved.”
Shekarau said that the ANPP would
undertake a national survey to determine its strengths in each
geo-political zone and on ways to fund its activities.
The former governor of Zamfara Senator Sani Yerima, dispelled the rumour that he had defected to the PDP.
He described the rumour as unfounded,
saying: “I have been a pioneer member of ANPP since 1999 and I will
remain in ANPP without doubt.”
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