APC National Chairman, Adams Oshiomhole APC National Chairman, Adams
Oshiomhole Comrade Adams Oshiomhole is the National Chairman of the
ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). In this interview with
journalists, the former labour leader opens up on the real issues
between him and Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo State and the way out of
the challenges in the state chapter of the party. Have you resolved your
differences with Governor Obaseki?
This has been an issue I
tried to avoid when I watched you talking about Oshiomhole’s faction and
Godwin’s faction. The truth is that I don’t have any faction. Everybody
in Edo State, particularly those of APC stock, are my people. We
founded the party from ACN to APC. It hurts when people can’t make a
distinction between policy positions and unhealthy debate about options
in dealing with specific issues.
Let me start with the issue of
the inauguration of the Edo State House of Assembly. I was governor when
PDP had 16 members, and ACN then, had eight members, but we had to
learn how to live with the reality that the parliament is in the hands
of the opposition, so all we needed to do was to cultivate ways and
means of playing up what united us as a people and getting the
opposition to recognise that we were all elected; even from different
political parties, but for a purpose; the sustainable development of Edo
State. And we managed that until the people favoured us with majority.
Right
now in Edo, we are obviously far more fortunate that all the 24 members
of the house are all APC. So, no matter if there are differences about a
preferred speaker, I don’t think this was enough for us to breach all
the rules, regulations, customs and traditions that are well entrenched
as regards to the simple straight forward matter of proclaiming a House
of Assembly. When I see Nigerians taking sides on it, I just pity people
who can’t make a difference between your personal affection or love for
someone and dealing with issues of principles and law. Now, I remain
convinced that it is not in the interest of our democracy for nine
members at 09:30pm, which I understand the Supreme Court in another
judgment has described as nocturnal hours, for an elected parliament to
seek to secretly inaugurate a house so that a particular person can
emerge as speaker, and in the process, you exclude 15 members of the
house.
Nine persons cannot elect the speaker or deputy speaker
on behalf of 24 members. Number two, it is also the tradition and the
law that when you are elected by your various constituencies, the day of
your inauguration, the proclamation is not a state secret to be shared
by those who are favoured. The proclamation must be published; stating
time and date. If there is any Nigerian who has followed inauguration in
the 36 states and the FCT, particularly the last federal one, it is
settled that the fact of proclamation letter must be communicated by the
clerk to all the members-elect so that they can go there that day with
their families and loved ones. Now, to try and do that at 09:30pm, even
if it was done by my biological son, God will give me the courage to
tell my son that this institution is governed by law.
Parliament
is an autonomous arm of government, delete it and there will be no
democracy. So I found it strange that because we pointed out what I
thought would be obvious to every Nigerian, that first, some of the
members of the nine out of 24 who are already in the minority, four of
them on take, have said they were invited for an informal conversation
with the deputy governor, then they were bundled into a waiting vehicle
and driven to the House of Assembly. And they were forced to take oath
of office against their wish. One of them was wearing shorts where he
went to buy suya. These are facts, the people have spoken and they are
still alive, they are still protesting. Then somebody says that because I
am the national chairman of the party, I ought to turn the other way.
If it is wrong in Bauchi, for them to do secret inauguration, how can it
be accommodated in Edo State? For me, these are the issues. And it is
much shameful that in this case, all 24 are APC members.
As a
former governor who had the privilege of presiding over Edo State for
eight years, I will tell you that there is little or nothing a
government can do in the final analysis. I was there at the Government
House, Benin, not too far away from Anthony Enahoro’s building where the
parliament seats, and I heard that the parliament met and decided to
change its leadership. And there is nothing I can do about it; it is
their privilege thing to do. So, I did not really know what the issues
were. So, that is not between me and the governor, anybody suggesting
that it is between me and the governor is just being mischievous. It is
about what is right and what is wrong. But we thought the issues were
resolved when the governor visited you in the village during Sallah? The
governor has slept in my house countless times before he became
governor, and even after he became a governor.
He is my friend,
he is my brother. But I am surprised that Nigerians don’t appreciate the
fact that even as brothers, if I feel strongly that what my younger
brother is doing is wrong, I should advise him quietly, and when I do,
it becomes factional war, that impression is wrong. Secondly, the
governor knows that there is no quarrel between us, because what could
have caused us to quarrel, I consciously made decision from day one to
avoid it. Namely, I was never going to decide for him who he pays and I
was never going to suggest to him who he appoints. But is the governor
on common grounds with you now? That is the issue; the last time we had a
meeting with Governors Bagudu, Fayemi, El-Rufai and Niyi Adebayo, we
all agreed that, given the division in Edo APC now, the way to go is to
have an all-inclusive meeting. We need to meet in a room and resolve our
differences and come out for people to know that APC is one; you cannot
solve problem without talking.
The governors encouraged him to
meet with me so we can arrange the meeting. In fact, the governors
offered to accompany us to Edo State to hold meeting with all the groups
so that we iron out our differences. Unfortunately, as we speak, the
governor has refused to convene that meeting. We have to work now on how
to get such a meeting on because there is no way to solve such a
problem without reaching out to the aggrieved parties. Let me assure you
that this governor is not under threat, it is those who are making
money from the crisis, those I call merchants of confusion, they are
only relevant when there is a fight. They are the ones that will tell
the governor they want to impeach you.
But the governor should
ask himself what he has done to deserve impeachment. But will you
support him for a second term? Have we gotten there? Let us get there
first. As it stands right now, has he told you, he is contesting? And
has he told you I am opposed to him? He is allegedly being told he is
going to be given the Ambode treatment? Who told him that? What will I
gain if Godwin does not run a second term, is Oshiomhole going to run a
second term? If I did what I did, whether he acknowledged it or not, but
people know what I did to support him to be, what comfort will I have
if he is terminated half way? What is Ambode treatment? But let me tell
you, Ambode treatment is not the worst treatment we have seen in the
APC.
What about M. Abubakar’s treatment in Bauchi. He won his
primary, as a sitting governor, he lost the election. What about Adamawa
State? Because of internal fighting the sitting governor lost. Although
we are hopeful in both cases that the court will give us victory
because we think we won the elections. So, the point to me is that
tickets are not the issue in politics. I think the real issue in Edo
State is what anyone that loves the governor (Obaseki) should do what we
tried to do, what those governors tried to do by reminding him that a
divided house cannot stand. And the house remains divided if we do not
make conscious effort to bring everybody together. So, what I am doing
is to encourage him and all our leaders to have an all-inclusive meeting
of all APC leaders. Lock the door, speak truth to ourselves. What is
simply happening is that there are people who think that their access to
bread and butter will end if there is peace and so they encourage the
governor wrongly.
I have had meetings before where I urged the
governor to carry people along. Whether you like it or not, if there is
one business where one tree cannot make a forest, it is politics. But do
you think you will support him again as you did the first time? If we
have this meeting of all the various tendencies within the APC and
remind ourselves of what unites us, rather than what divides us working
together wholeheartedly, everybody being given a sense of belonging,
there is no reason why we cannot continue to defeat PDP and there is no
reason why Obaseki cannot win election.
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