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Why I changed my mind on threat to leave Nigeria – Bode George

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Bode George, ex-deputy national chair (south) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), says he would have left Nigeria if President Bola Tinubu did not send Femi Gbajabiamila after him. 

In January 2022, after Tinubu announced his presidential bid, George threatened to flee Nigeria.

“I will move away from Nigeria. I’ll leave because he will be your representative in the international plane. Which investment will he bring here? I am not talking because I have any hatred for him,” he said.

“This is not the kind of person we can hand over this massive country to manage. He will be the greatest joke on the international plane. We should bother who should lead us.

“If by whatever chance he gets to the villa, I won’t be part of this country. And I am not joking. I can go to Ghana and be watching with binoculars from afar. You will see what will happen.”

It was the umpteenth time George had threatened to leave Nigeria for good in the event of a Tinubu presidency.

Speaking in an interview with Arise TV on Wednesday, George said it took Gbajabiamila, the president’s chief of staff, to get him to change his mind.

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“During the campaign period I stated it and I meant it; that if by whatever measure Bola Tinubu wins this election, I was going to get out,” he said.

Once they heard that, Tinubu sent his chief of staff, who is my little brother from Lagos state, Femi Gbajabiamila, to appeal to me.

“He came to say: ‘my boss said I should tell you, please be calm’. They knew they had wronged me. They said they were sorry.”

PDP CRISIS
George said the crisis in the PDP began during the buildup to the 2023 presidential election.

He also asked Nyesom Wike, minister of the federal capital territory (FCT); and Atiku Abubakar, presidential candidate of the PDP in the 2023 election; to sheathe their swords and work toward a resolution of the internal crisis.

“The last convention — the presidential convention — was when everything started. Instead of arresting it, they were exacerbating it,” George said.

“With all that, you cannot have the chairman of the party and the presidential candidate from one side of the divide — they didn’t listen.”

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George recounted how he confronted Iyorchia Ayu, ex-party chair, over his promise to step down if a northern presidential candidate emerged.

“Ayu made a public statement that peradventure the presidency comes from the north, he would resign. But when the results were announced, he said, ‘I have four years; I’m not going anywhere’.

“This is breach of trust! Of course, people would react to that. It’s against the party constitution to have the chairman of the party and the presidential candidate from the same zone — it is an anomaly.

“I want to appeal to the leaders of the various groups in the party that it is time to shelve your personal ambitions and let us rebuild the party.

“There is no organisation in the world without crisis but the ability to rebuild the crisis is needed.

“This crisis didn’t start now; it started from the presidential convention and nobody was able to manage it.

“Atiku and Wike should calm down and let us go to the elders meeting where we would start this discussion, to trace this crisis back to that convention, because that was where everything started going in the wrong direction.”

READ  PDP crisis: Ayu must resign, south must produce chairman – George

George recalled expressing dismay at the party’s disunity ahead of the election and noted that a crucial meeting was held two days before the poll.

“Two days before the general election, we had a meeting in Abuja, and it was only Oyo governor and Wike that came,” he said.

“They told us the stories of what they were going to do, and Wike said, out of the two candidates from the south, ‘I think we can go with Tinubu’. I said, at this meeting?

“I looked around and said there is nobody that knows Tinubu better than me, and I can’t do that; it would be wrong for you to leave this meeting and have a communique issued that our group has agreed to support Tinubu.

“They further asked me what my suggestion was and I told them they should take the discussion to their respective states to discuss whether they wanted Peter Obi or Tinubu.”

Politics

Rivers crisis: How I was ambushed with peace agreement – Fubara

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Siminalayi Fubara, Rivers State Governor, on Wednesday, revealed that he discovered he was being ambushed by the peace agreement he signed alongside the faction of the state House of Assembly that planned to oust him from office.

 

Fubara made the revelation during a non-denominational thanksgiving in Port Harcourt on Wednesday to mark a year he survived an impeachment plot on October 30, 2023, by 27 lawmakers loyal to the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike.

 

Fubara however clarified that it was not the initiator (President Bola Tinubu) of the peace accord that ambushed him, but those he thought were sincere about resolving the emerging crisis were not.

 

He explained that it was at the point of realising the sinister motives of the other party involved in the peace deal that he decided not to play into their hands.

 

He lampooned the pro-Wke lawmakers for not keeping to the peace agreement, describing their actions as fraud.

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“We went to Abuja and Mr. President knowing the importance of peace for Rivers State, called out some conditions for peace.

 

“We came back here, in this state, to do everything that has to do with the conditions of the peace. We went to court immediately and withdrew our matters. And you call yourself honourable when you cannot obey simple instructions.

 

“I acted as an honourable. I discovered that I was being ambushed not by the person who initiated the peace”, Fubara stated.

 

The governor thanked all the prominent Rivers people and others who had supported his government in the last year for their belief and resilience to scuttle the plots of enemies of his government.

 

“I am standing here because of all of you. A lot of people may not understand what happened on the 30th of October, 2023,” he said with nostalgia.

 

He reiterated his commitment to enthrone peace, acknowledging that his supporters had taken a very difficult part in that last year.

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He further said, “We are still complete. Let me tell you, we are still intact. They said we’re not going to last for one week. We are here one year plus.

 

“They said we would not have local government chairmen. Today, we have local government chairmen.”

 

“They said commissioners should resign immediately. Today, we have more than 23 commissioners.

 

“They said they are not going to do anything; they are going to frustrate them, they are not going to succeed. By the grace of God, there are lots of projects that are touching the lives of the people.”

 

The governor added that his government has demonstrated prudence and transparency in the use of resources of the state, saying that recently, Rivers was commended for showing transparency and accountability by an external body.

 

To his opponents, he said, “I now ask the question, who is the winner? We are here to appreciate God for the way He did it one year ago, He will do it again.”

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Fubara said he would pay contractors, and workers’ salaries and also release local government council funds.

 

He added, “I ask you again, who is the loser? Who is the loser? You see why you need to be happy? Do you see why you need to celebrate the righteousness of God?

 

According to the governor, success is when you are succeeding against the expectation of your detractors that you should fail.

 

He reiterated his resolve to ensure peace reigns in the state against all odds, thanking those supporting his government for the sacrifice they have paid.

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Tinubu, Atiku meet during Jumat prayers

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President Bola Tinubu and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar recently met at the National Mosque in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital city, during Jumat prayers.

The occasion was also a wedding ceremony for Senator Danjuma Goje’s daughter, and it brought together other prominent figures, including APC National Chairman Abdullahi Ganduje, Bauchi Governor Bala Mohammed, and former Borno Governor Ali Modu Sheriff.

According to presidential spokesperson Bayo Onanuga, Atiku is an old friend of President Tinubu, and their meeting was a friendly encounter.

This meeting, it was gathered, is significant, especially considering their history as opponents in the 2023 election.

However, as some observers noted, it’s not surprising, given their long-standing acquaintance and the fact that they move in the same social circles.

The event highlights the complexities of Nigerian politics, where former rivals can put aside their differences and come together in social and religious settings. As one commentator put it, “Life itself is bigger than politics”.

READ  Nigeria would have collapsed if Atiku had won presidential election, says Bode George

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Wike: Obi’s camp lobbied me so much before 2023 polls — they can’t deny it

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Nyesom Wike, minister of the federal capital territory (FCT), says the camp of Peter Obi, presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP) in the 2023 elections, is fighting him.

Wike spoke on Saturday during a private luncheon with stakeholders in Port Harcourt, Rivers state capital.

 

The luncheon was hosted by Wike in honour of the Martin Amaewhule-led faction of the Rivers house of assembly.

During the event, the FCT minister aimed digs at his political opponents.

 

The former Rivers governor said he refused to support Obi for the 2023 presidential election despite being lobbied “so much” for support.

He added that some persons in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who want the party’s presidential ticket in 2027, are also ganging up against him.

Wike boasted that his political enemies would not emerge victorious.

 

“Let me tell you what is going on. I have no regret at all for supporting President Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. I have no regret about it,” he said.

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“All these things you are seeing… there is Atiku’s group, Peter Obi’s group and some few governors of the PDP who believe I’m a problem to them. I will continue to be a problem to them.

“Atiku’s group believes that I and my team stopped them from becoming president. What we stopped was injustice. All we wanted was equity and fairness.

“Obi’s group — they lobbied me so much. They can’t deny it. I said, ‘look, this won’t fly. Rivers state will not go to where we will not… it won’t fly’. There is also a gang-up. They are fighting us back. They are fighting themselves.

 

“There is another gang-up within the PDP who wants to be president and they say, ‘look if we don’t do anything now we have a problem’. I can assure you they will have a problem.

“There is another APC — very prominent. All these people combined, they will lose.”

 

In the build-up to the 2023 presidential election, Wike refused to support the ambition of PDP’s Atiku Abubakar and LP’s Obi and instead backed Bola Tinubu, the All Progressives Congress (APC) standard bearer.

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