A
former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, has said his former political
party, the Peoples Democratic Party, owes him a debt of gratitude.
Abubakar, however, said he did not owe the ruling party anything.
It will be recalled that the National
Publicity Secretary of the PDP, Chief Olisa Metuh, had recently said
that Abubakar owed the party a debt of gratitude for providing him a
political platform that helped him to emerge as the former Vice
President.
But the former Vice President said in a
statement in Abuja on Sunday, that contrary to the claim by the
leadership of the PDP, it was indeed his former party that owed him a
debt of thanks.
The former Vice President, who resigned
his membership of the PDP in February to join the All Progressives
Congress, noted that the insinuation being peddled by Metuh that he was
ungrateful to the PDP was a distortion of history.
The statement particularly noted that
neither Metuh nor anyone currently in position of authority in the PDP
today was there when the PDP was formed.
He said, “If the National Publicity
Secretary of the PDP doesn’t have the knowledge of how the party came
into being, then it will be in order that he goes into the archives and
read about the history of the party and the roles certain individuals,
particularly former Vice President Atiku Abubakar played in building the
party.
“For the avoidance of doubt, Atiku
Abubakar does not owe the PDP. Rather, it is the PDP that owes him a
debt of thanks. Where were Metuh and his paymasters when the PDP was in
its formative stage? If he and his paymasters came as free riders into
the party, that shouldn’t mean they have the licence to distort history.
“The demagogic outburst and the repeated
innuendoes by which the PDP has been nursing its wounds following the
exit of its founding fathers will do no good for the party to reverse
the trend of how it is fast losing acceptability by the Nigerian
people.”
He said Metuh and his co-travellers in
the PDP should focus more on improving the lives of citizens, redressing
the parlous state of the nation’s economy and stemming the state of
insecurity instead of distorting history.
He said, “Nigerians need good
governance. They need to be told how the only country we all call home
can be safe for each and every one of us. Nigerians need a political
party that will work on the parlous state of the country’s economy and
restore financial confidence to Nigerians who work hard to support their
families. The youths of Nigeria need a political party that can give
them a direction to the future.
“There are very many challenges
besetting the country today and it will be incongruous that a political
party in government will ignore these challenges and continue to
vituperate over individuals who have deserted its fold to join forces
with other political parties better suited to provide solutions to the
myriad of problems confronting the country.”
The former Vice President, who used the
opportunity to commiserate with the government and people of Kaduna,
Benue, Katsina and Borno states following the recent spate of killings
in their states, said the PDP and its leadership must wake up to face
the challenges ahead.
In his reaction, Metuh said though he
would not exchange words with Atiku, he however maintained that he had
been in the party since inception.
PUNCHNG
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