Prominent political stakeholders from the North were at the weekend
divided in their response to the renewed bid by elder-statesman Chief
Edwin Clark to position President Goodluck Jonathan for another term in
office in 2015.
While nearly all of them including those who vehemently opposed the
president in his 2011 bid showed outrage over the renewed campaign, they
nevertheless disagreed among themselves on a common position with some
vowing that they would meet the President on the field in 2015.
Some of the Northern leaders also revealed that a prominent Ijaw
leader pledged on his knees before northern leaders prior to the Peoples
Democratic Party, PDP presidential primaries of 2011 that Jonathan
would only serve a single term if supported by the Northern leaders.
The Ijaw leader who supposedly made the plea could not be reached
last night and was said to be with the President at a function when Vanguard sought his opinion.
The PDP which controls power at the federal level has itself
dismissed the renewed clamour, describing it as a distraction for the
party and the president.
Chief Clark had at a press conference on the eve of his 85th birthday
last Thursday, given vent to a second term for President Jonathan, the
first person from the South-South geopolitical zone to lead the country.
He based his claim on the fact that all other leaders of the country
were not constrained in the bid for a second term.
Northern political leaders with the connivance of some Southern
politicians had vehemently opposed Jonathan’s bid in 2011 on the basis
of what they claimed as an infringement of the PDP’s zoning
configuration. Among the most prominent vocal groups was the Northern
Leaders Political Forum, NPLF led by Mallam Adamu Ciroma, a former
Minister of Finance.
VANGUARD
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