Friday, 24 November 2017

Atiku Abubakar reportedly leaves APC, set to go back to PDP

Former vice president Atiku Abubakar has according to Punch resigned from the All Progressives Congress (APC).

He had left the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) for APC to contest in the 2015 presidential primaries where he lost to President Muhammadu Buhari.

News of Atiku leaving the APC has been circulating on the internet for a while, after he reportedly met with former president Goodluck Jonathan over the 2019 presidency.

Jonathan had reportedly advised him to return early enough to PDP to fulfill certain provisions made by the party’s constitution, if he planned to contest under their umbrella.

He was also reportedly advised that he stands a better chance with PDP, as APC has nothing left to offer him.

Daily Trust reports that Atiku is expected to receive his PDP membership card on Saturday at his home state Adamawa.

A source who spoke to Daily Trust said thousands of supporters have been mobilized for the event, set to take place across the 21 local governments in Adamawa. He said:

Twenty buses have been allocated to each local government area for the event; the buses will convey supporters to Yola.

Lawan Uba, the Director of Mobilization of Atiku Support Group, also confirmed the news to Daily Trust. He said:

We’ve cleared the terrain and Atiku will come to the PDP tomorrow; this is certain unless there is last minute change because already many people from Abuja and other places are in Yola ahead of the formal event even though the elaborate ceremony will come up later.

Read Atiku’s full resignation statement below:
Statement of resignation of His Excellency Atiku Abubakar (Waziri Adamawa) Vice President of Nigeria, 1999-2007 from the All Progressives Congress


On the 19th of December, 2013, I received members of the All Progressives Congress at my house in Abuja. They had come to appeal to me to join their party after my party, the Peoples Democratic Party, had become factionalized as a result of the special convention of August 31, 2013.


The fractionalization of the Peoples Democratic Party on August 31, 2013, had left me in a situation where I was, with several other loyal party members, in limbo, not knowing which of the parallel executives of the party was the legitimate leadership.


It was under this cloud that members of the APC made the appeal to me to join their party, with the promise that the injustices and failure to abide by its own constitution which had dogged the then PDP, would not be replicated in the APC and with the assurance that the vision other founding fathers and I had for the PDP could be actualized through the All Progressives Congress.


It was on the basis of this invitation and the assurances made to me that I, being party-less at that time, due to the fractionalization of my party, accepted on February 2, 2014, the hand of fellowship given to me by the All Progressives Congress.


On that day, I said “it is the struggle for democracy and constitutionalism and service to my country and my people that are driving my choice and my decision” to accept the invitation to join the All Progressives Congress.


Like you, I said that because I believed that we had finally seen the beginnings of the rebirth of the new Nigeria of our dreams which would work for all of us, old and young.


However, events of the intervening years have shown that like any other human and like many other Nigerians, I was fallible.


While other parties have purged themselves of the arbitrariness and unconstitutionality that led to fractionalization, the All Progressives Congress has adopted those same practices and even gone beyond them to institute a regime of a draconian clampdown on all forms of democracy within the party and the government it produced.


Only last year, a governor produced by the party wrote a secret memorandum to the president which ended up being leaked. In that memo,  he admitted that the All Progressives Congress had “not only failed to manage expectations of a populace that expected overnight ‘change’ but has failed to deliver even mundane matters of governance.”


Of the party itself, that same governor said “Mr. President, Sir Your relationship with the national leadership of the party, both the formal (NWC) and informal (Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Atiku Abubakar, Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso), and former Governors of ANPP, PDP (that joined us) and ACN, is perceived by most observers to be at best frosty. Many of them are aggrieved due to what they consider a total absence of consultations with them on your part and those you have assigned such duties.”


Since that memorandum was written up until today, nothing has been done to reverse the treatment meted out to those of us invited to join the All Progressives Congress on the strength of a promise that has proven to be false. If anything, those behaviors have actually worsened.


But more importantly, the party we put in place has failed and continues to fail our people, especially our young people. How can we have a federal cabinet without even one single youth?


A party that does not take the youth into account is a dying party. The future belongs to young people.


I admit that I and others who accepted the invitation to join the APC were eager to make positive changes for our country that we fell for a mirage. Can you blame us for wanting to put a speedy end to the sufferings of the masses of our people?


Be that as it may be, after due consultation with my God, my family, my supporters and the Nigerian people whom I meet in all walks of life, I, Atiku Abubakar, Waziri Adamawa, hereby tender my resignation from the All Progressives Congress while I take time to ponder my future.


May God bless you and may God bless Nigeria.


Atiku Abubakar

Waziri Adamawa

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