Get The Gist: See As Tension brews as OBJ invites APC Presidential hopeful to Coalition’s Secret Meeting
The Coalition for Nigeria Movement
had a clandestine meeting during the week, thereby setting in motion the move
to wrest power from the ruling APC, and edge out the opposition PDP.
Both parties have been described as
wobbly by the founder of the Coalition, former President Olusegun Obasanjo who
believes there is an urgent need for a third force before 2019.
However, Obasanjo may have
sympathies for certain elements within the parties, and he might not have it
easy smuggling one of them in as the coalition’s candidate for the 2019
presidential election.
The first hush meeting held at
Protea Hotel, Ikeja, Lagos, during the week, had in attendance members of the
Nigerian Intervention Movement (NIM), and 35 other featherweight parties,
including the Labour Party, the SDP, and others.
But also present there was Sen.
Rabiu Kwakwanso, a former governor of Kano and 2014 APC presidential hopeful.
Kwankwaso was hot on candidate
Muhammadu Buhari’s heels in the party’s primary held in Lagos in the run up to
the 2015 election. The senator has also been sparring with Buhari in a
popularity contest in Kano.
Observers of Nigeria’s politics are
also not in doubt Kwakwanso was Obasanjo’s favourite for the 2015 election—only
that the former president could not make Bola Tinubu, the APC national leader
and chief architect of Buhari’s victory, buy into the idea.
Kwakwanso’s invitation to the Lagos
strategy meeting was, however, chalked up as one of those things, especially
considering the fact that the former governor was once a minister under
Obasanjo, and a diehard loyalist to the convener of the CNM.
But a co-founder of the NIM, SAN
Olisa Agbakoba, has hinted other members of the coalition are watching
carefully.
Agbakoba admitted they were all at
the meeting, and will be at many others Obasanjo will convene—to explore the
option of working together and have a solid front against 2019.
“We will not be supporting the
APC or the PDP. We have agreed on that,” he told the Punch. “But we have not
agreed on who the candidate would be and other minute details.”
According to him, Kwakwanso and
another of Obasanjo’s loyalists in the APC, Olagunsoye Oyinlola, were there.
“We told them in clear terms that if
we are to work together, it would present a challenge if the Nigerian voting
population see the same old people and then there would be no change,” said
Agbakoba.
Other PDP washed-up party men
present at the meeting were Cross River’s former Gov. Donald Duke who is also
gunning for a presidential ticket, and Akin Oshuntokun, a former
adviser to Obasanjo.
NIM’s co-founder Jhalil
Tafawa-Balewa was also present.
What still baffles many is that the
sprawling coalition is not supposed to be a political party, according to its
founder who said he is done with partisan politics, and that he will bow out as
soon as the coalition turns partisan.
How it hopes to bid for political
power by just being a pressure group with no affiliation to the two major
parties in Nigeria will sure surprise Nigerians.
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