President Goodluck Jonathan and his top aides are said to be developing strategies to stop the increasing popularity of the All Progressives Congress in the South-West and parts of the North-East and North-West.
High-ranking Aso Rock officials confirmed in Abuja, on Sunday, that this informed a recent meeting between President Goodluck Jonathan and his strategists in the Presidential Villa.
One of the sources said that the meeting reviewed how Nigerians across the six geo-political zones might vote in 2015 and concluded that the electons, especially the Presidential poll, would be keenly contested.
The source added that Jonathan and the strategists agreed that the APC had a firm grip on the South-West and therefore resolved that concrete measures should be adopted to woo the zone.
One of the measures, according to him, is to allocate the position of the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria or the Comptroller-General of the Nigeria Customs Service, to the South-West.
It was learnt that those at the meeting were in unison that giving either of the two positions would go a long way in countering the allegation of marginalisation being levelled against the Jonathan administration by the people of the zone.
The source said, “We knew that many people voted for the PDP during the presidential election in 2011 because of the President’s popularity and not because of the party he represented.
“This was the reason why the President won in four out of the six states in the South-West.
“With the alignment of the forces against the PDP and the President across the country, especially in the zone (South-West) now, we need to work hard to gain their confidence.
“It was also agreed that to curry political favour of the people of the zone, the President needed to cede either of the two positions (CBN governor and CG of Customs) to the zone.”
Another Aso Rock source said, “You must agree that we also need to do extra work in the North-East and North-West where our party’s popularity is waning to get as many people as possible on our side.”
He added that there were fears in the Presidency that the presidential election might go into run-off.
Efforts to get the Presidency’s reaction did not yield any result on Sunday as the Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters, Ahmed Gulak, could not be reached on the telephone.
A former Minister of Transport and Aviation, Chief Ebenezer Babatope, however, said that it was wrong to blame the alleged maginalisation of the South-West on the Jonathan government.
Babatope said, “We the elders of the zone are not resting and I know that very soon, the President would do something about it.
“The position of CBN governor is still open and that of the CG of Customs is there. However, we must blame the former Governor of Lagos State, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, for colluding with some members of the PDP in the House of Representatives to deny the South-West of the position of the Speaker.”
Babatope also accused the CBN Governor, Mallam Sanusi Lamido, of trying to incite the public, especially the opposition, against the PDP and Jonathan, through his statements on the alleged missing money at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation.
He alleged that within a week, Sanusi had quoted different figures of between $49 and $20bn as the amount involved.
The former minister said that if not that Sanusi would be leaving office in few months’ time, it would not be out of order to press for his removal for portraying himself as somebody unfit to hold such a sensitive office.
He said, “It is disheartening and highly embarrassing for the governor of the CBN be contradicting himself like that. Look at how he was raving before the Senate few days ago that the actual money that was missing was $20bn. The same man had initially quoted different figures of $49 and $12bn respectively.
“Imagine the CBN boss coming out to say that $49bn was missing in a government agency like the NNPC and you expect people not to ask questions? They will even come to the conclusion that it was the PDP government that stole the money for elections. Some people will instigate innocent Nigerians to take to the streets based on false information”.
Meanwhile, the PDP said on Sunday that it was shocked by statements credited to a former Vice- President , Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, that the party was Nigeria’s problem.
The PDP said in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, that while it recognised the rights of Nigerians to hold opinions and identify with political platforms of their choice, it found it very difficult to understand Abubakar ‘s bitterness.
Metuh said, “It is common knowledge that the private sector has been immensely successful in the last two years under the PDP-led administration owing to the continued implementation of our manifesto and policies including the continuation of the PDP ideology of transfer of wealth from public institutions to the private sector.
“This is the hallmark of the PDP-led Federal Government wherein hardworking private individuals are now thriving in manufacturing, trade, commerce and other critical sectors of the economy.”
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