When they were together…
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The Jigawa State Governor, Sule
Lamido, on Tuesday admitted that he betrayed his fellow Peoples Democratic
Party, PDP, governors who later decamped to the All Progressives Congress in
November 2013. Mr. Lamido said this after holding a closed-door meeting with
the PDP National Chairman, Adamu Muazu, at the party’s secretariat, Abuja.
The five governors, called G-5, who
decamped consist of Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Ameachi; Kwara State
Governor, Abdulfatah Ahmed; Sokoto State Governor, Aliyu Wammako; Kano State
Governor, Rabiu Kwankwanso; and the impeached Governor of Adamawa State,
Murtala Nyako.
PREMIUM TIMES reports:
Originally G-7, consisting of the
aforementioned and then Mr. Lamido and Niger State Governor, Aliyu Babangida,
the governors staged a walk-out from an August 2013 Special National Convention
of PDP, alongside other party stalwarts, including former Vice President Atiku
Abubakar, former party Secretary, Sam Jaja and former Kwara Governor, Bukola
Saraki.
The group formed the “new PDP”
immediately. But the five Governors, Messrs Ameachi, Wammako, Ahmed, Nyako and
Kwankwanso defected to opposition APC while Messrs Lamido and Babangida,
surprisingly, chose to remain in the PDP.
This caused bad blood leading the
Kano State Governor, Mr. Kwankwanso, to accuse Messrs Lamido and Babangida of
betraying the other five governors.
He said all seven governors had an
agreement to leave PDP, following a disagreement they had with the party
hierarchy.
“Everyone knows Governor Lamido was
part of us, he was the leader of the group. He took us to a certain height
before choosing otherwise and we were all surprised by his final decision.
Mr. Lamido corroborated Mr.
Kwakwanso’s submission saying, “Yes, I betrayed them. I am a betrayer.
Confirmed.”
When asked why he betrayed the
group, he simply responded, “I align myself with what he (Kwankwanso) said.”
The Jigawa State governor said his
recent meeting with Mr. Amaechi had nothing to do with party politics. He said
the Rivers Governor remains his friend and colleague and above all fellow
compatriot with whom he meets occasionally to review issues.
Mr. Lamido said he would not join
the APC.
“How would I join APC? If wishes were horses,
there won’t be APC,” he said.
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