Ahmed Adamu Mu’azu, chairman of the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) during the historic 2015 presidential poll, furiously
reacted to suggestions that he should reject Muhammadu Buhari’s victory after
President Goodluck Jonathan had openly conceded.
Jonathan,
after congratulating Buhari in an unprecedented telephone call while the
Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was yet to officially announce
the winner, told party members that although he had conceded to Buhari in his
personal capacity, PDP was free to reject the result.
Before
Jonathan conceded, however, Mu’azu had threatened to do so on behalf of the
party.
He
even stopped picking Jonathan’s calls at some point.
All
these are snippets of the intrigues that followed Jonathan’s defeat — as narrated
by Bolaji Abdullahi in a new book, ‘On a Platter of Gold: How Jonathan Won and
Lost Nigeria’, which will go on sale nationwide from November 30, 2017 after
launch.
In
the advance copy made available to ONLY TheCable, the author said many of
Jonathan’s supporters believed he was too hasty in congratulating Buhari and
were looking at ways to undo the gesture.
It
was then suggested that the PDP could still challenge the election in spite of
the concession statement by Jonathan — but they had to move quickly. A meeting
was scheduled for 6pm of Tuesday, March 31, three days after the election.
VOLTE-FACE
“By
6:00pm, all the President’s men and party bigwigs began to gather at the
banquet hall of the Presidential Villa. Many had rushed back to Abuja for the
meeting, anxious to know the next line of action. They had all heard the audio
of the phone call, but opinions were sharply divided on whether the president
had thrown in the towel too soon,” Abdullahi wrote.
“One
South-South governor disclosed that this banquet hall meeting was not the
president’s original idea. He said soon after the president made the telephone
call to Buhari, some governors had gone to him to express their reservations
about it. They felt he had conceded too cheaply. Their argument was that if the
president and the party had rejected the outcome of the election, they would
have gained a stronger platform to negotiate their exit.
“If
the case had gone to court, probably going all the way to the Supreme Court,
the Buhari government would have remained tentative until the matter was
decided and this would have also bought Jonathan more time, or even more
security out of office. They all agreed that all these were now merely
academic. It was at this point that they decided to call a meeting and see if
anything could still be done to salvage something from what at the time had
effectively become a lost cause.
“Present
at the meeting were Vice President, Namadi Sambo; Senate President David Mark
and his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu; as well as Deputy Speaker of the House of
Representatives, Emeka Ihedioha, who had also just contested and lost the
governorship election in Imo State and was challenging the results. Others
included: the People’s Democratic Party Board of Trustees Chairman, Tony
Anenih; Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Anyim Pius Anyim;
Governor of Cross River State, Liyel Imoke; Governor of Akwa Ibom State,
Godswill Akpabio, and former governor of Anambra State, Peter Obi. All members
of PDP National Working Committee (NWC) were also present, led by the party
chairman, Adamu Mu’azu. The meeting was chaired by President Goodluck Jonathan.
“The
back-slapping, generous banter and raucous laughter that usually preceded such
meetings were missing on this day. The banquet hall of the Presidential Villa
held several memories of more exciting days for most dignitaries. But what was
about to happen was anything but a banquet. There would be no feasting. In the
last four days, a funereal gloom had descended on the entire Villa, and the few
people that could still be sighted went about with faces turned to the ground.
The mood this Tuesday afternoon was not any different. Some made courageous
attempts at humour, but these fell flat like a joke made at a burial ground.”
ANENIH’S
INTERVENTION
Abdullahi
narrated what transpired at the meeting, beginning with the opening speech of
Jonathan.
“Gentlemen,
about an hour ago, I called General Buhari to congratulate him,” President
Jonathan began. He explained that he did not make the call because he believed
that the PDP lost the election, but rather, following advice from many people,
he decided to concede in order to restore calm to the nation and avoid chaos.
He added that, based on information at his disposal, he believed the election
had been massively rigged and INEC was complicit in the fraud.
“While
I have done my bit as a statesman, I believe the party should issue a strong
statement to reject the results and say that PDP will challenge it in court,”
he said, and suggested that the National Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh,
should issue the statement.
“At
first, many did not know what to make of this. How was it possible to concede
defeat and not accept the results? Was the president asking the party to
overrule or disown him? And if they went along with his suggestion, would the
end result not be the same chaos that he said he was trying to avert by making
the phone call?
“Anenih
had the answers. He said the precedent for this had been set a few months
earlier by the opposition party itself. When Ayo Fayose was declared winner of
the governorship election in Ekiti State, the incumbent, Kayode Fayemi,
promptly accepted defeat and congratulated his opponent. Even though Fayemi
believed the election to be flawed, he said he conceded in order to save the
state from chaos. However, this did not stop the APC from challenging the
results in court. Anenih expressed the view that the National Chairman, Adamu
Mu’azu, should issue the statement.”
‘STOLEN PRESIDENCY’
An
agreement was reached on the way forward, Abdullahi narrated, and all seemed
set for the change of tune by the party that had been in power for 16 years.
“Conscious
that some others in the room also had their own battles to fight and were not
primarily interested in Jonathan’s predicament, Anenih further stated that
discussions on other elections and candidates should wait until the ‘stolen
presidency’ was reclaimed. Anenih’s position was adopted and a team was put
together, chaired by Metuh, to draft a statement for the party chairman. Others
in the team were the party’s National Secretary, Adewale Oladipo; the National
Legal Adviser, Victor Kwon; Pius Anyim and Liyel Imoke. They went to work
immediately and by the following morning, the statement was ready. However, the
unexpected was about to happen,” Abdullahi wrote.
“When
the draft statement was presented to Adamu Mu’azu, he declared that he would
not release it. He said he had reflected on the idea of issuing a statement and
was convinced it was not the way to go. Words soon got the Villa that the party
chairman had backed out of the plan. Another round of panic began. The
President himself called Mu’azu’s mobile number several times, but the party
chairman did not answer the phone.
“Many
around the president had suspected all along that Mu’azu was not altogether
committed to the Jonathan project. They started grumbling openly that his
appointment, as Chairman, was another mistake by Jonathan because Mu’azu
himself wanted to be president. When the Chairman failed to show up for some
campaign events, the public saw this as evidence that things had finally fallen
apart. The party had to move quickly to deny that there was any crack in the
PDP ranks.
“Therefore,
for those who had questioned Muazu’s loyalty, here finally was the clear
evidence. If he had any objections to the decision taken at the previous day’s
meeting, why didn’t he say so? they wondered. How could he have turned around
to sabotage a plan that he was technically part and parcel of? But this was not
the time for retribution. That could wait a few more days. The party chairman
was still critical to their plans. An emissary was immediately dispatched to
persuade him to have a rethink.
“Godswill
Akpabio marshaled all the arguments he could muster, but Mu’azu would not
budge. It was also an opportunity for the party chairman to vent some of his
grievances. ‘Look, Akpabio,’ he said, ‘I am not a bastard. I have honour to
protect. The man who contested the election had conceded defeat. I should now
be the one to say that the party would not accept defeat? When the candidate
was picking his phone to congratulate the winner, did he consult with the
party?’
“And
in case anyone was thinking of blaming him for the president’s defeat, such
person should think again. After all, didn’t he warn against the use of
religion and ethnicity by the President’s wife and some of his other supporters
like Ayo Fayose and Fani-Kayode? Didn’t he also warn that the personal attacks
on Buhari would backfire, especially in the North? If no one listened to him
then and allowed things to go pear-shaped, how could they now turn around and
ask him to fall on his sword for sins committed by others?
“He
insisted that asking him to issue a statement that would most likely throw the
country into turmoil was tantamount to asking him to commit suicide – if not
literally, then certainly politically. If Akpabio liked, he could sign the
statement himself. After all, he was the Chairman of the PDP Governors’
Forum. A few days after this encounter, Adamu Mu’azu left the country for
Singapore. Some said on medical grounds. Some said for security reasons.
Others said both.”
How Adamu Mu’azu opposed plan to reject Buhari’s
victory
Exclusive from The Cable
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