Factional National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party,
Sen. Ali Modu Sheriff, has said that he will not relinquish his claim to the
leadership of the party. Rather, he said his rival, who is the Chairman of the
party’s National Caretaker Committee, Sen. Ahmed Makarfi, must resign before
peace would return to the troubled party.
Sheriff spoke in Abuja on Monday when he hosted a delegation
of the party from Abia State. He said it was true that a meeting was held in
Abuja last week Tuesday on how to bring all warring factions in the party
together. Unfortunately, he said the meeting could not agree with the most
important aspect of his conditions.
Apart from the resignation of Makarfi, Sheriff said that he
(sheriff) must be allowed to nominate the chairman and 10 others into the new
convention committee. He said he was ready to accept another 10 members for the
committee from the Makarfi group.
The former governor said these were the demands he made at a
meeting held with leaders of the party, including Markafi last Tuesday at the
Taraba State Governor’s Lodge, Abuja. Senator Buruji Kashamu, who represents
Ogun East in the Senate, confirmed that the meeting was held in a statement.
Buruji listed those at the meeting to include the Deputy
President of the Senate, Sen. Ike Ekweremadu; Governor Seriake Dickson of
Bayelsa State, Governor Darius Ishaku of Taraba State, Governor Ibrahim
Dankwambo of Gombe State, Governor Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo State, Governor
Nyesom Wike of Rivers State and the Minority Leader of the Senate, Sen.
Godswill Akpabio.
Others, he said, were the Deputy Minority Whip of the
Senate, Sen. Biodun Olujinmi; Sen. Suleiman Adokwe from Nassarawa State;
Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Sen. Walid Jubrin; House Minority Leader,
Mr. Leo Ogor; former Deputy President of the Senate, Sen. Ibrahim Mantu and
himself.
Sheriff also said that he told those at the meeting that the
proposed national convention should not hold in Port Harcourt, but in Abuja. He
said these were the conditions he said should be met before he would speak to
members of his National Working Committee.
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