The ruling
All Progressives Congress has described the opposition Peoples Democratic
Party’s definition and understanding of the restructuring of Nigeria as shallow
and far
from what Nigerians are asking for.
The two main
parties had since the end of last week been engaged in a debate on an issue
that has recently become the centre of national political discourse in Nigeria.
The APC had
fired the first salvo when it criticised the opposition party as a latter-day
convert on the issue, with the criticism drawing a sharp response on Sunday
from the PDP spokesperson, Dayo Adeyeye, who defined and insisted that his
party had always supported and planned for restructuring.
But in its
latest statement on Monday through its spokesperson, Bolaji Abdullahi, the APC
insisted that the opposition party was merely being opportunistic and is
attracted to the subject because it has become the “new political currency in
Nigeria”.
He said the
APC not only had provisions for the issue in the manifesto it presented ahead
of the last general election, it has also “dusted up” the report of the 2014
National Constitutional Conference in its current effort to formulate a
framework for implementation of the subject.
“The PDP’s
definition and understanding of restructuring, from what they said in their
statement, is shallow and that they do not know the kind of restructuring
Nigerians are asking for,” Mr. Abdullahi continued.
“This should
ordinarily be a welcome development, given that it provides opportunity for
bi-partisan cooperation on this very important national issue.
“However, of
concern to us is PDP’s rather shallow interpretation of restructuring as
desired by Nigerians.
“In his
release, Mr. Adeyeye quoted several aspects of his party’s constitution which
he claimed serve as evidence that PDP believes in restructuring.
“A cursory
review of the referenced parts of the constitution would, however, suggest
either the PDP is deliberately out to mislead or it just does not have an
appropriate understanding of the restructuring that Nigerians clamour for.
“For
instance, Preamble 2(b) of the PDP constitution quoted by Adeyeye states: ‘To
work together under the umbrella of the party for the speedy restoration of
democracy, the achievement of national reconciliation, economic and social
reconstruction and respect for human rights and the rule of law’.
“If
statements such as the above are what the PDP intends to pass off as
restructuring, this should further confirm that the party is still not in tune
with the aspirations and dreams of the Nigerian people.
“It is
indeed amusing that after being in power for 16 years, PDP is just waking up to
realise that its constitution prescribed restructuring.
“If this is
not political opportunism, we wonder what is. We understand that PDP needs
desperately to return to reckoning; and realising that restructuring is the new
political currency in Nigeria, it is now latching on and even claiming to be an
apostle!
“As the
ruling party between 1999 and 2015, PDP organised two national conferences, in
2005 and in 2014. They had nine years between the first conference and the
second one and one full year between the time the report of the 2014 conference
was submitted and the time it lost power in 2015.
“Perhaps, if
PDP show which aspects of the two reports it had implemented in the time it
had, then perhaps Nigerians might begin to take them seriously on the issue of
restructuring.”
Mr.
Abdullahi said if the PDP now believes in restructuring, then they are welcome
as latter day converts; stressing, however, that the appropriate behaviour
would be for the PDP to respect the efforts the APC is currently making to
deliver on its manifesto on restructuring.
“It must
interest the PDP that we have dusted up the reports of their national
conferences from the shelves they had left them to gather dust and those
reports are now forming part of the work we are doing with our committee, which
they have tried hard to denigrate.
“For the
avoidance of doubt, the APC believes in the restructuring of the country, it is
at the very heart of our party’s manifesto.
“As
explicitly stated in Section 3 (1) thus: ‘We will devolve more revenue and
powers, such as policing to States and Local Government so that decision making
is closer to the people. We pledge to bring the government closer to the people
through fiscal and political decentralization, including local policing’.’’
The ruling
party said it welcomes PDP and all the parties in opposition to work with it as
it strives to meet the aspirations of Nigerians on “this very fundamental issue
of our national existence.”
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