CPC

Buhari loyalists reaffirm support for Tinubu, pledge to remain in APC

By Uzair Adam 

Amid speculations of discontent within the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), key loyalists of former President Muhammadu Buhari have reaffirmed their support for President Bola Tinubu and pledged to remain in the party.

The group, operating under the Forum of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), made the declaration in Abuja on Thursday, countering reports that some Buhari allies were planning to exit the APC.

Those present at the meeting included Katsina State Governor Dikko Radda, Niger State Governor Umar Bago’s representative, former Nasarawa State Governor Senator Tanko Al-Makura, former Katsina State Governor Aminu Bello Masari, and Chairman of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Gen. Buba Marwa (retd).

Other notable figures in attendance were former Voice of Nigeria Director General Osita Okechukwu, former presidential aide Okoi Obono Obla, former APC National Secretary Waziri Bulama, ex-lawmaker Farouk Adamu, a representative of Speaker Tajudeen Abbas, and Foreign Affairs Minister Maitama Tuggar.

The forum emphasised that although individuals are free to pursue personal political interests, they should not do so under the guise of representing former CPC members.

Responding to whether the bloc would support Tinubu beyond the current administration, Hon. Farouk Adamu expressed confidence, saying, “We are with Tinubu just like our leader (Buhari), and it is our hope that Tinubu continues to remain our leader.”

CPS condemns Christian leaders for criticising Muslim-Muslim ticket

By Uzair Adam Imam

The Centre for Promotion of Shari’ah (CPS) expressed worries over the utterances of some prominent Christian political and religious leaders concerning the Muslim-Muslim ticket.

The centre was also dismayed by the numerous social, political and economic challenges bedevilling the Muslim Ummah in the country.

This was contained in a communiqué signed by Aminu Inuwa Muhammad, the centre National Coodinator, at the end of a one-day stakeholders meeting in Abuja.

It said, “Current developments in the political landscape of Nigeria have become a source of serious concern to CPS and the general Muslim Ummah in the country.

“The decision of some parties in the choice of presidential candidates and their respective running mates has attracted unguarded statements from some religious and political leaders, a development that has worsened the already tense political situation,” it added.

The centre also called on the Muslims to vote for the political parties and candidates who will ensure justice and protection of their rights and interests.

“Muslims in Nigeria need to properly organise themselves in order to take full advantage of their obvious demographic strength during the 2023 elections.

“Muslims need to pursue proactive measures towards countering the negative profiling in the media as well as the moral drift and mischief prevalent in the social media.”

Youth leadership in Nigeria and the Muhammed Kadade’s example

By Abdulrazak Iliyasu Sansani

I am not a card-carrying member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) or any other party. But I was on the cusp of becoming a member of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) in 2010 as a young man, who was majorly stopped by the constitutional requirements of being a card-carrying member, which I did not fulfil certain aspects of.  And, of course, other thoughtful considerations have prevented me from joining any party officially.

So, when the CPC merged with the ACN, ANPP, and a faction of APGA, the urge to join was renewed, and it only took God’s guidance for me not to have joined it or any other party. Nevertheless, I have always done all these with patriotic conviction and buoyed by the zeal to help my country in my little ways.

I am not a blind follower of any cause and certainly not a supporter of broad generalisations. This explains why I have never jumped on the bandwagon where youth leadership is equated with exemplary leadership, especially with optimal performance. I have clearly shown why it is not so in so many of my writings in the past. Nevertheless, I still believe that good leadership can be gotten in both the young and old. Throughout history, this has been proven to be spot on.

But when it comes to the issue of any leadership position that is reserved for youth. I am wholly in support of only youth leading in that instance. I do not subscribe to older men holding offices kept for the youth, which was absurdly becoming a given.

Hence, on October 31,  early Sunday morning, when I received the news of the emergence of the new National Youth Leader of PDP, Muhammed Kadade Sulaiman, whose age has been reported in so many newspapers, blogs, tabloids, etc. to be 25, I received it with great delight. It is a refreshing deviation from the past that had largely made a mockery of the contribution of the youth in respect of all the major parties in Nigeria. While this doesn’t repay all that, not even close. But it is the right step in the right direction.

If certain positions were mainly preserved for the elders, I would have had the same abhorrence if the youth destroyed this arrangement and occupied offices exclusively for the elders. I am a stickler for rules. Thus, I respect conventions and believe everyone should only get what is reserved for them.

In essence, I celebrated the victory of the PDP National Youth Leader, Muhammed Kadade Sulaiman, with the clarity of the triumph of the right thing over absurdity. Some have argued about his influential or rather affluent family background being the two reasons for his success. Whatever it is, there are numerous families with considerable influence in the polity who have had scions, who are political aficionados, and have vied for positions less significant than this and lost. They would have grabbed with both hands this grand opportunity, should it have been just for the two reasons above.

Therefore, the People’s Democratic Party, no matter your grouse against the party, has done something strategic and commendable. And for some of us, we applaud anything good and positive. We leave the rest for the pundits, political scientists, and seasoned politicians to analyse.

I hope Muhammed Kadade Sulaiman does well in this big assignment, and I pray that his emergence will pave the way for the massive influx of good and responsible youth in leadership positions. In the end, I also believe that the young and the old shouldn’t be denied a constitutional right to vote and be voted for simply because of their age. Merit must always be the watchword whenever we commence leadership discussion anywhere.

Abdulrazak Iliyasu Sansani wrote from Turaki B, Jalingo, Taraba State.