2015: Atiku, Tinubu hold closed-door meetings with Obasanjo
A
former vice-president, and a presidential aspirant on the platform of
the All Progressives Congress, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, and a national
leader of APC, former Lagos State governor Bola Tinubu, held separate
meetings with a former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, on Friday.
The meetings held at Obasanjo’s Hilltop presidential residence in Abeokuta.
The meetings which lasted less than one hour, were said to be connected with the 2015 elections.
Tinubu
had paid such a visit early last month to Obasanjo, where he said he
had come to discuss the state of the nation and seek the former
president’s advice on the choice of a presidential candidate for the
party.
However, on this visit, Tinubu did not grant any press interview as his convoy drove out of Obasanjo’s residence around 12.30pm.
Two
hours after his departure, Atiku, who had earlier paid a visit to the
governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, arrived in a convoy, and drove into
the former president’s compound.
He
moved into the inner chamber of the building briskly as soon as he
arrived. After a closed-door meeting which lasted for about 45 minutes,
he emerged from the chamber with his host, and went to another wing of
the building where they had lunch.
He
later emerged after 20 minutes and told journalists that he had come to
pay respect to his former boss and also discuss the developments in the
country with him.
He said, “I came
to pay my respect to my former boss, President Olusegun Obasanjo and we
discussed the state of the nation generally.”
He would, however, not reveal the details of their discussion.
He said contrary to rumours making the rounds, he enjoyed an extremely cordial relationship with Obasanjo.
Atiku
while reacting to the moves that the Speaker Aminu Tambuwal had also
joined the APC presidential race, said “the more the merrier, APC is a
democratic party.”
The former
vice-president said it was regrettable that the crisis in the Ogun State
APC had deepened with Chief Olusegun Osoba said to have defected to the
Social Democratic Party.
Atiku, who
is the chairman of the South -West reconciliation committee of the
party, however, expressed optimism that the case was not totally
irreconcilable.
He said, “It is
regrettable and unfortunate, but I believe it is a situation that is
still reconcilable. This is a situation that has been going on for some
time and we have not given up.”
Atiku lashed out at the ruling Peoples Democratic Party as a party whose transformation agenda has taken the nation backward.
He
said, “They call themselves transformers while we call ourselves
progressives, because transformation goes with progressiveness.
“But
their own transformation goes with backwardness. I have said it over
and over again because I have visited APC and PDP states, if you go to
Sokoto, Lagos, Rivers, Zamfara, Kano, you’ll really see, feel and touch,
not what they have told you on the television,” he said.
He
commended the state governor for the massive infrastructural
development he had achieved in the state in three and half years.
No comments:
Post a Comment