
Former Governor of Lagos State and national leader of the All
Progressives Congress, Bola Tinubu, has said he did not attend the
Friday meeting of a group of Yoruba leaders on the proposed national
conference because he was not invited, the PUNCH has reported.
A
group, Yoruba Committee on National Conference, had met at the
Isara-Remo, Ogun State-home of an elder statesman, Sir Olaniwun Ajayi,
to strategise on the selection of delegates for the South-West
geopolitical zone ahead of the conference.
Tinubu opposed the conference, as a diversion and a waste of time, and has ruled out the participation of his political group.
Some of the prominent Yoruba leaders at the meeting were Governor
Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo State; Afenifere leader, Chief Reuben Fasoranti;
former Minister of Finance, Chief Olu Falae; Gen. Alani Akinrinade
(retd.); activist lawyer, Dr. Tunji Braithwaite; Afenifere leader, Chief
Ayo Adebanjo; Bishop Bolanle Gbonigi (retd.); Archbishop Ayo Ladigbolu;
and the convener, Save Nigeria Group, Pastor Tunde Bakare.
Speaking
to our correspondent on Saturday, Tinubu’s media aide, Mr. Sunday Dare,
said there were attempts by some leaders in the South-West to sideline
other Yoruba leaders, especially those in the APC.
He said, “Have
you asked whether they (APC leaders) were intimated about the meeting?
There was no communication whatsoever. There was an attempt by a group
of self-appointed Yoruba leaders to isolate some other persons. And this
has been going on for a long time.
“There was no information out
there, whether in the public or privately. And it is not possible for
these leaders — the APC leaders or the Yoruba leaders in the APC — to go
for a meeting they don’t know about; a meeting they were not invited
to. It is not possible.”
Also, the Publicity Secretary, APC, Lagos
State chapter, Mr. Joe Igbokwe, said it was left to the people to judge
whether they were the leaders of the Yoruba nation or not.
He
said such a meeting without Tinubu and the APC governors from Lagos,
Oyo, Ogun, Osun, Ekiti and “probably” Edo states was incomplete.
Igbokwe
said, “There are leaders, there are also leaders. We, as the followers
can choose where we want to be. They are leaders in their own class. I
can’t deny Chief Ayo Adebanjo; I know him in the days of the locust. I
can’t deny others but there are leaders and there are also leaders.
“Asiwaju
and the governors of the APC states (in the South-West) were not there.
If you’re doing something in the South-West and you cannot find the APC
leaders who have about 90 per cent control of the leadership of the
zone, then what are you talking about? It means that there is a lacuna.”
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