The Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki,
has denied reports that he is nursing the ambition for presidency in
2019, saying he actually quit his presidential bid in the 2015 election
for President Muhammadu Buhari.
Saraki stated that he contributed
immensely to the emergence of Buhari as President and contributed
greatly to his victory in the presidential election held on March 28,
2015.
The Senate President, who spoke to select
journalists in an exclusive interview in Abuja on Saturday, also denied
having plans to dump the All Progressives Congress due to the ongoing
crisis in the party over his leadership of the Senate.
Rather,
he said what remained paramount in his mind at the moment was how to
support the Buhari-led administration to tackle the various social and
economic problems confronting the country.
Saraki said, “I was the first person that
stepped down his political ambition, once General Buhari announced that
he was going to contest the presidential election. And since then,
prior to the period of election, I worked tirelessly to support his
emergence.
“Even some of my friends who are not
supporting me now are doing so because I did not support them in their
presidential ambition and that I supported President Buhari. That is why
I find it funny that the same people are now claiming to love Buhari
more than me. It is a very funny world.
“These are people that I was begging to
leave the stage for Buhari to run since all of us are young. They are
now the one going round to say that Saraki did not like Buhari but time
will tell.”
The Presidency, however, faulted Saraki’s claim of stepping down for Buhari ahead of the presidential election.
Saraki had on October 13, 2014, announced
the suspension of his presidential bid in the interest of the country
and his party. He, however, did not state which of the other aspirants
he was going to back.
Saraki’s statement then partly read, “I
decided to step down my ambition because Nigeria’s political outlook for
2015 is very complicated and this is the time for every patriotic
politician to situate his personal ambition in the context of the
country’s overall interest.
“I don’t think our party can afford too
much internal rancour going into next year’s election. I, therefore,
think some of us need to make the sacrifice and be part of the solution
rather than part of the problem of the party.”
This will be Saraki’s first personal response to the ongoing crisis that is trailing his controversial emergence as the President of the Senate on June 9.
Saraki had led a faction of APC senators,
under the auspices of the Like Minds Senators, to defy the party’s
choice of Ahmad Lawan as the Senate President.
In what many have described as a ‘coup’,
the pro-Saraki group had allied with the opposition lawmakers in the
Peoples Democratic Party to make Saraki leader of the upper chamber of
the legislature in the absence over 50 APC senators.
A similar scenario had also played out in
the House of Representatives where Yakubu Dogara opposed Femi
Gbajabiamila, the choice candidate of his party, to emerge Speaker of
the House.
Explaining what happened on the National
Assembly leadership election day, Saraki said he smuggled himself into
the chamber on the day the 8th Assembly was inaugurated when he became
aware of an alleged plan to abduct and prevent him from standing for the
Senate presidential election
The Senate President also defended his
absence from the International Conference Centre venue of a proposed
meeting between President Buhari and APC lawmakers on the day of the
election.
He insisted that he did not receive any invitation for the meeting.
Saraki said, “As regards the meeting, on
the morning of the inauguration, I didn’t finish meeting until 4am of
that day and I had got information that efforts would likely be made to
make sure that I didn’t get access into the chambers.
He said the plan before was that
senators-elect should go to the Transcorp Hilton Hotel around 8:00am and
9:00am to proceed to the National Assembly.
The Senate President said he was,
however, advised against going to the chamber at the scheduled time as
there were plans to stop him from being part of the day’s proceedings.
Saraki said he got into the National
Assembly Complex as early as 6:00am and stayed in a car in the car park
from then till quarter to 10:00am. He noted that all through the period,
there was no communication to him.
“So, anybody who said they spoke to me to
go the ICC was not true because I didn’t even know what was going on.
All I was monitoring was how people were arriving at the complex. It was
at quarter to 10:00am that I got information that the Clerk to the
National Assembly had entered the chamber.”
The APC, however, described Saraki’s non-invitation claim as a lie, saying all senators-elect were invited to the said meeting.
Saraki, a two-term ex-Governor of Kwara
State and former Chairman of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum, said it was
at that point that he got down from the “small car” in which he was
hiding and entered the chamber.
“Even when I was in the chambers, I
didn’t know what had transpired earlier on. The only thing I observed
was that it appeared that some of our senators were not in the chamber.
But for the fact that my colleagues arrived in batches, I had the
opinion that they were on their way. And by 10:00am, the programme
started.
“Before I knew it, my election had come
and gone. Even, my people were worried. It was only when I got into the
chambers that they were relieved,” Saraki added.
The Senate President also dismissed his alleged pact with the PDP to elect Ike Ekweremadu as Deputy Senate President.
Ekweremadu of the PDP, who occupied same
position in the last Senate, had been re-elected as Saraki’s deputy in
the Senate that has the APC as majority.
The Senate President, however, insisted
that that it was the absence of the APC Senators from the chamber that
caused the emergence of Ekweremadu as his deputy.
He said, “Never in our wildest
imagination did we envisage that some senators would not be present on
the day of the inauguration. In my view, and in the view of some of
those who worked closely with me, I worked hard for my election. I had
direct contact with every single senator; one on one. Weeks to the
election, I did not rely on anybody. I worked hard, both in our party,
the APC, and out of it.
“I approached every senator, I talked to
them. We built confidence, not only in the APC, but, also, in the PDP. I
talked to them. That was why I laugh when people said that I had a deal
with Ekweremadu or I had a hand in the emergence of Ekweremadu.”
Saraki stated that he did not need any deal to win the election, saying he had “penetrated everywhere.”
Speaking further on the penetration, he
said, “One of the meetings was held at Transcorp Hilton and Senator
Godswill Akpabio and Senator Ibrahim Gobir co-chaired it. Both the APC
and the PDP members were present.
“At that meeting, if you heard most of
them there, the position they took was that ‘this is the Senate
President they want. Across party lines, they said that they believe in
me and that this is the Senate President that can lead us. There was no
deal.”
Saraki, who described Ekweremadu’s deputy
Senate presidency as painful and unfortunate, maintained that it was
caused by the absence of his APC colleagues. He recalled that the PDP
senators had announced to the public that they were supporting him.
He further said, “With regard to the
deputy, when they told us that they had a candidate, we, too, told them
we had a candidate for Deputy Senate President in the person of Senator
Ali Ndume.
“We never, in our imagination, thought
they (other APC senators) would not turn up. By the time we got there,
we were only 24 while the PDP was more than 40.
“It is unfortunate that we have a PDP man
as deputy Senate President. It is painful. It is painful for any APC
member because when we went through the struggle. That was not what we
signed for.”
Saraki said it was unfair to put the
blame on “one side” because it was a combination of errors and
miscalculations that led having some senators at another place instead
of being on the floor of the Senate on that day.
“So, to suggest that it was out of a
desperate act to emerge (as Senate President) is what I reject
completely and those who followed the events would know that I didn’t
have that deal to emerge,” he stated.
Saraki also disagreed with insinuations
that he went against the position of the party which had allegedly zoned
the position of the Senate president to a particular region.
“At no time was any decision taken by the party to zone the position to any particular zone,” he stated.
Saraki also said he had had personal
discussions with the Lawan and they had allegedly deliberated
extensively on how to collectively move the Senate forward in the
interest of the senators, the APC and members of the public.
He said, “I also have an opportunity to sit down and discuss with Senator Ahmad Lawan as part of our reconciliation efforts. I am confident that this matter will soon fizzle out because we are making serious efforts.”
Saraki further said serious arrangements were already ongoing to unite the various sides to the crisis, even as he hinted that he had reached out to the leaders of the party, President Buhari and Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, on how to collectively move the country forward.
“Regards to Asiwaju Bola Tinubu; as you
all know, he is one of the leaders of the party. I have great respect
for him. We have worked closely together before. Unfortunately my group
did not agree with him on this issue.
“However, we are both responsible and
committed to the project of the party and Nigeria that we will overcome
this and move forward. It is part of our plans, as part of the healing
process, to meet with him and it will happen soon,” Saraki added.
Saraki did not step down for Buhari – Presidency
The Special Adviser to the President on
Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, on Saturday, said there was no
truth in the claim by Saraki that he stepped down for President Buhari
in the APC presidential race.
Adesina, in an interview with one of our
correspondents, said the issue of stepping down did not arise because
the party conducted a free and fair presidential primary which Buhari
won.
The presidential spokesman said all Nigerians know those who took part in the party primary.
Adesina said, “There was no issue of
stepping down during the presidential race in the APC. There was a
presidential primary that was plain, transparent, free and fair.
“We all know those who were involved in
the primary; all Nigerians know those who participated in the APC
presidential primary and President Buhari emerged the winner of that
process.”
When asked if Saraki had reached out to
the President as he claimed, Adesina said, “The President has always
maintained that the party is supreme. The party started a process which
was truncated.
“The President has always maintained that those who truncated or aborted the process were the ones who precipitated crisis.
“The President had said in earlier
statements that he would work with anybody who emerged the Senate
President, but then, that did not include those who will subvert (the
process).”
(Punch)
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