For the first time since the All Progressives Congress (APC)
began its presidential campaign rallies, Atiku Abubakar, former vice-president
and ex-presidential aspirant of the party, has made his first appearance at the
APC presidential campaign rally in order to lend support to Muhammadu Buhari,
the man who won the presidential ticket he coveted.
It would be recalled that in one of his press conferences he
held recently, the People’s Democratic Party, PDP Director of Media and
Publicity of Presidential Campaign Organisation, Femi Fani-Kayode had observed that
most of the former APC presidential aspirants had not been attending Buhari’s
campaign rally, an indication he said, showed Buhari had been abandoned to his
fate.
Atiku, who recently
traced his absence at campaign rallies to a lengthy foreign trip, made a
surprise appearance at Jalingo, capital of Taraba state, where Buhari and APC were
currently campaigning.
The APC presidential primary was still ongoing on December
11, 2014 when Atiku, seeing that Buhari’s vote count had overtaken his, issued
a statement to congratulate the retired military general, pledging commitment
to the party and promising to “campaign vigorously” for Buhari and all APC
candidates to ensure victory in the 2015 elections.
Although he was on January 6 named a vice-chairman (north)
of the APC presidential campaign council, he travelled out of the country
shorty afterwards, leading to claims by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) that
Buhari had been abandoned to campaign all by himself.
On his return last week, he released a statement to say it
was “morally dubious” for the Nigerian government to consider postponing the
2015 elections.
He was reacting to a statement credited to Sambo Dasuki,
national security adviser, that the elections should be postponed to allow
permanent voter cards (PVCs) get to all eligible and registered voters.
He also promised to join the APC campaign team, saying: “The
duty of participating in the process of change, which our great party, the APC
is committed to, supersedes every other consideration.
“For me, participating in this campaign is a call to
national duty. It is a duty which we cannot afford to compromise upon and we
must press into the consciousness of those at the helms of affairs that it is
morally dubious and socially unacceptable to extend the dates of the elections
by a single day from the scheduled timelines.”
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