Still wallowing in the euphoria its
registration by the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, the All
Progressives Congress, APC, Tuesday, challenged the rejected African People’s
Congress to seek a new name and apply for registration if it was keen on being
a party.
Chairman of the APC Merger Committee,
Chief Tom Ikimi, who threw the challenge at the phantom APC while speaking to
Vanguard in Abuja, noted that the rejected group was being propelled by forces
within the Peoples Democratic Party to seek to thwart the registration of APC
for selfish reasons.
Ikimi, a former Foreign Affairs
Minister, said that with the formal registration of APC by the INEC, the issue
of who is real or fake had been laid to rest and that it was left for the
rejected group to seek a new name if it was genuinely interested in being
registered as a political party in Nigeria.
He said, “With the registration of
APC, it is very clear who is fake and not. The fake APC should seek a new name
and go for registration if indeed it wants to be registered as a party in the
country.”
Ikimi, who took a swipe at the
profiling of the new party by the PDP as a convergence of expired politicians,
argued that it was not the place of Doyin Okupe, the Presidential spokesman on
Public Affairs to judge the APC but the Nigerian people, who have been under
the heavy yoke imposed on the nation by the misrule of the PDP in the last 14
years.
Ikimi, who is also the South-South
National Vice Chairman of the APC, noted that the PDP was a harbinger of people
who were good at making promises just to win the votes of exasperated Nigerians
but good at delivering poverty and hardship to the populace since it came to
power.
The former minister announced that
APC would contest the Anambra governorship election in November and expressed
optimism that it would win if the forces allowed a free and fair election.
While commending INEC for its
courage in registering the APC, Ikimi however called on the commission to
provide a conducive atmosphere for a free and fair election to thrive in 2015.
“We look forward to interesting
times ahead, of a healthy political engagement between two national political
parties that present alternative choices to our people,” Ikimi said.
“Peaceful change of power is a wind
that is blowing across the globe and all over Africa now. Apart from France and
Italy in the advanced democracies we have here in West Africa-ECOWAS region,
examples in Ghana, Sierra Leone and Senegal where the opposition has
successfully replaced sitting governments though peaceful elections. It seems
to me that Nigeria is yearning now for a peaceful democratic change,” Ikimi
stated.
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