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Wike Wants PDP to Sanction Edo Deputy Governor

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Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State has called on the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to punish the Deputy Governor of Edo State, Philip Shaibu, for threatening to leave the party.

“This is the same deputy governor that was kneeling down to beg for us to give them umbrella, today you have the effrontery to threaten PDP. Such a shame,” Mr Wike is captured saying in a video clip posted on Facebook.

Mr Wike said the PDP was there for Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo State and Mr Shaibu when both were denied the All Progressives Congress (APC) ticket for the 2020 election.

“We went and made sure that they won that election. Today that deputy governor would be ranting. A deputy governor would come on national television to tell PDP the alternative.

“I have written to the national chairman of the party that if they don’t constitute a disciplinary committee against the deputy governor, I will invoke the sanctions of the party and will make sure they must discipline that deputy governor,” Mr Wike said.

“A deputy governor (is) threatening the party! I have never seen a thing like this in my life. A deputy governor coming on television to tell the party if you don’t do this.

“Who’s his father?

“Deputy governor comes and threatens the whole party where we are as governors. Now that he has started the trouble, let him wait, we’ll make sure he never has rest.”

Mr Wike is one of the most influential PDP governors in Nigeria.

The PDP in Edo State has been rocked by internal power struggle since Mr Obaseki, Mr Shuaibu, and their political allies and supporters defected to the party.

Mr Obaseki won the PDP ticket in Edo and got re-elected for a second term in 2020, after his former party, APC, had refused to allow him contest the party primaries because of his political battle with Adams Oshiomhole, the then national chairman of the APC.

Those who were already in the PDP before Mr Obaseki have been accusing the governor and others of trying to have an unfair dominance in the party and the Edo government.

They said there ought to be a balance in power-sharing in the state to compensate them for giving Mr Obaseki the vehicle to contest and win the election.

The governor and his allies, on the other hand, have repeatedly said the other PDP members in the state were yet to integrate them into the party.

We’ve not been accepted in PDP – Shaibu

Mr Shaibu last week hinted that he and others may leave the PDP.

“Are you planning to leave the PDP?” Channels Television reporter, Seun Okinbaloye, asked Mr Shaibu in an interview.

The deputy governor appeared reluctant to answer the question. He paused for a few seconds before he gave his response.

“For me as Philip Shaibu, I have no plans now to leave but for Philip Shaibu and his followers and the followers of Obaseki that left APC to PDP, they all plan to leave PDP,” he said.

“But to where? For now, I don’t know. Why because we feel not accepted in the PDP. And that is the reason why we are actually thinking that it is time to just leave.

“The truth is the governor has been appealing. Some of us were not happy with the governor’s statement, saying he is not leaving PDP. We left APC because of the governor, not because we wanted to join PDP. Because of the oppression that the national chairman of APC meted on the governor,” he added.

‘We are battle-tested’ – Obaseki

Governor Obaseki, unlike Mr Shaibu, has categorically said he is not leaving PDP.

“We have said it, PDP belongs to all of us. I am not going to leave PDP for anybody. Anybody who cannot accept my leadership of PDP in Edo State will leave PDP for us. It is as simple as that,” Mr Obaseki said recently at a meeting with PDP chieftains in the state, according to a Channels Television report.

“We don’t like to boast, we don’t like to talk too much, but we know where we are coming from.

“We are battle-tested, we are not battle-weary,” the governor said.

Mr Obaseki, from his remarks, gave the impression that the power struggle within the Edo PDP may have been compounded by the battle for the soul of the party at the national level, ahead of the 2023 presidential election.

He said, “Whoever is backing any groups outside Edo State, I am pleading to leave Edo alone. Leave Edo alone, Edo is not like any other state.

“Nobody has the monopoly to fight. To win an election, you need everybody to come together and work together.”

Mr Obaseki said he would not make any commitment regarding the 2023 elections without first having an understanding with the PDP members in Edo.

“I told you, I would not do anything or commit to anything without sitting down with each and every one of you, and us agreeing on what to do and where to go.

“Whatever it is, let us all come as one family and sit down and let’s have a conversation, and let’s agree on where we want to go,” he said.

Ebomhiana Musa, the spokesperson for Mr Shaibu, did not respond to calls and a text message seeking comment from him.

Another official of the Edo State Government, however, told PREMIUM TIMES, Sunday morning, that the government was preparing a response to Mr Wike’s comment.

By Premium Times.

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