Staff of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, have shunned an
invitation for a meeting with a factional chairman of the party, Ali
Sheriff.
The staff, who met under the auspices of the PDP Staff Welfare Forum
on Monday in Abuja, said they decided to shun the meeting with Mr.
Sheriff because, unlike, the other factional chairman, Ahmed Makarfi, he
never called for the reopening of the secretariat complex.
The Police have sealed the Wadata Plaza secretariat of the PDP since
May 22 last year following a parallel national convention that saw the
party divided.
The party’s national officers led by former Borno Governor, Ali
Sheriff, were sacked and an interim team announced in Port Harcourt on
May 21, 2016.
The convention appointed former Kaduna Governor, Ahmed Makarfi, as
chairman and a former senator, Ben Obi, as National Secretary.
Mr. Sheriff, however, insists he remains the national chairman.
A statement from the Welfare Committee said Monday’s meeting which
had about 80 members of staff present “unanimously voted to reject the
invitation by Senator Sheriff.”
They said they decided to reject the invitation because “while the
National Caretaker Committee under the able leadership of Senator Ahmed
Mohammed Makarfi, spoke in support of the call for the national
secretariat of the party to be opened for Party activities, Senator
Sheriff in a statement by his spokesman, Hon. Bernard Mikko rejected the
call for the reopening of the National Secretariat which was seen by
the staff as an affront to the progress and rebuilding process in the
PDP”.
The staff also queried the yardstick for the invitation by Mr.
Sheriff, accusing him of not working for the growth and development of
the party.
The staff accused him of “tacitly working against the party, as seen
in his activities that reduced the fortune of the PDP in the
gubernatorial elections in Edo and Ondo states”.
The staff also queried the “deaf-silence by Senator Ali Modu Sheriff
on various salient national issues especially the recklessness and
misgovernance of the APC-led administration.”
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