Wednesday, June 11, 2025 - The All Progressives Congress APC in Rivers State has told the suspended Governor of the state, Siminalayi Fubara that even if he decides to ditch the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the APC, his sins would remain unforgiven.
Chairman of the party in the state, Sir Tony Okocha made
this known on Tuesday, June 10, in Abuja while responding to questions
regarding Fubara’s recent Sallah homage on President Bola Tinubu.
Okocha replied that the APC is not a dumping ground for
political sinners and Fubara's sins won't be forgiven if he decamps.
He said: “If Fubara decides to join the APC, it has nothing
to do with the state of emergency in Rivers state. His sins cannot be forgiven
because he came to our party.
“You will jump into APC today and your sins are forgiven?
That cannot be true. It won’t work that way. Then, it would have made APC as a
dumping ground for people who commit misdemeanor and believe that by and large
we will come for reconciliation. No. It is not true. He has not spoken to me.
He will enter the party through the door not the window.
"Not only him, there are procedures for defection to
another party and if he claims to be a politician, he would know that all
politics is local, he would try and defect in his ward. From there it will come
to us and my ward chairmen. I have asked, nobody brought any information about
him entering APC."
Asked whether he was worried about Fubara’s meeting with the
president, Okocha said the APC had nothing to be worried about.
“How can I be worried that somebody visited my president?
Don’t forget it was also the season of Sallah. Yesterday, I read somewhere that
the former Governor of Ogun State, Chief Osoba paid Sallah homage and I don’t
know whether you also saw the President in the company of Chief EN Wike. So we
cannot be worried, we cannot gag the President to say you will see Mr A, you
will not see Mr B. Perhaps, if I had made an application to see Mr President, I
would have been there with my team”, he said.
Okocha also dismissed reports of a possible reconciliatory
moves being embarked on by Gov. Fubara, saying there was nothing like that.
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