Wednesday, June 18, 2025 Nenadi Usman, chairperson of the Labour Party (LP) caretaker committee, has described the recent chaos at the All Progressives Congress (APC) North-East stakeholders' summit in Gombe as “political karma,” following President Bola Tinubu’s earlier comments mocking internal crises within opposition parties.
The summit, held on Sunday, June 15, descended into disarray
after some APC leaders endorsed President Tinubu for a second term without
acknowledging Vice-President Kashim Shettima. The omission provoked outrage
among delegates, who disrupted the meeting with protests and threats of
violence.
The incident happened just days after Tinubu derided
opposition parties for their internal divisions, stating that it was “a
pleasure to watch them in disarray.”
In a statement on Tuesday, June 17, Usman said the conflict
within the APC was a direct consequence of the president’s earlier remarks.
“Today, we witness the irony of history in motion. Just days
after the president’s unguarded and undemocratic remarks, his own party, the
APC, has descended into a public crisis in the North East,” she said.
She accused the ruling party of attempting to impose a
singular political agenda, disregarding democratic processes and sidelining
their own vice-president.
“In their reckless bid to enforce a one-person agenda
without regard for process, respect, or even the dignity of their own Vice
President, the APC has exposed the rot at the core of their politics,” Usman
stated.
She said the North-East region’s rejection of the process
highlights a fractured party, with internal discord now publicly visible. “This
is not poetic justice. It is political karma. What President Tinubu wished for
others has turned to plague his own political household,” she said.
She criticised Tinubu’s earlier remarks, stating that they
undermine the spirit of democratic governance. “A president who celebrates the
weakening of opposition is, by extension, celebrating the weakening of
democracy itself,” she said.
Usman urged Nigerians to demand a political culture where
opposition is not silenced but protected, describing it as essential to the
country’s democratic health.
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