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13 govs threaten to pull out of NGF •As crisis tears forum apart

State Governors Sylva of Bayelsa State, Uduaghan of Delta State and Amaechi of Rivers State, meet at the South-South Summit to discuss the 2011 presidential election in Nigeria’s Port HarcourtThe division among the ranks of Nigerian governors under the aegis of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF) appeared to have widened at the weekend, as no fewer than 13 governors have alleged that the last meeting of the forum was staged to scheme them out.
Sources close to the forum told the Sunday Tribune in Abuja that some of the governors were aggrieved over the manner in which the last meeting, which held on Wednesday, February 19, was called.
A governor, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the invitation was selectively sent out to members and that some of the members, especially those that had opposed certain positions of the leadership, were not invited.
It was learnt that 13 of the governors, who share the same position, had already tabled their “minimal demand” before the leadership of the NGF with a threat that they could be forced to pull out of the forum if its leadership continued in its refusal to adopt democratic tenets.
The governor told the Sunday Tribune: “We were selectively invited to the last NGF meeting. And when we made enquiries at the secretariat, they claimed they sent out invitations to all members.
“But when some of us, who were not invited, got wind of the meeting, we dashed in to attend.”
The governor, from one of the southern states, further confirmed that themeeting was shrouded in secrecy, as the agenda was not even confirmed to those that got the invitation. None of the invitees, he stated, knew of the plan for election.
“You will be shocked to discover that even those that got invitations, did not know about any election, as the issue of election was not on the agenda. But the issue suddenly found its way into the agenda,” the governor said.
It was learnt that two issues caused the row at the meeting. One had to do with the scorecard of the executive committee and the second was the need to adopt democratic tenets in the administration of the forum, especially since it was taken that all the governors were equal.
Another contentious issue that created furore at the meeting was on the need to ensure that elections in the forum should not be by affirmation.
Another source said the incumbent leadership was faulted on its management of the Good Governance Tour, which the Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, is leading.
The source said that many governors were not impressed with way the tour, which was their idea, was being handled, especially the criticisms that had greeted it.
“Right now, some governors, including Adams Oshiomhole, have condemned the tour as a mere jamboree. It shows that the forum has not really managed it well ,because the NGF sold the idea to Labaran Maku to execute. It was meant as a form of peer review mechanism,” the source said, disclosing that the aggrieved governors would be forced to pull out of the forum, if the leadership failed to respect their wish.
Further insights into the last NGF meeting indicate thus: “Two things actually caused crisis at the last meeting Some of us demanded the said score-card, the achievements for the outgoing tenure. We believe that it was the legitimate demand and a normal thing to do at the end of the tenure of every executive of any Association. Again, we also demanded that elections should not be by affirmation. We wanted an open space for interested candidates. There is the general feeling that election should conduct this election as it should be through democratic tenets or even semblance of it.
“These are our minimum demands,” the governor further said.
He added that on the above, no fewer than 13 Governors are “speaking with one voice” adding that the unfolding crisis has nothing to do the the perceived and rumoured presidential ambition of any governor.
The governor stated that any of them could aspire to any position but insisted that none of them could be sponsored to cause any crisis within the body.
He asked: “ Do we look like people that could be sponsored? At how much? In the NGF we are all equal. Nobody is the boss.
“Look, if the right thing is not done, some of us are ready to pull out of the NGF in the next meeting. That is given already. And everybody knows this,” he stated.
-Tribunewp_posts

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Posted by on Feb 23 2013. Filed under Governors, Latest Politics, Top Stories. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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