ntention of G7 governors of the New Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to
 stay away from today’s meeting called by President Goodluck Jonathan to
 resolve the lingering crisis in the party, the presidency is going 
ahead with its plans, hoping that the governors will still attend.
The president, some governors of PDP, party stakeholders loyal to him
 and the aggrieved governors had agreed in their meeting of September 
15, held at the Presidential Villa, to sheathe their swords and return 
to a final round of meeting today, where they hoped all outstanding 
disagreements would be resolved.
But the Abubakar Baraje-led splinter group, to which the rebel 
governors were loyal, in a media statement last week, indicated that it 
was seeking a postponement of the meeting, as it coincided with the time
 most of the seven governors would be out of the country on Muslim 
pigrimage.
But the Nigerian Tribune learnt on Sunday that beyond what it saw on 
the pages of the newspapers, the presidency had not been officially 
notified of their decision not to attend.
It is, therefore, going ahead with the preparations for the meeting, 
which was expected to take place at the First Lady wing of the 
Presidential Villa.
The Special Adviser to the President, Alhaji Ahmed Gulak, confirmed 
to the Nigerian Tribune in a phone call on Sunday that President 
Jonathan was ready to receive the governors today or any time at all. 
He said though the presidency had seen the statement of the splinter 
group in the media, it was yet to be officially informed, adding that 
the presidency would not act on media speculations.
Asked to confirm if the meeting had been put off, he said “the 
meeting is supposed to hold tomorrow (today). Let’s wait for tomorrow 
before you begin to ask questions.”
Reminded that New PDP had said the aggrieved governors would not be 
available, Gulak added: “That’s the report we are reading in the 
newspapers, but the best thing is to wait for tomorrow (today) whether 
the meeting will hold or not. If the meeting doesn’t hold, you can call 
me (to find out) and if we have any reason to give, we can then give 
you.
“But, as of today (Sunday), I don’t work on speculations on the 
papers, I have not seen their formal letter of request to postpone the 
meeting. I just read it in the pages of newspapers. So, maybe by 
tomorrow (today), we will know the correct position.
“Well, as far as we are concerned, the president is waiting, any time any day.”
The presidential aide also responded to the claim made on Saturday by
 Governor Sule Lamido of Jigawa State that both President Jonathan and 
the national chairman of PDP, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, were joiners, who 
wanted to take over a house that did not belong to them.
Receiving some of his supporters from Kano State, Lamido had said “at
 the time Tukur became chairman, we were already governors. He 
contributed nothing to us; we are the ones who favoured him after he was
 rejected by his zone and defeated by Babayo Gamawa in a shadow election
 conducted in the North-West zone. We said, don’t worry let us meet in 
Abuja. We met in Abuja, we supported him and we made him the national 
chairman.
“At that time, Nyako, Kwankwaso, Wamakko, Babangida Aliyu, Amaechi 
and I were already in office, having won our second term elections. What
 did Bamanga contribute to us? Who favoured who between us?
“There is no way someone who was favoured and is squatting would be 
allowed to claim a house and attempt to send owners of the house out of 
their own compound. When the PDP was formed and registered, where were 
Tukur and Jonathan?”
But the presidential aide debunked the claim, saying both Jonathan and Tukur were original members of the PDP.
While he noted that Jonathan was the deputy governor of his state in 
1999, less than a year after the party’s formation, he also recalled 
that Tukur was a founding father of PDP.
According to Gulak, “Tukur was one of the pioneer members of PDP. 
Tukur is a founding father of PDP in 1998. So, they should know. Any 
governor should know that. Any governor that was there from G-18 to G-34
 to PDP. Tukur was always there. So, nobody can tell us that Tukur was 
not there when PDP was formed.
“As for the president, he was there when PDP was formed and, in 1999,
 he was the deputy governor of his state and today, by the grace of God,
 he is the leader of the party by all intent and purposes. So, nobody 
can call him a tenant in PDP.
“He is the real landlord that he is and he is the leader of the 
party. So, the fact remains the same, the president is the leader of the
 party and Bamanga Tukur is the national chairman. This is legally and 
constitutionally recognised.”
He added that there was only one certificate of registration of PDP 
with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), adding that 
“these are facts, they are not speculations.”
New PDP demands Tukur’s resignation, unified conventionThe
 leadership of the Baraje-led faction of PDP, again, demanded  the 
immediate resignation of Alhaji Tukur on the ground that he was not a 
registered and card-carrying member of the party.
The faction also called for the holding of a unity convention under 
Baraje, whom it asked should take over the party after the resignation 
of Tukur.
In a statement issued by its national publicity Secretary, Chief Eze 
Chukwuemeka, it accused Tukur of attempting to falsify party records to 
cover up facts about his irregular return to the party after his earlier
 expulsion, warning that such an action was criminal.
The faction alleged that Tukur, who was expelled from PDP in 2006, 
had not officially returned to the party, adding that all records at its
 disposal showed that the embattled chairman had not followed due 
process for his re-admission into the party. 
“He neither apply for, nor obtained the requisite waiver by the 
National Executive Committee (NEC) of the party before offering himself 
for election into the office of national chairman in 2012. 
“This makes his membership incurably defective and his emergence as 
PDP national chairman null and void and of no effect whatsoever, since 
he is the product of a flawed process,” the faction insisted .
Warning that Tukur’s continued occupation of the office of national 
chairman was fraudulent, illegal and unconstitutional, the faction added
 that “all the actions he has taken as the chairman of PDP since his 
purported election in March 2012, including the illegal, contentious 
convention of August 2013, are null and void and of no effect.”
The statement then canvassed that Tukur be eased out by offering him a
 ministerial appointment and Baraje, who handed over to Tukur, be 
recalled to continue in office.
“We hereby formally suggest the immediate recall of Alhaji Baraje, 
who erroneously handed over to Alhaji Tukur as the national chairman of 
PDP.
“This will enable Alhaji Baraje to organise a proper, unified 
convention that will usher in a duly elected National Working Committee 
(NWC) of the party as early as possible, to enable us to face the 
business of positioning PDP as the ruling party in 2015,” the faction 
stated.