Ahead
of the 2015 general elections, no fewer than 16 opposition political
parties are neck-deep in Alliance talks to remain relevant in the
polity.
The alliance may lead to the formation
of another mega party other than the yet-to-be-registered All
Progressives Congress being spearheaded by the Action Congress of
Nigeria, Congress for Progressive Change, All Nigeria Peoples Party and a
faction of All Progressive Grand Alliance.
The opposition parties had already met at the weekend in a hotel in Abuja, The Punch learnt, with a presidential candidate in 1999, Chief Olu Falae, as the leader.
Falae was a consensus presidential
candidate of the Alliance for Democracy and the All Progressive Party,
now ANPP, in the 1999 election in which former President Olusegun
Obasanjo of the Peoples Democratic Party emerged as winner.
The opposition parties at the meeting,
constituted a three-man committee with members drawn from the Action
Alliance, United Democratic Party and the National Conscience Party.
One of the political parties in the new
alliance, Advanced Congress of Democrats,held its National Executive
Committee meeting on Saturday at Jikwoyi, a suburb of Abuja, where its
members ratified the decision of the National Working Committee to
participate in the Falae-led alliance talks.
At the ACD congress, the party’s
National Chairman, Yusuf Yakub, lamented that the country was going
through hard times due to lack of good leadership.
“The party in power was not able to
deliver to Nigerians the dividends that are supposed to come with
democracy. These dividends are basic things like food, shelter, health
care, security, employment and enabling environment, where electricity,
good roads, clean water etc are available for investments in all sectors
to thrive,” he said.
Yakub later confirmed to our correspondent that his party attended the meeting chaired by Falae.
According to him, other opposition
parties need to form a formidable force to meet up with the challenge
posed by the PDP and APC.
“There were so many opposition political
parties that attended the meeting; I assure you something good will
come out of it. The alliance will be a third alternative to Nigerians,”
he said.
On why the parties involved in the new
alliance did not join forces with the APC, Yakub said, “Most of the
political parties in Nigeria that claim to be progressives are not
really progressives. If you look at their antecedents, you will find out
that they are also capitalists. It is just a game of interest; this one
trying to outsmart that one”.
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