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2019: Why I Parted Ways With Buhari, APC-Atiku

April 28, 2018

Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has said one of the reasons he parted ways with his former party, the All Progressive Congress (APC), was the inability of President Muhammadu Buhari to address the negative manner in which the party was being run.

Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has said one of the reasons he parted ways with his former party, the All Progressive Congress (APC), was the inability of President Muhammadu Buhari to address the negative manner in which the party was being run.

Mr. Abubakar stated this on Saturday in an interview with BBC Hausa Good Morning programme.

“After 2015 general election, I met the president. I told him the activities of the party have been crippled and there is a need for restructure. Also, I advised the president on issues concerning his administration. I said to him, if things continued like this, I will quit but Mr. Buhari turned deaf ears and remained mum,” he said.

When asked how he would battle corruption if elected in 2019, the presidential candidate said: “If Nigerians can recall, we initiated the Economic and Financial (Crimes) Commission (EFCC). I’m the person that sourced from the takeoff funds for the EFCC.

“In this administration (Buhari’s), there are people that are untouchable, they are doing things that are not in order but they are being shielded by the government. If elected Nigeria’s president, my administration will not spare any personality. When I was in (at) the helm (of affairs), none of my relatives or friends were found wanting.”

Mr. Atiku, however, commended the present administration on security in the North-east but decried that the war is getting too long.

“Eight years after, the Nigerian government is still fighting Boko Haram that is not professionally trained. If elected Nigeria’s president, I will investigate how the government was unable to defeat Boko Haram for years, also I will investigate the procurement of arms bought by this administration,” he said.

“If elected Nigeria’s president, 40 percent of my cabinet ministers will be youths,” Mr. Atiku added.

On the feud between the Nigerian government and Intel’s Nigeria Limited, in which he has a stake, Mr. Atiku said he was not part of Intel’s management so cannot be bothered.

“When they (Intels) got the contract, they signed an agreement with the government that the money (profit) should be shared into three. One part of the money will be given to Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), another part is meant to service bank loans while the remaining is for Intels. But when this administration came, they said all the money must be deposited in the Single Treasury Account (Treasury Single Account). That was where the issues began,” Mr. Abubakar said.

When asked on his perceived ban from traveling to the United States of America, the former vice president said he “has no any grudges with the American authorities.”

“I requested for a visa, they said it is under administrative process. I’m not desperate to travel to America, I don’t have any investment there. The house I bought for my wife years back, she sold the house, I don’t have anything to do in America. It’s my tradition, I buy houses for my wives but for me, I don’t need a house.”

When asked whether the ‘ban’ will affect his chances of becoming Nigeria’s president, Mr. Abubakar said: “It’s not by going to America that qualifies one to be a president, it’s not in our Constitution.”

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