Describing the comment as not only insensitive, Okeke said that it was a big insult on Igbo nation.
The Labour Party National Vice Chairman (South-East), Chief Innocent Okeke, has said that the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar, should be advised to withdraw from the race and should stop employing “old and outdated political tricks” to hoodwink Ndigbo to support him.
Okeke, who was reacting to Atiku's recent statement in Awka, the Anambra State capital, that his becoming president would be the stepping stone to actualise president of South-East extraction, said "This trick won't work this time round."
Describing the comment as not only insensitive, Okeke said that it was a big insult on Igbo nation. "It is unconscionable that at a time the country is on the brink of division, occasioned by nepotism and dominance of a particular region in the governance and the yearning for unity and equity, Atiku chose to insult Ndigbo right at their home front."
LP Vice Chairman noted that asking Ndigbo to vote for an extension of Northern-Fulani-Muslim-ticket when the Igbo are yet to test the presidency since 1999 whereas the North had been in charge for 10 years was mockery of the highest degree.
"The Kleptocrats at their own game always want to deceive their perceived targets with rhetorics laden with tricks.”
The statement partly read, "Atiku is employing the old and outdated political tricks on Ndigbo. It won't work this time round. The people are awake and tired of playing second fiddle in a country that they are a major stakeholder. While a Northern Buhari completes eight years in Aso Rock next year, had Atiku any modicum of integrity, he wouldn't have contested for the president let alone asking votes from the South and Ndigbo particularly.
"If Atiku is not up to spite Ndigbo as he usually does, if he believes he is the stepping stone for Ndigbo to take their rightful place, why is he still in this presidential race? He claims to be a unifier whereas he defiles equity which is the most potent unifying factor in Nigeria.
"Funnily enough, Atiku is among those that designed the agreement of rotation in 1999, and has witnessed it go round and now the undisputable right of Ndigbo, why does he want to change the goalpost in the middle of a match? This is unacceptable.
"One would recall that in respect to the principle of rotation and zoning arrangement which has been instituted, no southerner and no Igbo man opposed Atiku and Buhari both of whom are from the north. It was a battle between a Northerner and another as the South patriotically watched from the sideline.
"Now it is the turn of the south and the Southeast precisely, why is Atiku contesting and at the same time coming to the East with intention to insult and mock them?"
It added, "Ndigbo has contributed and still contributing to the present unity and success of Nigeria and doing everything possible to keep a united Nigeria. Agitations are up because of Nigeria's reluctance to embrace equity. Any semblance of unity that exists is driven by Ndigbo. The only tribe that goes everywhere and build home, therefore it is insulting to tell such a people that you are their stepping stone to president.
"Igbo want to be president because they want to fix the Nigeria that has been damaged for over the years. They have presented one of their best whose positive record as a governor is overwhelming.
"As we look forward for a new Nigeria emerging from reality and faith, no one should take these elements that have been architects of Nigeria's problems seriously.
"You cannot go to Kaduna and reveal that an average northerner will not vote a president from South, and repeat that average northerner will not like to vote Igbo or Yoruba, only to come to Awka and say you are a stepping stone. Who do you want to deceive?
"Atiku should be advised to withdraw from the presidential race, work on himself and purge away the old conspiracies that he and his cohorts have been using to teach their younger ones hate and disunity. This is the only practical way to be a unifier."