Connect with us

Politics

I Have Never Betrayed Tinubu, He Is Indebted To Me – Atiku

Published

on

at

Off-cycle Elections: Atiku Mobilises For Diri, Anyanwu, Melaye

The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2023 election, Atiku Abubakar, has said he has never betrayed President Bola Tinubu.

Atiku stated this on Thursday at a World Press Conference in Abuja while responding to a claim that he betrayed Tinubu by requesting the President’s academic records from the Chicago State University (CSU).

The PDP presidential candidate said he refused to pick Tinubu as his running mate when he emerged as the presidential candidate of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in 2007 in Lagos.

Atiku said the reason President Tinubu felt betrayed was that he refused to choose him as his running mate, stating that they parted ways politically after the fallout.

He said, “I beg to disagree (on betrayal allegation) with Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Yes, it is true that in 2007 we came together to form an alliance in Lagos, and at the convention, I contested and got the ticket. After I got the ticket, he sent about 5 or 6 seniors – some of them are here – I can even name them, but I don’t want to embarrass them.

“They met me and said to me that Bola wanted to be my running mate. I said to them, gentlemen, you’re all old enough, and apparently, virtually all of you are Christians’ with the exception of one person. What will be your reaction to having a Muslim-Muslim ticket?

“All of them said we totally objected to it, and I said, why didn’t you tell him when he was giving you the message that look, Tinubu, the message you’re sending us, we don’t seem to agree with you on it (Muslim-Muslim ticket). Why are you coming then to me? And that was the end of our political relationship. We broke away, so what is the ground for him to say that I betrayed him?

“Till today, I won’t do a Muslim-Muslim ticket; I don’t have to be president; we are a multi-ethnic and multi-religious people, and our government must reflect our diversity, and our composition must reflect the same.”

Atiku said rather than betray the President, he stood up to his then-principal, President Olusegun Obasanjo, and ensured that Lagos State did not fall to the political tsunami of 2003.

“Those of you who are old enough will also remember that in 2003, the PDP took over all the South-Western states, with the exception of Lagos.

“I stood between Obasanjo and himself (Tinubu), and I said no, you (Obasanjo) can’t take over Lagos. Leave it, and he (Obasanjo) left it. So, who is indebted to whom? Is it me or Bola Ahmed Tinubu? I vehemently deny that I stabbed Tinubu in the back.

“There are other things which I will not want to go into,” the former Vice President said.

Ige Olugbenga is a fine-grained journalist. He loves the smell of a good lead and has a penchant for finding out something nobody else knows.