Ekiti State
governor, Mr Ayodele Fayose, has said he cannot join the All Progressives
Congress (APC), even if he has to leave his current party, the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP).
Fayose, who
spoke at a gathering in Ado-Ekiti, said the practice of use and dump adopted by
the leadership of the APC would not allow him to contemplate defecting to the
party.
A press
statement issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Idowu Adelusi in Ado-Ekiti on
Wednesday, the governor cited the case of a national leader of the APC, Senator
Bola Tinubu, who worked tooth and nail for the victory of the party in the 2015
general elections in the country and who was subsequently abandoned by those he
helped to put in power.
“Some people
have been making overtures to me to join the APC, but I cannot join them.
With
what have they repaid somebody like Asiwaju Tinubu? He worked and helped the
party to secure victory but has been dumped. That is not a party I would be
interested in joining.
“One thing I
would not allow is for anybody to rubbish our leaders in the South-West. Our
leaders, including Asiwaju Tinubu, must be accorded their due respect, as any
attempt to rubbish them will be taken as a slap on the entire Yoruba race,” he
added.
The
clarification by the governor came on the heel of crisis rocking the PDP at the
national level in which Senators Ahmed Makarfi and Ali Modu Sheriff are locked in a battle
over the national chairmanship seat of the party.
This is just as
the governor said his administration would complete the rehabilitation of the
federal Ado-Itawure Road before the burial of the late military governor of the
old Western Region, Major-General Adeyinka Adebayo.
He also promised
to rehabilitate the Ifaki-Omuo Road, another Federal Government road, to make
access to the state more pleasurable.
On the need to
ensure coordinated development for the state, Fayose said a master plan for
Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, would be worked out.
He noted that
the government would need the support of landlords and property owners, as the
government would not want a situation whereby indiscriminate physical
development would later turn the town into an eyesore.
He promised that
a Landlords’ Summit would be conveyed to aggregate the opinions and input of
landlords to the evolution of the master plan.
Source: Guardian News
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