A
cold war brewing between President Goodluck Jonathan and Vice President Namadi
Sambo came out in the open last weekend as the two political figures attended
two different events with their political allies.
Mr. Jonathan was in Yenagoa, the capital of Bayelsa
State, to bury his brother, Meni, while Vice President Sambo was in Kaduna to
give his two daughters, Aisha and Huwaila, out in marriage.
A top official of the Peoples Democratic Party told SaharaReporters that many members of the party were baffled that the president fixed the burial of his brother on the same day that his vice president had set for his two daughters’ marriage.
A top official of the Peoples Democratic Party told SaharaReporters that many members of the party were baffled that the president fixed the burial of his brother on the same day that his vice president had set for his two daughters’ marriage.
SaharaReporters learnt that Mr. Sambo’s daughters’
wedding had been scheduled months ago. “The president knew about the wedding
and received his invitation long before his brother died on November 20,” said
our source, adding that First Lady Patience Jonathan had been tapped to be
“Mother of the Day” at the nuptials.
Several sources disclosed that the relationship
between the President and the Vice President started to deteriorate when Sambo
received reliable indications that Mr. Jonathan was determined to run for
another term in office. The prospect of the president’s going for a second term
has alarmed Northern political figures, among them the vice president, who had
been calculating ways of retaking Nigeria’s highest political office.
“We know that some northern elders have been
putting pressure on Vice President Sambo to position himself to challenge the
president,” said a source close to Mr. Jonathan.
Other sources in Aso Rock told us that President
Jonathan was well aware that Mr. Sambo is exploring options for running for the
presidency in 2015. “He has been trying to raise his profile and rally
political heavyweights and operatives to his corner,” said a Jonathan
associate. The source accused the VP of “trying to flex his political muscles,
but he should know that, even if Mr. President decides not to run, he [the
president] will still have a say in who succeeds him.”
One of Mr. Jonathan’s men said that they came close
to declaring war “after Vice President Sambo selected a powerful delegation and
went with them to pay a condolence visit to Gen. Muhammadu Buhari on the loss
of his daughter.”
A political observer described the scenes in
Yenagoa and Kaduna last weekend as resembling “a realignment of political
forces around President Jonathan and Vice President Sambo.” Those who mourned
with Mr. Jonathan in Yenagoa included Senate President David Mark, who also has
presidential ambitions, as well as numerous Nollywood players. On the other
hand, such personalities as Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, Muhammadu Buhari and
several Northern political figures, traditional rulers and business executives
attended the vice president’s more festive event.
A source close to the vice president disclosed that
Mr. Jonathan was in a precarious position. “He is waging an ongoing political
war against [former President Olusegun] Obasanjo,” said the source.
A confidant of President Jonathan’s admitted that
members of the president’s camp were angry at Mr. Obasanjo for trying to
remotely control the ruling party long after his exit from power. The People
Democratic Party recently stated that there was no plan to reconcile the
president and Mr. Obasanjo.
On his part, Mr. Obasanjo has said in private and
public forums that President Jonathan is bound to leave in 2015. The former
president’s statement is at odds with Aso Rocks’ strategy of leaving Mr.
Jonathan’s opponents guessing as to his next plans.

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