After about one
month of trying to swim against the
tide, the National Chairman of the
Peoples Democratic Party, Chief
Vincent Ogbulafor, on Thursday
resigned his position.Ogbulafor’s
resignation came in the wake of
mounting pressure from the Presidency
and the PDP governors over the N104m
corruption charges brought against him
by the Independent Corrupt Practices
and other Related Offences Commission.
A top member of the PDP National
Working Committee and a minister
confirmed this in separate enquiries
at about 8.35pm.
The PDP governors had on Wednesday
made spirited efforts to save
Ogbulafor’s job when they met with
President Goodluck Jonathan, pleading
that he be allowed to complete his
tenure.
But Jonathan vowed that he was not
going back on his commitment to
strengthening the anti-corruption
battle; and advised them to allow the
court to prove Ogbulafor’s innocence
or otherwise.
It was learnt that when the
governors failed to persuade Jonathan
to do their bidding, they consequently
gave Ogbulafor up till 11am on
Thursday to resign.
However, the governors had
supported him until Tuesday, when
three of their members from the
South-East met with Jonathan and later
told Ogbulafor to resign.
The governors had stressed the
moral burden of his continued stay in
office with the trial.
The governors were, Chief Martins
Elechi (Ebonyi State), Mr. Sullivan
Chime (Enugu State) and Mr. Ikedi
Ohakim of Imo State.
Confirming his resignation, a
minister (name withheld) said, “He has
resigned, he has presented his letter
to the Villa. I think he will submit
his letter officially to the party
tomorrow.”
Also, an NWC member said, “The
party chairman has resigned; we are
expecting him to brief us on Friday
(today), that is when we will be able
to make official comments on the
issue.”
It was gathered that the embattled
chairman had followed PDP governors to
see President Goodluck Jonathan in the
presidential villa on Wednesday night.
Before his resignation, Ogbulafor
had talked tough, and insisted that he
would not resign as no court had
pronounced him guilty.
Even at the last National Executive
Committee meeting of the PDP,
Ogbulafor said that his silence should
not be taken as a weakness.
By party’s constitution, Ogbulafor
is expected to hand over to Dr. Haliu
Bello.
But the PDP chair is zoned to the
South-East geo-political zone, which
means that Bello is only going to hold
brief for a new chairman, likely to be
elected from the same zone.
According to the ICPC charges, the
offence that Ogbulafor and three
others committed happened in 2001.
He was then a minister for special
duties under President Olusegun
Obasanjo.
But, he maintains that he is
innocent of the allegation.
Ogbulafor resigned midway into his
tenure as PDP Chairman.
However, when contacted, the
National Secretary of the party,
Alhaji Kawu Baraje, neither confirmed
nor denied the Ogbulafor resignation
rumour.
Baraje said, “I cannot confirm that
to you now, but maybe in the next few
hours I will be able to confirm yes or
no.
“It is no longer news that three
governors from the South-East states
asked him to resign as a result of the
case in court, and you know the
process of electing our chairman and
various members of the party executive
- they come from the zones before they
are now elected through national
convention.
“So, he has to go on consultation
with his zone and, presently, he is
doing a lot of consultation around his
zone and the outcome of the
consultation is what will tell us
whether he is going to resign or not.”
Asked who would take over from
Ogbulafor if he resigned, Baraje said
he would have to hand over to his
deputy (Bello), pending when a new
chairman would be elected from his
zone.
Also speaking on the issue, the
party’s National Legal Adviser, Chief
Olusola Oke, said that the South-East
would still produce the chairman of
the party if Ogbulafor resigned.
He also said that though the
party’s constitution stipulated a
one-month notice before the
resignation could take effect, that
might not be necessary the
organisation was not a business firm.
Meanwhile, the PDP governors have
reportedly commenced an intensive
search for Ogbulafor’s replacement.
Among those being considered are
Dr. Okweliseze Nwodo from Enugu State
and Ambassador Thomas Aguiyi-Ironsi,
who hails from Abia State.