Nigeria’s
main opposition party has accused the ruling Peoples Democratic Party,
PDP, of using public funds to lure back some of the federal lawmakers
who defected from the ruling party to the opposition.
The
The All Progressives Congress, APC, condemned the alleged action by the
ruling party, terming it “political horse trading carried too far.”
In
a statement issued in Lagos on Tuesday by its Interim National
Publicity Secretary, Lai Mohammed, the party said the PDP, in a show of
desperation, rolled out an enticement package that promised $2 million
(N328 million) to each Senator who returns to the PDP; $1 million (N164
million) to a member of the House of Representatives, and $10 million
(N1.64 billion) to a “leader” who abandons the APC for PDP. It claimed
that the price tag for the federal legislators from Rivers State was
even higher – $5 million (N821 million) each.
The APC, however,
said no amount of inducement would stop the change on the horizon ‘as
the long-suffering people of Nigeria were ready and eager to vote out
the PDP next year.’
The APC said the five House of
Representatives members who took the PDP’s bait and returned to the
latter were ‘dirty traitors.’ It said when the lawmakers initially
defected to the APC, they were neither forced to do so nor given any
incentive beyond the rare opportunity offered them to be a part of the
looming change.
The opposition party expressed the hope that the
defectors would declare the money they allegedly collected from the PDP
to those who voted them into office. The party said it also hoped the
lawmakers would pretend to be democratic by sharing the money with their
constituents.
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