Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
02ABUJA3034
2002-11-06 08:32:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Abuja
Cable title:  

NIGERIA: PDP SETS PRIMARY SCHEDULE; FAILS TO

Tags:  PGOV PREL NI 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L ABUJA 003034 

SIPDIS


E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/03/2012
TAGS: PGOV PREL NI
SUBJECT: NIGERIA: PDP SETS PRIMARY SCHEDULE; FAILS TO
RESOLVE OBASANJO/ATIKU RIFT


REF: ABUJA 2975


Classified by Ambassador Howard F. Jeter. Reasons: 1.5 (B &
D)


C O N F I D E N T I A L ABUJA 003034

SIPDIS


E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/03/2012
TAGS: PGOV PREL NI
SUBJECT: NIGERIA: PDP SETS PRIMARY SCHEDULE; FAILS TO
RESOLVE OBASANJO/ATIKU RIFT


REF: ABUJA 2975


Classified by Ambassador Howard F. Jeter. Reasons: 1.5 (B &
D)



1. (C) SUMMARY: The ruling PDP's National Executive
Committee met October 31 in a failed effort to heal the
Obasanjo/Atiku rift, according to Deputy House Speaker
Nwuche. The Vice President's faction won the three key
decisions at the four-hour meeting. First, efforts by
Obasanjo's supporters to adopt the Obasanjo/Atiku ticket by
consensus were rejected. Second, the session backed the
legislators' proposed (and Atiku's preferred) primary
timetable and, third, it nullified the requirement that
candidates complete "intent to run" forms early which would
have forced Atiku to make known his intentions to challenge
Obasanjo. Now Atiku has more flexibility and time to
decide. The inability to resolve the rift between its two
top office-holders demonstrated again the strength of
factionalism within the PDP. Reconciliation will prove
elusive and infighting will likely grow more intense as the
countdown to primaries and the party convention approaches.
End Summary.



2. (C) The ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP)
National Executive Committee (NEC) October 31 meeting
failed to heal the political rift between President
Olusegun Obasanjo and Vice President Atiku Abubakar.
During a private breakfast meeting at the Ambassador's
Residence the following day, Deputy Speaker of the House of
Representatives Chibudom Nwuche told Ambassador Jeter that
Obasanjo and Atiku communicate only through "surrogates,"
and the gap between the two appeared to be widening.
During the NEC meeting, attended by Obasanjo, Atiku,
senators, governors and party officials past and present,
the NEC rejected a proposal by Edo State Governor Igbegnion
to adopt Obasanjo and Atiku (as well as all sitting
governors and their deputies) as consensus candidates for
the anticipated 2003 elections.



3. (C) Nwuche further said the NEC also rejected the
President's efforts to hold the presidential primary before
the other national and state primaries. Obasanjo had hoped
to win his presidential spot then use this secured position
to promote his choices for legislative and gubernatorial
nominations. Moreover, with Obasanjo securing his place
first, the contestants in the other races would need his
support and, in the process, be obliged to promise their
loyalty. At the end of the NEC meeting, however, PDP
Chairman Audu Ogbeh announced that the party's primaries
would commence mid-December starting with nominations for
the State Houses of Assembly; no timetable for the
subsequent primaries was announced.



4. (C) In a related development, the PDP also adopted
guidelines for nominations, setting fees for potential
candidates, starting at five million Naira (38 thousand
dollars) for President and dropping to 100,000 Naira (820
dollars) for State Houses of Assembly. To encourage female
candidates, PDP Chairman Ogbeh announced that the fees
would be waived for women. Adding further to the
uncertainty surrounding the process, the NEC also
eliminated the deadline for potential candidates to declare
their intentions by nid-November - a gambit designed to
flush out Atiku. Instead, candidates will be able to file
until the eve of the primaries.



5. (C) COMMENT: The PDP was yet again unable to resolve
the differences between the President and his Vice. The
Vice President's forces emerged from the NEC strengthened,
with Obasanjo's weaknesses evident. Unable to get himself
selected as a consensus candidate, Obasanjo now must temper
himself for a tough fight for the nomination, with Atiku as
one likely, if late, challenger. The primary timetable and
the elimination of the filing deadline serve Atiku's
interests, giving him the chance to assess his chances and
delay announcing his candidacy until the last minute before
directly challenging Obasanjo. The indirect challenge will
take shape around the primary process, with each campaign
turning into a miniature test of strength between Obasanjo,
on the one hand, and Atiku and other challengers, on the
other.
ANDREWS