EFFORTS
 by President Goodluck Jonathan’s underground campaign team to mobilise 
Igbo support for his 2015 presidential ambition have split Igbo leaders,
 leading to sharp disagreements in the region.
Investigation
 by The Nation on Sunday shows that the campaign, coordinated by a 
South-East serving governor, is the cause of the current crisis in the 
All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA). Some leaders of Ohanaeze Ndigbo 
are also worried that the foot soldiers of the campaign have penetrated 
the apex Igbo socio-cultural organisation polarising opinion of its 
leaders on the chances of an Igbo president in 2015. 
Ohaneze
 elders who have spoken on the matter are Dr. Dozie Ikedife, the 
immediate past President General, who reportedly said Ndigbo will 
contest only if Jonathan is not seeking re-election; Col Joe Achuzie, 
who said Igbo presidency in 2015 is not negotiable; and Chief Arthur 
Eze.
 An 
insider said since Ikedife’s pronouncement on the issue all has not been
 well with the younger elements in Ohaneze  insisting that the elders 
 are out  to mislead Ndigbo again. 
In his
 own stead, former Governor of Anambra State, Dr. Chinwoke Mbadinuju has
 thrown his weight behind the president. According to him, “The 
president has done well for Ndigbo. Every good turn deserves another. He
 has done for us what we never got before. We will repeat what we did in
 2011 for him in 2015 by giving him the votes all things being equal.”
In a 
telephone interview however, Ikedife said his position on the matter is 
very clear. “I have made my position on this matter very clear. We, 
Ndigbo supported Jonathan during the last election. If the constitution 
allows him to contest again and he decides to run, I do not see why we 
must withdraw our support if he performs. So, I am saying that if he 
fulfills the promises he made and excels, we may support him, but if he 
does not fulfill his promises, it will be difficult to support his 
re-election.” 
A 
source, close to APGA leadership said the disagreement between Chief 
Victor Umeh, the National Chairman of the party and Governor Peter Obi’s
 loyalists would have been resolved  if not for  their alleged 
differences on the issue of Jonathan’s 2015 presidential bid.
“That 
is the core area of disagreement between the APGA leaders. While Umeh 
wants the party to produce a candidate in 2015, Obi and some others want
 Ndigbo to support the president again so that he would have ample time 
to complete the vital projects he promised the zone,” the source said.
Although
 Obi has repeatedly expressed the party’s readiness to present a 
presidential candidate in 2015, his opponents in the party, mainly from 
Anambra State, say  he is the problem of the party, alleging that he is 
the stumbling block to their planned expansion of the party. 
A top 
official of APGA in Anambra, who would not want to be mentioned, alleged
 that the disagreement between Obi and Umeh has affected the 
relationship between Obi and Governor Rochas Okorocha, who, according to
 him, share the view that APGA should have its own presidential 
candidate to slug it out with Jonathan.  
But 
Okorocha who told The Nation that there was no disagreement between him 
and Obi, however, urged Ndigbo to change their tactics if they want to 
produce the president. 
Dismissing
 claims that some other stakeholders outside the South-East, have 
conspired to stop the zone from producing president, Okorocha said, “It 
is not Nigeria that is alienating the South-east. It is a wrong 
statement. Rather, it is the Southeast that is alienating itself. They 
have not demonstrated enough courage in pursuing this course.” 
He added: “Nobody can donate presidency to you because you are Igbo, Hausa or Yoruba. You have to struggle for it.” 
“You 
see, we must begin to repackage ourselves so that the entire nation can 
buy your stories. The Southeast should be able to say to Nigerians, ‘we 
have a candidate and this candidate is good.’ That’s how to look at the 
politics of nowadays rather than going back to lick the old wounds of 
marginalisation.”
Maxi 
Okwu, top politician and former presidential candidate, in a telephone 
interview, also said that people like Arthur Eze and co, who go about 
endorsing people for 2015, are not speaking for Ndigbo. 
According
 to him, “It is too early to endorse President Jonathan for re-election 
in 2015. One, because he has not said he would run. Two, we seem to be 
jumping the gun by crying more than the bereaved. We must learn from our
 past. As we are talking, most of the promises he made to Ndigbo during 
the last election, when he got Igbo support, are yet to be delivered. I 
am talking of the second Niger Bridge, Enugu Airport, and another state 
for the zone, not mere appointment of some people to certain positions.”
Okwu 
is of the view that in politics, groups must maximize their advantages, 
use strong arm tactics to get what they deserve. According to him, the 
South-West used this strategy, and Ndigbo must do the same.
Dismissing
 utterances of some Igbo leaders that suggest endorsement of Jonathan, 
Okwu said, “We the new generation of Igbo out rightly reject such hasty 
endorsement. Even by PDP arrangement, it is the turn of Ndigbo to 
produce president, but if for any reason we have to concede, it has to 
be on the consideration of an iron-cast agreement not the kind of hasty 
arrangement made by All Progressives Grand Alliance and other Igbo 
leaders in the past,” he said. 
Mbadinuju
 added that only a national conference can solve the myriad of problems 
facing the country and called on government to accept the mounting calls
 for such a dialogue in the interest of the nation.
 According
 to him, “Let us do both at the same time by calling a national 
conference and also the conference serving as the president’s second 
tenure; we should kill all the birds with one stone. Our interest is 
that Nigeria remains stable and since the 2011 national elections, the 
country has not known peace. Democratic set up without opposition is no 
democracy.
 “Jonathan
 is not weak, as some people say, but his handicap is that he is 
presiding over a divided nation. We want to avoid a break- down of the 
society.
 “If 
not for his style at the helm of affairs, Nigeria would have gone to a 
different page. I would like the president to hearken to those who have 
called for a national conference. It is distracting but at the same time
 inviting.
 “What
 is important is that the president with his advisers should see it as 
vital especially coming from the elders of this country.”
 
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