A faction of the embattled Labour Party (LP) has
said it may not be able to field candidates for the 2019 general election due
to intra-party feud.
The party with a strong affiliation with the
Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has been engulfed in intra-party leadership
dispute that has led to the emergence of two factions.
One of the factions loyal to the NLC addressed a
press conference on Tuesday, stating reasons why the party may not be able to
participate in the next year's general election.
Addressing journalists, the National Publicity
Secretary of the party, Ebere Ifendu, said there is a subsisting court order
that LP should hold an all-inclusive national convention which was not adhered
to.
The party scribe, who traced the genesis of the
crisis in the party to the allegations of financial impropriety against the
leadership of the party, said the tenure of the NWC led by Abdulkadir
Abdulsalam elapsed on October 10.
According to him, "With the end of the tenure
of this executive as well as the compliance with the above mentioned court
order, the L P does not have a National Working Committee (NWC) in place. This
clearly means that any nomination of candidate done by the party after October 11,
2018, is null and void and it will be in contempt of the court order."
Ifendu said even if the party holds the national
convention now, it will not be possible for it to field candidates for the
general election because the deadline set by the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC) for party primaries had since expired.
She described the suspension of some members of the
NWC by the Abdulsalam-led faction as figment of the wildest imagination of
those behind the plot.
"Firstly, the NEC was not properly
constituted. There is a subsisting court order that gave us a mandate to
conduct an all-inclusive national convention.
"The judgement is a consent judgement, which
involved all parties, including Abdulsalam, who signed the documents that was
used for the judgement. So it is no longer what INEC can interfere with, the
court orders must be respected," she said.
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