C' River: PDP Chairman, Vena, Mulls Court Action Over Alleged Removal, Says Action Political
Judex OKORO
Mr Venatius Ikem has mulled legal action over his alledged removal as the chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Cross River by the State Working, saying the processes were faulty and unconstitutional
Explaining that his purported removal is political, Ikem said he has done his best to reposition party and reconcile some internal wranglings aimed at bringing peace and unity.
Fielding questions from newsmen in Calabar at the weekend, he described the allegations against him put forward by the SWC as not only baseless, but an attempt made to portray him as misfit for the office he has held for years.
Recall that the State Working Committee (SWC) had on Friday removed Ikem from office as the chairman of the party alleging financial misappropriation, high-handiness and ineptitude.
In his place, the SWC announced Mr Austin Edibe, who was the party's Vice Chairman in the Northern senatorial district of the state, as his replacement.
Reacting to the development, Ikem said: "Like they always say, you give a dog a bad name when you want to hang it. The truth is that to the best of my knowledge, I run one of the most efficient excos of our party.
"We meet regularly and I think in the last quarter or so we have had two stakeholders meetings we have our regular State Committee meetings and the stakeholders meetings.
"Secondly, I think there must be issues to discuss, whenever there are issues and programmed I am always there, we just had a party revalidation exercise this year, we had the party congresses this year we performed well.
"The last local government elections, we stood up strongly and I am very proud of our outing despite the outcome given the circumstances.
"To me, I know and everybody knows that i am doing my best to run the party within the context we find ourselves so talking about not holding meetings or ineptitude leadership is completely out of the question.
"One of the problems I see in PDP is the hangover of being in government, we have been in government for so long that many people have never experienced being out of government.
"They believe that things should be the way it used to be when we held sway in government house.
"The drastic change to being an opposition party is not being properly absorbed by our members so their expectations is usually not what is possible in terms of availability of welfare, availability of funds for this and that but even given that we have done very well.
"The national assembly members have been very supportive, they have programmes and even with some stipends to support us monthly."
On the allegation of misappropriation of fund, Ikem who said he ran a cashless policy, said the books are there for everyone to see.
Ikem alledged that insecurity of a sitting Senator was behind his alleged removal, adding "my crime is that I am supporting Hon. Peter Akpanke against him (Senator). I don't know whether anybody is contesting against him in 2027.
"He used to say Peter wanted to contest against him, but Peter has said he is not contesting against him so I'm supporting Peter against him. Those are the underlying political issues.
"These ones are just cover ups to say they have a valid reason. The real reason is political that I should not be supporting Peter.
"For me, the same support I give to him is the same support all my elected officials are entitled to. it does not matter the positions they hold so I cannot support him as a senator more than I am supporting other members."