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Why I resigned from Tinubu’s govt – Former aide Aliyu Audu reveals

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 Why I resigned from Tinubu s govt Former aide Aliyu Audu reveals
Aliyu Audu

In a bold political move, Aliyu Audu, former Senior Special Adviser to President Bola Tinubu on Public Affairs, has publicly revealed that he resigned from his position in order to actively campaign against Tinubu’s re-election in 2027.

Audu made the revelation on Monday during an interview on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily, where he said his decision was rooted in “principle and conscience.” He criticized the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) for what he described as efforts to turn Nigeria into a one-party state.

“It confirmed it on one hand, and on the other hand, it strengthened my resolve to not work for him in 2027,” Audu said, referring to Tinubu’s Democracy Day speech where the president claimed to enjoy seeing the opposition in disarray.

READ ALSO: JUST IN: President Tinubu’s aide resigns

“I couldn’t in all honesty and in my conscience be in his government knowing I’m plotting against removal in 2027, because I will, and by God, we will remove him. Collectively, Nigerians will install a leader that will be our chosen, not his chosen. Not emilokan (my turn), but awa lokan (our turn), in fact, gbogbo wa lokan (all of us).”

He also criticised the inclusion of Nyesom Wike, a PDP member and current Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, in the APC-led government, questioning his loyalty and the legitimacy of such a move.

“What is Wike doing in our government? If he’s going to leave the PDP, he should leave. If we’re doing a government of national unity, you deal with the party, not individuals. The party is what we vote for — not Bola Tinubu but APC; not Atiku but PDP; not Peter Obi but Labour Party.”

Audu’s resignation letter, dated June 8, criticised the APC’s political trajectory and warned against what he described as a deliberate silencing of opposition voices. In a follow-up statement, he clarified that while he does not support the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), he would not lend himself “as an instrument to reduce Nigeria to a one-party state.”

“If we now begin to silence or crush opposition simply because we have the upper hand, then we are no different from the very system we once criticised under Obasanjo in 2003,” he said.

 



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