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Abure-led Faction Accuses Abia Deputy Governor, Usman, Others Of Forcefully Taking Over Labour Party Office

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The Barr Julius Abure-led faction of the Labour Party has accused the Abia State deputy Governor, Ikechukwu Emetu, and members of the Sen Nenadi Usman-led party executives of forcefully breaking into and occupying the party’s national secretariat on Tuesday.

National publicity secretary of the Abure-led Labour Party, Obiora Ifoh, who described the action as an invasion, recounted that security personnel at the Secretariat said that hoodlums invaded the Secretariat around 1am early on Tuesday to pull down party’s billboards and replaced them with that of the Nenadi Usman.

Earlier on the same Tuesday, Usman-led exco, accompanied by the Abia State deputy governor, resumed office at the party’s national secretariat which was hitherto occupied by the Abure-led exco.

Both camps have been locked in a tussle. However, the court and Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) recently recognized the Usman-led Exco as the legitimate party leadership.

But Ifoh, in a statement, said the invasion aided by eight Truck-load of Policemen, refused entrance officers and staff of the party and ensured only names of members of Nenadi Interim leadership were given access into the Secretariat.

“The Abure led leadership is dumbfounded by the invasion of its secretariat by Nenadi camp aided by Police in the early hours of Tuesday. Accompanied by the Abia state deputy Governor, Ikechukwu Emetu, Senator Nenadi ordered his hoodlums to break into all the offices, and carted files and other materials alongside.

“When some of our senior officials came to office in the morning, we were prevented by the Police. We refused to confront them to avoid clashes and confrontations, choosing peaceful approach.

“It is on record that a Federal High Court in FCT gave a judgement which recognized Senator Usman as the Interim Chairman of the Labour Party. However, the party leadership has obtained a Stay of Execution and has since appealed the judgement. It is therefore inappropriate and needless for any group to resort to self-help by illegally breaking into the National Secretariat.

“We are by this statement calling on the Police, Department of State Security, office of the National Security Adviser and other relevant agencies to take note of the unlawful invasion of our party Secretariat. If this anomaly is not checked, it is a pointer that our democracy and its institutions are being threatened. We are also calling on our party faithfuls to remain vigilant as the party leadership is doing everything within the law to ensure that justice is not denied the party,” Ifoh said in the statement

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APC recalls ‘retired’ Abdullahi Adamu for 2026 convention c’ttee despite ADC defection rumour

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The ruling All Progressives Congress APC has officially set its sights on the 2026 National Convention with the unveiling of a 73-member Central Coordination Committee, which features the controversial return of its former National Chairman, Senator Abdullahi Adamu.

The inclusion of Adamu is particularly striking given his 2023 announcement that he was quitting partisan politics due to a self-described “allergy” to political activities, followed by recent viral reports suggesting he had dumped the ruling party for the African Democratic Congress ADC.

APC leadership appears to have made a strategic move to suppress rumours of internal fracture by placing the former chairman at number 32 on the committee list.

The Nasarawa State chapter of the APC had last month issued a formal rebuttal against claims of Adamu’s defection, insisting that a widely circulated photo of him was not an ADC reception but rather his participation in the APC’s nationwide e-membership registration exercise.

The convention committee is chaired by the Governor of Imo State and Chairman of the Progressive Governors’ Forum, Hope Uzodimma, who will be supported by Kwara State Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq as Vice Chairman and Yobe State Governor Mai Mala Buni as Secretary.

The list reinforces the influence of state governors over the party’s transitional machinery as they prepare for the national gathering scheduled for March 2026.

Beyond the Adamu saga, the committee reflects a “big tent” strategy by the National Working Committee NWC, incorporating a mix of traditional heavyweights and notable new entrants.

The list includes Senate President Godswill Akpabio and Speaker Tajudeen Abbas, alongside recent high-profile defectors such as Rivers State governor, Siminalayi Fubara; Kano State Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf and Plateau State Governor Caleb Mutfwang, all of whom officially joined the APC recently.

 

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LP crisis: Abure Adamant, rejects reconciliation move

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The leadership crisis rocking the Labour Party deepened on Monday as the Julius Abure-led National Working Committee rejected reconciliation moves by Abia State Governor, Dr Alex Otti, describing the effort as insincere and premature.

The Abure faction insisted that the legal battle over the party’s leadership was far from over and accused Otti of being responsible for the crisis now tearing the party apart.

Speaking in an exclusive interview with our correspondent, the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Obiora Ifoh, dismissed the reconciliation call and questioned its timing.

“We are not interested in any move by Abia State Governor, Dr Alex Otti, to reconcile the party because he was the one who brought the crisis to the party in the first place,” Ifoh said.

“This reconciliatory thing he is throwing around is of no use. What we just witnessed was a judgment by a court of first instance. Why can’t he wait for the outcome of the appeal before deciding on such a move?

“Why is he suddenly in a rush to call for reconciliation? As far as we are concerned, their celebration is a pyrrhic victory. It will soon die down, and Nigerians will behold the true leadership of the party. Let him know that the battle is not over.”

The hardline stance by the Abure camp highlights the depth of division within the party, despite recent court rulings and the intervention of the Independent National Electoral Commission, which has recognised the Nenadi Usman-led National Caretaker Committee.

The rejection came barely hours after Otti publicly expressed regret over the exit of the party’s former presidential candidate, Peter Obi, describing his departure as a major setback for the Labour Party.

Otti spoke in Abuja during a meeting with members of the party’s Board of Trustees, leaders of the National Caretaker Committee and representatives of the Nigeria Labour Congress and the Trade Union Congress.

The meeting followed INEC’s decision to recognise the Nenadi Usman-led caretaker committee—a move earlier described by the Abure faction as hasty, prejudicial and aimed at undermining the party’s leadership.

During the meeting, Otti said the new leadership had resolved to pursue reconciliation and rebuild internal cohesion following its court victory.

“We have decided that there is a need to set up a reconciliation committee,” he said. “The interim NWC will advise us on when to do so. The idea is to reconcile everyone who desires to return.

“We appeal to Julius Abure and his team to sheathe their swords and come back to the party. If they abide by the rules of the party, we will be happy to see them back.”

Otti also said the party would not participate in the forthcoming FCT council elections and ruled out joining any external opposition coalition ahead of the 2027 general elections.

“Labour is already a coalition—the coalition of Nigerian workers and progressive-minded people,” he said. “We have no plans to join another coalition.”

He commended INEC for complying with the judgment of the Federal High Court by replacing the Abure-led executives with the Nenadi Usman-led National Caretaker Committee on its portal.

Meanwhile, the Director-General of the Labour Party’s Directorate of Mobilisation and Integration, Marcel Ngogbehei, blamed Otti and Peter Obi for the protracted crisis.

In a statement issued in Abuja, Ngogbehei said Otti, as the party’s most powerful elected official, failed to convert the momentum of the 2023 elections into durable party structures.

“By sponsoring and legitimising a caretaker committee, launched conspicuously in Abia State, Otti injected executive weight into an already volatile leadership dispute,” he said.

“Caretaker committees are not neutral instruments; they are factional weapons. Predictably, this entrenched parallel authorities, multiplied court cases and accelerated the party’s legal disintegration.”

Ngogbehei also faulted Obi for refusing to intervene decisively to reconcile the warring factions.

“Obi remains the Labour Party’s most unifying symbol, yet he declined to impose moral authority or broker a compromise,” he said, adding that the former presidential candidate’s silence weakened party cohesion.

He warned that the ruling All Progressives Congress was benefiting from the internal crises of opposition parties ahead of the 2027 elections.

Despite reconciliation overtures from the Otti camp, the firm rejection by the Abure faction suggests that the Labour Party’s leadership crisis is far from resolution, with further legal and political battles looming.

Source: Punch.

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Atiku Condemns Bandits’ Growing Audacity, Says Tinubu’s Administration Must Be Held Accountable

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Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has raised the alarm over what he described as the growing audacity of bandits operating across the country, lamenting that criminal groups continued to attack communities and take hostages with little resistance.

Atiku, a chieftain of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), expressed his concerns while reacting to the latest attack on Kurmin Wali community in Kajuru Local Government Area of Kaduna State, where about 177 worshippers were abducted from three churches.

In a statement signed by Atiku’s spokesman, Paul Ibe, and dated January 21, 2026, the former vice president said it was troubling that despite claims by some state governments of success in negotiating peace deals with bandits, the same criminal elements were still carrying out violent attacks unchecked.

“It’s colossally embarrassing to see non-state actors holding the country hostage and attacking people and taking hostages again and again unchallenged,” Atiku said.

He argued that deterrence becomes difficult in a situation where state authorities appeared weakened in their response to insecurity, noting that some governors have resorted to pleading with bandits under the guise of peace negotiations.

Atiku clarified that while he was not opposed to dialogue as a means of ending violence, he rejected any arrangement in which armed groups dictate the terms of engagement

“Those peace deals always favour the bandits more than their victims and they have always fooled the government’s negotiators,” he said.

The former vice president also faulted what he described as reactive responses to insecurity, advising that government action should not be limited to moments after attacks have already occurred.

“Nigerians are no longer impressed by the powerful language of condemnation by the government. They’re more interested in results than rhetoric. Experience has shown that if rhetoric were enough to deter the bandits, the menace would have ended a long time ago,” he added.

Atiku further stressed that the administration of President Bola Tinubu must be held accountable for its campaign promises to tackle insecurity across the country.

“Nigerians cannot be comforted by excuses. As a former opposition party, the APC held the then government in power to the harshest and merciless standards and therefore, the Tinubu administration must be held to the same standards,” he said.

Our correspondent had reported that an incident on Sunday, January 18, at three churches in Kurmin Wali community, Kajuru Local Government Area of Kaduna State, resulted in the abduction of over 160 people. Initially, the State government and Police Command denied that the incident took place but later admitted to it on Tuesday through a statement by their spokesperson, Benjamin Hundeyin. This admission came after widespread public criticism of the police’s initial denial.

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