PDP Chieftain Segun Showunmi has disclosed details of how former President Muhammadu Buhari dispatched emissaries to mend fences with then-estranged political ally Bola Ahmed Tinubu in London. Showunmi singled out Nasir El-Rufai as the most principled figure among the coalition party members.

Speaking during a TVC interview from 1:39, Showunmi declared: “Nasir El-Rufai is the bravest of them all in the coalition. At least he had the capacity to say, ‘Okay, I’m not being treated well.”

Showunmi contrasted this with previous political dynamics, stating: “When the shoe was on the other leg, and people perceived that President Tinubu was not being treated well by the Buhari government. At least Nasir El-Rufai had the discipline and the sense to go to the then-president to say, ‘No, we can’t treat him like this.'”

See also  My Husband Came Home To Pick Something; He Went Back To The Office, Hours Later, He Died - Woman Said

Offering an insider information that he was privy to, he revealed: “And I can tell you, because I’m an insider, and I know certain things. The then-President Buhari dispatched the Vice President Osinbajo and El-Rufai to go and plead with Tinubu in London.”

He noted that political relationships have shifted with President Tinubu being the one appealing to the former Kaduna Governor not to leave the party: “And Tinubu has now also pleaded with Nasir El-Rufai. But if he says he’s out, and he has gone through the process of saying, ‘I’ll check with this, and I will check with that,’ and he has said, ‘I am out,’ that is his right.”

See also  In The 1st And 2nd 'True Promise' Operations, We Responded To Israel, Not The Resistance - Iran

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sorry this site disable right click
Sorry this site disable selection
Sorry this site is not allow cut.
Sorry this site is not allow copy.
Sorry this site is not allow paste.
Sorry this site is not allow to inspect element.

Discover more from

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading