The Arewa Progressive Women League has alleged that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar is too corrupt to be presented as consensus candidate for the North.
The league also said the Kaduna jamboree by self-proclaimed Northern elders was a fraud.
The group was reacting to Saturday’s meeting with selected presidential candidates organized by groups, including the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) and the Northern Elders Forum (NEF) in Kaduna,.
According to the group in a statement by its leader, Hannatu Abbass “those posing as elders were inconsequential old people that have stripped themselves of the garb of integrity and credibility.”
The group recalled that the meeting was called by the same old people who Atiku Abubakar had ridiculed during his days as Nigeria’s vice president.
“It is the height of lack of integrity and shame for the same old people who were dismissed as non-existent by Atiku Abubakar to now lead the paid campaign for endorsing him as the region’s sole presidential candidate.
“We are living witnesses to the remarks by Atiku in 2010 that the Northern region had no elders referring to the same sate of old men today bandying him as consensus northern presidential candidate,” the Women Group said.
The Group wondered how the so-called elders arrived at their choice of Atiku whereas in reality, ” he happens to be the most corrupt politician the North has ever had the misfortune to produce. “
Pointing to a United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) report, the Group noted that the period Nigeria had an “exponential spike” in the number of people living below $1 was during the administration of Obasanjo and Atiku.
They said Abubakar and ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo created the pathway for Nigeria’s struggle with poverty through their non-transparent privatisation process.
“The World Bank, which is the body that provides a global poverty headcount had noted that slightly over 98 million Nigerians were living in multi-dimensional poverty, indicating that 60.9 percent of Nigerians, or 100 million people, were living below the poverty threshold in 2010, and 120 million in 2012
“Interestingly, the period the country had an exponential spike in the number of people living below $1 a day was during the 16 unbroken years that the former Vice-President’s party held sway in Nigeria,” the group said.