Former Jigawa State Governor Alhaji Sule Lamido has opened up on his ongoing legal battle with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), expressing deep concern over the party’s actions that pushed him to seek redress in court.
Lamido, one of the few remaining founding fathers of the PDP, described the dispute as a “painful and unfortunate situation,” especially given his decades-long loyalty and sacrifice to the party.
He spoke during an interview with the BBC Hausa Service monitored in Dutse.
He said he decided to approach the court after he was denied the nomination form to contest for the position of National Chairman during the party’s national convention—an action carried out without any explanation.
“I went to court because I was denied the form to participate in the contest for National Chairman. There was no reason given. It was simply blocked,” he said.
Lamido further alleged that some PDP governors deliberately worked against his ambition because they feared he would not be controlled by any individual or interest group if elected.
He also revealed that Bauchi State Governor Bala Mohammed personally reached out to him, urging him to step down from pursuing the chairmanship position.
“Bala Mohammed personally called me and said, my senior brother, you are too strong for us. If you become the national chairman, we cannot own and control you.’ I reminded him that when the PDP was formed in 1999, he was not even around. Many of us laboured to build this party from the ground up,” Lamido stated.
“I told him that, looking at the PDP’s position, contributions, struggle and foresight of the caliber of its people in side it’s and leaders it’s produced in Nigeria to think of gathering all of them completely and owns them at the same time. You know it is not possible”.
The former Minister of Foreign Affairs said when he arrived at the PDP national secretariat to buy the nomination form only to meet the offices locked, “We went there and found the office locked. There was no means to obtain the form. That was so went to court seeks redress.”
Lamido disclosed that the court eventually ruled in his favour, ordering the PDP to make the form available to him and provide adequate time for campaigns before conducting the national convention.
He insisted that the judgment—which he said has been officially served and acknowledged by both the PDP and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)—renders the recent PDP national convention “null and void” until the court’s conditions are fully met.
