El-Rufai’s ‘hostile treatment’ forced me out of ADC, Salihu Lukman alleges

Salihu Lukman

Salihu Lukman

Opposition crisis deepens


One of the leading figures in the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Salihu Mohammed Lukman, has suspended his membership of the party and the opposition coalition, throwing the party into a fresh membership crisis.

Specifically, Lukman, a former National Vice Chairman (North-West) of the All Progressives Congress (APC), accused former Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai of orchestrating the hostile treatment and political marginalisation that forced him to quit the party.

In a message addressed to the National Chairman of the ADC, Senator David Mark, and copied to coalition leaders, Lukman said his decision followed months of what he described as sustained hostility by El-Rufai and his political associates over the leadership and direction of the party in Kaduna State.

“This may come to you as a disappointment. I am very sorry. I just can’t continue to bear the painful hostile treatment I keep getting from some leaders from Kaduna, especially Mallam Nasir,” Lukman wrote.

He alleged that decisions concerning leadership representation in Kaduna were being manipulated to sideline him, claiming he had been reduced “to the status of a bastard” within a coalition he had worked hard to build.

The latest development marks one of the most serious public cracks within the ADC-led opposition coalition ahead of the 2027 general elections and is likely to heighten concerns over the alliance’s internal cohesion, particularly in Kaduna State, a state considered strategically important to the coalition’s electoral calculations.

Lukman said he had devoted more than a year to reconciling and uniting opposition leaders in Kaduna, only to become the target of what he described as an orchestrated campaign led by El-Rufai and his supporters.

“For Mallam Nasir and his people, I am the problem,” Lukman said. “I have decided to resolve the problem for them and everyone.”

He announced the suspension of both his ADC and coalition memberships, saying it was preferable “to be inactive than to continue to chase dashed expectations.”

Lukman also questioned the coalition’s commitment to democratic values, accusing some of its leaders of reproducing the same political practices they had once criticised.

“For many coalition leaders, the objective of rescuing our democracy is just about allowing them to have their way, even when their actions reproduce the old habits that destroyed our former parties,” he said.

He further alleged that former Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi was reaching out to individuals in Kaduna whose commitment to building the ADC was questionable while disregarding the views of those who had invested in strengthening the party’s structures.

“Whatever he wants to do with them is certainly not about building the party into a strong democratic party,” Lukman alleged.

According to him, these developments have steadily diminished his confidence in the coalition and reduced the ADC to what he described as “a marginal participant” in preparations for the 2027 elections.

Lukman expressed gratitude to Senator David Mark and other national leaders of the coalition, insisting that his action was not a protest against the party’s national leadership but against what he described as “the disdainful treatment meted out to me by El-Rufai and a small group of coalition leaders in Kaduna.”

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