THe All Progressives Congress may soon lose former governor of Plateau State, Senator Joshua Dariye, to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) .
The ex-governor dropped this hint recently.
Dariye said: “I am coming back to the PDP, go and tell the world,” he told journalists in Jos, adding that politics was not about wining in just any party, but belonging to a group, where everyone could work together for the benefit of the people.
“After wide consultations with my constituents, we have resolved it is better we all work together in the interest of the community. I am not coming to scuttle the work of Governor Jonah Jang. No, there is no conflict of roles,” he said.
Dariye, who contested for the Senate on the platform of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in 2011 said while governor come and go, project Plateau would remain and nobody should feel insecure. “We must collectively work together to protect it for generations yet unborn,” he said.
Asked his expectation for Nigeria in 2015: he said: “I am not a prophet of doom, I believe there will be a viable Nigeria, I believe in one corporate Nigeria and the president will rise above that as I believe people will conduct themselves with decorum during the elections.”
Speaking on the outcome of the national conference, Dariye said when the report would be taken to the National Assembly, every member would work together to scrutinise the various recommendations and see which one would be workable.
He said there was nothing wrong with Nigeria as God had endowed the nation with resources but that people were not patriotic in dealing with issues.
He cited the United States of America where despite all the challenges of security, weather control and other issues, the people had been able to rise up in unity and were proud of their country.
Dariye described recent comments by some Nigerians that the North was a parasite as ‘ungodly statements’ by those who did not know the history of Nigeria.
He recalled that the same North had used its resources to build big bridges in Lagos, adding: “No matter how educated or wealthy one is, we have no other country we can call our own.”