Cover

Trouble in Ogun APC as Gov Abiodun, Amosun Clash Over Alleged US Criminal Records

Published

on

 

Ogun State governor, Dapo Abiodun and his predecessor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, have clashed over the governor’s alleged criminal records in the United States.

Advertisement

Abiodun and Amosun have been battling for the control of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state.

 

Advertisement

A petition submitted to the national secretariat of the APC had sought Abiodun’s disqualification from the party’s governorship primaries over fraud allegations.

 

Advertisement

A member of the party in the state, Ayodele Oludiran, had in the April 12 petition alleged that the governor had been accused of ‘concealing criminal offenses he allegedly committed in the USA in the 1980s’.

 

Advertisement

Oludiran insisted that Abiodun’s candidacy would portend danger for the APC with the damning allegations against him.

 

Advertisement

However, documents allegedly featuring the mugshot of Abiodun and his purported court conviction for criminal offences which bordered on credit card fraud, petty theft, and forgery surfaced online on Monday.

 

Advertisement

Reacting to the allegations, DailyTrust reports that Dapo Abiodun Campaign Organisation (DACA) accused Amosun of sponsoring a smear campaign to malign the governor.

 

Advertisement

The group in the statement, in Abeokuta on Tuesday by the spokesman of APC, Tunde Oladunjoye, accused Senator Amosun and his loyalists of fabricating ‘malicious, unfounded and totally false allegations to incriminate the governor and present him as one who is ineligible to contest the high office he’s occupying’.

 

Advertisement

But, Amosun in a statement by his media aide, Bola Adeyemi, described the allegations as ‘wild and callous’.

 

Advertisement

He implored Abiodun to employ every legal means to bring whoever is involved in any ‘smear campaign’ against him to book.

 

Advertisement

 

 

Advertisement

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

Exit mobile version