Tag: Edwin Clark

  • Baba Lekki and Okon berate Papa Edwin Clark

    As the last independence anniversary got underway, Okon has been busy lamenting  the good old days before independence when food was aplenty in the land and the local wine made from ripe banana was so abundant that even monkeys were known to get drunk on the heady stuff. At some point, snooper became exasperated with the boy’s lamentation and protest.

    “Okon, but you claim you were born in 1980. How come you remember what happened around independence?” snooper charged.

    “Oga, I don tell una say official age no be facial age. Obudu monkey dey sweat na hair dey cover am”, the mad boy snorted as he continued his rhapsody about pre-independence bliss.  The following day the boy actually raised the stakes by appearing on a television series known as “crunch time” with Baba Lekki in tow.

    “Mr Okon, welcome to the show”, the lead presenter drawled in a heavily accented baritone.

    “Point of incorrection!”  the mad boy charged. “I no be Mr Okon again. Now I be Master Okon. When a man don dey cook for thirty years without accident he don become master be dat”.

    “Ok, Master Okon”, the man corrected in a voice full of mirth and mischief.

    “And make you no dey take Yoruba corner corner eye lauf at Okon like dat. Dis one no be like dem foolish general title dem Abacha man come give dem foolish Yoruba musician and him dey jump all over dem place”, Okon screamed.

    “Just get on with it and answer the question”, a Lagosian-sounding fellow shot out from the audience.

    “Foolish Yoruba man. How market now? Abi you don return from Abuja?” the mad boy sneered. The interviewer saw an opening since Okon was on the offensive.

    “ Sir, can it be said that Chief Clark has abandoned his son Mr Goodluck Jonathan?” the interviewer queried in his merry baritone.

    “Make una tell Jonathan make him produce him birth certificate now. When fire catch man and catch him son, man must to take care of him own fire first oo. He be like if say dem Buhari don set dem afire”, Okon sniggered. It was at this point that Baba Lekki barged in with a frown.

    “Edwin Clark na gbarogudu man”, the old man began in pidgin and then switched to perfect English.”When we were in London he was Urhobo, when we got to Nigeria he became Ijaw. Na money dey determine him tribe. Tomorrow  Kajegbodo Clark fit say him be godogodo”.

    “Ha baba if he wan disowner him fine fine Yoruba wife, Okon dey kampe ooo. He don tey I punish Egba woman”. The mad boy snorted in relish. It was at this point that some Arogbow Ijaw fishermen from the surrounding creeks stormed the station and disrupted proceedings.

  • Clark, the father, Jonathan, the son- Reuben Abati

    Clark, the father, Jonathan, the son- Reuben Abati

    I have tried delaying the writing of this piece in the honest expectation that someone probably misquoted Chief E.K. Clark, when he reportedly publicly disowned former President Goodluck Jonathan. I had hoped that our dear father, E.K. Clark, would issue a counter statement and say the usual things politicians say: “they quoted me out of context!”  “Jonathan is my son”. That has not happened; rather, some other Ijaw voices, including one Joseph Evah, have come to the defence of the old man, to join hands in rubbishing a man they once defended to the hilt and used as a bargaining chip for the Ijaw interest in the larger Nigerian geo-politics. 

     

    If President Jonathan had returned to power on May 29, 2015, these same persons would have remained in the corridors of power, displaying all forms of ethnic triumphalism. It is the reason in case they do not realize it, why the existent power blocs that consider themselves most fit to rule, continue to believe that those whose ancestors never ran empires can never be trusted with power, hence they can only be admitted as other people’s agents or as merchants of their own interests which may even be defined for them as is deemed convenient. Mercantilism may bring profit, but in power politics, it destroys integrity and compromises otherwise sacred values.

     

    President Jonathan being publicly condemned by his own Ijaw brothers, particularly those who were once staunch supporters of his government further serves the purpose of exposing the limits of the politics of proximity. Politics in Africa is driven by this particular factor; it is at the root of all the other evils: prebendalism, clientelism and what Matthew Kukah has famously described as the “myownisation of power”.  It is both positive and negative, but obviously, more of the latter than the former. It is considered positive only when it is beneficial to all parties concerned, and when the template changes, the ground also shifts. As in that song, the solid rock of proximity is soon replaced by shifting sands. Old worship becomes new opportunism. And the observant public is left confounded.

     

    Chief E.K. Clark? Who would ever think, Chief E.K. Clark would publicly disown President Jonathan?  He says Jonathan was a weak President. At what point did he come to that realization? Yet, throughout the five years (not six, please) of the Jonathan Presidency, he spoke loudly against anyone who opposed the President. He was so combative he was once quoted as suggesting that Nigeria could have problems if Jonathan was not allowed to return to office. Today, he is the one helping President Jonathan’s successor to quench the fires. He always openly said President Jonathan is “his son”. Today, he is not just turning against his own son, he is telling the world his son as President lacked the political will to fight corruption. He has also accused his son of being too much of a gentleman. Really? Gentlemanliness would be considered honourable in refined circles.  Is Pa E.K. Clark recommending something else in order to prove that he is no longer a politician but a statesman as he says?

     

    As someone who was a member of the Jonathan administration, and who interacted often with the old man, I can only say that I am shocked.  This is the equivalent of the old man deleting President Jonathan’s phone number and ensuring that calls from his phone no longer ring at the Jonathan end. During the Jonathan years, Chief E. K. Clark was arguably the most vocal Ijaw leader defending the government. He called the President “my son”, and both father and son remained in constant touch.

     

    There is something about having the President’s ears in a Presidential system, elevated to the level of a fetish in the clientilist Nigerian political system. Persons in the corridors of power who have the President’s ear- be they cook, valet, inlaws, wife, cousin, former school mates, priests, or whatever, enjoy special privileges. They have access to the President and they can whisper into his ears. That’s all they have as power: the power to whisper and run a whispering campaign that can translate into opportunities or losses for those outside that informal power loop around every Presidency, that tends to be really influential.

     

    Every President must beware of those persons who come around calling them “Daddy”, “Uncle”, na my brother dey there”, “my son”, “our in-law”: emotional blackmailers relying on old connections. They are courted, patronized and given more attention and honour than they deserve by those looking for access to the President or government. Even when the power and authority of the whispering exploiters of the politics of proximity is contrived, they go out of their way to exaggerate it. They acquire so much from being seen to be in a position to make things happen.

     

    Chief E. K. Clark had the President’s ears. He had unfettered access to his son. He was invited to most state events.  And he looked out for the man he called “my son”, in whom he was well pleased. Chief Clark’s energy level in the service of the Jonathan administration was impressive. Fearless and outspoken, he deployed his enormous talents in the service of the Jonathan government.  If a press statement was tame, he drew attention to it and urged a more robust defence of “your boss”. If any invective from the APC was overlooked, he urged prompt rebuttal. If the party was tardy in defending “his son”, he weighed in.

     

    If anyone had accused the President of lacking “the political will to fight corruption” at that time, he, E.K. Clark, would have called a press conference to draw attention to the Jonathan administration’s institutional reforms and preventive measures, his commitment to electoral integrity to check political corruption, and the hundreds of convictions secured by both the ICPC and EFCC under his son’s watch. So prominent and influential was he, that ministers, political jobbers etc etc trooped to his house to pay homage.

     

    In due course, those who opposed President Jonathan did not spare Chief E. K. Clark either. He was accused of making inflammatory and unstatesman-like statements. An old war-horse, nobody could intimidate him. He was not President Olusegun Obasanjo’s fan in particular. He believed Obasanjo wanted to sabotage his son, and he wanted Obasanjo put in his place. Beneath all of that, was an unmistaken rivalry between the two old men, seeking to control the levers of Nigerian politics.

     

    Every President probably needs a strong, passionate ally like Chief E. K. Clark. But what happened? What went wrong? Don’t get me wrong. I am not necessarily saying that the Ijaw leader should have remained loyal to and defend Goodluck Jonathan because they are both Ijaws, patriotism definitely could be stronger than ethnic affinities, nonetheless that E. K. Clark tale about leaving politics and becoming a statesman is nothing but sheer crap.  If Jonathan had returned to office, he would still be a card-carrying member of the PDP and the “father of the President” and we would still have been hearing that famous phrase, “my son”. Chief E. K. Clark, five months after, has practically told the world that President Buhari is better than “his own son”.

     

     It is the worst form of humiliation that President Jonathan has received since he left office.  It is also the finest compliment that President Buhari has received since he assumed office. The timing is also auspicious: just when the public is beginning to worry about the direction of the Buhari government, E. K. Clark shows up to lend a hand of support and endorsement. Only one phrase was missing in his statement, and it should have been added: “my son, Buhari.” It probably won’t be too long before we hear the old man saying “I am a statesman, Buhari is my son.”  I can imagine President Obasanjo grinning with delight. If he really wants to be kind, he could invite E.K. Clark to his home in Ota or Abeokuta to come and do the needful by publicly tearing his PDP membership card and join him in that exclusive club of Nigerian statesmen! The only problem with that club these days is that you can become a member by just saying so or by retiring from partisan politics. We are more or less being told that there are no statesmen in any of the political parties.  

     

    It is not funny. Julius Ceasar asked Brutus in one of the famous lines in written literature: “Et tu Brutus?” President Jonathan should ask Chief E. K. Clark: “Et tu Papa?” To which the father will probably tell the son: “Ces’t la vie, mon cher garcon.”  And really, that is life. In the face of other considerations, loyalties vanish; synergies collapse. The wisdom of the tribe is overturned; the politics of proximity dissolves; loyalties remain in a perpetual process of construction.  Thus, individual interests and transactions drive the political game in Nigeria, with time and context as key determinants.

     

    These are teachable moments for President Jonathan. Power attracts men and women like bees to nectar, the state of powerlessness ends as a journey to the island of loneliness. However, the greatest defender of our work in office is not our ethnic “fathers and “brothers” but rather our legacy. The real loss is that President Jonathan’s heroism, his messianic sacrifice in the face of defeat, is being swept under the carpet and his own brothers who used to say that the Ijaws are driven by a principle of “one for all and all for another”, have become agent-architects of his pain. The Ijaw platform having seemingly been de-centered, Chief E.K. Clark and others are seeking assimilation in the new power structure. It is a telling reconstruction of the politics of proximity and mimicry.

     

    Chief E.K. Clark once defended the rights of ethnic minorities to aspire to the highest offices in the land, his latest declaration about his son reaffirms the existing stereotype at the heart of Nigeria’s hegemonic politics. The same hegemons and their agents whom Clark used to fight furiously will no doubt find him eminently quotable now that he has proclaimed that it is wrong to be a “gentleman”, and that his son lacks “the political will to fight corruption”. There is more to this than we may ever know. Chief Clark can insist from now till 2019,  that he has spoken as a statesman and as a matter of principle. His re-alignment,  is curious nonetheless. 

  • Edwin Clark jumps ship extravagantly

    Edwin Clark jumps ship extravagantly

    For the more than five years or so that Goodluck Jonathan was president, Edwin Clark, a former Information minister and Ijaw man from Delta State, stood vexatiously and provocatively behind him. His response in those happy days to those who deplored the president’s weakness, indulgence and overtly regional, if not outrightly ethnic, bias was that as hosts of the mainstay of the economy, oil, the South-South possessed a leverage on the nation’s politics that could not be gainsaid. If the South-South’s crude oil was good enough for the country, argued Chief Clark with unfathomable syllogism, then Dr Jonathan should be good enough for the country. And if he fell short of anyone’s expectations or standards, then the country should accommodate and endure him until he finished his term in office. That term, Chief Clark defined, was not one term of four years but two terms of eight years. In those exciting days too, Chief Clark, who already saw himself as an elder statesman, held court in Abuja, acting like a self-appointed ambassador plenipotentiary for both Dr Jonathan and the South-South.

    As the 2015 general elections approached, Chief Clark became more vociferous and incendiary. He gave the impression that if things did not favour Dr Jonathan, whom he described as his godson, he was prepared to go down with the ship, and if the ship began to sink, he would even refuse to follow the rats to the deck. Chief Clark prospered as his glib and prolific talk about the inalienable rights and manifest destiny of his beloved region intensified. He advised that for our mental health, we should take Dr Jonathan as he was, with all his warts. Noisome militants in the region also began to whoop for war, warning portentously of apocalypse should the country repudiate Dr Jonathan. Scores of visitors flocked the Abuja residence of Chief Clark, paid obeisance, and flattered and massaged his ego. They curried his favour and pined for a word on their behalf to the court of Dr Jonathan. Those were giddy days.

    Less than six months after Dr Jonathan came to grief, Chief Clark has reportedly modified his views on the former president. He lacked political will to fight corruption, said the elder statesman of his eminent compatriot. Chief Clark also insinuated that the former president was precipitate in conceding electoral defeat last March. Since he conceded defeat, there was nothing else anyone could do, he groaned. It was fruitless fighting for someone who ran for office, lost and conceded, he added. Chief Clark then added the clincher: “I no longer belong to the PDP. I won’t go to the APC either, but I will continue to talk as an elder statesman and leader of this country. I have left politics. If anyone comes to me to say he’s running for any elective position in the PDP or the APC, I won’t support you. I’m not a member of the PDP anymore.”

    Two things are clear. Chief Clark is leaving politics a frustrated man, and his frustration is anchored on both the electoral loss incurred by Dr Jonathan and the former president’s weaknesses and hasty concession of defeat. Second, knowing full well how badly it would rankle with Nigerians and even sound opportunistic should he join the new ruling party, the elder statesman has quit the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). No matter how hidden his motives are, his withdrawal from the PDP and his harsh and pejorative description of Dr Jonathan’s leadership ability so soon after the PDP’s electoral debacle gave Chief Clark out as less than altruistic. He knew he could not defect to the All Progressives Congress (APC) and still keep what is left of his reputation, and he was also reluctant to still be regarded as one of the backbones of the PDP, a party that has fallen badly on hard times. So he has opted to stay disingenuously detached. If he could gain nothing by being in the PDP, let him at least not lose anything by being seen by the APC as that unrepentant PDP avatar.

    While he waved and sang frantically and often irrationally for Dr Jonathan and the PDP in the good old days, this column suspected Chief Clark did not do so out of conviction. He did his calculations well, knew which side his bread was buttered, and half expected that the gravy train would continue for many years to come. Once things came to a dramatic and explosive end, the sensible and calculating Chief Clark knew it was time to move on. He pretends to follow the beaten path of former president Olusegun Obasanjo, but the former president himself absconded from politics on less than noble grounds, a victim of vaulting ambition and abject miscalculation. But whether out of altruism or mischief, the grand old man of South-South politics has taken a bow. Perhaps it is final. He wants to be called an elder statesman like Chief Obasanjo, as if that were possible by fiat or by age. Yet, neither he nor Chief Obasanjo has earned that appellation. Instead, they are recognised as the old men of Nigerian politics. If they truly wish to be statesmen, they will have to earn it — if it is not already too late; if they are not too ossified and too incorrigible to mend their ways.

  • Jonathan lacked will power to fight corruption – Clark

    Jonathan lacked will power to fight corruption – Clark

    Hails Buhari’s anti-graft crusade

    Quits partisan politics

    The Ijaw Leader, Chief Edwin Clark, on Wednesday said former president Goodluck Jonathan lacked the political will to fight corruption while in office.

    He hailed President Muhammadu Buhari’s ongoing anti-corruption crusade.

    The former federal commissioner for Information also announced his retirement from partisan politics.

    Clark said he has quit the Peoples Democratic Party and will not join the ruling All Progressive Congress.

    Despite announcing his retirement from politics, the elder statesman said he will continue to speak out against any form of injustice anywhere in the country.

    Clark, who spoke while hosting the “Think Nigeria First Initiative” group, who visited him at his Asokoro Residence, Abuja, said Jonathan meant well for Nigeria but lacked political will  to tackle corrupt politicians in the country.

    He said, “I have joined the group of those who don’t belong to any political party anymore.

    “I no longer belong to the PDP. I won’t go to the APC either, but I will continue to talk as an elder statesman and leader of this country. I have left politics.  If anyone comes to me to say he’s running for any elective position in PDP or APC, I won’t support you. I’m not a member of the PDP anymore.

    “I’m a true Nigerian. I have Muslims in my house even though I’m a Christian. Boko Haram is a problem of all of us and we must fight it together.”

    He reiterated his support for Buhari’s quest to fight corruption and urged Nigerians to support him.

    “It is not everything done by the opponent that is wrong. I will therefore support the policies that are for the good of the country because Nigeria belongs to all of us.”

    “We are all to support him, particularly in his determination to eradicate corruption in Nigeria.  For eight years Obasanjo legalised corruption. Yet, he’s the one talking about corruption. If your brother is arrested, did he give you money? If your sister was arrested for corruption, did she give you money?

    “Nobody should distract Buhari from fighting corruption. People should stop talking about sectional or selective justice.

    “Jonathan didn’t have the political will-power to fight corruption. He’s too a gentleman. Drivers of yesterday are living in palatial buildings now under his government. In advanced countries, when you are living above your means, people query you. That’s not so in Nigeria. Former governors and lawmakers are now asking for immunity.

    “Jonathan meant well for this country, but the will power to fight corruption was not there.

    “In an ideal society, when a man who earns 20,000 as his monthly salary and all of a sudden he acquire something that is worth N100,000, he should be questioned, but here in Nigeria, immunity has covered those that should be questioned.

    “That is not the kind of country that we want. Being a gentleman is not enough to govern this country.”

     

  • Buhari is ready, fit to rule Nigeria – Clark

    Buhari is ready, fit to rule Nigeria – Clark

    A former federal commissioner for Information, Chief Edwin Clark, on Wednesday urged Nigerians to rally round President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He said all hands must be on deck to move the country forward.

    The elder statesman also said President Buhari is fit and ready for the job of ruling the country.

    Clark, a major supporter of former President Goodluck Jonathan who spoke in Abuja when he hosted a group, Probity Ambassadors Organization of Nigeria, who conferred on him a life time achievement award, said he is certain that President Buhari will bring development to the country.

    “My advice for Mr. President and APC is to regard Nigeria as one, the attitude of winner takes all should not be employed.

    “Definitely, he will bring development to the country. He has to satisfy the yearnings of all Nigerians, including those who voted for him and those that voted against him.

    “We all own Mr. President and no one section owns him. We all want a Nigeria where everybody believes that we are one. Without the minority or the majority, no group can succeed,” the Ijaw leader stated.

  • Edwin Clark loses grandson

    Edwin Clark loses grandson

    Obaro Okorodudu, a grandson of the Ijaw Leader, Chief Edwin Clark, is dead.

    The deceased is the son of Chief Clark’s eldest daughter, Rebecca Okorodudu.

    According to a statement released by the family and signed by Ibrahim Clark, the 27- year- old Okorodudu until his death was a final year medical student in the United States.

    His remain is expected back in the country later on Thursday.

  • Jonathan timid, cowardly, says MEND leader, Henry Okah

    Jonathan timid, cowardly, says MEND leader, Henry Okah

    •Dismisses Edwin Clark as a tribalist

    Leader of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), Henry Okah, is hitting hard at President Goodluck Jonathan from his prison cell in South Africa.

    Okah who was sentenced to a 24-year jail term in March 2013 for terrorism, sees the President as timid and cowardly.

    In a lengthy interview published by this newspaper today, the man who President Jonathan once accused of masterminding the attempt on his life during the 2010 Independence anniversary in Abuja said he found it difficult to speak about him (Jonathan) without “saying something uncomplimentary.”

    Going down the memory lane, Okah said of him: “I have met President Jonathan. I knew him though not closely when he was the Deputy Governor of Bayelsa State. My cousin Chief (Diepreye) Alamieyeseigha was then governor.

    “I had a meeting with Jonathan in Pretoria in 2007 when the late President Musa Yar’ Adua sent him to speak with me. He was accompanied by Chief Timipre Sylva. I have spoken to him on occasions.

    “In one instance, he was traumatized emotionally by the attack on his country home which he was misled into believing I had a hand in. The last time I spoke with him was in April 2010 when he asked for my support personally. Since my recent arrest, I have had no direct contact with him.

    “It is difficult to speak about President Jonathan without saying something uncomplimentary. I truthfully find him timid and cowardly. His discussions are unintelligible revealing a lack of intellectual depth.

    “As governor of Bayelsa State, and a man whose home had been violated, I expected him to be angry and indignant at this sacrilegious act. Rather, he was physically trembling, terrified and incoherent as he spoke weeks after the attack.”

    Okah said he has been vindicated by the president with his performance since assuming the nation’s leadership six years ago.

    “I warned Nigerians about Goodluck Jonathan but some people assumed I was speaking in anger and arrogance,” he said.

    He added: “Nigerians have now seen President Jonathan for exactly what I told them that he is.  There is little difference in his speeches and that of Asari.”

    Drawing a comparison between Jonathan and his main challenger in this month’s presidential election, General Muhammadu Buhari, Okah said: “I was quite young when General Muhammadu Buhari was in power so I am compelled by this fact to look at him in awe. This has nothing to do with his personality. General Buhari kept quiet for a long time and I have not kept up with him since after he was deposed in a military coup. He does not appear vain and would very likely be a more prudent civilian leader. This is not to say that I would vote for him in any elections as much as I respect him. I am disillusioned with Nigerian politics and have never voted or participated in any form of politics at any level.”

    He prayed that “Nigeria gets a responsible and sensible president who sees the need to properly address the situation of the North and South in the face of Boko Haram and the Niger Delta issue.”

    Okah was also unsparing in his evaluation of the Ijaw leader, Chief Edwin Clark and ex-militant, Asari Dokubo.

    He dismissed Chief Clark as  a tribalist and an opportunist and “one of those people in the Niger Delta who parade themselves in oil companies pretending to have control over militants.”

    He wondered what “this decrepit man can do with all the money he is gathering.”

    Of Asari Dokubo, he said: “He is unintelligent and has forgotten the different versions he has given in the past. This man once said I was fighting against Goodluck Jonathan because Jonathan displaced Alamieyeseigha. Another time he said my wife is Itsekiri which was why I supported Itsekiris. My wife is from Enugu.

    “He has also said in yet another interview that I am not Ijaw. But Ijaw historians and scholars will tell him that I am a purer Ijaw than he can ever be. Even as I say this I must tell you that the issue of tribe is unimportant to me because I am not tribalistic and regard myself first as a Nigerian before an Ijaw.”

    He seems disappointed with Nigeria’s human rights community for showing no interest in his case. According to him,”I don’t know if any human rights organization in Nigeria has any interest in my case. Most African human rights organizations are lame and can be very easily influenced by governments through bribes and intimidation into ignoring rights abuses.

    “Citizens of most African countries receive no support from their governments or home NGO’s leaving them open to abuse in foreign prisons.”

    •EXCLUSIVE SOUTH AFRICAN PRISON INTERVIEW,

    —Pages 31 -33, 36-37

  • Soldiers will be deployed for elections – Clark

    Soldiers will be deployed for elections – Clark

    Ijaw leader, Chief Edwin Clark, has insisted that soldiers will be deployed to polling centers to ensure hitch-free elections.

    He said what the people desire is a safe environment to exercise their rights and this could only be achieved with deployments of soldiers.

    Clark, who spoke in Abuja on Friday when leadership of Jonathan Sambo Support Group in Gombe South/Central Senatorial District of Gombe State paid him a courtesy visit, said “Our people want safety when they go out to vote and the soldiers would be deployed to guarantee that.”

    The elder statesman , who also spoke on the ongoing crisis in the ruling party – the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), said that candidates’ imposition would be the party’s major undoing in the elections.

    He noted that the imposition of candidates at all levels by PDP leadership would haunt the party at the polls.

    He wondered why the leadership of the party allow that to happen in the first place.

    “I am very sad indeed that people in Gombe, majority of our minority people are being held hostage. The problem of imposition is not limited to Gombe, the problem PDP has today across the country was caused by imposition of candidates, being replaced by people who are not qualified for reason best known by the party. So these are problems we are trying to resolve.

    “A situation whereby a governor of a state would try to nominate everybody to become part of him is not democracy,” the former federal commissioner stated.

     

  • Why war against insurgents lingerers – Clark

    Why war against insurgents lingerers – Clark

    Ijaw leader, Chief Edwin Clark, Wednesday gave reason why the war against insurgents still lingers.

    Clark, a well known backer of President Goodluck Jonathan said the military for sometime was prevented from launching full blown attack against the Boko Haram.

    The recent development, according to him, was a plus to the President as the military has been able to recovered over 30 towns initially ‎taken over by the insurgents.

    Speaking in Abuja while playing host to some groups – the National PDP professionals, National Coalition for Jonathan/Sambo 2015, Relate International Prayer Group, Northern Missionary Forum and One God, One Nation Peoples Initiative, who paid him a solidarity visit, said, “Today 30 communities taken by the rebels have been reclaimed. Jonathan is a war general. No one else could have done what he did few days ago. He visited Baga, Moguno and other places to show his support for troops fighting the insurgents.

    “The war is not a conventional war. The opposition thought he won’t get the lost zones back. People had been preventing the army from fighting the insurgents before. There were saboteurs. But now, there game plan is over‎.”

    He further declared that Jonathan by the recent achievement in the fight against insurgency has proven that he is a war general.

    Clark also noted Jonathan is thinking so much about the youths having created great opportunities for child education.

     

  • Buhari incapable of ruling a democratic state – Clark

    Buhari incapable of ruling a democratic state – Clark

    Ijaw elder statesman, Chief Edwin Clark, on Thursday said the presidential candidate of the All Progressives’ Congress (APC), Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, is incapable of ruling a democratic state.

    Clark, who stated this in al statement to the 22 aggrieved former governorship aspirants of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Akwa-Ibom State, also urged the politicians to whom he addressed his statement, not to desert the party for the APC.

    According to him, the APC is an alliance that is not in the interest of Nigerians.

    He, however, noted that Buhari is today surrounded by controversies because of his “sordid past,” accusing him on surviving on ethnic and religious sentiments.

    “It’s clear that apart from clinging to sectional, ethnic and religious sentiments, the APC presidential candidate has no idea of running a democratic state.

    “Mohammadu Buhari is a personality drenched in controversy because of his sordid dark past, Nigeria is ahead of his puerile and barren ideology, which remains stagnant. The APC political marriage is about accomplishing selfish, personal desire rather than the well being of Nigerians,” he said.

    He, however, pleaded with the aggrieved former aspirants not to leave the party for the APC, assuring them that he was conversant with their case and that President Goodluck Jonathan would right the wrong by repositioning the party.

    “I am very much aware of the situation of the 22 PDP gubernatorial aspirants, who felt cheated by Governor Godswill Akpabio’s titanic hold of party structures and the emergence of the PDP governorship candidate in Akwa Ibom State.

    “These illustrious party aspirants were very angry, threatening to leave the party if justice is not done on their agitation to have a free, fair and transparent party primary though only one joined the opposition APC, others had remained.

    “Mr. President, no doubt, will address these injustices with the view of repositioning the party so that loyal party members and Nigerians who remain steadfast to the present transformation can be rewarded with good governance,” Clark stated.