Tag: Jonathan

  • Jonathan lacks good sense of history, say Buhari supporters

    The Buhari Support Organisation, an umbrella body of all groups and associations campaigning for the election of the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, has accused President Goodluck Jonathan of standing history in its head saying no amount of distortion will stop Buhari from winning the February 14 presidential election.

    In a statement signed by its Head of Media and ICT, Dr. Chidia Maduakwe, the organisation said it was regrettable that rather than engage on issue-based campaign, the president and his team were more concerned about the age of Buhari and how he cannot remember his telephone number.

    Maduekwe, who was reacting to Jonathan’s campaign statement that Buhari never equipped the army as Head of State, said available records have it that the military were well taken care of during the Buhari regime than now.

    He said: “Contemporary presidents worldwide usually drip with facts and records of history when addressing an audience particularly during an election year while on campaign. It is very regrettable that our incumbent president failed woefully in the litmus test he set for himself to run an issue-based campaign. With a PhD degree, he is highly educated to occupy the exalted post of the president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and so, accessing facts should not ordinarily pose a problem.

    “Verifiable records listed below has it that even with less oil revenue accruing to both the Buhari and Babangida regimes as compared to the heavy windfall which continued after Jonathan came into power about six years ago, the military then were by far better taken care off with modern equipment, welfare and high moral than now. Their glowing global performance then can attest to this simple fact.

    “Please refer to Central Bank of Nigeria, Economic and Financial Review (Lagos), 23, June 1985, 80; and Economist Intelligence Unit, Country Profile: Nigeria, 1990-91, London, 1990, 25. Also based on information from United States, Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, World Military Expenditures and Arms Transfers, 1972-1982, Washington, April 1984, table III, 95; and United States, Arms Controls and Disarmament Agency, World Military Expenditures and Arms Transfers, 1988, Washington, June 1989, table III, 111.

    “With the current magnitude of insecurity, corruption and economic downturn facing this country, one is totally taken aback with this revelation of the intellectual shallowness of the decision making clique that has held this country hostage in the last six years.

    “Fortunately, Nigerians are saying it loud and clear that the much younger PhD holding GEJ has failed to lead us out from the woods.

    “We might just juxtapose the very important views of President Ronald Regan during the 1984 campaign for the presidency when he said he will not make age an issue in the campaign and will not exploit for political purposes the youth and inexperience of his opponent. Also Thomas Jefferson once said, ‘We should never judge a president by his age, only by his works.”

  • FEBRUARY  POLL:  JONATHAN  ANGRY WITH MINISTERS,  AIDES OVER APC’S ATTACKS

    FEBRUARY POLL: JONATHAN ANGRY WITH MINISTERS, AIDES OVER APC’S ATTACKS

    This is not the best of time for many members of the Federal  Executive Council and aides of President Goodluck Jonathan.

    He is angry with them for allowing the rival All Progressives Congress (APC) get the upper hand   so early in the campaign leading to the February 14 election.

    He is particularly irked by the perception of his government by many Nigerians as ‘non-performing’ which he blames on the opposition.

    This  was evident at the flagging off of his campaign in Lagos on of the day defending allegations of incompetence levelled at his administration

    Consequently, PDP strategists have returned to the drawing board with a view to checking the APC onslaught. They are tinkering with the option of the PDP fighting ‘dirty’ if necessary. Sources familiar with the development said that the President was unhappy that public opinion was turning against his administration in spite of what his ‘good performance’. It was gathered that that the pressure from campaign issues being raised by the opposition accounted for the manner in which the President spoke at the flag-off of his campaign in Lagos. President Jonathan,it was also learnt, opted to beat his drum if no one would do it .

    This is expected to serve as a template for the party’s Presidential Campaign Council, headed by Director-General Ahmadu Ali. Sources said that the President was disturbed that most Ministries, Departments and Agencies(MDAs) were not defending issues brought up for public discourse by the opposition. One of the issues being considered now is a minor cabinet reshuffle which will see a Minister posted to take care of Information and National Orientation to fill in gaps during the ongoing campaign. One source said that the President is not comfortable with the lack of input from the Mini.

    “The President was talking with anger in Lagos because of pressure from critics who were trying to writeoff his administration. He was under tremendous pressure to clear his image to prove that he had performed in office,” one source said.

    “The President believes the MDAs and their Ministers are not reeling out the facts and figures enough for Nigerians to appreciate the modest successes recorded by the administration.

    “You can see that from the way he has been taking in on the opposition, he is desperate to match them tit- fortat. At a point, the President was fidgeting. He alleged that the figures being reeled out by his critics were just wrong.”

    Another source said: “From the look of things, the PDP and the presidency may engage in dirty campaign because the heat is too much. “Henceforth, you will see the PDP and government officials firing on all cylinders to prove one point or the other.”

    Responding to a question, the source added: “PDP and Presidency strategists have returned to the drawing board to reshape the campaign.” Meanwhile, there were signs last night that the Presidency might engage a substantive Minister of Information and National Orientation to put all issues about performance in “perspective.”

    A third source said: “The Presidency is not too happy about the handling of the government image. A little swap of ministers might take place to sell the achievements of the government to the public and defend allegations from critics and the opposition. “The new media focus is to be on the offensive instead of being on the defensive on performance-related matters.

    “Some cabinet members have been short-listed to man the Ministry of Information and National Orientation because the Supervising Minister, Dr. Nurudeen Mohammed is more of a diplomat than an information manager.”

    The APC said last night described the February 14 Presidential election as a referendum to determine President Jonathan’s lacklustre leadership and performance after about six years in the saddle as the President.

    The party in a statement in Abuja expressed disappointment that the President could raise issues about what he intends to do for the country after wasting the mandate freely given to him by the Nigerian people four years ago.

    It expressed dismay and disappointment at the inability of President Jonathan to use the opportunity offered by his campaign outings to tell Nigerians what he has done for them in the last six years and recalled that President Jonathan had earlier said that parties and candidates should dwell on issues agitating the minds of Nigerians and how these can be solved, but said it was surprised that in his campaign outings so far including those of Enugu and Lagos, the President has been unable to do this.

    It said further that at the PDP Lagos campaign flag-off and at Enugu, rather than the President telling the people of Nigeria watching on television and those at the campaign venue what he has achieved and what he intends to do differently, the second-term seeking President Jonathan spent valuable time reading copiously excerpts from the maiden speech of General Ibrahim Babangida who overthrew Buhari in 1985.

    “Nigerians do not expect a political commentary from President Jonathan of a nearly 30 year old speech delivered to the nation by IBB. What Nigerians expect to hear among others is what he has achieved in the last six years and why corruption still remains endemic and the economy in shambles.

  • Jonathan campaigns in Enugu, faults Nigerians’ perception  of  corruption

    Jonathan campaigns in Enugu, faults Nigerians’ perception of corruption

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday expressed frustration at the way the generality of Nigerians perceive corruption.

    He could not understand why anyone seen to be living well is dubbed corrupt.

    “If you have a good house, you are declared corrupt; if you buy a good car, you are declared corrupt. That is the definition of corruption in Nigeria today,” he said in Enugu on day two of his nationwide campaign for re-election.

    Lashing out at the opposition in Enugu as he did at the flagging off of his campaign in Lagos on Thursday, President Jonathan accused the All Progressives Congress (APC) of ‘over flogging’ the issue of corruption in the country with a view to ‘deceiving’ Nigerians.

    He said: “They over-flog corruption because they think it is the only way to misinform the youths into believing that they are saints who have solution to the problem.

    “When they sing the song of corruption, the young people will ignorantly follow it.

    “They want me to fight corruption by arresting their perceived political enemies and send them to jail.

    “They want this administration to play to the gallery in order to satisfy their vendetta. You cannot just arrest people and send them to jail without evidence for trial.” govern Nigeria based “on my personal habits”, but on the basis of what he termed true democracy. He accused the APC Presidential flag bearer of ‘ selectively’ arresting Second Republic vice president Alex Ekwueme,former governor of Imo State,the late Chief Sam Mbakwe,Second Republic governor of the old Anambra State,Chief Jim Nwobodo and the late Chief Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, and sending them to jail on ‘trumped up charges’. nflayed the opposition of drumming the issue of human rights abuse and drew the attention of “They also maltreated a respected elder statesman by going to London and kidnapped him and put him in a crate like sardine,” he said He blamed past administrations of that the Navy,according to him, had only one frigate as against the current four. He asked for 100 per cent support from the people of the state saying: “We will not accept 99.9 percent.” Also speaking,Vice President Namadi Sambo described Enugu and the Southeast as the bedrock of PDP.” Other speakers were Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu and Governors Theodore Orji (Abia), Sullivan Chime (Enugu) and Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom) as wellas the PDP National Chairman,Alhaji Adamu Muazu. Hhighlight of the occasion was the presentation of flag to the governorship candidate of the party in state, Mr. Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi.

  • Jonathan’s campaign speech in Lagos

    Jonathan’s campaign speech in Lagos

    FULL TRANSCRIPT OF PRESIDENT GOODLUCK JONATHAN’S REMARKS AT THE FLAG-OFF OF THE PDP 2015 CAMPAIGN IN LAGOS ON THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015

    Your Excellency, the chairman of our great party, Alhaji Adamu Muazu, senior members of our party here on this great occasion, we have spent so much time here so I will not bore you with protocols.

    Today, I am going to address only a segment of the Nigerian population. I am going to address the people who are voting for the first time, those of you who will attain 18years this year.

    That means I am addressing the young people. I donot want to address old people like me, because we are spent already and I will crave your indulgence Nigerian youths, those of you who are here, and those of you watching us at home, listen to what I am saying.

    I am going to address political gatherings in 37 cities and I am going to dwell on three key things. I am focusing on the young people.

    Whatever I say, when you go back, call your aunts or call your uncles, your father or your mother, or your cousin, that is at least 60 years old and confirm and ask them what you heard that the Presidential candidate of PDP mentioned in any of the rallies because 2015 elections is about the young people: either you vote and continue to be relevant in Nigeria’s political history or you vote for you to be irrelevant.

    And I will repeat it, those of you who are voting for the first time, your decision to vote could mean you vote for a Nigerian youth to be important, to be relevant in this country or be a Nigerian person to be treated as a nonsense person and I believe all of you want to be relevant.

    Of course you have seen…we have just introduced our governorship candidates and you see how many of them that is of your age bracket. Which other party will give that kind of opportunity?

    I am going to dwell on three things because those who say they want to take over power from PDP have been telling a lot of lies. They have hired people from all over the world and those of you in the social media carry all forms of lies, painting all kinds of colour and giving me all kinds of face that I cannot defend.

    If you listen to us in the 37 places we will address these issues, you will now know where to cast your votes. I will address you in all the places on three issues.

    The first is the issue of insecurity. I am also going to address whether this administration is fighting or encouraging corruption. I am going to address the issue of weak government and unfocused government that has no plans. Yours is to listen and compare with everything that has been done before in this country and take a decision.

    I will not keep you here for too long because we still have the opportunity… I am going to raise just very few issues today and tomorrow I will continue in Enugu and then on and on and on.

    First let me tell you about the voter’s card. First when we came in here we saw some placards, some of you complaining that we are yet to get a permanent voters card. Only yesterday, I directed that every Nigerian (of voting age) must vote. INEC must make sure and government will not allow a situation where some (eligible) Nigerians will not vote; we will not allow it. All Nigerians must vote and I mean it.

    I told you that I am addressing those of you who are voting for the first time. Those of you in the age bracket of 20 to 24, if you go back, ask your uncles, before 2011 no Nigerian complained that he had no voters card. People voted themselves into office. We came and said every Nigeria vote must count and since then, the voter’s card has become relevant.

    This is the party that is giving political strength to all Nigerians. Already you have been told from intelligence reports that some people are already cloning cards so that your voter’s card will no longer be relevant. Is that the kind of people you want to take over government?

    They want to take us to the old days when nobody sawvoter’s cards but results were announced. They want to take us to the old days when ballot papers would be in South Africa and results would be announced. Are you going back to the old days?

    Nigeria must move forward, Nigeria is for the youths. Nigeria is not for old people like us. The young generation must redefine this country. We must take this country to where we want it to be. Nobody can push us backwards. The past is past. They have led us backward and backward.

    In fact when we were young, we were told that at Independence, Nigeria, Brazil, Malaysia, Indonesia and even India were all at the same level. That was what we were told when I was in the secondary school and the university. Now all those countries have left us behind and now some people want to take us backward. Do you want to go backwards? Nigerian youths do you want to go backwards?

    Young Nigerians were doing things fantastically well, they were acting films and these very people were snubbing them, they were playing music and these very people were abusing them. But we are encouraging them and the world has accepted them. Do you want to move forward? ….. Do you want to go backward?

    I told you I was going to address things and I will be very brief. They talk about insecurity. That they will fight insecurity. And you will ask are our armed forces weak? Are the Nigerians in the Armed Forces weak? If we have problems what is the cause—equipment. And somebody who wakes up and tells young people of 23 years old that he wants to fight insecurity, ask him when he was the head of government did he buy one rifle for a Nigerian soldier.

    These people did not buy anything for the Nigerian soldiers. They refused to equip them. No attack helicopter, nothing. Ask them what they did with the defence budget for the whole time they were in office. No country equips armed forces overnight. What they use is quite expensive and they are built over the years. Even if you spend 10 billion dollars today, you cannot equip the army, navy and air force.

    The capacity is built overtime. They refused to build the capacity. They instigated crisis and now they are telling us they will fight insurgency. Ask them and they will answer. I will elaborate more as we progress to other places.

    The next is that they say government is corrupt; or we are not fighting corruption. Only yesterday, I addressed the anti-corruption agencies. I said look people are deceiving young Nigerians. You must tell Nigerians what you are doing. We have arrested more people within this period. Gotten more convictions within this period but everyday they tell us lies.

    At this point, let me apologize to some Nigerian civil servants who did not receive their salaries in December early enough and I will tell you what happened. I apologize to those families that suffered because we believe that for you to fight corruption; you must take measures, establish and strengthen institutions. You just don’t wake up, enter the street, arrest one person and lock up and show on television and say that you are fighting corruption.

    If they had succeeded in fighting corruption, corruption would not have been with us here today. If they had set up structures and especially in today’s modern science using ICT to manage resources, we would not have been talking about corruption today. What happened in December was that IPPIS, software for processing salaries, — sometimes people steal through salaries- and some federal government agencies including some ministries tried to divert funds to pay some allowances. The system is scientific, it is not a human being, and as long as money meant for salaries is about to be diverted to other things, it shuts down. Those departments of government were shut down, this is the only way that you can prevent corruption.

    I served in Bayelsa as deputy governor and governor for eight years; I also served as Vice President and President for another four years at the centre, for all this period, the fertilizer area is where states and federal governments spend billions of naira but less than 10 per cent of fertilizers go to the farmers. The rest is stolen and sent out of the country. Even the 10 per cent sometimes is adulterated. We came and cleaned up the sector and today there is no corruption in the fertilizer industry again.

    What did we do? We assembled some young Nigerians that are IT gurus and we developed the e-wallet system and through that the farmers now get their fertilizers directly and nobody is cheating the government again. Is that not the way to stop corruption?

    If somebody tells you that the best way to fight corruption is to arrest your uncle or father and show him on television, well, you won’t stop corruption, you will even encourage corruption. I used to tell people and I will also address press conferences so that people can ask me direct questions. Armed robbery is still with us, despite the fact that we are shooting (death penalty) armed robbers. Is that stopping armed robbery?

    So arresting people and demonstrating on television will not fight corruption, we must set up institutions, strengthen them to prevent people from even touching the money and that is what we are working on and we are succeeding.

    Some people say they are finding corruption… some of you know, I am not addressing people of 20 years and below but people from 30 years and so on… Nigerians go to fuel stations and sleep overnight to buy fuel or tip those who sell fuel to buy fuel. They hoard fuel and they benefit from the hoarding. Who are those who benefitted from hoarding fuel? Since we came on board, have you suffered? Do you need to bribe someone before you get fuel?

    When the crisis of insecurity came up, we had nothing. So to get things very quickly, we used some vendors to make procurement. But now what we are doing is government to government. Now any new procurement we are doing whether for the air force, navy or army it’s government to government, so there is nothing like corruption anymore. Even if we have some issues, maybe… is that not the way to fight corruption?

    You must prevent people from touching money, you don’t give them the opportunity or test them with money and this is what government is doing and we are succeeding in a number of areas in our procurement processes. The relevant agencies will address Nigerians for you to appreciate what we are doing.

    They say the government is weak, they say we are un-focused; we have no plan.

    They say we are weak because there were some people who took our fathers, our mothers and our uncles while they were abroad put them in a crate and flew them to Nigeria but they were intercepted by superior powers. That blocked Nigerians from even going to Britain at a time and the relationship between Nigeria and Britain… the whole world isolated Nigeria.

    They said that is the way to fight corruption. So immediately I suspect your uncle, I can just crate him and throw him into Kirikiri. Is that the way to stop corruption?

    If somebody tells you that he will not follow due process… I came in with Yar’Adua and he advocated due process and I stand by due process. Any country that does not abide by the rule of law is a jungle.

    Do you want Nigeria to be a jungle society? Immediately I suspect you that you have done something wrong I just ask the police or army to arrest you and throw you into jail. Is that the country you want?

    They say to be strong is to jail people indiscriminately for 300 years. Is that where you want to go?

    A country is like an industry. It must be managed properly by people who have brain and great ideas upstairs.

    Let me just give you some highlights: they say we are not focused; we are not planning. But our economy has become the biggest in Africa; it was not the biggest in Africa before. Without planning, can your economy become the biggest in Africa?

    They say we are not planning, we are not focused but we have cleaned up the corruption in fertilizer distribution in the country. The farm inputs are getting to the farmers and our import bills, the money we use in buying things from outside is coming down. Can you get that without planning?

    You are no longer queuing up and leaving your cars in fuel stations. Can you do that without planning?

    I believe that some few years back some young people have not seen trains except when you travel abroad and you have never boarded a train. Now our trains are moving. Can you do that without planning?

    In the power sector, we are in Lagos; Egbin power sector got burnt in 2005 and remained so until now when we are fixing it. We have been able to finish the privatization of the power sector. This is an interface period but you already know that the generation capacity is almost double. Can you do that without planning?

    This government feels that Nigerians are very dynamic people, very creative, very industrious, very talented in music, arts and business. Many of them do not have money and you know we are almost 200 million in Nigeria and we cannot reach everybody the same day. We came up with the concept of YOUWIN to give grants not loans to young Nigerians that have ideas. If you interview them, some of them are already manufacturing and in the next four to five years, we will be exporting things from this country. And they say we have noplans for the youths? They should come and tell us what plans they have for the youths.

    I believe that young Nigerians, not people who are spent and finished. not people of my age, we are gone… that is why I said I am addressing people from the ages 18- 23 those who are voting for the first time, we believe that you people will take us to the moon. My generation has failed we couldn’t take Nigeria to the moon. Look at what India is doing. Look at what countries we were at par with at independence are doing and I said for us to get to the moon, that’s a special area; you need to expose your best brains.

    I came up with a special scholarship that you must first of all make a First Class in the university. We have scholarship for everybody but you must first of all make First Class from your university and then we test the best brains and send them to the best 25 universities in the world. Can someone who has no plans for the future of this country do that?

    Can somebody who does not think about the Nigerian youth do that?

    Do you want to go back to those days when they had no plans for us?

    When I came on board as President, I noticed that though in the country and on paper, there is this programme or policy of government that every state must get a Federal government owned university. Out of the 36 states we have, 12 had no federal universities and people were deceiving Nigerians that they were doing something.

    I said we must establish these 12 universities in the remaining 12 states, start as small universities and grow and we have done that successfully and they are growing gradually.

    We did not stop there. We looked at the school drop-outs in some parts of the country and they were quite high. We came up with the Almajiri educational programme and we thank the Governors from many of the states where we have those set of students. We have programmes for Almajiri students and we have the programme for out-of-school children. Can somebody who has no plan for the country think about that kind of programme?

    You will ask some of those people who are deceiving you now and who hired some people from outside the country to go on social media and tell all kinds of lies, that when they were in power did they build any nursery school for anybody? Ask them, ask them, I say go and ask them.

    If they did not build nursery schools for anybody, what did they use our money for? They built prisons or universities for you?

    I will build universities for you, I will build secondary schools for you, I will build primary schools for you.

    They say we have no plans for this country but we established the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF)—out of the money that comes into this country we reserve a little so you just don’t squander it.

    This is a government that introduced for the first time what we call the SWF and I want to thank the Governors from the states who keyed into the SWF idea. In addition to the SWF, you know that there are some stolen monies, which from time to time government gets back. They have been getting these monies back but we do not know how they are spending it.

    The ones that have come in within this period, we have not even started spending it but first of all we agree on how to spend it. Because we have security challenges and this money is primarily for security and they used security channels to take it, 50 per cent of it will be used for security, 25 per cent of it for development and 25 per cent of it will be used for future generations. This is the decision we have taken even before we start spending the money. Can somebody who has no plan for the future of the country do that thing? They should come and tell you what they used our monies for.

    We believe that so many young Nigerians, some young workers find it very difficult to own a house of their own. We introduced the Mortgage Refinancing Company. It is just coming up, estates are being built and we are working with the Labour unions. As we pursue that programme in the next five years, most Nigerian workers either working in private sector or in government can own houses. They have no plans for you; they are coming to tell you false stories. We have said you do not need to have so much money to own a house. Do you want to go back to the old days?

    We have plans for employment generation. We know one of the greatest challenges for most governments including Nigeria is to get jobs for our youths but we are not sleeping. So far we have been able to create a number of jobs… I have set up two bodies headed by the Vice President made up of people in government and the private sector. We call them Presidential Job Creation Board and Micro, Small and Medium Scale Enterprises Council, working very hard to ensure that every year two million jobs are created. Can somebody who has no plans do that?

    Of course we have been told that I have other opportunities. I have many other things to say but people are getting tired … we’d have the opportunity to talk and talk and talk.

    Some groups of people have said that you have to vote for your liberation or imprisonment. Some groups of people came, and I read it in the papers, when they see people in government maybe governors, ministers, commissioners and so on … they will say we will draw a line, we are not probing the past because they want to deceive them to get their support.

    So they will draw a line and start fighting corruption after they cross the bridge. Only two days ago, somebody stood in Port Harcourt and said he was going to catch people in the streets and throw them into Kirikiri.

    The same mouth says something from the right, and from the left, making contradicting statements. Can you trust those people? Are they not deceiving you?

    They want power by all means and all what they want to use power for is to lock up and imprison their enemies. I have no enemy to fight. My interest is your interest. My interest is the Nigerian interest and for the future generations and young Nigerians to develop. Not to fight enemies. We must stop corruption. I will not stop corruption by catching people, putting them in trailers and dumping them off to be killed. You can’t stop corruption that way. Someone wakes up and he feels he can jail all his enemies and he thinks that is how to fight corruption? I think we have advanced beyond that point.

    Somebody wakes up and says “O, Nigerian women I am going to give you position.’’ And you ask him when you were a Head of Government, you had a cabinet, I have the list of the cabinet members, there was no one single woman. Not even one in the cabinet.

    So Nigerian women, you cast your votes and go back to the kitchen and die there or you cast your votes to liberate yourself.

    The Nigerian women must decide where to cast their votes: you vote and go back to the kitchen and die in the kitchen or you cast your votes to liberate yourself. We are ready to liberate all Nigerian women.

    Let me say one more thing and conclude. I read a headline in one paper yesterday: MEND DUMPS JONATHAN… did you read it?

    I am from the Niger Delta. The leader of MEND is one Okah. He is in South African prison. Why is he there? South Africa is not Nigeria where people will say Oh, President (Jonathan) manipulated it. Okah is in the prison because 1st October 2010 when we were to celebrate our independence, our golden year of independence, Okah was procured by some Nigerians to assassinate me. Okah bombed Abuja, but the attempt was to assassinate me and South Africa intelligence system caught him in the plan to assassinate me. He is now in jail in South Africa and they say MEND dumps Jonathan.

    Okah that wanted to assassinate Jonathan, will he support Jonathan? I am told that Okah is supporting some people… I am told that Okah who is in a South African prison for killing Nigerians is endorsing some people. Is that the country you want to live in? Count me out.

    Let me conclude by thanking all Nigerians, especially Lagosians. Let me sincerely on behalf of my party apologise to you because we are having this rally today so the whole of Lagos is at a standstill. We beg you, we have to do it and we know you love us, will support us and we promise to make sure that… this is the very first government that has supported the industrial sector very well. Ask your brothers and sisters in the private sector, if they are sincere they will say that we have come up with policies that have encouraged commerce and industry.

    Government alone cannot employ people. The private sector must grow to create jobs for the people. Bear with us because the PDP government will continue to encourage the private sector to create jobs for Nigerians.

    Finally, let me tell all of you especially those of you, who want to go to the National Assembly that we just had a national conference. The document from that conference, because of the controversy we have in the present National Assembly, you know how chaotic the present Assembly is, we know that if you bring that document to the Assembly they will dump it.

    So we want to present it to the next Assembly. So those people you are sending, if you mean well for this country, you must vote people who can go to the National Assembly, discuss and adopt that document that our leaders have agreed so that this country can move forward.

    I stand today in the city of Lagos, in the south west on behalf of the leader of our party, Alhaji Muazu, the Vice President and all the leaders and promise that if you vote the PDP en masse to the National Assembly and to the Presidency, we will adopt that document so that this country will move forward.

    That document is to liberate you, we did not influence it, our fathers, mothers, brothers and sisters that are credible came up with it.

    Ask them, we did not influence it. I did not ask them to dot any `I’ or cross any `T’ because I have no personal interest. My interest is the Nigerian interest.

    It is either we vote to be prisoners as we were- and I will tell you maybe some of you do not know, in 1983, I don’t know for the young people, some of you who are writing all sort of things on the social media. In 1983/84, what they called discipline as a post graduate student instead of reading my book, the whole night I queued up to buy two tins of milk. And they say that is discipline.

    So we should make you queue up the whole night as students to buy two tins of milk? Is that the discipline you want?

    You must vote for your liberation, you must vote for your development, you must vote to take Nigeria to the moon. You cannot vote to take Nigeria backward.

    Leave us who are half dead to bury our dead.You must vote for the progress of this country, you must vote for the Nigerian youth, you must vote for the Nigerian women. PDP!… POWER!

    Thank you all.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    .

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Jonathan: we’ve failed

    Jonathan: we’ve failed

    From President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday came a damning verdict on his generation. We have failed, he said, urging the youth to vote for young people.

    Jonathan spoke in Lagos at the opening of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP’s) campaign ahead of next month’s general elections.

    He said: “I do not want to address old people like me because we have failed completely. We are spent already.”

    An angry and agitated Dr. Jonathan, who was sarcastic in most of his over 30 minutes speech, told the youth that the election was their opportunity to vote for their relevance.

    The President addressed insecurity, unemployment and corruption, stating the steps his government had taken in addressing them. He promised that the recommendations of the National Conference will be sent to the Eighth National Assembly for passage — if he is re-elected.

    Flaunting his party’s governorship candidates, Jonathan, who said he was addressing Nigerians who will be voting for the first time and young people, boasted that his party had provided the youth an opportunity by fielding young candidates.

    Jonathan attacked  past leaders, saying they never bought any equipment for the military.

    Jonathan also attacked those who said the militant group, Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), disowned him, adding that he has no business with a group whose leader (Henry Okah) is in a South African prison, for killing many Nigerians.

    According to the President, Okah, the mastermind of the October 1, 2010 bomb blast in Abuja, was hired to assassinate him but his mission was uncovered by security agencies. He was not surprised such a group was not supporting him.

    Jonathan boosted that it was under his administration that people understood the importance of voter cards, insisting that prior to 2011, elections were never really held as politicians were imposed through rigging and malpractices.

    He said he had “directed” the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to ensure that irregularities in the Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) distribution are corrected so that no eligible Nigerian is disenfranchised.

    The President said: “I do not want to address old people like me because we have failed completely. We are spent already.  Listen to what I will say because I am going to address political gatherings in 37 places. Whatever I say, when you go back home, ask your aunts or uncles who are 60 years and above to confirm the things I mentioned.

    “This election is about the young people. It is either you vote for the young people to be relevant in this country or you vote for you to be irrelevant. Those of you who are voting for the first time should vote for a Nigerian youth to be important and relevant in this country.

     “We have just introduced our governorship candidates and you can see that many of them are within your age bracket. Which other party will give the youth that opportunity?

    “Those who say they want to take over power from PDP have been telling a lot of lies. They have hired people from all over the world.

    “Do you want to vote for people who want to take you back to the old days? Nigeria is for the youths. It is not for old people like us.

    “They talk about insecurity. That they will fight insecurity and we ask, are our Armed Forces weak? Ask the man telling you who are about 23-year-old that when he was Head of Government, if he bought one rifle for the Nigerian soldier?

    “These people did not buy anything for the Nigerian soldiers. Ask them what they did with the defence budget throughout the whole time they were in government; no equipment was bought for the armed forces.

    “Nobody equips the Armed Forces overnight. They are built over the years. Even if we spend $10 billion today, it cannot immediately equip the Army, Navy and Air Force because their capacities are built over the years. It takes a period of time.

    “They refused to build the capacity, instigated crisis and now they are telling us they will fight insecurity. Ask them these questions and they will answer. I will disclose more as we progress.”

    On corruption, which his administration has been criticised for condoning, Jonathan said:

    “They say that the government is corrupt and not fighting corruption, but only yesterday (Wednesday) I addressed the corruption agencies (sic) to give Nigerians breakdown of their activities in the past 15 years.

    “To fight corruption, you must take measures to establish firm institutions. You don’t just go into the street and arrest somebody and lock him up or show him on television and say you are fighting corruption.

    “If they succeeded in fighting corruption in their time, corruption would not have been with us today. If they had put in place structures and embraced modern technologies to manage resources, we would not have been talking about corruption today.

    “Why some civil servants did not receive their salaries in December is because of a software that processes salaries and does not allow money meant for salaries to be diverted for something else.

    “Sometimes, some ministries and agencies divert funds to pay some kinds of allowances; so, what the system does is to shut down once anyone tries to divert money meant for salaries. That is why those departments of government were shut down and some people could not get their salary. That is how to fight corruption.

    “In the past, fertiliser which is an area where the federal and state governments spent billions of Naira, had less than 10 percent of the fertilizer going to the farmers. Sometimes the 10 percent was even adulterated while the money ended up in the pockets of few persons. But today, there is no corruption in the fertilizer industry again.

    “We assembled some young Nigerians that have attributes and developed what we call the Electronic Wallet, through which farmers get their fertilisers directly and no one cheats the government anymore. Is that not the way to stop corruption?

    “If someone tells you the best way to stop corruption is to arrest your uncle or father and show him on television, it will not stop corruption. It will even encourage corruption. We are shooting armed robbers but armed robbery is still with us. Has that stopped armed robbery?

    “We must set up institutions to prevent people from even touching the money and that is what we have been doing and we are succeeding. Since we came to power, Nigerians no longer sleep overnight at fuel stations, while those who hoard fuel benefit.

    “Since we came on board, have you had to bribe somebody to get fuel? Have you suffered to get fuel? Is that the kind of country you want to go back to?

    “They say the military is corrupt. When this insecurity crisis came up, we had nothing. So, to get weapons very quickly, we used some vendors to purchase, but now, what we do is government to government. Any procurement for the Armed Forces is done at government levels and so, there is nothing like corruption. Is that not the way to fight corruption?

    “We are reducing corruption. I will not go further on this because the heads of the agencies will address Nigerians for you to appreciate what we are doing.”

    Jonathan defended his administration’s style, saying: “They said the government is weak and has no plan…I came in with Yar’Adua (late Umaru Musa Yar’ Adua) and he advocated for due process. So, I stand by due process. Any country that does not obey the rule of law is a jungle. They said we do not plan and our economy is now the biggest in Africa. Without plan can we achieve it?

    “Our trains were not moving for many years but now most of them are moving. Can we achieve that without planning? We have been able to conclude the privatisation of the power sector and our generating capacity is almost doubled. Can you do that without planning?

    “The government feels that Nigerians are very dynamic people. Very creative and industrious but most of them do not have money. Having in mind that we are almost 200 million people and we cannot carry everybody at once, we came up with the You-Win concept to give grants to young Nigerians to manufacture things and in the next few years, they will be exporting their products.

    “Can you do that without planning? And they say we have no plans for the country. They should come and tell us the plan they have for Nigeria.

    “I believe that the young Nigerians, not people like me because we are finished. My generation has failed. We did not take Nigeria to the moon. Look at what countries that we were at par at Independence are doing now? For us to get to the moon, it takes a special candidate.”

    On his achievement in the education sector, Jonathan said he created 12 Federal universities – one in each of the states that had non – adding that he built Almajiri schools to give dropouts in the North the opportunity to be educated.

    “They say we have no plans but we produced Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF). Other countries have it. It is to enable countries reserve a little of the money that comes into the country so that every income is not squandered.

    “In addition to the SWF, there are some stolen money that are returned from time to time. They have been getting these stolen money before and no one knows how they spent the money. The ones that are coming in within this period we have not even started spending.

    “We agreed with the states on how to spend it. We agreed that because we have security challenges, 50 percent of the money be channeled to security since the money was primarily for security reasons and were siphoned through security means; 25 percent for development and 25 percent for future generation.

    “That is a decision we have taken even before we start spending the money. They should come and tell you what they used our money for…

    The government has been widely denounced for not providing jobs for the youth. Jonathan said: “So far, we have created a number of jobs but we are not there yet. I have set up two presidential committees on job creation headed by the Vice President and made up of people in government and those in the private sector. The board is working very hard to ensure that at least two million jobs are created every year.

    “Only two days ago, somebody stood in Port Harcourt and said he was going to catch corrupt people and put them in Kirikiri. The same mouth he used to say he was not going to probe anybody. Contradictory statements; can you trust such people? Are they not deceiving you?

    “All what they want to use power for is to lock up and imprison their enemies. I do not have any enemy to fight. I have no enemies to fight. My interest is Nigeria’s interest and for young Nigerians to develop. Not to fight enemies.

    “We must stop corruption but I will not do that by catching people and putting them in confinement or killing them. I think we have advanced beyond that stage.”

    He also spoke on women, saying: “Somebody told Nigerian women he will give them position in his government. Ask him when he was Head of State, how many women were in his cabinet? Not a single one. So, Nigerian women should either cast their votes to go back to the kitchen and remain there or vote to liberate themselves.”

    On MEND, he said: “I read in the newspaper that MEND has dumped Jonathan. I am from the Niger Delta, the leader of MEND is one Okah who is in South African prison. South Africa is not Nigeria else people would have said the President influenced it.

    “Okah is a South African prison because October 1, 2010, when we were to celebrate our Golden Independence, he was procured by some Nigerians to assassinate me and Okah bombed Abuja. Their plan was to assassinate me but intelligence investigation from South African Intelligence and Nigeria Intelligence systems robbed him in while planning to assassinate me.

    “He is now in jail in South Africa and they say ‘MEND dumps Jonathan’. Will Okah that wanted to assassinate Jonathan support Jonathan? And I am told that Okah is supporting some people. I am told that Okah, in a South African prison for killing Nigerians, is supporting some people. Count me out.”

    Other leaders of the party and governors spoke at the rally.

    Ondo State Governor Olusegun Mimiko has described President Jonathan as the most  criticised, abused and insulted leader in this country.

    Mimiko, who is the Southwest Co-ordinator of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Presidential Campaign Committee said in spite of the unwarranted attacks, “Nigerians across the country can feel the impact of his administration in agriculture, power, education, and resuscitation of rail system.

    Chairman, PDP National Campaign Committee, Senator Ahmadu Ali stirred controversy when he said: “PDP is the agent of change. We fought for democracy when others fled the country. We have remained in power for 16 consecutive years stressing that that is the more reason why Nigerians should vote for PDP in February.”

    To the Chairman of PDP Governors Forum, Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State,  belives Nigeria will be better under Jonathan if re-elected on February 14. His re-election, he said, would enable him consolidate on his achievements.

    Akpabio said: “We cannot afford to hand-over power to those who will send us to prison. Jonathan is a democrat, Nigerians should let him continue in office”.

    PDP leader in Lagos State, Chief Bode George described next month general elections as a decisive one. He advised Lagosians to vote for PDP at least for a change.

    Vice President Namadi Sambo thanked the people of Lagos for hosting the take-off of the party’s national campaign. He thanked the youths for supporting the transformation agenda of Mr President adding that the PDP administration will introduce more poverty alleviation programmes if re-elected.

    Senate President David Mark noted that the PDP-controlled Federal Government has impacted positively on the lives of Nigerians through improved power supply, job creation, infrastructure development, and revitalization of the education sector.

    The highlight of the event was the presentation of flags to President Jonathan as PDP presidential candidate and all governorship candidates.

    Lagos PDP governorship candidate Mr Jimi Agbaje, said they would work for the party’s success at the poll.

    It seems the presentation of flags has foreclosed reconciliation or addressing petitions written by aggrieved governorship aspirants in states like Oyo, Ogun, Adamawa, Akwa Ibom and Sokoto.

    At the rally were Governors Aliyu Babangida (Niger), Liyel Imoke (Cross River), Gabriel Suswam (Benue) Ibrahim Dakwambo (Gombe) and Idris Wada (Kogi). Former governors in attendance include Ali Modu Sheriff (Borno), Mahmoud Shinkafi (Zamfara) and Peter Obi (Anambra).

    Others are Senators James Manager and Hosea Agboola’ Hon. Muraina Ajibola, Chief Shuaib Oyedokun, Chief Abiola Ogundokun, Chief Bayo Dayo, Chief Tom Ikimi, former Inspector General of Police, Mike Okiro, Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan, Minister of Education, Mallam Ibrahim Shekarau,  Hajiyya Bola Shagaya and Mrs Olukemi Mimiko.

  • Fiery Jonathan launches campaign on defensive note

    Fiery Jonathan launches campaign on defensive note

    The last few weeks have been particularly testing for President Goodluck Jonathan and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). From all indications,  next month’s general elections will be the stiffest electoral test the ruling party will face since its virtual domination of the political space since the enthronement of civilian rule in 1999. The PDP emphatically won presidential elections of varying degrees of credibility in 2003, 2007 and 2011.

    However, the country’s political landscape has been drastically altered and transformed in the run-up to the February 14 and 28 general elections. Nigeria now effectively has a two-party dominant political system as against the former situation in which a PDP behemoth easily overran a motley opposition of sectional and fragmented parties.

    Against all odds and postulations, the All Progressives Congress (APC) has crystalised into a formidable opposition party, posing a credible electoral threat to the PDP at the centre. The APC conducted credible, transparent and competitive primaries leading to the emergence of former military Head of State and three-time unsuccessful presidential aspirant, Gen. MuhammaduBuhari (rtd), as its candidate. Contrary to predictions, the APC did not implode after the primaries but all the other aspirants – former Vice President AtikuAbubakar, Governors Rabiu Musa Kwakwanso and Owelle Rochas Okorocha of Kano and Imo states respectively, as well as newspaper publisher, Mr Sam Nad-Ishiah, have rallied round Buhari.

    It further consolidated on this achievement by the choice of Prof. YemiOsinbajo , a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), as its vice presidential candidate. Osinbajo, a former Commissioner of Justice and Attorney General of Lagos State is also a senior pastor of the Redeemed Christian Church of Nigeria (RCCG). This has blunted the potency of any of the parties, especially the PDP, successfully manipulating the religious card against the other.

    Even as the APC launched this week its nationwide presidential campaign with impressive rallies in Rivers and Akwa-Ibom states (both states in President Jonathan’s Niger Delta stronghold), former President OlusegunObasanjo chose to launch another of his blistering attacks on the Jonathan presidency. Addressing market women leaders from the South West at his Hilltop private residence in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital,  Obasanjo again accused his former protégé’s administration of incompetence, wasteful spending and corruption.

    It was about the same time that excerpts of an interview former military President, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, granted the in-house magazine of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) was widely reported in the media. Debunking the perception that his administration institutionalised corruption in Nigeria, Babangida said members of his government were saints in comparison to the current situation in the country. This was seen as an indirect but devastating put down of the Jonathan presidency.

    Receiving a delegation of the TankoYakasai-led Northern Elders Council (NEC) at the Presidential Villa on Wednesday, an understandably enraged President Jonathan launched verbal missiles, obviously directed at Obasanjo, though he did not mention names. In his words, “Making provocative statements in this country, statements that will set this country ablaze and you tell me you are a senior citizen. You are not a senior citizen, you can never be; you are ordinary motor park tout.”

    It was against this background that President Jonathan was in Lagos yesterday to flag off his presidential campaign from the country’s commercial nerve centre in the Southwest. The Lagos rally was clearly a critical and strategic one for the PDP. From the attendance, the party had mobilised intensively for the nationally televised event. All the party’s prominent leaders including Vice-President Namadi Sambo,  Senate President, David Mark, National Chairman, Alhaji Adamu Muazu, Deputy Speaker, House of Representatives, Emeka Ihedioha, PDP state governors and governorship flag bearers in the next election, were all present.

    In their respective addresses to the crowd, Coordinator of the President’s campaign in the Southwest and Ondo State Governor Olusegun Mimiko, Chairman of the PDP Governors Forum, Godswill Akpabio of Akwa-Ibom State and Ekiti State Governor Mr Ayo Fayose, extolled the virtues and achievements of the President while naturally denigrating Gen. Buhari and the APC.

    Mimiko emphasised Dr Jonathan’s academic credentials as a doctorate degree holder while reeling out alleged violation of human rights under Gen. Buhari as a former military Head of State. A vote for Gen. Buhari, he argued, would be a vote for dictatorship. Fayose contended that Nigerians should not vote for a Gen. Buhari , who he claimed, was in the pocket of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Yet, Gen. Buhari emerged in an open and competitive intra-APC primaries while Jonathan emerged as PDP’s flag bearer in a carefully choreographed convention in which he had no competitor, creating the impression that the party was in the pocket of the presidency.

    Other prominent party leaders, some Nollywood stars and youth organisations made fiery speeches to drum up support for Jonathan. But the man of the moment was obviously President Jonathan himself. He was clearly determined to utilise the occasion to regain the initiative from the opposition and generate a new momentum for his party’s campaign. His delivery was perhaps the most vigorous, combative and confident of his political career so far. Yet,  he appeared, most of the time, to be on the defensive, irritated and visibly angry. Jonathan is clearly a President under pressure. The intense criticisms of his perceived below par performance are certainly getting to the President.

    Unfortunately, since he spoke ex-tempore, only occasionally referring to bullet points on a sheet of paper, his delivery was often uncoordinated and he resorted to broad generalisation where specific facts and figures would have strengthened his arguments.

    President Jonathan stated from the outset that his address would be directed at young people,  especially those aged between  23 and 24. This was probably a clever ploy to take advantage of the voting strength of this category of the electorate as well as the age difference between Gen. Buhari and himself.

    While saying that his generation had failed the nation and were ‘finished’’, he still urged the youths to take their destiny in their hands by voting for the PDP. He did not explain how or why a vote for a ‘failed’ and ‘finished’ generation within the PDP would be more beneficial to the country’s youth than a vote for the same category of persons within the APC.

    Still on the defensive, he vehemently condemned and rejected the allegation by his opponents and critics that his administration was soft on corruption. Pointing to his success in fighting corruption associated with fertiliser distribution, Jonathan said the emphasis of his administration was in preventing corruption from taking place at source rather than jailing those who succeeded in looting the treasury. That he said, was a more effective way of fighting graft.

    Obviously referring to Gen Buhari’s threat that corrupt persons under his watch would end up in Kirikiri Prison, Jonathan said he would not engage in arresting ‘foes’ and locking people up without following due process.  Yet, the President did not address such issues as the criticism of his granting state pardon to former Governor DiepriyeAlaimesigha, who was convicted of corruption, the soft landing he gave the former Aviation Minister, Miss Stella Oduah, indicted for approving the unauthorised purchase of bullet proof BMW cars or the fact that Interior Affairs Minister, Abba Moro, remains firmly in his cabinet despite the NIgerian Immigration Service (NIS) employment recruitment scam that resulted in the death of at least 19 Nigerians.

    Equally defensive on security, Jonathan said the blame for the poor combat readiness of the Armed Forces could not be heaped on him. He said he inherited a weakened army, navy and air force that had not been properly funded and equipped for several years by his predecessors. He was, however, not specific on which of the successive administrations. He urged Nigerians to ask ‘them’ what they did with military budgets when they were in power even as he was silent on the impact defence budgets have made during his six years at the helm.

    Jonathan told his audience that a President who had no plan for the country as alleged by his opponents would not have established nine  new federal universities or Almajiri schools to cater for out-of-school children in the north. But was it wise to establish such a large number of universities including one in his village, Otueke, when existing ones were poorly staffed, funded and equipped? Did proper thinking and planning go into this decision? Has it not rather further compounded the challenges of higher education in the country?

    Speaking on reports that the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) had endorsed the APC candidate, Jonathan said the leader of MEND, Henry Okah, a kinsman from his Southsouth zone,  was in jail in South Africa for trying to assassinate him in the 2010 Independence Day bombings at the Eagle Square, Abuja. Yet, Jonathan had never told the nation before that the bomb attack was an attempt on his life. In any case, the MEND statement was signed by its usual spokesman, Gbomo Jomo. Does the jailing of its leader mean that the group has ceased to exist?

    The President urged the electorate to vote in National Assembly members who would implement his decisions, which he said the current National Assembly has not been disposed to. But what is the guarantee that the next National Assembly will be optimistic about the National Conference report? Should the sum of N7 billion have been committed to an exercise that the administration was not sure it could get passed into law? The president’s fiery campaign speech in Lagos will certainly be vigorously interrogated by analysts.

  • ‘Jonathan shedding crocodile tears on nation’s division’

    ‘Jonathan shedding crocodile tears on nation’s division’

    THE All Progressives Congress (APC) said yesterday that President Goodluck Jonathan was shedding crocodile tears over his lamentation that Nigeria had become more divided along religious and ethnic lines than at any time in the nation’s history.

    Its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, in a statement in Abuja yesterday, noted that there was no point Jonathan being “sanctimonious”  about an issue for which he “bears most responsibility.”

     “You are the most divisive leader in the history of Nigeria, having ceaselessly exploited the country’s fault lines for political gains,’’ the party said.

    The APC alleged that Jonathan was the first leader to have turned the house of worship to a political arena, using the pulpit to make political and policy statements as well as making a show of what should ordinarily be a very personal religious affair.

    The party added that the president’s belated lamentation was aimed at pulling the wool over the eyes of Nigerians with a view to extracting undeserved political gains, especially a few weeks before next month’s elections.

    The statement said: ‘’Where was President Jonathan when his spokespersons and party members sought to pit Christians against Muslims by labelling the country’s main opposition party, the APC, as an Islamic party? Where was President Jonathan when his spokespersons and party members sought to portray all adherents of a particular faith as terrorists?

    “Not once did this president call his loquacious and sycophantic supporters to order when they were denigrating people of other tribes, calling them unprintable names. Not once did he call his supporters to order when they were threatening to bring the country down, if he is not re-elected.

    “President Jonathan led the divisive band by tagging the leaders of a whole people ‘rascals’, just because people dared to protest against his administration’s policies. A man who got a pan-Nigerian mandate turned himself into a tribal leader, running a government that excludes a critical mass of the nation’s demography and pigeon-holing himself into an ethnic cocoon.

    “A president, who has undermined the nation’s unity with his actions and utterances, and a president, who has cashed in on all the nation’s fault lines to feather his own political nest definitely lacks the moral authority to preach to anyone about unity. He is the embodiment of divisiveness, hence he has no business being self-righteous.’’

    It called on Nigerians to repudiate the divisiveness that was embodied in the president and his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), “so that the country’s ‘unity in diversity’ can once again become a reality, rather than a mere saying.”

  • Jonathan condemns terrorist attack on French magazine

    Jonathan condemns terrorist attack on French magazine

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan has extended condolences to President Francois Hollande and the people of France as they mourn the victims of last Wednesday’s terrorist attack.

    A statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, said Jonathan joined the rest of the civilised world in “condemning the heinous, senseless and totally unjustifiable killing of journalists and other persons” during the attack on the satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo.

    He noted that the attack by the extremists was an assault on the right to freedom of expression.

    Jonathan also saw the attack on Charlie Hebdo as another manifestation of the depravity and brutality, which the world has to contend with in what must become a truly collective effort by lovers of peace, progress and freedom across the globe to rout “agents of darkness and retrogression”.

    The president assured Hollande and the people of France that Nigeria stands in full solidarity with them on their day of national mourning for those who lost their lives in the hands of the terrorists.

    Jonathan noted that France has been a strong ally and dependable partner in strengthening regional cooperation in the fight against terrorism in Nigeria, West Africa and Africa.

    It also reads: “President Jonathan pledges that his administration will continue to work with the French government and other friendly governments in all continents to end the scourge of global terrorism.

  • PDP governors give Jonathan new conditions

    PDP governors give Jonathan new conditions

    Governors elected on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) are believed to have made new demands on President Goodluck Jonathan in return for their support in the February 14 election.

    The demands are assuaging those aggrieved; a commitment to run an all-inclusive government, if the President is re-elected; and an assurance to redeem his campaign pledges to any state or geopolitical zone.

    It was gathered that some of the governors and party leaders were unhappy over the way the results of governorship and other elective offices primaries were overturned by some forces in the Presidency.

    A PDP source said the governors bared their minds to the President on Monday and Tuesday at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

    The source said: “We cannot pretend that some of our governors are certainly unhappy. For instance, Governor Sule Lamido has grouses against the Presidency on his son and the non-fulfillment of 2011 campaign promises to his people.

    “Also, Governor Martin Elechi cannot just understand why the Presidency watched while a cabal from Abuja hijacked the primaries and disorganised PDP in Ebonyi State.

    “In Delta State, Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan was virtually forced to sacrifice his senatorial ambition to avoid bloodshed.

    “Some PDP governors are skeptical that they might be abandoned after the re-election of Jonathan. They want assurance that they will not be left in the lurch since most of them will be completing their second term in office.

    “The governors wanted commitment for those who will be leaving office but who are not contesting for any office. They include Governors Liyel Imoke, Sullivan Chime, Martin Elechi; Emmanuel Uduaghan; Sule Lamido; Olusegun Mimiko,  Bala Ngilari; Abubakar Danladi and Deputy Governor Muktar Shagari.

    “Some governors who are vying for senatorial ticket are also looking at Plan B from the presidency, in case they are defeated. They include Governors Godswill Akpabio, Jonah Jang; Isa Yuguda; Aliyu Babangida; Theodore Orji, Gabriel Suswam, Saidu Dakingari, and Ibrahim Shema.”

  • Jonathan attacks Obasanjo

    Jonathan attacks Obasanjo

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday replied his critics, lashing out at “elder statesmen making provocative statements that could could set the country ablaze”. He called them motor park touts.

    Dr. Jonathan did not mention the names of such statesmen.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has severally attacked Jonathan’s administration. He, last week, accused the government of squandering Nigeria’s foreign reserves. Former military president Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, in an interview, spoke of corruption, saying compared to what he reads, his regime, which many describe as “very corrupt” was a saint.

    Speaking while receiving the Northern Elders Council (NEC) at the Presidential Villa, Jonathan said: “Some people call themselves statesmen but they are not statesmen; they are just ordinary politicians. For you to be a statesman is not because you have occupied a big office before but the question is what are you bringing to bear? Are you building this country? Or are you a part of people who tell lies to destroy this country?”

    “To create enmity and make people who ordinarily would have been living together to fight themselves. Are you planning to set the country ablaze because you did not get that particular thing you want?”

    He went on: “At the appropriate time, Nigerians will know all of us, even though I know most of you know us but the younger ones do not know. Some people are hiding under some clogs, some big names and creating a lot of problems in this country.”

    “Making provocative statements in this country, statements that will set this country ablaze and you tell me you are a senior citizen. You are not a senior citizen you can never be; you are ordinary motor park tout.

    “Because if you are a senior citizen you will act like one. It is not because of the offices we occupy is by divine grace and providence that some of us occupy these offices. But what role are you playing to build this country?”

    The President noted that without peace and unity, there can never be development.

    He said: “I feel sad that our younger ones are beginning to see a Nigeria as if we are so divided. A Nigeria that a Muslim and a Christian cannot sit down together. I was told that even the driver of Tafawa Balewa was a Christian. Our people lived together in those days; why not now that we have even modern ways of life?

    “Our children leave us and go abroad, they stay together and do a lot of things together. But when we come back home,  we begin to build walls; this is a southerner, this is a northerner, this is a Muslim, this is a Christian, this is a Yoruba man, this is an Hausa man, this is an Ijaw man, this is a Nupe man. Is that the way we are going to develop our country?”

    According to Jonathan, America is great because it is made up of various cultural groups and ethnic lines have been so weakened that people think only about America.

    He stressed that citizens of any country that begin to see themselves through their tribal enclaves cannot go anywhere.

    His words: “If today I’m sick, if the best doctor that can treat me is from Zamfara or  Enugu or  Ekiti, they will bring that doctor to treat me.  They will not ask if that doctor is an Ijaw man, Ogbia or any other tribe. And until we get to that level where we begin to use people based on their  competences, yes there must be spread in political appointment and so on.”

    Jonathan said that Nigeria will begin to develop when there is no discrimination based on primordial privileges.

    “And that is what we stand for. I will continue to plead with you because from all of your activities you have been advocating for that,” he told the elders.

    He also denied the allegation that he does not like Northerners.

    He said: “Some people say Jonathan hates the North. I have heard that statement and I use to ask Namadi Sambo, they say I hate the North, but you are here. I asked the National Security Adviser and my Principal Secretary the same thing. In fact, my Principal Secretary has been my friend since I was the deputy governor. I never knew I was going to come here as Vice President not to talk of President.

    “But I have known him since I was the deputy governor of Bayelsa State. My Chief Detail, Yusuf from Borno State has been with me since I was a deputy governor in Yenagoa and I see him as a good person and I have carried him along with me. So I had to ask, how can somebody wake up and say I hate the North?”

    He went on: “I used to tell Nigerians I come from the down trodden, what you call the Talakawas; I come from that level ….. And I said the only thing that can liberate an individual or a group of individuals is education. If I did not go to school, I wouldn’t have been here to talk to big people like this.

    “If you didn’t go to school, you wouldn’t have spoken the way you spoke; you would have looked for somebody to interpret. This is what I believe; I don’t play politics with it. It has been my policy that I don’t play politics with education.”

    “When I came on board  I said even though as a country we have the policy on paper, every state must get a Federal Government university. Out of the 12 federal universities created, nine were in the North while three were in southern Nigeria. The only three states that had no federal university were Bayelsa, Ebonyi and Ekiti.”

    “Those who were in charge of the university establishment were not fair. For us to liberate ourselves we must go to school. If I hate the north would I have done that?”

    Jonathan added: “We talk about Almajiri’s education; we felt we must change. Luckily, I initiated it but now state governments are keying into it because I know that it was education that liberated me I would have been a local canoe builder like my father and grandfather.”

    “But I’m here because of education and I feel if we must liberate Nigerian children whether they are from Zamafara, Bayelsa, Kebbi and Delta they must be educated. I feel we must enter the north by aggression through education,” he said

    The President said that he was always sad hearing of school dropouts in the North.

    He said: “Today I saw a publication in Daily Trust showing projects that have been awarded by the Federal Government, the ones for the Northeast very small, Southsouth very many. I had to make photocopies and distributed to all the ministers and I asked, is it true this is how projects are skewed by this government because somebody wants to play politics?”

    “Because I am a president from the South I have taken all the projects to the South? And I said all the ministers must come up and tell me how the projects are being distributed across the country and if it is skewed, you must tell me why it is so. One of the ministers, the North and she is in charge of water resources, said that publication cannot be true because the Kasambila Dam alone, the value is more than the amount quoted in that paper.”

    “This is to show you how mischievous Nigerians are because you want to paint Jonathan bad. All lies that have been told about this  government, I promise you that I am working with your son and I will not cheat any part of this country. ”

    “For the people who want to paint us in all kinds of color, we will explain to Nigerians. There are a lot of documentation we will show Nigerians.” he said

    The President promised that his administration would not exploit or cheat any part of the country.

    NEC Chairman Tanko Yakasai, who led the delegation, said that the Council believes in the peaceful co-existence of the country.