Tag: Jonathan

  • Jonathan and 2015

    Jonathan and 2015

    Since former President Olusegun Obasanjo tamed the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) during his eight turbulent years in power, the party had become unrecognisable both as a party, in its fundamental sense, and as a democratic institution, in its structural and operational sense. All it required for the party to retain and nurture its new identity and continue to decay magnificently was for Chief Obasanjo’s successors to be tarred with the same imperious and imposing brush. Luckily for the party, it had a succession of equally overbearing chairmen eager to lend their talents and services, not to say their lack of critical thinking, to the presidents that succeeded Chief Obasanjo. The party thus mastered the art of motion without debate, premise without conclusion, form without substance, and silence without reflection.

    This, therefore, was the ecosystem that produced President Goodluck Jonathan. When he emerged as running mate to the late President Umaru Yar’Adua for the 2007 election, Chief Obasanjo had cleared the way and silenced the opposition within the party. And when it came to the turn of Dr Jonathan to take over from President Yar’Adua as acting president, and to contest in 2011 on his own merit, he was not unmindful of his party’s new political culture. Those within his party he could not browbeat, he bribed; and those he could not bribe, he dealt with brutally. If his opponents within the party thought he was easy meat, he gave them a lesson in life and politics they would never forget. Chief Obasanjo was not always successful in dealing with opponents outside his party, for they were recalcitrant and querulous. But Jonathan too has met more than his match in the opposition, for they have not lost any of their fire and truculence.

    Yet, of all the sure things in Nigerian politics today, probably the most certain is that Dr Jonathan will contest the 2015 presidential election. And given the nature and character of the PDP, it is more than certain that if anyone will contest against him, it will be merely a formality to dignify the party, raise its esteem in the eyes of the people as a democratic institution, and give the false impression that neither the party nor Dr Jonathan engages in the tyranny that has become the PDP’s sinews. Already, party chieftains and rank and file have lined up ingloriously behind Dr Jonathan for the 2015 race. They all understand on which side their breads are buttered. They are not disconcerted by the sham enthusiasm and offensiveness with which they sell the president’s candidacy. They fiercely urge him on and impress it on him that their assurances are all he needs to win.

    But except Dr Jonathan is telling himself a lie and believing it, and the people around him are living in denial, they know the only chance they have of winning the 2015 race is for the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) to field an unelectable presidential ticket. A few months ago, before the insecurity problem magnified into an ogre, Dr Jonathan’s chances rested on the queer dynamics of the contest, especially the fact that he hails from a minority tribe and evokes hope in others like him tired of the tyranny of majority tribes that everyone, irrespective of state of origin, can successfully aspire to the presidency. There is also the unsettling use of religion as a tool of political mobilisation, which the president has raised into virtuoso art. Despite the dangers of elevating religion into the political arena in a country lacking in self-moderation in both politics and religion, Dr Jonathan has avidly plumbed that depth and made himself into some sort of quixotic religious champion.

    From all indications, however, and in the face of the worst security challenges the country has ever had to contend with, neither religious affiliation nor area of origin will avail a politician much. The more Boko Haram terrorists inflict punishment on the country, whether in the Northeast or in the suburbs of Abuja, the more Dr Jonathan’s government demonstrate its impotence. Waves upon waves of attacks elicit from the presidency only messages of condolence and the summoning of security meetings. There are no new approaches, no inspiring and rousing talk of steely resolve in moments of national angst; and beyond cavalier wish of victory, there are no demonstrations of hope and confidence that the terror monster can indeed be defeated. As the Boko Haram attacks become more audacious and telling, so the Jonathan government has become more stupefied and feckless, sometimes even showing the violent sect sinister respect, and at other times pledging to it, out of desperation and fear, a most unnerving and counterproductive clemency.

    It must be noted that Dr Jonathan seized upon the moronic tools of ethnicity and religion to anchor and give fillip to his flagging campaign because he despairs at ever finding concrete developmental achievements to parade. The economy has not yielded to his panaceas, nor has the society responded to his native charms. Even his talisman, which many tie teleologically to his name, has failed to reorder politics beyond his bucolic and innocent sermonizing. The consequence of these multiple failures is that, even without the aggravation Boko Haram’s terror was always capable of causing, the Jonathan government was doomed, to put it mildly. If these multiple failures irritate and vex the electorate, nothing rouses them into a greater rage than the poor judgement the president often exhibited whenever he confronted the mundane issues of the day.

    The country has often been treated to his quaint and outrightly unsophisticated views on what should pass as the philosophical challenges of the day, and to his dour responses to the ordinary provocations of the people and especially the opposition. He dragged his feet on the Stella Oduah scandal and impatiently and infuriatingly dismissed our concerns because, as the Information minister Labaran Maku said, critics and the opposition politicised everything. Even when he sacked Ms Oduah, Dr Jonathan did it reluctantly, sullenly and bad-temperedly. The president has also ignored our irritations on the Diezani Alison-Madueke affair involving frivolously and expensively chartered jets and unremitted oil receipts, perhaps because we also ‘politicise’ the shocking disclosure of opaque public accounting and suspected sleaze in the Ministry of Petroleum Resources. And he has done absolutely nothing about the Abba Moro Immigration Service recruitment scandal, perhaps, this time, because the Internal Affairs minister is backed by the president’s arch supporter, Senate President David Mark.

    By trivialising public administration and policy so abysmally, Dr Jonathan illustrates and underscores his perfunctory and emotive approach to governance. This attitude hardly conduces to electoral triumphs as much as it provokes angry rejection. And by presiding over a government that tolerates ministers who sue the legislature to stall investigations, the rot in the system, not to say in the Jonathan presidency, can’t be more complete. So, Dr Jonathan can’t run on achievements, and he can’t run on sound judgement either, for after all, nothing exhibits poor judgement as his refusal to empathise with Borno families whose teenage daughters were abducted by Boko Haram militants, possibly for sex slavery.

    Indeed, Dr Jonathan is cornered, just as his supporters are irrational to still embrace a president who can’t run on his records or on his ideas, or as it is becoming apparent, given his considerable staidness and lack of grit, on his personality. He will run only on if the opposition APC makes the wrong presidential ticket choice. The APC is still in a quandary over the 2015 ticket, perhaps still consulting. The party will require the highest gift of clairvoyance to do what is right, and to, as it were, read the mind of God. If it is any consolation to them, let them consult Churchill, Nixon, JFK and De Gaulle when those statesmen had to make life-changing and life-defining decisions without the faintest idea what powerful changes the outcomes would trigger. God help the APC.

    In short, in a free and fair election, Dr Jonathan and the PDP can’t win the 2015 presidential election except the APC loses it. Given the president’s string of bad decisions, bad judgement and bad and ineffective policies, and notwithstanding his constant and exasperating resort to ethnic emotionalism and religious grandstanding, the initiative is no longer in his hands; it is in the hands of those he likes to romanticise as his enemies. Let these opposition enemies, therefore, be as ruthless as Chief Obasanjo was when that wily farmer and general corners his enemies, an idiosyncrasy that took the former president repeatedly but undeservedly to heights of glory and splendour in his many tumultuous decades on earth, starting from the time his friend Major Kaduna Nzeogwu planned a coup without telling him, and his former boss General Murtala Mohammed died alone on the streets of Lagos.

  • Jonathan should beware of Ekiti

    Jonathan should beware of Ekiti

    What the presidency will take more than a passing interest in the coming governorship polls in Ekiti and Osun in view of the 2015 election is expected. However, to profit from the state elections, President Goodluck Jonathan and his team have to make the right choices.

    From all indications – from the non-transparent PDP nomination processes to the body language of the presidency, it seems that they are missing the plot. The recent statement attributed to Vice-President Namadi Sambo makes it therefore very urgent to warn the president against making a grave mistake that will undoubtedly prove fatal to his prospects for re-election next year.

    Sambo’s statement likening the election in Ekiti to a war that has to be won at all costs indicates that the federal ruling party will shy away from nothing, including illegalities, to ensure the victory of its candidate on 21 June in Ekiti. That is a bad omen both for Ekiti people and Nigeria as a whole.

    The national leadership of the PDP, whose ultimate goal is Dr Jonathan’s victory at next year’s presidential election, is getting its strategy wrong. By imposing Ayo Fayose as its flagbearer in Ekiti, it is obvious that the party leaders do not know the state very well and are in fact ignorant of its political history.

    Fayose’s tenure as governor of Ekiti was prematurely terminated in 2006 by a lawful impeachment, for wrongdoings in office, by a house of assembly dominated by members of his party, showing that he carries a heavy, debilitating baggage that should have disqualified him for consideration as a candidate in the first place. That the PDP forced him on its members in the state shows that it was determined to disregard Fayose’s unpopularity even among his fellow party men and women.

    The PDP leaders in Abuja also seem to be ignorant of the records of the former governor in office, a period when insecurity ruled in the state, when economic activities were at their lowest ebb and unemployment reached new heights – in fact, a period bereft of any meaningful development that most Ekitis would rather not remember.

    The PDP bosses also disregarded the fact that Fayose could not win his senatorial zone at the last general election; in fact, out of the five local governments that make up the zone, he did not win a single one!

    Given Fayose’s proven unpopularity even in his home area of the state, who do the PDP generalissimos expect to vote for him on 21 June?

    Is it Ado people, whose sense of cultural pride Fayose during his inglorious reign as governor repeatedly hurt through an open, brazen and serial denigration of the revered office of the Ewi of Ado-Ekiti?

    Is it Ikerre people, whose children – students of the College of Education – were shot by one of Fayose’s henchmen while participating in a peaceful protest, or whose traditional ruler, the highly respected Ogoga, the PDP flagbearer abused openly?

    Where, then, in the state that Fayose turned into a theatre of political violence during his infamous tenure, is Abuja expecting the votes for its man to come from?

    It is very obvious, therefore, that the PDP generals are not courting Ekiti people for their mandate. They intend to seize it.

    History has shown, however, that Ekiti, whose people are renowned for their fierce independent spirit, is a very bad place to rig elections. Since 1964, resistance to electoral fraud in Yorubaland has been hottest in Ekiti.

    It must not be forgotten that the Southwest is the most peaceful region in the country at the moment and any attempts to manipulate the Ekiti polls will add to the security troubles of the president. A chaotic election in Ekiti, therefore, will not only increase national instability but also hurt the president’s standing in the international community at a time when he needs global support to win the ongoing battle against the murderous Boko Haram terrorists.

    It must be emphasised here again that the Ekiti polls is not a test run of the presidential election. The election is about the decision of Ekiti people over who governs their state. Given the many positive changes in the state in the past three and half years, it is very obvious even to a casual observer how Ekiti people will vote on 21 June.

    However, the verdict of the Ekitis at the governorship election is not necessarily an indication of how they will vote at next year’s presidential election. Ekitis are not the kind of electorate that vote for a party irrespective of the candidate, which is why President Jonathan won in the state in 2011 even though the state’s then ruling party ACN fielded a candidate. This is a point that deserves serious consideration by the president and his advisers.

    Nobody should underestimate the resolve and capacity of Ekiti people to resist imposition. It is palpable in the air that the people are firmly and resolutely resolved to respond to any attempts to steal their votes with the decisive force of popular resistance. This is a sign that any efforts to manipulate the election can only result in a disaster.

    Ekiti 2014 is about the future of Ekiti and its people should not be hindered in any way from freely and peacefully deciding that future. In fact, a free, credible and transparent Ekiti polls – whatever the outcome – will be a boost to President Jonathan’s chances next year and will bolster his image in the international community. There are enough killing fields in Nigeria; we cannot afford a new trouble spot in Ekiti.

     

    * Femi Awoniyi, an indigene of Ekiti State, is the publisher of the Germany-based bimonthly magazine, The African Courier

  • Questions for President Jonathan

    Despite the criticisms of the quarterly Presidential Media Chat with President Goodluck Jonathan by some media executives, I am one of those who think the interviewers usually try their best to cover the various critical issues in the country for the president to respond.

    I watched the last one and was particularly impressed by the way the interviewers asked follow up questions to get the president to declare his stand on the 2015 presidential elections. Expectedly the president chose to answer the questions the way he deemed fit and still left the question of his presidential ambition still hanging.

    I expect the question of President Jonathan’s ambition and many other urgent issues of national importance to come up tomorrow when the seventh edition of the chat holds. With the situation in the country, Nigerians are itching for answers to many questions bogging their minds.

    Yesterday afternoon, I asked The Nation’s followers on Twitter and friends of facebook what they think should be the most important question President Jonathan should answer during the media chat.

    I was not surprised by the numerous responses I got.  Even though many were not enthusiastic about the outcome of the chat, indications are that Nigerians are particularly worried about the endless killings by the Boko Haram and other terrorist groups in the country.

    More than ever before, Nigerians are worried about the future of the country and need a firm assurance from the president that he is still really in charge and not the terrorists who seem unstoppable for now.

    If some Nigerians were to be on the panel of interviewers, here are some of the questions they would have wanted President Jonathan to provide exhaustive answers to:

    Who should take responsibility for the continuous loss of lives and properties in the country?

    What is your greatest fear for the country?

    Where are our kidnapped school girls?

    Why don’t you allow the North their independence, so they can rule themselves and stop blaming you?

    What is preventing you from exposing Boko Haram sponsors?

    Why has this administration paid deaf ears to the plight of over two million polytechnic students whose campuses have been shut for 10months following FG/ASUP face-off?

    Where is the missing $20m which was not remitted to the federal account by NNPC?

    Who ordered the withdrawal of army from the various check points before  the  attacks abduction of the girls in Chibok?

    Mr President, tell me what will make me believe that you deserve my vote if you contest for 2015 election.

    Sir, we would like you to tell us why you should continue to sit as the president even when almost everything is falling apart? We observed that heads of governments of other countries of the world do not wait to have one-tenth of the crises bedevilling us before throwing in the towel.

    Why did you dance at a PDP rally barely 24 hours after the first Nyanya bombing?

    Why are the youths not employed?  How many times are we going to have fuel and cement scarcity?

    With the issues on ground about the bombing and gunmen killing innocent Nigerians, what hope does the (let me use the word “ordinary” Nigerians) have in GEJ’s tenure as president for four to five years now?

     Do you think you are trying your best in terms of security in the country?

    Where are our kidnapped school girls?

     Are the Nigerian Armed Forces not well-trained and paid to secure the nation?

    If corruption and poverty are not our problems, then what is it?

  • 2015:  South-South trouble spots for Jonathan

    2015: South-South trouble spots for Jonathan

    Although the South-South geo-political zone is considered President Goodluck Jonathan’s strong base, there are some organised groups and spots within the zone, whose dissatisfaction with People’s Democratic Party (PDP) may pose as stumbling blocks for Jonathan’s 2015 presidential ambition, reports Associate Editor, Sam Egburonu

    In Human Rights Day, Tuesday, December 10, 2013, Ogoni people of Rivers State, in the South-South geo-political zone openly demonstrated their dissatisfaction with Dr. Goodluck Jonathan-led federal government, when they shut down the Eleme axis of the East-West Road to protest against what they described as the federal government’s non-implementation of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report on the devastation of Ogoniland.

    On that fateful day, as early as 7am, a mammoth crowd of Ogoni people, including their traditional rulers, women and elders, led by the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) and the Ogoni Solidarity Forum, blocked the highway somewhere between Port Harcourt Refinery, the Onne Oil and Gas Free Zone and the Indorama-Eleme Petrochemical Company at the Akpajo junction of the East-West Road.

    Most of the protesters carried placards, some of which read: ‘Federal government save our lives; ‘Ogoniland is now a death zone.”

    President of MOSOP, Mr. Legborsi Pyagbara, who addressed journalists after the protest, said they used Tuesday, December 10, being, to express their displeasure over the federal government’s continued refusal to implement the UNEP report two years after it was submitted.

    Pyagbara said: “We are here today in commemoration of the Human Rights Day and the Ogoni people are using this day to express their disapproval of the federal government’s inaction to the implementation of the UNEP report. So what we are doing is part of a global process.

    “As I speak, there are people in Germany, in London, USA doing a similar thing in solidarity with the Ogoni people. The UNEP report is like a death sentence passed on the Ogoni people and we are telling President Goodluck Jonathan that he has no time again. He should swing into action to implement the report and save the Ogoni people.”

    Also speaking, the National Coordinator of the Ogoni Salidarity Forum, Celestine Akpobari, said: “The protest was successful. It went the way we planned it. The aim was to compel the federal government to implement the UNEP report through this non-violent protest.

    “Before this time, we gave the federal government a 90-day ultimatum to implement the report, but as at November 10 this year when we (Ogoni people) celebrated the 18th anniversary of the death of Saro-Wiwa and other Ogoni compatriots, nothing has been done about the report,” Akpoborai said.

    Barely a month after that expression of dissatisfaction, on the second week of January 2014, angry Ogoni youths, while protesting police shooting of their kinsman and lawmaker representing Rivers South-East Senatorial District, Senator Magnus Abe, also blocked the Elelenwo Junction area of the same East-West Road in Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

    The Sunday before the protest, Abe was shot with what the police described as rubber bullets at the venue of a rally organised by the Save Rivers Movement, a mobilisation group of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Obio/Akpor Local Government Area of Rivers State.

    Also, the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) condemned the role of the police at the rally, blaming it on politics.

    The MOSOP President, Mr. Legborsi Pyagbara, reportedly said, “We had hoped that politics in this dispensation would be played with civility, decency and devoid of political violence. The current level of political intolerance in the country, and in Rivers State in particular, is deeply troubling and condemnable.

     ”Recognising that the Ogoni had made so much sacrifice for democracy, which is being enjoyed in the country today and for which we have not benefited commensurably, we deplore the situation where any Ogoni man would be sacrificed on the altar of political acrimony or political violence in Rivers State.”

    That sentiment against the Jonathan-led federal government by some groups and individual stakeholders in the South-South who do not want to be associated with his re-election campaign also manifested clearly in February this year as the zone prepared for the National Conference.

    It manifested during the Pre-National Conference meeting of the South-South, organised by the South-South People’s Assembly at Ashbury Hall of the Mirage Hotel, Calabar. Trouble started when the chairman of the meeting, Dr. Emmanuel Nsan, a former Minister of Health, allegedly suggested that President Goodluck Jonathan’s re-election bid be endorsed at the meeting as one of the proposals the South-South delegates would present at the National Assembly.

    That suggestion caused a major division as some members of the Pre-National Conference, including Dr. Peter Mede, who moved the counter motion and Jonas Chugo, the President of Eleme People’s Assembly stoutly opposed it.

    At a point, the matter was put to vote. Although, supporters of Jonathan’s re-election agenda at the meeting carried the day, his opponents put up a determined fight, alleging that they were tricked to the pre-conference meeting to endorse Jonathan’s re-election ambition when the meeting should, as was the case in other zones, concentrate on issues of strategic importance to the zone.

    Rivers, main battlefield

    The long political battle between President Goodluck Jonathan and Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State, which culminated in Amaechi’s decision to dump PDP for APC has made Rivers State the central battlefield for Jonathan’s 2015 presidential ambition.

    Acknowledging Amaechi’s popularity in the state, Jonathan’s associates have allegedly empowered Chief Nyesom Wike, Amaechi’s former Chief of Staff to vie for the governorship ticket of PDP in 2015.

    The strategic implication of this battle for the political control of Rivers State, according to an insider is that if PDP allows Amaechi’s APC to take everything, Jonathan may not secure even the required 25 percent vote from the state during the presidential election. “This is not acceptable to the presidency and to the PDP. Jonathan cannot afford not to get the required votes in any of the South-South states.”

    To confirm Mr. President’s determination to win the Rivers political battle, just last April, First Lady, Mrs. Patience Jonathan, while reacting to a report that claimed she was planning to install three governors in Bauchi, Bayelsa and Rivers states, said in a statement signed by her media assistant, Ayo Adewuyi, that:“While we consider this a figment of the imagination of the writers of the spurious story, it is also expedient to state clearly that the First Lady does not meddle in the affairs and selection process of the ruling party, the Peoples Democratic Party.

    “Consequently, there is no way she can dictate or install anybody into political offices.

    “In the case of Rivers State, the First Lady wishes to state categorically that the Supervising Minister of Education, Chief Nyesom Wike is the leader of PDP in Rivers State and he enjoys the followership of the people of the state. The First Lady is solidly behind Chief Wike.

    “The people of Rivers State are also solidly behind Chief Wike and are prepared to follow him… “Mrs. Jonathan has not withdrawn her support for Chief Wike at any time and will always work for the interest and the good of Rivers people. As far as the First Lady is concerned, there is no shaking in Rivers State,” Mrs. Jonathan said.

    On that issue, ex-militant and leader of leader of outlawed Niger Delta People’s Volunteer Force, Alhaji Mujahedeen Asari Dokubo, an ardent supporter of Jonathan’s 2015 presidency differed sharply. Reacting to reports on First Lady’s support for Wike’s governorship ambition, Dokubo was quoted as saying the Ogoni should be supported to produce the next governor in the interest of justice and fair play.

    “As far as we all know, there are three ethnic clusters in Rivers State: the Ijaws, the Igbos (Ikwerre is part of the Igbo cluster) and the Ogonis. After Bayelsa was excised from Rivers State, the Igbos have ruled for many years. Odili was an Idoni Igbo; he ruled for eight years. Omehia/Amaechi, who is also Ikwerres, by 2015, would have ruled for more than eight years, making over 16 years.

    “It is morally wrong for any anybody to say that Igbo cluster should produce the next governor in 2015.  I am an Igbo man also, by virtue of my origin, and so I am not against the Ikwerre people or against the Igbo. I repeat, I am an Igbo man; I can narrow it down: I have Ikwerre blood flowing in my veins.

    “Having said that, the next cluster are the Ijaws, made up of the Kalabaris, the Obolo and Ibani people, the Wakrike; Okirika is just one town in Wakrike, Ukoro and others. These people have produced a governor. In terms of local government spread, they are in 11 local government areas out of the 23 local government areas; the Igbos are spread in eight and the Ogonis in four local government areas.

    “In terms of population, when you remove the cosmopolitan population of Port Harcourt and Obiakpor, which is about 80 per cent of the population, is non-indigenous of those local governments. That is old non-Rivers indigenes and Rivers indigenes, who are not indigenes of Port Harcourt and Obiakpor local governments. If you remove those populations, the Ijaws are the majority as a single block.

    “When you look at that, for somebody to say another Ikwerre man should become governor is wrong. Yes, constitutionally, he has a right to aspire, everybody is free to aspire, but it is not moral, it is not right. Something can be legally right but it might not be morally right,” he said.

    As the battle for Rivers State political control rage, insiders say PDP top leadership in Abuja is highly worried at Amaechi’s firm control of the critical political machinery and is ready to pay any price not to lose out completely in 2015 presidential election.

    Edo State: Edo State is another South-South state where Jonathan is fighting hard to secure the required votes during the presidential election.

    In fact, since Governor Adams Oshiomhole and his All Progressives Congress took over power in Edo State, the near mythical influence of Chief Tony Anenih, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees (BoT) and that of the other powerful PDP chieftains in the state has been badly dealt with in the former PDP stronghold.

    During the last governorship poll in the state, Anenih in particular had assured the worried Presidency that PDP will take back the state. This was not to be as Oshiomhole and his APC’s political party not only retained his seat but also cleared all the 18 local government areas of the state.

    “So, as the 2015 elections draw nearer, it has become clear that all that Jonathan and PDP would hope for during the presidential election is to get about 20 or 25 percent of the votes on sentimental ground,” said Chief James Edosoma, a community leader

    Still loved by many in South-South

    The trouble areas and pockets of stiff opposition notwithstanding, Jonathan still enjoys majority support in his home zone, the South-South. In fact, majority of the leading PDP chieftains in the region, who are alleged to have benefitted personally from his presidency are so passionate about his re-election that they are ready to bet their lives on it. Such supporters are led by Chief Clerk and ex-militant Asari Dokubo. Such supporters have openly defended the re-election bid declaring that it is a must.

    Former Minister of Education, Olorogun Kenneth Gbagi, is another top politician from the zone that would not tolerate anything stopping Jonathan from re-contesting. In a recent interview he said: “President Jonathan has a constitutional right as a Nigerian to seek re-election. I do not know what qualifies, Tafawa Balewa, Shehu Shagari and Olusegun Obasanjo to seek office for second term that Jonathan does not have. Obasanjo from the South-West ran for two terms and nobody challenged his right to go for second term. Shagari from North-West contested election, completed his first term and ran for second term and was sworn-in but the military truncated his second term. But nobody challenged his constitutional right to go for re-election. Nobody also challenged Tafawa Balewa.

    “If late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua was alive, nobody would have challenged him if he wanted to go for second term. Nobody has stopped a serving president in Nigeria, Africa, America, from seeking re-election unless he was defeated at the election. I do not agree that the proponents of asking Jonathan not to re-contest make any legal, political and historical sense.

    “However, should they feel that Jonathan has not done well, which is a matter of mathematics; what did Jonathan as president get overall, what has he been able to achieve? What did Jonathan get overall and how much has he used to prosecute Boko Haram war with the army and what is left for executing projects? What did he get with regard to a level playing ground of a peaceful existence as a nation as opposed to what other presidents got? We must have a benchmark to assess all the presidents to know how they have performed.

    “Having said so, it is not to say Jonathan should not contest. Jonathan should contest, Jonathan must contest. If those who don’t want him to re-contest know what they are doing, they should mobilise and stop him at the election.

    “If because of this predominantly northern opposition Jonathan did not contest, he cannot come back to the South-south, we will chase him away. It is not Jonathan’s mandate; it is South-South’s mandate. We cannot be made second class citizens in our country. He cannot dare to say he will not re-contest. He will be shocked with the answers he will get. His mandate is a collective mandate of the South-South led by our hero, Ken Saro-Wiwa, who paid with his blood.”

    So except there are major strategic changes before the 2015 presidential election, it seems certain that Jonathan also has serious political battles to win in the South-South zone. It is a development the president is deeply concerned about.

  • Chibok: Sabo, Falana, 24 others on Jonathan’s rescue committee

    Towards unraveling the circumstances surrounding the reported abduction of 234 secondary school girls in Chibok, Borno State, Brig. General Ibrahim A. Sabo (Rtd.)has been named as the Chairman of a fact finding Presidential Committee set up by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Other members of the committee are Barrister Femi Falana, SAN, Hajia Hawa Ibrahim, and Hajia Fatima Kwaku.

    This is contained in a statement issued last night by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Anyim Pius Anyim.
    According to him, the Committee will be inaugurated at the State House, Abuja on Tuesday, 6th May, 2014 by 12 noon.

    The statement reads: “As part of efforts to ensure successful rescue of the abducted female students of Government Secondary School CHIBOK, the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, GCFR, has approved the constitution of a Presidential Committee on the rescue efforts for the missing female students.”

    “The Committees whose work shall be largely fact findings is charged with the following terms of reference:”

    “To liaise with the Borno State Government and establish the circumstances leading to the School remaining open for boarding students when other schools were closed;”

    “To liaise with relevant authorities and the parents of the missing girls to establish the actual number and identities of the girls abducted;”

    “To interface with the Security Services and Borno State Government to ascertain how many of the missing girls have returned;”

    “To mobilise the surrounding communities and the general public on citizen support for a rescue strategy and operation;”

    “To articulate a framework for a multi-stakeholder action for the rescue of the missing girls;”

    The committe is also expected to advise the Government on any matter incidental to the terms of reference.

    Other members of the committee include 2 representatives of National Council of Women
    Societies (NCWS), 2 representatives of the All one whom shall be a female
    Nigeria Conference of
    Principals of Secondary
    Schools (ANCOPSS), 2 representatives of the National Parents Teachers Association.

    Also in the committee are 2 representatives of the Nigeria Police, 2 representatives of the State Security Service, 2 representatives of the Nigerian Army, 2 representatives of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), 1 Representative of the Federal Ministry of Information (who shall be the Committees’
    Spokesperson).

    The committee also have one Representative of the Federal Ministry of Justice, 3 Representatives of Borno State Government (two of whom, preferably, shall be women), 1 Representative of the United Nations, 1 Representative of ECOWA (who shall be a woman) and Permanent Secretary (Special Services Office) OSGF will serve as Secretary of the committee.

  • Jonathan sets up panel on 234 abducted girls

    Jonathan sets up panel on 234 abducted girls

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Friday set up a fact-finding committee to find out the circumstances surrounding the reported abduction of about 234 secondary school girls in Chibok, Borno State.

    The decision was taken at a high-level meeting at Aso Villa to review the security situation in the country, especially the bombing at Nyanya on Thursday and the kidnapping of girls of Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, on 15th April, 2014 by suspected terrorists.

    The Minister of Information, Labaran Maku disclosed this to State House correspondents at the end of Jonathan’s meeting with the service chiefs, Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, Minister of Defence, Aliyu Gusau, Vice President Namadi Sambo and other security agencies and some other ministers.

    Maku briefed in the company of the Military spokesman, Chris Olukolade, Police spokesman, Frank Mba, State Security Service (SSS) spokesperson, Marilyn Ogar and the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Doyin Okupe. Stressing that the composition and terms of reference of the committee will soon be made public, he said that it is made up of security agencies, civil society, international organizations and other stakeholders. He said: “On the unfortunate kidnap of the Chibok girls, the security chiefs briefed the meeting on efforts so far made to locate and rescue the girls, and bring the perpetrators to justice. Extensive and intensive aerial surveillance by the Air Force has been carried out in all the routes leading into and out of Chibok up to the Chad and Cameroun borders. Other parts of Borno and Adamawa states are also under the searchlight.” “Every information relayed to security agencies has so far been investigated, including the search of all places suspected as a possible hide-away of the kidnapped girls. The police, backed up by the military and DSS, have combed and are still combing all reported places that the girls might have been taken to. In view of the inconsistent and contradictory information available to government on the Chibok abduction, the President has set up a fact-finding committee comprising security agencies, civil society, international organizations and other stakeholders.” Noting that the President shares in the pain and anguish of the parents and guardians of the Chibok girls abducted by the terrorists, he said: “The President’s heart goes out to these our unfortunate daughters who have had to endure the trauma of abduction and separation from their loved ones. The government and people of Nigeria stand solidly by them.” He said that the President also appealed to the parents, guardians, relations and members of the public to furnish security agencies with all the information that will assist in the rescue of the girls. Maku added: “Government also appreciates the public outpouring of support and the sentiment expressed so far by all Nigerians, including civil society groups who have come out to condemn the abduction of the girls and terrorism in the country. Government strongly believes that the people of Nigeria, standing together, will overcome the current security challenges.” “The President has directed that the security agencies should intensify efforts to rescue the Chibok girls. The President assures Nigerians that “wherever the girls are in the world, we will get them back, apprehend and punish the culprits”. He stated. On the latest Nyanya bomb blast he said: “The meeting received updates on the second Nyanya bombing, the ongoing search for the Chibok girls, and efforts made so far to deal with related incidents of insecurity and terrorism in the country.” “On Nyanya, the President directed security chiefs to increase surveillance and expedite investigation into the explosion to ensure that those behind the heinous act are arrested and brought to justice.” The President, he said, commiserated with the families of the deceased in the latest bombing at Nyanya, sympathized with all those who were injured in the incident and directed full medical treatment for the victims at government expense. According to him, the President also directed for additional proactive measures by security agencies to enhance public safety, including increased public awareness for citizens to step up their cooperation with security agencies by reporting suspected activities and persons likely to cause a breach of public peace, safety and security. He also disclosed that the government is doing everything possible to ensure the successful hosting of the World Economic Forum in Abuja next week. Noting that the intention of the terrorists is to intimidate and shut down the government, he declared that terror will never shut down Nigeria. According to him, Nigeria has not invited any direct foreign intervention in the fight against insurgency but have been collaborating with other countries.

  • Jonathan gives three districts to FCT workers

    Jonathan gives three districts to FCT workers

    President Goodluck Jonathan has directed that three districts be allocated for housing schemes for workers in the Federal Capital Territory, the Minister, Alhaji Bala Mohammed, said.
    Mohammed announced the decision at a May Day rally in Abuja on Thursday, adding that the president directed that the houses should be made affordable.
    “In the recent time, Mr. President has commissioned more workers’ housing estates in the life of this nation; this can also be said in other sectors of the economy, such as health and education, among others ,’’ he said.
    The minister said the FCT Administration recently gave out 200 plots as Long Service Award to some of its employees who served meritoriously.
    He said that plans had been made to institutionalise the award.
    However, he said that the FCT Administration had been working assiduously to boost workers’ morale through various welfare programmes and incentives.
    Mohammed said the administration had adopted measures to check congestion at healthcare facilities in the territory arising from the influx of people.
    “In the light of this, scores of specialised medical and para-medical personnel have been recruited for this purpose.
    “As a worker-friendly administration, a Ministerial Committee on Hazard allowance has been constituted to address dangers being faced by some of our staff who perform duties that are considered hazardous,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the minister as saying at the forum.
    Mohammed pledged government’s determination to continue to explore ways to create a favourable environment for workers to give their best in effort to build a just and equitable society.
    He said the security challenges facing FCT residents would be addressed to ensure safety for law abiding citizens.

  • Jonathan drops Political Adviser

    President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan has terminated the appointment of his Special Adviser (Political), Alhaji Ahmed Gulak with immediate effect.
    Presidential Spokesman, Dr Reuben Abati said in a statement that the President thanks Alhaji Gulak for his services to the present Administration and wishes him success in his future endeavours.
    A replacement for Alhaji Gulak will be announced soon.

  • Falana to Jonathan: Ignore calls for removal of Borno governor, others

    Falana to Jonathan: Ignore calls for removal of Borno governor, others

    Lagos lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), has berated elder statesman, Chief Edwin Clarke, over his alleged call for the removal of the governors of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe States over Boko Haram insurgency.
    Falana urged President Goodluck Jonathan to ignore Clark’s views, seeking the removals of the governors.
    He said in a statement issued on Tuesday in Lagos that it was illegal and unconstitutional for the elder statesman to call for the removal of the governors.
    Though he admitted that Clark wields enormous influence around the Presidency, he maintained that his call for the removal of the governors was diversionary and has no backing in law.
    Falana argued, “there is nothing like partial declaration of a state of emergency in the 1999 Constitution; what section 305 (c) of the Constitution contemplates is the recourse to ‘extraordinary measures to restore peace’ and security where there is a breakdown of public order and public safety.
    “This in effect means that all democratic institution should be suspended to permit the military exercise full control until peace and order returns.”
    He said that Section 305 of the Constitution which empowers the President to declare a state of emergency in any part of the country does not make any provision, expressly or impliedly, for the removal of elected democratic structures.
    “In other words, the power of the President, to take “extraordinary measures to restore peace and security under a state of emergency does not include the removal of elected public officers or the dissolution of democratic structures,” the lawyer added.
    He insisted that state governors cannot be held vicariously liable for the inability of the President to stem the rising wave of insurgency in the country.

  • APC to Jonathan: cancel Adamawa rally

    APC to Jonathan: cancel Adamawa rally

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has urged President Goodluck Jonathan to cancel the political rally being planned for him by the Adamawa State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) next Tuesday.

    It said the President should not be celebrating when over 200 school girls are missing.

    ”We hope and pray that our daughters are released safely even before Tuesday, April 29th when the rally is to be held, but until then, it is insensitive and indecent for anyone, least of all the President who is the father of the nation, to engage in any celebratory outing under any guise,” the party said in a statement issued in Lagos yesterday by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed.

    It said the President must not repeat the faux pas he committed less than 24 hours after 75 of his compatriots were killed in the Nyanya bombing.

    “’All decent men and women were riled that President Jonathan went dancing at an illegal campaign stop in Kano and popping champagne corks at a birthday celebration in Ibadan when the smoke was yet to clear from the scene of the Nyanya bombing

    ”The President should not repeat the same mistake, if indeed he considered that to be one. He should see the missing girls as his own daughters and stop forthwith his illegal campaign rallies,” APC said.

    The party said the ongoing bickering over the site of the rally in Adamawa, close to the scene of the sad abduction of the girls, is distracting from what should be a concerted national effort to find the girls and reunite them safely with their families.

    ”For a President whose grovelling aides have likened to Nelson Mandela, Barack Obama and other great leaders in a patently blasphemous campaign, he should take time to ask himself how Obama would have reacted to one missing girl from any school in the US, not to talk of over 200 missing girls.

    ”Does President Jonathan honestly believe that Mandela, in his days as President, would have been campaigning when his compatriots are being daily bombed or abducted? Sycophancy has no limit, especially in an environment where many will disown even their children for pecuniary gains, but President Jonathan must rise above those who are justifying his insensitivity by saying the government cannot shut down so as not to give victory to Boko Haram.

    ”We are not saying the government should shut down. But the President must shut down all celebratory public outings and all political campaigns until our missing daughters are safely found and returned to their homes,” it said.

    It emerged yesterday that Jonathan has setup a committee involving all the security operatives in the country with a mandate to secure all the airports in the country.

    Jonathan’s move, according to the Minister of Interior, Comrade Abba Moro, is to avoid unexpected attack at the airports.

    Moro spoke to reporters in Abuja after a meeting with the Presidential Committee on the review of security and screening architecture in all international airports, led by the Special Adviser to the President on Programme monitoring and evaluation, Prof. Sylvester Moye.

    The committee paid a working visit to the minister to seek ways of assisting in actualising Jonathan’s order.

    Moro said the committee will ensure that a holistic reform is effected at various airports were thugs and other abnormalities will be put right adding that the committee will commence work by next month (May 1).

    He disclosed that: “A situation where protocol officers, immigration officers and other top government officials work passengers right into the aircraft and where people even abandon their duty positions to assist travelers thereby roving around the airport thereby causing congestion, and where troller handlers are even more in number than passengers is not acceptable and it must stop.

    “I had in audience the Presidential Committee on the review of security and screening architecture in all international airports. Led by the Special Adviser to the President on Programme monitoring and evaluation, Prof. Sylvester Moye. They came with an overall requirement for ensuring that our airports conform to international best practices in teams of entry and exit.

    “The airport is the first point of contact between Nigeria and the outside world. They have made a series of recommendations to President Goodluck Jonathan and he has approved them. Part of which is the congestion of our airports. As a major stakeholder, as a ministry that is housing the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) whose primary responsibility is the coordination and facilitation of entry and exit we must work together. I thank Mr. President for the wisdom for composition of the committee that has virtually all stakeholders in the aviation industry.

    “On our part we have agreed to assist in ensuring that proper demarcations are created and people are limited in the area where they should be. Government does not want to leave any stone unturned as regards security.

    “President Goodluck Jonathan is serious about this. The committee will work on identification of access into the airports. Reenactment of security checks at the airports. The committee will commence work May 1. It will also remove unnecessary road blocks. Hoodlums will be driven away from all airports across the country.”

    ‘Abuja safe for World

    Economic Forum’

    Jonathan yesterday reassured the global community of the safety of all participants in next month’s World Economic Forum on Africa billed for Abuja.

    Jonathan, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, spoke while receiving China’s Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Gu Xiaojie who presented his letters of credence to him at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    According to him, the security challenges being experienced in parts of the country will have no adverse effect on the safety of participants in the forum.

    He praised China for confirming participation of its delegation at the Forum to be led by Premier Li Keqiang.

    He said: “We will give all participants a good reception in Abuja. We have faced challenges in the area of security, but we will overcome the situation so that our economy can move forward faster. Participants will not have a problem with security during the summit.” He said

    The Ambassador assured Jonathan of the President of China’s confidence in Nigeria’s security measures and the country’s ability to host the World Economic Forum on Africa successfully.

    He said: “From our assessment, we are confident that all is under control and we have relayed that to our people.”

    He applauded Nigeria’s re-basing of its GDP and the country’s emergence as the number one economy in Africa, noting that it will certainly stimulate the inflow of more foreign investors.

    Activists seek UN’s

    intervention

    A non-governmental organisation, the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP), yesterday urged the United Nations to “urgently intervene to secure the safe release of 230 students of Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, who were abducted by members of the Boko Haram.

    The organisation wants the Monitoring and Reporting Mechanism (MRM) of the UN Security Council, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Children and Armed Conflict, and the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to provide “international assistance and support to the Nigerian authorities to secure the release of the children and to ensure that they are back to school.”

    In a statement by SERAP executive director Adetokunbo Mumuni, the organisation said that, “continuing abduction of these innocent children is having negative impact on their well-being and long-term education. We are urging these bodies to move swiftly to support efforts to protect schools, teachers, and students from deliberate attack in the North-East of the country.”

    “In particular we urge the UN Security Council’s Monitoring and Reporting Mechanism (MRM) on Children and Armed Conflict to take strong action including by referring members of the Boko Haram and their backers to the International Criminal Court. Accountability for attacks on school children and education-including prosecuting perpetrators-is critical to deterring perpetration of crimes under international law.”

    MURIC seeks

    military’s probe

    Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) Director Prof Ishaq Akintola yesterday urged the National Assembly to probe the military over its handling of the case of the Chibok missing school girls.

    The Army, he said, has goofed and should apologise to Nigerians.

    Akintola said: “This is a democracy and the citizens have the right not only to demand performance but also to insist on true reportage. It is clear from what happened that there was glaring disconnect between the field and army control room. This is a serious malady. The military is wobbling and fumbling. This is why innocent civilians continue to die everyday in this Boko Haram saga.

    “It is only in Nigeria that such confusion is condoned. The abduction of girls in their school is a tremendous setback for girl-child education and it should have been treated with more seriousness and high manifestation of professionalism.

    “MURIC calls attention to the misery and despair of parents of the unfortunate girls. Indeed all Nigerians have shown deep concern over this ugly incident. The huge national psychological trauma is immeasurable. Therefore nobody should trivialise the unprofessional behavior of the Nigerian military.”

    Pastor: end time here

    Regional Overseer of the Deeper Life Bible Church in Delta State, Pastor Obinna Nkemjika, at a news conference in Warri to announce the visit of the General Superintendent of the church, Pastor William Kumuyi, said the worsening security situation is a sign of end time.

    Pastor Obinna said the visit of the church’s leader will last three days; Friday, April 25 to Sunday April 27, for a crusade tagged ‘Unforgettable Encounter with the God of miracles’.

    According to him, activities of the terrorist group, Boko Haram, are just typical of the fruits of depraved minds, noting that what Nigerians need to have a stable society is the kind of total transformation the visit of the church leader has in store.

    He observed that the problem of insecurity is not peculiar to Nigeria, adding that other countries across the world have since lost their peace. He however pointed out that the increasing breach of the peace across the world is just a fulfilment of the prophesy about the end times.