Tag: Jonathan

  • Senate applauds Buhari, Jonathan over peaceful handover

    Senate applauds Buhari, Jonathan over peaceful handover

    The Senate on Tuesday congratulated President Muhammadu Buhari, his deputy, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and former President Goodluck Jonathan over Friday’s successful inauguration of the new administration.

    This followed a motion by the Senate Leader, Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba and 107 other Senators entitled: “Congratulations to President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR and others.”

    Ndoma-Egba in his lead debate noted the successful handover of government and the inauguration of Buhari as President, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and his deputy, Prof. Osinbajo, on May 29.

    He also noted the successful inauguration of some National Assembly members as governors in their respective states.

    He listed the National Assembly members inaugurated as governors to include Hon. Aminu Waziri Tambuwal (Sokoto), Senator Ifeanyi Okowa (Delta), Senator Benedict Ayade (Cross River), Senator Bindo Jibrilla (Adamawa) Senator Atiku Bagudu (Kebbi ) and Hon. Ifeany Ugwuanyi (Enugu).

    Ndoma-Egba said the Senate identified with the current government of President Buhari and the state governments under the leadership of “ our colleagues  in the National Assembly in their attempts to actualize the legitimate yearnings of our people for a greater country in all spheres of social-political and economic life.”

    Senate President, David Mark, who summed contributions by Senators, said the important message is that the country had a smooth and peaceful transition from the ruling Peoples Democratic Party to an opposition party, the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Mark noted that for the first time in the political history of the country, the presidential election results were not being contested at any tribunal.

    He added, “It is not just enough to congratulate Buhari, we have to congratulate the former President Jonathan who willingly conceded defeat and followed it up with a phone call.

    “We should congratulate Buhari, former President and all Nigerians.”

     

  • Euphoria of  Jonathan’s return ebbs in Otuoke

    Euphoria of Jonathan’s return ebbs in Otuoke

    •Residents lament one-year darkness

    Residents of Otuoke, former President Goodluck Jonathan’s hometown in Ogbia Local Government Area, Bayelsa State, are angry.

    Their anger is not over the electoral defeat suffered by their ambassador. It is because Dr. Jonathan finished his presidency without solving the electricity crisis in the community.

    The former President returned to his country home on May 29 after handing over the reins of government to Muhammadu Buhari, who defeated him in the March 28 presidential election.

    Yesterday, when The Nation visited the community, the hype and the euphoria that heralded the home-coming of Dr. Jonathan as a worthy ambassador, were ebbing.

    Traces and evidence of the reception the people accorded their worthy son, stared visitors in the face. The stacks of plastic chairs used for the thanksgiving church service on Sunday were seen in the premises of St. Stephen’s Anglican Church.

    An imposing statue of the former President with an inscription: “We honour you the hero of democracy” stood at the entrance of Jonathan’s palatial home.

    Visitors were still milling around the gate to the expensive courtyard to have a glimpse of where the former President will live a quiet life after a five-year sojourn as a tenant in the Presidential Villa. Most of them were stranded as security operatives denied them access into the inner court.

    Those struggling to enter the compound included a group of youths from Nasarawa State.

    The youths, who came under the aegis of Nasarawa State PDP Youths, said they came to pay a courtesy visit to the former President, but lamented that they had been trying in vain for two days to see him.

    Led by Atia A. Atia, the youths were seen sitting on a concrete pavement close to the building.

    “We came to pay him a courtesy visit. We campaigned for him vigorously. Though he lost, we thought it wise to come and greet him. But for two days now, we have been unable to see him,” Atia said.

    Some Ijaw leaders and freelance journalists appeared stranded at the gate as they tried to convince security operatives to allow them in.

    Security around the building was still tight, though the personnel were not as stern-looking as they used to be when Dr. Jonathan was in office.

    Mobile policemen in three trucks were still keeping vigil around the building. They hung their clothes and personal effects on a truck.

    The patrol vans of the Joint Task Force (JTF), Operation Pulo Shield and other security vehicles, including an Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) belonging to the military, were stationed near the building.

    Workers were putting finishing touches to some of the structures within the sprawling compound.

    The fence was being redesigned and remodelled by a firm, Kakatar Ce.

    But, Otuoke was gradually shedding off the euphoria associated with Jonathan’s return.

    A 6pm yesterday, the policemen hopped into the trucks and left, saying they had completed their assignment.

    The primary concern of villagers was the darkness that pervaded their community.

    A resident, who pleaded for anonymity, said: “The situation has been worse since the President returned. On Friday when he came back, there was light but it only lasted for few hours.

    “After the light went off since Saturday morning, we have not seen it again. We have been in darkness since this year. Before now, they only brought light each time the President visited and took it whenever he left.

    “But since he came back finally, we have not had light. It is unfortunate because we expected our kinsman to address this problem before returning home. How does he feel knowing that we are in darkness while he is enjoying light in his compound?”

     

    Otuoke: Not all about darkness

     

    The town sure has some reasons to thank Jonathan. The Federal University, Otuoke is one of such. The university has swollen the town’s population and has provided employment for many of its indigenes, so much so that the population of staff is more than those of students.

    As a result of the university, more modern buildings have been built. Hotels and guest houses have also sprung up. The federal road, linking the town from Yenegoa is also being built. Known as Kolo-Otuoke-Bayelsa Palm Road,  the single-lane 20-kilometre road is already being dualised.

    Otuoke, a mere 15 – 20 minutes drive from Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, has really changed into a satellite town. Driving through the narrow and bustling road of Azikoro village, one meanders the  bends that lead to the community through Otu-Ogidi.

    From the bridge, Otuoke comes alive. Shanties of a few years ago have given way to modern buildings. All the buildings on the road have either been reconstructed or renovated. Mud houses, which used to dot the community, are gone. There is a general belief that Jonathan has empowered his kinsmen with contracts to enable them build good houses.

    The hitherto narrow road has been expanded. Solar-powered streetlights are on both sides of the road; at night they cast golden glows on the neatly swept street.

    Directly opposite the former President’s house are twin duplexes erected by Jonathan for his mother and his late father. Though not gaudy, their simple splendour distinguishes them from other structures around them.

    Located nearby is the new ultra-modern St. Stephen’s Anglican Church, a controversial building  donated to Jonathan by Gitto Construction Ltd, an Italian contractor working for the Federal Government.

    There is also a Skill Acquisition Centre. In addition, there is a mini “Eagle Square” built by former Governor Timipre Sylva and named after Mrs. Jonathan. The Dame Patience Jonathan Square registers its significance with two torn National Flags hoisted.

    To ensure that members of the National Youth Service Corps serving (NYSC) in Otuoke enjoy the benefit of serving their country in the community, the old “Corpers Lodge” have been repainted. An air-conditioned 40-bedroom apartments with a kitchen and restrooms for each apartment are being built by the state government.

    All over the city, the state government, the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) and other federal agencies strive to outdo  one another in the race to develop Otuoke.

    The main catalyst for the massive development in the hitherto rustic and out-of-the-way community is the Federal University of Technology, Otuoke (FUTO).

    The establishment of the higher institution has unleashed a flurry of socio-economic activities. It is a major federal presence that has redefined the community. Independent observers believe the establishment of a tertiary institution of that magnitude in his small community was a masterstroke by Jonathan.

    Directly opposite the university is Margel Resort, a hotel owned by the  former President’s wife, Dame Patience. Boutiques, cosmetic shops, restaurants among others are springing up.

     

    The wonder cottage hospital

     

    Another wonder Jonathan attracted to the community is the Otuoke Cottage Hospital (OCH). Indeed, the hospital is in a class of its own. It is a world-class cottage hospital constructed with global standard and best practice. The environment alone gives a visitor a breath of fresh air. The surroundings are clearly mapped out with landscaped lawns which are constantly mowed by the hospital management. It is further beautified with a network of roads linking the various departments and blocks to allow easy movement of persons, vehicles and equipment.

    The blocks, though simple, are solid. From the reception, a visitor begins to see the difference between a kite and a hawk. The reception located within the Outpatient Department reassures any patient of the hospital’s capability.

    The seats are comfortable enough for patients to relax and get documented before proceeding to the waiting room, which separated from the reception with a capacity to accommodate many patients. The Consulting Rooms and Medical Records are also designed to allow for quick response to the medical needs of the patients.

    Within the Outpatient Departments are modern Pharmacy Department, Counseling Room, Compounding Rooms and Drug Store, which are located close to a five-bedded department. Each of the beds is unique. It has an oxygen pipe to enable any patient on emergency have free access to oxygen.

    From the Outpatient Department, a roofed walkway opens to the wards. On the walkway is a sculptural depiction of a caring mother and her child. The wards – male, female, children and maternity – are constructed close to one another. In fact, the wards boast of sophisticated equipment and many live supports tailored to the needs of each category of patients. Unique and perhaps, the first of its kind in the country, are automated beds in the wards. Each of the wards has 10  beds. They are electronically controlled and fitted with speakers, audio system and other adjustable buttons.

    An oxygen pipe is fitted on the wall close to each of the bed. So, it is each patient to an oxygen pipe. The entire wards are piped with oxygen. The hospital has an Oxygen Plant which generates oxygen and distributes to all the wards.

    Almost everything that makes a standard hospital is in OCH. The Laboratory Department is designed with state-of-the-art equipment. It is further divided into haematological and pathological laboratories.

    With experienced manpower, OCH can perform all surgeries in its Theatre and anybody wheeled into the facility has a high percentage of coming out alive. The theatre is made up of two suites, one monitor and an aesthetic machine.

    The hospital depends mainly on two 350KVA generators for its electricity supplies, using three drums of diesel a day.

    Within the compound are two aesthetically designed buildings constructed to accommodate members of staff of the hospital. What is this hospital lacking? It has functional water works, laundry and an equipped kitchen. But the hospital has its fair share of the 2012 flood that devastated the state. Two 4D ultra-sound scan machines worth millions of dollars and two digital x-ray machines were damaged by the floods. Also, one of the two ambulances with live support facilities was destroyed by the floods.

    The foundation was laid by Jonathan in 2006 during his brief tenure in the state as the governor.

    The work could not go on because of logistic problems until the office of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) adopted and completed it when Jonathan was president.

  • Jonathan yet to resolve Bayelsa PDP crisis

    Jonathan yet to resolve Bayelsa PDP crisis

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan has not resolved the crisis in his state’s chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    It was gathered that the President attempted to convene a stakeholders’ meeting to discuss the crisis, but most party leaders and other aggrieved members did not show up.

    The party, ahead of its 2016 governorship election, is divided into two camps of members loyal to Jonathan’s family and supporting of the state Governor Seriake Dickson’s re-election.

    The anti-Dickson camp, controlled by the former President’s wife, Dame Patience Jonathan, comprises former aides to the President, federal and state lawmakers who failed their re-election and sacked Dickson’s aides.

    A source said Jonathan was not allowed to intervene in the crisis because the elders were angry at his failure to exert his authority over the PDP when he was the President.

    The source, who spoke in confidence, noted that Jonathan allowed his former aides to sow the seed of discord in the party without calling them to order.

    “Jonathan lost his voice in the party the moment he allowed his former aides and his wife to launch a campaign of dividing the party in the state.

    “He allowed them to carry on as if they were larger than the party. Leaders in the state expected the President to give direction and beat everybody into shape. But he remained quiet,” the source said.

    It was learnt that matters came to a head when former presidential aides allegedly sponsored candidates in the opposition to challenge the PDP in the last general elections.

    He said: “Right now, everybody looks up to Governor Dickson for direction in the party. The Presidential cover enjoyed by Jonathan’s former aides ceased to exist from May 29. Some of them have been expelled already from the party. So, the governor, not Jonathan, holds the aces.”

    The main rival to the governor and former Special Assistant to Jonathan on Domestic Matters, Mr. Waripamowei Dudafa, accused the governor of destroying the party with his second term ambition.

    But PDP described Dudafa as an ingrate.

    In a statement at the weekend in Yenagoa, the state capital, by its Publicity Secretary, Mr. Osom Makbere, the PDP said: “Dudafa is not in a position to determine what goes on in the party, especially with regards to who flies the party’s flag in the 2016 governorship election.

    “…This is the height of ingratitude for a young man who came into politics after serving his mandatory one year National Youth Service corps (NYSC) programme in Yenagoa and was without any work experience. Yet, he became a member of the House of Assembly in 2003, Commissioner of Local Government in 2007 and Special Assistant to the President on Domestic Affairs in 2012, through the magnanimity and grace of the party leaders at various times…”

    “Where was Dudafa when the founding fathers were toiling day and night to build the PDP in the state? Where was Dudafa when the present administration was re-writing the history of governance in the state? Where was Dudafa when the present administration was transforming the state

  • Jonathan and verdict of history

    SIR: But for the agony wrought on hapless Nigerians since the electoral defeat of President Goodluck Jonathan on March 28, history would have been kinder to the former president. As a matter of fact, he had endeared himself to Nigerians for providing an enabling environment for a free and fair election and the fact that his concession of defeat had come before all the votes had been counted won him accolade worldwide. The above won him sympathy of Nigerians in spite of the inadequacies of his government.

    However, since the April 11 election, there has been palpable evidence of absence of governance, a pointer to the fact that the concession of victory to President Muhammadu Buhari was a mere show. If  Jonathan  truly  conceded defeat  in the true spirit of statesmanship,  he  would have provided  effective leadership  until the last day  of his  administration. The reverse was the case.

    In the last one month or so, the lives of the ordinary Nigerians, including millions who voted Jonathan became miserable. The former President abandoned governance and gave some shylocks, including independent oil marketers, free rein to fleece Nigerians to the marrow. Price of petroleum products skyrocketed which in turn affected the cost of production and transportation of goods. These in addition to the woes brought on the nation by endemic power failure. The irony is that downtrodden masses were most affected and living became nightmarish in most villages and towns. Security of lives and property could not be guaranteed because of the activities of insurgents, kidnappers and armed robbers. This is apart from the agony faced by civil servants who were owed arrears of salaries.

    Would it not be right then to conclude that the former President and his party inflicted pains on Nigerians because of their loss at the election? It is unfortunate that they turned their backs on history. If President Jonathan had played his leadership role to the end, he would have continually enjoyed the goodwill of Nigerians in future. But with the way his government ended, how does he think history would remember him?

     

    • Adewuyi Adegbite

    Apake, Ogbomoso.

  • Jonathan’s parting shot

    Jonathan’s parting shot

    The ex-president cannot dictate whether his successor should probe or not; or the period the probe should cover 

    One had thought Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, the immediate past president of Nigeria, would give us a breather so Nigerians could pick the bits and pieces of their lives together. But try as one did, Dr Jonathan would always do or say something that would compel one to return to him. Without doubt, we would continue to talk about the Jonathan administration for some time. But then, after this piece, I intend to have a deserved break on the former president because, by last Friday, old things were supposed to have passed away and all things had become new.  I hope Dr Jonathan would let me be.

    One was compelled to return to the former president because of his speech last Wednesday at the valedictory session of the Federal Executive Council in Abuja, where he again expressed his morbid fear for probe. And that if the Muhammadu Buhari administration must probe his government, then, it must be ready to probe his predecessors too.  “I believe that anybody calling for probe must ensure that these probes are extended beyond the Jonathan-led administration. Otherwise, to me, it will be witch-hunting … How do you allocate oil fields, marginal wells and all that? Do we follow our laws? All these should be probed …” the former president told his audience in his vintage, even if infantile fashion. Dr Jonathan also told his cabinet members that they had performed well and that those criticising them were merely doing so for political purposes. Obviously the former president must be putting performance on its head. But there is nothing wrong with this; after all, the lizard that falls from a wall too acknowledges the ‘feat’ it has performed by nodding its head!

    Of course, Dr Jonathan got the usual applause from his ministers. That was the way they kept deceiving themselves until they sent themselves packing from Aso Rock Villa. They kept applauding ministers who reeled out statistics which had no bearing with what was on ground. It was the same statistics that pushed the Jonathan government into the dustbin of history on March 28.

    Anyway, while the former president is entitled to his opinion on these matters, unfortunately, his opinion, especially on the vexed issue of probe does not carry any weight. It is not for him to say whether probe is necessary or unnecessary, or the period it should cover. That is the prerogative of the new government. In the first place, if he was comfy with corruption and saw nothing wrong in probing those he succeeded, that was his business. In the same vein, it is late in the day for him to start talking about “improper allocation of oil fields”. If he knew there were any such things, why did he not do something about them in his more than five years as president?

    That he did not do anything about the issues he is now raising less than 48 hours to his exit from power shows the pride of place that corruption occupied in his time. And this is globally acknowledged. He did not leave anyone in doubt that he was quite comfortable with persons of questionable character who walked in and out of Aso Rock while he was the landlord there. He even crowned the infamy by referring to the massive looting of the country’s treasury as ‘stealing’. That was his position on, and predisposition to, corruption (and he is perfectly entitled to it), even though it explains why the country is in the mess he left it in. But it would be preposterous to recommend that failed paradigm to the incoming government. Dr Jonathan on his own accord made ‘transformation’ his government’s mantra; Buhari could decide to make anti-corruption (probe) his. So, there would be nothing unusual about that.

    So, rather than keep blackmailing the new government not to probe his government, the former president should advise his ministers and other aides that had stolen public funds to return at least a substantial part of it. That would be much more like it, rather than this cheap popularity or victimhood that Dr Jonathan is seeking. Negotiation can only begin when what is returned is proportionate to what was stolen.

    The former president may be right that corruption did not start with his government. But what he feigns ignorance of is that it assumed an unusual dimension in his time. Indeed, the Jonathan government ‘liberalised’ corruption, as it were! If I must remind him, even General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida whose regime was notorious for being highly corrupt, said they were ‘angels’ compared with what happened in the Jonathan years. For once in recent times, Babangida appeared to be talking sense. Perhaps it was even the impression in Babangida’s time that the country’s economy was resilient (as it did not collapse despite the massive assault on it) that propelled the mindboggling looting of the treasury in recent years. Unfortunately, we have now seen that it is when stealing has not reached a crescendo that an economy would not collapse.

     In Dr Jonathan’s time, looters stole too much for the owners to notice. That is why we have unending fuel queues; states and even the Federal Government are leaving backlog of salaries unpaid, etc. as legacies of the Jonathan government. We are in crisis not just because oil prices fell; it is more due to the government’s cluelessness about how to husband the country’s resources, and the unprecedented looting of public funds.

    So, Dr Jonathan should stop romanticising probe. Indeed, the way he had been talking about probe, one begins to wonder if it is not a question of the guilty being afraid. But, the earlier the former president realised that whatever the Buhari government decides to make its priority is its prerogative, the better. Dr Jonathan’s government behaved like the biblical rich man who throughout his lifetime did not know Christ only to get to hell to bear the consequence of his choice. If former President Jonathan was blind to issues of corruption in his time, it was not because he did not have enough warnings about its prevalence in his government; he had a surfeit of it. Indeed, in my January 12, 2014 write-up titled “2014: agenda for Jonathan, fight corruption and other things shall be added unto you”, I had admonished the government to deal squarely with corruption and every other thing would be added unto it. That admonition, like many others at the time, was like the lone voice in the wilderness. Yet, if we are not having electricity today, it is because of corruption. If people are dishonest about fuel subsidy, (for which reason the ordinary people were to be punished by removing subsidy when what they needed to remove was corruption) it is because the government condoned corruption. Indeed, that we are importing fuel at all is the product of corruption. In essence, corruption is at the root of why this country is not working today.

    So, Dr Jonathan has no reason now to be crying wolf under the mere suspicion that the new government could decide to ask questions about how his government spent public funds. It is true the new government does not have to devote all its energy to probes, the truth is that we cannot make progress if we allow those who had absconded with public funds to enjoy the ill-gotten wealth. Moreover, like adults that we are, when we stumble, we have to look back to know why. Perhaps Dr Jonathan would have succeeded if he did just that.

    He decided his government’s mantra; he cannot dictate his predecessor’s. If he chose to embrace corruption, it was not for lack of knowledge of its prevalence but because he did not think it necessary to fight it. As they say, anyone who caused rain to fall should not be surprised if the rain is accompanied by thunderstorm. So, if Dr Jonathan gladly and willingly embraced corruption, he should also gladly embrace its consequence (if any). His appeals to ethnic and primordial sentiments did not take him far before. It would not take him far now, either.

    Nigeria is one of the few places where a president or public official, rather than say ‘I have nothing to hide, probe me’; would be saying ‘if you want to probe me, you must be ready to probe my predecessors. Otherwise, to probe me would tantamount to witch-hunt’. But President Buhari should not be deterred by that blackmail. If he wants to probe, he should go ahead, allegation of witch-hunt or wizard-hunt notwithstanding.

  • I will dedicate rest of my life to peace – Jonathan

    I will dedicate rest of my life to peace – Jonathan

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan on Friday received cheers and standing ovation from his kinsmen when he returned to Bayelsa State after handing over the reins of the nation’s leadership to President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Dressed in Ijaw attire, Jonathan and his wife who wore a flowing red gown walked gracefully into the Gabriel Okara Cultural Centre, Yenagoa, the venue of the grand civic reception organized in his honour by the state government.

    Colourfully dressed Ijaw women, Ijaw leaders and youths trooped to the arena to welcome their kinsman who they described as hero of democracy and ambassador of peace.

    The crowd let out cries of joy as the former President and his entourage entered the almost congested hall at about 3:13pm.

    The Bomo Council of Chiefs and People, Women for Change Initiative (WCI), the University of Port Harcourt Alumni Association (UPAS), the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) and the Ijaw National Congress (INC) were among the groups who came to welcome the former President.

    Jonathan and his wife were accompanied by Governor Seriake Dickson and his wife, Rachel; former governors, former ministers and some members of the National Assembly.

    Among the dignitaries who followed the former President to his home state are the former Secretary to the Federal Government, Senator Anyim Pius Anyim; Governor of Ondo State, Olusegun Mimiko and former Governor of Anambra State, Mr. Peter Obi.

    The former President told his kinsmen that he would henceforth dedicate the rest of his life to promotion of peace.

    He said: “I am grateful to all Nigerians. The best I can do now is to dedicate the remaining part of my life to peace across the country.

    “Nigerians have given me so much that I cannot pay back and that is why I maintain that we need peace in this country. We need development in this country. Crisis don’t bring development rather it brings destruction.”

    He expressed confidence in the ability of Buhari’s administration to make Nigerians happy.

     

     

  • Jonathan, Patience leave for Otuoke

    Jonathan, Patience leave for Otuoke

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan Friday left the Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport, Abuja for his home town Otuoke in Bayelsa State.
    He took off on Nigerian Air Force Aircraft, flight 5N-FGW at about 12.03 pm
    He left in company of his wife, Dame Patience Jonathan , his Aide-De- Camp (ADC) Colonel Ojogbane Adegbe, his escort and some of security personnel.
    Some of those who bade him farewell at the Presidential wing of the airport are some members of his cabinet.
    They were led by the former President, Arch. Namadi Sambo, Attorney General of the Federation Mohammed Adoke, the Aviation Minister, Osita Chidoka, FCT Minister Bala Mohammed and other members of his cabinet
  • Abductors of Jonathan’s  cousins demand N50m ransom

    Abductors of Jonathan’s cousins demand N50m ransom

    Patience Egbeni and Kate Eni, the two abducted cousins of President Goodluck Jonathan, will be missing in action when the President returns home today.

    The six gunmen in military uniform, who abducted them on May 20, are still holding them hostage.

    It was gathered that the gunmen, after about five days, established contacts with their families and demanded N50 million ransom.

    The President’s cousins were abducted at their provisions stores near the riverbank of Akempli, Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State.

    The hoodlums stormed the area at 8.30am and seized the women.

    They forced their victims into a waiting speedboat and took them to an unknown place.

    A source, who spoke in confidence, said: “The victims are two maternal cousins of the President. We know that they have been preparing to welcome the President, after the May 29 handover. Unless they are rescued before then, their dream of welcoming their brother will be a mirage.”

    Police spokesman Butswat Asinim, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), said the victims had not been released.

    The spokesman said he was not aware of the ransom demand, adding that security agencies were still making efforts to free them.

  • ‘Jonathan returns home without state visit to Bayelsa’

    ‘Jonathan returns home without state visit to Bayelsa’

    President Goodluck Jonathan will return to his state, Bayelsa, after handing over the reins of the nation’s leadership to the President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari, on Friday.

    Jonathan is returning home amidst mixed feelings from his kinsmen over his performance throughout the period he occupied the nation’s highest political office.

    Though the state government has planned a grand reception for the outgoing President, most people are not happy that Jonathan at no time paid a working visit to the state before the expiration of his tenure.

    Jonathan visited many states controlled by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to inaugurate projects, but failed to stop by in the state.

    For instance, Jonathan visited neighboring Akwa Ibom on about three occasions to inaugurate projects executed by Governor Godswill Akpabio.

    But the President failed to come to Bayelsa despite all efforts by Governor Seriake Dickson to bring him to the state.

    Last year, the state government hinted many times that Jonathan was coming to the state on an official visit to inaugurate projects finished by Dickson.

    All was set for Jonathan to come, but he failed to show up.

    The government went as far as mapping out the itinerary of the President, including completed projects lined up for commissioning, but Jonathan failed to honour the visit.

    The failure of the President to pay a working visit to his home state fueled speculations that all was not well between him and the governor.

    But the government denied the frosty relationship between Dickson and the President.

    When asked whether the President would use the occasion of his grand reception to inaugurate some projects in the state, the Commissioner for Information, Mr. Esueme Kikile, said it did not form part of the programme.

    He said the tenure of the President had come to an end, adding that he lacks the capacity to turn his reception into a state visit.

  • Buhari formally receives handover notes

    Buhari formally receives handover notes

    President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday received the handover notes from the outgoing President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The exercise took place inside the Council Chamber of the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Jonathan had earlier conducted the President-elect round the seat of power.

    He presented an executive summary of his handover notes and a copy of the National Conference report to Buhari in the presence of All Progressives Congress chiefs who witnessed the event.

    The outgoing President, who spoke after the presentation, said his administration had done its best for the country.

    On his part, the President-elect said he would not make an official statement until after studying the handover notes.

    He commended Jonathan for conceding defeat in the March 28 presidential election.