Tag: Jonathan

  • The defeat of President Jonathan

    SIR: Few months ago, President Goodluck Jonathan had a fairly good reason to believe he will have a blowout. The opposition at the time seemed to lack proper coordination. There was no threat on the horizon, so the president falsely believed. He was sure the polls would mimic a birthday bash:  Everybody would wish him more years.

    But that was then. The climate has since changed. And so has the prospects of a sustainable Umbrella. Today, Jonathan is an endangered candidate. The hysteria in his camp reflects awareness of his vulnerable condition. It accounts for the rich marvel of this season. Trenchantly surreal, it looks like a drama around a swap of traits: The life long civilian pleads election allergy while his main rival, has managed to tap into the frustration of the alienated majority. With one word offer of CHANGE, the All Progressives Congress (APC) opposition party has provoked a Pavlovian hunger for a new reality in the populace.

    The dread of staring defeat drove President Jonathan to experimentation in costly antics. He decrees a six-week postponement through the instrumentality of the military. He moves house to house, under the cover of darkness, pitching the abominable idea of an interim national government to cajole powerful citizens. He inspires the agitation against the deployment of smart card reader for voter accreditation.

    He sponsors the demonization of Attahiru Jega, Chairman of Independent National Election Commission, as a prelude to supplanting the umpire with a puppet. He embarks on a bribing blitz; dumping dollars everywhere he needs affection. Quite simply, Jonathan has been signaling, erroneously, that he is desperate enough to explore any possibility that might help him retain his grip on power!

    President Jonathan’s last-ditch efforts have proven insufficient to save his doomed campaign. His establishment and resourcing of the Hate Buhari Cottage Industry has not won him more lovers. His tokens of appeasement – especially that masterstroke of a 50 percent reduction in darkness tariff – have not assuaged voter discontent.  But the optimist in Jonathan is not ready for his imminent defeat. He still hopes against hope that he will clinch a second term last March 28.

    Unlike General Muhammadu Buhari, a veteran of three failed presidential quests, President Goodluck Jonathan is a virgin at losing. Jonathan has won every election he has participated in as a contestant since 1999. His 16-year-long winning streak and a name that is widely promoted as the talisman behind his many quantum leaps, from a shoeless pupil to the pinnacle of power, have consolidated the myth of his own invincibility in his mind. But the news of a defeat will shake the foundation of Jonathan’s sense of personal identity. It will devastate him mentally and emotionally. And the wounded loser and his reflexes, at that level, will generate chaos.

    President Jonathan has a docile demeanor; but he is not known to be a man of depth or erudition. His discretion, as a rule, selects consequential options from the extreme end of impropriety. There is a likelihood that, in the potentially volatile hours after the announcement of a Buhari victory, a shell-shocked Jonathan would let an impolitic utterance slip out of him. He may make a panicky move that telegraphs dismissal of the outcome. And any of these is guaranteed to turn one man’s job loss into a national tragedy.

    But President Jonathan has a record of going for broke whenever he senses that the outcome of a democratic process would disadvantage him. Jonathan split the Nigerian Governor’s Forum when his proxy lost a free and fair chairmanship contest to his gadfly, Rotimi Amaechi. President Jonathan recently overran Ekiti State because he needed a crucial foothold in the Southwest. A soldier released a tape that implicated the ruling party.

    President Jonathan has to take a responsible posture. He has to urgently transmit an instruction forbidding any of his allies from making any post-result reaction that doesn’t follow his lead. His followers will be inclined to resist his defeat. They will interpret his defeat as the end of their access to waivers and free meals. Jonathan needs to communicate to them, ahead of time, in the clearest terms, that he will concede. This footnote, which Jonathan can tag on to his narrative, may temper his legacy of a bungled presidency. It is the only way he can win in defeat.

     

    • Emmanuel Uchenna Ugwu

     immaugwu@gmail.com

  • Artistes react to President Jonathan’s defeat candour

    Artistes react to President Jonathan’s defeat candour

    Following Saturday’s electoral defeat of President Goodluck Jonathan by General Muhammadu Buhari, artistes have come out to praise the president for conceding defeat and congratulating his political rival.

    Till the election, Jonathan and Buhari were the two major candidates and supporters of both candidates fought bitter through their campaigns, despite peace accord signed by both parties.

    Afrobeat musician, Seun Kuti, took to his Facebook account to express his pleasure at the president’s action.

    “I believed I had you pegged from the first of January 2012 but today, you sir, surprised me completely. You put Nigerians first,” wrote Seun Kuti who was an antagonist of President Jonathan. He added: “Congratulations, President Goodluck Jonathan. I believe that it’s only in defeat that a man’s true nature comes to the surface.”

    Nollywood actress and producer, Rita Dominic, a staunch supporter of President Jonathan also praised the president’s action, even as she congratulated his opponent.

    Taking to her Twitter account, Dominic wrote: ‘Congratulations to General Muhammadu Buhari. Thanks President Jonathan for conceding honourably. God bless Nigeria.”

    However, Omoni Oboli, Nollywood actor, director/producer, who also devotedly campaigned to have Jonathan re-elected was a bit neutral in her tweet. The actress, whose movie, Being Mrs Elliot, attracted presidential attention at its premiere last year, simply wrote; ‘Congratulations to you all! Nigeria won! God bless Nigeria!”

  • I’ve expanded democratic space, says Jonathan

    I’ve expanded democratic space, says Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan last night thanked Nigerians for their participation in the democratic process.

    In a concession statement, he said:

    “Fellow Nigerians, I thank you all for turning out en-masse for the March 28 General Elections.

     ”I promised the country free and fair elections. I have kept my word. I have also expanded the space for Nigerians to participate in the democratic process. That is one legacy I will like to see endure.

     ”Although some people have expressed mixed feelings about the results announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), I urge those who may feel aggrieved to follow due process based on our constitution and our electoral laws, in seeking redress.

     ”As I have always affirmed, nobody’s ambition is worth the blood of any Nigerian. The unity, stability and progress of our dear country is more important than anything else.

     ”I congratulate all Nigerians for successfully going through the process of the March 28th General Elections with the commendable enthusiasm and commitment that was demonstrated nationwide.

     ”I also commend the Security Services for their role in ensuring that the elections were mostly peaceful and violence-free.

     ”To my colleagues in the PDP, I thank you for your support.  Today, the PDP should be celebrating rather than mourning.  We have established a legacy of democratic freedom, transparency, economic growth and free and fair elections.

     ”For the past 16 years, we have steered the country away from ethnic and regional politics. We created a Pan-Nigerian political party and brought home to our people the realities of economic development and social transformation.

     ”Through patriotism and diligence, we have built the biggest and most patriotic party in Nigerian history. We must stand together as a party and look to the future with renewed optimism.

     ”I thank all Nigerians once again for the great opportunity I was given to lead this country and assure you that I will continue to do my best at the helm of national affairs until the end of my tenure.

     ”I have conveyed my personal best wishes to General Muhammadu Buhari.

     ”May God Almighty continue to bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

     ”I thank you all.”

     

     

  • Abdulsalami, Anyaoku,  others hail Jonathan

    Abdulsalami, Anyaoku, others hail Jonathan

    Millions of Nigerians, including former Head of State Abdulsalami Abubakar and former Commonwealth Secretary-General Emeka Anyaoku yesterday lauded President Goodluck Jonathan for accepting defeat.

    Jonathan reportedly called the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate and President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari, even before the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) officially declared the winner of the keenly contested poll.

    Abubakar, who led members of the 2015 election peace committee to the presidential villa in Abuja, expressed happiness that the President contacted Buhari before the committee arrived.

    In Abubakar’s team were former Chief of General Staff, Navy Commodore Ebitu Ukiwe; Cardinal John Onaiyekan; Primate Nicholas Okoh; former president of the Nigeria Bar Association, Priscilia Kuye; the President’s Special Adviser on Inter-party Affairs, Ben Obi and industrialist, Aliko Dangote.

    Describing Jonathan’s action as statesmanly, Abubakar noted that it was the first time in the country’s history that a loser would call his opponent to admit defeat in a presidential poll.

    Abubakar said: “We are here to ensure that peace is maintained at this moment we thank Nigerians and the international community.

    “The elections have been very peaceful, despite the hitches. At the end of the elections, there were a lot of upheavals but thankfully they have been contained.

    “We were in the middle of a meeting with international observers, when I called Buhari and he told me that Mr. President has called him to congratulate him.

    “We were spell bound and the reason we have come here is to thank President Jonathan for this statesmanship.

    “In any contest there is always a winner and President Jonathan has accepted that he lost and we want to thank him.”

    Anyaoku said by conceding, President Jonathan has set a worthy example to fellow Africa countries.

    Similarly, millions of Nigerians took to social media to appreciate the President for being a ‘honourable gentleman’.

    According to APC spokesman, Lai Mohammed, President Jonathan is a hero for conceding defeat.

    An ardent supporter of the President,  Ohimai Amaize commended the president for his action.

  • Celebrating Jonathan’s exit

    SIR: By last Monday – to be precise, it was obvious that the son of canoe-carver-born former university teacher have lost his re-election bid. Results of the presidential election humbled him. It seems to be the heaviest political fall from grace to grass. The relief of President Goodluck Ebele “Azikiwe” Jonathan’s exit from the nation’s top job would be profound in many ways. If he loses, it would mean that the nation’s participatory democracy has attained some appreciable level of liberal maturation. It will explain that the country’s democratic experiment has taken the will of the electorate into account. It will also give credence to the fact that the era of deploying dollars to buy people’s votes is over. It would again means that no criminally corrupt government, as Jonathan will ever force itself on the nation, indefinitely.

    However, there are no indications Jonathan wouldn’t be tempted to use the military to its ultimate destruction, given the thickheaded and irresponsible egoism of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, with their politics of cattle trading where national interest is utterly subordinated. This still cannot deters a people’s resolve that the highest and truest expression of human spirit lies in the volition to determine their existence. It could come by blood and iron.

    Another issue is the deceptive propaganda, which soiled whatever reputation President has mustered. The president expects Nigerians to watch the minimal dents his administration made on airports renovations, road rehabilitation in televised advertorials in a country where power stability is less than an hour per day after trillions of naira was looted in the name of power generation! He even swore to go on self exile if he failed to complete the Second Niger Bridge by 2015.

    It’s now the butt of joke on ‘Instant Media’ and elsewhere, where the president’s minders regularly ask those against him to go and hug transformer. The responses of those against the president now come with pictures of young boys and girls hugging transformer with the saying: “I been hugging this transformer in the last twenty hours without electricity”. That is how deep the abyss of national wreckage the nation has sunk.

    We are in this horrible state because from the beginning, Jonathan has confused himself with the role propaganda can play in modern days society. He seems to believe propaganda creates leaders! Such terrible assumption has robbed him of the earlier empathy, which was wrongly ascribed to him by Nigerians who were deceived by the most ordinary of his simple appearance, but coated in slyness, spinelessness, infinite shrewdness, serpentine slush and gross deception.

    Nigerians can now know where Jonathan is coming from and the composite ruin his administration visited on the people. Any gain saying it’s unknown to him that corruption is the greatest problem confronting the powerfully endowed nation and that frontally combating the hydra-headed monster is the CHANGE Nigerians need? How else can Nigerians celebrate themselves than Jonathan’s rustication? It will be a celebration of an end to his inept government.

    • Erasmus, A Public Affairs Analyst writes in from Lagos.
  • Ekiti election: Not a walkover for Jonathan

    Ekiti election: Not a walkover for Jonathan

    Last Saturday’s election in Ekiti State was a much closer contest between the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC), unlike the situation in June, last year  few  months during the gubernatorial election reports SEUN AKIOYE.

    Not a few Nigerians expected the Presidential and National Assembly Elections in Ekiti state to be violent even though there will be no gubernatorial elections there on April 11, 2015. This position was further reinforced when several studies and independent analysis posited the state as one of the flashpoints for violence.

    The stakes in Ekiti are high. The governor, Ayodele Fayose, only five months ago rode to power on the back of his acclaimed local populism and provincial credentials. In the election that brought him to Oke Ayoba Government House, he won by a landslide. Thus, he was expected to also help deliver the state to his political party the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in similar manner.

    •Jonathan
    •Jonathan

    Also, in the build up to the election, Governor Fayose has been most vociferous in his campaign for the re-election of President Goodluck Jonathan. While many would describe his method as “devilish” and unconventional, Fayose insisted he had no regrets for his unabashed support for the president.

    It was this scenario that set the mood for the Presidential election in Ekiti state. On Thursday, 26th March, 2015, Fayose in rounding off his campaign to the Ekiti people boasted on the Ekiti state radio that the election would be a landslide for the PDP. That sentiment was also shared by top members of the party.

    However, around the state, there were ominous sign that the election would not be a walk over for the ruling party.  The sign around the different local governments visited by The Nation revealed that the opposition All Progressive Congress (APC) would not be railroaded as suggested by the governor. Former governor of the state, Otunba Niyi Adebayo told The Nation in Iyin on the eve of the election that the party was more prepared than the ruling party in sensitization of the voters.

    He said: “We are more than prepared; we have done everything possible, we have campaigned, we have gone round the state, much more than the people we are contesting against, we have educated the voters, our level of preparedness is very high. We honestly believe that given a level playing field, we have no doubt that the APC should win all the elections here in Ekiti.”

    The aggressive campaign by the APC towards Saturday’s presidential election could serve several purposes but chief among that is to reconnect with the people and restore the confidence lost during the gubernatorial election.  That may also have been the reason why even though the party lost all the 16 local governments to the PDP, it was not with the landslide the ruling party expected, the APC came in a respectable second position in the elections.

    Election generally peaceful, despite fracas

    Despite the threat of violence, residents of the state came out early for accreditation in many of the local governments monitored by The Nation.  The general conduct of the election was also peaceful, but there was always the threat of violence and disruptions. Early in the morning, former governor Dr. Kayode Fayemi had set up a command post in his home in Isan Ekiti. Around 10: am, he received a report about a shooting in Ikere Ekiti by persons associated with the Deputy Governor. Dr. Olubunmi Olusola- Ereka.

    But Special Assistant to the governor on Public Communication and New Media, Mr. Lere Olayinka denied that the Deputy Governor was implicated in the shooting. But investigations conducted by The Nation at the trouble spot in Ikere-Ekiti revealed that the victim was taken from Ikere General Hospital to the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital in Ado Ekiti.

    A doctor who preferred anonymity said: “The man was brought to the hospital around 1: pm, he was shot in the back. We have treated him and he is in a stable condition,” he said. Apart from Ikere, there were pockets of violence in some wards and local governments especially in Gboyin where hoodlums disrupted voting in five polling units.

    In the state capital, there were no reports of violence or electoral malpractice and the same pattern was replicated in many of the local government. Former Governor Fayemi told The Nation that despite pockets of violence, the election should be smooth.

    But even though voting was concluded early in many of the polling stations, results did not come into the INEC collation center until Sunday morning. The Nation correspondent who spent the night at INEC headquarters reports that at the Registration Area Centers (RAC), results were being collated into the early morning.

    Journalists were not the only parties interested in getting the results early, members of Governor Fayose’s media team were also on the prowl in many of the RAC to collate results on Saturday night. One of the aides who spoke to The Nation said it was to prevent any fraudulent activities regarding the final results.

    Not a walk over

    •Buhari
    •Buhari

    When the results began to come in, many were surprised at the showing of the APC.  For instance, in Ifelodun Irepodun local government, the home of APC chieftain Niyi Adebayo and former Labour party gubernatorial candidate, Opeyemi Bamidele and incumbent governor, Fayose, the PDP defeated the APC by just 3,425 votes. This should be a surprise because of the strong presence of Gov. Fayose.

    Another surprising outcome is from Emure local government where the difference is 1,469 votes. Even more unanticipated is Ilejemeje local government where the PDP led by a mere 799 votes.  But the PDP had a field day in Ikere and Ado Ekiti where the PDP trounced the APC 14,091 to 7,990 and 25,411 to 14, 414 in Ikere and Ado Ekiti respectively. The Ikere case is hardly surprising since the deputy governor is said to be “on ground”. But some APC sympathizers claimed that the shooting in the area may have had an effect on the outcome.

    However, there were cases of electoral fraud in some wards as reported by the collating officers. For instance in Moba, hoodlums came to seven polling stations in Osan with guns and attacked the Electoral officers. The election was cancelled in seven units.

    In Oye local government, there was a case of over voting in unit 11, ward 11. The number of accredited voters was 299 but the number of recorded votes was 403. In Ikere, the collating officer declined to write a report on the violence claiming it happened before the election. “There was no report of any incident and the celebrated incident happened in ward 6 unit 2 before the election began,” he said.

    In Emure, ward 6, unit 6, there was a case of over voting, where 188 was accredited 191 votes recorded. Also there was attack by hoodlums who kicked the ballot boxes forcing the votes to be cancelled.

    Also in Gboyin, five polling units were cancelled in Aiyesogba when hoodlums attacked midway into the election. In Ekiti East, there was a case of over voting in two polling units in ward 6, with the number of accredited voters being 262 and votes recorded 269.

    There was however a moment of tension when the collating officer for Ijero local government, Francis Adebayo came late to the collating center claiming that he almost lost his life to some overzealous security officials. Adebayo came to INEC without the original white result sheet claiming the Electoral Officer in charge of Ijero had seized it.

    According to some of the witnesses, trouble began when Polling Unit officers began to protest over unpaid allowances causing commotion. Adebayo, who returned with the duplicate result sheet, said he barely escaped with his life when security officers refused to provide him security to return to Ado Ekiti.

    However, the returning officer for the PDP in Ijero, Retd General Joseph Ayeni disputed Adebayo’s claim. “There was no commotion in Ijero but a disagreement. Every security officer wanted a copy of the result, nobody even touched the collating officer,” he said.

    The returning officer of the APC and former chairman of the local government, Hon. Ojo Atibioke corroborated Ayeni’s position. “There was no fighting and it is unfortunate that the collating officer was saying he was almost gunned down. Trouble began when the security officers began to demand for duplicate copies of the report, but there was no fighting,” he said.

    However, the Resident Electoral Commission (REC) in Ekiti, Sam Olumekun gave a pass mark on the conduct of the election describing it as “successful and a wonderful exercise.” On the pockets of violence, he said they were not sufficient enough to affect the outcome of the election. He also said INEC is about to retrieve the white result sheet from the electoral officer.

  • COMMENTS

    For  Segun Gbadegesin

    Jonathan must handover peacefully and sharply if he is not voted. There are many non-violent options of pushing them into historical oblivion. From Onyilo  Onyilo, Abuja.

    According to your article, there is no one that is free in Nigeria. You people should allow Jonathan to continue. Go to Edo State and Rivers, everybody has political interest. Anonymous

    I read your article “The responsibility to choose.” Brilliant piece as usual I must say. I’m certain Jonathan will lose. Anonymous

    It’s quite interesting to know from you that “there is more than enough to go round” in the verbal onslaught between the PDP and APC, leaving aside the subjective judgement of who “cast the first stone”. But recall that remarks were considered too indecent to be hauled on Jonathan by APC before the “semi-literate jackpot” attack on Buhari credited to Wale Oladipo of PDP. Again, APC also helps immensely in “spoiling Jonathan the more” by imagining all sort of tricks he had designed to rig the election, even those never contemplated by him, thereby opening his eyes and mind towards that direction. Of course, it remains a mystery to many Nigerians as to how the president would aim at rigging the election and still spent much time and energy  consulting with Nigerians all over the country. He could have sat and designed his rigging strategies in his office, and waited for the election day for their execution. From Emmanuel Egwu.

    You have now been vindicated. There were massive failures of the card readers and shortages of ballot papers. The incident forms were not enough in some wards. Radio Nigeria reported that in Ibeju -Lekki which is a PDP strong hold, area boys were causing trouble. Jega has exposed himself. Anonymous

    God bless you, sir. Interminable GBOSA to you for your marvelous, outlandish and fantastic article. No tricks, antics and fable displays by Jonathan would earn him people-vote, though he is full of gimmicks and mimics. With God on our side, a new lease of life is around the corner. Did he think because he begged, solicited and dollarised the kings and many groups, he will scale through? He is deceiving himself; chasing shadow. I am sure he’ll be ‘choked’ after the presidential election. I pray God to grant you new wisdom, education and understanding. From Amidu Saheed, Ifo

    APC supporters are already posting results on facebook. They do not obey any laws. Anonymous

    Having Jonathan as President again is like putting fire on the roof, it might burn the house utterly. Who the citizenry needs now is who will bring peace into the country and not who will shrug his shoulder. Apart from that, he doesn’t deserve the saddle anymore because he would turn melody to malady; he must be jettisoned because he is too quarrelsome. From Olude Quadri, Keulere Ifo.

     

    For Olatunji Dare 

    Why is it that The Nation never sees anything good in Jonathan’s government. Would you say the same thing if Buhari did not deliver? Looking at things, Buhari has the upper hand. We are watching. Anonymous 

    Well-written. We are rather in a nation where majority are ill-informed and burdened with ethnic and religious sentiments. Otherwise, all of us will be in a single queue against Jonathan come Saturday. From Barrister Ngozi Ogbomor.

    Thank you for your article. As usual, it’s a masterpiece. A text message is in circulation intended to clone all Buhari supporters’ PVCs. I’m pretty sure you’ll get one soon. God bless and reward you abundantly. Anonymous

    You are a pride, with all sincerity, sir, to writing, language – not just English – and humanity. We love you and would ever be proud of you. From Barrister Lekan Oyerinde

    The only reason I feel Nigeria is still where it is today (at the dump) is due to sentiments. And I wonder, how could we be so educated and yet timid in the face of tribal sentiments. ‘So long as it hails from my mother’s kitchen, the insidious odour is good’. Anonymous

    Your article was concise and comprehensive. Kudos to you. God bless Nigeria. Anonymous

    Sir, a typical Nigerian leader does not care about history or posterity; it’s about the now. Anonymous

    Just wish to say well-done for your  articles I read in The  Nation. It gave me a lot of excitement. Please keep it up. Soonest, the PDP will face the reality of their misfortunes. May God bless Buhari as he climbs the ‘unseatable seat’ of  Jonathan, come May 29th. Insha Allah! God bless all Nigerians. From Fati, Kuje.

    God bless you for your article The Nation March 24, 2015: “The home stretch, finally” We need fearless journalists like you; God will always protect you from evil doers, amen. From Okosun a okosun

     

  • Jonathan’s concession speech

    Jonathan’s concession speech

    STATEMENT BY PRESIDENT GOODLUCK EBELE JONATHAN AFTER THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE RESULTS OF PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 2015

    Fellow Nigerians,

    I thank you all for turning out en-masse for the March 28 General Elections.

    I promised the country free and fair elections. I have kept my word. I have also expanded the space for Nigerians to participate in the democratic process. That is one legacy I will like to see endure.

    Although some people have expressed mixed feelings about the results announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), I urge those who may feel aggrieved to follow due process based on our constitution and our electoral laws, in seeking redress.

    As I have always affirmed, nobody’s ambition is worth the blood of any Nigerian. The unity, stability and progress of our dear country is more important than anything else.

    I congratulate all Nigerians for successfully going through the process of the March 28th General Elections with the commendable enthusiasm and commitment that was demonstrated nationwide.

    I also commend the Security Services for their role in ensuring that the elections were mostly peaceful and violence-free.

    To my colleagues in the PDP, I thank you for your support. Today, the PDP should be celebrating rather than mourning. We have established a legacy of democratic freedom, transparency, economic growth and free and fair elections.

    For the past 16 years, we have steered the country away from ethnic and regional politics. We created a Pan-Nigerian political party and brought home to our people the realities of economic development and social transformation.

    Through patriotism and diligence, we have built the biggest and most patriotic party in Nigerian history. We must stand together as a party and look to the future with renewed optimism.

    I thank all Nigerians once again for the great opportunity I was given to lead this country and assure you that I will continue to do my best at the helm of national affairs until the end of my tenure.

    I have conveyed my personal best wishes to General Muhammadu Buhari.

    May God Almighty continue to bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    I thank you all.

    Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, GCFR

    President,

    Federal Republic of Nigeria

    March 31, 2015

  • Abdulsalami commends Jonathan for conceding defeat

    Abdulsalami commends Jonathan for conceding defeat

    Jonathan accepts defeat

    Former Head of State, Abdulsalami Abubakar on Tuesday commended President Goodluck Jonathan (Peoples Democratic Party) for conceding defeat to the All Progressives Congress Presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari for winning Saturday’s election.

    Abdulsalami, who is the Head of the 2015 Elections Peace Committee, gave the commendation while speaking with State House correspondents after his committee met President Jonathan at the new Banquet Hall of the State House, Abuja.

    He said that the committee was in the Villa to ensure peace was maintained in the country and that he was happy that President Jonathan had already called Gen. Buhari before the committee arrived at the Villa.

    He said: “We were here to ensure peace is maintained at this moment we thank Nigerians and all international community who came to support during the elections.

    “The elections have been very peaceful despite the hitches here and there. At the end of the elections, at the counting that there are a lot of upheavals that have happened but thankfully they have been contained.

    “We were at the middle of a meeting with the international observers to try to see how we can still water the tension down, when gladly I called Gen. Buhari that we are going to see him, he told me that Mr. President has called him at about 5:15 p.m. and congratulated him and conceded defeat.

    “We were spell bound and the reason we have come here is to thank President Jonathan for this statesmanship. In the history of Nigeria I think this is the first time where a contestant has called his rival to congratulate him and through this point, President Jonathan maintained a point that the blood of Nigerians is not worth his presidency and by his action he has proved that.”

    “He has proven to be a man of his word‎ because during our interaction on this peace committee he has always maintained that he is going to accept the result of the elections whichever way it is done. And he has proved this.

    “And I think we need Nigerians, all of us to join hands in making sure we assist him in the peaceful handing over. And I will appeal to all politicians ‎those who are celebrating and those who are sorrowing to please give peace a chance to be moderate.”

    He went on: “In any contest there is always going to be a winner and President Jonathan has accepted that he lost and we want to thank him. On behalf of Nigerians I want to thank President Jonathan for being the statesman that he is, he has approved that he is a statesman and he has the love of this country in his heart. So Nigerians should please help him to ensure this is real.”

    He said that any Nigerian who is aggrieved has the electoral laws to exploit to seek re-address.

    “So if anybody has ‎any grievance he should apply through the law. I appeal again to our youth, to everybody to please give peace a chance and accept that the chief contestant himself has accepted. So nobody please go and raise any eyebrow and cause any destabilization of this country,”  he stated

    Members of the Peace Committee that met the President included former military Chief of General Staff, Naval Commodore Ebitu Ukiwe; Cardinal John Onaiyekan; Primate of the Anglican Church (Nigerian Communion), Nicholas Okoh; former president of the Nigeria Bar Association, Priscilia Kuye; the President’s Special Adviser on Inter-party Affairs, Ben Obi; and ‎prominent industrialist, Aliko Dangote.

  • Buhari floors Jonathan, Sambo in Kaduna

    1. Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has floored incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan in Vice President Mohammed Namadi Sambo’s home state, Kaduna, with 1.127,760 votes to 484,085 votes.

    The opposition APC won in 14 of the 23 local governments, leaving the ruling party with nine councils.

    Comrade Shehu Sani of the APC won the Kaduna Central Senatorial District seat, defeating Senator Mohammed Mukhtar Aruwa of the PDP with 468,964 votes to 168, 241 votes.

    APC’s Suleiman Hunkuyi defeated the incumbent senator and former Kaduna State Governor, Ahmed Makarfi, to clinch the Kaduna North Senatorial Zone ticket with 447,917 votes to 136,197 votes.

    However, Danjuma Laah of the PDP defeated APC’s Ishaku Shekarau to emerge the winner of the Kaduna South senatorial seat with 259,239 votes to 119,022 votes.