Top politicians and well-meaning Nigerians have since
Saturday been urging Nigerians for calm as reactions to the postponement
of the country’s elections persist.
But right
from when the postponement was announced by the Independent National
Electoral Commission, INEC, many of them have been using the media to
calm frayed nerves.
Presidential candidate of the All
Progressives Congress, APC, Muhammadu Buhari, on Sunday evening urged
his supporters to be patient and support INEC even in the face of the
challenges.
“I wish to appeal for utmost restraint and
calm by all Nigerians, especially the teeming supporters of our great
party, the All Progressives Congress, APC,” he said.
He maintained that Nigeria is more important that whatever personal or political ambitions some people may have.
Buhari,
while reacting to the shift in the date of the general elections in the
country, admonished the people, especially politicians, to play their
parts to make it greater than it currently is.
“Nigeria is definitely greater than any of us, and much more important than our individual ambitions.
“Before us there was Nigeria, and long after we are gone there will still be Nigeria.
“Let
us continue to do our part to make it the great country that it should
be. We must rescue our dear country. God being on our side, we shall
salvage Nigeria together,” he said.
Deputy Director
General of the APC Presidential Campaign, Senator Olorunnibe Mamora,
also asked Nigerians to maintain their cool even though the postponement
gives out Nigeria as an unserious country.
“We have accepted to move on and I am saying that I am not convinced that the decision was right.
“We
will never have 100 per cent collection of Permanent Voters Card. INEC
should do their best to ensure that a larger number of the electorates
collect their PVCs and they should train their staff well.
“We hope that at the end of the day, the reasons given should have been overcome,” he said on a television programme on Monday.
James
Faleke, a member of the House of Representatives and head of the Buhari
Campaign Organisation in Lagos State, appealed that “all agents of
change must, however, remain steadfast and calm. They should avoid
falling into the trap.”
Other Nigerians who have
appealed for calm include former Governor Rasheed Ladoja of the Accord
Party, who maintained that his party was not happy with the postponement
as well as the Lagos State House of Assembly’s Committee Chairman on
Local Government Administration and Chieftaincy Affairs, Moshood Oshun,
who urged Nigerians to see the postponement as a further resolve to
change the situation of Nigeria using their voters’ cards.
No comments:
Post a Comment