IN clear terms, President Goodluck Jonathan, yesterday, previewed
2015 politically and economically and returned a grim verdict: It may be
a turbulent year and there is need for Nigerians to pray.
Speaking at the Christ Apostolic Church, Area I, Durumi, Abuja where he
joined other worshippers for the last Sunday service of the year,
President Jonathan specifically enjoined religious leaders to pray to
God to guide him and other politicians in the country aright so that
they will not set the country ablaze through their utterances.
On
the drop in the price of crude oil, Nigeria’s main foreign revenue
earner, Jonathan admitted that the trend will “affect us in one way or
the other” but promised that “the economic team is working very hard to
stabilise it and we believe that although there may be temporary
inconveniences, it will definitely not bring the economy down.”
The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, presidential candidate reiterated
that the ambition of anybody in the country was not worth the blood of
any Nigerian.
The president spoke on a day Governor Sule Lamido
of Jigawa State urged him and Major-General Muhammadu Buhari (retd), the
All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential standard bearer, to sign a
peace accord for the forthcoming general elections.
A tempting year
According to the president, for every office in the country, there are a
thousand and one Nigerians who are qualified to occupy such office, so
no politician should think that he is the only qualified person for the
office.
His words: “Next year is a tempting year for us. Election
year in Third World countries is always a turbulent year with all kinds
of predictions. I, however, believe that God who brought us to this
level will see us through.
“All that I will request of you is to
continue to pray for us politicians, myself and other politicians from
all political parties, for God to guide us in our utterances and what we
do so that we will not sacrifice the lives of Nigerians because of our
ambitions.
“Nobody’s ambition is worth the blood of any Nigerian.
Pray to God to give us that wisdom and mind to make sure we conduct
ourselves in a way that will not set the country ablaze because of our
personal ambitions.
“There are so many good Nigerians that can
hold the offices we are occupying or aspiring to occupy, it is by
privilege of God that we are here in positions to ask for the mandates
of Nigerians.
“None of us should begin to think that he is the
best person to be anywhere from state houses of assembly to the
Presidency. There are a thousand and one Nigerians that are super
qualified more than those people who are even aspiring to occupy
offices.
“Pray for us that God should give us the wisdom to
conduct ourselves in a manner that at the end of the day, this country
will triumph.”
Essence of leadership
Emphasising that the
essence of leadership is to serve the country and its people, Jonathan
said any person seeking to lead would not encourage the killing of
people he seeks to lead or the destruction of their property.
He
said: “The development of Nigeria is what all of us want. If every
aspirant has the mind to develop the people, then you do not need to
kill or maim people to get there. You do not need to kill the people you
want to develop in order to get to the office you want except if you
are aspiring for that office for a different reason.
“If the idea
is to help the people, grow the economy and make the people happy, you
won’t want to kill, you won’t want to maim or burn down houses, vehicles
and property.”
Nigeria’s challenges
Acknowledging that
the country is under going a lot of challenges, the president hoped that
the country would overcome the challenges.
“We are facing a lot
of challenges now as a nation. The challenges did not start today but
somehow, instead of abating, the problems started increasing for one
reason or the other. But I am convinced that it would have been worse
than this but for your prayers. With the prayers you continue to offer
to God, God will see us through,” he said.
Jonathan also
acknowledged that Nigeria, as a nation, had not reached where it ought
to be, saying his administration had put in place policy measures that
will begin to bear fruits in the next four or five years and change the
face of the country.
He said: “Those who are taking pains to look
at what we are doing will agree with us that if we progress as a nation
steadily in this manner, in the next four or five years, this country
will be a better place.
“Only a few days back, the Vice President
was in Port Harcourt to flag off the Eastern railway. The Western one
moving from Lagos to Kano has been running. We will start using the
modern one from Kaduna to Abuja by the first quarter of next year and
the one from Port Harcourt.
“We relied on agriculture before the
oil boom or doom and all that died. We are reviving it and the whole
world has appreciated that we are moving forward in agriculture. When
they start something, people do not see the benefits immediately. We
know that as a nation, we have a lot of challenges in terms of getting
jobs for our young graduates and we have set up a lot of programmes that
can create job opportunities for our young men. The result may not be
obvious immediately but God willing, job opportunities will continue to
increase and many more young people will be engaged.”
We’ll work hard to make polls violence-free — APC
However, the APC has assured Nigerians and the international community
that it will do all in its power to make sure that the 2015 general
elections are violence-free, saying the rising apprehension about the
polls among the populace is inimical to the conduct of a successful
election.
In a statement issued in Lagos, yesterday, by its
National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said its
efforts should be complemented by the PDP-led Federal Government, which
has a propensity for using the security agencies to harass and
intimidate the opposition and ordinary citizens.
It also said the
Federal Government should take necessary measures to ensure that the
elections are free, fair and credible, since rigging and other acts of
electoral malfeasance constitute the immediate trigger for anger and
violence during and after elections.
It said: ”We have heard from
Nigerians who are so afraid about possible violence during the
forthcoming elections that they are even willing to relocate to other
countries until after the elections. But, as the biggest opposition
party in Nigeria and a major stakeholder in our nation’s democracy, we
are assuring, on our part, that there will be no violence.
”Though our party has no history of violence, we have commenced a
nationwide effort to sensitise our members and supporters to the need to
eschew rancour and embrace non-violent methods, even in the face of the
kind of provocations to which we were subjected during the Ekiti and
Osun governorship elections, when our members were needlessly harassed,
arrested and detained by partisan security agencies acting under orders
from the Federal Government.
”If the Federal Government allows a
level playing field for all contestants, if the security agencies stop
acting as the armed wing of the ruling PDP, if the electoral umpire will
carry out its duties without fear, favour or bias and if citizens are
allowed to exercise their franchise unmolested, the stage will be set
for a non-violent, free, fair and credible polls. In other words, the
government has a major role to play in making the forthcoming polls
peaceful.
”On our part, in addition to other efforts aimed at
ensuring a peaceful election, we pledge to accept the result of an
election that is not only free, fair, credible and transparent, but one
that is also seen to be so. We hope other parties will make a similar
pledge.”
The party said it demonstrated, during its recent
rancour-free and festive national convention in Lagos, that elections
should be a celebration of democracy, rather than a moment of fear,
violence and threat to lives.
It said far from mere rhetoric, it
had taken practical steps, as far back as May 2014, to work with the PDP
to ensure violence-free polls in 2015.
APC said: ”Following up on a
meeting of representatives of both parties in Washington, DC, US, April
7-8 2014 under the auspices of the CSIS Nigeria Election Forum, at
which it was agreed that a joint meeting of both parties be convened to
discuss and agree on the crucial issue of a Code of Conduct for the
campaigns and the elections, we wrote a letter to the PDP suggesting a
bipartisan meeting to address the issue.
”The PDP agreed to the
proposal and suggested that it should be expanded to include the
leadership of other political parties in the country. However, problem
with logistics meant that the meeting did not hold.
”Even with
the little time left for the election to hold, we strongly believe that a
meeting of the leadership of the two political parties, the APC and the
PDP, will send a powerful message to our compatriots and indeed the
international community and douse the tension that is building up ahead
of the election.”
Jonathan, Buhari should sign peace accord — Lamido
In like manner, Governor Lamido advised Jonathan and Buhari to sign a peace pact on 2015 election.
The governor made the clarion appeal in Dutse, weekend, while formally
launching campaigns for all PDP aspirants of the state at Aminu Kano
Triangle.
Stressing that Nigerians are over-stretched and should
not be victims of political violence again, Lamido said the two
candidates should sign that in case anyone of them lost 2015 general
election, his followers will not throw the country into anarchy and
should anyone fail to keep the pact, he will be liable on conviction.
His words: “Nigeria and Nigerians are over-stretched and tired of
political crisis, they are saying they can no longer tolerate any
political unrest because of the interest of two persons. I want General
Buhari (retd) and President Jonathan to commit themselves in writing in
case there is crisis in any part of the country after the presidential
elections.”
Lamido said the 2007 post-election crises which claimed many lives and property should serve as a lesson.
On Clark, Dokubo Asari
The governor further expressed concern over unguarded and inciting
utterances from people like elder statesman, Chief Edwin Clark and
Alhaji Mujahideen Dokubo Asari, saying their utterances were threatening
the corporate existence of Nigeria and the peace and security of the
nation.
“On many occasions, when Clark or Dokubo talked, they
threatened that if President Jonathan did not win 2015 presidential
election, Nigeria will break, and they always regard Northerners as
parasites.
“Let me warn that nobody will intimidate us no matter
the position he is holding or his influence in the society. Our people
have been killed, our economy has been destroyed, we have been pushed to
the wall. Whoever touches us again, we shall march and dare him, to
protect our interest and our region.”
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
NEW HOME, CAR OWNERS EMERGE AS COWLSO ENDS THREE DAY WOMEN'S CONFERENCE.
As the 23rd edition of the National Women's Conference organized by the Committee of Wives of Lagos State Officials (COWLSO), ends today...

-
Against the background of its commitment to increasing basic knowledge that will correct wrong perceptions about beer, Nigerian Breweries P...
-
Nigeria’s state-run oil firm said the West African nation is on the brink of unearthing major oil reserves in the Lake Chad area, after man...
-
Participants at the maiden edition of the Fuji Roundtable , powered by Goldberg Lager Beer, from the stable of Nigerian Breweries Plc, hav...
No comments:
Post a Comment