Saturday, 21 February 2015
Still on OBJvsGEJ! Does loyality pay?
GEJ, THE MOST HUMBLE PRESIDENT...
OBJ REMAINS MY GODFATHER - GEJ!
•‘I Didn’t Sign Single Term Pact With Anyone’
President Goodluck Jonathan has declared that he is not
ready to join issues with former President Olusegun
Obasanjo over the latter’s decision to tear his Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) membership card, on Monday.
Jonathan, who granted an interview to a team of Tribune
editors, in Lagos, on Thursday, said that senior citizens
must always remember the need to keep Nigeria united
even when they have cause to disagree politically.
The president used the occasion of his first interview with
a Nigerian media outfit to clear the air on a number of
issues, including security, the sanctity of the March 28 and
April 11 election dates, expected return of the abducted
Chibok schoolgirls and fight against corruption.
He said he was confident of winning the rescheduled
elections as none of the other candidates had any plan for
the country that could rival his.
President Jonathan stated that Obasanjo remained his
father, adding that disagreement should be expected
between political children and their father.
When asked to comment on his quarrel with the former
president and tell Nigerians exactly what was responsible
for the criticisms he (Obasanjo) had launched against him
in recent times, Jonathan said: “Obasanjo is a father to
me.”
The president said: “First and foremost, Obasanjo is a
father to me. By divine providence and the grace of God, I
am the President of Nigeria today. It is not by my strength.
But God uses human beings to actualise His own blessings
on human beings. And He used so many Nigerians,
including former President Obasanjo, to play one role or
the other for me.
“I became the deputy governor of a state, became the
governor, the vice president and president. I have no
issues with him, and I really don’t want to join issues with
President Obasanjo. I think it is not necessary.”
He, however, cautioned those he called senior citizens to
always be mindful of the unity and security of the country
whenever they have cause to disagree.
“But I will use this opportunity, because you asked, to just
plead with my father that he is a leader, a former president
of the country. He has led the country more than anybody
— eight years of democratic governance and almost four
years of military governance. No other person has that
kind of record.
“The stability of this country is critical in terms of the
economy of this country. Rating agencies downgrade
countries that are going into elections because the feeling
is that there would be crisis. When you paint the colour of
instability for your own nation, you are doing so much
injustice to the country because it affects the economy of
the country, not just affecting the country in terms of
security and social issues alone. It affects the economy
directly. So, I plead with very senior citizens that Nigeria is
dear to us; we don’t have any other country than Nigeria.
“So, actions and inactions, or utterances, should be
guarded so that we don’t expose our country to the
international community as if it is a country in danger, a
country that is about to collapse. You are frightening
investors, especially those who invest hot cash, to pull out
their money from the country and that would affect the
stock market and it would affect the economy.
“For one reason or the other, Obasanjo may disagree with
me as his first political son. You can even disagree with
your own biological children, as a human being, not to talk
of disagreeing with your political children. So, he can agree
or disagree with me, but the utterances have to be
managed in a way that it does not affect the economy and
security of this country.”
The president also clarified his stance on the alleged single
term pact which he has been accused of breaching by
some aggrieved PDP leaders. He said he never signed any
single term pact with anybody.
He stated that his comments in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia,
where he met with some Nigerians after his election as
president in 2011, were taken out of context to create the
impression that he opted for a single tenure.
According to him, he advocated a single term of seven
years for executive positions and added a caveat that if the
nation agreed to that option, he would not seek re-
election, as a sacrifice.
He said that he came to the conclusion of the necessity of
a single tenure of office for presidents, having checked the
enormity of resources the country commits to
electioneering every four years.
He added that the nation also goes through lots of security
stress and tension during elections, which could be
avoided if the single term option is adopted.
The president stated that it would have been immoral for
him to spend 12 years on the seat whereas the
constitution would only have preferred seven years.
He said that his critics took out a substantial part of his
comments in Addis Ababa to colour his position.
“I added something that people are misquoting. I said that
I had won the election then, I used one year to complete
(late President) Yar’Adua’s tenure and I had won election
for four years. If Nigerians agreed to a single term of seven
years, it would not be proper for me to contest. That
would mean if I win, I would serve as president for 12
years. I said that people would question that ‘why do you
want to serve 12 years and incoming presidents would
serve seven years?’ Morally, I cannot defend that.
“So, if the country agrees to a single term of seven years,
then I will not contest. I would rather lose so that they
would know it’s because of my sacrifice because it is
something I believe in. I also believe that the interest of the
country is more important to me than my individual
interest and I said five years was okay, and that even if I
stayed here for 100 years, if I won’t work, I won’t work,” he
said.
On how he felt watching Obasanjo destroy his PDP
membership card on the television, Jonathan said the
incident didn’t have effect on him because the attacks had
been coming serially and had become commonplace.
The president, who also spoke on the efforts of his
administration to tackle corruption and insecurity, said
that corruption could not be fought by merely clamping
people to prison.
He denied marginalising the South West, insisting that
some persons who did not want the PDP to blossom in the
geopolitical zone did their best to block the party’s plan to
ensure the emergence of the Speaker of the House of
Representatives from the zone.
He stated that his government was systematically refusing
making it difficult for anyone to pilfer government’s
money through the use of technology, while also ensuring
the revival of the railways, building of schools and
development of road infrastructure.
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