Powered By Blogger

Tuesday 14 April 2015

In Nigeria III; President a Liar and a Betrayed Nation



By; Abdul-Rahman Baban Saibo

Prologue (Blasphemy);

“My husband is a messiah,” -first lady Patience Jonathan. “People do not understand the burdens this President is bearing. He’s like Jesus Christ. He’s bearing the burden of everybody.”- Doyin Okupe, Senior Special assistant to President Goodluck Jonathan. This is the same man, must I remind, whom claimed himself  a “Bastard” if the then newly born opposition Party APC (now governing party) do not disintegrate within a year “If they don’t crumble and disappear before 2014, don’t call me Okupe... call me Bastard”. Why he chose to be a bastard if that happens? Only people of his caliber could tell.

During that same program Mr. Doyin Okupe (Bastard) also asserted that, “I can’t see GEJ losing this election. It’s not possible.” I wonder what he would say had gone wrong today! Or may be “Lord” GEJ had sacrificed his ambition for the betterment of Nigerians just the way “Jesus Christ” did, Who knows?!

Also, a lawmaker from Rivers state Mr. Bipi Evans claims that Mrs. Patience Jonathan Nigeria’s first lady is his Jesus Christ. One must come to curiously ask, how on earth could these people be compared with this holy personality? Considering the fact that this same peoples’ acclaimed faiths regards him to be God, how then could one confidently compare him with these ill beings? Perhaps, those who see the first family as “Lords” hath faith only in power and wealth, as of result, the only thing they worship is it.

But hence, I’d say it has come to its ends, for those whom obeys not but ‘Power’ and ‘Money’ will so rot in jail as the vanquisher of ill acts and corrupt deeds have thus unveiled.
 
“Nigeria we hail thee, Albeit thy children fail thee, in mercy God’ll bail thee, Before thou thus derail thee.”- Hannatu Musawa      

President a Liar;

President Goodluck Jonathan’s fund of lies to Nigerians and to the world is rather becoming an act of disrespect to the people, as he continuous to undermine not alone his integrity and dignity, but also that of the country’s as well. Though as it appears both the Nigerians and the international communities, do apprehend the man’s endless shameless-shameful acts. But the question remains, ‘are Nigerians doing the ‘much’ in need to reintegrate their national integrity in proving they have a fragment of it left?’

“But if I’m voted into power within the next four years the issue of power will become a thing of the past. Four years is enough for anyone in power to make significant improvement and if I can’t improve on power within this period, it then means I cannot do anything even if I am there for the next four years.”- President Goodluck said on February 1st 2011 in Addis-Ababa. How cunning, and yet the man’s despair to return to power took him the entire nine yards just to ensure all democratic processions are neglected and curbed to becoming absolutely irrelevances. Today the PDP as a ruling party grew to neglect entirely what are known to be democratic orders. The coming together of the sitting Governors of the ruling party to agree on a consensus that the presidency’s primary elections should be annulled and the incumbent is to be granted an automatic ticket proves it all. The party’s executives’ (chairmen) processes to office are rather such of which democracy entirely tabooed.

“Up till two months ago Mr. President you told me that you have not told anybody that you will contest in 2015. I quickly pointed out to you that the signs and the measures on the ground do not tally with your statement… and only a fool would believe that statement you made to me judging by what is going on.” Former president Olusegun wrote in his letter to President Goodluck Jonathan. But allow me to say Mr. Former President, but President Goodluck Jonathan honestly thinks of you and Nigerians as fools.

“Four years is more than enough to make all invaluable changes to a nation,” were the words of President Goodluck during his 2011 campaigns. O my! But allow me to say those are the words of a man whom had the privilege to govern the country for more than five consecutive years with no single diminutive achievement to offer his people. Or perhaps, Nigerians have heard of enough projects only Mr. President and his political dogs know about, Of course, for if they were real? Nigeria would be regarded amongst 1st world nations.

I recall the Presidents’ interview with Christian Amanpour in 2013, the President did actually humiliated himself and Nigerians on global television when he was asked what he had to say about power (electricity) stabilizing in Nigeria for when he assumed office the first time he had her assured that power is Nigeria’s number one problem and he would do all in his strength to curb it. But three years after, in a second interview, President Jonathan had this to say to Amanpour, “I would have loved that you asked an ordinary Nigerian in the streets of Lagos and Abuja or another other city this question about power. That is one area that Nigerians are quite pleased with government, that our commitment to improve power is working. That is one area that even civil society members agree that government has kept faith with its promises.” “What should I tell the people who keep contacting us and saying they hope they have electricity just to watch this interview on their televisions…? Amanpour asked in response to the presidents’ submission, but the president assumed the stands of an “ordinary Nigerian” (himself) instead, and said, “We have not gotten to where we should be. The power infrastructure is one investment that must complete the chain before the bulb can light”. I have to be honest about this, I was stupidly abashed.

A week later the CNN correspondents walked the streets of Lagos and Abuja just to confirm from “ordinary Nigerians” as the president wished. Unfortunately all of those interviewed had not but to attest that the president indeed lied, and perhaps there’s no “area that Nigerians are quite pleased with the government.”

Regrettably, that degrading talk with Nigeria’s leader furthered to a point of self-contradiction. Christiane determined to continue with the president’s assessment of the Boko Haram insurgency, “Others believe Boko Haram is about resisting misrule and corruption.” But of course as a Nigerian leader, the person in question must retort contra to such attack even if the allegation comes true, “No! No! No! Boko Haram is not as a result of misrule. Sometimes people feel it’s as a result of poverty, definitely not. We should not play politics with Boko Haram.”

Wasn’t it during the June 5th 2014 National Executive Council’s meeting of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) that president Goodluck whole heartedly blamed the opposition party (APC) Governors for Boko Haram’s dilating crisis? “There is no insurgency in PDP states because the Governors are performing.” That quite sounded to me like politics being played with Boko Haram by the president. And what was that again the president mentioned when Christiane asked “do you admit that there is a problem in the security dealing with it?” of course the president retorted “that is not correct. That is not correct. I have said it severally; those are insinuations by some interest groups.” “One of those interest groups is the state department of the United States.” Amanpour replied the president. “No! No! No!” (Again!?) “People get wrong information to the state department of United States.” Need I do remind of President Jonathan’s #AmericaWillKnow media chat? I still wonder as to what changed his mind.

A year now, since the Chibok girls were abducted by Boko Haram. I recall vividly when the President claimed to know the whereabouts of the missing girls that’s some 10 months back, but then on another submission, of course surprisingly, his own words were, “all the information that was volunteered to us (about their location we’ve used) and we have searched the places… and we have scanned but we have nothing.” Permit me to admit, this is my country’s leader.

But if I could meet the president, I’d sure would ask him, ‘and Mr. president, why should Nigerians trust in your coming back to office when your own words were “it then means I cannot do anything even if I am there for the next four years.” And you told even your predecessor that you do not intend to?’ does it then mean that the last four years you spent in office did not suffice you to make “significant improvements” and you still can’t and won’t “improve on power within the coming period”? Earnestly, what exactly do you intend to improve on? Or perhaps, “four years is too short a time for someone to make an impact,” as yourself accorded.

“I am concerned about your legacy and your climb down which you alone can best be the manager of, whenever you so decide… You may wish to pursue a more credible and more honorable path.”- Former President Olusegun Obasanjo to President Goodluck Jonathan.

A Betrayed Nation;

During his 2011 campaign, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan made some unscrupulous promises regarding the problems the country was facing. Mr. Goodluck’s toughest challenge being the serious insecurity bothering the nation, he assured Nigerians that curbing Boko Haram would be his 1st project. But lest one reminds that at the end, all through his stay in office had never for once visited the states where the insurgency was badly corroding until a few weeks to the country’s national elections. The President’s excuse as he claimed during his 3rd media chat in 2013 was because the Borno State airport was not functional at the moment he planned to visit, “And we did not want to land somewhere and fly into Maiduguri with a helicopter for obvious reasons.” “Obvious reasons” indeed, for that’s a President whom promised to secure his people no matter what it takes.

During that chat the President was asked why he had to travel to Brazil when Nigeria was in a serious delicate insecurity situation. The President’s responded, “The day the international community gets to know that the president of Nigeria couldn’t travel because of Boko Haram, then we are finished,” (finished!?) I think the president is confusing leadership with acting (my take).

Just a day to his declaration ‘ceremony’, President Goodluck Jonathan’s chief of army staff Mr. Alex Badeh announced that a ceasefire accord had been reached between the Nigerian Government and the Boko Haram terrorists. To further strengthen the hopes of the people, he announced even that the terrorists agreed to release the over 200 Chibok schoolgirls in exchange with their captured fellows. To Nigerians greatest dismay, it’s just a week to the long awaited Presidential elections (of which a majority of the populace regards as “Change”) but yet, there’s still no news of the whereabouts of the missing girls.

On the 20th of this month, the BBC had an interview with the President, talking on the hopes to finding the missing schoolgirls, the BBC correspondent asked the president if he’d know where the missing girls are, regarding that the military saying that they have “no clues at all as to where they (Chibok schoolgirls) are.” The President response to that assertion was (am sorry to say) rather stupid, “if that’s what the military tells you then of course you have to take it.” He said, “But we ask that question every day, we are looking up too, we have not seen dead girls, that is a good news. So I believe they are still alive, I believe we’ll get them.” “Many people are questioning how on earth has it been that during this last just few weeks,” the interviewer went on, “less than six weeks, the whole picture has changed in the North-East, this towns and villages have been taken back, and they’re wondering why that couldn’t have happened months or years ago, why it’s happened right now?” the President replied, “Yes I agree that in the beginning of Boko Haram, we never expected that they will build up that kind of capacity, we underrated the external influence.” I think at that juncture, President Jonathan himself agrees that we are finished, and he in a sense did finish us.

“We shouldn’t have waited for a practically ‘non-existing’ government to give us the go ahead before mounting a humanitarian effort to rescue those girls.”- Senator John McCain of the Republican party of USA said in an interview. How I wish they didn’t?
“I would have loved that the Nigerians in Diaspora vote this year but to be frank with you that is going to be difficult now. Presently, the law does not allow the voting outside Nigeria and so this year Nigerians in Diaspora will not vote but I will work towards it by 2015 ‘even though I will not be running for election.”- President Goodluck Jonathan said in 2011. But Mr. President, if you honestly didn’t want to contest in this election, then why did you strongly and repeatedly emphasized on not contesting? O! Of course, “four years is too short a time for someone to make an impact.” Indeed.

In my remorseful opinion, a country can only be at its breaking point when its leaders whom hath not the tiniest fragment of shame, boldly face its people and ask them to vote for them ‘again’ when the only legacies they are about to leave them are but endless lies and seemingly unending disasters of which they (the leaders) deliberately allowed to hatch (if not incubated).

“Mr. President, there’s an election coming, can you win it?” the BBC correspondent asked his final question. I honestly adored the earnest with which the President replied that question. “I will surely win it.” Although the challenges faced by Mr. President were solemnly raveling, he still assumed he’d emerged the winner after all.

“If I go Nigerians will miss me.”- President Goodluck said in one of his media chats. Truth is many Nigerians (my-self included) will really miss this man and his company of lies and deceit.

“In a sick country, every attempt to cure it is an affront to those who feed on its sickness,”- Bernard Malamud

Epilogue (Defeat);

At 5:15pm the evening of Nigeria’s presidential elections, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan called General Muhammadu Buhari to congratulate him on his victory in the ongoing elections of which the final result was yet to be officially announced. That honorable gesture made by President Goodluck took almost the entire world aback. “An incumbent African President concedes defeat at an early hour, is this the first time this is happening?” the world seem to have never witnessed such!

Although as I said, that was an “honorable gesture”, could it have qualified as heroic? Many Nigerians regarded that doing as heroic, but I (for one) see it as an “ethic of leadership”. But profoundly, I see it more as a self vindication from the eyes of the international community, of whose eyes were interestingly glued to the country’s political uproar and a democratic transgression.

Prior to the presidential elections, I recall, two peace agreements were gladly signed by the presidential contestants of the two major parties PDP and APC, both agreements were signed in front of both domestic and international witnesses. Yet again, US secretary of states, John Kerry had visited earlier the country and had a one-on-one discussion with both candidates (separately).

Let the truth be told here, if President Goodluck Jonathan hadn’t have conceded defeat the result would have still been announced as him being the defeated and still the country would still have remained in peace. Why then would that little “honorable gesture” be regarded as “Heroic”?

In the arts of leadership (governance) power and politics are always the game tools, wherein the people are the players. But nature and time will always be the judges as well as the decision makers in their own respective perspectives.

No comments:

Post a Comment