July 24

Mixed reactions greet govs’ visits to ex-leaders
Mixed reactions have continued to trail
the visits of some Northern states’ governors to three former Nigerian
leaders – Generals Olusegun Obasanjo, Abdusalami Abubakar and Ibrahim
Babangida.
Four of the governors – Murtala Nyako
(Adamawa); Sule Lamido(Jigawa); Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto); and Rabiu
Kwakwanso (Kano) – had last Saturday visited Obasanjo in Abeokuta where
they discussed issues that have to do with the polity, especially the
2015 general elections.
On Monday, Wamakko, Lamido, Kwakwanso
and Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu headed for Minna, where they
reportedly discussed similar issues, including the political crisis in
Rivers State with Abubakar and Babangida.
At the meeting which was to have also
been attended by Nyako, the governors appealed to Abubakar and Babangida
to ask President Goodluck Jonathan to urgently bring the Rivers State
crisis to an end.
While the main opposition political
parties – the Action Congress of Nigeria and the Congress for
Progressive Change – described the visits as a welcome development,
the Coalition of Northern Politicians, Academics, Professionals and
Businessmen and the Rivers State chapter of the Peoples Democratic
Party, disagreed.
In a telephone interview with one of
our correspondents, the National Publicity Secretary of the ACN,
Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said, “I think the four or five governors made
their case. They are worried and concerned about the growing climate of
political intolerance and impunity and that these have consequences not
only for democracy but for the 2015 elections.
“They are concerned that the current
attitude and frame of mind of the President regarding some governors
even those considered as dissidents is worrisome to them.
“They are saying that at the rate things are going there might be no election in 2015.
“This is aligning with our own position
about four months ago that we are concerned about certain actions of
the government. Then we cried out about the despotic nature of the
President but we were taken on by the President’s spokesperson that it
was not despotism.
“This is what these governors are seeing
now and what they are saying by their visit; in calling on all of these
former Heads of State and elder statesmen is to appeal to the President
to allow for democracy and a peaceful election in 2015.”
Mohammed’s counterpart in the CPC,
Rotimi Fashakin, argued that some of the issues raised by the
governors were capable of derailing the nation’s democracy if not
urgently addressed.
He said, “There is nothing wrong with people going round to troubleshoot and bring about resolution of crises.
“You will find out that in situations like this, you must be able to explore all avenues.
“The First Lady has confessed that as
far back as four years ago, she bore a grudge against the Rivers State
governor and it was because of this that we are witnessing what we are
seeing now.
“Some of these issues are capable of
derailing this democracy; it is understandable why they will continue
to explore avenues for peace.
“They are going round to see people they
feel can have some influence on the President and his wife to speak up
now so that we can have a stable polity.”
Their arguements were supported by the
Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly, Mr. Otelemaba Amachree,
who said the visits were capable of restoring peace to the PDP and
ending the crisis in the state.
Amachree, who spoke through his Media
Assistant, Mr. Jim Okpiki, argued that Obasanjo, Abubakar and
Babangida were still relevant to the Nigerian political clime.
He said, “The truth is that we cannot
remove Babangida and Obasanjo in today’s politics. Apart from that,
Babangida and Abubakar are very influential people that can make things
happen.”
However, the convener of the CNPAPB, Dr.
Junaid Mohammed, believes that the visits were not to salvage the
country but the PDP.
Mohammed said that if the governors’
actions were to save the country, they should have also visited a former
President, Shehu Shagari, and another ex-Head of State, Gen. Yakubu
Gowon.
He said, “As far as I can remember,
Shagari was a President of this country and he is alive and well.
General Gowon, like the others, is a former Head of State, who did
this country proud.
“These men were not visited and this
goes to prove that these visits have nothing to do with salvaging the
country. Indeed, the goal is to salvage the PDP as a party and
they have more to do with public relations.
“None of these men that they visited
is in a position to salvage the nation. If the nation is to be salvaged,
it will not be Babangida or any of these people; it will be salvaged
by forces beyond these individuals. As a public relations exercise, I
don’t mind the governors going to visit former Heads of State but I
mind the way it was done because Obasanjo, Babangida, Abdulsalami
Abubakar and Gen. (Theophilus) Danjuma, who is also being considered
for a similar visit , have only one thing in common: They are
stinkingly rich.”
To the Rivers State chapter of the
PDP, the governors are desperadoes looking for exit plans as their
tenure is drawing to an end.
The party, in a statement by the
Special Adviser on Media to its Chairman, Mr. Jerry Needam, argued that
the visits were not borne out of genuine interest to resolve the
lingering political crisis in Rivers State, but to fuel it.
It wondered why the governors who
are now “patriots” of democracy could not remove the logs in their eyes
before removing the speck in other people’s eyes.
“How can any serious minded governor
not be worried that the average Northerner today lives in grave fear of
insecurity and poverty and yet these busybody governors are wasting tax-
payers’ money, flying on chartered executive jets to stoke trouble in
Rivers State,” the party said.
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