Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • 2023: Emirs lobby Jonathan amid zoning controversy

    2023: Emirs lobby Jonathan amid zoning controversy

    Some northern traditional rulers have reportedly begun lobbying former President Goodluck Jonathan to defect to the All Progressives Congress and run for President in view of the raging debate of zoning between northern and southern elements, Sunday PUNCH has learnt.

    “Jonathan has spoken with Buhari on the matter and he is considering joining the APC,” an associate of the former President authoritatively confirmed this to Sunday PUNCH on Saturday.

    It was learnt that two top traditional rulers in the North-West and one in the North-East had encouraged the former President to give the Presidency another shot.

    “The deal is for Jonathan to join the APC, then get a waiver to contest. Currently, Jonathan can only be in office for another four years, then return power to the north. They also believe he could be a stabilising force in the country, especially now that the country is deeply divided,” another source said.

    Currently, several northern elements – especially those in the Peoples Democratic Party – are insisting that there should not be zoning ahead of the 2023 poll. Some of those opposed to zoning include a former Kano State Governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso; former Governor Sule Lamido of Jigawa State; Bauchi State Governor, Bala Mohammed; and Sokoto State Governor, Aminu Tambuwal.

    However, many southern elements believe that since Buhari would have spent eight years by 2023, it would only be fair for the next President to be from the South. Already, former Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State; ex-Governor Orji Kalu of Abia State and Ebonyi State Governor, Dave Umahi, have declared their intentions to contest.

    In the South-West, the national leader of the APC, Bola Tinubu, has revealed his intention to contest the presidency, while Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo and Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State are rumoured to be eyeing the same seat.

    “Former President Atiku Abubakar’s camp is selling the idea of Atiku doing just one term and returning power to the south. However, only Jonathan can promise to do one term and abide by it because he is limited by the Constitution,” said an APC chieftain.

    “Also, the South-East and South-South see Jonathan as one of their own. The South-West, through Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, had been in power for eight years while the current Vice President is also from there. The north also feels there should not be zoning. Jonathan is a safe option at this point,” he added.

    Jonathan had visited the President Muhammadu Buhari several times in the last couple of months, more than any other former head of state. On all occasions, Jonathan had refused to speak to State House reporters while the Presidency claimed he came to brief Buhari over happenings in troubled African countries.

    Also, Jonathan had not been seen at any event organised by the PDP in the last one year. He also refused to attend the party’s national convention last year, several months after the PDP reconciliation committee led by a former Senate President, Bukola Saraki, visited him and pleaded with him not to defect.

    Meanwhile, a former Governor of Jigawa State, Sule Lamido, told BBC Hausa on Saturday that he was not sure if Jonathan was still a member of the PDP.

    When Lamido was asked if Jonathan was still a member of the PDP, the former governor said, “I doubt it. He has not been attending recent activities of our party.”

    Attempts to get a response from Jonathan’s spokesman, Ikechukwu Eze, proved abortive as he neither responded to repeated calls nor replied a text message sent to him on Saturday.

    Eze had earlier told Saturday PUNCH that the insinuations that Jonathan would defect and run for president in 2023 were mere rumours.

    Although many claimed that Jonathan’s frequent visit to the President at the Presidential Villa lent credence to the overtones, Eze had said the meetings had nothing to do with defection or presidential ambition.

    He insisted that Jonathan’s regular presence at the Villa was to brief his successor on his assignments as a special envoy, Economic Community of West African States; adding that the ex-President met with Buhari to brief him on the political developments in the Republic of Mali.

    Eze said, “Defection issue and presidential ambition are all rumours. It has no foundation. We do not want to be reacting to such (things) again. We have issued statements on this before.

    “Former President Jonathan went to the Villa to brief the President on the forthcoming ECOWAS meeting in Ghana. The meeting will discuss the political happenings in Mali. As a special envoy, he was at the Presidential Villa to brief President Buhari.

    “There are issues in Mali and at the forthcoming meeting, ECOWAS leaders are to look at the transition timetable proposed by the Malian rulers and take a position on it. It is also at this meeting that a decision would be taken on whether to sanction the Malian military ruler or not. This is the issue that took oga (Jonathan) to the villa.”

    Asked about the political meeting the former Bayelsa State governor reportedly held with members of his defunct political co-ordinators, Eze said there was no iota of truth on the alleged agenda of the meeting.

    He noted that there was no way Jonathan’s friends would not visit him in his home state in Bayelsa during the Yuletide.

    Since Buhari assumed office, the APC administration had waged a war against some aides of the former President considered to be corrupt, with many of them tried for alleged corruption.

  • Some Northerners Made it Impossible for Jonathan to defeat Boko Haram – Babangida Aliyu

    Some Northerners Made it Impossible for Jonathan to defeat Boko Haram – Babangida Aliyu

    Babangida Aliyu, former governor of Niger state, says some northerners made it impossible for former President Goodluck Jonathan to defeat Boko Haram.

    Speaking during an interview with the Punch, the former governor said it is unfortunate that insecurity has been allowed to escalate.

    “When Boko Haram started and Umaru Musa Yar’Adua and Goodluck Jonathan’s government started doing something about it, it fell on former President Jonathan to carry on. Many northerners misconstrued his (Jonathan) position at that time and for political purposes, they threw many arguments that made it impossible for the proper articulation and proper implementation of policies that would have got rid of Boko Haram and now, we still have them till today,” he said.

    “The banditry that many of us thought was impossible to happen, I am yet to hear from anybody about the statement credited to Kawu Baraje, our former PDP national chairman in Kwara State, when he stated that they brought the bandits or Fulani from other places. I think based on the thinking that probably former President Jonathan wouldn’t have handed over power even if they had won, but he handed over.

    “He congratulated them even before the conclusion proper counting of votes which then took away whatever purposes of bringing those people would have served and I would have thought that if that is true, then those who brought them in would compensated them to go back to where they came from.”

    Speaking further, Aliyu said he believes that “if the governors had really done a lot from 2015 to date, we would have got rid of the banditry”.

    ”Today it’s so unfortunate that you probably have to be praying when you leave Abuja for Kaduna or Kaduna to Abuja or indeed, particularly in the northern states,” he said.

    “Now, even in the day time, you can’t drive freely and comfortably. So, I believe that the first port of call for fighting insecurity is the governors. Maybe you heard me in Kano when I was saying could one be greater than 19 because at one time, even though the circumstances were different, we had one man for 19 states and now, we have 19 governors and still, we have more problems than we did the last time.”

  • Insecurity: Return Nigeria to days of Goodluck Jonathan – Northern coalition to Buhari

    Insecurity: Return Nigeria to days of Goodluck Jonathan – Northern coalition to Buhari

    The Coalition of Northern Groups (CNG) has appealed to President Muhammadu Buhari to return Nigeria to the situation it was during former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Alhaji Ismail Musa, CNG’s Director of Strategic Communications, while featuring on Vanguard Live on Wednesday, expressed dismay with the incessant killings, kidnappings, and general insecurity across the country.

    The CNG expressed great concern with President Buhari over his handling of insecurity in the country leading to the loss of many innocent lives and destruction of properties worth billions of naira.

    He observed that what they are begging Buhari for is for him to know that human life is very important.

    According to him, “If you can do something, in fact, if you can take us back to the insecurity you met on board that will be tolerable to a large extent to say well he has taken us back to (former President Goodluck) Jonathan’s standard we are crying about. I mean the killings at that time; the statistics are there to speak for themselves.”

    Alhaji Ismail Musa lamented the type of leadership in the country with so many atrocities happening in all parts of the country.

  • Nigeria can be peaceful, united if leaders value every section — Jonathan

    Nigeria can be peaceful, united if leaders value every section — Jonathan

    Nigeria @60: PDP, Jonathan task Nigerians to remain hopeful
    Former President Goodluck Jonathan, has urged Nigerian leaders to value the interest of every section of the country in order to build a united nation devoid of agitation, disunity and disenchantment.

    Jonathan spoke when he led members of the 1981 set of the University of Port Harcourt alumni Association on Saturday, to the king of Opume kingdom in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa, King Amalate Turner.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Jonathan described the country as being blessed with both human and natural endowments which can only be enjoyed in a peaceful atmosphere.

    He urged leaders to focus more on building a united nation where no one society or tribe should be more valued than the other.

    “If leaders derail, then there is bound to be disunity and disenchantment from those who feel not being accorded their rightful respect and value,” he said.

    Jonathan, who is an alumnus and a member of the pioneer graduate class of 1981 of the University of Port Harcourt, said the reunion programme is part of activities of the alumni aimed at fostering bond among old classmates.

    He said it’s also a platform to deliberate on issues affecting their alma mater and give back to the school and society in general.

    On his part, King Turner said it is a good thing to reunite his classmates after 40 years of separation.

  • Jonathan lauds A’Ibom as Gov Emmanuel completes overhaul of nine General Hospitals

    Jonathan lauds A’Ibom as Gov Emmanuel completes overhaul of nine General Hospitals

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan on Tuesday lauded Akwa Ibom government for its investment in secondary healthcare as he inaugurated  117 years old remodeled Ikot Ekpene General Hospital, the ninth to witness a complete overhaul by Governor Udom Emmanuel.

    He has also called on governments to strengthen health infrastructure that would address the healthcare needs of the people and meet the United Nations target on health.

    This is even as he has said  that COVID-19 pandemic has put into the consciousness of everyone including administrators, politicians and professionals that health related issues should no longer be taken for granted.

    The Former President commended  Emmanuel for the provision of health infrastructures adding that health security remained paramount in national security of the country.

    “Let me thank the governor for making it possible for me to link with this project, a hospital that has history, that has been completely renovated, redesigned, reconfigured for effective health care delivery.
    “It is a good way to start the programme that has actually brought me that is to partner with the NMA in their annual programme and it is good that we are starting the health week with the commissioning to meet the health needs of the people 
    “We commend the governor because health is key, when you are talking about national security, the health security is quite prominent, the Covid 19 pandemic has opened the eyes of everybody be you professionals, politicians, administrators that health in the nation is key and we have to do everything possible to strengthen the infrastructure to deliver the health needs and based on UN provisions, health is a human right issue,  we thank the governor for providing this facility”. 
    Earlier, in his speech, the Governor who was represented by the state deputy governor  Me Moses Ekpo, explained that the commissioning is a fulfilment of his campaign promises to the people

    “The commissioning of this General Hospital is a fulfilment of a campaign promise I made, to establish world class secondary health care facilities (general hospitals) in all ten Federal Constituencies in the State. With today’s event, we have completed and commissioned to the glory of God, all but one, (Ikot Abasi) whose work is on-going
    .”We have committed enormous resources in upgrading or reconstruction of health care facilities, given my acute belief that three fundamental elements determine and shape the Social Contract: Security of lives and property, healthy population and manpower development.  

    “We have tackled these three crucial areas with messianic zeal and the results are there for any discerning or dispassionate mind and eye to see.” He said.

    State Commissioner for Health, Prof Augustine Umoh , in his remarks, said the commissioning  of the facility represents a milestone in the Governor’s commitment to the health needs of the people.

  • GEJ, Tambuwal, Wike, 5 Others Nominated For AFBA Leadership Award

    GEJ, Tambuwal, Wike, 5 Others Nominated For AFBA Leadership Award

    By Muhammad Goronyo, Sokoto

    Former President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal of Sokoto state along with his Rivers state counterpart, Ezenwo Nyesom Wike have been nominated for the award of the African Bar Leadership Medal (ALM) by the Africa Bar Association (AfBA).

    The release by Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to governor Tambuwal,Muhammad Bello said both Governors Tambuwal and Wike are Life Members of the AfBA.

    At the AfBA event billed to hold, as part of the association’s annual conference, in Niamey, Niger Republic, this month, former Presidents of Niger Republic, Muhammadou Issoufou, Sierra Leone, Dr Ernest Bai Koroma and Liberia, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf are among nominees to be decorated with ALM.

    Other nominees of the medal are: the Chairman of BUA Group of Companies, Abdussamad Isyaku Rabiu and first Tamil-Indian female appointed as a Judge of the High Court of South Africa in 1995, Justice Navanethem Pillay,.

    These nominations were announced by the President of AfBA, Mr Hannibal when he visited Gov. Tambuwal and was taken round to inspect some ongoing and completed projects in Sokoto by the state Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Suleiman Usman (SAN).

    According to Mr Uwaifo, AfBA, which wants its members in the government to excel, is really proud of Gov. Tambuwal who has executed many developmental projects in his state.

    Along with members of his entourage, the AfBA President had inspected the ultra modern Diagnostic Center at Farfaru, the state High Court complex renovated by the incumbent administration, the 950-bed Sokoto State University Teaching Hospital (SOSUTH) under construction and the Girls Science Academy also under construction.

    Applauding Gov. Tambuwal for his feats, Mr Uwaifo said: “I think the Federal Government and federal agencies have to learn from Sokoto state government. We must not do substandard project and we must not play politics in executing projects and we must face the divident of democracy.”

  • Gov Wike Warns Jonathan Against Joining APC

    Gov Wike Warns Jonathan Against Joining APC

    Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State yesterday urged former President Goodluck Jonathan to remain in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and resist the temptation of joining the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    According to Wike, who spoke in an interview on BBC News Pidgin, the PDP is a better political platform for the ex-President to run for the 2023 Presidency if he chooses to.

    Wike warned Jonathan not to be enticed by moves by the APC to lure reputable members of the PDP, adding that the ruling party is offering nothing but destruction.

    “If I see the former President, I will tell him what I heard. I will tell him, ‘Don’t go anywhere because these people want to destroy your reputation. They don’t like you; you should know.
    “What APC is doing now is to bring reputable people from PDP, and when they bring them, they destroy them so that they won’t have anywhere to go again. That’s what the APC is doing.

    “I respect the former President because he is a man of integrity but if I am to advise him, I will tell him, ‘Sir, don’t make that mistake. If you want to run for President, run under PDP. Nigerians cherish you more than this government. They have seen that all the things the (Buhari) government promised them are lies. So, please don’t join the APC for the sake of your reputation.’

    “He (Jonathan) has the right to decide whatever he wants to do but like I said before, if my former President runs for President in APC, I won’t be able to vote for APC in the election because that would be anti-party but if he runs in PDP, I will work to ensure he wins the election,” Wike said.
    Jonathan lost his reelection in 2015 to Muhammadu Buhari.

    Though out of Aso Rock, Jonathan has been working closely with the incumbent in his role as Special Envoy of the Economic Community of West African States.

    With the 2023 elections fast approaching and the clamour for power shift to the South, Jonathan, who has the legal right to one more term as Nigeria’s President as the constitution permits all eligible Nigerians to be in office for two terms of eight years, has been receiving entreaties from the APC.
    Some APC chieftains had visited him in recent times, raising the stakes in permutations for the 2023 general elections.

    Of late, with the wave of defections swinging in the direction of the ruling party, the National Secretary, APC Caretaker, and Extra-ordinary Convention Planning Committee, John Akpanudoedehe, recently said Jonathan would be given an opportunity to contest the 2023 presidency on APC platform “if he chose to join the ruling party.”
    However, the former President is yet to respond to the entreaties.

  • Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari’s son, Yusuf

    Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari’s son, Yusuf

    The wedding of President Buhari’s son, Yusuf, to his bride, Zahra Bayero, is currently holding in Bichi, Kano state.

    Among the many dignitaries that attended the wedding include Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Former President Goodluck Jonathan, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, former Nigerien president Mahamadou Isoufou.

    A dowry of N500, 000 was paid at the ceremony.

    SEE MORE PHOTS;

    Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari
    Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari
    Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari
    Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari
    Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari
    Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari
    Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari
    Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari
    Goodluck Jonathan, Atiku Abubakar, others attend wedding of President Buhari

  • Inability to Manage Nigeria’s Diversity Cause of Growing Tensions – Jonathan

    Inability to Manage Nigeria’s Diversity Cause of Growing Tensions – Jonathan

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday attributed Nigeria’s failure to properly manage its diversity and continuing inability to give ethnic and religious minorities their proper place in the country as part of the reasons for disenchantment in the polity.

    The former president, in his address at the 13th Joe-Kyari Gadzama Public Lecture said aside from the South-west, no other area in the country has been able to balance religion and development.

    “That is the only part of Nigeria where we feel has been able to manage religion and development very well. So, we must look at our own unique circumstances and come up with the right form of government,” he said.

    His address during the event, which held both virtually and physically in Abuja, was titled: “Redefining Democracy: Yearnings of the Minority in a Democratic Setting.”

    Jonathan stated that he decided to honour the invitation to speak on the state of the nation, despite the likely misinterpretation of his treatise, out of his respect for the host, Mr. Joe-Kyari Gadzama (SAN), and because a society that does not respect the rule of law would breed anarchy where life becomes nasty, brutish and short, making real progress difficult.

    According to him, in Nigeria, the complications associated with the marginalisation of minority groups and tribes were identified many years ago and efforts have been made across generations to solve the problems, including the Willinks Commission set up during the colonial era.

    He added that although the Federal Character Commission (FCC) is a product of such efforts, it has not fully rectified the anomalies, having been tailored to deal with mainly the civil service.

    Jonathan said: “The Federal Character Commission over many decades may have been doing its best to give everyone fair representation and a fair sense of belonging, but there are still many who feel that this agency of government has not fully addressed the challenges of accommodating minorities.

    “This is because it has managed to pursue with varying degrees of success emphasis on the civil service. However, many are of the opinion that it does not really go far enough, since it currently does not address inequalities in political appointments into sensitive areas such as the military and public sector appointments.”

    He stated that Nigeria now faces the challenge of managing diversity and minority interests, and even in the parliament, it has been struggling with the task of accommodating disadvantaged groups like women and people with disability.

    He traced the country’s problems to its foundation, saying that the growing dissent cannot be divorced from the country’s failure to manage its differences and play down on its fault lines.

    “From the independence and post-independence crisis, the coups and the counter-coups and the different republics to date, the swelling disenchantment is the fallout of our inability to manage our diversity and downplay our differences. It is obvious that calls for fragmentation seem to be getting louder among some segments of our nation.

    “This is because we have not been able to positively harness and harmonise our enviable size and the ingenuity of our people and project our greatness,” he stated.

    But beyond the grandstanding from some quarters, the former president stated that Nigeria needs to unite and face the problems that have been holding it down, further pinning it down to “a failure to properly manage our diversity and harness our potential.”

    For a multi-ethnic country to make progress, Jonathan said that there must be a conscious effort to give a democratic sense of fairness, equity and justice and guarantee minority groups access to the political space.

    He added that the refrain that Nigeria is potentially great was going out of tune, as the younger people had begun to query whether Nigeria will ever operate within its full capacity.

    “By now, we should be running an advanced economy and the social system and standard services that support that economy just like other nations like Singapore or Malaysia and the United Arab Emirates who share the same political and economic evolution with us. However, we are lagging behind so far away from them.

    “The stories of these countries clearly confirm that the journey to the transformation of a nation does not take a lifetime. That Nigeria still remains potentially great after over 60 years of independence shows that there are fundamental lessons in the political evolution of our nation that we have not really learnt,” he said.

    According to him, although there is a school of thought which blames the country’s colonial experience for its seeming backwardness, while the proposition may have some element of truth, Nigeria was not the only country that was colonised.

    He said a second school of thought blamed the huge size of the nation, describing it as the dilemma of the whale, which is feared for its weight, and yet dies by its weight.

    He added: “I share the sentiments of many political commentators that at the crux of our challenge of national transformation is the problem of our political and governance structures and the inability to harness our diversity towards shared prosperity.

    “I believe that from independence, the political evolution of leadership in Nigeria has been too concentrated along tribal and religious lines and that is still haunting us today.”

    He said it was the reason he conveyed a national conference in 2014 which sought to look at the political leadership structure, saying that the nation is currently trapped in the dilemma of an “imperceptible giant” that needs to work harder to realise it’s destiny.

    He said what many countries might be doing better than Nigeria was that they had developed systems and institutions that ensured that the political recruitment process offered a space for all, including the minorities.

    “Where the minority feels that they are not relevant, there’s always the tendency to fulfil their destiny with a different approach. This is the beginning of the unending agitations and resistance movements across the world,” he added.

    He decried the winner-takes-all approach to politics, stressing that enough space must be created for those who may be at a disadvantage, a situation that has fuelled the practice of cross-carpeting in the country because there’s usually nothing for the loser.

    He also stated that bestowing maximum powers on one individual may not be the right form of government.

    According to Jonathan, the inequity in the polity runs from the federal to states to local governments and even in wards where certain minorities can never dream of becoming top leaders because of their areas of origin.

    “Looking to the future, I can say that our leaders can do a lot more to eliminate ethnic sentiments in our society, enthrone merit and build a system that gives citizens equal opportunities to excel.

    “There has to be a united, strong and cohesive Nigerian nation of patriotic citizens for any structure or system to yield the promise of our shared prosperity,” he added.

    Earlier, Gadzama, who praised Jonathan for averting bloodshed by handing over peacefully to his successor had said that in every democracy, majority rule was endorsed and guided by the constitution, which also protects the rights of the minorities.

    He stated that the participation of persons belonging to the minority in public affairs and in all aspects of the political are essential to preserving their identity as a minority.

    He added that democracy is likely to develop and endure when all members of society are free to participate and influence political outcomes.

    Aside from Jonathan, other dignitaries at the event included the National President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Mr. Olumide Akpata; Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Alhaji Mohammed Bello; Chairman, House Committee on Judiciary, Mr. Onofiok Luke, former Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Mohammed Adoke (SAN) and members of the diplomatic corps.

  • BREAKING: Jonathan’s Ex-aide, Ahmed Gulak, shot dead in Owerri

    BREAKING: Jonathan’s Ex-aide, Ahmed Gulak, shot dead in Owerri

    Ex-political Adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan, Ahmed Gulak, has been shot dead in Owerri.

    The chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) was shot by gunmen in Imo State, the capital.

    Eyewitness told The Nation Gulak was allegedly shot dead around 06:30am by gunmen at Amaekwemgba Junction, Umueze Ezemba Community, a few poles to the airport.

    He was reportedly accosted while driving from Enyiogugu Mbaise area towards the airport before his assailants blocked him and shot him twice on the head.

    He was said to have died on the spot.

    Some people around the area alleged that the gunmen came in military camouflage.

    Details shortly……