Fayose
cautions on ‘analogue, expired’ leaders
• S’East
senators hail indictment of Buhari’s regime
• Atiku
visits Ekiti to boost presidential bid in 2019
Reactions
continued, yesterday, to former President Obasanjo’s letter advising President
Muhammadu Buhari not to seek re-election in 2019.
Obasanjo had
faulted Buhari’s steering of the country and urged the incumbent, especially on
health grounds, to stand down honourably, even as he advocated a coalition for
national redemption.
The Minister
of Information, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said: “We have no reason to believe that
former President Obasanjo has any motive beyond the well-being of the nation in
issuing his special press statement. We have also taken his admonition in good
faith, and we thank him most sincerely for taking time off his busy schedule to
pen such a long statement.”
He said: “It
is true that many Nigerians have been calling on the president to run again,
while others are opposed to his return. However, we believe this issue is a
distraction for the president at this time. This is because Mr. President
spends every working hour tackling the enormous challenges facing the nation,
most of which were bequeathed to his administration by successive past
administrations. He is committed to fulfilling the mandate given to him by
Nigerians in 2015. And that’s where we are right now.”
In the
statement, the minister extolled the achievements of the government,
concluding: “This administration is not unaware of the enormity of the
challenges facing the nation, but we are up to the task. We have taken the bull
by the horns, and long-suffering Nigerians will begin to experience a new lease
of life as our efforts yield fruits.”
Ekiti State
governor, Ayodele Fayose, described the letter as belated and self-serving,
saying: “Obasanjo himself should heed his own advice to Buhari by also going
home to rest. Both Obasanjo and Buhari are analogue in this digital age and
have expired. We have been hearing of Obasanjo since we were in the primary
school. It is time for him to vacate the public political space. When Nigerians
hear him speak nowadays, they hiss.”
Notwithstanding,
Fayose urged Buhari to “heed Obasanjo’s advice and go home and rest,” having
“overstayed his welcome.”
According to
the governor, the letter is a “face-saving” discourse coming “after Obasanjo,
who led the cabal that imposed Buhari, had seen that Nigerians had turned back
from following the president.”
He stressed
that although the “damning” letter makes “some sense,” Obasanjo was not the
right person to have written it.
The former
president “was the leader of those who deceived Nigerians and lied to the
international community to support Buhari,” said Fayose, insisting people “have
already made up their minds to show Buhari the exit next year with or without
Obasanjo’s self-serving letter. So, he should not take the credit. He should
not reap where he has not sown.”
Reuben
Abati, former spokesman to Buhari’s predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan, said the
letter reeks of “frustration, disappointment and regret.” According to him,
“The only thing Obasanjo didn’t do is tender an apology to the people. However,
he admitted he was part of the efforts to bring ‘change’ in 2015. He did not
only support the incumbent president but also voted for him.”
Speaking on
Channels Television’s Politics Today, Abati, nevertheless, conceded: “The
letter reflects certain levels of consensus within the society, given that
people had been saying some of the things that were stated. But coming from the
author, those statements acquire a special significance and resonance both
locally and internationally.”
For Kogi
State governor, Yahaya Bello, there is no stopping Buhari’s re-election. At an
event marking the second anniversary of his administration, he said when the
time arrived, the opposition would realise that the “majority of the people of
this country are solidly behind him (Buhari).”
The leader
of the South East Caucus of the Senate, Enyinnaya Abaribe, said Obasanjo’s take
on the Buhari administration merely confirmed the group’s predictions.
He decried
the “alienation of a sizeable portion” of the polity and condemned the
administration’s failure to adhere to the principle of federal character,
adding: “That a president of elder statesman status would willfully breach this
fibre that holds this country together is highly regrettable. It could have
been good and politically expedient if President Buhari sees himself as
president of Nigeria and not of a section of the country.”
The Alliance
for New Nigeria (ANN), one of the newly registered political parties, said,
while it was not absolving Obasanjo for “being part of those who contributed to
the malaise that is plaguing the country,” it was more interested in the
message than in the messenger.
The Alliance
said the letter vindicated its position on the need for a new coalition to
rescue the country from misrule and nepotism. “The nation needs a coalition of
professionals and technocrats who are burning with patriotism and who see
politics, not as a means of amassing wealth, but of contributing to
development,” said coordinator, Onome Ojigbo, in a statement.
The Chief
Whip of the House of Representatives, Alhassan Ado Doguwa, said: “It is
pertinent to note that the former president lacks the moral and political
credibility to speak on the political affairs of our country. A man who was
involved in all sorts of corruption issues in his administration and indeed his
unpopular bid to violate the constitution by wanting to take a third term is
not in any way a credible democratic voice to count on.”
Also, a
former governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji Balarabe Musa, accused Obasanjo of
propping up Buhari as president and warned that any attempt by the incumbent to
seek re-election could inflame suffering Nigerians, sparking a revolutionary
change of government.
Col. Tony
Nyiam (rtd), a member of the Presidential Advisory Committee (PAC) for the 2014
National Conference, said Obasanjo had only spoken the minds of many and warned
the administration against its “rigid and persistent ignorance of the
inevitability of restructuring.”
The Chairman
of the National Conscience Party (NCP), Dr. Tanko Yinusa, backed Obasanjo’s
call for a third force that would seize power from the All Progressives
Congress.
“While we
are not saying he (Obasanjo) is better, the content of the letter is what one
needs to look at. The truth it is that President Buhari is incapacitated by the
serious challenges. He has also not been able to think deeply in trying to move
Nigeria out of the present economic challenges. He has not also been able to
address the problems in his own party,” said Yinusa.
In a related
development, former vice president turned presidential aspirant, Atiku
Abubakar, visited Fayose, yesterday.
While
fielding questions from reporters, Atiku said he was in the state to parley
with members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the governor on his 2019
ambition.
Atiku said
Fayose was “blunt and straightforward, a sharpshooter in politics,” noting: “I
respect him for that.” He added: “Above all, he is also the chairman of our
governors’ forum. He calls the shots and when he does, we all take the queue.”
Fayose
answered: “He (Atiku) has not spoken to me privately about it (ambition). May
be he would do that in our private meeting. But his body language obviously
shows he has an ambition, which is legitimate. We will all examine everybody
and we will set a level-playing ground. As he has come, others will still
come.” He added: “I have all it takes to lead this country. But whichever way
it goes, the interest of our party comes first.”
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