Former President
Olusegun Obasanjo has again torn at President Goodluck Jonathan, saying
Nigerian democracy remained at risk due to the action of the present
administration.
Speaking at a book
Launch in honour of the pioneer chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices
Commission, ICPC, Mustapha Akanbi, in Abuja, Mr. Obasanjo, who is the
Chairman of the occasion, said the president should stop encouraging ‘verbal violence which may not physically
hurt but has ways of degenerating into physical violence’. See more after cut.....
Mr. Obasanjo said
the greatest indictment against any administration is to be seen trying to
destroy opposition of all sorts which invariably mean destroying
democracy.
“Management of
democracy without resorting to brute force and dictatorial tendencies must be
cultivated,” the former President said.
“As a leader, you
must not deliberately do evil or condone evil. You should know that you will
one day give account to God, you may cover up here, but before God, there is no
cover up.”
The former
president also spoke at lenght on the President’s handling of the Boko Haram
insurgency, corruption, the economy and youth
unemployment.
On insecurity, Mr.
Obasanjo said Boko Haram is not out to “frustrate anyone’s political efforts”
and lamented that it took Mr. Jonathan the years to fully understand the menace.
On corruption, Mr.
Obasanjo said, “when the head is rotten, the whole body is useless”
On the economy, he
said Nigeria would continue to sink deeper and that what Nigerians are told
about the state of the economy “is not truly what the economy is”.
“The economy is in
doldrums, if not in reverse,” he said.
Mr. Obasanjo’s
latest attack on the President is coming seven days after he rated Mr.
Jonathan’s performance as below average.
The former
president had spoken last weekend in Abeokuta while addressing book writers as
part of activities marking the Ake Arts and Book Festival.
“I rate this
current administration below average,” Mr. Obasanjo said in response to a
question about Mr. Jonathan’s performance.
The former
president also said he deserved credit for helping an individual from a
minority tribe become Nigeria’s President.
“Rather than take blame for bringing Jonathan to power, I should be taking credit,” he added.
“Rather than take blame for bringing Jonathan to power, I should be taking credit,” he added.
The Nigerian
presidency responded Sunday, slamming Mr. Obasanjo and describing his rating as
untrue and misleading.
In a statement in Abuja, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Doyin Okupe, said Mr. Obasanjo’s rating was at variance “with the facts on the ground”.
In a statement in Abuja, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Doyin Okupe, said Mr. Obasanjo’s rating was at variance “with the facts on the ground”.
Mr. Okupe said
President Jonathan had performed so well that “in terms of performance and
achievements, no administration since 1960 when Nigeria gained independence
from Britain, has done as much as that of President Jonathan”.
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