Editorial
The Challenges Before Jonathan
President-elect, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was on April 19, in Abuja, issued with a certificate of return by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Mohammed Jega, after winning the April 16, 2011 Presidential Elections, adjudged by both domestic and international observers, including the Commonwealth, European Union, African Union, Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), civil society, and other acclaimed election monitoring groups, as free, fair, credible, and indeed, a complete departure from all previous polls.
Nigerians have spoken and given him their implicit support, believing he is capable of taking them to greater heights as a nation.
Jonathan, like a political leader, should therefore, embark on reconciliation, reconstruction and rehabilitation required to launch Nigeria into the league of world industrial and economic giants.
To achieve this, The Tide urges the President-elect to be magnanimous in victory by running an all-inclusive government while those who lost in all the elections from the various political parties, should be gallant and gracious in defeat by being supportive of government in the challenges ahead.
We recall the President-elect’s electoral promises, which he must now fulfill. At a breakfast meeting with Nigerian businessmen and women in the manufacturing, banking, telecommunications and oil and gas sectors at Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja, ahead of the presidential elections, Jonathan had promised to use the private sector to drive the nation’s economic recovery. Specifically, he promised fresh development initiatives in agriculture and oil and gas, for which the industrialists endorsed him. We trust that he will fulfill these promises.
Jonathan’s election at this moment in the nation’s life represents a catalyst to the consolidation of Nigeria’s democratic culture, as he has in the past one year at the helm, shown respect for the rule of law.
We, therefore, challenge him to translate his promises to action by promoting agriculture through irrigation, modern methods that would make farming attractive to the teeming jobless youths. His pledge to build five fertilizer plants in five zones of the country, if fulfilled, will no doubt be a major step in the transforming of the sector. We note that various governments in the past had made fruitless efforts to end rice importation. Jonathan’s promise to bring this about in four years is, therefore, a self-assigned duty to evolve a buoyant agricultural sector.
Again, all efforts at industrial and economic transformation in the past had been stalled by the under-performance of the power sector. No doubt, President Jonathan has improved electricity supply, but the fluctuating 3,500 megawatts current supply is far below the average 10,000 megawatts required to stabilise the economy and stimulate economic transformation. It is hoped that the president will work hard at giving the nation steady power supply that would bring down the present high cost of manufacturing and other services which presently are transferred to consumers and end-users.
The railways are globally acknowledged as the cheapest means of moving goods to distant places but this transportation sub-sector in Nigeria has been in comatose for years, leading to the present situation where heavy duty trucks have taken over the highways as substitute, with attendant risks to the durability of the roads and safety of lives. The on-going initiatives to restore the rail transport system should, therefore, be given greater impetus as a means of bringing down cost of goods and services, thereby reducing inflation.
We commend the Federal Government’s Amnesty Programme under which thousands of ex-militants are receiving training in usefull skills across the country and abroad. We believe that Jonathan’s victory will further strengthen the Amnesty Programme, bring peace to the oil-producing Niger Delta region. His promise to build additional refinery and some gas plants would, no doubt, create more employment opportunities, enhance economic viability and reduce criminality in the land.
Similarly, the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), designed to promote infrastructural development in the region, has since its establishment, been bogged down by inadequate funding, leading to poor performance. Now is the time to make NDDC serve its purpose, just as the government should up-scale funding for the Niger Delta Ministry to enable it deliver on its mandate.
The Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), now before the National Assembly, and crafted to ensure best practices and involve host communities in the industry as well as create jobs for youths also awaits the President-elect’s full implementation, when passed and assented to.
Above all, the unfortunate post-election incidents also bring to the fore the urgent need to overhaul the national security apparatus, equip and strengthen it to withstand any security breaches in future as a means of ensuring national unity and stability.
We reckon that these challenges are enormous, but Jonathan cannot afford to fail to discharge the responsibilities bestowed on him by history. He has no option, therefore, but to succeed.
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