Politics

Jonathan Very Patriotic, Never Clueless As President – Ex-Minister

Published

on

Former Minister of Sports and Youth Development, Bolaji Abdulahi, has defended former President Goodluck Jonathan who had been roundly criticised as weak and clueless during his reign as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria from 2010-2015, saying that the former President was neither weak nor clueless.
Abdulahi made the assertion in Port Harcourt at the weekend, during the first quarter August Meeting organised by Education Champion League Committee for the review of his book “On A Platter Of Gold – How Jonathan Won and Lost Nigeria”.
The former Minister, who also served as the National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (2016-2018), disagreed with the widely held claims that the former President was weak and clueless but instead described him as a patriot.
He said: “Definitely he’s not weak, definitely he’s not clueless from my experience. The most important thing I know about him is that he’s very patriotic. As a patriot he’s also someone who’s careful about how he uses power.
“He understood the enormity of the powers of the President and he used to say that if he uses 30 percent of his power as President of Nigeria, he will become a dictator. So he’s someone who is careful and who is also reluctant to hurt people. So because of his reluctance to hurt people, it’s possible that some will interpret it to mean that he’s clueless”.
“Some of the things that he did at the time, some other people have done the same and even worse. So I think he was just a victim of the kind of politics of that time. I think if he had been president at this time, he would probably have had a different approach”.
Abdulahi who also is the author of “Sweet Sixteen”, described his latest book as an attempt of “a journalist trying to practice history”, saying he was inspired to write the book a long time ago.
He added that as a Minister, he did not see every event that played out from the point of view of a typical Nigerian politician but as a technocrat and a journalist with the irresistible urge to document what he saw in Nigerian power play.
He stressed; “I saw everything in government from a news angle, but soon realized that I couldn’t report all that I saw in government. I saw myself mainly as a journalist and technocrat not as a politician and realized that I was excluding myself from the mainstream but the journalistic instinct in me took a better part, so the book came forth”.
The former Minister, while commending the organisers of the event, added that what inspired him to write the book was to document for posterity the inner political intrigues, complications and complexities that played out during the former President’s meteoric rise to the highest office in Nigeria as President and his eventual loss of the coveted office.
Abdullahi said he was elated that the review of his book was part of the programme of the first quarter “August Meeting” by the organisers who also used the occasion to launch the Port Harcourt Education Champions League.

Trending

Exit mobile version