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The Politics Of Boko Haram, Jonathan’s Declaration

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Twenty-four hours before
President Goodluck Jonathan formally declared his intention to seek re-election as Nigeria’s president come 2015, there was a bomb blast at the assembly ground of Government Comprehensive School, Potiskum, Yobe  State, in which no fewer than 47 students and three teachers were killed. The incident which also left about 98 school children and teachers injured, came hours after the Northern governors had called on the Presidency “to declare a total war and eliminate Boko Haram in our midst before the 2015 elections.”
The senseless war on Nigerians by terrorists that have claimed lives of innocent citizenry including the unborn, ordinarily should not be an issue of politics at any given time. As a matter of fact, an event of such dastardly act should provide a ground for reflection and action towards finding a permanent solution to the insurgency that has ravaged the nation in a manner that questions her peace and unity.
In the midst of security challenges imposed by domestic terrorists and their foreign allies, the government has remained a rallying point of hope; assuring the citizens that all is not lost in the fight against insurgency and terrorism. Even more heartwarming was the promise that “no matter how long it takes, the federal government will ensure that all those responsible for the senseless murder of so many promising youngsters and the continuing acts of terrorism across the country are brought to justice and made to pay for their atrocious crimes.”
Like any dastardly act of the insurgents, the bomb blast left the government and well-meaning Nigerians heart broken and agitating. “The war on Nigerians by terrorists without boundaries where men, women, children and even the unborn are victims speaks volumes of the agenda of the terrorists,” Senate President, David Mark said, while reacting to the Potiskum school blast that utterly betrayed sense of brotherhood.
From the operations of the insurgents and the harm done to the polity, the best option open to the leaders according to Northern governors is for them “to come together by partisan or non-partisan bases to encourage Mr President and the federal government to declare total war and eliminate Boko Haram in our midst before the 2015 elections,” especially against the background that “Boko Haram members are no longer terrorists, but rebels who have declared war against their country and have acquired illegal territories.”
Boko Haram is not a way of life.  The sect’s senseless and ceaseless killings, apart from questioning the worth of brotherhood and sanctity of life, have gone a long way “in seeking to break the united Nigerians spirit by attacking the young who are the future of Nigeria.”
It may not be enough for government to condemn the almost daily rounds of violence, it must do the needful and urgently too, by being proactive in her actions against the insurgents to restore a fast waning public confidence on the ability and capacity of government to protect lives and property of the citizens.
The stand of the Northern governors that the federal government should now declare total war against Boko Haram clearly appears to contradict the mind sets of some Northern leaders who have encouraged government ab initio to be disposed to dialogue with Boko Haram. Asking government to come all out to crush Boko Haram cannot start and end with pushing the issue of security to government alone. It is a collective responsibility.
However, Jonathan’s declaration, a day after the blast at Potiskum, the fifth time in a little over one year in Yobe State, expectedly, attracted outrage from the All Progressives Congress (APC). The party, which described the timing of the declaration as callous and insensitive, said the event was akin to dancing on the graves of all victims of Boko Haram  attacks, especially as it took after the bombing of school children in Yobe State.
The APC, in a manner of acting as a check to activities of Jonathan and his party, said since the president chose to celebrate a national tragedy, Nigeria should also be prepared to celebrate his electoral failure next year.
Between Jonathan and the security of Nigerians, APC believes that his administration has established a pattern of putting his political interest above the security and welfare of Nigerians who voted him into office. According to the party, “the Jonathan’s administration has nothing to show to justify its desire to seek re-election, because, his time in office has been marked by a reign of blood, tears, sorrow and the gnashing of teeth by Nigerians.”
Looking at the claims of APC as released by its spokesman, Lai Mohammed that “instead of the transformation that Jonathan promised Nigerians, he had delivered transmogrifications with unprecedented corruption, runaway unemployment, erasure of hope, total darkness even with millions of naira sunk into the power sector and trains that are grinding their way to a long-forgotten past of locomotives in an era of bullet trains,” what quickly comes to mind is that the opposition party is waiting for the smallest opportunity to call a dog a bad name with the aim of hanging it.
National Chairman of the APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, agreed that Jonathan’s declaration was ill-timed. In a press briefing in Abuja, Odigie-Oyegun accused the Jonathan-led PDP administration of bogus claims, misrepresented facts and demonstrated a lack of empathy for the plight of Nigerians in the North East.
The press briefing provided a season of verbal missiles over claims made by Jonathan at his declaration. From the alleged promotion and sustenance of a culture of impunity and corruption to failure of Jonathan administration to “halt the march of terrorists daily inching nearer all of us,” the APC national chairman also accused the President of failing to empathise with hundreds of thousands of Nigerians who are internally displaced persons as a result of the occupation of their land by Boko Haram.
Hitting like never before, Odigie-Oyegun said, it was a grave act of insensitivity for the President and his party, to enagage in a jamboree barely 24 hours after the Potiskum bomb blast that claimed 50 lives, only to utter words and ‘minutes of silence’ that have no meaning to the victims.
But the PDP national publicity secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, returned fire to fire to APC. He said the APC’s reaction to President Jonathan’s declaration was merely a product of the confusion and frustration such declaration has put the opposition party. He said the APC leaders, in their characteristic manner, instead of accepting the success already acknowledged by Nigerians, went into their usual shadowboxing and mischievous propaganda in a failed attempt to score a cheap political point.”
In a manner of ‘revenge is sweet,’ Metuh recalled that on the 20th of May 2014, there was a twin bomb blasts in the city of Jos, killing 118 people and wounding at least 56 others. Yet, he said the tragedy on the nation did not restrain the APC from  holding its mega rally in Ekiti State, the next day, May 21, for the governorship campaigns of the then Governor Kayode Fayemi in which the entire top hierarchy of the APC, its national officers and governors were in attendance.
At the rally, Metuh said “the APC observed a minute silence in honour of fellow Nigerians mowed down in cold blood, before charging the atmosphere with usual insults and loathing acts of insensitivity, speaker after speaker.”
According to him, a lucid epithet on the APC defies the logic of an alternative, while exposing it as hypocritical and opportunistic. He also berated the APC for “always seeking to gain political capital from the insecurity challenges in the nation.”
Explaining why the President went ahead with his declaration, a day after the Potiskum bombing, the PDP spokesman said the move defied the expectations of the terrorists and their sponsors, adding that the President and his party stood with the mourning families, as his disposition, speech and mobilising of over 100,000 Nigerians in prayers at the event.
Be that as it may, the tragedy of the politics of Boko Haram and Jonathan’s declaration is that politicians now explore the legacy of “talk and 1 talk” or “dagger me, 1 dagger you,” rather than engage in acts that are healthy in solving the problem of terrorism; the trend of which has been a global phenomenon.
There is nothing wrong by the opposition party to come up with feasible plan on how best to tackle security challenges in the land. Afterall, the elders say when a house is on fire, the geckoes, rats, lizards among others join efforts to save the house from the inferno; lest when the house is destroyed, there will be no abode for them.
But to ask the President to take a walk out of the office as suggested by APC only shows “the desperation of politicians who have hidden agenda.” For anybody or party to rule, there must be Nigeria, and “when life throws you lemons,” Adedamola Are says, “you must be prepared to make lemonade from them.”
The major problem of insurgency in Nigeria is not because there is lack in the capacity or resolution to genuinely address the national challenges, but that of some Nigerians (particularly the elite class) being enemy to the country. Ayo Olukotun (The Punch, Friday, November 14, 2014) captures the scenario thus: Nigeria verus Nigeria.
Yes, corruption is endemic in Nigeria, prompting someone to describe corruption as Nigeria’s 37th State, but Olokutun says, “the problem with Nigeria is that its political class is double-minded about corruption; one hand condemning it verbally, but in conduct, employing it as a principle of statecraft to accumulate wealth and oil political machines.” According to him, “the Nigerian opposition, while keeping the party in power on its toes with regard to corruption, does not see the need to match its criticisms with examples of rectitude in its own domains.”
Some may argue that there is no hope for the country or that radical revolution can only address the accumulating mess, yet, it stands to reason that “Nigeria malaise is not exceptional in a global context.”
In the midst of national malady, Olukotun sees hope not self-depreciation, in the horizon. He said “the fact that we contained the Ebola scourge winning global applause in the process, suggests that we have untapped reservoirs of mastery and rejuvenation.”
What Nigeria requires is not doom day predictions, but building from her weaknesses and strengths. Hence, Olukotun concludes that “in this season of election, it will help if we no longer conceive of Nigeria as a country on the edge of terminal dissolution on account of its several challenges, but one that is capable of mounting and sustaining the kind of reforms that will unleash its greatness.”
The point should be made here that two things should define Nigerians’ response to prevailing situations in the country-patience and positive attitude in addressing the problems.

 

Samuel Eleonu

President Goodluck Jonathan

President Goodluck Jonathan

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Anambra Guber: ADC Candidate Urges INEC To Tackle Vote Buying 

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The candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in the forthcoming Anambra governorship election, Mr John Nwosu, has urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to ramp up measures to curtail vote buying in the election.

Claiming that elections in the country are typically characterized by vote buying, Mr Nwosu said a repeat of such phenomenon would taint the credibility of the forthcoming gubernatorial poll.

Mr Nwosu is among the 16 governorship candidates listed by INEC in a June 4, 2025 statement to participate in the November 8, 2025 election in Anambra State.

His party, the ADC, will battle it out with other parties to unseat incumbent Governor Chukwuma Soludo of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

Mr Nwosu, in a statement on Saturday, said it was baffling seeing voters openly selling their votes to party agents and other representatives around polling units on election day.

According to him, “such practices not only derail the true will of the people but also reduce elections to an auction, where the state is effectively handed over to the highest bidder.”

Mr Nwosu urged INEC to introduce secure voting cubicles that would safeguard the legitimate rights of voters and uphold the sovereignty of democracy.

“INEC must provide secure voting cubicles to ensure ballots remain private and secret. Currently, many polling areas are too exposed, allowing others to see the voting process. This not only encourages vote buying but also undermines the integrity of the elections.

“Voting must remain secret. Nigeria already has strong electoral laws which, if properly enforced, can deliver outcomes that truly benefit society”, Mr Nwosu said.

He held that the Anambra governorship election was another opportunity for INEC to secure the trust of Nigerians about its commitment to transparency and fairness during polls.

He also noted the role of security agencies in tackling the menace of vote buying on the day of election.

He said, “The success of any political activity depends largely on security, because security is key. While it is not solely INEC’s duty to ensure elections are properly conducted, the Commission must create an enabling environment that allows citizens to participate freely, conduct themselves properly, and exercise their right to vote.”

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Alleged Attack On Abure In Benin, LP Calls For Investigation

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The leadership of the Labour Party (LP), on Saturday, condemned the attack on its factional Chairman, Barrister Julius Abure, at the Benin Airport, Edo State.

The party, in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Obiora Ifoh, called on the relevant security agencies to investigate the attackers and their sponsors.

“The Labour Party is perplexed by the physical attack on our National Chairman, Barrister Julius Abure, by agents suspected to be working for anti-democratic elements who have tried unsuccessfully to wrestle the leadership of the party from him.

“Few hours ago, a prominent member of a known political family, Ms Precious Oruche, alias ‘Mama P’, accosted Barrister Abure while on a queue at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Airport Abuja, boarding a Max Air flight en route to Benin, and attacked the Labour Party’s National Chairman unprovoked.

“The attacker, Madam P, who is also a known content creator, continued the attack all through the duration of the flight, defying all attempts by the Max Air flight attendants to calm her.

“The assault, which attracted a large population of onlookers, continued unabated on disembarkment at the Benin Airport while she continued recording the scene.

“It took the intervention of the security agents on hand to whisk Abure to safety while the attacker was handed over to the police for questioning.

“In one of her films released, the lady, who is a prominent member of the ‘Obidient’ and claimed that she has contacts with the highest police hierarchy, boasted that nothing will happen to her.

“She vowed that she will not stop attacking Abure or any member of the Labour Party executive because, according to her, ‘you have killed Labour Party and you are the reason why Obi is no longer in the Labour Party.’

“The leadership of the Labour Party is completely troubled with this cyber-bullying and the consequences of the action of this political agent on the party. We are by this statement calling on the Inspector General of Police to thoroughly investigate this suicidal aggression against the leadership of the Labour Party and Barrister Julius Abure in particular.

“We sincerely believe that the lady-agent was on an assignment to accomplish the desires of her paymasters. Assault and cyber-bullying are severe crimes under our laws and we think that the Police must fish out her sponsors and cohorts, and bring them to book.

“We are calling on the members of the Labour Party to be calm, even in the face of this unwarranted provocation and wait for the outcome of the investigation on the unprovoked attack against the leadership of the party,” the statement read.

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New PDP Leaders Emerge In Adamawa After Congress 

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The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) delegates in Adamawa have elected Hamza Madagali and Saleh Sheleng as the state chairman and secretary of the party, respectively, to pilot the affairs of the party for the next four years.

Speaking during the party’s congress in Yola, the state capital, on Saturday, Mr David Lorhenba, the chairman, Adamawa Congress Committee, described the exercise as hitch-free.

He said that a total of 2,656 delegates from 21 local government areas came out and elected 39 officials.

Mr Lorhenba commended the delegates for conducting themselves in an orderly manner.

“The conduct of the congress is very successful, all the delegates come from 21 Local Government Areas and cast their votes peacefully.

“We have a total of 2,656 delegates and we have announced the winners very successfully”, he said.

In his remarks, Alhaji Attahiru Shehu, the outgoing chairman, congratulated the new executives and charged them to continue on what they have already done for the party to remain strong.

According to him, they started as opposition in the state and produced Gov. Ahmadu Fintiri who is serving his second term, opining they “he has done well for the state.”

In his acceptance speech, Mr Madagali thanked the delegates for the confidence they reposed in him.

He promised to run an open door policy in manning the affairs of the party.

“Let us continue the legacy of good governance and prepare ahead for 2027 with focus, discipline and unity.

“To those outside our party, especially the youths and women of Adamawa, we invite you into our party.

“PDP is your home. Our doors are open to all who wish to contribute positively to the development of our state.

“Our party will continue to be a shining example of people-focused on leadership,” he said.

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