VoA
– A spokesman for Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan said former
President Olusegun Obasanjo should stop trying to ‘play God’ when it
comes to Nigerian politics.
Reuben Abati said the former president crossed the line when he
criticized Jonathan’s performance in office in a lengthy letter made
public December 2nd.
Abati said it is something the international community and friends of Obasanjo should be concerned about.
Jonathan Sunday sent a strongly worded response to Obasanjo in which
he accused the former president of trying to incite ethnic disharmony,
as well as instigate members of the ruling People’s Democratic Party
(PDP) to rise up against him.
Abati said Jonathan also made clear that Obasanjo’s letter was a
threat to national security “as it may deliberately, or inadvertently,
set the stage for subversion.”
“If you were in Nigeria, you will see that, within the last one month
or so, with the emergence of the APC (All Progressives Congress), which
is a coalition of opposition groups, that particular group has been
trying to undermine the president. In the past, any time former
President Obasanjo wrote a letter against a sitting president there were
consequences in the form of military intervention, or maybe the failure
of the government,” he said.
In his December letter, Obasanjo raised concerns about the security
situation in Nigeria. In his reply, Jonathan said, although the current
national security challenges were sown under previous administrations,
his government was working assiduously to overcome them.
“Those who continue to downplay the successes in this regard, amongst
whom you must now be numbered, appear to have conveniently forgotten
the depths to which security in our country had plunged before now,”
Jonathan said.
Abati said Jonathan also took exception to Obasanjo’s allegation that
Jonathan was training snipers to assassinate political opponents.
“In that particular section of the response to former President
Obasanjo, President Jonathan said that, one, it is an offense and an
insincere allegation. And, he made it very clear that if President
Obasanjo feels [that way] about this, he should provide evidence,” Abati
said.
Jonathan responded to Obasanjo’s allegation of “high corruption” by
saying that the seed of corruption in Nigeria was planted a long time
ago.
“That corruption is an issue in Nigeria is indisputable. It has been
with us for many years. You [Mr. Obasanjo] will recall that that your
kinsman, the renowned afro-beat maestro, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, famously
sang about it during your first stint as head of state. Sonny Okousn
also sang about corruption,” Jonathan said in his reply.
Jonathan described as untrue Obasanjo’s allegations that he
(Jonathan) asked half a dozen African presidents to speak to Obasanjo
about Jonathan’s ambition to seek re-election in 2015.
“I have never requested any African president to discuss [this] with
you on my behalf. In our discussion, I mentioned to you that four
presidents told me that they were concerned about the political
situation in Nigeria and intended to talk to you about it,” Jonathan
said in his letter to Obasanjo.
Abati said Obasanjo crossed the line when he tried to allocate to himself the power to determine who should run Nigeria.
“If you go back to former President Obasanjo’s letter, he says in
that letter that he is the one who put President Jonathan there as
president. Now, for a man to go public and boast publicly,
internationally, that he installed the president, and that he did it
also in 1979, I think the international community must be concerned
about that, that one individual would allocate to himself the powers of
God, the power to install a president in a country of over 170 million
people,” Abati said.
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