President Goodluck Jonathan and former president Olusegun
Obasanjo today in Abuja
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President Goodluck Jonathan today admitted, for the first time, that his government ground to a halt before it could take the first step, and he blamed Boko Haram for it.
Mr. Jonathan made the confession at the 60th National
Executive Committee of the Peoples Democratic Party.
"During [the electoral] campaign, our emphasis was more
on job creation, power but now what worries us most is security,” he said. "This is because you must be alive
before you will eat food”
He described security as “very, very fundamental,” saying,
“If you are not safe, you can't even think of hunger because a dead person does
not need food.”
The President told senior party members that although he had
promised to focus on job creation and power, he had been forced to change
government policy to focus on security due to the activities of the violent
militant sect.
In convoluted remarks, he said, "If you look at this
issue of Boko Haram, for the past three weeks, except the incident in Plateau
State, which of course is unfortunate but
has nothing to do with Boko Haram, we will continue to work with
Governor Jonah Jang and other leaders from the state to make sure that we
resolve the crisis in Plateau State. That has nothing to do with Boko Haram.
"But outside that, we would see that there are some trends,
there is some hope and God willing, the issue of Boko Haram will also come
down."
Mr. Jonathan did not comment on his promise in April to
vanquish the militants by June, a promise which he did not fulfill. He did not apologize for that, either.
“Did Boko Haram also persuade him not to give a damn about
corruption, for which both his government and his party are the most famous?” a
political analyst asked in Abuja today.
“If he says Boko Haram brought him to a standstill, did they also tell
him he should not provide personal example, such as declaring his assets or
telling his wife it is a shame to live in Abuja and claim a job in Abuja she
cannot possibly honour?”
A newspaper columnist, commenting on Mr. Jonathan’s
confession, reminded SaharaReporters that it was only recently at the “Media
Chat” that Jonathan told Nigerians they will start enjoying his success in
2013.
“The cows are coming home to roost now,” he said. “Boko Haram did not stop him from buying
himself executive jets or budgeting nearly N1billion for feeding himself or
repeatedly traveling with hundreds of hangers-on to foreign capitals to collect
huge estacode payments. He is now
telling Nigerians the militants are the ones stopping him from fulfilling his
electoral promises!”
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