President Goodluck Jonathan |
President: We'll never lose focus of transformation agenda
By Muhammad Bello
Leaders from the South-south and the Middle Belt, yesterday
urged President Goodluck Jonathan to run for a second term in office.
The leaders, led by First Republic Commissioner for
Information, Chief Edwin Clark, who
made the call in Abuja, during a meeting with the president, dismissed arguments by some people that Jonathan should not seek re-election in 2015,
saying the call was not valid.
Clark told State House correspondents, after the meeting
with the president that lasted for about one hour, that the elders, under the
aegis of Congress for Equality and Change (CEC), came to interact with the
president and to urge him to seek a fresh mandate in 2015.
According to him, no amount of criticism of the president
would be sufficient to rule him out of the 2015 contest as he was
constitutionally eligible to contest again.
Clark said the position of the CEC was not taken in
isolation of notable stakeholders in the three geo-political zones of
North-east, North-central and South-south, adding that all of them agreed that Jonathan should seek a second term in
conformity with the principles of
justice and equality.
He added: “It is written in the constitution of Nigeria.
Shagari did so; Obasanjo did so. Former President Shhehu Shagari's second term
was taken over by a military man (Gen Muhammadu Buhari). Today, he (Buhari)
wants to be president. He staged a coup in 1983. I was also a senator at that
time. When it came to Obasanjo, he did eight years under the constitution. And
some of my northern friends have said all they said was a second term for
Shagari. If Shagari was entitled to two terms; why not Jonathan? Is it because
he is a minority? We are here, the elders, believing that Mr President should
contest ,as the constitution provides, in the 2015 election.”
He explained that his group found it necessary to begin an
early campaign for the president because there was an early campaign of calumny
against him.
“We could not have talked about 2015. It is because some
people have started to say that he is not qualified to contest election in 2015
and those of us who believe in it and the constitution is there, educate them
and that is what we are doing. Whatever the president said about waiting till
2014 before he would decide, that does not affect those who believe that he has
a right,” he said.
Jonathan, in his response, assured the group that his administration would never allow
itself to be derailed from pursuing its transformation agenda to its logical
conclusion.
The president, according to his Special Adviser on Media and
Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, pledged that his administration would continue to
build on the achievements contained in its mid-term report to the nation.
He commended the elders for “working tirelessly to bring us
to where we are today,” and for their continued support, promising that “as our
leaders, we will continue to do our best to justify the confidence you have
reposed in us.”
He also thanked the Middle Belt and South-south regions for their contributions to national unity,
stressing that the unity of Nigeria “depends on the cooperation of all.”
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