Tuesday 21 May 2013

2015: Jonathan Must Contest, Clark Tells Northern Leaders

Elder Statesman and former Minister of Information, Chief Edwin Clark said yesterday that the Southern part of the country would still produce President in 2015 election, adding that it was not yet the turn of the north.
 
He also said the intrigues of power shift from the south in 2015 was improper at this period of the country’s march to nationhood.
Clark who said this at the third conference of the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly, noted that the constitution was clear on the number of terms that every president can contest.
He further said the people of South-South believe that the return of President Goodluck Jonathan in 2015 would mean well for the unity of Nigeria.
His words: “The South-South believe that it is in the interest of Nigeria and the unity of our country that Jonathan should contest and no one should shut him out. Movement of power or power rotation is not proper at this time. In the constitution of Nigeria, every president has two elections to be contested. Shagari did it in 1979 and 1983.
“In 1999 Obasanjo did it and 2003. In 2007 Umaru Yar’Adua of blessed memory did it and if he had remained alive he would have done it again in 2011, so Jonathan is not a different person, He’s a Nigerian and he has the right to contest again.”
He further said that the country belongs to all citizens, noting that there is nobody that owns or has stake in the country more than others.
“Nigeria belong to all of us and there is nobody who is superior to another. If you are talking about peace, peace for who? There is an incumbent who has not done a second term, so northerners have no place. It is not yet the turn of a northerner. They have the right to contest as Nigerians, yes, in other parties”.
Continuing, Clark said, “So, if a northerner does not rule this country, there won’t be peace? They have ruled for over 38 years, we have only ruled from the south for less than 14 years. When Lord Lugard united this country, he didn’t say the north is superior to the south, we are all equal in this country, and anybody can aspire to the highest position in this country, so nobody has the prerogative to rule others.”
In addition, he said, “having noted the negative effects of our divisiveness it is important that we clearly define the fundamental objective of our coming together which is to expand trust, solidarity, shared commonality and commit ourselves wholly to uniting our people for our common good.
“In our efforts to build an enduring legacy of one united family for the first time in the almost 100 years of our existence as a country, let us deliberately cultivate and imbue in members of our generation and beyond the attributes of tolerance and love for one another.
There can be no alternative to building a loving family because love is the fulcrum of survival and life. A house where love flourishes will usually resolve issues that cause disaffection and disharmony internally. Outsiders are regarded as pariahs.
“As earlier noted our inability to act as one concentric and impermeable family provided the leeway for the North to undermine and exploit us. The inexplicable outcome was that the North successfully pummeled us to endorse their leadership of the country for 38 years compared to the 14+ years the South has ruled the country.
“Today, all we hear on daily basis is that power must return to the North. Whether such hues and cries have the endorsement of Nigerians is left to be seen. We are nonetheless encouraged by our renewed solidarity and shared commonality to say that as people who have consistently been driven by the thrust of equity, justice and fairness, we must seek to balance the observed disparity in the leadership paradigm.
Consequently, we are inclined to state that power shift culminating in the transfer of the presidency to anywhere outside the confines of the southern hemisphere would be an aberration this Assembly should not endorse. It may perhaps be apposite for anybody holding a contrary view to say so now.’’
Similarly, former Governor of Bayelsa State, Chief Dipriye Alamieyeseigha, stated that there was no vacancy in Aso Rock, saying that President Jonathan will remain the Commander-in-Chief beyond 2015.
Alamieyeseigha said: “Aso Rock is not vacant. The northern agitators will all at the appropriate time join the moving train. They may have their opinion but I can assure you that President Jonathan will remain as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, come 2015″.
Speaking on the presidential pardon granted to him by the Council of State, Alamieyeseigha said it was a negotiated deal and that it is in order. It started during Late President Yar’Adua.
He said: “It was a pardon that was negotiated. This pardon was negotiated and if I fulfil my own part of the bargain, why shouldn’t the Federal Government fulfills its part? People who don’t know what happened are the ones talking. But if I opened my mouth, those who are talking will keep quiet.
He said: “President Goodluck Jonathan was part of the negotiating team. There is no person in this country that knows issues surrounding Alamieyeseigha better than Mr President. He was my deputy governor and all that transpired were known to him. I’m already writing my memoir. At the appropriate time, you will know.”
Asked whether late President Yar’ Adua was privy to the pardon, he said, “without Yar’Adua, I would have died by now. Otherwise they would have even killed me. The person behind it is somebody all of you know. Somebody used the phrase, Oga at the top. You know him and he will be exposed at the right time.”


Source: Naij.com
Source: Vanguard

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