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Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Presidency: North should wait till 2019,says Babatope
A former Minister of Transportation, Chief
Ebenezer Babatope, has backed Jonathan’s 2015
bid, asking the North to wait until 2019 for their
turn.
Also, a former governor of the old Anambra
State, Dr. Chukwuemeka Ezeife, has said
President Jonathan is a tool in the hands of God
to implement God’s designs for Nigeria.
He said Jonathan’s tolerance, cool-headedness,
fear of God and respect for people and their
constitution had neutralised Boko Haram violence
in Nigeria.
The duo spoke during the state’s 17th
anniversary public lecture organised by the
Bayelsa State Government in Yenagoa on
Monday.
Other dignitaries at the lecture which took place
at the state’s Banquet Hall on Monday evening
were a former Speaker of the House of
Representatives, Alhaji Ghali Na’Abba; Governor
Seriake Dickson of Bayelsa State; his deputy,
Rear- Admiral John Jonah (retd.); elder
statesman, Chief Diete Spiff; Speaker, Bayelsa
State House of Assembly, Konbowei Friday; and
the Chief Judge of the state, Justice Kate Abiri.
Babatope in his lecture, had described Jonathan
as a detribalised Nigerian, whose right to contest
the 2015 presidential election was non-
negotiable.
“If Jonathan declares to contest the 2015
election, I will be among the people that will
campaign for him. I submit it is right and proper
that the Ijaw man, President Goodluck Jonathan,
completes his term in 2019. After that, if I am
still alive, I will be one of those that will fight to
ensure the North have its turn in 2019,”
Babatope said.
Ezeife said through Jonathan’s style of
leadership, which could not be compared with
any President before him, had been able to
contain the Boko Haram’s insurgency.
The former governor said, “Jonathan is a tool in
the hands of God to implement God’s design for
Nigeria. His tolerance, cool-headedness, fear of
God and respect for people and their constitution
has neutralised the Boko Haram sect. We must
sympathise with the aggrieved people, even as
we must not allow injustice to take root. And we
must not be provoked as to endanger, Nigeria,
which our God Almighty has given us. Everybody
knows who would lose most, should the
unthinkable happen.
“Which President had faced determined efforts to
making the country ungovernable, under him? If
we help put a bag of salt on somebody’s head
and make rains to beat the person, do we have a
right, at the end of the rain, to ask how much
salt is left in the bag?”
Ezeife also said for Nigeria to survive as one
united country, there was the urgent need to
restructure the country for efficiency and
effectiveness.
Dickson, in his remarks, said a new Nigeria was
born with the election of Jonathan, a man from
the minority tribe, as the President of the
country.
He sued for peace in the country, stressing that
Nigeria was not only a country of contradictions,
but had endless potential, which if well
harnessed, would drive the nation’s socio-
economic and political development.
“May I call on the present generation to learn to
see national issues as they are. Because it is
when you have a nation, you can have a G7
governors. Disagreement is healthy – whether we
agree or not, it is legitimate. All politicians are
ambitious and ambition is legitimate but the way
you go about it matters,” Dickson said.
Na’Abba, speaking on the theme, ‘Good
governance as a panacea for promoting a stable
and sustainable democracy,’ said good
governance should be the hallmark of
democracy.
He said in view of the myriad of problems
confronting the nation, there was the need to
guarantee good governance and deliver the
dividends of democracy to the people.
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