President Goodluck Jonathan flanked by the chairman of the party Aliyu Mua’zu, Vice President Sambo Namadi, Senate President David Mark, deputy speaker, House of Representatives, Hon Emeka Ihedioha, serving PDP governors, and aspirants that got their party flags for the forthcoming elections, amongst other prominent chieftains of the party, said Nigeria’s leadership is no longer for old and senile people lacking in vibrant ideas.
Jonathan said “I want to address people who are voting for the first time this year, those of you who attained 18 this year. I don’t want to address old people like me because we are spent. I am going to address political gatherings in 37 places and I am going to dwell on three major things; whatever I say, when you get back home, call your parents, aunties, uncles that are at least 60 years old and confirm what you heard.
“2015 elections is about the young people; either you vote for the young Nigerians to be relevant in Nigeria political history or you vote for you to be irrelevant. I want to dwell on three things because those who say they want to take over power from the PDP have been telling a lot of lies; they have hired people from all over the world to tell all sorts of lies on the social media, painting all kinds of colour and giving me all kinds of bait they cannot defend.
“I will address insecurity, corruption and insinuations of weak government. On voter cards, I have directed INEC that all Nigerians – not 99.9 per cent – must vote. Before 2011, no Nigerian complained that he had no voter card, but we came and insisted that every Nigerian must express themselves at the polls; since then voter cards became relevant.
The president fired an apparent salvo at the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) which was two days ago accused by the DSS of trying to fake the voter cards.
Jonathan continued: “Already, some people are cloning cards so that your voter cards will not be relevant; is that the kind of people you want to take over government? They want to take us back to the old days where nobody sees voter cards but results were announced. They want to take us back to the old days where ballot papers will be in South Africa and results will be announced in Nigeria.”
On insecurity, the president accused past leaders, including his direct opponent Gen Muhammadu Buhari (rtd), of weakening the country’s armed forces by starving them of the necessary arms despite funds provided for that.
“They talked about insecurity – that they will fight insecurity; are our armed forces weak? If we have a problem, what is the cause? It’s equipment. They don’t have the platform. Somebody will wake up and tell young people of 23-year-old that he wants to fight insecurity; ask him, when he was the head of government, did he buy one rifle for the Nigerian soldier?
“They refused to equip the military; they didn’t buy anything, no helicopter, nothing. Ask them what they did with their defence budget the whole time that they were in office; they didn’t equip. No country equips armed forces overnight because their equipment is quite expensive. Armed forces are built over the years; the capacity is built over a period of time. They refused to build the capacity. They instigated crisis and now they are coming to tell us they will solve the problem. Ask them and they will answer.”
On the charge that his government was soft on corruption, Jonathan said that more people have been quizzed over the offence of corruption than he is given credit.
He said: “I addressed the anti-corruption agencies yesterday (Wednesday) and I told them that people are deceiving young Nigerians, but they must tell Nigerians what the government is doing.
“We have arrested more people within this period. We have done more convictions within this period, but every day they tell us lies. If they had succeeded in fighting corruption, it won’t be with us today. There is no corruption in the fertilizer industry again because of the electronic wallet technique that we developed.”
“If anyone says the best way to fight corruption is to come and arrest your uncle and father and present them on television, you don’t stop corruption that way; you even encourage it that way. We must set up institutions, strengthen them to prevent people from even touching the money. You don’t test people with money, don’t even allow them to touch it. That is what we are working on, and we are succeeding.
“They said the military is corrupt, but when this insecurity came up, we had nothing (no arms). So, to get these things quickly, we used vendors to get these procurements, but now what we are doing is government-to-government. Any new procurement for the Navy, Army, Air Force, is government-to-government.”
Source: Leadership
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave your comment