The Presidency on Sunday denied the existence of a rift between President Goodluck Jonathan and ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo, saying the reported “frosty relationship” between them was “mere drama which is a very important element of politics and governance.”
Special Adviser to the President on Media and
Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, said this while reacting to recent
interview granted by a leader of the Niger Delta Volunteer Force,
Mujaheed Dokubo-Asari.
Asari-Dokubo had, amongother things, said Jonathan
would not rule beyond 2015 because he is surrounded by greedy
politicians who caused the rift between him and Obasanjo.
But Abati in an interview with State House
correspondents in Abuja said, “I keep saying it; there is no rift
between President Jonathan and former President Obasanjo. The President
has utmost respect for the former President whom he regards as his
father. He even calls him ‘Baba.’
“I don’t think anybody can say he has any evidence
anywhere where the President has been disrespectful to the elderly man.
So, those things that you see in the newspapers about people saying
President Jonathan and former President Obasanjo are quarrelling are
exaggerated. They do not reflect the truth,”
The presidential spokesman claimed that “some persons” were just bringing up issues in an attempt to set up the two leaders.
He said that Jonathan and Obasanjo were experienced enough to discern the tactics.
On Dokubo-Asari’s utterances, Abati said the comment
did not reflect the feelings of Nigerians about the President and his
administration.
He said the ex-militant leader was a “member of the house” and that his outburst came as a surprise to the Presidency.
“I don’t know whether it is a wise thing for you to
be a member of the house and then for you to stand outside and urinate
into that same house. Doing so may serve the purpose of sensationalism
and it may please some mischief makers, but the truth of the matter is
that wise people may think that that is not really the right way to go,”
he said.
Abati described Dokubo-Asari’s claim that some greedy
politicians around Jonathan had cut him off from his roots the “a crab
mentality theory of human relationship.”
Explaining the theory, he said, “If you put a number
of crabs in a bucket and one of them tries to go to the top, the other
crabs will be struggling to pull that one that is trying to go to the
top down. They will keep reminding that top crab that you are one of us;
this is where you belong and you cannot leave us; we are together.”
According to Abati, when the principle is translated
into governance it means that leaders are put under pressure because
there are many people saying they don’t want progress because they all
want to be at the same level.
He urged Dokubo-Asari to be consistent, honest and
truthful, and be less worried about those who are preventing other
people from seeing the President.
He said, “President Jonathan is not running an Ijaw
project. He is running a Nigerian project and I keep saying he is a man
who is very conscious of his place in history. At the end of the day,
whether the people say they are being blocked from having access to him,
or even those of us who work for him, it is important to remember that
the only person that will be called to come and give account is
President Jonathan.
“That is the man Nigerians voted for and all of us,
whether we are his kinsmen or we are his staff or we are his friends, I
think we should focus more on the Nigerian project, the Nigerian
assignment that President Jonathan has been given and worry less about
insinuations like all these ‘people are blocking me from having access’,
‘he has forgotten his brothers’, ‘he is arguing with a particular
person.”
Meanwhile, Jonathan on Sunday promised Nigerians that
his administration would perform better in 2013 and improve on their
welfare in all aspects.
The President gave the assurance while speaking
shortly after he had laid the foundation stone of the Living Faith
Foundation’s Bible College in Kaduna.
“Let me assure all of you and indeed all Nigerians
that 2013 will be better for us than 2012 in all aspects of the nation’s
history. The New Year shall be better for us in terms of job creation,
wealth creation and improved security among others,” the President told
the worshippers,” he said.
Jonathan urged Nigerians not to lose hope because he
and members of his team had resolved to make significant changes in the
country during his tenure.
He said although the changes might seem to be slow in
coming because of the tedious processes involved, they would soon be
manifesting.
He said he was aware that people found it difficult
to continue to believe the government because of the challenges they are
facing.
“Sometimes, challenges make people doubt the sincerity of government, but I am confident that God knows everything,” he said.
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