THE
Special Adviser to the President on Political Affairs, Alhaji Ali
Gulak, has said that the former military rulers still aspiring to become
civilian president of Nigeria should forget the dream.
“Their time is up. As elder statesmen, they should give positive advice for Nigeria to move forward,” he said.
Gulak spoke in Abuja on Thursday night at a banquet and colloquium
organised by the Political Summit Group (PSG) in honour of President
Goodluck Jonathan on his 55th birthday anniversary. He represented
Jonathan at the occasion.
Making a veiled reference to General Muhammad Buhari (rtd), who
contested in the last presidential election under the platform of
Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), Gulak said such leaders who have
had opportunity to rule the country once, some up to eight years, should
stop nurturing ambition of becoming civilian presidents.
He said what was needed was for them to act as elder statesmen and
restrict themselves to advisory role on how to move the country forward.
He said Nigeria has had leaders like the sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo,
Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, among others, who at independence did their best to
lay solid foundation for the development of the country.
Alhaji Gulak added that instead of building on that foundation, some
people have constituted themselves into stumbling blocks in the
development of the nation and trying to set the country on fire through
inflammatory utterances.
He said there was no way anyone could be president of Nigeria in this
democratic dispensation without building bridges across the nation.
The presidential aide, however, said President Goodluck Jonathan
under the 1999 Constitution has right to seek re-election in 2015,
adding that he deserves re-election based on the track record of
achievements.
“Nigeria is a great nation. We are on the mountain top and we have
seen the promise land and President Jonathan will take us there,” he
said.
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