Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose and former
Edo State Commissioner for Information, Kassim Afegbua, have again called on
President Muhammadu Buhari to step aside.
The
governor said the insecurity and economic problems in the country were
indications that the president lacks the know-how to be at the helm of the
affairs of the country.
In a
statement issued by Lere Olayinka, his spokesman, the governor said the
abduction of 105 pupils of Government Girls Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe
State, and Nigeria’s regression in Transparency International’s perception of
corruption report were further proof that the president needs to “take a bow.”
He
said: “President Buhari promised Nigerians that he would bring back the missing
Chibok girls and defeat Boko Haram within three months. After more than 32
months in office, Boko Haram is still killing Nigerians, with herdsmen also on
killing spree.
“Painfully,
the same Boko Haram they claimed to have defeated suddenly became strong enough
to kidnap over 100 students. Now, Nigeria is not only looking for the remaining
Chibok girls, another over 100 innocent students have joined, this is
unacceptable.
“Funny
enough, a few days ago, the president called on all Nigerians to be prepared to
pay the ‘ultimate price’ for the progress and unity of the country and I wish
to ask him what other price he wants Nigerians to pay.
“Already,
Nigerians are sacrificing their lives by getting killed while seeking what to
eat. Some have even committed suicide. Yet, the same president who is enjoying
all the benefits of his office is calling on Nigerians to forego personal
pleasures and pay the ultimate price.”
Fayose
further said the president has nothing to campaign with ahead of the 2019
elections.
“When
President Buhari mounts the campaign podium, what will he tell Nigerians? Will
he tell Nigerians that corruption and insecurity has not worsened than it was
in 2015? Will the president say that Nigerians deserve to be buying petrol that
they were buying at N86 per litre in 2015 at N180 now?
“Is
President Buhari going to justify that within 30 months, Nigeria’s debt that
was N12.06 trillion in 2015 increased by over N10 trillion?”
On his
part, Afegbua said if he were President Buhari’s son, he would have graciously
advised his father not to re-contest the 2019 presidential election but go home
and rest.
Afegbua
who is also the spokesman of the former military President, General Ibrahim
Babangida (rtd), therefore advised the president not to run for second term if
he were his son.
According
to The Cable, he said former
President Olusegun Obasanjo was right to have said the Buhari-led
administration is nepotic.
“If
President Buhari is my father, I will graciously advise him. I will say,
‘Daddy, it is time to go home and manage the rest of your life. It is time to
leave the stage where people will be abusing you’. I will not bring out my dad
to be so vilified if I were to be his son.”
“So it
is not about changing policies, it is about the fact that this is the age of
retirement, this is the age of having more time for yourself and family than
committing to public service.
“When
Babangida clocked 70, I was one of those who prevailed on him to quit partisan
politics. We prepared a statement for him at a public event in Abuja, he
announced his retirement from partisan politics. That is the hallmark of a
statesman,” he said.
Afegbua
who is a member of the All Progressives Congress (APC), said Nigeria “cannot
afford the luxury” of a president whose doctors have advised him to “eat
more and sleep more.”
He
said: “Now the president has told us that his doctors told him to eat more and
sleep more. But this country needs a president who will be awake when the
country is sleeping. Or who will be awake when the country is awake. India is
awake at night, 24 hours because they want to catch up with lost time.
“We
cannot afford the luxury of having a president who will sleep when we have
insecurity everywhere, herdsmen here and there. We need a president that has the capacity to go
round and preach peace to all the ethnic groups.
Meanwhile,
President Buhari and Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo pay little or no cognisance
to re-election bid, a presidential aide, Ismael Ahmed, said in Abuja at the
weekend.
Ahmed,
a Senior Special Assistant to the President on Social Investment Programme
(SIP), who made this disclosure while addressing journalists along with the
Special Adviser to the President on SIP, Mrs. Maryam Uwais, said both the president and his
deputy were more pre-occupied with the wellbeing of Nigerians than any
re-election.
According
to Ahmed, the implementation of SIP had provided a veritable platform for
economic growth at the grassroots to the extent that the success
recorded thereof is part of the package that All Progressives Congress (APC)
can showcase ahead of elections.
However,
he said notwithstanding, the focus of the programme is not about the search for
re-election
but rather about poverty reduction, wealth distribution, insisting that both
the president and vice-president hardly bother about re-election but are rather
more concerned about the interests of citizens.
“I
think even though this is a political promise, it came from a manifesto of a
political party. The implementation is far from being just political. The
implementation is for all Nigerians. When we set out and were campaigning in 2015, we
didn’t say what we are going to do is going to be solely for political reasons.
“The president
and vice-president are more committed to the electorate rather than elections
and are concerned about the future rather than just next one year. So, this is entirely
about the country itself and not just for political reasons. But if you are
talking about what we can leverage on, there are a lot of successes in SIP. We are engaging
73,000
cooks that are growing rural economy. They are buying from local
farmers.”
He
added: “Therefore, this is growing the rural economy…We have reduced the number
of out of school children in the last one or two years. We have been
implementing the school feeding Programme. Engaging 200,000 young unemployed
graduates that are receiving N30,000 a month. Those are successes in itself.
“So, if
we are looking for things to leverage on, stamp our chests and storm the
political campaigns and say we should be voted again, we have a lot of success
stories to tell but that is not the entirety and essence of this programme. The
essence of this programme is to reduce poverty and to distribute wealth as much
as we can. The president and vice-president care less about the elections like
I said. They care more about the citizens.”
Courtesy: Thisday
Comments
Post a Comment