August 28, 2012 by Ihuoma Chiedozie
President Goodluck
Jonathan on Monday said he was the most criticised President in the
whole world and vowed to become the most praised before he left office.
Jonathan however
absolved himself of any blame for the country’s problems for which he
said he had become an object of criticism.
“I think I am the most
criticised President in the whole world, but I want to tell this
audience that before I leave I will be the most praised President,” he
said at the opening of the 52nd Annual General of the Nigerian Bar
Association at the International Conference Centre in Abuja.
He added, “Sometimes, I ask, were there roads in this country and Jonathan brought flood to destroy the roads?
“Was there power and Jonathan brought hurricane to wipe it out?
“If Boko Haram is that
of poverty in the North, were there farms and Jonathan brought tsunami
and drought to destroy them? Within two years – is that possible?
“But what I can tell Nigerians is, ‘let those talking keep talking, time will tell.’”
The keynote speaker at
the event, Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah of the Sokoto Catholic Diocese,
had earlier picked holes in the 1999 Constitution and said the President
of the Federal Republic of Nigeria was the most powerful President in
the world.
Kukah also said a messiah was needed in the country, but he emphasised that the identity of the messiah was still unknown.
The President’s spokesman, Reuben Abati, had in an article in The Guardian newspaper on Sunday defended Jonathan against insinuations that he was a drunk and glutton.
Abati wrote, “We are not
allowed to touch alcohol. Alcohol is not served during official duties.
Yes, when there is an international function, wine is served, but
nobody gets drunk around here (Presidency). That will amount to an act
of indiscipline.
“The President himself
does not allow alcohol to be served at his table. But when you go to
social network media, they tell you something else. Lies. Lies. Lies.”
Meanwhile, Jonathan also
joined the controversy over the propriety or otherwise of the creation
of state police in the country. He called for restraint in the debate on
the creation of state police, although he admitted that the National
Council of State welcomed the proposal when it was raised at one of its
meetings.
He said, “On the issue
of state police, everybody knows I have been Deputy Governor and
Governor in Bayelsa State, there was a time we were frustrated and we
felt that we should have our police, that we would be able to manage
criminality in our state better because of our local environment.
“Police from other parts
of the country find it difficult to go into the waters, but for us who
were born inside the water, even in the night we can enter ordinary
canoe to go anywhere and we feel that if we have our local police it
will be better for us because our police can reach everywhere in our
state.
“But when I discussed
the issue of state police with former presidents before a state council
meeting, they said it is a good idea, which probably one day we will get
there.
“And that is the
emphasis I want to make, one day we’ll get to that point. But presently
we have to be careful on how we go about it.”
He added, “Experiments
have been made, there was a time when the police came up with a policy
that police officers from the rank of inspector and below should be
posted to their states of origin as a way of testing whether police
familiar with the environment will make changes. But it was realised
that when police officers from the rank of inspector down were posted to
their state of origin, things became worse. So the police had to
discontinue that policy.
“We also feel that
looking at the federal level and the way the governors are handling
elections in their states with the state electoral commission, where
opposition parties hardly win even councillorship elections.
“So, if there is state
police and the governors manipulate their state police the way they are
manipulating their state electoral commissions, the instability that it
will create, even what we are witnessing will be a child’s play.”
President of the NBA, Joseph Daudu, SAN, had in his address backed calls for the creation of state police in the country.
The NBA also condemned
the level of insecurity and corruption in the country, and told the
President that he would go down in history as the architect of a modern
Nigeria if he revived the anti-corruption campaign.
The theme of the conference was ‘Nigeria as an emerging market: Redefining our laws and politics for growth’.
In apparent response to
calls for the convocation of Sovereign National Conference, the
President said in his address that democratic structures were already in
place in the country.
“It is important to
appreciate the existence of a democratic structure in the country,
which, no matter our opinion, cannot be wished away,” he said.
Kukah, in a paper
titled, ‘Nigeria as an emerging democracy: The dilemma and the promise,’
had said that due to the nature of the country’s constitution, the
President of Nigeria was the most powerful in the world.
“The President of
Nigeria is more powerful than any President anywhere in the world, even
more powerful than the American President.
“The President of
Nigeria can, as I am standing here now, decide to allocate an oil well
to me,” the cleric said, drawing laughter from the audience.
“To be the President of Nigeria, you have to have the capacity to do well and that is where motive becomes important,” he added.
Noting that Nigerians were looking for a messiah, Kukah said only a Nigerian could lead the country to the Promised Land.
He added, “Nigerians are looking for a messiah, but a messiah is not going to come from another planet.
“The Nigerian messiah is
among us – we were not told that a Ghanaian could be the President of
Nigeria. The only qualification to being the President of Nigeria is
being a Nigerian.
“The messiah is among us, but who the messiah is, we don’t know.”
He noted that all the Presidents since the country’s independence came to power by accident.
“There is no President of Nigeria till date that did not come to power by accident.
“This should teach us to
be more modest because God always finds a way of bringing somebody who
was heading somewhere else – who has no ambition,” he said.
Kukah went ahead to
stress that “the Constitution as it is does not have the capacity to
deal with the fine issues of a complex country like Nigeria.”
The cleric noted that calls for state creation are largely selfish.
He emphasised the need
to address difficult questions in the country, like the country’s
membership of the Organisation of Islamic Countries, the implementation
of Sharia law in parts of the country, and the need for state police.
“When Shagari became the President of
Nigeria, not a single Muslim in Nigeria mentioned Sharia law, because we
were all busy eating,” he said.
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