Ex-President Goodluck Jonathan has accused Borno State governor for a role he allegedly played in the abduction of Chibok school girls some years ago, calling him to exculpate himself of such ignoble role.
In 2014, more than 100 girls from Government Girls’ Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State in Nigeria were abducted by persons suspected to belong to the militant Islamic group, Boko Haram.
At the launching of a book: On a Platter of Gold — How Jonathan won and lost Nigeria, written by Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, a former Minister of Youth and Sports Development under Jonathan administration in Abuja on Thursday, Kashim Shettima, the Borno State Governor, described the former President as a bad leader who made poor choices while in power.
But, Jonathan in a statement signed by Mr. Ikechukwu Eze, his media aide in Abuja on Friday, said, “He [Shettima] should be able to tell us if it was Jonathan’s poor choices that led the governor to expose the students of the Government Girls’ Secondary School in Chibok to an avoidable danger, in total disregard of a Federal Government’s directive to the governors in the three states most affected by Boko Haram to relocate their students writing the West African Senior School Certificate Examination to safe zones.
The ex-president also accused the governor of frustrating the war against Boko Haram, noting “The governor is now denying that he had no hand in the kidnap of the Chibok girls even before anybody accused him of culpability.
However, we share the view of those who insist that the governor had other things up his sleeve when he promised the West African Examinations Council that he would secure the girls and ended up doing the very opposite, by deliberately abandoning them to their fate, without any security presence in their school.”
Jonathan said that it was instructive that while other governors in the zone heeded the security advice, Shettima was the only one who “flagrantly” flouted it.
He queried, “Should we also fail to point out that his decision to reward the principal of Chibok Secondary School, who was uncharacteristically absent on the night the terrorists stormed the school, with the post of a commissioner, did throw up more questions than answers?”
Jonathan challenged the governor to explain to the people of Borno State and Nigerians what he did with the over N60 billion Local Governments Fund, which he said were left by his predecessor, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff.
The former President further described Abdullahi’s book as sour grapes — full of lies and gossip, saying “it was unfortunate that Shettima claimed at the presentation of the book that he [Jonathan] wasted the goodwill he commanded because of bad governance and poor choices in office.”
According to him, “As a man who had never seen anything good in the administration of Jonathan on account of party and other differences, it has remained our consistent view that in a democracy, Governor Kashim Shettima and others like him are entitled to their opinion, no matter how jaundiced.
“However, it is a sad commentary on the character of some of our politicians that they go to any length to make spurious statements in pursuit of the sad narrative to remain politically correct.
“We cannot be deceived by his crocodile tears and patronising claim that ‘Jonathan is essentially a decent man,’ which is a ploy he deployed to justify his false allegation of a lost glory.
“The man who today speaks of squandered goodwill should be able to tell Nigerians what percentage of the votes Jonathan got in 2011 from Borno State at the height of that his envisaged glory, according to Shettima, and what it became in subsequent elections.
“What was obvious yesterday and has remained today is that Governor Shettima and those who think like him never liked Jonathan based on some parochial and paternalistic sentiments.”
The one-time president described the governor’s claims as parochial and jaundiced, and debunked the allegations of poor governance and highlighted what he described as his key achievements, which he said were yet to be matched by any other leader.
“I assembled a yet-to-be-matched crop of dynamic cabinet and economic management team made up of tested technocrats like Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (former Minister of Finance), Dr. Shamsuddeen Usman (former Minister of National Planning), Mr. Olusegun Aganga (former Minister of Trade and Investments) and Dr. Akinwumi Adesina (President of the African Development Bank and former Minister of Agriculture),” he added.
Source- Punch