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Some of Top Officials Absent from Jonathan’s Midterm Peport Presentation
Some of the top officials of the Nigerian Government shunned
the ceremony where President Goodluck Jonathan presented the scorecard
of his administration in the last two years.
When top officials of the Nigerian Government gathered on Wednesday
to listen to President Goodluck Jonathan present the scorecard of his
administration in the last two years, one notable absentee was observed.
The event, held at the International Conference Centre, Abuja, was attended by Nigeria’s top five public officials but one, the fourth citizen by Nigeria’s official hierarchy.
Aminu Tambuwal, the Speaker of the House of
Representatives was conspicuously absent at a ceremony attended by Mr.
Jonathan, Vice President Namadi Sambo, Senate President David Mark, and
the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Mariam Mukhtar.
No reason was given for the speaker’s absence although it was later
announced during the programme that he was represented by the Deputy
Speaker of the House, Emeka Ihedioha.
Though a member of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party, Mr. Tambuwal
has never really been a darling of the ruling party or indeed of the
president.
“ ..the joke here (at the presidency) used to be that the Speaker is
an APC man in PDP government,” a presidency source told Premium Times,
saying they were not surprised the speaker was absent.
Mr. Tambuwal’s election as speaker was opposed by both his party and
allegedly the presidency; while he got the support of the opposition for
his emergence as speaker. He is known to hold secret political meetings
with top opposition leaders like one recently held with Muhammadu
Buhari and Bola Tinubu, two national leaders of the emerging All
Progressives Congress, APC.
Rumours have also been spread that the speaker is being considered as
a presidential candidate of the APC, a merger of Nigeria’s largest four
opposition parties, a claim the speaker denied.
However, Mr. Tambuwal’s spokesperson said there was no big deal to his principal’s non-attendance.
“Usually, the Speaker goes to his constituency on a day like this
(Democracy Day) to interact with his people, there is no issue at all,”
Imam Imam, Mr. Tambuwal’s spokesperson, said.
He said the Speaker left Abuja for Sokoto on Tuesday after the
sitting of the House, and has commissioned some projects undertaken by
Governor Wammako.
“In any case even the invitation sent, read the House of Reps, and
the Deputy Speaker was there to represent the House, so it will be
erroneous to assume that the Speaker shunned the event,” Mr. Imam added.
Mr. Tambuwal was, however, not the only major dignitary that shunned
the event witnessed by ministers, lawmakers, foreign guests, and others,
and broadcast live to millions of Nigerians.
Obasanjo, Babangida, Abdulsalami, Atiku
At least four former heads of state: Olusegun Obasanjo, Muhammadu
Buhari, Ibrahim Babangida, and Abdulsalami Abubakar, and a former Vice
President, Atiku Abubakar, also shunned the event, which was used by the
Jonathan administration to showcase its successes. However, all of them
were invited, the Premium Times reports.
Although no official
reason was given for Mr. Obasanjo’s non-attendance in Abuja, he was
present as Governor Sule Lamido of Jigawa outlined the achievements of
his administration in the state. Mr. Lamido, also a member of the ruling
party, is seen as a loyalist of Mr. Obasanjo and is believed to be one
of the PDP Governors that voted against Jonah Jang, the PDP and
presidency’s reportedly backed candidate for the chairmanship of the
Nigeria Governors Forum, NGF.
Posters have already been
circulated across various Nigerian states of a joint ticket of Mr.
Lamido and Rotimi Amaechi for the 2015 presidency, a move reportedly
supported by Mr. Obasanjo. Mr. Amaechi, who won the NGF chairmanship
election, is currently having a running battle with the presidency and
the PDP leadership. He has since been suspended from the ruling party.
The
Jigawa event was also attended by Lamido Sanusi, the Governor of the
Central Bank, another person who has the backing of the opposition
parties. Though serving in a PDP government, when Mr. Sanusi was being
honoured with a traditional title in Kano, the event was largely
attended by opposition leaders including Mr. Buhari and Mr. Tinubu.
Mr.
Sanusi also preferred to attend the Jigawa event than attend one by Mr.
Jonathan even though several achievements of the economic team of which
he is a core member were being highlighted at the Abuja event.
Two
other former military heads of state, Ibrahim Babangida and Abdusalami
Abubakar, were also absent at the event, attended by three other past
Nigerian leaders: Yakubu Gowon, Shehu Shagari, and Ernest Shonekan.
Mr.
Babangida challenged Mr. Jonathan for the PDP presidential ticket in
2011 but eventually lost to former Vice President Atiku Abubakar in a
northern consensus arrangement before the latter lost the party ticket
to Mr. Jonathan. He eventually declared his support in the presidential
elections for Nuhu Ribadu, the candidate of the Action Congress of
Nigeria in 2011.
Mr. Babangida also recently encouraged Mr. Tambuwal, the speaker, to run for “higher office.”
On
his part, Mr. Abubakar, the former head of state, who is said to be a
cousin to Mr. Babangida, is known to always share the same position with
the latter and has also not been seen attending presidential meetings
and events.
Another notable absentee was Atiku Abubakar, also a
member of the PDP, and the loser in the PDP presidential primaries of
2011. Mr. Abubakar recently warned that the PDP faced disintegration
with the various crisis it is facing.
Buhari expectedly absent
Of
the prominent absentees, perhaps the least surprising is that of Mr.
Buhari, a perennial challenger for the office of president.
Mr. Buhari was the runner-up in the 2011 elections to Mr. Jonathan; and had earlier contested in 2003 and 2007.
A
major critic and outspoken opponent of the Jonathan administration, it
would probably have been more of a surprise if the former general
attended the meeting.
When Mr. Jonathan was first appointed
acting President in 2010, Mr. Buhari attended meetings of the National
Council of State at the presidential villa, but stopped attending the
meetings or even going to the villa after Mr. Jonathan was announced as
the winner of the April 2011 presidential election which Mr. Buhari as
candidate of the opposition Congress for Progressive Change, CPC,
challenged up to the Supreme Court.
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