The
Presidency on Tuesday described a former presidential candidate of
the Congress for Progressive Change, Maj.-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari
(retd.), as a leading protagonist of violence.
It said that apart from his ambition to
rule the country again, Buhari had refused to contribute meaningfully
to actions capable of ending insecurity in the country.
Buhari, a former Head of State and now the National Leader of the CPC, had on the Hausa service of the British Broadcasting Corporation on Monday, said the Federal Government should be blamed for the lingering security challenges in the country.
He also flayed the Goodluck Jonathan
administration for what he called “poor handling of insurgency” that had
led to the death of many Nigerians and destruction of properties.
While reacting to this, the Senior
Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe,
told our correspondent in an interview in Abuja that it was unfortunate
that such a statement could emanate from Buhari.
Describing Buhari as a man he respects
so much, Okupe added that he had no option but to reply to his
accusations against the Federal Government and the President.
He reminded Nigerians that Buhari had
previously been credited with a statement that he would make the
country ungovernable if the last presidential election did not favour
him.
Okupe said, “Everybody in this country
knows that it was Buhari who vowed that if he did not win the election,
he would make the country ungovernable for this President.
“It was this same Buhari, who said
during the electioneering period that if the votes were counted and he
lost, people should go for blood.
“He is not in any position to apportion blame on the issue of violence in the North or in Nigeria in general.
“He is a protagonist of violence. The only solution he sees to his not being President is to call for violence.
“This government has tried to contain
some of the repercussions of the unguarded statements made by Buhari and
I don’t think anybody in Nigeria will take him seriously on this
allegation.”
The presidential aide added that if
there were those to be blamed for the insecurity in the country, the
name of Buhari should top the list.
Okupe wondered why the Katsina
State-born general had refused to visit states like Borno and Yobe
despite the fact that he hails from the northern part of the country.
He said, “As a former Head of State,
have you ever seen him (Buhari) visiting Borno or Yobe State? Have you
ever seen him show sympathy to people , either Christians or Muslims
that have been killed during these attacks (by Boko Haram)?
“Have you see him as a leader, a man who
traversed the entire length and breadth of the North especially to
canvass for votes seeking an end to the violence; why is it that he
cannot use that same clout that he has to get leaders together and say
we must put an end to this carnage?
“He finds it comfortable to shift the
blame to other people. What has he done as a leader, who is from that
region to help Nigeria and the North out of this unfortunate
development?
“Nigerians should ask him, as a former
Head of State and stakeholder in the Nigeria project and a man who
wants to be President again, if he would want Nigeria to be destroyed
up to a point before he can try to wade in? It does not work that
way.”
Okupe said that as a leader, Buhari
should stop apportioning blame, but should do something crucial to
bring the carnage in the country under control.
He reminded the former military ruler
that during the crisis in Niger Delta, leaders from the region went
into the creeks and discussed with the militants to lay down their
arms.
“Has Buhari done that? When Christians
were killed, he kept quiet, when mosques were bombed, he did not say
anything. He doesn’t have any other interest in Nigeria but his
inordinate ambition to rule,” he added.
In his reaction, Buhari said there was
no way he could be involved in the discussion on how to end the carnage
since he was not part of the problem.
Buhari, who spoke through the National
Publicity Secretary of the CPC, Mr. Rotimi Fashakin, also said it was
apparent that those responsible for the crisis in the Niger Delta were
the ones that volunteered to end it.
He said, “When the Niger Delta militancy
reached a crescendo, some notable people from that region went into
the creeks as he (Okupe) alleged.
“The question is: ‘Who were the people
who started the Niger Delta imbroglio ab initio?’ If the people that
initiated and executed a problem decided to resolve it, what can anyone
do about it? This is totally different from the Boko Haram palaver.”
Punch
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