Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has told President Goodluck Jonathan
to do the needful instead of inundating him with pleas of forgiveness.
Obasanjo who was the president before late Umar Musa Yar’Adua said this
today following his return from South Africa where he had gone to
deliberate on South Sudan’s increasing insecurity and violence. He told
newsmen that it was absurd to be invited back into the ruling People’s
Democratic Party (PDP) – a party he has always been a member of.
Obasanjo who recently met with the Senate President, David Mark at his
Abeokuta Hilltop mansion to discuss his rocky relationship with
President Goodluck Jonathan said his misgivings are not personal, rather
they are “issues of principle, morality, honour , integrity, commitment
and character which are paramount.
According to the Owu chief: “During last week when I was in South Africa
as the Chairman of AU Commission of Inquiry on South Sudan and while
with my fellow Commissioners, we were deliberating on how to help that
new country out of its problem of security and violence, I received
avalanche of news and cacophony of appeals and pleadings from some
quarters of PDP leadership.
“There are misunderstandings and misrepresentations which some of those
appeals and pleas manifested; hence this explanation from me. Talking of
inviting me back to PDP is wrong and it is a great misrepresentation as
I have never left PDP and I will never leave PDP.
“I have said it before and I will say it again, I rose to become the
President of Nigeria on the platform of PDP and for that reason alone, I
will remain a card-carrying and ward-active member of PDP for as long
as I have to be a political party member.
“Secondly, nobody has personally offended me as a result of my
membership of PDP. If, however, anybody or group feels offended by my
continued membership, I will offer an unreserved apology but continue to
remain in the Party.
“I have had occasions to say to the President, the Senate President and
the Party Chairman separately that I have no quarrel with any individual
or group in the Party. There are, for me, issues of principle,
morality, honour , integrity, commitment and character which are
paramount.
“For instance, as a former President of Nigeria, the Chairman of West
Africa Commission on Drug and a member of Global Commission on Drug, I
cannot accept that the Zonal leader of my political Party and, worse
still in my zone, will be an indicted drug baron wanted in America.
“How do I explain that to friends outside Nigeria? This is only one of
the many issues that I have pointed and still pointing out.
“I have national and international standard to maintain and reputation
to keep and sustain. For these reasons, I opted to remain active only
at the ward level of the Party till the leadership does the needful.
“But under no condition will my commitment to Nigeria be diminished.
And, for me, it is commitment to Nigeria first and any other commitment
can only follow in second or third place. Where any other commitment is
in tandem with what I see and understand as commitment to Nigeria, such
other commitment will share a pride of place with Nigeria.
“I must hasten to thank the President, the Senate President and the
Chairman of PDP with whom, at their instances, these issues have been
discussed and laid to rest. My interest and commitment to Nigeria go
beyond partisan politics.
“Today, Nigeria needs all hands on deck to deal with our pressing
problems of security including the issue of Chibok girls, widening
inequality, infrastructure, impunity, corruption, poverty and youth
education, skill-acquisition, empowerment and employment.
“These are issues of concern to most Nigerians. We all need to join
hands to move Nigeria forward. I don’t need to be begged for that.
“Rather, I beg and appeal to those who are begging me to realize that we
must put Nigeria’s interest above politics – party or personal –
otherwise, we will all be judged at the bar of history if not the bar of
current affairs.
“In addition, we must preserve, sustain and deepen democracy and democratic practices,” Obasanjo stated.
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