Culled from Vanguard
The Presidency yesterday reacted angrily to the
continuous vituperations being poured on President Goodluck Jonathan by former
President Olusegun Obasanjo, describing the Ota farmer as a confused man.
The Special Adviser to the President on Political
Matters, Alhaji Ahmed Gulak, made the remark exclusively to Sunday Vanguard
while reacting to newspaper reports yesterday in which the former president was
quoted as heaping the blame for the insurgency in the country on Jonathan. Click to read more after the cut...
Gulak said Nigerians should not take Obasanjo’s
criticism of Jonathan serious because it was either his comments were based on
ignorance or outright mischief or both, but primarily geared towards confusing
the people and distracting the Presidency from delivering on its promise to
Nigerians.
According to the President’s aide, the security
problem in Nigeria actually started during Obasanjo’s presidency and peaked
during Yar’Adua’s time and was merely inherited by the present administration.
He said it was therefore wrong and condemnable for
Obasanjo or any Nigerian for that matter to accuse Jonathan of not tackling the
security challenges headlong, saying that the man was doing his best to stem
the tide of the crisis.
Gulak, who described Boko Haram as an international
security threat that has its roots outside Nigeria, pointed out that the
federal administration had shown the will and capacity to deal with the
situation the way it should be.
The Political Adviser said, “As far as I am
concerned, Obasanjo is becoming more confused and Nigerians should not take him
serious on the issue of his attacks on President Goodluck Jonathan.
“Nigerians have not forgotten that it was in
Obasanjo’s time that Zaki Biam, Odi, bombing of oil facilities and militancy
became very rampant in the country. So let us not be distracted by his antics,
which are either borne out of ignorance or outright mischief or both.”
The former President had been quoted in the magazine,
New African, as saying that Jonathan should blame no one but himself if he
cannot address the Boko Haram crisis.
“If the president is the chief security officer of
the country and there is a security problem, where do you go for the
solution?”, Obasanjo said in his latest public criticism of the president.
“And if that solution is not coming from the chief
security officer, who has everybody and can mobilise everybody inside and
outside to get a solution, then he has the responsibility to solve the problem.
And nobody else should be blamed but him.”
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