The Northern Elders’ Forum on Monday said that the North would
not support President Goodluck Jonathan in the 2015 presidential election.
The
spokesman for the group, Prof. Ango Abdullahi, stated this in an interview with
one of our correspondents, while reacting to a statement by the Chairman of the
Northern Governors’ Forum, Babangida Aliyu.
Aliyu,
had in Minna on Sunday, said the North would negotiate with candidates
contesting the 2015 presidential election.
He
denied saying only a northerner should emerge as President in 2015.
Abdullahi
said, “My part of the North will not support him (Jonathan). The South owe us a
moral debt and they should pay.
“They
seem to be forgetting the moral debt they owe us. There is nothing personal
against the person of President Goodluck Jonathan. There is something wrong
with the system that threw him up against equity and justice.”
The
NEF spokesman said that people should have the courage to acknowledge equity
and justice.
He
stated, “The Northern Elders Forum has no political party. This is something
that you should remember. The various northern groups including the ACF (Arewa
Consultative Forum) have no political party.
“What
we have are political interests and it is on these political interests that we
are going to direct our energies. At the moment our political interest, based
on equity and justice rests with the North.
“When
I say we will not support him, it is not because he is Jonathan or that he is
Ijaw. What we are saying is that we will look at the issues at stake and throw
our weight where there will be equity.”
Abdullahi
said that the North had not been treated fairly.
According
to him, the NEF has no political party or presidential candidate for now.
The
NEF spokesman added that there were no contradictions in the comments made by
Aliyu and his Jigawa State counterpart, Sule Lamido.
Lamido
had in Dutse, the Jigawa State capital, said that the Peoples Democratic Party
presidential ticket was not a guarantee that Jonathan would win the 2015 poll.
Abdullahi
said, “There is no contradiction in the position of the North. If you read
what Babangida Aliyu said correctly, he said the North will negotiate the
Presidency in 2015.
“It
does not foreclose the emergence of a northern candidate. I don’t know in what
context (Sule) Lamido spoke but I know he knows what he is talking about.
“It
is a fact that even when a candidate emerges on the platform of a party there
is no guarantee that he will win the election in a free and fair contest.”
He
recalled that the North supported zoning in 1999. This, he said, was to enable
all parts of the country to have a sense of belonging.
Abdullahi
said, “It was the Northern Elders Forum that supported the election of the
President from the Southern part of the country, first for four years and
secondly for another four years.
“We
are not talking as if other parts of the country have no rights. We ceded our
rights and supported their aspirations, and therefore, what we are saying is
that for equity, fairness and balance, it is about time that there is a payback
based on the kind of system so that people will not misunderstand us.”
The
Presidency on Monday said Jonathan was ready to negotiate with the North and
other zones in the country if he decided to contest the 2015 presidential
election.
Special
Adviser to the President on Political Matters, Dr. Ahmed Gulak, said this in an
interview with one of our correspondents.
Gulak
spoke in reaction to Aliyu’s comment on Sunday.
The
presidential aide said that as far as Jonathan was concerned, politics was
about extension of olive branches to all stakeholders and building bridges.
He
said the President was favourably disposed to negotiating with any bloc or zone
in order to move the nation forward.
Gulak
said, “Politics is about power; it is about extending olive branches; it is
about consultation and it is about building bridges.
“President
Jonathan is ready and always willing to negotiate with any bloc or zone in
order to move the nation forward.
“Politics
is about discussing with stakeholders, all zones, all blocs and all states. He
will do this should he decide to contest in 2015.”
Meanwhile,
the ACF on Monday said the north was not insisting on a northern president in
2015.
The
National Publicity Secretary of the ACF, Mr. Anthony Sani, who said this in an
interview with one of our correspondents in Kaduna, said the North, like other
regions, would contest the presidency in 2015.
Sani
said that there was nothing wrong with the statement credited to Aliyu that the
region was ready to negotiate the 2015 poll.
The
ACF spokesman said that the zoning formula had been killed and buried by the
2011 elections.
Sani
stated, “I think Governor Aliyu Babangida is not wrong precisely because
politics of zoning has been killed and buried by the results of elections in
2011 when Nigerians voted against politics of zoning.
“Where
that is the case, the North will be expected to canvass for the presidency like
any other sections of the country. In that case, there is nothing like North
insisting on the presidency, but it will be left for dynamics of democracy to
determine.”
The
ACF’s spokesman said the South used annulment of June 12, 1993 election to
morally blackmail the North into accepting zoning.
He
stated, “When the time came for the turn of the North, then suddenly
constitutionalism and politics of merit supplanted zoning. What is more?
Nigerians voted against politics of zoning in 2011.
“As
democrats, ACF and northern leaders accepted the judgment of Nigerians in
accordance with democratic tenets which demand that majority has its say and
way while minority only has its say.
“In
proper democracy premised on triple foundation of liberty, justice and common
decency, there cannot be insistence.”
Sani
blamed the media for reporting that the North wanted power returned to it as a
birth right.
Source: Punch
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