In the face of mounting opposition, former president, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan has shown to be a man with many positives...
Former President, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan
Whichever way you look at the 2015 presidential election,
ultimately, Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan was a gallant contestant; he did
the unfamiliar in this part of terra firma — for the first time in
Nigeria, an incumbent President accepted defeat. Again, a President seen
by many as weak actually reached into the recesses of his psyche and
drew inner strength to unflex taut muscles and let go, preferring the
way of peace to that of conflict, the beginning of which all may know
and see, but whose end not all will see and know.
This is because ours is a polity of contentious and unimaginably
clashing socio-political and economic interests where it does not take
long to ignite the fire of hate, acrimony and general disturbance of
peace.
Result of the election
It does not take long to incite the public and call out people who
quickly transform into a mob. It happened just after the declaration of
results of the 2011 presidential election because the loser let loose on
the polity some supporters who did not agree with the result of the
election.
In conceding defeat, Dr Jonathan told a nation on tenterhooks in a broadcast: “I
promised the country free and fair elections. I have kept my word. I
have also expanded the space for Nigerians to participate in the
democratic process. That is one legacy I will like to see endure.
Although some people have expressed mixed feelings about the results
announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, I urge
those who may feel aggrieved to follow due process based on our
constitution and our electoral laws, in seeking redress. As I have
always affirmed, nobody’s ambition is worth the blood of any Nigerian.
The unity, stability and progress of our dear country is more important
than anything else…”
This, at a time when some hawks in the leadership cadre of the
Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, his political party, did not want him to
relinquish power. Up till the last moment Jonathan called Buhari, some
leaders of his party and government did not want to concede.
Unthinkable gesture
Besides, the doomsayers had looked at their crystal balls and
fingered 2015, the election year as the year Nigeria’s fate as one
nation will unravel; Jonathan’s “unthinkable” gesture deflated
the tyres on which the predictions were rolling. The beneficiary of
Jonathan’s electoral loss, President Buhari, knew fully well the import
of the path his predecessor chose to tread.
At his inauguration on May 29, 2015, Buhari had this to say of
Jonathan: “I would like to thank President Goodluck Jonathan for his
display of statesmanship in setting a precedent for us that has now made
our people proud to be Nigerians wherever they are. With the support
and cooperation he has given to the transition process, he has made it
possible for us to show the world that despite the perceived tension in
the land we can be a united people capable of doing what is right for
our nation.
Together we co-operated to surprise the world that had come to
expect only the worst from Nigeria. I hope this act of graciously
accepting defeat by the outgoing President will become the standard of
political conduct in the country.”
Jonathan’s tenure from 2011 to 2015 would raise many questions
about his choice as Personality of The Year. He made flashes of
statesmanlike conduct by expanding the political space and allowing the
opposition to blossom in a country where his predecessors had
practically emasculated and muffled the voice of opposition.
While some hawks around him wanted toughness and brute force,
Jonathan opted for conciliation. But there are those who would argue for
him; while many would also argue against him; but this is 2016, and
Nigerians are still living in peace because one man conceded power.
He cannot be held responsible for the insurgency and the activities
of Boko Haram but he can be blamed for the way he handled the abduction
of the over 200 Chibok girls. True, there may have been political
undertones at the commencement of the insurgency but when the presidency
was quick to splash the tar of politics on every act of insurgency, it
belied the fundamental issues which were related purely to a lack of
capacity from the seat of power.
Yes, he was not perfect. In fact, were perfection to be a factor
in the choice of Vanguard Editors, the toxicity that would greet mention
of Jonathan’s name would have had an annihilating effect on the
senses.
An example was laid bare in February by otherwise intelligent
people, largely in the opposition, who chose to look the other way in
the face of a shambling pre-election distribution of the Permanent
Voter Cards, PVCs, the main legal instrument that would allow you vote.
It did not matter that just a week to the first presidential election
date of February 14, about 40% of PVCs were yet to be received (not
collected as INEC would want Nigerians believe because you collect what
is ready for collection).
Three of Dr Jonathan’s predecessors drew opprobrium because they
couldn’t let go when it was called for. General Yakubu Gowon
(postponement of handover date), General Ibrahim Babangida (serial
handover postponement and June 12 annulment) and civilian President
Olusegun Obasanjo (Third Term pursuit), in spite of all they achieved
while in power, lost all because of the charming yet potentially
destructive lure of power and a determination not to know when to allow a
process of transition manifest.
Latent power struggle
At each turn, doom loomed. In other parts of Africa, the story is
similar. The over 500,000 lives lost in Rwanda can be traced to the
latent power struggle spiralled out of control..There was Samuel Doe who
refused to relinquish power in Liberia – Liberians are still recovering
from the war that followed almost a quarter of a century ago. Zaire,
Central Africa Republic, Cote D’Ivoire, Sierra Leone are countries that
have gone through needless wars because of power struggle.
Nigeria should by now have become a more stable, prosperous
democracy had the June 12, 1993 presidential election not been decidedly
made controversial by the military junta that refused to relinquish
power. 22 years after, the nation has not recovered from that hurt.
Lives were lost during the struggle to return the country to
democracy. There was the Peace Committee that ensured that both Buhari
and Jonathan signed a deal to ensure that the outcome of the election
would be accepted by either contestant. Without legal teeth, it could
have as well been a fool’s errand.
Jonathan, with a demure demeanour, verdant and unacquainted, for
sparing Nigeria and its over 180 million people the chaos, conflict and
needless loss of lives, things that had been predicted to happen after
the 2015 general elections, as well as the possible dismemberment of the
country – not forgetting that a chaotic Nigeria would have meant an
unstable West African sub-region – and by conceding victory to Buhari in
a presidential contest, we have chosen him as Vanguard’s Personality of
The Year, in tandem with his electoral nemesis, President Buhari.
-written by Jide Ajani
Source: Vanguard
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