According to The Punch, the Lagos State governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Mr. Jimi Agbaje, has warned that if President Goodluck Jonathan fails to win next month’s election, the South-South could shut down the oil sector and this would affect the nation’s economy which is oil-dependent.
Agbaje, however, asked that if another part of the country shuts down over the failure of its candidate emerging President, would it have an equal effect on the economy since Nigeria relies heavily on the Niger Delta for its foreign exchange earnings.
Jonathan hails from the South-South while his major contender, Maj. Gen Muhammadu Buhari (retd.) of the All Progressives Congress, hails from the North-West.
The PDP governorship candidate said this at meeting in London organised by his supporters and the UK chapter of the PDP.
In the six-minute video clip posted on DiasporaPr.com, which was sighted by our correspondent, Agbaje warned that Jonathan’s victory was imperative.
“I was active in the politics of the South-West in 1999. The Afenifere of which I was a very active member, did not support Olusegun Obasanjo as President but in 2003, it was difficult for the Afenifere as an organisation to go out and tell people that they should not vote a Yoruba man into office and so what did they do? They said they would not present a candidate because they had their own son (Obasanjo) who was running for office. That is the politics of that country.
“Now, in 2015, we are saying that the South-South has presented a candidate and we are talking about equity and some are saying that he should not be given a second term. This is a very difficult thing.
“In argument, some have said ‘what will happen?’ Well, people will be upset and they have shown that they have the power to shut down the system. I am not saying it is justified but the reality is there. If the system is shut down, where are we as a country?
“They say if the others don’t get it, they too could shut down the system. Yes they can shut down the system but ask yourself which of the two do you think we can survive with? And these are the realities that we have to face.
“These are the realities that we have to allow. First, we have to sell the achievements of our person but we have to understand the politics of our country that we are still doing turn by turn and it must run in a way that is equitable.”
Agbaje said Jonathan had done very well but his achievements were not been publicised well enough.
He said Buhari was too old to rule, adding that he was being controlled by people with selfish ambition.
He said, “The Buhari of 2007 and 2011 is not the Buhari of 2015. The Buhari of 2015 is a more compromised candidate. He is not working on his steam any longer; he is working on the steam of those who want him there for their own reasons.” (Credit: The Punch)
A rather conflictual statement,a psychological game-play, if not an incitement. When does democracy rely on economic threat to determine leadership? From all indications, the South South cannot and will not initiate any chaos because it has affiliation to President Jonathan. This sounds like a cheap blackmail, if not a delusional threat to sway support for Jonathan. Have we forgotten that ‘a tree does not make a forest’? More to the reality point is the claims from the SS that Buhari is the preferred agent of change in the forthcoming presidential election. It shouldn’t stop at that though, it should be a popular mandate to integrate North and Sout, East and West, so that a unified Nigeria is achieved at last.
More to the point, the dimishing oil products may well serve as a ‘wake up call’ for Nigerians to diversify and engage in long lasting and sustenable economic growth alternatives such as agriculture for which nature has us blessed in abundance.
Should any Nigerian feel so threatened that oil is the panacea for Nigeria’s socio-economic growth and progress? I think not.
Just as Jonathan has been operating on the directives of his chieftains, a governance process which erodes presidential autonomy because he succumb to the whims of his aides and advisors. Antecedent informs Buhari’s personality and persona, his mindset and the boundaries he is capable of drawing as opposed to Jimi’s presumed ‘behind-the-scenes’ APC administrative capabilities.
APC’s formation is quite different from PDP’s as a cluster of parties (including former PDP key members) coalisced to form its constitution. It will be difficult to orchestrate pre-dominance, or dwell on exclusivity and impunity. A diverse environment takes good care of a vast majority, not a priviledged minority.