Obasanjo’s letter: PDP members urge govs to speak out

Goodluck Jonathan and Olusegun Obasanjo
Peoples
Democratic Party supporters in the North-West on Monday urged the
party’s governors to speak up on the issues raised by former
President Olusegun Obasanjo in his letter to President Goodluck
Jonathan.
The supporters, under the aegis of the
North-West Solidarity Forum, said the PDP governors’ continued silence
on the issues was worrisome.
The Zonal Leader of the forum, Alhaji Abubakar Danfulani, said this in a statement made available to journalists in Abuja.
They said there was a need for the governors to take steps to reconcile the two leading figures in the party.
In the statement titled,“Obasanjo’s
letter: Where are the PDP governors?” the forum members said they
were concerned because the 18-page letter “borders on issues of
governance and exposes details of such other issues which should not
have been meant for the public space.”
They also said they were concerned about the motivation behind the declassification of the letter by Chief Obasanjo.
The statement reads in part, “The
silence in the camp of the PDP governors is worrisome to us. It gives
the forum the impression that the governors may be sympathetic to the
cause of Chief Obasanjo since he was said to have been responsible for
the election of no fewer than 18 out of the 23 of them (out of which
five have defected to the All Progressives Congress).
“But is that enough reason to keep mute
and stand the risk of being complicit in the grand plan by the former
President to expose the underbelly of the Jonathan’s administration to
attacks by the opposition elements?
“At this point, the PDP governors who
believe in the survival of the Federal Government and the PDP cannot
afford to sit on the fence or keep mute.”
Also, the Bishop of Anglican Communion
Nigeria, Ife Diocese, Oluranti Odubogun, on Monday said President
Jonathan must respond to the various issues raised in Obasanjo’s letter.
Odubogun argued that the controversial
letter had made the political climate hotter and there was need for
Jonathan to clear the air on most of the issues raised.
The cleric, who spoke during the
church’s ordination service, described the allegations as “too weighty
for the President to keep silence on.”
He said, “Whatever the issues are,
President Jonathan must respond to all the allegations. The man has gone
public and has made allegations. Is it true that over a 1,000 names are
on his list? Are we back to the dark ages of Abacha regime? Some other
things are true: bad governance, corruption. These are truism; everyone
can see it.
“Nigerians have continued to suffer
under the yoke of bad governance and no one who has been in governance
can absolve himself from the state in which we are today.”
The cleric pleaded with the President
not to throw the country deeper into a state of chaos and insecurity by
his “self-serving aides” who are out to protect their selfish interest
rather than the nation.
“The National Assembly cannot absolve
itself from the pandemic corruption that is causing the nation to bleed;
this has led the entire nation into captivity. But if the path of
liberation of this country is in the confusion that is ensuing, so be it
and glory be to God,” he added.
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