President
Goodluck Jonathan is expected to meet the 36 state governors and
security chiefs on Wednesday (today) in continuation of his
administration’s efforts at ending the security challenges in parts of
the country.
The enlarged meeting of the National
Security Council is a follow-up to an earlier one the President had with
the Peoples Democratic Party governors on Thursday.
The All Progressives Congress governors
had stayed away from the first meeting because their party leadership
informed them that an official of the Presidency called one of them to
announce the postponement of the Thursday meeting.
However, to ensure that its governors
attended the rescheduled meeting, the APC shifted its state congresses
earlier fixed for Wednesday (today) to Saturday.
But there were concerns in the
Presidency that the meeting could turn out to be a stormy session if
Adamawa State Governor, Murtala Nyako, decided to confront the President
with the allegations he made in a memo he addressed to his colleagues
in the Northern Governors’ Forum.
Nyako, in the memo, had accused the
President of carrying out genocide against the North in the Federal
Government’s fight against insurgency.
He had also accused the present
administration of allegedly being the most corrupt and greedy
administration in the history of the country.
The content of the memo has already been
slated for discussion by the Northern state governors on Thursday
alongside the outcome of the President’s meeting with the governors.
“There is no way Nyako will make such
inflammatory remarks against the government and the issue will not come
up during the meeting. Either he attends personally or he sends his
deputy, the issues raised in the memo will definitely come up for
discussion,” he said.
The APC is known to be highly displeased with Jonathan’s campaign against Boko Haram insurgents in the North-East.
Only on Monday, its Interim National
Publicity Secretary, Lai Mohammed, said the Federal Government’s war
against insurgency was unconvincing.
Mohammed had argued that recent
statements credited to the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party
and the alleged actions of Jonathan were enough to convince members of
the APC and other Nigerians that the PDP was not telling all it knew
about the insurgency.
He added, “The statement credited to the
Governor of Akwa Ibom, Godswill Akpabio, to the effect that President
Jonathan should sack the three governors of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa
states is worrisome because it will give the PDP an advantage in 2015.
“That again gives us concern that
probably the manner the government has been handling the Boko Haram
insurgency has been with a view to 2015 elections.”
A Presidency source however told our
correspondent on Tuesday that the enlarged meeting would review latest
incidents in the country, especially as they concern security.
Some of the latest incidents are the
abduction of schoolgirls in Chibok, Borno State and the bomb explosion
in Nyanya bus station in Abuja.
The source added that the meeting might
take a position on the emergency rule declared in Adamawa, Borno and
Yobe States which expires in May.
There have been divergent opinions on
the desirability or otherwise of extending the emergency rule in the
affected states with some Northern leaders opposing the move.
The governors of the affected states –
Murtala Nyako (Adamawa); Ibrahim Geidam (Yobe) and Governor Kashim
Shettima (Borno) – are also of the view that the one-year emergency rule
be lifted.
Another Presidency source told our
correspondent that President Goodluck Jonathan had not taken any
decision on the matter yet.
“The President is committed to listening
to the views of all stakeholders before a decision that will be
acceptable to all will be taken and that was one of the reasons he
insisted at the Thursday meeting with the PDP governors that their APC
counterparts must be given the opportunity to be part of the meeting,”
he added.
The meeting, according to another
source, would listen to the security chiefs and deliberate on their new
approach to tackle the insurgency in the country.
The President had hinted while receiving
a delegation of Abuja residents who were in the Presidential Villa,
Abuja to rejoice with him on Easter Monday that there would be a change
in the government’s anti-terrorism tactics.
“Boko Haram will come and go. We are
working very hard, we are changing our approaches, God’s willing we will
end Boko Haram,” he had said.
No comments:
Post a Comment