Goodluck Jonathan
Nigeria's immediate past President Goodluck Jonathan has debunked reports that Buhari's government met an empty treasury.
Former President Goodluck Jonathan has described the present
administration’s claim that it inherited an empty treasury as a lie. The
Cable reports that Jonathan said this while speaking at the launch of
his new book “My Transition Hours.”
It’s been a consistent claim of the President Muhammadu Buhari
administration that it inherited a crashing economy, one that Jonathan
has described as a lie.
He said:
"Recall that the opposition and their sympathisers and
campaigners, both local and international, with their malicious
propaganda, tore our economy to shreds, threatened our stability and
existence as a nation and intimidated our citizens, all in the bid to
take over power.
Rather than forge a coalition and build on the momentum we had
gathered when they eventually took office, they went on a persecution
spree and vengeance mission. That the country slipped into recession
soon after we left office was a self-inflicted injury caused by
misplaced priorities. The narrative of inheriting empty treasury is a
blatant lie.
Also, the excuse of the collapse of world crude prices does not
hold water. This is because the Fourth Republic took off in 1999 with
crude oil selling for less than $20 per barrel and a Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) growth at 0.58 per cent, according to National Bureau of
Statistics (NBS) figures. Yet, the economy maintained a steady growth
from that year, peaking at 15.33 per cent in 2002 when the average crude
oil price was about $25.
It is also instructive that the oil and gas sector constitute
about 11 per cent of our GDP. There had to be a wider causative factor
than just the fall in world crude prices.
It also amounts to standing facts on their heads to
continuously claim that recession was caused by so-called mindless
looting. The truth is that the opposition, in a bid to undo our
government, became its own undoing when it got to power, because of the
burden of justifying deliberate misrepresentations. There is wisdom in
the saying that if you win a prize and get the crown, don’t go around
destroying the person who previously held that prize; it will lose its
value.
Even after winning the election and forming the government at
the centre, the blame game continued. When two brothers fight to death,
it is the neighbour that inherits their father’s wealth. And we have
seen neigbouring nations like the Republic of Benin and Ghana reaping
from the capital flight out of Nigeria.
Just consider that my minister of state for health, Dr.
Muhammed Ali Pate, is now a professor at America’s Duke University, as
well as a Senior Adviser to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation based
in Washington DC. My minister of Agriculture, Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, is
now the President of the African Development Bank (AfDB).
My Co-ordinating minister, Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo Iweala, is the
chairperson of the Board of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and
Immunization (GAVI) and the African Risk Capacity (ARC). She also sits
on the board of Twitter and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank,
just as she is a Senior Adviser at Lazard and a Director at Standard
Chartered Plc in the United Kingdom, amongst others.
My minister of communication technology, Dr. Omobola Johnson,
is currently chairperson of custodian and Allied Insurance Limited as
well as the Global Alliance for Affordable Internet. And it is not just
members of my cabinet. Others who served with me in different capacities
are also soaring on the world stage.
A good example is Ms. Arunma Oteh, who I appointed the
Director-General of the Securities and Exchange Commissnon (SEC). Under
her steady and skillful direction, Nigeria’s equity market grew in
metric proportions, and by the time I left office in 2015, the market
had tripled in size to $150 billion in value. Two months after I left
office, Ms. Oteh was appointed a Vice-President and Treasurer at the
World Bank.
With such personalities on my cabinet, no one can factually say
we were ‘clueless’ or inept. The evidence of performance is simply
overwhelming. We gave Nigeria an impressive and steady GDP growth rate
at 6.7 percent per annum.
We were officially cited as the third fastest growing economy
in the world by CNN Money in 2014. We eradicated polio and guinea worm
and became the first nation in the world to defeat the Ebola virus, such
that the then richest man in the world, Bill Gates celebrated us for
our prowess in the health sector. We reduced our food import bill by 36
percent."
“There are millions of Nigerians and others around the world
who are still impressed with our modest achievements in consolidating
democracy and growing the nation’s economy. They will continue to serve
as my strength and encouragement.”
Former Nigerian president, Goodluck Jonathan has spoken out on what he does whenever people call him 'clueless'.
Goodluck Jonathan
Goodluck Jonathan, a former President of Nigeria, has said he
laughs anytime people try to run down his administration as a clueless
one.
The former President said this in his recently published book titled, ‘My Transition Hours’.
He said, “Sometimes I laugh when certain propagandists attempt
to stand logic on its head by maligning my administration as one bereft
of ideas and clueless. In assessing my administration, it is best to
focus on facts.
“I cannot assess myself. I leave that to history and I make
bold to say that never in the history of Nigeria till date has the
nation had such a star-studded cabinet full of achievers and people who
got to the top of their chosen fields by merit.”
Jonathan said the only thing that saddened him was the hounding of his former ministers by the Muhammadu Buhari administration.
He, however, said he was happy that many of his ministers and
former appointees had become leading world figures today like Adewunmi
Adesina and Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.
Jonathan added, “Most painful has been the attacks on my
ministers, aides, associates and even members of my family. There is an
attempt to erase our legacy from history. The good thing is that the
unending barrage of attacks, deliberate misinformation, and programmed
media smear campaigns have failed to sway the opinions of those with the
clear view of our beliefs, efforts, and achievements.
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