Former President Goodluck Jonathan reportedly revealed that he has been visiting President Muhammadu
Buhari more frequently than the public know.
While speaking to newsmen at the
Presidential Villa in Abuja, Wednesday, on the purpose of his visit to the
President, Jonathan said he mostly visited Buhari at night as he has
become a state property.
“You asked why I came to see the
president today; one key thing is that having been a head of
government, a former president, you become a state property,” he
said.
“That’s the privilege you have but
every privilege has its corresponding responsibility, and once you
become a state property, most of your international engagements that
have to do with public addresses and some international assignments,
they become national assignments; you brief the President.
“Even when I was here, the former
presidents used to do that and see me. I have been coming; most times
I come in the night; that’s why you don’t see me.
“I came to brief the president about
some of my engagements. As you are aware, I will leading the AU
elections monitoring team to Zambia, I came to brief the president
about some of these external engagements. It is the tradition,"
the former president said.
On the Niger Delta crisis, Jonathan
said to find lasting solutions to the pipeline bombings, all the
stakeholders in the Ijaw ethnic nationality - traditional rulers,
elders and opinion leaders, must be involved.
“We have been in touch to see that
peace reigns in the country; those of you that have followed my talks
when I was here, my emphasis was always that we need a united Nigeria
and I always emphasise that Nigeria is great not just about the oil.
So many countries produce more oil than Nigeria but nobody notices
them.
“We are great because of our size,
the human resources we have, the diversity we have. If we fragmentise
the country into small components, we will be forgotten by the world.
That has been my focal position and without peace there cannot be
development anywhere in the world; we are all working collectively to
see that issues are resolved,” he said.
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