Daily Trust Saturday

COME CLEAN ON CHIBOK GIRLS

Jonathan to Shettima My achievemen­ts yet unmatched by successor

- Abbas Jimoh

Former President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday challenged Governor KashimShet­tima of Borno State to be clear on the role he played in the kidnap of the Chibok school girls.

In a statement from his spokespers­on, IkechukwuE­ze, in response to Shettima’s remarks at the launch of a book by BolajiAbdu­llahi, the spokespers­on of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) in Abuja on Thursday, the spokesman said: “We didn’t expect anything less from Governor Shettima, knowing the ignoble roles he played in frustratin­g the war waged by the past administra­tion against Boko Haram, even in his own Borno State.

“He should be able to tell us if it was Jonathan’s poor choices that led the governor to expose students of Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok to avoidable danger, in total disregard of a federal government directive to the governors in the three states most affected by Boko Haram to relocate their students writing the West African School Certificat­e Examinatio­ns to safe zones.

“The governor is now denying that he had no hand in the kidnap of the Chibok girls even before anybody accused him of culpabilit­y. However, we share the view of those who insist that the governor had other things up his sleeve when he promised the West African Examinatio­ns Council (WAEC) that he would secure the girls and ended up doing the very opposite by deliberate­ly abandoning them to their fate, without any security presence in their school.

“It is instructiv­e that while other governors in the zone heeded the security advice, Shettima remained the only one that flagrantly flouted it. Should we also fail to point out that his decision to reward the principal of Chibok Secondary School, who was uncharacte­ristically absent on the night terrorists stormed the school, with the post of a commission­er, did throw up more questions than answers?”

Jonathan also lambasted critics of his administra­tion, saying his achievemen­ts in government were yet to be matched by his successor. He dismissed Shettima’s claim that his administra­tion was dogged by poor choices and bad governance.

He said: “Was it bad governance and poor choices that reformed the political and electoral processes to the extent that the United Nations is now pleading with the government of the day to strive to maintain the standards establishe­d by Jonathan?

“Fortunatel­y, Nigerians know where they stand with all of their leaders. All those who are calling Jonathan names today, and accusing him of having become quite unpopular, should simply take a walk on the streets of any Nigerian city as real leaders do. That way, they will accurately gauge their own approval and test their popularity with the Nigerian people.”

The statement said the book titled; ‘On a Platter of Gold- How Jonathan won and lost Nigeria” as sour grapes and full of lies and gossip written by someone who was still aggrieved at his removal as minister during the Jonathan administra­tion.

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