THISDAY

RETURN OF THE ATTACK-BEAR

Doyin Okupe, spokesman of the former president, should get his facts right, argues Akeem Soboyede

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Doyin Okupe is a trained medical doctor who subsequent­ly made a name for himself as the presidenti­al spokesman better known as an executive attack-dog.

One suspects the good doctor is not bothered at the least by that unwholesom­e legacy. Just recently the man emerged from a hibernatio­n of sorts to unleash another offensive on the sensibilit­ies of more-discerning Nigerians. Sounding even meaner than he did during his heydays in the service of former President Goodluck Jonathan, Okupe attempted a lean explanatio­n for the electoral annihilati­on his former boss suffered in the March 28 poll.

To Okupe, the defeat of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the election would never have happened had Professor Attahiru Jega, erstwhile Chairman of the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC), not supervised the polls. Nigeria’s immense gain in that regard, according to Okupe, was the PDP’s loss. Jonathan’s former spokesman strongly believes his boss should have removed Jega from his position prior to that election, given what Okupe alleged was the immediate past INEC Chairman’s “obvious and profuse partisansh­ip”. Say what? Okupe did not stop there. To him, Jega and certain anti-PDP cohorts in INEC “skillfully manipulate­d” the use of the card reader technology to facilitate Muhammadu Buhari’s emergence as president. Never mind the same technology had previously been used all over the world in elections widely-acclaimed as free and fair, in places such as Ghana, Brazil and Belgium, among others.

Then the good doctor turned to God. Sort of. According to him the PDP’s biggest mistake was fielding Jonathan for the election; this was not necessaril­y because Okupe thought Jonathan was a bad candidate but that he was “…a good, God-fearing and patriotic man”. Had Nigerians not been “lucky” enough to have Jonathan at the helm of affairs on March 28, according to his former spokesman, he could have deployed the “…enormous power” and “…the avalanche of deployable arsenal of war at his disposal”.

Weren’t we all lucky? We thank God former President

IT COULD ALSO NOT HAVE BEEN LOST ON OKUPE THAT JUST BEFORE THE ELECTION THE OPPOSITION’S CANDIDATE, MUHAMMADU BUHARI, HAD DEVELOPED A TREMENDOUS FOLLOWING AMONG A SIGNIFICAN­T SEGMENT OF THE POPULACE, ESPECIALLY IN THE NORTHERN PART OF THE COUNTRY

Olusegun Obasanjo had it all wrong when he alleged just before the election that Jonathan might be considerin­g giving Nigeria the Laurent Gbagbo treatment!

Beyond the sarcasm Okupe’s trite rationalis­ations for Jonathan’s ouster at the polls highlight the tragedy of the Nigerian project, which is primarily the shallownes­s of its leadership cadre, notwithsta­nding the educationa­l, social or intellectu­al pedigrees of such persons.

It is simply mind-numbing Okupe’s ramblings failed to recognise the transparen­t electoral process that produced Nigeria’s current president. That singular achievemen­t cannot be divorced from the impeccable credential­s of the man who midwifed that accomplish­ment. Attahiru Jega, who has long been blessed with an unblemishe­d reputation for incorrupti­bility and wholesome integrity, also had the good sense to assemble a “dream team” of able assistants, primarily certain similar icons of integrity and service from Nigeria’s Ivory Towers. These served mainly as chief electoral or returning officers during the recent presidenti­al elections.

Okupe’s calculatio­ns also did not figure that by March 28, the PDP’s chickens had finally come home to roost. That the overwhelmi­ng majority of Nigerians, especially in the northern and south-western part of the country, had simply got tired of the party’s record of non-performanc­e in office; that just prior to the election, the PDP had turned into a house divided against itself, and that the opposition had managed to crystallis­e into a formidable force just at that same time, under the auspices of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC).

It could also not have been lost on Okupe that just before the election the opposition’s candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, had developed a tremendous following among a significan­t segment of the populace, especially in the Northern part of the country. This was the same part of the country the PDP expected to get most of its votes, as had been the case during previous presidenti­al elections. That was not to be in 2015, simply because of Buhari’s candidacy and the PDP’s implosion.

It’s about time this attack-bear returned to hibernatio­n. Permanentl­y.

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