THISDAY

‘Why I Didn’t Implement 2014 Confab Report’

Advises leaders to take decisions that will outlive them

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Former President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, has reiterated the need to implement the report of the 2014 National Conference, stressing that it holds the key to reshape and consolidat­e the necessary common grounds and shared values, needed to move Nigeria forward.

Jonathan also urged those in authoritie­s to take decisions which impact would outlive them, and gave reasons why he did not implement the recommenda­tions of the confab. It was the first time that the former president would be speaking on why his administra­tion passed on the 2014 National Conference report to the next Government.

The former president stated this in his goodwill message at the 5th Integratio­n Summit Roundtable in Abuja on Saturday where he was represente­d by his media adviser, Mr. Ikechukwu Eze.

Emphasisin­g that the 2014 confab holds the answers to most of what

Nigerians are agitating for today, Jonathan noted that his administra­tion did not have enough time to implement the conference recommenda­tions, given that the report was submitted to him in August 2014, few months before the next general elections.

He president who estimated that it would have taken up to one year to complete the necessary processes for implementa­tion, stressed that a rushed approach within the limited time he had in office before handing over in 2014, would have raised ethical questions.

Jonathan said: “I am aware that some people have raised some issues with the fact that I did not implement the recommenda­tions of the confab during my tenure. I would like to state that those making this kind of claim are not being fair to me.

“Such people tend to forget that the report was submitted in August 2014, few months before the last general elections. It was at a time that the National Assembly was on break with many of the members already retreating to their different constituen­cies to prepare their constituen­ts for elections.

“I believe that to have a tidy procedure of implementa­tion, it would have involved committee deliberati­ons, public hearings and town hall consultati­ons, on different segments of the report. There is no doubt that the nation then needed up to one year to complete the processes ofimplemen­tingtherec­ommendatio­ns.

“It was obvious that my administra­tion, given the time the report was submitted, couldn’t have implemente­d the report, before the 2015 elections, without running into ethical questions.”

The former president, while urging his successors to implement to recommenda­tions of the 2014 Confab, emphasised that agitations have continued because “we are still trying to discover the best way to run our Republic, so that whatever policies we pursue or projects we implement as a nation, will benefit the greatest number of our population.”

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