THISDAY

Clark: Buhari Practised Nepotism to Destroy Nigeria's Economy

President’s farewell speech, a charade, says group

- Chuks Okocha and Sunday Aborisade in Abuja

Ijaw leader and elder statesman, Chief Edwin Clark, yesterday, reviewed the eight years of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administra­tion, and declared that it was a total failure.

The 96-year-old Niger Delta elder handed down his submission at a news conference in his Asokoro, Abuja home, saying all the promises made by the Buhari administra­tion to the people of Niger Delta were not fulfilled.

This came as the Defenders of African Democracy (DAD) and Hope Africa have described the farewell broadcast of the outgoing president that Nigerians should follow and obey election tribunal’s decisions as a ruse and charade, when his administra­tion paid little or no regard to court decisions and orders.

Speaking, Clark said, "The truth is, President Muhammadu Buhari is leaving the nation, especially the Niger Delta region, worse than he met it. He is bequeathin­g bouquet of unfulfille­d promises, divided nation and myriad of critical federal infrastruc­tural projects in shameful states, especially roads, and particular­ly in the Niger Delta region."

He said there was terrible state of insecurity insecurity in most parts of the country, being perpetrate­d by the menacing killer herders, Boko Haram and ISWAP terrorists, heinous bandits, kidnappers and sundry criminals.

As a result of that, he said, "A vast majority of citizens, particular­ly, the youths, are gripped by feelings of annihilati­on, fear and desperatio­n due to lack of adequate protection by the government"

The developmen­t, he added, had resulted in the now common "japa syndrome", where the youths are leaving the country has become the aspiration of most active Nigerians.

Clark said, "Sadly, a sizable number of the Nigerian youths, particular­ly the profession­als are leaving our dear country in droves to other climes particular­ly; Canada, Britain, USA, among others.

"There was a particular occasion in 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic, when about 50 medical doctors were going to Britain for greener pastures, and they were returned at the airport by the immigratio­n, but nobody knows how these Doctors later found themselves in Britain within two weeks.

"Today, we have a lot of Nigerian nurses scattered in Britain and other nations of the world. I am 96 years old now, and I have been actively involved, by the Grace of God, in the affairs of Nigeria and the Niger Delta region, for over 70 years, I have seen it all.

"In the past eight years, President Muhammadu Buhari has demonstrat­ed in most cases that he did not belong to the whole country but to a group; his tribe and religion, which is contrary to what he said in his inaugural speech that he belong to everybody.

"For instance, he appointed fourteen out of seventeen security Chiefs from one section of the country. So, the declaratio­n that he belongs to everybody and nobody, was a sham. I make bold to say that the reverse has been the case, he belongs to some people, but not the entire Nigeria.

"Even in simple matters like extending the good wishes of the government to notable personalit­ies in the country on their birthdays or other landmark attainment­s, the Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion was selective and biased in who it chooses to recognise or consider worthy of goodwill messages.

"Muhammadu Buhari’s team has publicly recognised the anniversar­ies of people who in all humility are either much younger than me, or have contribute­d much less than I have, to this country. On my 91st birthday in 2018, I protested this anomaly in an open letter to President Muhammadu Buhari. I became 96 on Thursday last week; the Buhari administra­tion did not deem it fit to send a goodwill message to me.

"Given my patriotic services to Nigerian, three of my colleagues in General Yakubu Gowon’s government’s cabinet became Heads of State and President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, mainly, General Murtala Mohammed, General Olusegun Obasanjo, and Alhaji Shehu Shagari, over the past 70 years.

"I regard myself as a senior citizen of this country. I am convinced that if President Muhammadu Buhari was not illiberal and ‘belongs to everybody’, he would have been consulting me for advice.

"At my age, the present government had treated me with ignominy to the extent of sending armed policemen in loaded vans to my Abuja residence on 4th September 2018, to search my residence with a warrant procured from a certain Magistrate Court with the false allegation that I was stockpilin­g arms and ammunition from the Niger Delta.”

On their parts, the Defenders of African Democracy and Hope Africa,

said the Buhari farewell broadcast was a further confirmati­on that the ruling party, the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) used the courts and security agencies to intimidate the opposition political parties.

The two groups said this was more so, coming after the recent dramas exhibited by the some courts recently making what is considered politicall­y induced unwarrante­d levying of unethical and obscene fines against key opposition personalit­ies, presidenti­al candidate and political parties whose crime was that they sought legal interpreta­tion on the vexed issues of law relating to tardiness in the conduct of elections held in Nigeria.

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