In an
interview with ThisDay,
President Jonathan said he underestimated the strength of terror group Boko
Haram when he assumed office as President but now believes that the leader of
the sect will be arrested before the elections.
He said bad press & poor Public relations has negatively affected his government as people, including himself and his cabinet members are not up to date with the achievements of his government. Read the interview after the cut...
He said bad press & poor Public relations has negatively affected his government as people, including himself and his cabinet members are not up to date with the achievements of his government. Read the interview after the cut...
"I think the thing that has brought this
government down with both Nigerians and non-Nigerians, is the issue of Boko
Haram. One thing is that terrorism is all over the world, but they believe that
we did not handle it the way we were supposed to handle it. Probably at the
beginning, we and I mean myself and the team, we underrated the capacity of the
Boko Haram. Capacity not in terms of what they have in Nigeria, but their
international linkages, we underrated that and thought that we were dealing
with some local elements that we could overrun.
Many of
the security chiefs had made statements that later on you people took them up
on. That shows they underestimated their capacity. We’ve now realised that the
handshake had gone above the elbow and so we have to move fully and that’s why
we are running round to get the right military equipments we need. Somehow we
could not get them early enough, and now it has moved too close to the
election. But with what is happening now, in the next two weeks, that is three
weeks into the six weeks, God willing, Nigerians will be happy with what the
military has done in the North-east.
On
whether there is anything I would have done differently, yes. I think one thing
about the government is that we have done quite a number of things. At times
many of us in the government don’t even know what we have done. People tell us.
I remember in the beginning of this campaign, if I wanted to visit a state, I
will ask those in my office to list out some of our projects in some of these
states so that we can tell them what we’ve done. Sometimes when I go to the
states, people from the host governments will give me a longer list than the
ones prepared for me in my office. That means that even some of us in the
government don’t even know all of what we have done to impact positively on
Nigeria.
Probably
we did not put attention and resources on media and public relations. Public
relations is a major thing and that is why companies have departments for this.
No matter what you do, you must have a team that would manage your image. Shell
doesn’t need anybody to advertise their crude oil, they’ve sold it already, but
they still have image makers. I think we downplayed the issue of image for the
government, and of course making our achievements known.
Also
probably the issue of corruption, because these are the two areas people tackle
us - corruption and security. For security, God willing, that will soon be a
thing of the past. The next thing is the issue of corruption, and I used to
tell people: if I don’t want to fight corruption, I wouldn’t have brought in
(Ibrahim) Lamorde as chairman of the EFCC.
I came
on board as the vice-president of Yar’Adua, (Nuhu) Ribadu, you all know the
story, was removed. Lamorde was Ribadu’s second in command, he was the Director
of Operations, and was removed from the EFCC back to the police. Farida was
appointed and she was trying her best, because she used to brief me from time
to time. We had to drop her because of reports from both within this country
and outside. And given that Ribadu was Lamorde were well- trained by the west,
they argued that if I bring Lamorde back that EFCC would improve. If I am
someone that don’t want to fight corruption I would not have listened and
brought back Lamorde because he once investigated me. My in-law was detained
here in Abuja for weeks. But I sent for him and told him that Nigerians and non-Nigerians
believed in him, so we would bring him to help EFCC, because he was the
backbone of Ribadu. So we asked him to come and be the head of the agency.
But
people often say that my body movement encourages corruption which is not
true. Lamorde told me about their limitations, being in court and the
court compromising. I then came up with some innovations again. Though
constitutionally, the three arms of government are not supposed to meet; there
is no platform for the three to meet, even though the executive and parliament
do meet because we are all politicians, but I said look we must, for the image
of the country, come together. I then called for a special meeting with myself,
the vice-president, then the head of corruption agencies, EFCC, ICPC and the
Senate president and his deputy, then the speaker and his deputy. Then for the
judiciary, all the judges of the federation, the president of the court of
appeal, the chief judge of the federal high court and (from) each of the zones,
we nominated a state chief judge each. I told them that the executive,
legislature and judiciary must work together in the interest of the country to
fight corruption.
I
called the meeting because of the issue of court delay, and we discussed and
everybody showed concern. But the judiciary operates like a university setting
where every lecturer behaves like he is 100 per cent academic freedom
.Every judge has some level of autonomy, and if they don’t operate that way
there will be issues. So there is a limit that even the chief judge of the
federation can control a judge. The only thing is that if they misbehave they
will be punished under their guide book, but other than that, the judge can
decide to ignore any decision. We had several meetings, and it was in one of
those meetings that the question came up about the difference between
corruption and stealing based on the laws.
We are
doing our best to see that corruption is reduced. You can see that in the
payroll system, we have eliminated corruption and theft including the agric
sector. One major area that we will go into is the oil sector. So we are
going to sanitise all the sectors, but I always believe that fighting
corruption is not just about first arresting people and celebrating the
arrest on television. We have to investigate and prosecute before
publicity" he said.
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