Buruji Kashamu, a stalwart of the Peoples Democratic Party in Ogun
State, on Sunday, berated former president Olusegun Obasanjo over his
criticism of president Jonathan’s handling of corruption and the Boko
Haram insurgency in the North saying he lacked the moral rights to do
so.
In the same vein, former Petroleum Resources Minister, Alhaji Shettima Monguno, has faulted Obasanjo’s comments.
Both spoke differently against the backdrop of the recent statements
credited to Obasanjo where he made veiled reference to Jonathan as a
‘weak leader’.
The former president had on the occasion to mark the 40th anniversary
of Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor as a clergyman, criticised Jonathan’s
handling of corruption and the activities of Boko Haram.
Kashamu, in a statement in Abeokuta said Obasanjo’s administration,
which did not do better in tackling corruption and terrorism in its
eight years, laid the foundation for the country’s current travails.
He said, “Perhaps, the point should be made – and poignantly too –
that the earlier Obasanjo purges himself of his messianic postures, the
better it would be for him and the nation at large. He is quick to
recount his exploits while in office. But the truth is: the foundation
of some of the challenges that we are grappling with today were laid
during his last years in office.”
The PDP chief further accused Obasanjo of pursuing a personal and
selfish agenda by his criticisms of the Jonathan administration.
However, Monguno, while speaking to journalists in Maiduguri, Borno
State, on Saturday, posited that Obasanjo had no moral right to
criticise Jonathan
He said, “Somebody who wanted to extend his tenure beyond the
constitutional term; tried his very best to extend but was rejected, is
now advising government to do the wrong thing”.
The former Petroleum Minister noted that Obasanjo’s prescription of
military action the type he unleashed on the Odi community during his
reign in 1999 would only compound the problem.
Monguno said, “I do not agree with our former President that Jonathan
should use force, or use the military to crush what they always call
the Boko Haram.”
According to him, even in the military, soldiers do not want to go to war unless it is absolutely necessary.
He noted that even the United Nations does not use force in
situations like this and advised Obasanjo to look back on his military
and political way of life.
Monguno advocated the use of peaceful means in resolving the Boko Haram threat rather than use force.
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