The presidency seems to be having jitters about the forthcoming elections, understandable because no one knows how it's going to turn out.
The two leading parties PDP and APC have gone all out in their campaign bids , playing dirty most times and yet no one seems to be sure of what to expect.
Alot of Nigerians, on social media even gatherings seem to talk of nothing else, well i would just say get your PVC and exercise your right. Sahara Reporters say there's an indication that president Goodluck Jonathan wants to postpone the elections, can he do that really? Read the report below:
In the face of dwindling
prospects for his re-election bid, President Goodluck Jonathan has embarked on
a renewed three-pronged approach to scuttle the presidential election scheduled
for February 14, several sources within the Presidency have disclosed. In a
startling disclosure, our sources said Mr. Jonathan was willing to entertain a
military take-over as one of his options.
Another source said several PDP governors were aggrieved
that Mr. Jonathan shortchanged or abandoned them during the party’s primaries.
Several of them are reportedly paying the president back by standing aloof from
his campaigns or actively mobilizing support for Muhammadu Buhari, the APC’s
presidential candidate.
Our sources revealed that the president and hawks within his
administration held a prolonged meeting yesterday and decided that the
elections must be frustrated at all cost. Two of the sources said Mr. Jonathan
intends to call a meeting of the Council of State for Thursday to persuade its
members to back a proposal to postpone the polls. In place of an election, the
president wants to set up “a government of national unity” to be headed by him
for 18 months to two years. It is unclear whether the council would endorse the
plan to reschedule elections. The council’s membership includes past heads of
state and presidents, and some of them have been openly critical of Mr.
Jonathan’s record.
One source stated that, as part of the broad strategy to
scuttle the elections, the Presidency would refuse to pay the balance of the
contract for the printing of ballot papers. The contract was awarded when the
Nigerian currency, the naira, officially exchanged for N165 to a dollar. The
source said the contractor, who claimed to be sourcing his foreign currency
from the black market, is now seeking an adjustment to his contract. “The
contractor wants to be paid N210 to a dollar, but President Jonathan and his
team have refused to help the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)
source the balance,” our source revealed.
Instead, the president and his team have advised INEC to
look for a local Nigerian printer to print the ballot papers. INEC chairman
Attahiru Jega and some of his top aides have balked at the idea of using a
local printer. They argue that such an arrangement would be a perfect recipe
for chaos, allowing the Presidency to use its considerable slush funds to
illegally print duplicate papers with which to rig the election, as happened in
several states in 2011.
A source at INEC told SaharaReporters that the commission’s
chairman and some top officials suspect that the Jonathan administration was
working seriously to undermine the commission’s credibility. “There is a lot of
internal sabotage going on at INEC,” the source said. He disclosed that some
resident electoral commissions were giving contradictory statements and reports
about the commission’s preparedness for the February elections, without
clearing with the headquarters. “Can you imagine also that even non-essential
materials are being stolen from INEC offices, all in an effort to undermine the
effort to hold elections,” said the source.
The Presidency’s second option is the recruitment of some
members of the defunct National Conference to press the case for postponing the
elections until Nigerians discuss, adopt and implement the resolutions of the
confab. In order to push that agenda, the Presidency has released more than N2
billion to Raymond Dokpesi, the owner of Africa Independent Television (AIT),
to coordinate the campaign for postponement of the elections.
Using AIT and
other willing media, Mr. Dokpesi is expected to press the case for constituting
an interim national government headed by Mr. Jonathan. Earlier today in Abuja,
Mr. Dokpesi’s AIT aired a live discussion by members of a “post national
conference consultative committee”, to begin framing the case for postponement.
The live program featured Bolaji Akinyemi, a former Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Femi Okurounmu, who headed a nationwide consultation for the national
conference, Maurice Iwu, a notorious former INEC chairman, Mike Ezekhome, a
lawyer, G.G. Darah, a professor and close associate of jailed former Governor
James Ibori of Delta State, and Balarabe Musa, a former governor of Kaduna
State whose involvement is perhaps the only surprise.
Dokpesi’s group is expected to use its huge war chest to
argue that elections are untenable because of INEC’s questionable preparedness
as well as the tense security situation in Nigeria’s northeast.
The Presidency’s third option is the possible use of the
Nigerian military to scuttle the election. Nigeria’s Chief of Army Staff,
General Tobiah Minimah, is reportedly a key player in executing the military
option. One source reported that General Minimah, who is from President
Jonathan’s Niger Delta region, was initially reluctant, but eventually signed
up for the scheme to use the military to intervene should the elections proceed
and not go President Jonathan’s way.
Our sources said the president was irate that INEC chairman,
Mr. Jega, had been avoiding meetings with him and his presidential aides.
“Professor Jega has maintained that he wants to be seen to have conducted a
free and transparent election, even if imperfect. He has therefore maintained
that there is no point going to Aso Rock to hold meetings exclusively with Mr.
President, who is a candidate, and the president’s team,” one source close to
Mr. Jega said.
Our Presidency sources disclosed that Mr. Jonathan had
started looking for ways to remove the INEC chairman from office. “If they
succeed in postponing the elections, the president will either suspend Prof.
Jega, the way he did to former Central Bank Governor [Sanusi Lamido Sanusi] or
ask him to go on compulsory leave pending the end of his tenure.”
While SaharaReporters was about to publish this report,
several sources told our reporters that President Jonathan and his co-travelers
have moved to the courts as a way of scuttling the elections, at least five
court cases have been filed to either postpone the elections and disqualify the
APC candidate , Muhammad Buhari.
A reliable source
told our team of investigators that President Jonathan is shopping for a
federal high court judge to scuttle the elections with a court order in the
next few hours.
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