Following the claim by the National Chairman of the
All Progressives Congress (APC), Adams Oshiomhole, that former President, Dr. Goodluck
Jonathan, started vote buying in Nigeria, the ex-president has said that Oshiomhole's
fragile psychological state has reached a boiling point.
The Chairman of APC had while featuring on a
Channels Television programme, ‘Roadmap’, was quoted to have said: “President
Jonathan started this massive vote buying in Nigeria and the media must play
back and do proper interview and investigation to discover the origin of vote
buying.”
However, while responding through a statement
issued by his media aide, Ikechukwu Eze, on Wednesday titled: ‘Oshiomhole: The burden of blame
game and tumultuous leadership’, the former president said Oshiomhole was
currently operating under tremendous stress in a bid to steady the already
floundering ship of his administration.
Jonathan stressed that as the new leader of his
party, he might have got himself entangled in a voyage of tactless desperation.
He stated: “Our attention has been drawn to a media
report in which the national Chairman of APC, Oshiomhole, was alleged to have
claimed that President Jonathan started vote buying in Nigeria.
“His recent flip flops where he praised Governor
Samuel Ortom and Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso one day only to denounce them the
next day, is enough evidence of his fragile psychological state.
“Not only is he contented on squabbling with
members of the opposition, we note the self-destructive tendencies of
Oshiomhole who is locked in a feud with members of his own party, including the
Minister of Labour, Chris Ngige, and a host of APC governors. It appears that Oshiomhole’s
psychological strain may have reached boiling point.”
Jonathan added that when juxtapose the above
statement with Oshiomhole’s current statement, it becomes obvious that the APC chairman
is suffering from “multiple personality syndrome and has a Jekyll and Hyde
schizophrenia.”
On the vexatious issue of ‘vote-buying’, which has
unfortunately found its way into the country’s election lexicon, Jonathan
pointed out that it was obvious that the shameful development in the democratic
experience became very glaring during the 2016 gubernatorial elections in Edo
State, an exercise that took place more than one year after he had left office.
He
noted: “It is therefore deceitful for any politician or group to link the
former president with the anomaly, no matter how they want to stretch the
now-failing blame game.
“While
in office as president between 2010 and 2015, Jonathan conducted many elections
including the 2011 and 2015 general election, and many off-season gubernatorial
and parliamentary elections in some states like Anambra, Ekiti, Ondo and Edo,
and not for once did the issue of vote buying come up in the assessment of
those elections.”
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