ACCORDING TO PREMIUM TIME
As Nigerians and the international community continue to praise
President Goodluck Jonathan for conceding defeat to his main challenger,
Muhammadu Buhari, in the March 28 presidential election, PREMIUM TIMES
has received exclusive details of how the president took the decision of
making the historic concession telephone call to Mr. Buhari.
Reliable
officials, knowledgeable about the drama that unfolded at the
presidential villa that March 31, said Mr. Jonathan was pulled by two
contending forces: loyalists who kept pressuring him to concede defeat
and congratulate Mr. Buhari, and hawks who insisted he and his party
should strongly challenge the APC candidate’s victory.
Our sources
said even before collation began at the headquarters of the Independent
National Electoral Commission in Abuja, Mr. Jonathan had indicated he
would accept whatever outcome once the election is considered free and
fair.
But while the President was on the verge of keeping that
promise, some “hawks” in the presidency and the party rushed to the
first family’s official residence to warn him against any “hasty
decision”.
“They were telling the president that a lot of options
were still open, and that the game was not over,” one of our sources
said. “They were doing all manners of analyses, and assuring the
president that ultimately, he would triumph.”
“At a point the
president became confused and it was clear the forces opposed to the
president’s decision to concede victory was gaining control. As some of
them were talking to the president in the villa, others who were far
away were calling the President on telephone. The president was in a
dilemma.”
Another presidential aide said while in that state of
confusion, the President invited the Minister of Aviation, Osita
Chidoka, to ask his opinion.
Those who overheard the conversation
between the two men said Mr. Chidoka begged the president to disregard
any contrary counsel and quickly concede defeat.
“Mr. President, I
can tell you that by congratulating Buhari, you would have done the
unthinkable and history will surely be kind to you,” a presidential aide
quoted the aviation minister as saying.
Our sources said as the President and Mr. Chidoka conversed, the Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke, arrived.
“He
quickly joined Osita (the aviation minister) in appealing to the
President to ignore those advising him not to concede defeat,” a witness
said. “In fact, I saw Adoke and Osita kneeling before the president in
deference and begging him to take the right decision in the interest of
the country.”
Our sources said at this point, Mr. Jonathan
appeared convinced. But more calls came in from people believed to be
opposed to any concession move, and the president became confused again.
At
that point, the Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, arrived, and
she quickly joined the party working to convince Mr. Jonathan to make
the historic call.
While Mr. Adoke departed shortly after Mrs
Okonjo-Iweala’s arrival, the finance minister and her aviation
counterpart continued to appeal to the President to make the right
decision.
At a point, the Special Assistant to the President on Domestic Matters, Waripamo-Owei Dudafa, joined the party.
He
reportedly knelt before the president, held his hand, and said, “You
need to congratulate Buhari now sir. I think you should leave this place
on May 29 holding your head high.”
Mr. Dudafa then offered to place a call to Mr. Buhari so the President could speak with him. Mr. Jonathan agreed.
So
at about 5:15 p.m. that March 31, Mr. Jonathan spoke to Mr. Buhari,
congratulating him for his victory in the presidential election.
At
5:27 p.m., Mr. Chidoka, while still at the presidential villa, tweeted,
“President Jonathan congratulates Gen. Buhari in a phone call this
evening.”
He further tweeted, “President Jonathan will address the nation after a meeting with PDP officials.
“President
Jonathan is a democrat by instinct, he has expanded the civic space and
entrenched genuine democracy. A great future awaits him as sets a
continental example on the essence of democracy.
“President
Jonathan, by refusing to be an African Big Man, has indeed become an
African role model. Soon when emotions subside, the story of Pres.
Jonathan’s stubborn commitment to democracy and peace will be told.”
When
contacted Monday, Mr. Chidoka said he was not prepared to discuss what
transpired at the president’s residence on the day of the historic
concession call.
Mrs. Okonjo Iweala could not be reached for comments. Calls to her spokesperson, Paul Nwabuikwu, did not connect.
With
presidential election results from all but one of Nigeria’s 36 states
counted, and Mr. Buhari, clearly in unassailable lead, President
Jonathan had telephoned the APC candidate to concede defeat.
At the
time the call was made, INEC was yet to declare Mr. Buhari winner
because it was still expecting results from Nigeria’s remote Borno
State.
By the time the Borno vote was added to the tally, Mr. Buhari garnered 15,416,221 votes to Mr. Jonathan’s 12,853, 162 votes.
The historic concession telephone call defused tension across Nigeria and has thrown up Mr. Jonathan as a democracy hero.
That conversation is believed to have saved Nigeria from descending into violence in the aftermath of the election.
In
a nationwide broadcast after INEC officially declared Mr. Buhari
winner, President Jonathan told Nigerians he kept his pledge to deliver a
credible election.
source: http://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/headlines/180750-revealed-the-men-and-woman-who-pressured-jonathan-to-concede-defeat.html
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