President Goodluck Jonathan has expressed confidence
that he will a second term despite the soaring popularity of
his main challenger, Muhammadu Buhari.
With the presidential elections scheduled to take place next
weekend, Mr. Jonathan told the BBC in an interview that he
has nothing to worry about, as his ruling Peoples
Democratic Party, PDP, remains the strongest party in
Nigeria despite the seeming nationwide support for the
opposition All Progressives Congress.
“I will surely win it… My party is still the strongest party”,
the president said.
The interview was published Friday, a day after the
national chairman of PDP, Adamu Mu’azu, admitted that
his party will win the elections but not with a landslide as
believed in some quarters.
Mr. Mu’azu said: “While I do not see a landslide victory
coming, I am convinced that our party will perform
creditably in the Southwest and the North of Nigeria and
elsewhere in all the elections this year because the
evidence is clear that despite our travails at the beginning,
we have done very well over the past fifteen years of our
nascent democracy since 1999 to record victory. Those
who disbelieve our resilience will be surprised for victory is
ours”.
In an interview with the BBC that touched on a wide-range
of subjects, Mr. Jonathan repeated his comments that he
believed the abducted Chibok school girls are alive since
the jihadist sect, Boko Haram, has not shown they had
been killed.
“We have not seen dead girls that is the good news. I
believe they are still alive, I believe we will get them”, he
said.
The president said the Nigerian military will hopefully
recover the remaining territories under Boko Haram control
in less than a month.
The president said the group has grown weaker with the
government’s renewed drive that has seen the military
reclaim several towns and villages held by the terror group.
“I’m very hopeful that it will not take us more than a month
to recover the old territories that hitherto have been in
[Boko Haram’s] hands”, Mr. Jonathan said.
“We never expected that [Boko Haram] will build up that
kind of capacity. We under-rated their external influence.
Since after the civil war we’ve not fought any war, we don’t
manufacture weapons, so we had to look for help to re-
equip our army and the air force”.
On violence during his presidency, Mr. Jonathan said he
took responsibility for “whatever goes wrong”.
“Whatever goes right, I take the glory”, he said. “Whenever I
hear that somebody dies in Nigeria… I feel pain, because
they are all Nigerians”.
Saturday, 21 March 2015
I will surely win - Jonathan Declares
Labels:
News
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment