
President Goodluck Jonathan
He said such politicians could not be 
described as statesmen because of the big offices they occupied before 
but by virtue of what they brought to bear on the nation.
Jonathan spoke while playing host to a 
delegation of the Tanko-Yakasai-led Northern Elders Council in the 
Presidential Villa, Abuja.
Although the President did not mention 
names, former President Olusegun Obasanjo had on Monday said Nigeria was
 facing economic problems due to the failure of the present 
administration to plan for a rainy day.
Obasanjo had told Iyalodes and 
eminent women leaders from the South-West, who visited him at his 
Hilltop residence in Abeokuta, Ogun State, that the nation’s reserves 
which as of 2007 stood at $67bn had been depleted by the Federal 
Government.
The former President had earlier written 
an open letter to Jonathan in which he accused him of tribalism, 
condoning corruption and training snipers.
But a visibly angry Jonathan told the 
Northern elders that   some people were hiding under big names to create
 problems for the country.
Jonathan also said that such people were in the habit of making unguarded statements with the aim of creating enmity.
The President said, “Some people call themselves statesmen but they are not statesmen, they are just ordinary politicians.
“For you to be a statesman, it is not 
because you have occupied a big office before but the question is what 
are you bringing to bear on the nation?
“Are you building this country? Or are 
you a part of the people who tell lies to destroy this country; to 
create enmity and make people who ordinarily would have been living 
together to fight themselves?
“Are you planning to set the country ablaze because you did not get that particular thing you want?
“At the appropriate time, Nigerians will know all of them even though I know most of such people. The younger ones do not know.
“Some people, including those with big names, are hiding under some clogs and creating a lot of problems in this country.
“They are making provocative statements 
that will set this country ablaze. How can someone tell   me that such 
people are   senior citizens. They are not   senior citizens and they 
can never be. They are ordinary motor park touts.
“If you are a senior citizen, you will 
act like one. It is not because of the offices we occupy, it is by 
divine grace and providence that some of us occupy these offices. But 
what role are you playing to build this country?”
Jonathan also used the opportunity to assure the delegation that he was not against the Northern part of the country.
He said whenever he heard about such 
accusation, he always turned to Vice- President Namadi Sambo who is from
 the North to ask if, indeed, he is anti-North.
The President listed his Principal 
Secretary, Hassan Tukur, and   his Chief Detail simply identified as 
Yusuf, as some of his close aides from the North.
Jonathan said because of his background,   he believed that the only thing that could liberate individuals was education.
He said that was why he insisted that nine out of the 12 new federal universities be located in the North.
Jonathan said, “I used to tell Nigerians that I come from a background people refer to as the Talakawas; I come from that level and I am here today talking to Alhaji Jimeta because I went to school.
“And I said the only thing that can 
liberate an individual or a group of individuals is education. If I had 
not gone to school, I wouldn’t have been here to talk to big people like
 these.
“If you didn’t go to school, you wouldn’t
 have spoken the way you spoke, you would have looked for somebody to 
interpret. This is what I believe. I don’t play politics with it. It has
 been my policy that I don’t play politics with education.
“When I came on board, I said even though
 as a country we have the policy on paper, every state must get a 
Federal Government university.
“Out of the 12 federal universities 
created, nine of them are in the North while three are in southern 
Nigeria. The only three states that had no federal university were 
Bayelsa, Ebonyi and Ekiti.
“Those who were in charge of the 
university establishment were not fair. For us to liberate ourselves, we
 must go to school. If I hate the North, would   I have done that?
“We talk about Almajiri education, we felt we must change. Luckily, we initiated it but now state governments are keying into it.
“I know that it was education that 
liberated me. I would have been a local canoe builder like my father and
 grandfather. But I am here because of education and I feel if we must 
liberate Nigerian children whether they are from Zamafara, Bayelsa, 
Kebbi or Delta state, they must be educated. I feel we must enter the 
North by aggression through education.
The President also referred to a newspaper publication (not The PUNCH)
 which, he said, indicated that the Federal Government awarded a few 
projects for the North-East and a chunk for the South-South.
He said he had reproduced copies of the 
publication and distributed them to   ministers with a directive to 
ascertain whether indeed projects were skewed in favour of a particular 
geopolitical zone.
Jonathan added that he directed the ministers that if the report was indeed true, they must explain the reason(s) to him.
He said despite all the negative campaigns against him and his government, he would not cheat any part of the country.
The President said, “For the people who 
want to paint us in all kinds of colour, we will explain to Nigerians. 
There are a lot of documentations we will show Nigerians.
“Let me reassure you that this 
administration is working with your sons and daughters; we will not 
exploit any part of this country; we will not cheat any part of this 
country.”
Jonathan also stressed the need for peace
 and unity in the country, saying there could be no development without 
the two factors.
He said he was saddened that young Nigerians were seeing the country as a divided one.
The President said, “I feel sad that our 
younger ones are beginning to see Nigeria as if we are so divided. A 
Nigeria that a Muslim and a Christian cannot sit down together.
“I was told that the driver of the late 
Prime Minister, Tafawa Balewa, was a Christian. Our people lived 
together in those days. Why not now that we have even modern ways of 
life?
“Any country that its citizens see themselves through their tiny tribal enclaves cannot go anywhere.”
Yakasai had in his remarks said   it was 
important for all Nigerians   to appreciate the fact that the country 
was crafted in such a manner that no one section   could rule without 
the support of the other.
He recalled that it was the North   that 
endorsed the principle of power shift which brought about the Presidency
 of Obasanjo and Jonathan.
He said it behoved on all Northerners and indeed, other Nigerians to continue to respect the principles of democracy.
Yakasai said, “Northern Elders Council 
believes in peaceful co-existence and extension of hands of fellowship 
to brothers and sisters from the other side of the nation.
“It is unpatriotic for anybody to instigate people against any person or peoples because of a temporary gain.
“Politics of insult, blackmail and castigation of individuals will not take this country anywhere.
“We therefore believe in peaceful co-existence among Nigerians and by working together shall we move the country forward.”
http://www.punchng.com/news/some-senior-citizens-are-motor-park-touts-jonathan/ 
 
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