Bolaji Abdullahi
Bolaji Abdullahi, spokesperson of the All Progressives Congress,
APC, says former President, Goodluck Jonathan’s tolerance for corruption
made the administration of ex-United States’ President, Barrack Obama
support President Muhammadu Buhari.The APC spokesperson, who was a Minister under the Jonathan’s
administration, said the immediate past president gave the world to
believe that there was no corrupt practice in his government despite
claims by former Central Bank, CBN, Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.
In his upcoming book: “On a Platter of Gold: How Jonathan Won and Lost Nigeria,” Abdullahi claimed that there were allegations of “missing
billions from government oil corporation, legislative inquiries into
mind boggling subsidy scams, a cabinet minister and close confidant of
the president embroiled in hundreds of million naira armoured cars
scandal.”
The APC spokesperson said, “another Minister’s recruitment
‘racket’ leading to the death of hapless jobseekers, pension
administrator disappearing with billions of naira, an ex-convict’s
presidential pardon – the list seemed endless” all occurred under
Jonathan’s administration.
Abdullahi also made mention of the case of the billions of dollars
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, was accused of
failing to remit to the federation account by then-CBN governor, Sanusi.
According to Abdullahi, “In a Presidential Media Chat soon
after Sanusi’s ouster, Jonathan denied that any money was missing and
declared, quite memorably, that: ‘If anyone steals $50 billion or $20
billion anywhere, America will know.
“They will tell you where it is; it is their money.’ Quite
possibly, the Americans had no evidence of $50 billion or $20 billion
having gone missing, but Jonathan’s government gave no one the
confidence that no money was being stolen,” Abdullahi wrote.
“Since the Transparency International started monitoring
political corruption in countries across the world, perception has taken
precedence over facts and figures in measuring where countries stood in
corruption rating. The problem with perception however is that it does
not need to be proved beyond reasonable doubts.
“On this basis alone, Nigerians, and whoever else was
interested, had more than enough basis to conclude that even if Jonathan
himself was not personally corrupt, he had demonstrated ample tolerance
for corruption and corrupt officials – allegations of missing billions
from government oil corporation, legislative inquiries into mind
boggling subsidy scams, a cabinet minister and close confidant of the
president embroiled in hundreds of million naira armoured cars scandal,
another minister’s recruitment ‘racket’ leading to the death of hapless
jobseekers, pension administrator disappearing with billions of naira,
an ex-convict’s presidential pardon – the list seemed endless.
“Put together, these stories formed an ugly compendium that
could make the Obama Administration to feel justified in supporting a
‘regime change’ in Nigeria, especially if the substitute was a Muhammadu
Buhari, marketed as an ascetic, sandal-wearing old soldier, who had
zero-tolerance for corruption.”

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