Facebook friends disagree with Jonathan over emergency rule
| Facebook friends disagree with Jonathan over emergency rule |
Several
Facebook friends of President Goodluck Jonathan, on Wednesday,
described the state of emergency rule declared in Adamawa, Borno and
Yobo states as “partial.”
Although the majority of them applauded
the President for taking the decision, they said the presence of
political office holders in the affected states might undermine the
effectiveness of the measure.
They argued that the political office
holders in the states should step down pending the time that normalcy
will return to their respective domains.
One of the President’s friends, Adebayo
Adediran, explained that the political office holders sympathetic to the
teachings and ideals of the Islamist sect, Boko Haram, might sabotage
the move to restore law and order in their states.
He said, “My dear President, please note
that there is nothing like partial or half state of emergency. It
should be a complete or total state of emergency and no ‘milidemocracy’
as you’ve done now.
“Let all the present states actors, I
mean political office holders in those states, step aside for now as
they will definitely interfere with the military orders and that may
also result to more dangerous situations. Our army don’t have to
negotiate with any civilian leader before they act please.”
Another commenter on the President’s
Facebook fan page, Eno-Obong Antia, said imposing a “total emergency’’
in the affected states would go a long way in getting them to
collaborate fully in the resolve to stamp out terror in the affected
northern states.
Antia said, “Mr. President, sir, you
have done well. But I wish the governors and those in the state houses
of assembly were affected because by the time they stay in their various
homes for at least three months without their usual Ghana-must go
allowances, they will be at loss and this will make them to fish out
those among them that are involved in the crime.”
One Tony Chidozie wrote, “Declaring
state of emergency is a good decision; but to still allow the
politicians at the helm is making it look like a new name for old
sickness.”
His friends on the social network also
argued that the emergency should have been declared long ago to
forestall the needless killings. Some people also advocated for the
enforcement of the emergency rule in other troubled northern states.
A commenter, Adaramaja Oluwatosin, said,
“Thank God for the action! But Mr. President, why? All this while you
were just there looking at the situation while lives were being wasted
and properties of innocents Nigerians were destroyed. This step you have
taken is supposed to have been taken since May the souls of the slain
Nigerians rest in perfect peace.”
A section of his Facebook friends
advised him to immediately jettison the amnesty offer proposed to the
group, adding that Jonathan should focus his attention on quelling the
insurgency once and for all during the period of the emergency rule.
“This action is more constitutional and
more lawful than the much touted amnesty. If the trouble makers in those
states submit themselves to constitutional order and renounce
terrorism, then and only then will amnesty proposals become legitimate
or meaningful.
“The country is again facing a looming
civil war. It is a war we must win against separatists and outlaws. May
the soldiers complete the task with victory,” one of his friends,
Chigoziri O Onwumere, wrote.
To Onoriode Kelvin, it is a step that
Jonathan ought to have taken before now. He argued, “This was long
overdue. You do not – no matter the situation – negotiate with
terrorists. The political office holders should also step down in the
state pending when normalcy is achieved. Otherwise, the purpose of this
declaration will not be 100 per cent effective.”
Seemingly summing up the advice of
fellow Nigerians who flooded the President’s Facebook page was Metche
Wonder, who said now is the time the Jonathan administration must put an
end to terrorism in the country.
Metche Wonder said, “When an individual
cooks for the masses, definitely they will finish it, but when the
masses cook for an individual, can he or she finish it? Mr. President,
this is the right time to cook for these terrors of peace, take a
drastic measure, in order to wipe this shame from the face of our dear
country Nigeria.
“How can humans become fond of killing
fellow humans? I wonder why one Nigeria our fathers fought for seems
not to be working. So, please Mr. President, rethink all over these
again and call a spade a spade for the sake of national peace. I rest my
case.”
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