Former President
Goodluck Jonathan has said that he built the Nigeria’s democracy to a stage
where the country will no longer have to wait for court judgments to conclude
elections.
Jonathan said this at
the sixth edition of African Ambassadors’ Interactive Forum and Dinner,
organised by the African Third Sector Resource in Abuja, on Thursday, where he
was presented with the ‘African Leadership & Achievement Award.’
The former president
said by conceding defeat before the 2015 election result was declared, he
wanted to set a new standard for the nation’s democracy and prove a point that
election-related litigations should no longer define Nigeria’s democracy.
He said, “I always say
that I reformed the democratic process as President in order to consolidate
democracy in Nigeria and the sub-region. I conceded defeat without a fight
because I wanted to set a standard for our democracy, going forward.
“My aim then was to
change the narrative and prove that election-related litigations should no
longer define Nigeria’s democracy. People must not always go to court and
obtain judgments before elections in Nigeria are declared conclusive.
“We don’t get to hear
about such court cases in mature democracies. I wanted us to get to that point
in our democratic experience. I thought that it won’t be out of place if we get
to that stage where those who lost elections will be able to congratulate those
who won.”
The former President,
who was represented by the former Minister of National Planning, Alhaji
Abubakar Suleiman, recalled that already some agencies in the United States had
predicted Nigeria’s disintegration following the growing tensions at the time,
stressing that the country and indeed the African continent could have been
doomed if Nigeria was allowed to slide into anarchy.
He said, ”Above all,
what that decision did for me and the nation was to avert a looming crisis.
Given the tension in the land as of that time, I was deeply contemplative of
what would have happened if we had let our nation, the biggest black nation on
earth, slide into anarchy, because of contestations for power. What then would
have happened to our citizens, Nigeria’s economy and the investments driving
its growth?
“I was convinced that
the implications for peace and the economy of the sub-region and the rest of
the continent, couldn’t have spelled anything else but doom.
“Recall that after the
2011 presidential election which most observers adjudged transparent, with my
victory generally seen to have been well-deserved, crises and conflicts still
surfaced that claimed the lives of many of our compatriots, and properties worth
billions of naira destroyed.”
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