Politics The Chibok Abductions: The thief in President Jonathan’s Life - Vanguard

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*And 100 Days of Infamy

By Jide Ajani

“I don’t know the key to success, but the key to failure is to try to please everyone” – Bill Cosby

You need to be close to President Goodluck Jonathan to understand him. But understanding a man is not the same as understanding his circumstance(s). For a man who permanently wears a demure demeanour, but occasionally bursts into laughter and manages a smile, Nigeria’s Number One Citizen is a bundle of ambivalence. This piece will show why an earlier report on this page (GOODLUCK JONATHAN: A President in Need of Help – an encounter inside Aso Rock) ought to have been taken seriously by presidential handlers. And whereas it should be acknowledged upfront that there are those who neither wishes Jonathan nor Nigeria well, the selfsame President and his team would need to re-discover themselves so that Nigeria, under their watch, would not continue this shambolic run.

How the stage was set for a shameful act

The President looked distant; yet, behind a veneer of statesmanlike mien, he tried vigourously to mask it. This was as a result of what he had been put through in the last 36hours during the weekend of May 2 – May 4, 2014.
But before the ordeal, just some two weeks earlier, precisely April 14, 2014 and less than 24 hours after the deadly Nyanya bombing. Jonathan decided to go and dance in Kano in the name of a rally while some innocent students of Government Girls Grammar School, Chibok, were being put through torture by members of the Jama’atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda’awati wal-Jihad which, in English, means, “People Committed to the Propagation of the Prophet’s Teachings and Jihad”, otherwise known as Boko Haram.

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Source: #Vanguardngr
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