NEWS
Between Buhari and Atiku: When you
rig yourself into power, there’ll be no peace – Shehu Sani blasts
President-elect
The lawmaker representing Kaduna Central senatorial district at the National Assembly, Shehu Sani, has condemned the current administration for rigging themselves back into power during the 2019 elections.
Sani said that President Buhari cannot claim that what he has
experienced during the election was a legacy of what he wants to leave for
Nigerians.
The lawmaker also hailed former President Goodluck Jonathan for the
peaceful conduct of the 2015 elections.
Senator Sani said that the violence that followed the 2019 elections
vindicated Jonathan.
According to the lawmaker, during the 2019 elections, various political
players made inflammatory utterances and hate speeches that prepared the ground
for the violence.
Sani, who dumped the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC, few months
to the general elections, said, “One singular statement made by former
President Jonathan that no blood of any Nigerian was worth his own ambition set
the tone for non-violent elections at that material time,” according to
Guardian.
“The bodybags comments made by the Governor of Kaduna State and other
bloody comments, inciting statements and hate speeches, with the desperate use
of violence on people and against people by those in position of power have
seriously stained and tainted the credibility and transparency of the 2019
elections.
“We have never in history seen how public resources were shared to
voters to vote for public office holders and for candidates.
“When a nation descends to the very point that leaders have to pay to
be elected into offices, then the soul of that nation has been buried along
with dishonour.
“We have created a new form of politics and electioneering process
where people buy themselves into public office or use violence for them to
assume the position of power.
“One of the foremost cardinal of democracy is the ability, opportunity
and the rights of people to elect their leaders into office.
“But when that process is destroyed, undermined and decimated, then the
legitimacy of the people who are going to be in office will be seriously
questioned. This is where we find ourselves today.
“You can’t use violence and public resources to get yourself into
office and then claim any form of credibility. And I am saying it very clearly
that as as long as leaders would perpetrate injustice, undermine the basic
principles of credible elections and rig themselves into power, they have lost
the moral right to call for statesmanship or sportsmanship.
“You cannot rig election, destroy the foundation of democracy and
demand peace, unity and order among the people.
“If the foreign observers were categorical in their condemnation of the
gross destruction of the electoral process as it was done in the presidential
and National Assembly elections, there could not have been the violence that we
have seen.
“They were mild and modest in their reportage, assessment and
conclusion on what has happened.
“I can say that President Buhari cannot claim that what he has
experienced today is a legacy of what he wants to leave for Nigerians.
“And I will also point out that if there is going to be seriousness in
tackling electoral malpractices in Nigeria, then there must be sanction on
those perpetrating it.”
PLEASE
SHARE THIS POST!
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for your comment, keep reading our news and articles