The Presidential candidate of the
All Progressives Congress, Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd), has
welcomed the endorsement of former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo,
saying it will convince more Nigerians to vote for him and his party.
Buhari said this on Wednesday night during an interview with CNN’s Chief International Correspondent, Christine Amanpour.
Obasanjo had on Tuesday in Nairobi, Kenya during an interview with the Financial Times of London at the launch of his controversial autobiography entitled, ‘My Watch,’ expressed support for Buhari.
When asked by Amanpour what he thought
of Obasano’s endorsement, Buhari said, “It would certainly bring more
supporters to us and more confidence again to us for those who are
sitting on the fence.”
This, he said, was “because General
Obasanjo is highly respected and as far as the Nigerian nation is
concerned, there is no serious issue that can be discussed without
people seeking his opinion and listening to it.”
In the course of the interview, Buhari
disagreed with President Goodluck Jonathan and the Peoples Democratic
Party on the reasons behind the postponement of the general elections.
Although the ruling party insisted that
the Independent National Electoral Commission was not prepared for the
elections, Buhari maintained that INEC was forced by the military to
delay the elections even after insisting it was prepared.
Despite his disappointment, he explained
that since the action was constitutional, the APC had asked its
supporters to obey the law and remain calm but resolute.
Asked about the Boko Haram insurgency,
Buhari restated his belief that the military had been unable to overcome
the insurgents because resources meant for the military had been
misappropriated.
He cited scuttled plans by the National
Assembly to probe the funding of the army over the last three years and
interviews granted to the foreign media by soldiers, who he said,
claimed that they had to fight without proper weapons, to back his view.
He said, “The National Assembly
attempted to conduct a hearing by getting the budget approved by the
National Assembly over the last three years and inviting the service
chiefs to come and tell them why the weapons were not procured and sent
to the soldiers under competent leadership and that hearing was
scuttled.
“So, it showed the misapplication or
misappropriation of the resources provided by government and says why
the Nigerian military was unable to defeat Boko Haram.”
Regardless, Buhari said the military was competent to tackle the insurgency.
If elected as president, he said achieving that goal would not be “too difficult.”
“I believe this problem will not be too
difficult for the APC government because we know the Nigerian military
is competent. It is a question of making sure that the money voted for
equipment and training is properly utilised,” he said.
The APC’s presidential candidate also
said corruption had to be tackled “because there are serious citizens of
this country that (have) said unless Nigeria kills corruption,
corruption will kill Nigeria.”
In endorsing Buhari, Obasanjo had said,
“The circumstances he (Buhari) will be working under if he wins the
elections are different from the one he worked under before, where he
was both the executive and the legislature – he knows that. He is smart
enough. He is educated enough. He’s experienced enough. Why shouldn’t I
support him?”
And Buhari expressed a similar view when asked if he had changed.
The former military dictator, who
admitted that some of the things his regime was accused of had a degree
of accuracy, insisted that things would be different.
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