A review of the video recording of President Goodluck
Jonathan’s speech at a Christmas Day service in Abuja has shown that the
president lied to Nigerians in his claim that the Nigerian media
misquoted him.
Mr. Jonathan had claimed on Thursday that
the media quoted him out of context in their reporting of the remark he
made at a Christmas Day service that the war against insurgency in
Nigeria could not be totally won
In the statement signed by his Special Adviser on Media, Reuben
Abati, the president lambasted a section of the media for carrying
headlines, which, in his estimation, suggested that the war against
terrorisms might never be won in the country.
He particularly
criticised two headlines “Terrorism Has Come to Stay” and Insurgency Far
From Over – Jonathan” by two newspapers he did not name, saying they
were most incongruous with the thrust of his remarks and amounted to
taking extreme editorial liberties with his comment at the church
service.
Mr. Jonathan, accompanied by members of his family, his
aides and some ministers, worshipped at the cathedral church of the
Advent, Life Camp, Abuja on Christmas Day during which he made the
remarks.
In the Thursday’s statement titled, “Stop this reckless
scaremongering” the president said, “Reports in a section of the media
today which quoted President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan as saying at a
Christmas church service on Wednesday in Abuja that “terrorism has come
to stay” in Nigeria are completely untrue and a mischievous
misrepresentation of the President’s remarks,” Mr. Jonathan said.
“President
Jonathan’s verifiable remarks at the Cathedral Church of the Advent,
Life Camp Abuja were to the effect that in comparison with some other
countries which have experienced the scourge of terrorism, Nigeria has
made remarkable progress in dealing with the security challenges posed
by terrorism and insurgency.
“Headlines such as “Terrorism Has
Come to Stay” and “Insurgency Far From Over – Jonathan” are therefore
most incongruous with the thrust of the President’s remarks and amount
to taking extreme editorial liberties with his comments at the church
service.
“It is apparent that in their indecent haste to cast the
most sensational and negative headlines, some editors never paused to
consider that it would have been most absurd for a President whose
administration has done so much to reverse the tide of terrorism, to
publicly assert the contrary.”
The statement said the president
merely pointed out that whereas terrorism remained a global challenge,
Nigeria had done comparatively better in reducing the incidence of
terrorist attacks within its borders to a reasonable level.
However,
a thorough review of the recording of the event revealed that Mr.
Jonathan actually said Nigerians should not expect to see terrorism
disappear entirely in their country.
He also said terrorism was far being over and that Nigerians should thank God it has been reduced to a manageable level.
A
transcript of Mr. Jonathan’s comment on terrorism reads, “For those who
know about terrorism, countries that are infested with terror will
hardly get out of it. If you look at country like Pakistan, we even go
to Pakistan to train our soldiers, in some parts of Pakistan as we are
talking now, there appears to be no government. So this country could
have been worst.
“Look at the incidences in Abuja, even the
police headquarters was bombed, the UN Building was also bombed right
here in the seat of government. Maybe the next target would have been
the State House.
“So we have to thank God that we have been able
to bring it to a reasonable level, though we are far from getting out of
it. There are a lot of challenges but we have to thank God.”
Meanwhile,
the newspapers which published the story with the headlines :
“Terrorism here to stay” and “Terrorism Far From Over” told PREMIUM
TIMES Friday they are standing by their stories, saying they did not
misquote the president in any way.
“There is no contradiction in
what we reported, and I believe the response from the presidency is just
an afterthought from Reuben Abati,” said Ibrahim Sheme, the Editor of
Abuja-based Blueprint Newspaper, which ran its own story with the
headline “Terrorism here to Stay – Jonathan”.
Mr. Sheme described
Mr. Jonathan as a reckless speaker who hardly thinks before speaking
and then only react to the implications of his comments.
“The President should know that whenever he speaks in public, he is talking to Nigerians who are intelligent to make sense of whatever he says. They are just managing the information and they did a bad job of it. The president was quoted correctly and we stand by our story,” Mr. Sheme added.
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