President
Goodluck Jonathan has again lashed out at ex-President Olusegun
Obasanjo, describing him as a confused man unstable in his views
regarding government’s handing of the protracted Boko Haram insurgency.
Mr.
Jonathan, who spoke through his spokesperson, Reuben Abati, was
reacting to Mr. Obasanjo’s comment in a CNN interview that the
president had been deploying excessive force and exploring little or no
dialogue in solving the Boko Haram problem.
“To
deal with a group like that, you need a carrot and stick. The carrot is
finding out how to reach out to them. When you try to reach out to them
and they are not amenable to being reached out to, you have to use the
stick,” Mr. Obasanjo reportedly said.
An
apparently angry Mr. Abati took to Twitter early this morning deploring
the former president’s comment and labeling him a confused man whose
counsel or view the government does not care about.
In
four different tweets this morning, the presidential spokesperson
said, “In Nov. 2012 in Warri, fmr Prez. Obasanjo accused federal govt of
being soft on Boko Haram. He recommended the Odi solution: genocide.
“In
Jan.2013, OBJ tells CNN Govt shd adopt a carrot and stick approach to
Boko Haram. Genocide & dialogue? Where exactly does he stand?
“OBJ’s position on Boko Haram= Contradiction and Confusion writ large.
“One report says OBJ is recommending a multifaceted approach to Boko Haram. This govt certainly doesn’t need a lecture on that!
“Jonathan
administration has shown creativity & purposefulness in handling
the BH challenge. Hence, the progress we witness.”
Mr.
Obasanjo first angered Mr. Jonathan after he suggested that the
president appeared a weak leader given the way he was handling the
security challenges facing the country.
In
his comment, the former President reminded the nation of how he
directed security agencies to invade Odi, Rivers State, to fish out
militants who killed some security men during his tenure.
An
angry Mr. Jonathan however hit back at Mr. Obasanjo during his last
media chat, saying the Odi invasion Mr. Obasanjo boasted about did not
solve the problem but only ended up shedding the blood of the innocent.
Since
then, elements loyal to the two men within the party have engaged one
another in a war of words, and the national leadership of the party has
been desperate for a reconciliation.
But
when a peace team, led by party chairman Bamanga Tukur, visited the
ex-President in his Ota farm on December 15, Mr. Obasanjo insisted he
would continue to comment on national issues whenever necessary not
minding whose ox is gored.
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