Saturday, December 14, 2024
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We can end insecurity in two years – Obasanjo

Nigeria’s former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, has said the country had the capacity to end the protracted security challenges within two years, but regretted that the current leadership had failed to do the right thing.

Obasanjo who spoke when he received Mohammed Hayatu-Deen, a PDP presidential aspirant in Abeokuta, the nation is “decomposing and dissolving” under the current administration.

“And you talk about security and people ask me about it and I say I know that we can put all insecurity in Nigeria behind us within a space of two years,” he said.

“That we have not done or that we are still in the situation is a choice that has been made by our leaders, not the way God wants us to be.”

Addressing the PDP aspirant, Obasanjo said, “I believe, like you (Hayatu-Deen) have rightly said, this period is not like any other period in the history of Nigeria and you used two words, decomposing and dissolving. I can’t find any better words to describe the situation we have found ourselves.”

He asserted that Nigeria could surmount its present economic and security challenges if leaders were willing to make the right decisions.

“I want to emphasise the point that the Nigerian situation, bad as it is, will only be put right by Nigerians at the forefront of our situation. So, Nigerians have to brace themselves up to do what needs to be done to put Nigeria back on the right path,” Mr Obasanjo explained.

Listing knowledge, vision, passion and innovation as mandatory requisites for the next president, Mr Obasanjo admitted “Nigeria is a complex country,” albeit “not a difficult country to rule or to manage.”

The ex-president reaffirmed his passion for Nigeria and vowed to continue clamouring for good governance.

“And when you said you are involved in this with a passion, and I was telling some people this morning that passion means madness; that you are mad about Nigeria. I am and I have no apologies for that, because I have no other country I can call my own and I have no other country I can go to and say, yes, I have come to live here,” Obasanjo said.

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