Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,195,634 members, 7,958,906 topics. Date: Thursday, 26 September 2024 at 07:06 AM

Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat - Politics (2) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat (19476 Views)

Peter Obi Tipped As Next President Ahead Of Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Atiku Abubakar An / I Didn't Say APC Is Worse Than PDP &Shuld Not Expect Votes Frm N/east -Sen Bukar / Corruption Under Buhari Govt Worse Than Pdp’s 16 Years – Makarfi (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (Reply) (Go Down)

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Caseless: 6:45am On Mar 01, 2019
angry
Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by chyleo007(m): 7:05am On Mar 01, 2019
Dailymemoirs:
When elections are won by rigging anyone can write anything and make a theory out of it but I ask. If it was free and fair would all these theories stand. The theory above is false. Nigerians voted Atiku but Buhari forced their will out of the window using INEC

What are you saying, Nigerians also voted PMB/PYO and later the vote was counted and winner emerge

4 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by madridguy(m): 7:09am On Mar 01, 2019
Brilliant write up.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Nobody: 7:11am On Mar 01, 2019
Download this nairalander's lovely song http://www.naijapals.com/music/Searching_for_love_Xpol-89179
Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by danot1030: 7:11am On Mar 01, 2019
Dailymemoirs:
When elections are won by rigging anyone can write anything and make a theory out of it but I ask. If it was free and fair would all these theories stand. The theory above is false. Nigerians voted Atiku but Buhari forced their will out of the window using INEC

If the rigging theory is giving you consolation in defeat good for you bro.

5 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by ITbomb(m): 7:17am On Mar 01, 2019
Dailymemoirs:
When elections are won by rigging anyone can write anything and make a theory out of it but I ask. If it was free and fair would all these theories stand. The theory above is false. Nigerians voted Atiku but Buhari forced their will out of the window using INEC
Thank you.
Majority of Nigerians accepted Atiku but the rigging mechinery in the KKK states gave Buhari the false win.

Considering that, this writeup is a total hogwash

2 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by princejenks(m): 7:21am On Mar 01, 2019
the results show that the south were clearly tired of the incumbent but the strong support from his region helped him retain power,this is clearly what happened not this long explanations.

1 Like

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Myde4naija(m): 7:22am On Mar 01, 2019
KidsNEXTdoor:
If Jonathan did half of what Buhari did..

Believe me Buhari would not be where he is today...
He would have died in Daura long ago

Using Niger delta oil money to treat himself in London while masses suffer in penury
your comment is not clear

1 Like

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Larryslim(m): 7:24am On Mar 01, 2019
I agree with the obasanjo part, obasanjo damaged Atiku, called him a thief and said he can't be trusted with the nation, your vice, someone you know in and out.
Then few months to the election, you throw your weight behind him, how are you going to convince peoole that atiku isn't a thief anymore like you publicly stated?
My dad for example, travelled all the way from dublin to Nigeria to vote for buhari, when i asked him why buhari?
He said atiku is a thief and can't be trusted with the nation, amidst other reasons.
Atiku name has been stained already and there is absolutely nothing he can do about it now.
Good name is truly better than gold or money!

12 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Myde4naija(m): 7:26am On Mar 01, 2019
mycar:
That was not an election, figures did not add up. Atiku will win in court if all the evident are looked into
stop deceiving yourself, I'm sure atiku didn't even win in ur polling unit.

2 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by akintunde63: 7:26am On Mar 01, 2019
author=KidsNEXTdoor post=76238010]If Jonathan did half of what Buhari did..

Believe me Buhari would not be where he is today...
He would have died in Daura long ago

Using Niger delta oil money to treat himself in London while masses suffer in penury [/quote]

Don't wish anyone death or any form of evil, even ur enemies. If u point one evil finger at some, remember the remaining 4 will be pointing at u. Fayose also said PMB was going to die, but as God would have it Buhari is alive today and has been elected for a second term as president

2 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Larryslim(m): 7:27am On Mar 01, 2019
princejenks:
the results show that the south were clearly tired of the incumbent but the strong support from his region helped him retain power,this is clearly what happened not this long explanations.
That's a lie!
Atiku/Pdp faired very bad in the south, even the south east which I'd thought Atiku will dust buhari.
Infact atiku performed woefully in this election, he couldn't drag in out with buhari in his own region like Gombe, even nassarawa that is a pdp stronghold, even in his own state,adamawa. He couldn't defeat buhari with over 500k votes.
Atiku/Pdp performed woefully!

3 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by akintunde63: 7:31am On Mar 01, 2019
Freddyjimoh:
As the final results of last week’s presidential poll were released, three broad groups emerged: Those genuinely surprised that the Peoples Democratic Party candidate, Atiku Abubakar, lost; those in pretentious denial of his defeat; and those in a quandary because they hoped to profit from a stalemate.

The first group comprise those who expected that the electoral math would be significantly affected by the farmer-herdsmen clashes in the Middle Belt; the fragile economic recovery and job losses; the widespread feeling of a captive government; and, finally, the shambolic party primaries.

The opposition, actively supported by a few vocal religious leaders and a section of the business elite, hammered the ruling All Progressives Congress on these points throughout the campaign that it seemed February 23 would deliver the final nail in President Muhammadu Buhari’s political coffin.

If the leadership of the APC was sufficiently threatened by the potential pitfalls ahead, it didn’t show it. On the contrary, the public faces of the party’s three most dangerous politicians – Nasir El-Rufai, Rotimi Amaechi and Adams Oshiomhole – kept stoking the fires.

In what must have come as a rude shock to those genuinely surprised by Buhari’s reelection, however, he lost only marginally to Atiku in Benue with 7,587 votes and, for the first time, won in Nasarawa, a traditional stronghold of the opposition. He lost in the North Central by 104,239 votes (less than one per cent of the votes he scored in 2015), but it was his second-best performance in five races so far, defying the Armageddon predicted.

Why? In a contest in which the two leading candidates were Hausa-Fulani, the whispering campaign in many religious circles that the Hausa-Fulani is the worst evil that has befallen the region since Satan, didn’t seem to make much sense. Voters probably decided that Buhari was the lesser of two evils, ignoring clerics who had begged them, on their knees, to vote otherwise.

Also, the demographic changes in the region may have strengthened the Hausa-Fulani population and significantly improved its voting power. In Kwara, Abuja took the three-and-a-half-year-old war with Senate President Bukola Saraki to his doorstep in Ilorin, stoking a catastrophic “Otoge” rebellion against the Saraki dynasty; while in Makurdi, voters didn’t seem sufficiently impressed with Governor Samuel Ortom’s identity politics to give Buhari the resounding rejection the governor campaigned for.

Those in pretentious denial of Atiku’s defeat have a different problem. They built a castle of myths and could not bear to see their fancies crumble. One of such myths was that the perception of Atiku as a corrupt politician and the PDP as a crooked party would not stick.

It’s not their fault. In some respects, the poor choices of Buhari’s government in the last four years created a situation where some said they would rather have a corrupt government than an incompetent one.

But this moral equivalence is superficial. As I said in a piece entitled: “Buhari v. Atiku: The inconvenient truth,” published on February 15, trust was at stake and on that score, Atiku did not lose on Saturday: “He already lost in 2006 when he fell out spectacularly with Obasanjo and suffered a Humpty Dumpty’s fall. The sum of the ongoing feverish endorsements and lobbying, the extravagant claims of momentum and the fantasy electoral maps would be insufficient to stitch his candidacy together forever again. He’s done.”

And there, hopefully, goes the myth that Nigerians care less about corruption than they do about competence.

Yet the deniers will not stop there. Given how poorly Buhari is perceived in the South East, it was expected that he would probably perform worse than he did in 2015, when he got 198,248 votes in the five South Eastern states. Atiku was expected to bury Buhari in a tsunami of Igbo vote.

I had warned in an article on January 1, entitled, “2019: Facts, fiction, myths, and what matters”, that the myth of a Buhari electoral disaster in the South East was exaggerated. But deniers turned a deaf ear especially after Atiku picked former Governor Peter Obi as running mate. It was comfort medicine for the elite to ignore the facts, but ordinary Igbo people know that even their own kith and kin in Abuja have not served them better in the last 20 years.

Governors control the purse strings of the parties and have significant influence on where and how the votes go. It’s true that Buhari has not overcome the perception of Igbo prejudice. But in the last four years, he has managed to deepen his alliances with a number of governors and influencers in the South East. The result is an improvement in his performance from 198,248 in 2015 to 403,242 this year, when a spectacular defeat was widely predicted.

There, is also, of course, the myth of the influential retired army generals. Following former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s endorsement of Atiku, it was taken for granted that from then on, Atiku was president-in-waiting; which was, in fact, how Obasanjo addressed him, and he was not laughing.

The political graveyard is littered with the remains of former top political officers that Obasanjo has fallen out with, former President Goodluck Jonathan being the most recent casualty. So, when Obasanjo and Buhari fell out, with General T.Y. Danjuma, former military president Ibrahim Babangida and Aliyu Gusau all lining up behind the Otta chicken farmer, it seemed Buhari’s fate was sealed.

Deniers who indulged themselves in this expired tale refused to see the writing on the wall. Obasanjo has had his moment, but he obviously didn’t know when it ended. Nigeria is sick and tired of a self-appointed oracle who thinks it’s his business to tell us who should lead us and when.

Not only that, Obasanjo also thinks it’s his prerogative to decide how long every president must stay in office, and then goes on to judge the next man by a measure of success which he did not achieve in his 11 years of being in charge.

Deniers may continue to worship at Obasanjo’s shrine, but voters who have seen through his decades of hypocrisy and opportunism decided it was time to send the world’s most restless busybody former president on forced retirement.

Obasanjo also belongs to the third group – those who hoped to profit from a stalemate in Saturday’s election. Whatever he may have said about Atiku publicly or told him privately, it’s doubtful if Obasanjo loves Atiku more than he loves Buhari. How could he seriously believe that Atiku would win after damaging his former deputy consistently for 13 years only to seduce him with endorsement three months to a major election?

In any case, how will an Atiku presidency benefit an Obasanjo who puts himself first, centre and last? The profiteer from and mastermind of many stalemates was probably hoping for another stalemate over which he could have become the arbiter in deciding who takes over next on his own terms. But that was not to be.

Whatever Obasanjo could not get from Buhari who he once described as “smart, educated and experienced”, Atiku would have had to sell Nigeria to provide it, a transaction that voters right down to Obasanjo’s polling unit, rejected outright.

Atiku has fought a good fight. No challenger has come so close in the last five election cycles in Nigeria. He should have called it a day before the final results were announced, instead of indulging the judicial wing of the stalemate army, a wing that is currently in fortuitous disarray.

One lesson Jonathan taught Nigeria is that you don’t have to win to be victorious. And it was just like yesterday when one unexpected phone call from him to Buhari put the critics, the deniers and the stalemate army out of business.

Atiku missed that chance. And it could prove worse than his defeat.



– Azu Ishiekwene is the Managing Director/Editor-In-Chief of The Interview and member of the board of the Global Editors Network.

Source: https://www.today.ng/opinion/atiku-abubakar-omen-worse-defeat-198964


Either way Nigeria was going to be ruled by foreigner, either " Jubril of Sudan" or "Atiku of Cameroon"
Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Nobody: 7:47am On Mar 01, 2019
Dailymemoirs:
When elections are won by rigging anyone can write anything and make a theory out of it but I ask. If it was free and fair would all these theories stand. The theory above is false. Nigerians voted Atiku but Buhari forced their will out of the window using INEC




next time say ,social media nation voted atiku ,while the real electorates with interest of nigeria @heart voted buhari.
The elites & the rich class believe in money sharing govt but fortunately the so called illiterates & poor class knows infrastructural development is the only way ... no pain no gain

3 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Nobody: 7:50am On Mar 01, 2019
Now, this is an article worth reading and keeping for posterity's sake.

Very well written and captures the issues perfectly.

If Obasanjo becomes relevant after this election defeat, then we should blame the media for amplifying his voice. His relevance in this country's affairs should be allowed to die a natural death.

The man is an egotistical maniac.

8 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by papiwyte(m): 7:59am On Mar 01, 2019
Dis man is finished grin grin grin grin grin
U see what some likes and shares on nairaland has cause grin grin

6 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by chris51(f): 8:01am On Mar 01, 2019
Good write up. Kudos to the writer. All the analysis were made convincingly without insults.

My joy is that OBJ who was always blackmailing Presidents in power is out of the way

Saraki that became Senate President through the back door is also out of the way.

There is hope for the 2nd term of APC

7 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by chris51(f): 8:01am On Mar 01, 2019
chris51:
Good write up. Kudos to the writer. All the analysis were made convincingly without insults.

My joy is that OBJ who was always blackmailing Presidents in power is out of the way

Saraki that became Senate President through the back door is also out of the way.

There is hope for the 2nd term of APC
Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Dino98: 8:04am On Mar 01, 2019
simplyhonest:
this is a quality write-up... my take on this is that, gradually, people are beginning to make their choice devoid of financial inducement.... GOD BLESS NIGERIA

People made their choice devoid of financial inducement in this election??

LOL...okay
Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by ogene007: 8:05am On Mar 01, 2019
This is a very useless article which seeks to misinform and further confuse the uninformed. The article makes no mention of votes inflation by the APC to favour themselves and voter suppression in PDP stronghold's using the security agencies and APC thugs. They also ignored the deliberate disenfranchisement of millions of voters in the SE by INEC through deliberate sabotage of the smart card readers. While voters in APC strongholds in the north were allowed to vote without smartcard readers, millions were disenfranchised in the SE/SS.
This article is just as useless as the government that paid for it.

1 Like

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Marvis4real(f): 8:08am On Mar 01, 2019
in my own opinion, people should stop writing trash simply because Atiku didnt become the president this time. The Buhari you all glorify today contested more than twice before becoming the president.
Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Freddyjimoh: 8:11am On Mar 01, 2019
naptu2:


Read the bottom of the post.


God bless you sir

I came across a good and well balanced article and I felt it was worth sharing with other well-thinking Nigerians. I don't think it is a bad thing to do.

1 Like

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by xperiencelove(m): 8:16am On Mar 01, 2019
So the cash Jonathan gave to all obas and flew with jets all around was his father's money Abi?

Even The Bells university at Ota was built with Obasanjo's legitimate income Abi?

Don't worry, your wailing is yet to begun
KidsNEXTdoor:
If Jonathan did half of what Buhari did..

Believe me Buhari would not be where he is today...
He would have died in Daura long ago

Using Niger delta oil money to treat himself in London while masses suffer in penury

4 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Dino98: 8:44am On Mar 01, 2019
TOPCRUISE:
Many of those who had supported and convinced people to vote out Buhari are crooks who benefited a lot from PDP dominated previous administrations.
Their aggressive campaign against buhari and tooth and nail arguments made me found out that interference of anti corruption bodies is really hurting their business

My problem with APC supporters is how they turn a blind eye to all the CORRUPTION under this government but keep pointing at PDP.

Yes PDP was(is) corrupt but so is APC....is the same APC not made up of former PDP members??

I'm not trying to defend PDP...my point is we have corrupt people in APC too. Nigerians should stop being sentimental and start calling things the way they are....it will serve us better that way.

We should realize both parties are corrupt and work our way from there for a better Nigeria and not some people defending PDP, while others defend APC.

PDP ruled for 16years and mismanaged our resources where are most of their members now??

Nigerians are just funny....we will defend any party or group we associate with even if they do wrong.

Its okay to point out PDP's wrong but turn a blind eye to APC's...its okay to say enough of the Saraki dynasty but will welcome Tinubu with open arms. Supporting anyone or any party does not mean u need to also overlook any bad thing they do.

We need to grow past this. Anyone who is wrong regardless of the party he/she belongs to should be condemned.

1 Like

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by TeraHawks: 9:34am On Mar 01, 2019
Pointless write-up.

But then, to write grammar is sweet and everyone has an opinion; no matter how hypothetical it is.

Buhari is a beneficiary of a highly rigged election; for a so called man of integrity, one would have expected him to at least tell the truth as Yar Adua did. But alas, his integrity is mere fiction.

APC will continue to degrade every aspect of governance; economic indices are clear to see and now, our electoral process has suffered the same fate. the next 4yrs would see a further deterioration. I and my family will not be affected though, cos God is our source.

Imagine winning an election without any clear-cut economic plan. God help Nigeria

1 Like

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by smeag0l(m): 9:42am On Mar 01, 2019
Please, which elections were held free and fair in this country?Besides, were you really thinking Atiku will beat Buhari in a free and fair elections?
Dailymemoirs:
When elections are won by rigging anyone can write anything and make a theory out of it but I ask. If it was free and fair would all these theories stand. The theory above is false. Nigerians voted Atiku but Buhari forced their will out of the window using INEC
Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by smeag0l(m): 9:52am On Mar 01, 2019
I'm not a supporter of either PDP or APC but it's high time we made some things clear to those clamouring that Atiku should have won if the elections were not rigged and put this whole issue to rest. I honestly disagree with this because he was beaten by close to four million votes. Now, if as the say, he wants the elections in Yobe, Borno and Kano reconducted, Those are around three million votes. I can bet you that if the elections are re-conducted a million times in those three states Buhari will still floor him. Let's take a step back into history. In 2007, even while Atiku was still vice president and Buhari was in political oblivion, the results of the presidential elections showed that Buhari had four million votes more than Atiku. Fast-track to 2015, in the APC primaries, Atiku still lost to Buhari. Now, my question to everyone here clamouring that Atiku would have won if not for rigging is if Buhari could beat Atiku with no monetary support from the likes of Tinubu and Amaechi and with no federal might back then in 2007, what makes you think Atiku will suddenly beat Buhari now that he has everything to his advantage?
Freddyjimoh:
As the final results of last week’s presidential poll were released, three broad groups emerged: Those genuinely surprised that the Peoples Democratic Party candidate, Atiku Abubakar, lost; those in pretentious denial of his defeat; and those in a quandary because they hoped to profit from a stalemate.

The first group comprise those who expected that the electoral math would be significantly affected by the farmer-herdsmen clashes in the Middle Belt; the fragile economic recovery and job losses; the widespread feeling of a captive government; and, finally, the shambolic party primaries.

The opposition, actively supported by a few vocal religious leaders and a section of the business elite, hammered the ruling All Progressives Congress on these points throughout the campaign that it seemed February 23 would deliver the final nail in President Muhammadu Buhari’s political coffin.

If the leadership of the APC was sufficiently threatened by the potential pitfalls ahead, it didn’t show it. On the contrary, the public faces of the party’s three most dangerous politicians – Nasir El-Rufai, Rotimi Amaechi and Adams Oshiomhole – kept stoking the fires.

In what must have come as a rude shock to those genuinely surprised by Buhari’s reelection, however, he lost only marginally to Atiku in Benue with 7,587 votes and, for the first time, won in Nasarawa, a traditional stronghold of the opposition. He lost in the North Central by 104,239 votes (less than one per cent of the votes he scored in 2015), but it was his second-best performance in five races so far, defying the Armageddon predicted.

Why? In a contest in which the two leading candidates were Hausa-Fulani, the whispering campaign in many religious circles that the Hausa-Fulani is the worst evil that has befallen the region since Satan, didn’t seem to make much sense. Voters probably decided that Buhari was the lesser of two evils, ignoring clerics who had begged them, on their knees, to vote otherwise.

Also, the demographic changes in the region may have strengthened the Hausa-Fulani population and significantly improved its voting power. In Kwara, Abuja took the three-and-a-half-year-old war with Senate President Bukola Saraki to his doorstep in Ilorin, stoking a catastrophic “Otoge” rebellion against the Saraki dynasty; while in Makurdi, voters didn’t seem sufficiently impressed with Governor Samuel Ortom’s identity politics to give Buhari the resounding rejection the governor campaigned for.

Those in pretentious denial of Atiku’s defeat have a different problem. They built a castle of myths and could not bear to see their fancies crumble. One of such myths was that the perception of Atiku as a corrupt politician and the PDP as a crooked party would not stick.

It’s not their fault. In some respects, the poor choices of Buhari’s government in the last four years created a situation where some said they would rather have a corrupt government than an incompetent one.

But this moral equivalence is superficial. As I said in a piece entitled: “Buhari v. Atiku: The inconvenient truth,” published on February 15, trust was at stake and on that score, Atiku did not lose on Saturday: “He already lost in 2006 when he fell out spectacularly with Obasanjo and suffered a Humpty Dumpty’s fall. The sum of the ongoing feverish endorsements and lobbying, the extravagant claims of momentum and the fantasy electoral maps would be insufficient to stitch his candidacy together forever again. He’s done.”

And there, hopefully, goes the myth that Nigerians care less about corruption than they do about competence.

Yet the deniers will not stop there. Given how poorly Buhari is perceived in the South East, it was expected that he would probably perform worse than he did in 2015, when he got 198,248 votes in the five South Eastern states. Atiku was expected to bury Buhari in a tsunami of Igbo vote.

I had warned in an article on January 1, entitled, “2019: Facts, fiction, myths, and what matters”, that the myth of a Buhari electoral disaster in the South East was exaggerated. But deniers turned a deaf ear especially after Atiku picked former Governor Peter Obi as running mate. It was comfort medicine for the elite to ignore the facts, but ordinary Igbo people know that even their own kith and kin in Abuja have not served them better in the last 20 years.

Governors control the purse strings of the parties and have significant influence on where and how the votes go. It’s true that Buhari has not overcome the perception of Igbo prejudice. But in the last four years, he has managed to deepen his alliances with a number of governors and influencers in the South East. The result is an improvement in his performance from 198,248 in 2015 to 403,242 this year, when a spectacular defeat was widely predicted.

There, is also, of course, the myth of the influential retired army generals. Following former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s endorsement of Atiku, it was taken for granted that from then on, Atiku was president-in-waiting; which was, in fact, how Obasanjo addressed him, and he was not laughing.

The political graveyard is littered with the remains of former top political officers that Obasanjo has fallen out with, former President Goodluck Jonathan being the most recent casualty. So, when Obasanjo and Buhari fell out, with General T.Y. Danjuma, former military president Ibrahim Babangida and Aliyu Gusau all lining up behind the Otta chicken farmer, it seemed Buhari’s fate was sealed.

Deniers who indulged themselves in this expired tale refused to see the writing on the wall. Obasanjo has had his moment, but he obviously didn’t know when it ended. Nigeria is sick and tired of a self-appointed oracle who thinks it’s his business to tell us who should lead us and when.

Not only that, Obasanjo also thinks it’s his prerogative to decide how long every president must stay in office, and then goes on to judge the next man by a measure of success which he did not achieve in his 11 years of being in charge.

Deniers may continue to worship at Obasanjo’s shrine, but voters who have seen through his decades of hypocrisy and opportunism decided it was time to send the world’s most restless busybody former president on forced retirement.

Obasanjo also belongs to the third group – those who hoped to profit from a stalemate in Saturday’s election. Whatever he may have said about Atiku publicly or told him privately, it’s doubtful if Obasanjo loves Atiku more than he loves Buhari. How could he seriously believe that Atiku would win after damaging his former deputy consistently for 13 years only to seduce him with endorsement three months to a major election?

In any case, how will an Atiku presidency benefit an Obasanjo who puts himself first, centre and last? The profiteer from and mastermind of many stalemates was probably hoping for another stalemate over which he could have become the arbiter in deciding who takes over next on his own terms. But that was not to be.

Whatever Obasanjo could not get from Buhari who he once described as “smart, educated and experienced”, Atiku would have had to sell Nigeria to provide it, a transaction that voters right down to Obasanjo’s polling unit, rejected outright.

Atiku has fought a good fight. No challenger has come so close in the last five election cycles in Nigeria. He should have called it a day before the final results were announced, instead of indulging the judicial wing of the stalemate army, a wing that is currently in fortuitous disarray.

One lesson Jonathan taught Nigeria is that you don’t have to win to be victorious. And it was just like yesterday when one unexpected phone call from him to Buhari put the critics, the deniers and the stalemate army out of business.

Atiku missed that chance. And it could prove worse than his defeat.



– Azu Ishiekwene is the Managing Director/Editor-In-Chief of The Interview and member of the board of the Global Editors Network.

Source: https://www.today.ng/opinion/atiku-abubakar-omen-worse-defeat-198964

3 Likes

Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Zeezxo(m): 11:45am On Mar 01, 2019
Corrosiveman:
Like for Atiku Share for Buhari
now you get the share. where is my own share
Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Friend01(m): 1:03pm On Mar 01, 2019
Dailymemoirs:
When elections are won by rigging anyone can write anything and make a theory out of it but I ask. If it was free and fair would all these theories stand. The theory above is false. Nigerians voted Atiku but Buhari forced their will out of the window using INEC
When Igbos voted for Atiku there was no rigging.
When Akpabio lost his seat there was no rigging.
When it does not favour you it becomes rigging.
Wonderfully immature reasons of a wailing wailers.

I agree totally with you that Alhaji Atiku won massively on Nairaland and no body is contesting that.

But You people haven't seen anything yet,you will cry and wail and nothing will happen.
Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by Friend01(m): 1:09pm On Mar 01, 2019
mycar:
That was not an election, figures did not add up. Atiku will win in court if all the evident are looked into


This is exactly the same delusion Sowore, Kingsley Moghalu and Fela Durotoye where under thinking Nigeria was an online piece of land surrounded by deluded people.

Oga INEC, go and add the figure up and let's see where it lands you and your boss.
Re: Atiku Abubakar: An Omen Worse Than Defeat by roomus(m): 2:18pm On Mar 01, 2019
Nigerians voted buhari, Nigerians voted atiku...but he who had the larger and most loyal followers won..PERIOD!!!..

Buhari supporters paid to vote for him(love), Atiku supporters were paid to vote for him(money).

Buhari supporters voted for him due their natural love for him, atiku supporters voted for him due to their natural hate for pmb.

Buhari , Awolowo, ojukwu , Mandela all have one thing in common... Natural love from their people...

It is in his death that people would realize how great and symbolic the man buhari is...he would b referenced a lot (forget all d APC/PDP stuffs, his personality is priceless)




Dailymemoirs:
When elections are won by rigging anyone can write anything and make a theory out of it but I ask. If it was free and fair would all these theories stand. The theory above is false. Nigerians voted Atiku but hari forced their will out of the window using INEC

(1) (2) (3) (Reply)

AMCON Takes Over Sen Abdulfatai Buhari’s Houses For ₦600m Loan Default / Tinubu: Rivers Made Right Choice Voting Quality Over Sentiments - El-rufai / Top Nigerian Achievers Of Year 2013

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 111
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.