Former president of Nigeria, Goodluck Jonathan, on Tuesday said the biggest threat to the 2023 general election is fake news and propaganda, not guns.
Jonathan made this observation while speaking at a Panel Session at the 2022 Peace Conference organized by the Goodluck Jonathan Foundation.
Jonathan called for an end to hate speech, fake news and propaganda going into the 2023 elections. He noted that the biggest task for the one who eventually becomes president in 2023, would be to protect the country from internal aggression.
“Before now, we were afraid of the gun. But now, we are afraid of fake news and propaganda. If we destroy our country, then why then will we need a president? We need to have a nation first before those vying for governors and president can contest”
On the need to continue the conversation around credible elections, he said: “Advocacy is critical. We have to keep talking. Because dictators harass people who talk, it means people are listening. So we will not stop talking until our country is better”.
Earlier, the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Catholic Diocese, Bishop Hassan Kukah, spoke very passionately of former President Goodluck Jonathan, pledging that he “can take a bullet” for him.
While describing Jonathan as the face of Democracy in Africa, he recalled how the former president cancelled a very important trip to meet up with President Muhammadu Buhari to sign the Peace Accord before the 2015 elections.
“I was at the centre of negotiations to get Buhari and Jonathan together to sign the Peace Accord,” he said.
Kukah also expressed disappointment in what he called ethnic inequality in the Buhari administration, and the appointment of top government officials in the cabinet, noting that he only takes solace in the fact that the current administration will soon end.
Disclosed that Kukah the first part of the Peace Accord preparatory to next year’s election would be signed soon, probably after the commencement of campaigns slated for September 28.
In his keynote address, the Chairman of the conference, Dr Mohamad Ibn Chambas, a Member of the West African Elders Forum, stressed that the Federal Government and all other stakeholders must play their role to guarantee credible elections.
Speaking on the central theme of the conference, ‘Nation Building: The Role of Elections in a Multi-Ethnic Context, he called on the media including social media to be responsible for reporting elections.
Also speaking in a goodwill message, Bayelsa State Governor, Douye Diri who was represented by his deputy, Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo, recalled that Nigeria would have been in “pieces” and not in “peace” in 2015 if Jonathan had not done what he did.
Reiterating the popular phrase Jonathan which connotes that his political ambition is not worth the life of any Nigerian, he said “until our ambitions are buried below the ambitions of others, we will not have peaceful elections“.
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