Remarks by
His Excellency, President Goodluck
Ebele Jonathan, GCFR
On the
Occasion of the Submission of the
National Conference Report
Thursday 21st August,
2014
PROTOCOLS
1. Mr Chairman, very distinguished delegates, it is with all gladness
that I address you this day. After nearly five months endeavour to find the
appropriate verb for the noun of our country within the syntax of human
experience, you have brought to a grateful Nation, thereport of the 2014
National Conference.
2. I want to congratulate the Chairman and his able team, the Delegates,
all Nigerians and indeed everyone who has contributed one way or the other to
the successful convocation and conclusion of the Conference.
3. I also congratulate the Presidential Advisory Committee which
developed the framework for the Conference after travelling around the country.
We cannot afford to take for granted the efforts and commitment that the
delegates and the leaders put into the Conference to make it a success. The
patriotic zeal was evident in the inputs of the delegates into the dialogue and
how these have now formed the basis of the report.
4. On behalf of all Nigerians, let me thank you most sincerely for your
hard work. Your tireless efforts aimed at coming up with recommendations to
chart a path of peaceful coexistence, sustainable development, justice and
progress as we march into our second centenary shall not be in
vain.
5.To my mind, one of the main reasons for which the Conference was
convoked was fully achieved: that is, to create a platform for a genuine and
sincere dialogue among Nigerians. Even in moments when things seemed ready to
boil over, it was evident that the Delegates were only disagreeing to agree.
6. It is now very clear that as Nigerians, we have devised a way of
addressing and resolving our differences amicably: we dialogue and
dialogue until we agree! This is most heart-warming indeed!
7. My dear brothers and sisters, I am not unmindful that there were
delegates who were in this hall when I inaugurated this conference who today
are not part of this closing event as the cold hands of death have snatched
them. I pray that Almighty God will grant eternal repose to the souls of our
departed patriots and protect all the families they have left behind. They
would be proud of what you, their living colleagues, have done to end what we
started together.
8. On the occasion of the 53rd Independence Anniversary of Nigeria last
year, I made a promise to set aNational Conversation in motion in
order to advance the course of nation-building. The agitation had been there
for a while and we could no longer ignore it or delay the process. I was
motivated by a genuine desire to make our country a better place where we can
build consensus in the evolution of a New Nigeria.
9. When I was inaugurating the Presidential Advisory Committee in
December last year, I made it very clear to the committee that it was a sincere
and fundamental undertaking, aimed at realistically examining and genuinely
resolving, longstanding impediments to our cohesion and harmonious development
as a truly united Nation.
10.At the inauguration of the National Conference in March, I told you
the Delegates our expectations. I did say that I expected participants to
patriotically articulate and synthesize our people's thoughts, views and
recommendations for a stronger, more united, peaceful and politically stable
Nigeria.
11. I urged the participants to forge the broadest possible national
consensus in the process. I also warned that we should not to be under any
illusions about the task ahead because we would be confronted with complex and
emotive issues.
12. I am very satisfied that the Delegates navigated these obstacles in
a very mature manner. There were those who set out to input ulterior motives to
our modest efforts at reshaping and strengthening the foundations of our
nationhood to deliver better political cohesion and greater development agenda.
The naysayers raised false alarms over some phantom hidden agenda and called to
question our sincerity and did everything possible to derail this noble project.
13. The success of this conference has proved the cynics wrong in many
respects. Those who dismissed the entire conference ab initio as
a "diversion" have been proved wrong as what you achieved has
contrary to their forecast diverted our country only from the wrong road to the
right direction.
14. They said the conference would end in a deadlock as Nigeria had
reached a point where the constituent parts could no longer agree on any issue.
We exploded that myth by suggesting that you should arrive at your decisions by
consensus or 75% majority threshold.
15. That was the
first challenge you had at this conference when it appeared you were going to
break up. There were suggestions that we should intervene as government to
"save" the conference at that dicey moment but I insisted that
beyond the inauguration we were not going to intrude into the conference in any
manner. We kept our promise.
16. One of the many
reasons for our non-interference is this: we have at the conference, 492
delegates and six conference officials who all in their individual rights are
qualified to lead our great country and if they were unable to agree on how to
take decisions, we would be in real trouble! Acknowledging the quality and
patriotic content of the delegates, I was confident, the right thing will be
done.
17. I understand,
there were a few outstanding issues yet. That you did not agree on all issues
shows the sincerity of the discourse. Nobody was at the Conference to be
politically correct. People spoke passionately and argued strongly in favour of
what they genuinely believed in. As a result, there were bound to be strong
disagreements.
18. If everybody
agreed on every issue, the debate would not only be lacking in quality and
passion, it would also be said to have been stage-managed. What we should worry
about now is not that there were disagreements in one or two items, but how to
manage these disagreements such that nobody walks away feeling short-changed
and bitter. It is a major challenge in nation-building as experienced by the
biggest democracies in the world. You managed them well and came out tall,
fellow citizens.
19. I must
congratulate you! You not only worked out a compromise but you never had
to divide the house to take over 600 resolutions which I understand you passed
at this conference. You have indeed built a new architecture of negotiation
based on trustful give-and-take that is going to
be a permanent reference point in our national life.
20. There were many
other moments of anxiety at the conference with avalanche of headlines about
possible "walkouts" and "show-downs". However with your
sense of maturity and abiding presence of God who put this country
together, what we have today is a walk-in and a show-up!
21. In my
inauguration speech on March 17, 2014, I enjoined you as follows:
"We need a new mind and a new spirit of oneness and national
unity. The time has come to stop seeing Nigeria as a country of many groups and
regions. We have been divinely brought together under one roof. We must begin
to see ourselves as one community. We are joined together by similar hopes and
dreams as well as similar problems and challenges. What affects one part of the
community affects the other."
22. I'm greatly
delighted that you worked that out in practical terms by your patriotic
demonstration of the truism that "though tribe and tongue may differ,
in brotherhood we stand".
23. The result of
the conference has shown that we are not enemies, neither are we antagonists,
no matter our religion, region, state, and tongue. This Conference has
reinforced what I have always believed: that Nigeria is here for our
collective good.
24. Mr Chairman,
distinguished delegates, there is awisdom saying that if two
siblings went to the inner recess to dialogue and they are grinning from
ear-to-ear when they are done, truth must have been in short supply in their
discussions. However, no matter the bitter truth they shared behind closed
doors, holding hands when they emerge and not disowning each other is the
hallmark of blood being thicker than water.
25. This dialogue
reflects the current issues in the light of the socio-political evolution of
the world. I did say before that we cannot proffer yesterday's solutions
to today’s Nigeria's problems. The challenges we faced at Independence or even
at the beginning of this democratic experience in 1999 are not the same challenges
we face today.
26. The discourse
reflected our latest challenges. We shall send the relevant aspects of your
recommendations to theCouncil of State and the National
Assembly for incorporation into the Constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria. On our part, we shall act on those aspects required of us
in the Executive.
27. Let me reaffirm
this: Nobody has a monopoly of knowledge. We who are in government need to feed
from the thoughts of those who elected us into power. You have done your
patriotic duty, we the elected, must now do ours.
28. As I receive
the report of your painstaking deliberations, let me assure that your work is
not going be a waste of time and resources. We shall do all we can to ensure
the implementation of your recommendations which have come out of consensus and
not by divisions.
29. In this regard
I appeal to all arms of government and the people of Nigeria to be ready to
play the different roles that the volumes of reports you have produced
would assign to you. It is my hope that with what you have done,
our country is on the right road to getting the job of nation building done.
30. The report of
the National Conference, coming 100 years after the Amalgamation, promises to
be a landmark in our history. I have always believed that dialogue is a better
way of driving change in the community and I am happy that this dialogue has
gone very well. With the far-reaching recommendations touching on several areas
of our national life, I am convinced that this will be a major turning point
for Nigeria.
31. We have gone
through many challenges in our first centenary, now is the time to hit the
track and take our proper lane for the race of progress. Our moment for
national rebirth is here. We have to rekindle hope not only within our country
but in the entire African continent where collectively our leadership is
acknowledged.
32. Distinguished
ladies and gentlemen, in every governance index, we are making progress. In
2009, our life expectancy was forty seven years, it has now risen to fifty-two.
We were spending over a trillion naira importing food four years ago, it is now
down to a little over six hundred billion naira and still falling! The size of
our economy has grown.
33. We are
improving on our infrastructure and now well on our way to self-sufficiency in
energy security. We are focussing on education with a view to banishing
illiteracy from our country. We have revived our railways and our airports are
undergoing massive repositioning. Our sports men and women are now hungrier for
laurels and we are recalibrating our security forces to meet the challenges of
newer security threat that was brought to us!
34. Very
distinguished delegates, this administration has made the sanctity of the
ballot a cardinal focus. Our successes in polls in different states in recent
past have shown we are making substantial progress in the direction of making
the polls attractive to all categories of citizens in our land so that our best
and brightest would not continue to shun the electoral process. Our goal is
that Nigeria must quickly arrive at the point where every vote is not only
counted but counts. It is free, fair and credible elections that we
crave.
35. Now is the time
that we put behind us all the drawbacks that have inhibited us from fulfilling
our manifest destiny and realizing our full potentials. We must steadily arrive
at the juncture where strife, conflicts and mistrusts would become distant
echoes of our past. We must make every inch of our country a space for
joyous habitation. Our country must enter a new season of harmony,
prosperity and happiness with justice abiding in every hamlet, community and
our country. It is the dawn of a new day in Nigeria and the new nation is at
the door accompanied by its great men and women, young and old.
36. All those who
have predicted the disintegration of our country at the end of our first
centenary would wish they chose another country when the possibilities of the
new vision for Nigeria are actualised. In place of disintegration we shall have
integration. In place of bitterness and spilling of blood, we shall have
sweetness and healing in our land. Henceforth, our country shall become like a
running water that approaches a rock, rather than stopping it takes a curve and
flows on.
37. Mr Chairman, we
arrived at this point with praise to God and gladness in our hearts. I once
again congratulate you and your wonderful team and all of you the distinguished
delegates, for the great job that you have done in these five months. I
would like to implore you all to continue to make yourselves available for
service to the nation as that is the hallmark of every patriot.
38. We are
grateful!
39. On this note, I
hereby accept the report and declare the 2014 National Conference closed
to the glory of our Almighty God.
40. I thank you
all.
Nonsence.
ReplyDeleteI read this article to the end still did not understand the content of the conference. Of what good is it to the common man in Nigeria?
ReplyDelete