General News
ACTING PRESIDENT JONATHAN GOODLUCK RESUMES DUTIES 2/11/2010
Acting President Goodluck Jonathan has once again lived up to his name by becoming acting president of Africa's most populous nation by share ‘goodluck’. I guess with the story of Goodluck, many Nigerian families would start rushing to name their new born babies “Goodluck”
He took over as governor of his State after his predecessor was indicted and forced out of office to become the Executive Governor of the state and served out the remaining years of the their term in office.
His choice as vice presidency candidate in the last elections in Nigeria surprised every one but probably not Goodluck himself. He patiently followed his master and he became the Vice-President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Now he's leading Nigeria after the president's lengthy hospitalization in Saudi Arabia which prompted legislators in both houses of parliament in Nigeria to save the nation from probably another military intervention to take action.
"There has not been any rise that's been so meteoric in Nigeria," said analyst Charles Dokubo of the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs. "It's nothing more than luck or chance. But what is luck? Luck is when you can take advantage of an opportunity. He was in the right place at the right time."
Jonathan gave a televised speech Tuesday night announcing that he had assumed power after the National Assembly voted him into the presidency. The move came amid public outcry over elected President Umaru Yar'Adua's more than two-month absence as he undergoes treatment for a heart condition.
Now Jonathan, a quiet 52-year-old biologist who remains largely unknown in Nigeria, is at the helm as the West African country faces endemic corruption, a simmering militancy and historical religious tensions that led to more than 600 deaths last month and over 2000 in the past two years.
Militants in the oil-rich Niger Delta region where Jonathan grew up have threatened to take up arms again to disrupt the oil industry, but with the emergence of Goodluck in power, the Niger Delta militant groups may have a change of heart and dialogue with him rather than adapt the militant approach as against Yar'Adua's led government.
Jonathan had been involved with the peace negotiations and is a member of the Ijaw ethnic group that is spread throughout the Delta, two things that may help him in salvaging an amnesty program started by Yar'Adua which seem to be failing at the moment.
"We are not sentimental about the origin of the individual that occupies the position of president," the statement read. "Should Goodluck Jonathan fail to accede to our demands, we will continue with our fight regardless of the fact that he hails from the Niger Delta."
That likely is not an empty threat. As Jonathan waited to be sworn-in as vice president in 2007, Niger Delta militants dynamited his country home. Goodluck was not there at the time and escaped injury.
Beyond the Delta, Jonathan faces a government hobbled by corruption and a country plagued by faltering public electricity and poor reputation of the armed forces particularly the police.
He also will remain a target for politicians in the Muslim-dominated north. An unwritten power-sharing agreement within the PDP between Nigeria's Christians and Muslims calls for the presidency to alternate between the two faiths. Jonathan, a Christian, is taking over for Yar'Adua, a Muslim, before his appointed time is up. It isn't the first time luck has touched Jonathan's life.
Jonathan, who has degrees in zoology and hydrobiology, worked as a government ecologist and lectured at a local university in the 1990s. He later served as director of environmental protection for the Oil Mineral Producing Areas Development Commission, a one-time government agency aimed at managing oil production.
It was from there that the People's Democratic Party picked Jonathan to serve as a running mate to Bayelsa state Governor Diepreye Alamieyeseigha. The duo took power in 1999, but allegations of corruption made Alamieyeseigha fled to Britain and he fled back to Nigeria disguised as a woman, but was later impeached and lawmakers stripped him of his immunity from prosecution.
Jonathan then took over as governor of the oil-rich state, but a corruption charge clouded his wife, Patience, in 2006. The Economic and Financial Crime Commission, the nation's anti-corruption investigators, seized $13.5 million of her money that they claimed she tried to launder through a friend. What happened to the corruption case against Jonathan's wife remains unclear.
Then-President Olusegun Obasanjo hand-picked Yar'Adua and Jonathan to run on the PDP's presidential ticket in 2007. Jonathan had no real connection to Obasanjo, beside both men being Christians from Nigeria's south but Yar'Adua's health problems may have played a part in the decision.
"I think Obasanjo realized that Yar'Adua needed someone with solid hands to handle the ship of state if something happened," the analyst said.
The nation is for now relief that the transition of power has gone on smoothly but every one waits as we wish Acting President Jonathan Goodluck, ‘all the luck’ that he needs to savage Nigeria from all its woes.
By Elvis Iruh- Former Editor-in-Chief, The Voice newsmagazine

 
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