FG plots to sabotage smooth handover - APC alleges

By The Citizen

The All Progressives Congress, APC, yesterday accused the out-going President Goodluck Jonathan administration of plotting to hinder a smooth handover of power to the President-elect, General Muhammadu Buhari (retd) on May 29.

President Goodluck Jonathan had, on Wednesday, accused the APC of acting like a parallel government and trying to stampede his administraton out of office by making impossible demands in the terms of reference of the President-elect's transition committee.

Briefing newsmen after the Federal Executive Council meeting on Wednesday, Minister of National Planning, Abubakar Suleiman, a member of Jonathan's transition committee, said the council frowned at the terms of reference of the in-coming government and warned that the President's magnanimity should not be construed as cowardice.

He said the council agreed that Dr Goodluck Jonathan remains the President of the country until May 29 and the in-coming government should avoid creating a parallel government.

Misplaced aggression
Responding yesterday to President Jonathan's accusation, the APC in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said it was becoming apparent that the Jonathan administration will not fully cooperate with the incoming government, despite its public posturing in that regard.

The party also described as 'an act of hostility and a patently-misplaced aggression the unnecessary vituperation against the incoming Buhari administration by the Jonathan government, ostensibly because of the terms of reference of the Buhari transition committee but in reality part of an orchestrated plot to sabotage the transition.'

It rejected the continued blackmail by the Jonathan administration as a result of President Jonathan's concession of defeat, wondering whether the concession, gracious as it was, has now become a shield for all wrong doings.

The party said: 'We are sick and tired of being blackmailed by the Jonathanians. Gen. Buhari won the March 28 Presidential elections fair and square, having satisfied both constitutional and other statutory requirements.

'We have no apology for our victory, and the concession of defeat - while it may have increased the political stock of President Jonathan - has by no means diminished the historic and emphatic victory of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari and the All Progressives Congress.'

Outgoing administration trying to hide something

Justifying its claim that the Jonathan administration was plotting to hinder a smooth transition of power, APC said: 'While the outgoing government had earlier issued a memo to all ministries, departments and agencies to make sure their handover notes are ready by April 20, the same government has now reversed itself and said the handover notes will not be ready until May 14.

'With the new date, the Buhari transition committee will have little or no time to take a thorough look at the handover notes or seek clarification on knotty issues, effectively handing it (Buhari Transition Committee) a fait accompli as far as the handover notes are concerned. This does not augur well for a smooth transition and gives the impression that the outgoing administration is trying to hide something.

'By its dilly-dallying on the date for the readiness of the handover notes from the MDAs, the administration's posturing that it is ready to hand over has been exposed as nothing but a smokescreen.'

On parallel govt
APC described as illogical and strange, the claim by the Jonathan administration that the President- elect was trying to set up a parallel government simply because he has set up his own transition committee and given it terms of reference meant to guide the members on the discharge of their duties as members of that committee, wondering how those terms of reference have become the concern of the outgoing Federal Executive Council.

According to the party, 'in case the Federal Executive Council has forgotten, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress was declared the winner of the March 28 Presidential Election by INEC. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari is, therefore, today the President-elect and the All Progressives Congress the incoming government. It is, therefore, illogical to accuse the President-elect and the incoming government of setting up a parallel government.

'It is either the outgoing Federal Executive Council has something to hide or is bent on sabotaging the incoming government. There can be no other reasons for the misplaced aggression that was exhibited in that ill-intentioned, unprovoked and vitriolic statement from the Jonathan government.'

It said that to put the matter beyond doubt, the party has decided to publish in full the terms of reference in question so that Nigerians can judge for themselves whether there is anything suggestive of intimidation or running a parallel government in the document.

APC warned the Jonathanians not to overstretch the goodwill which the President has earned by his gracious concession even before INEC officially declared Gen. Muhammadu Buhari as the winner of the March 28 Presidential election, saying while it was momentous, it was not unprecedented in Africa, where power has changed hands peacefully between the ruling and opposition parties in several nations.

The party asked: 'Are they now saying that because the President conceded defeat, the incoming administration can no longer ask legitimate questions or seek clarifications that may arise from the handover notes?

'We will not surrender to any blackmail, subtle or otherwise. We shall ask questions and ask for explanations and clarifications whenever and wherever we deem such necessary. We cannot run a transparently honest government or fight corruption if we are prevented from asking legitimate questions and seeking clarifications from the outgoing government during the transition process. Let the Jonathan administration not tie our hands behind our back just because he conceded defeat after losing an election.'

The Terms of Reference
The party then reproduced the Terms of Reference for Buhari's Transition Committee which state thus:

*To develop a clear framework for liaison with the out-going administration for purposes of a smooth hand-over/take-over.

*To receive hand-over documents from Ministries, Departments and Agencies and itemise the most important or most urgent issues confronting the in-coming government.

*To review and make preliminary assessment of the balance sheet of government with particular emphasis on:

*The status of assets and liabilities of government.

*Cash flow position of the government.
*Quantum of public domestic and external debt of government and their deployment.

*Government's out-standing contractual obligations and its ability to meet such obligations.

*Status of implementation of capital projects.
*Under-take a preliminary assessment of the security challenges facing the country, and the

*Counter-insurgency measures taken by the government thus far.

*Counter policy measures being implemented in the Niger Delta to deal with unrest and major economic crimes in the area. In particular the status of the Amnesty Programme.

*Readiness of the Police and other national security and intelligence agencies in addressing threats to law and order.

*Provide a brief over-view of CBN, NNPC, NCC, Customs and FIRS.

*Suggest 'quick fixes' which will result in tangible, visible and practical measures so that change will be seen after 30 days, after 100 days, after six months of the administration taking office.

*Make any other observations which in view of the committee would be helpful to the transition and take-off of the new Administration.

*Report back to the President-elect in two weeks. - Vanguard.