Nigeria’s former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari declared he would run for president on Wednesday, criticising President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration for corruption and failing to tackle the Boko Haram Islamist insurgency.
His bid for the opposition ticket, if accepted, would pit him against Jonathan for a second time.
Addressing thousands of cheering
supporters in a white traditional robe, dark glasses and a green
skullcap, Buhari berated the government for failing to stamp out
insecurity.
“Nearly all are in fear of their
lives … due to insurgency by the godless movement called Boko Haram, by
armed robbers on the highways, by kidnappers who have put whole
communities to flight,” he said in his bid in the capital Abuja for the
All Progressives Congress (APC) ticket.
Thousands have died in Boko
Haram’s increasingly bloody campaign to carve an Islamist state out of
the religiously=mixed country, Africa’s biggest economic power and oil
producer.
Jonathan, a Christian
southerner, has yet to officially declare his intention to run, but is
widely assumed to be going for another term. Abuja is festooned in
smiling campaign posters touting his achievements and calling for
“continuity”.
“I … present myself before you …
and before God seeking to be elected as APC’s Presidential candidate,”
said Buhari, a Muslim northerner.
Buhari won a rare reputation as a
fighter against corruption during his timing ruling Nigeria from
1983-85. Most Nigerians agree he did not use the presidency to enrich
himself and his backers. His iron-fisted administration jailed several
politicians on graft charges.
He had been expected to run and
faces ex-vice president Atiku Abubakar in the primaries on Dec. 2.
Abubakar declared his intention to run late last month.
Jonathan’s assumed intention to
run has been welcomed by elites from his powerbase in the largely
Christian south but has upset many in the mostly Muslim north, who argue
he tore up an unwritten rule that power rotates between north and south
every two terms, when he ran in 2011.
Jonathan took over from northern leader Umaru Yar’Adua, when he died in 2009 during his first term.
At the start of this year the
opposition coalition was looking stronger than any has since the end of
military rule in 1999, after a wave of defections from the ruling party,
including by Abubakar and several lawmakers.
But failure to agree on who
should lead the party in the polls has made it look weaker and more
divided. Jonathan meanwhile faces no opposition within the ruling
People’s Democratic Party (PDP), which also poached some APC members.
If Buhari wins the ticket but
loses the poll, he is likely to become a lightning rod for northern
anger at the perception that power has become concentrated power in the
oil-rich south of Africa’s leading energy producer.
More than 800 people were killed and 65,000 displaced in three days of violence in the north after Jonathan’s 2011 win.
“Nigeria in my experience has
never been so divided, so polarised by an unthinking government
hell-bent on ruling and stealing forever whatever befalls the country,”
Buhari said.
The APC was created out of four
regional parties last year. Its core support is in the north and the
religiously-mixed southwest, including the commercial capital Lagos,
where a formidable chunk of Africa’s biggest economy is based.
Buhari is popular in the north,
as is Abubakar, but it is unclear whether the mostly ethnic Yoruba
southwest would vote en masse for either of them, even while it remains
majority APC at the level of lawmakers and state or local governments.
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