Mrs. Hillary Clinton, the former US Secretary of State,
has lambasted President Goodluck Jonathan over corruption in Nigeria and
the reckless squandering of the nation’s oil wealth.
While
speaking in separate events in New York City, Hillary said the Nigerian
government under President Jonathan, squandered its oil resources, and
indirectly helps corruption to fester in the country.
Clinton,
who also expressed her anger over the abducted schoolgirls in Chibok,
Borno State, spoke with ABC-TV’s Robin Roberts on American national
television, and also at a public function organised by the International
Crisis Group.
Later, the former Senator and First Lady made other
critical remarks concerning Nigeria at a philanthropy parley, as she was
widely quoted by several American media outlets, including CNN.
Clinton
stated the following position in the New York events she attended,
challenging the credibility and quality of the country’s leadership
under President Jonathan’s watch.
“The seizure of these
young women by this radical, extremist group, Boko Haram, is
abominable, it’s criminal, it’s an act of terrorism, and it really
merits the fullest response possible, first and foremost from the
government of Nigeria,” Clinton told ABC-TV.
“The
government of Nigeria has been, in my view, somewhat derelict in its
responsibility toward protecting boys and girls, men and women in
northern Nigeria over the last years,” she said.
“The
Nigerian government must accept help – particularly intelligence,
surveillance and recognizance help – their troops have to be the ones
that (are) necessary, but they could do a better job if they accept the
offers that are being made. Nigeria has made bad choices, not hard
choices,” Clinton said, parroting the name of her forthcoming memoir.
“They
have squandered their oil wealth; they have allowed corruption to
fester, and now they are losing control of parts of their (own)
territory because they would not make hard choices,” she went on to say.
“The
Nigerian government has failed to confront the threat, or to address
the underlying challenges. Most of all, the government of Nigeria needs
to get serious about protecting all of its citizens and ensuring that
every child has the right and opportunity to go to school,” she said in
her address to the function organised by the International Crisis Group.
“Every
asset and expertise should be brought to bear. Everyone needs to see
this for what it is, it is a gross human rights abuse, but it is also
part of a continuing struggle within Nigeria and within North Africa,”
she added forcefully.
Clinton, often mentioned as the
leading Democratic Party candidate in the upcoming 2016 U.S.
Presidential election cycle, has not yet announced whether she will run
for the White House. Yet, comments from the respected former U.S.
Secretary of State do carry political weight beyond American borders.
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