No plan to impose military gov on Borno – Presidency

President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday refuted report in the media suggesting that he was planning to step up the ongoing state of emergency in Borno state by imposing a military administrator on the state.

The President described the said report as another mischievous attempt in the media to project the federal government in bad light, even as he reiterate the current administration’s readiness to adhere to the rule of law.

According to the said report in one of the national newspapers, the President had identified a retired Army General that he intended to appoint as the military administrator of Borno state, based on the belief that “placing a soldier in charge of the state government will send a wrong signal to the recalcitrant insurgents”.

The report further claimed that the move to suspend democratic structures in Borno State was recently revived following a similar attempt last May when the president first declared a state of emergency in Adamawa State.

But when contacted, Special Adviser to the President on media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, told journalists last night that, while the said report did not make any sense, the country’s constitution does not make any provision for military rule in a civilian regime.
Abati noted, however, that if there was a need to extend the ongoing state of emergency, the government would not hesitate to do so.

He said: “It (the said report) is preposterous; it does not make any sense. This is one of the states that government had declared a state of emergency twice, and in the two occasions, it did not remove the governors of the affected states.

“Nowhere does the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria recommend military rule over civilian rule in a democratic setting like Nigeria. And this is a government that has consistently placed emphasis on strict adherence to the rule of law.”