Former Nigerian President, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan has disowned an
online statement credited to him concerning the relationship between the
South East and the people of the Niger Delta, describing it as a
fabricated speech. The report claimed that the former President spoke on
the position of Niger Delta over agitations for Biafra in a speech he
presented recently in Texas, United States. However, a statement signed
by his Media Adviser, Mr. Ikechukwu Eze, on Saturday described the
report as false, declaring that the former President could not have
presented the purported speech because neither did he travel to the
United States nor send anybody to represent him at the unnamed event.
Eze who noted that it was the second time in three years that the former
President would be issuing a disclaimer on the purported speech, blamed
the development on the effort of some unscrupulous criminals out to
tarnish the image of Dr. Jonathan. He wrote: “Our attention has been
drawn to a fake story with the title ‘Why Niger Deltans don’t want to be
part of Biafra’ currently circulating online and purported to have been
taken from a speech allegedly presented by former President Dr.
Goodluck Jonathan at an unnamed event in Texas, United States. “The
story which is being recycled in some online platforms claimed that the
former President allegedly spoke on the relationship between the people
of the Niger Delta and South East states while addressing the broader
issue of agitation for Biafra. “We thought we had finally dealt with the
issue of this falsehood with our timely and well publicised disclaimer,
soon after the supposed speech first surfaced online in 2017. However,
it beggars belief that the same jejune and disastrous effort at speech
writing, hatched by some yet-to-be-identified shady character, is again
being served to the social media public as a fresh dish. “We want to
clearly state, as we did in 2017, that there was no such event involving
the former President and that Dr. Goodluck Jonathan will never present
such a sloppy and hate-filled speech. “We note that the false report is
the same old statement that was first put out about three years ago by
some unscrupulous elements. Now and as then, it began this way: “Former
President of Nigeria, Goodluck Ebere Jonathan yesterday delivered a
lecture at Texas, United States…. “We recall that when the purported
speech was first published in 2017, we dismissed it as pure fiction
because, unknown to the authors, they made the claim at a time when the
former President had neither been to Texas since leaving office in 2015,
nor been invited to any speaking engagement in the US State. Our
disclaimer which was issued on October 13, 2017 was published then in
many newspapers. “That this odious concoction has not only resurfaced as
a new document but continues to spread in May 2020 shows to what a sad
extent the fake news and bizarre hoaxes industry is gaining ground in
our public space. “It makes it even more distressing that such a poorly
conceived dithyramb and the obvious falsehood around it, could receive
any attention from discerning Nigerians. For instance, this is a speech
that was purportedly presented in Texas, United States, but nothing was
said about the actual date, venue, organisers and purpose of the event.
Does it also make any sense that the former President would be assumed
to have travelled to the United States to present a speech, at a time
when airports are shut and public gathering banned across the world on
account of Covid-19 pandemic? “We can only reiterate as we did in 2017
that this falsehood serves no purpose other than probably massage the
ego of the faceless writer. At a time like this, Nigerians have more
important things competing for their attention than waste their data on
the hackwork of a fraudulent wannabe speech writer who thinks nothing of
the criminal implication of attributing his duplicitous diatribe
against a people to former President Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan
According to punch
Jonathan disowns online comments on BiafraFormer President Goodluck Jonathan has said that he never spoke on the position of Niger Delta over agitations for Biafra.
Jonathan,
in a statement by his Media Adviser, Mr Ikechukwu Eze, on Saturday
also disowned an online publication which claimed that he spoke on the
relationship between the South East and Niger Delta.
The report
was said to have also claimed that Jonathan spoke on the position of
Niger Delta over agitations for Biafra in a speech he was said to have
presented recently in Texas, United States.
The former president
described the report as false, adding that he couldn’t have presented
the purported speech because he neither travelled to the US nor sent
anybody to represent him at the unnamed event.
Eze said it was
the second time in three years that Jonathan would be issuing a
disclaimer on the purported speech and blamed the development on the
effort of some “unscrupulous people” to tarnish Jonathan’s image.
He
said, “Our attention has been drawn to a fake story with the title,
‘Why Niger Deltans don’t want to be part of Biafra’ currently
circulating online and purported to have been taken from a speech
allegedly presented by former President Dr Goodluck Jonathan at an
unnamed event in Texas, the United States.
“The story which is
being recycled in some online platforms claimed that the former
President allegedly spoke on the relationship between the people of the
Niger Delta and South East states while addressing the broader issue of
agitation for Biafra.
We thought we had finally dealt with the
issue of this falsehood with our timely and well publicised disclaimer,
soon after the supposed speech first surfaced online in 2017. However,
it beggars belief that the same jejune and disastrous effort at speech
writing, hatched by some yet-to-be-identified shady character, is again
being served to the social media public as a fresh dish
He added,
“We want to clearly state, as we did in 2017, that there was no such
event involving the former President and that Dr Goodluck Jonathan will
never present such a sloppy and hate-filled speech.
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