Former President Goodluck Jonathan has said the outcome of the Edo state governorship election last Saturday, September 21, has shown that technology would not solve Nigeria’s electoral challenges.
Jonathan made the remarks in Abuja at a programme organised by the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR) and Partners in commemoration of the International Day of Peace. Jonathan said the human mindset was key to the resolution of the electoral problems. But he regretted that many Nigerians had a dirty attitude to politics.
Jonathan, the only Nigerian president to hand over to an opposition party after he was defeated at the polls, said there was more tension after the Edo election than before it, due to the feelings that some things were not done rightly. He argued that technology would not solve the problems in Nigeria’s electoral process, because technologies could be manipulated if the human mind was corrupt.
“Here in Nigeria, we talk about technology. Without the human mind ready to do what is right, if we bring the technology, they will manipulate it. Actually, 10 top countries are in conflict globally. Three of them are in sub-Saharan Africa. And quite a number of countries around us, including us, are in one form of conflict or the other.
And when you look at what causes conflict in Africa, most cases are struggle for leadership, contestation for power. And that is the main cause of conflict.
Sometimes when you go through a society, and you can tell all kinds of stories. But by the time you do proper analysis, and dig deep, you know that most cause of conflict is leadership struggle. That is why I’m only worried about my country Nigeria.”
The former president, who chaired the occasion, said the notion that politics was dirty was wrong. He stressed that the players were responsible for the dirty state of politics in Nigeria and Africa, in general.