Asiwaju Bola Tinubu
 
A
 former Governor of Lagos State, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, says there is a 
need for the country to undergo a “common sense” revolution, adding that Nigerians should be prepared for 
change
Tinubu, who is a national leader of the 
All Progressives Congress said the many years of misrule by successive 
Peoples Democratic Party presidents had continued to sink the country 
further into crisis.
The former governor said this in a statement titled ‘A Return to Decency’, on Monday.
He described the 16 years of PDP rule at the federal level as a period of steady decline into disaster.
He said, “The longer they rule, the less
 benefit the people derive. Nigeria now needs a ‘common sense 
revolution,’ a revolution that calls forth a return to decency, probity,
 transparency of process and fairness in outcome.
“This is done not by subterfuge, divide 
and rule and turning Nigeria in a field of discord or a street of broken
 institutions. It is accomplished by honouring the principles of 
democratic good governance and economic justice. It is done by 
persuading the people they are better off as one instead of better off 
tearing at one another’s throats.
“Nigerians should be prepared for 
change. We must rescue Nigeria from those set to cause it irreparable 
harm. The change I talk about is the only route to our deliverance from 
16 years of the PDP locusts. Nigeria is ours to keep and its democracy 
is ours to save.”
He advised that this year’s Independence
 Day should be a time of sober reflection because other countries that 
received independence at the same time as Nigeria had since surpassed 
the country.
He described the Nigeria of today as the
 nightmare of its founding fathers. Tinubu further berated the PDP-led 
Federal Government of using religion to divide Nigerians.
He said, “We commemorate this 
Independence Day because the nation has survived despite its many 
challenges. We dare not celebrate because the nation has not flourished 
as it should. Fifty four years our national trek began with hope and 
promise, peace and unity.
“Today, the nation staggers beneath the 
weight of trouble multiplied by hardship. Peace and unity seem to have 
yielded the moment to violence and discord. We exist as a political unit
 on a map but we do not prosper as brothers and sisters in one nation, 
under one flag and pursuant to one accord.”
“Never has an elected government in 
Nigeria employed religion as a tool to divide the people, setting 
Nigerian brother against brother in a manner that allows this 
administration to function at the basest level of governance while 
seeking to establish a political domination that seeks no greater 
purpose than its self-perpetuation.”
He described attempts to stigmatise and 
physically intimidate the APC and the militarisation of elections as 
features of a perverse democracy.
He described President Goodluck Jonathan’s transformation agenda as an avenue to siphon funds through a dubious blueprint.
“They do not have a national blueprint 
or vision. They do have a blueprint and vision for excessive 
self-enrichment. Their equation is simple: You work, they feast. You 
toil, they grow fat. You seek a decent wage; they pilfer the collective 
treasury to enjoy a king’s ransom,” he said.
He said rather than promote religious 
tolerance and harmonious living, Jonathan’s government believes its 
electoral chances are enhanced by promoting ethnicism, internal 
divisions and religious suspicion but “successful nations are not built 
this way, have we not learned the lesson that we paid the high price of 
civil war to learn.”








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