The ex-Spokesman of Goodluck Jonathan Presidential Campaign Organisation told Vanguard that President Buhari had in the last one year and three months, brought nothing but chaos, destruction, division, fear, deaths and shame to Nigeria compared to the PDP governments he was ridiculing.
He said, “It is obvious that President Muhammadu Buhari has
either lost his memory or he has been badly misinformed.
“If you look at the state of the country in 1999 when former President Olusegun Obasanjo took over and compare it to what it was in 2007 when he left office, you will find out that there was not just development but also a miraculous transformation in every sector; that is what Obasanjo managed to achieve and I am very proud to be part of that government and part of those legacies.
“After Obasanjo left, Umaru Yar’ Adua took over and then came former President Goodluck Jonathan. As far as I am concerned, Jonathan built on Obasanjo’s legacies and foundation and he took us to yet another level.
“If you compare Nigeria in 2015 by the time Jonathan left to 1999 before Obasanjo came in, you will have to thank the PDP for lifting this nation up and taking us from strength to strength.
“By the time Jonathan left in 2015, we had the largest economy on the African Continent and the fastest growing economy in the world, among other things.
“In one year and three months, all of that have been destroyed by President Buhari and his APC, we are now back in the dark ages. Every sector in the country has been destroyed and everyone is complaining.
“President Buhari has brought nothing, but ethnic cleansing, recession, abuse of power, persecution, genocide, chaos, destruction, division, fear, deaths and shame to Nigeria and they have no other way of running the country, but to intimidate the citizens and threaten them. That is his own legacy.
“It should also be noted that a large number of people that supported Buhari in his quest to become the president, last year, were all originally from the PDP, whether the PDP governors, who decamped or PDP ministers who decamped or PDP legislators who decamped, 70 percent of people that helped to put Buhari in power used to be PDP including former President Olusegun Obasanjo; former Vice President Atiku Abubakar; Senate President Bukola Saraki; Speaker, House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara; former speakers Aminu Tambuwal, Aminu Masari; Umar Ghali Naaba; former minister of the Federal Capital Territory and governor of Kaduna State, Nasir El- Rufai; Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State; Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi; former governors Olagunsoye Oyinlola; Segun Oni; Danjuma Goje; Aliyu Wammakko; Rabiu Kwankwaso; Murtala Nyako; George Akume; Senate Leader, Ali; former PDP national chairmen, Barnabas Gemade; Audu Ogbeh, among others.
“When he insults PDP legacy and said that nothing was ever done by PDP in 16 years, he is insulting those 70 per cent that put him in power starting with Obasanjo and I think that this is most unfair and very ungrateful of him.”
Daily Post
The call came after the
US Consumer Product Safety Commission recommended at the weekend that
consumers stop using the smartphone and major airlines globally banned
use during flights.
Samsung issued a recall for Galaxy Note 7 smartphone in early September
in 10 markets, including the US and South Korea.
Defective batteries, which caught fire during charging and normal use,
were apparently manufactured by Samsung SDI.
Batteries made by its other supplier, Amperex Technology, have not faced
the same issues.
Samsung said it is now only using batteries made by Amperex for the
Galaxy Note 7 and has ordered an additional four million as
replacements, Yonhap reported. The Chinese firm, which also supplies
batteries for Apple’s iPhones, is now the sole battery suppler for the
Note 7.
Samsung’s battery unit previously supplied about 70 per cent of the
batteries for Note 7. The world’s largest smartphone maker reportedly
was looking for a third battery supplier but hasn’t found one. As demand
for the iPhone 7 models takes off, Samsung could face a supply crunch.
With an estimated 2.5 million Galaxy Note 7 units sold, analysts say the
recall could cost Samsung as much as $5 billion in revenue. The
smartphone was launched on 19 August.
The company has lost $22 billion in market capitalisation as its share
price has tanked 11 per cent since Friday – the largest two-day decline
in eight years, according to Bloomberg.
Corporate statement
Samsung issued a statement for the Hong Kong and Macau markets, stating
that, “we wish to re-emphasise that Galaxy Note 7s purchased in Hong
Kong and Macau from authorized re sellers on or after 2 September are
not affected by the issue as those batteries are provided by a different
supplier”.
It would be recalled that Samsung had earlier said that fewer than 500
Galaxy Note 7s sold in Hong Kong and Macau between 26 August and 1
September “may be affected by the battery issue”. It said a replacement
programme is running and it “has been proactively contacting customers
who may be affected”.
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/09/stop-using-galaxy-note-7-samsung-tells-consumers/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/09/stop-using-galaxy-note-7-samsung-tells-consumers/
The call came after the
US Consumer Product Safety Commission recommended at the weekend that
consumers stop using the smartphone and major airlines globally banned
use during flights.
Samsung issued a recall for Galaxy Note 7 smartphone in early September
in 10 markets, including the US and South Korea.
Defective batteries, which caught fire during charging and normal use,
were apparently manufactured by Samsung SDI.
Batteries made by its other supplier, Amperex Technology, have not faced
the same issues.
Samsung said it is now only using batteries made by Amperex for the
Galaxy Note 7 and has ordered an additional four million as
replacements, Yonhap reported. The Chinese firm, which also supplies
batteries for Apple’s iPhones, is now the sole battery suppler for the
Note 7.
Samsung’s battery unit previously supplied about 70 per cent of the
batteries for Note 7. The world’s largest smartphone maker reportedly
was looking for a third battery supplier but hasn’t found one. As demand
for the iPhone 7 models takes off, Samsung could face a supply crunch.
With an estimated 2.5 million Galaxy Note 7 units sold, analysts say the
recall could cost Samsung as much as $5 billion in revenue. The
smartphone was launched on 19 August.
The company has lost $22 billion in market capitalisation as its share
price has tanked 11 per cent since Friday – the largest two-day decline
in eight years, according to Bloomberg.
Corporate statement
Samsung issued a statement for the Hong Kong and Macau markets, stating
that, “we wish to re-emphasise that Galaxy Note 7s purchased in Hong
Kong and Macau from authorized re sellers on or after 2 September are
not affected by the issue as those batteries are provided by a different
supplier”.
It would be recalled that Samsung had earlier said that fewer than 500
Galaxy Note 7s sold in Hong Kong and Macau between 26 August and 1
September “may be affected by the battery issue”. It said a replacement
programme is running and it “has been proactively contacting customers
who may be affected”.
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/09/stop-using-galaxy-note-7-samsung-tells-consumers/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/09/stop-using-galaxy-note-7-samsung-tells-consumers/
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