Lagos (AFP) - Outgoing Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan said Sunday that some of his friends deserted him shortly after he conceded defeat to his rival General Muhammadu Buhari in the March election.
Jonathan publicly conceded defeat to Buhari on March
31, a decision which was commended by local and foreign commentators and doused
tension in the country.
"Some hard decisions have their own costs. No
doubt about that. It is a very costly decision but I must be very ready to pay
for it," Jonathan said during a farewell church service in Abuja.
Jonathan's public admission of defeat in the
nail-biting election came more than six hours after he rang Buhari to concede,
earning him widespread praise for statesmanship.
"If you take certain decisions, you should know
that people close to you will even abandon you at some point. I tell people
that more of my so-called friends will disappear."
Many party faithful and erstwhile loyalists of
Jonathan have either crossed over to Buhari's All Progressives Congress or made
harsh statements against Jonathan's party or its leaders.
Jonathan said he was not surprised by the desertions
or statements by his former loyalists, adding that former South African
president Frederik de Klerk faced a similar situation when he decided to
abolish minority rule in that country.
Jonathan said that de Klerk's marriage to his wife,
Marike, broke down after he took that decision.
"But that is the only decision that made South
Africa to still be a global player. If by this time w still have minority rule
in South africa, nobody would have been talking about South Africa in the
present generation," he said.
He said that ministers who served under him should
brace themselves for "persecution" following his loss and his
decision to concede defeat.
Muhammed Buhari the president elect is set to resume
office on May 29. He his known to be a very discipline leader.

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