America is not
ready to joke with trouble makers in Nigeria. First, it was the
extradition of PDP Ogun central senator-elect Buruji Kashamu to the
United States but gradually the flood light of the US seems to beam on
wife of the President, Patience Jonathan and others who attempted to
disrupt the just concluded elections or instigated violence against
innocent Nigerians.
Along with Patience Jonathan, ex-Niger Delta minister, Godsday Orubebe
and governor of Katsina state, Ibrahim Shema are going to be sanctioned
by America.
The US Assistant
Secretary of State for African Affairs, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, said
in a statement that the US will shut its doors on people involved in any
form of violence during the polls.
“Anyone found to have incited violence or interfered with electoral
processes will be unwelcome in the United States and subject to visa
sanctions,” Ms. Thomas-Greenfield said.
Although Thomas-Greenfield did not give names of those considered for
sanctions, Patience Jonathan, Orubebe, Shema and others who became an
item on social media across the globe for inciting violence and trying
to scuttle the elections seems to have positioned themselves for this
sanction.
Thomas-Greenfield said, while the elections were generally without a
significant scale of violence, and irregularities in some parts of
Nigeria, some people were resolved to undermine the will of Nigerians
and interfere with electoral processes, resorting to violence.
It would be recalled that Patience Jonathan incited violence during a
PDP Women Campaign in Calabar, Cross River state, when she said that
anyone chanting APC's ‘Change’ should be stoned.
Watch Video Below:
Thomas-Greenfield
said US looked forward to the inauguration of the president elect,
Muhammadu Buhari, on May 29 and the beginning of a new chapter of the
relationship between the two countries.
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