PANDEF rejects naming of Station after Jonathan, calls it demeaning
Jennifer Ugwueke
The naming of the Railway Station in Agbor, Delta State, after former President Goodluck Jonathan has been rejected by the Pan Niger Delta Forum – PANDEF.
Rotimi Amaechi, the Minister For Transportation had announced on July 18 while inspecting the Warri-Itakpe rail line that President Muhammadu Buhari had approved the naming of the Railway Station after his predecessor.
But PANDEF, through its National Publicity Secretary, Ken Robinson, in a statement on Sunday, described the gesture as “meaningless and belittling to the person and status of the former President
The statement, which was titled, ‘PANDEF derides naming of Railway after former President Jonathan’, the group demanded that a more befitting national infrastructure should be named after him as he deserved to be celebrated in Nigeria.
PANDEF stated, “Though understandable that all those that the various Railway Stations are named after are prominent and deserving Nigerians. However, if the gesture was truly an honour done to Goodluck Jonathan, then there would have been no reason naming several other Stations after numerous other persons.
“It is simply improper, incongruous and completely unacceptable that one of several Railway Stations in the Country would be named after former President Jonathan. More so, there is no other former Head of State or President that a Railway Station has been named after.”
PANDEF demanded the immediate reversal of the honour and also called on the former President to “reject the dishonourable gesture.”
It added, “If President Muhammadu Buhari sincerely wants to honour former President Jonathan in terms of naming an infrastructure after him, it should be something befitting. What is wrong if, as the first democratically elected President of Nigeria from the South-South geopolitical zone, the Port Harcourt International Airport, Omagwa, Rivers State, is named after the former President?
“The Port Harcourt International Airport is one of the nation’s five functional international airports, in addition to those in Lagos, Abuja, Kaduna, and Enugu. The Abuja International Airport is named after Nigeria’s first President, Dr Nnamdi Azkiwe; that of Lagos is named after the late Head of State, General Murtala Mohammed; and the Enugu international airport is named after Akanu Ibiam, who was governor of the former Eastern Region from 1960 to 1966.”