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| Goodluck Jonathan | 
LAGOS (Project Syndicate) – Nigeria’s president, Goodluck Jonathan, who  was elected only eight months ago, is already swimming in a sea of  troubles. On January 1, New Year celebrations were abruptly cut short  when Nigerians woke up to learn that the government gasoline subsidy had  been withdrawn. The country’s poor immediately hit the streets, already  angry because their corrupt and incompetent government has been unable  to repair state-owned refineries, thereby forcing Africa’s largest oil  producer to import petroleum products.
To ordinary Nigerians, the  fuel subsidy was the only advantage that they derived from the  petrodollars that pour into the national treasury. Suddenly,  politicians, civil servants, and their cronies were embezzling even that  benefit.
What began as sporadic protests quickly ballooned into a  show of people power in Abuja (the national capital), Lagos (the  commercial capital), and Kano (the most populous city in the north), led  by the civil-society organizations Joint Action Front and Save Nigeria  Group. Other towns and cities also joined in the protests, and  Abdulwaheed Omar, President of the Nigeria Labour Congress, called on  workers around the country to strike until the government rescinded its  decision to remove the subsidy. Millions complied, paralyzing the  economy.
The Jonathan government had calculated that eliminating  the subsidy in the midst of the New Year festivities, a time when most  Nigerians travel to their home villages, would impede coordinated  resistance, so the speed, ferocity, and scope of the demonstrations  caught the authorities completely by surprise. When the protest leaders’  grievances expanded to include the 2012 budget’s lavish provisions for  the president and top civil servants, the Nigerian National Petroleum  Corporation’s shady deals, and government corruption, Jonathan realized  that he had to back down.
First, he announced a 25% salary cut  for all political appointees. This did not impress the protest leaders.  Next, the government promised to eliminate social-services waste.  Finally, in a humiliating retreat, Jonathan retracted his decision on  the gasoline subsidy.
Even as Jonathan was struggling to defuse  the rage in the streets, Boko Haram – the violent Islamic sect that has  been terrorizing the northern part of the country since 2009 – escalated  its attacks. The sect had bombed a church in Madalla, a town on the  outskirts of Abuja, on Christmas Day, killing 45 worshippers, and its  spokesmen then demanded that all Christian southerners residing in the  north leave.
The government responded by declaring a state of  emergency in several of Nigeria’s northern states. In apparent  retaliation, on January 21, Boko Haram launched a daylight attack on  government facilities in Kano, including several police posts, killing  an estimated 160 people. A key Boko Haram member, suspected of  masterminding the Madalla bombing, then escaped from police custody,  suggesting collaboration between security officials and sect members.
Indeed,  an increasingly embattled Jonathan recently declared that his own  cabinet, in addition to the security agencies, is riddled with “Boko  Haram sympathizers.” In desperation, his national security adviser,  Owoeye Andrew Azazi, has called on the United States to declare the sect  a terrorist organization and to provide the Nigerian government with  counter-terrorism assistance. Government officials have also held  meetings with officials at the Israeli embassy, who have expressed  willingness to help the country in its self-declared “war against  terror.”
But critics of the government, including several  respected public intellectuals, have pointed out similarities between  Boko Haram and the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, an  armed militant group in the country’s oil-rich region, which has been  killing soldiers and kidnapping foreign oil workers since 2006. Both  groups are led by impoverished youths, angry at official indifference to  low living standards, with a majority of Nigerians living on less than  two dollars per day since the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) took power  following the end of military rule in 1999.
Moreover, there is  mounting evidence that several of the Boko Haram sympathizers against  whom Jonathan railed are members of the PDP’s northern faction. The  northerners are angry that Jonathan, a southerner, beat them to the  presidency last year, and they see the sect as a useful instrument with  which to intimidate him into ceding the office in 2015.
Neither  Jonathan nor his northern adversaries enjoy much popular support.  Jonathan is now widely viewed as weak and indecisive, while the PDP’s  conservative faction in the north is understood to be part of the  “cabal” that has misgoverned the country and looted its treasury since  independence in 1960.
With a corrupt and rudderless government,  Africa’s most populous country has resumed its dance on the edge of the  precipice. Its poor and powerless citizens, angrily demanding  transparency and accountability, do not want the country to disintegrate  into its many squabbling ethnic parts. But its rich and powerful, who  have already plunged the country into a bloody civil war once, appear  ready to do it again.
Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan (b. Novembre 20, 1957),is currently the President of Nigeria. A former zoologist who became vice-president in 2007. He was the Governor of Bayelsa State from 9 December 2005 to 28 May 2007, and was sworn in as Vice President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria on 29 May 2007. He became officially the President of Nigeria May 6, 2010, the day after the previous President was buried, after a prolonged illness that saw his Vice-President step in to his shoes as Acting President. There had been tension in the country as rival political factions struggle to assert authority in what was seen as a power vacuum during the period of illness of Yar’Adua.
Family: He is married to Patience and has two children.
Jonathan, of the Ijo (Ijaw) ethnic group and a Christian, was born and raised in the region of the Niger delta in what is now Bayelsa state. He attended Christian primary and secondary schools in the area and later attended the University of Port Harcourt, earning a B.S. in zoology (1981), an M.S. in hydrobiology and fisheries biology (1985), and a Ph.D. in zoology (1995). During his university education, he also taught at Rivers State College of Education from 1983 until 1993. He then served as an assistant director at the Oil Mineral Producing Areas Development Commission, a now defunct government agency, from 1993 until 1998.
Jonathan’s political career began when he became involved with the nascent People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in the late 1990s. He was elected deputy governor of Bayelsa state in 1999 under the party’s banner. He served in that position until 2005, when he was elevated to the governorship after the incumbent was charged with corruption and impeached. In 2007 he was selected to be the vice presidential running mate of the PDP’s presidential candidate, Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. He and Yar’Adua were elected in April and inaugurated in May. zoologist he became vice -president of Nigeria in 2007

