Former President Goodluck Jonathan has shed new light on the deep constitutional crisis that gripped Nigeria during the final months of President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua’s tenure, revealing that a key presidential aide deliberately sabotaged a crucial transfer of power.
Speaking in a recently trending interview with the Rainbow Book Club, Jonathan recounted the political turmoil that arose in 2010 while Yar’Adua was critically ill and receiving medical treatment abroad.
He disclosed that, contrary to public assumptions at the time, President Yar’Adua had indeed complied with constitutional requirements by preparing and signing a letter to formally transfer power to him as acting president before his departure.
However, according to Jonathan, this letter was never submitted to the National Assembly. The aide entrusted with the delivery of this document to the legislature reportedly withheld it for undisclosed reasons, thereby plunging Nigeria into an unprecedented leadership vacuum.
“That letter was written,” Jonathan explained. “But the person who received the letter, one of President Yar’Adua’s aides—whose name I won’t mention—refused to forward it to the National Assembly. As a result, Yar’Adua became gravely ill and could no longer oversee the affairs of the country, yet no acting president was officially in place.”
He noted that although, as vice president, he was able to oversee some executive functions such as presiding over Federal Executive Council meetings and approving ministerial submissions, the absence of formal authorization limited his powers significantly.
“The Nigerian president has two primary roles,” Jonathan clarified. “One is to serve as the Chief Executive, similar to a prime minister, which the vice president can partly assume. But the other role is Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces—and there’s no such thing as an ‘acting’ commander-in-chief. You’re either fully in that role or you’re not.”
Without the official handover, the nation was left without a constitutionally recognized leader capable of overseeing security and military operations. Jonathan described this as a highly precarious situation that endangered national stability.
“No serious country tolerates such a vacuum,” he said. “In the United States, even for minor medical procedures, the president temporarily hands over power to the vice president. Once the president recovers, authority is immediately restored. That’s how quickly and seriously such transitions are handled.”
The situation in Nigeria, however, dragged on for months, prompting grave concern among lawmakers and citizens alike. Eventually, the National Assembly was compelled to invoke what became known as the doctrine of necessity. This extraordinary legislative action enabled Jonathan to assume full presidential powers in the absence of a formal transfer letter.
“The doctrine of necessity was the only viable option left. It allowed the National Assembly to empower me to act as president without the official letter from Yar’Adua,” Jonathan explained.
He also highlighted the political undertones of the crisis, noting that Yar’Adua, a Muslim from the North, had succeeded Olusegun Obasanjo, a Christian from the South. The regional and religious balance of power, he suggested, was a significant factor behind the resistance to him assuming the presidency.
“There has always been a sensitive balance in Nigeria’s politics—between North and South, Muslims and Christians. Yar’Adua’s presidency represented the Northern Muslim bloc, and there was an expectation that he would serve two full terms before power would rotate back to the South. His illness disrupted that arrangement, and even allowing me to act as president became controversial.”
Yar’Adua eventually passed away in May 2010. Following his death, Jonathan was sworn in to complete the remainder of the term and subsequently contested and won the 2011 presidential election.
This revelation offers rare insight into the behind-the-scenes struggles that defined one of Nigeria’s most fragile transitions of power in the democratic era.