Tag: Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida

  • IBB’s book launch: Leaders hail legacy of former military president

    IBB’s book launch: Leaders hail legacy of former military president

    …warn against political instability

    Former Nigerian Military President, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida (IBB), officially launched his memoir, ‘A Journey in Service’, in Abuja on Thursday, drawing an elite gathering of past and present leaders who reflected on his legacy and the state of democracy in West Africa.

    The event, held at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel, attracted former presidents, military leaders, and statesmen from Nigeria and beyond.

    Discussions ranged from Babangida’s contributions to Nigeria’s political history to concerns over the resurgence of military coups in the region.

    In his keynote address, former Ghanaian President Nana Akufo-Addo emphasised the importance of multi-party democracy in Africa’s development.

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    He warned against the growing wave of military takeovers, calling them a setback to democratic progress.

    “Multiple parties are good for our continent,” Akufo-Addo said, urging leaders to protect democratic institutions.

    Former Nigerian Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon (rtd), lauded Babangida’s rise from aide-de-camp (ADC) to head of state, describing him as a “boss of bosses.”

    Gowon also expressed gratitude for Babangida’s decision to restore his rank of General after it was stripped following the 1976 coup.

    “Thank you for restoring my rank,” Gowon said, reflecting on how Babangida’s leadership impacted his life.

    General Abdulsalami Abubakar, another former military president, shared personal anecdotes about his long-standing relationship with Babangida, which spans over 80 years.

    He recalled a childhood prophecy that foretold Babangida’s rise to power and commended him for documenting his life’s journey.

    “Your memoir will enrich the country,” Abdulsalami remarked.

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan described Babangida as one of Nigeria’s most charismatic leaders and called for the creation of presidential libraries to preserve the country’s political history.

    “IBB brought us here today to celebrate his book and library. His home has become somewhat of a pilgrimage site,” Jonathan noted.

    Representing former President Muhammadu Buhari, ex-Minister of Transportation Jaji Sambo delivered a congratulatory message, expressing hope that Babangida would continue offering valuable counsel to Nigeria’s leadership.

  • IBB to launch ‘long-awaited’memoir February 20

    IBB to launch ‘long-awaited’memoir February 20

    • Ex-military president to hold fundraising for presidential library

    Former military President Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida (IBB) has announced the launch of his autobiography, titled: A Journey in Service, on February 20.

    Seven years ago, IBB expressed doubts about writing an autobiography, saying he was uncertain if Nigerians would “want to read about a dictator”.

    He added that the public had a wrong impression of him, citing his role in the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election, and some of the controversial policies he implemented between 1985 and 1993 as Head of State.

    In an invite dispatched to dignitaries this week, the Board of Trustees (BoT) of the IBB Presidential Library Foundation announced that the book launch would take place alongside a fundraising for a presidential library at the Congress Hall of Transcorp Hilton Hotel in Abuja.

    Read Also: IBB Specialist Hospital performs first brain surgery

    The organisers said the event would be chaired by Olusegun Obasanjo, a former president; with President Bola Tinubu as the special guest of honour.

    The keynote address would be delivered by former Ghanaian President Nana Akufo-Addo, while Nigeria’s former Vice President Yemi Osinbajo would review the book.

    Other guests billed to attend the event include ex-Presidents Muhammadu Buhari, Yakubu Gowon, Abdulsalami Abubakar, and Goodluck Jonathan.

    A former Minister of Defence, Gen. Theophilus Danjuma, and the Chairman of BUA Group, Alhaji Abdul Samad Rabiu, are the chief launchers.

  • Buhari salutes former Military President, Ibrahim Babangida at 78

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday congratulated former military President, retired Gen. Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida on his 78th birthday.

    President Buhari’s congratulatory message was conveyed in a statement issued by Malam Garba Shehu, his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, in Abuja on Saturday.

    President Buhari said: “On behalf of the Federal Executive Council, my family and all Nigerians, please accept my warm felicitations on your 78th birthday.

    Read Also: Jonathan salutes Babangida at 78

    “On this special day of your life, the reminiscences of your courage and invaluable service to the army in protecting the sovereignty of the country come to the fore. Thank you for the role of statesman you are playing in the affairs the nation.

    “As you age gracefully, the country will continue to look up to you for guidance and wisdom.

    ”May Allah continue to increase your health and grant you the strength to give your best to your family and the nation.”

    NAN

  • Why it both matters and does not matter to say APC is center-right and PDP is hard right

    “A little to the right and a little to the left” – Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, 1990

    Who was it who said that in their ideologies and economic programs, the APC is center-right and the PDP right-wing? I was the one who said so last week in this very column. It was not the first time of my saying so in the column. And in all certainly, it probably will not be the last time either. But why am I making this an issue in today’s column? The answer to this question says a lot about how retrograde political journalism in general has become in Nigeria in the last three to four decades.

    I take no satisfaction from the fact, but today, I am one of the very few columnists that use such terms as “center-right”, “hard right” and “centrist” in my newspaper writings. This is remarkably different from what the situation was in the 1970s, 80s and 90s when writing about politics in newspapers and other news media in our country was saturated by constant and even invariant mention or discussion of political tendencies, policies and politicians as being either leftist, centrist or rightist. Indeed, one could rightly say that the deployment of the terms became so common, so over-used that the terms came close to being emptied of their meanings and connotations in other countries of our continent and the world.

    One famous or, perhaps infamous instance of this sort of widespread but empty use of “right” and “left” in Nigerian politics about three decades ago is the one indicated in the epigraph for this essay: “a little to the right and a little to the left”. As those old enough and well-informed about the period know, Babangida made the statement when he formed the two parties that eventually contested the fateful June 1993 elections, the National Republican Convention(NRC) and the Social Democratic Party (SDP). Babangida formed the two parties as the cornerstone of his ultimately deceptive and bankrupt “Democracy Project” that was intended to usher in a civilian democratic government that would take over from the military.

    With advice and guidance from respected and influential political scientists from our universities and foreign, mostly Western advisers, Babangida and his regime wanted the two parties to be completely detribalized and centrist, with one party being a “little to the right” and the other “a little to the left”. Everyone knew that by these terms, Babangida intended that one party, the NRC, would be pro-capitalist and pro-business while the other party, the SDP, would be  pro-socialist, pro-workers and devoted to the interests of the poor of the urban and rural communities. But as we all now know, even though the SDP survives till today, nothing but the national betrayal and great calamity of the annulment of the June 1993 electoral victory of the SDP and M.K.O. Abiola came from Babangida’s formation of these two parties of the “right” and the “left”. But this is not the focus of this piece today. What then is our focus?

    I will give a short and precise answer to that question: in 1990 when Babangida made that “a little to the right and a little to the left” remark, ideology, economic programs and policy initiatives completely dominated all political discussions in Nigeria; today, the more you look for ideology, for economic and political visions guiding and distinguishing our political parties from one another, the less you see. In plain terms and not to mince words at all, between the early to mid-70s to the mid-90s in Nigeria, capitalist ideology and its vision of development were under severe scrutiny and contestation. In the universities especially but also in the arts, literature and popular culture, national conversation about the past, the present and the future in our country and continent was almost totally dominated by a radical, some would say – and actually did say – “extremist” critique of capitalism. As a consequence of this, virtually all the defenders of capitalism were welfarist – for the simple reason that an outright defense of hard, conservative right-wing capitalism seemed futile and self-defeating at the time. From this we can derive a very important principle of all modern political discourse: anywhere in the world where you hear or read of terms like “right”, “left”, “center”, “center-right” and center-left”, it means that in that context or space, the dominance, the hegemony of capitalism is seriously under scrutiny and challenge; conversely, anywhere in the world where these terms are noticeably absent, it means that the dominance of capitalism is taken for granted and other ideologies – ethnic-irredentist, religious-fundamentalist or regional-revanchist – take over and hide, if not completely eclipse the dominance of capitalism. Such a nation-space or historical context is what we have in the current PDP-APC era in Nigeria.

    Will this era last? I do not think so. Definitely, I hope not! Very well: when will it end, when will its lurching from one crisis to another endlessly come to an end, one way or another? I do not know the answer to this question either. What I do know, with considerable confidence in my projection into the future on this particular issue, is that the uncontested dominance of capitalism of the present PDP-APC era will come to an end and this sooner rather than later. Why do I think so; what is the basis of my certitude, my seeming over-confidence on this observation, this claim? Good question! The answer, quite simply, is that throughout the whole world, the dominance, the hegemony of capitalism is being challenged by both left-of-center social democracy and solid leftist anti-capitalist movements of the poor and their supporters. Thus, Nigeria is not and cannot be isolated forever from these currents of contemporary global politics.

    Permit me to break this assertion down to easily demonstrated and understood propositions: in the name of saving our planet from extinction, in the name of ending the widening and deepening gaps between the rich and the poor of all the nations and regions of the world, in the name of creating more and more jobs for exploding population growths in most parts of the planet, and in the name of unborn generations that will come after us, social-democratic and anti-capitalist movements throughout the world are challenging the dominance of unregulated and unregulatable capitalism. How can any thinking person believe that we in this country will not ultimately be swept into the vortex of these global and regional currents and movements of politics and history, compatriots? As a matter of fact, is it not the case that we have already been swept into the vortex, as witnessed by the number of our youths that are part of the waves of migrants streaming endlessly into the global North and perishing tragically in the attempts? Or the growing communities of the Nigerian diaspora on the African continent itself, especially in South Africa upon whom, periodically, are visited great violence as the scapegoats of the failing policies of that country’s post-apartheid state?

    Against the background of these immediately preceding questions and observations, it matters a lot that we should say of our two dominant political parties, the APC and the PDP, that they are, respectively, center-right and hard right. To state this observation in its most easily understood formulation, think, compatriots, of the following incontrovertible declaration: if Atiku Abubakar and the PDP had won the recent presidential elections, it would have taken a few months, perhaps a few weeks and most definitely not years, for them to sell off the NNPC, the nation’s cash cow, to complete private ownership. In contrast to this, Buhari, we know both from his recent presidential campaign and several statements he had made in the past, is staunchly resistant to the idea of selling the NNPC to private moguls in his party and the other ruling class parties that are only waiting, waiting for the right moment to sell that national ATM machine to themselves once and forever, amen! In this context, Atiku and the PDP can be said to be for complete private ownership and control of the means of production – the classical definition of capitalism – while Buhari and the APC would seem to be for state control of important areas of the production process, side by side with private ownership of parts of the total machinery of production and distribution.

    What of aspects of economic production in our country that are very important for the well-being or indeed the survival of working and non-working Nigerians, aspects like oil subsidy and deregulation of the provision of amenities and services like electricity, water, education, health, collection of taxes and revenues? In all of these, the PDP is for complete deregulation so that private investors and operators can be free of so-called state interference. In contrast, Buhari remains committed to oil subsidies though he is clearly wavering and may give in to the tremendous pressure building up, not only among all the other ruling class parties but within his own party, the APC. The stand of the PDP in all these aspects of economic production in Nigeria is that of the hard right, pro-capitalist parties of the world, especially of the Western countries. And this is why just before the last presidential elections, Atiku suddenly became “attractive” to the Americans to whom, previously and for a long time, he had been an undeclared persona non grata.  As for Buhari and the Americans, it is an open secret that our President’s obsequious longing for their love, their approval has been persistently and coldly rebuffed.

    Bringing these reflections to a close, it is important for me to stress that as long as Nigerians recognize that the PDP aspires to be a solid alternative to the APC with regard to the crucial ideological and economic terms we have discussed in this piece, so long will it be important to be aware, be very aware, that one party, the APC, is center-right while the other party, the PDP, is hard right. This is not a vote, not a plea for the APC, compatriots. Far from that, my stand really is – a pox on both of their houses! For the truth is that ultimately, between the center-right and the right, the difference is like the difference between getting a dangerous viral fever and cold and getting pneumonia: both can kill. If you wish to have the analogy in a somewhat more neutral or even benign form, the difference between the APC and the PDP, that is to say the difference between center-right and hard right, is the difference between a capitalism with the guilty conscience of rich folks whose bellies are full while the bellies of most of the population are empty and the capitalism of rich folks who say, without any sentiment at all, that it is not their fault that some are rich and most are poor.

    No, compatriots, ultimately, it does not matter in the least that APC is center-right and PDP is hard right. This is because while in theory and in sloganeering they may express different views about such things as public control of the crucial means of production, provision of subsidies for utilities and services, or regulation of both public and private enterprises, in practice and in reality, the APC and the PDP are doing the same things: looting the nation and its resources dry and busy transferring our collective assets and resources to themselves. For both parties, the debates going on in most of the other nations and regions of the world between capitalism and social-democratic and anti-capitalist movements and forces don’t apply here at all. What we want, what we should talk about in Nigeria is long, list of moralistic and sentimental objectives: provide good leadership; respect our diversity; unite us in spite of our differences; substantially curb or altogether eliminate corruption; stem the unending decay or malfunctioning of our institutions; correct the decay, the devaluation of our educational systems; restructure and redistribute the resources and responsibilities that the central government in Abuja controls jealously. Do all of this while you take for granted, while you take as natural and incontestable the capitalism of both the hard right and the center-right!

    A futile wish! Why so? Because capitalism is not an emanation of nature. It is always and forever facing challenges, revaluations, revolutionary transformations, regressions, etc., etc. Who says, who thinks that our capitalism is unique and will be different from all the other capitalisms in our world?

     

    • Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

  • Social media accounts bearing my names fake, says IBB

    Former Military President Ibrahim Babangida has disowned various social media accounts bearing his name declaring that they are fake and are convener of fake news.

    In a press statement by his media office, he urged the public to disregard any social media handles with the name and pictures of the former leader as they are meant to mislead the public.

    The statement reads, “The attention of General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida GCFR, has been drawn to the existence of several twitter handles and “Social Media” purportedly owned by the Former Military President

    “The Media office of the former Military President wish to inform the general public, particularly “Social Media” community that General Babangida currently has no twitter handle and not on any “Social media” platform.

    “Also, we wish to state categorically that the twitter handles bearing the name and photographs of General Babangida are fake and targeted at misleading unsuspecting members of the public.

    Read Also: 2019 presidency: Tambuwal has my blessings – Babangida

    “Accordingly, we wish to advise the social media community and the general public to be wary of the fake accounts, mischievous fake online news and discountenance whatever message conveyed therein.”

    The former military leader further debunked a story making rounds by an online media.

    “We wish to emphatically state that General Babangida is an elder statesman and a peacemaker. A malicious story in an online media credited to General Babangida is a malicious Fake News.

  • Presidential aspirants pour libations

    SOMETIME last week, presidential aspirants David Mark and Bukola Saraki visited former military president Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida in furtherance of their quests for high office. The former military leader is the chief priest of one of the political shrines aspirants of all shades visit to pour the libation of their ambitions. Senator Mark, a former senate president, visited General Babangida two Saturdays ago; and Sen Saraki, the current but embattled senate president, visited on Sunday. Another contender, ex-vice president Atiku Abubakar, had earlier gone to the same shrine to pour his own libation. Gen Babangida, as is his custom, is not averse to holding regal court and speaking dissemblingly royal. He did both in spectacular fashion two weekends ago in a manner that evoked images of his past splendour.

    The other shrine, though exuding false and immoderate potency, is the power reliquary superintended by, this time, High Priest Olusegun Obasanjo, former military head of state and two-term (1999-2007) president. There is hardly any contender for the main Nigerian power prize who does not venture into this second shrine to pour libation, asking for endorsement, and perhaps willing to pay any price. With the exception of Alhaji Atiku, nearly all presidential aspirants have visited the Obasanjo shrine. They have, however, not explained what they would do with his endorsement if it came, nor answered what it is still worth after many years of the old warhorse vacating office. Nobody, let alone an aspirant, makes the mistake of seeking Chief Obasanjo’s empowerment. He endorses, for whatever it is worth; but he does not empower.

    It is not controversial or futile to seek endorsement. What is controversial are the nature of the endorsements and their value. Endorsement by top leaders and politicians with name recognition often enlivens and gives fillip to campaigns. Presidential aspirants have, however, so far been unable to persuade the electorate that the shrines that have become their mecca are not monuments to dead or dying gods. It is hard to see the electoral value of Gen Babangida, more than 25 years after his exit from power. And barely 11 years after leaving office, the more controversial Chief Obasanjo has seemed to deplete politically even more rapidly than the Minna-based general. Indeed, after cautiously endorsing then candidate Buhari for the 2015 presidential poll, the Abeokuta-based former president has seemed to gradually and relentlessly mummify. He will of course still go on to endorse someone, after the debacle of endorsing the African Democratic Congress (ADC), for he is not aware that ‘anointing’ has left him, but he will shrewdly wait to see which way the cat jumps before placing his bets.

    Why the endorsements by Chief Obasanjo and Gen Babangida have become the objects of derision is not hard to explain. They are endorsements triggered by habit rather than by reason, products of habit rather than practicality. Elsewhere, endorsements are often actuated by ideological affinity or philosophical objectives. But not only are the rubrics of the two aforesaid shrines ambiguous and amorphous, their chief priests are also ideologically and philosophically vacuous. What is even more damning is that the aspirants have aligned themselves wholly to the ethnic and geopolitical dynamics of their ambitions rather than any set of coherent and systematic beliefs. It is a case of vacuum (aspirants) chasing vacuum (endorsers), a sort of Magdeburg hemispheres powerfully clenched shut, encasing nothing.

    But regardless of their lack of real power, both Chief Obasanjo and Gen Babangida may still pride themselves in their ability to attract political attention, particularly from presidential contenders. They will see themselves as infinitely better than other past heads of state and presidents who mummified decades ago, ex-leaders whom no one regards or pays more than a casual, reluctant visit. They exult that even the immediate past president, Goodluck Jonathan, is unable to attract as much attention as they have consistently attracted over the years. They view the near reclusiveness of ex-president Shehu Shagari with alarm, and are petrified by both the mystifying anonimity in which interim head of state Ernest Shonekan dwells and the contrived ecclesiastical activity of ex-head of state Yakubu Gowon.

    Indeed, what really haunts both Chief Obasanjo and Gen Babangida is their fear of being ignored, after so many giddy years in office, many of those years truly epical and magical on the scale of experimentation, vainglory, and sheer improbity. They do not mind being skewered, their families added for full measure if they cannot help it; but they fear being ignored. They are not used to being ignored, and they will do everything in their power to shore up the value of the bilge water they dispense from their shrines, assured that the emptiness of their political customers cum aspirants make them the perfect dupes it has been the great and unending misfortune of Nigeria to produce.

  • IBB’s ally tackles Osinbajo over comment

    …says no gov’t has performed like IBB”s

    Former National Democratic Party (NDP) chairman in Kaduna State and a strong ally of former Military President, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida (IBB) during the build up to 2011 presidential race, Hassan Mohammed Jallo, has tackled the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo over the VP’s recent public comment against the past regime of IBB.

    Osinbajo who was answering questions from Nigerians at a town hall meeting in Minnesota, United States last Sunday, had spoken on how huge funds went down the drain in previous administrations, which earned much and invested little in infrastructure. On OPEC statistics on oil revenues accruable to Nigeria under successive administrations between 1990 and 2014, the Vice President said not much had been done in terms of infrastructure, despite the huge oil revenues.

    He said: “Under the IBB / Abacha administrations (1990 – 1998) Nigeria realised$199.8 billion; under the Obasanjo / Yar’Adua governments (1999 – 2009), the country got $401.1 billion; and during the Jonathan administration (2010 – 2014), Nigeria got $381.9 billion from oil revenues.

    “The question that we must all ask is, what exactly happened to resources? The question that I asked is that where is the infrastructure?”.

    However, addressing journalists on Monday, Jallo who said he is for IBB till eternity, advised Osinbajo to retrieve his comment, particularly against IBB administration.

    He said this was because IBB’s achievements were too lofty not to be noticed by any Nigerian, adding that the Aso Rock, the seat of the Federal Government was built by IBB.

    He listed few of IBB achievements out of 277 items to include construction of ECOWAS Headquarters, Abuja international airport phase 1&11, Nigerian Dockyard Snake Island, Lagos, National Assembly, Abuja, Maitama General Hospital, Abuja, boreholes for 1004 Housing Estate, Third mainland bridge, Lagos.

    Read Also: Osun has lowest index of unemployment – Aregbesola

    Others, according to IBB supporter, was the removal of Decree 4 on the press, establishment of Nigerian Broadcasting Commission along with Nigerian Telecommunication Commission which has powers to give private lincense.

    He said, “It is unfortunate that since the declaration of intention of IBB to contest the 2011 presidential elections, certain negative reaction and stories are being made by very few unprogressive Nigerians, but the glorious image of IBB as an excellent God fearing leader, father, peacemaker, diplomat and a living legend of our time remains positive in the minds and memories of the Nigerian majority.

    “There is no respected statesman as much as IBB in Nigeria, and that is the role he is playing. He is ready to support whoever emerged the flag bearer of PDP presidential race because he is a founder and a card carrying member of the party.

    “I will continue to react and redirect whoever makes deragotary comments on my leader (IBB) because no Nigerian leader dead or alive had achieved what IBB had achieved for the country”.

  • IBB supports political orientation by YES Nigeria

    Former Nigeria’s Military President, Gen. Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida has called on Nigerians to embrace the ideology of YES NIGERIA MOVEMENT which seeks to ensure that credible candidates are allowed to oversee the political affairs of the country

    Gen. Babangida who received a delegation of YES NIGERIA MOVEMENT led by its Convener Ali Soyode in his Minna home, Niger State called on the government to recognize the need to give younger generation the opportunity to take over governance come 2019. He reminded the delegation that they were privileged to have served their fatherland at a younger age and such can be provided by new generation of leaders especially in today’s modern global competiveness. He reiterates the need for electorates to get their voting documentations in order to play their role in the governance of the country.

    The former Military President applauding the leadership of the Movement for the great works it has achieved especially in the areas of educating the electorates on their Democratic and political rights and also supporting existing parties identify potential candidates for elective offices compares it to their MAMSER period in the late eighties to create awareness for political orientation, transition and economic values.

    YES NIGERIA MOVEMENT Convener, Mr. Ali Soyode in his speech said the aim of establishing the movement was born out of his desire to see a better political and democratic system educating the electorates of their power to elects, call to accountability of the elected and having right people in government through the exercise of their votes.

    He maintained that the country is due an opportunity for younger generations, team workers, patriotic leaders and those wishing to form alliance for the benefits of Nigerians to lead and have the elders as the advisory council.

    One of the highlights of the visit was seeing the former Military President pledging to work with the movement until right people are given opportunity to lead the people as he sees the leadership of the movement as real progressive leaders whom have been serving their country with passions, commitment and total dedication both home and in the diaspora.

  • IBB advocate for younger generation to be in power

    Former Military President, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida ( IBB ) has advocated for the younger generation to be given the opportunity to steer the reins of leadership of the nation.

    According to him, the old generation has overstayed in the corridor of power as the nation need new ideas which only the younger generation can proffer.

    Speaking on Sunday when he received  members of a new political movement, the New Nigeria led by its leader, Moses Siloko Siasia who visited him at his Hilltop Residence in Minna.

    Babangida asked the current crop of leadership to hand over the country’s leadership to younger people who have the passion and zeal to propel it on the path of development and growth but the older generation was recalcitrant then.

    He said history has shown that a nation’s development fulcrum progresses better in the hands of younger generation, which he said, is more adventurous and full of fresh ideas.

    “Some of us assumed leadership at a very young age. The older generation must give way for the new one. We have become analogue but this is a digital age; so the young people should be supported to use their digital knowledge to move the country forward.”

    The former military President urged for the realization for the Not Too Young To Rule Bill stating that the youths need to put their energy towards ensuring that the Bill comes to reality.

    The leader of the delegation and Peoples Democratic Movement ( PDM ) candidate in the last governorship election in Bayelsa State said the group was in Minna as part of its bid to meet former leaders and get their blessings. 

    He expressed the intention of the group to pay same visit to former president, Olusegun Obasanjo, former President Goodluck Jonathan and former head of state General Abdulsalam.

    Siasia stated that the youths in the nation have decided to take their destinies in their hands because the old generation has failed the country adding that the group would be fielding candidates for various positions including that of the President in the 2019 elections.

  • Of OBJ, IBB and Father Hassan Kukah

    Of OBJ, IBB and Father Hassan Kukah

    Generals Olusegun Obasanjo, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida and Bishop Hassan Kukah have, in their various ways, written themselves into Nigerian history, if not yet folklore, and they will always be celebrated for one thing or the other. This, in essence, means that mentioning their names have become an imperative wherever, and whenever, Nigeria is mentioned. This fact does not, however, suggest that there can be no glitches in that rendition as there sure are: the aborted Third Term Project, which General Obasanjo has, like forever, denied (‘If I wanted it, I would have told my God and He would have granted it’, or words to that effect), in spite of many beneficiaries of the accompanying bribe not only confessing but displaying millions of naira in public; General Babangida’s annulment of the freest, ever, election in Nigeria – that of Jun 12 1983, in which Nigerians unanimously voted billionaire businessman, M.K O Abiola of blessed memory, and for Bishop Kukah, his recent, totally incongruous invitation to the military to again intervene in the affairs of Nigeria. Just as these men are celebrated, history must, uncannily, record these glitches so that they are shown to be human, after all, and liable to commit their own mistakes like you and I, ordinary mortals. Let us therefore, proceed apace, to document these individuals as they occurred in our recent history beginning from the Bishop who, because we must quickly dispatch this section of our story, I go no further than pressing into service, The Nation’s newspaper HARDBALL column of Thursday, 8 February, 2018 which wrote, inter alia, as follows, but edited for space, in what it captioned as Kukah Cooking Full Emptiness: “The revered Father Matthew Hassan Kukah, Catholic Bishop of Sokoto, just cooked his latest broth. But it is nothing but full emptiness — taken from the angle of the good priest as sound public thinker, with a deep knowledge of Nigerian contemporary history and who loves to impress with great polemics — a little to the left; and a little to the right, like Ibrahim Babangida’s doomed two parties. Has reason so spectacularly failed among Nigeria’s most rigorous thinkers, Hardball wrote further, that their forensic minds must throw up past debacles and future miracles? Father Kukah let it slip, rippling with avant-garde knowledge and holy wisdom, that Nigerians could not afford to, much longer, “take the military for granted”. Pray, who are the military and what might that mean? Are the military a political party, constitutionally free to join political frays? Or, on the philosophical plain: the military, all-wise and supremely above board, should come, post-haste, and sack the democratic order yet again? This, proceeded the column, is a most condemnable baiting — if not outright goading — by a man who definitely ought to know better. It is a sickly reminiscence of that sorry period of Nigerian life, when some otherwise respected “intellectuals” would hug to crass emotions, and with sententious zest, beckon the military to come roll in their tanks.

    No surprises though.

    When Buhari’s anti-corruption war debuted in 2015, Father Kukah did not quite ripple with priestly zeal, to clear Nigeria’s public finance of sleaze. Rather, he called on Nigerians to “move on” because President Goodluck Jonathan had done fantastically well for losing election and quitting. Was he supposed to stay put, holy Father? Now, he is suggesting the military, which by the Constitution, are subordinate to the democratic order, as having intervening rights. That is bordering on high treason, no matter how putative. That is why the Catholic Church must call this priest to order. He sure has rights as a citizen. But his right ends when he starts insinuating extra-constitutional ideas, just because there is tension in the land”

    Such love of country, and grandstanding! Need I add a word more?

    Since General Obasanjo made his Special Statement and launched his movement, I have read nobody contests his right to talk from now till kingdom come. All they have said is that there are ways to talk, especially when you’re not only a highly regarded statesman, two-time president of Nigeria who has, with considerable justification, been described by none other than a colleague columnist of mine on The Nation on Sunday, as the greatest pilgrim to the Villa since Buhari’s fresh coming. It has been further contended that, by launching his movement to take over from Buhari, who he says must return to Daura, as if we have all forgotten his own, still denied, third term ambition, Obasanjo was opportunistically deploying the coup tactics of raking up all the hardship in the polity, using them for purposes of hoisting a MUGABE SPIRIT, of forever wanting to be in power, even if, from the shadows. Or who of his recruits into the movement, would boss the general? His launch, and all the supporting appurtenances, they say, uncannily reminded them of the murderous, goggled infantry general justifying their December 31, 1983 coup, and claiming that Nigerian hospitals have become no better than consulting clinics.

    But, they say, you cannot deceive all the people, all the time. Commenting on this recently Dr Jide Oluwajuyitan  wrote:”But with Col Ali (rtd), former PDP chairman and under whose chairmanship of PPRA, house probe confirmed the theft of N1.6 trillion by PDP stalwarts and their siblings under the fuel subsidy scam, and Olagunsoye Oyinlola who as governor of Osun State was sacked by the courts for electoral fraud, as the movement’s chief drivers, it is not difficult to predict the outcome of his proposal which in itself is a recipe for a rule of the mob by ill- equipped men as we have witnessed since 1966.

    General Babangida, they said, did not disappoint at all with his famed Maradonic peccadilloes – three statements in as many hours – whilst famously throwing one of his spokespersons – one we must say, who self-righteously decided to input himself into the banalities he was sent to deliver, by adding his own, special anti-Buhari diatribe, and has since been running from pillar to post when law enforcement came calling, right under the bus.

    Nigerians, the smart people that they are, can see ‘the collusion, and the treachery of the generals’ as they remember, only too well, all those serpentine meetings on the Minna hilltop as Buhari was battling for dear life in a London hospital.

    Lest the columnist be egregiously misrepresented, let me remind my readers that nothing here should be taken as justifying the self-inflicted woes of the Buhari government. I have written my hands sore deprecating the president’s unexplainable clannishness which, saw almost the entire Nigerian security architecture in the hands of northerners, and was recently demonstrated in the re call of Prof Usman Yusuf, the Executive Secretary of the National Health Insurance Scheme, a man under EFCC investigation over an alleged, humongous N919m fraud, who should have been made to first clear himself of this grave allegation. This is a big slur on the President’s number one programme – the anti-corruption war which, very encouragingly, successfully retrieved about N500B from our yesterday thieves in 2017. How unfortunate.

    The same regret must go to the poor handling of the matter of the murderous Fulani herdsmen which has run the entire country into a stupefying tailspin these past few weeks. I have written severally on these pages, counselling that the fact that the president is Fulani and owner of cattle, make it incumbent on him to quickly find a lasting solution to what has turned the entire North Central into a killing field. It is unbelievable that being so close to the problem, the president did not realise that, if not properly handled, and on time, it has considerable potential of significantly, if not fatally, affecting his acceptance in key areas of his party’s support. It is sincerely hoped that the Army’s Operation Cat Race now being put in place to fight herdsmen attacks, would not be a flash in the pan even though Nigerians are already sceptical, given the ethnic configuration of the leadership of our security agencies, about the possibility of these murderous elements being fought with the same ferocity as the equally terrible Boko Haram vermins.

    In concluding, let me just say that it is the wish of most Nigerians that our two respected military heads of state and the Bishop, would be kind enough to allow Nigerians choose their leaders in an atmosphere of peace, and concord, at transparent elections, without any unnecessary hectoring.

    We can only hope that this is not too much to ask.