Tag: Obasanjo

  • Atiku has learnt his lessons, says Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Wednesday said he could vouch for the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar to reposition the country.

    Obasanjo made the statement in Lagos while speaking at the 2019 Island Club Quarterly Business Lecture.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Abubakar had earlier delivered his lecture themed: “My vision to get Nigeria Working again”.

    Obasanjo, in his remark, said he believed that Atiku had the experience, the capacity and passion to move the country forward.

    He said Nigerians should no longer find his support for the former vice president strange going by what he said or wrote about him in the past.

    He reiterated that he stood firmly by whatever he said in the past about Atiku and indeed President Buhari.

    He, however, said the PDP candidate had demonstrated what was expected of a committed and sincere leader by owning up to his past mistakes and showing remorse.

    Obasanjo added that Atiku had not only apologised to his political party and the nation but also apologised to him for the past disagreements he made as his deputy.

    He said that Atiku was not infallible like every other human being and that he, (Obasanjo) would be playing God by not forgiving the former Vice-President.

    “I have been called names because of my position on Atiku Abubakar, the Waziri Adamawa.

    “Everything I have said as far as I have knowledge of Atiku, I have not retracted and I stand firmly by them because they are to the best of my knowledge true.

    “And neither has what I have said and written about Buhari been controverted, if anything, they have been confirmed and proved beyond any shadow of doubt.

    “But Atiku has done things which are absolutely imperative for a leader to be followed and believed.

    “First, know who you are and present yourself as you are – a human being in blood and flesh and susceptible to human mistakes and human frailties.

    “Don’t cover up with sanctimonious veneer of bogus integrity, incorruptibility, uprightness, goodness and false figures and statistics, all of which are contrived to deceive, to cheat, to plunder and to destroy.

    “Atiku never claimed to be a saint and I never described him as such. I will never so describe any human being alive let alone calling him a Messiah.

    “On an occasion in the past when I said that someone was not a Messiah, some Nigerians out of bad “belle’’ were up in arms.

    “For me, as a Christian, the only Messiah I know and have is Jesus Christ and even then, the man aspect of Him was imperfect while the divine aspect of Him was perfectly messianic.

    “Secondly, a leader must be honest to himself and to the people he serves or he wants to serve.

    “He must identify and acknowledge his situation, mistakes, shortcomings and inadequacy; show remorse where and when he has erred, seek forgiveness and repent; and not passing the bulk or keep blaming others and fail to accept responsibility.

    “Atiku accepts responsibility for his mistakes, shows remorse and seeks forgiveness from his political party and subsequently from Nigerians.

    “He asks for forgiveness from me and as a believer, a Christian as such, I forgave him in accordance with the teaching and instruction of my Saviour.

    “For, if you forgive men when they sin against you, your heavenly father will also forgive you.

    “But if you do not forgive men their sins, your father will not forgive your sins (Matt 6:14-15 NIV).

    “If anybody blames me for forgiving Atiku, I leave such a person with God Almighty, especially as both Christian and Islamic clerics joined Atiku to visit me to seek forgiveness.

    “Anybody who does not forgive when forgiveness is sought with contrite heart cannot be a true believer and should not expect the forgiveness of God,” he said.

    He said past disagreements notwithstanding, Atiku demonstrated great leadership qualities when he was in office as Vice-President.

    Read Also: PDP: Atiku is a consummate democrat

    Obasanjo said he believed with the experience and courage of Abubakar, he remained the best candidate to move the country forward.

    “I must reiterate that Atiku is not a saint. Who is? But from what I know of Atiku, he will be a performer in all respect. I can say that again from my personal experience.

    “He knows the problems and he handled some of them in the past.

    “We now know that both Buhari and Atiku have issues and all of us as human beings have one issue or the other in different magnitudes.

    “But judging both of them empirically and for the task at hand, Atiku will perform much better than Buhari.

    “And he will seek for good and able people around the country and beyond and make use of them to achieve his mission and vision for the general good of Nigerians and the country,” he said.

    Obasanjo claimed that the state of affairs under All Progressives Congress (APC) had been disappointing and called on the citizens to effect a change with their votes.

    He also commended Island Club for providing the platform for leaders to articulate their visions for the country through the lecture.

    He said the series of the Club’s lecture had helped enriched discourse on nation-building.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that prominent Nigerians at the lecture included Senate President, Bukola Saraki, PDP National Chairman, Prince Uche Secondus and Sen. Ben Murray-Bruce.

    Others at the lecture included a PDP chieftain, Chief Bode George, PDP candidate in Lagos, Mr Jimi Agbaje and a former governor of Ogun, Otunba Gbenga Daniel.

  • ‘Obasanjo lacks morality to accuse Buhari of rigging plot’

    Emmanuel Umohinyang is the Convener, Re – elect Buhari Movement (RBM). He spoke with reporters in Lagos on former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s allegation of plot to rig polls against President Muhammadu Buhari and preparations of the group for next month’s elections. Excerpts:

    What is your reaction to former President Obasanjo’s allegation that President Buhari is planning to rig next month’s elections and that his administration is like that of Abacha?

    As you know, when it comes to the issue of credible election, Obasanjo does not have a say. He does not have the morality to talk about credible election in Nigeria because he is the grand master of election rigging. Under his watch, we had the Maurice Iwu of this world. During his time, election was not won at the ballot, results were written from the comfort of people’s homes. It was during his era that we had the famous “Mr. fix it”. Election was fixed. It is only an exhibition of fear, thinking that we are back to the era we are coming from. I want to assure our former President that the new Sheriff in town is different from what we had during his era. Under President Muhammadu Buhari, elections will not only be free and credible, it will be seen by even the worst critics of his administration. Let us not becloud ourselves with the issue, coming from Otta, asserting that this administration is being run like the Abacha era. I think it is the most unfortunate statement I have had from a former President. By the way, Obasanjo is not the only former President we have had in this country and one expects that as an elder statesman, if he sees anything that the administration  has done that he feel strongly about, he could approach the President and share his views. The late former President Shehu Shagari, and Gen. Yakubu Gowon are examples. We have the Council of State of which he is a member, so trying to portray himself as saint when we have his records is like a slap on our face. It’s quite unfortunate. I think we should give it to this administration that it has saved us the pain and agony of the past, talking about the Obasanjo/Atiku era, when political detainees was the order of the day, politically motivated assassination was the order of the day. I think Ex –President Obasanjo may have run out of ideas and is just trying to seek attention from Nigerians. Unfortunately, he cannot get it. President Buhari is a General of the people’s army. Nigerians love him and appreciate what he is doing. That is basically the reason we are pushing his re – election come February 16, 2019.

    Don’t you think the former President has a point with Gen. T.Y Danjuma toeing the same line?

    I am surprised that you mentioned Gen. Danjuma, so we can say it is a communion of the Generals. Their views does not represent Nigerians view and I think at the last Council of State meeting, the INEC chairman was there to explain the level of preparation. From what we heard, the Council of State endorsed INEC’s preparation. INEC has equally said they have worked independently. There has not been pressure from any quarter. I want to assure you that under President Muhammadu Buhari, election will not be rigged; rather we will have something better than what we had in 2015. I think the President has endeared himself to Nigerians. It is not easy for a man to maintain the position of “Mr. Integrity” for decades. Who among these people can you call ‘Mr. Integrity’ without hearing a boomerang from Nigerians? President Buhari has held on to ‘Mr. Integrity for years. Nobody, not even his worst critics have ever queried that posture. He didn’t earn that over the shelf. It is due to hard work that he has put into the system. He has held several public offices. You can go and check his records. Go and check what he has, and you will realize that we have moved from that era where a sitting President will gather contractors and gather 7 Billion Naira in the name of a Presidential library. What we are saying is that we should have more faith in President Muhammadu Buhari. The integrity of some people is tied to their stomach, not President Buhari. He will never allow the coming election to be rigged in his favour or that of any other candidate.

    How do you react to the removal of CJN by President Buhari?

    I think I need to correct this impression, Justice Walter Samuel Nkanu Onnoghen remains the CJN. We must enlighten our people that he has not been removed in the literal word of it. He was only suspended. The provision for the removal of the CJN is provided for in section 291 and 292 of our constitution as amended. Under those provisions, I don’t think the President can unilaterally remove the CJN. No. what the  President has merely done is to carry out an order of the CCT, directing that the President should suspend the CJN, pending the conclusion of  his trial, and that the most senior Justice in the hierarchy of the Supreme Court be appointed  in acting capacity. The suspension simply means if the person is found not guilty after the conclusion of trial, he will be reinstated. People made some funny and ridiculous  comments, prior to his suspension. We had some governors  assemble in Abuja and declared that the CJN ignore the summon of the CCT. If at all, those governors made those statements, I think it is the most ridiculous statement I ever heard because when you tell an ordinary Nigerian on the street who caught stealing yam, that the full weight of the law would be brought on him and you try to turn a blind eye on somebody just because he is from your zone, such is really unfortunate. We cannot make progress as a country. My position  is that irrespective of the who is involved, even if it is my father, the very minute you go against the laws of the land, you must face the consequences, pure and simple. What becomes of our country when people begin to disobey the order of the courts? If we go tribal, it means the Northern governors could also say El Zaky Zaky and Dasuki are from our zone. The next thing will be anarchy. We should all rise against sectional interests and begin to deal with issues on its merits.

    What is your reaction to the backlash that followed the suspension?

    Look, we are in a political era. The Presidential election is a few meters away. It is expected. We are in era where the politicians, lawyers, Doctors etc all have interest to protect, but I think we should look at the larger picture regarding whose interest the President should protect. That of his political party? The answer s no. His personal interest? The answer is no. That of the constitution? I think the answer is yes. The President is acting based on the powers given to him by our constitution, to obey orders that comes from courts. You must also understand that it is a simple principle of law that orders of courts must be obeyed, no matter how bad. It was Lord Denning who said in his famous quote that no matter how tall a man is, the law is taller than him. That is why I subscribe to the removal of immunity against criminal prosecution for all categories of office holders, so that any occupier of  even the office of President can be tried for criminal infractions. It will be an aberration to smuggle immunity that was not conferred on the CJN. I think Nigerians, should rise up and be counted if we want to move Nigeria from where we met it to where we want it to be. Don’t forget fighting corruption is one of the cardinal programmes of this administration. The present happenings in our country today reminds me of the famous poem by Prof. Niyi Osundare titled “My Lord, where do I keep your bribe?” As members in the temple of justice, we must ensure that corruption is eradicated from our Judiciary.

     

  • Obasanjo’s needless perennial scaremongering

    How Atiku can see this man as a friend is beyond me.

    Then, Murtala was killed. I think it is public knowledge that Obasanjo fled on the day Murtala Muhammed was killed. He remained in hiding until the coup was aborted and he reached out, first, to M.D Yusuf (Inspector-General of Police), who then called him and he came out of hiding, and joined us in Dodan Barracks. We discussed the funeral of Muhammed and made arrangement as to who would accompany his remains to Kano, so on and so forth.

    “At the end of the meeting, Obasanjo asked M.D Yusuf and I to stay with him in the chambers (Dodan Barracks). After everybody had left, Obasanjo told M.D Yusuf and I that what had happened had destroyed his faith in the loyalty of the Nigerian Army. That he had decided that after the funeral, he would retire, leave the Army and go home. But before that he would name me as the successor to Murtala. I told him that, that amounted to desertion and that he could not run away. He was number 2, number 1 had been killed in battle; he as number 2 would take over.

    “He said no, no, no; that he didn’t think he should stay; that he wanted to go.

    “We argued that. In the end, Yusuf said, ‘look, let’s all sleep over this matter; tomorrow we will decide.’ I said, ‘look, there’s no question of sleeping over it; the point now is we should be looking for who is going to take Obasanjo’s seat as number 2 because there is no way we are going to allow him to chicken out and leave at this time; we must all stay and face the future together.’ – Gen T. Y Danjuma in “I MADE OBASANJO HEAD OF STATE AGAINST HIS WISH”.

    Then in Obasanjo’s Delusional Messianic Complex, JANUARY 28, 2018, Austin Braimoh wrote: Obasanjo, erstwhile military dictator and civilian despot, is so predictable one could almost set a watch by it! The country goes through crises phenomena; people and governments are looking for the most suitable solutions, the man smells an opportunity, and he strikes! Obasanjo has done the same thing over and over, that his predictability is one that all of us have become familiar with. Obasanjo has messianic delusions! In his troubled soul, there cannot be any leader of the Nigerian state greater than himself. He is the beginning and the end of all that is good about leadership here; the ultimate point of embarkation and the terminus! This complex is related to several factors that animate his troubled soul. These range from the privatisation policy that saw the unfair sale of national assets; the massive issues of corruption exemplified by the wastage of $16B that yielded no electricity and the billions spent on his fruitless Third Term Agenda! His greatest fear is to be exposed for his duplicity. So the first thing he does is to ensure that he burrows permanently inside the entrails of the nation’s power complex thus securing the vintage place to shield himself from scrutiny. That explains why in every government, he makes a deliberate show of his entrances and exits in the seat of power; he adroitly exploits the photo-ops and drops hints about his strategic value to the governance structures in place in the country. Obasanjo exploits that proximity at two levels. First, he offers the impression of care about the state of the administration and the country; deepens our forgetfulness about him. Or don’t we easily forget the crimes that Obasanjo perpetrated, even when he had all the opportunities to put in place the building block of national development that would have worked for the Nigerian people. He returned from prison, near-bankrupt; but in eight years, built up a mind-boggling enrichment that catapulted him into the ranks of some of the richest individuals in contemporary Nigeria!”

    Need I say more of this Nigerian self-appointed Messiah?

    Yes, of course, but I shall largely through others, because to write objectively on this self-regarding gentleman, is to  lay oneself open to charges of disrespect to elders, something so ill-becoming of an Omoluabi Yoruba.

    When Obasanjo, very well captured above by somebody who should know, perennially shows up every election cycle, grandstanding, and pretending to some bravado, it should be understood that far less than noble principles, propel him. Rather, it is self service borne out of fear; especially now, fear of not knowing what could befall him in a Buhari second term. As a result of this, he created what he called a Third Force which died unsung. He then cobbled together an assortment of hungry men in what he called a coalition. That one is out there, competing with Ologbondiyan, in the manufacture of lies but without the slightest impact other than as busybody. Whatever he schemed to overawe Buhari has turned to ashes, sending to the garbage heap, some puny reputation some of those who rushed to him, once had. In consequence, he has gone back to his jeremiads which no longer resonate with the bemused citizenry.

    Worst is the fact that they are mostly a tissue of lies or misrepresentation of facts.

    For instance, ahead of the 2015 presidential election, the Premium Times of December 12, 2013 quoted him ranting as follows: “President Goodluck Jonathan is currently keeping over 1000 people on his political watch list and is secretly training snipers and other armed personnel as well as acquiring weapons for political purposes. That was also in an 18-page letter in which he alleged that the snipers were being trained same place as Sani Abacha, trained his. This time around, it is lies against Buhari and some agencies of state which he tried to besmear, still managing to embed the name, Abacha, which I suspect, must still be torturing him.

    For him “Babangida is a fool”, Abacha a rogue and an animal in human skin while Jonathan is weak, and a killer. The poor, sick, and  decent  Yar’Adua he deliberately inflicted on the country, gets wacked for  ‘failing to do his job’, while Buhari, even though without his (Obasanjo’s) rambunctiousness and one-upmanship, is incompetent, unfit and scheming self succession, again, like Abacha. Atiku, he has severally thrashed, both in words and in his published works, as corrupt, disloyal, untrustworthy, marabout –loving, and of a shadowy parentage”

    How Atiku can see this man as a friend is beyond me. Desperation? Okay, we wait, we see.

    Lies upon lies just to undermine others. So why should President Buhari be bothered with Obasanjo’s latest letter?

    However, being so self-loving, and about Nigeria’s only competent man, may we humbly ask ex-President Obasanjo, his reaction to some of the allegations against him in a trending Whatsapp chat?

    1. That you massively rigged the 2003/2007 elections in order to turn Nigeria into a one party state.
    2. That you removed three sitting senate presidents chased away two PDP chairmen, one at gun point, and illegally declared state of emergency in Plateau and Ekiti State.
    3. That through hirelings who did not meet the constitutional provisions, you illegally removed Governors Ngige, Ladoja, Ayo Fayose and Diepreye Alamieyeseigha.
    4. That, failing to break the Lagos State governor, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, you illegally, and forcefully, withheld Lagos State funds, and would not budge even when the Supreme Court ruled your action illegal.

    5.That under your watch Nigeria witnessed the assassination of several  politicians which remains unresolved till date.

    1. That in Zaki Biam, Benue State, you deployed armoured tanks and helicopter gunships against a poor, defenceless people, wiping out 300 families. Ditto in Odi, Bayelsa State, leaving it with just two buildings, a church and a bank, women and children.
    2. Would you have tolerated Saraki and Dogara in the National Assembly?

    8.That during your tenure there were religious wars in the north, Bakassi and Egbesu boys running riot in the south east, beheading people in broad daylight. There was militancy in the South south, and OPC in the South West where you jailed the late Dr Fasheun and ordered OPC members shot at sight. It is even alleged you could have squelched Boko Haram in its embryo if you were a little more attentive as president.

    What else do you want, asks the chat?  To disrupt, and heat up the system, or why discredit INEC?

    You cannot distort history, it says, since you are actually on the same page with Abacha, suggesting that you  are planning to take Nigeria down with you.

    Concluding finally, it says: we have news for you Baba: Nigeria will survive you”

    We are all waiting to hear from you Baba. But not necessarily through another letter as we have had enough.

  • Tinubu: Obasanjo seeks return to power

    All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart Asiwaju Bola Tinubu has said  former President Olusegun Obasanjo has no moral right to accuse anybody of rigging.

    Obasanjo accused  President Muhammadu Buhari of planning to rig the February 16 election.

    Tinubu, in a statement yesterday, said: “By hook, crook or utter fantasy, Obasanjo seeks to return to Aso Villa, not as an irritating, importuning guest but as a long-term resident. He wants to be back in control.  If he cannot be president, then the president better carve from his office a special room for Obasanjo.

    “Obasanjo thinks he is more than the greatest Nigerian. He thinks himself greater than Nigeria itself. Unless he is allowed to lead the procession, he will groan, grouse and grit. However, neither President Buhari nor the progressive APC have much use for his reactionary policies and his megalomaniac ways.

    “Thus, we shall be forced to endure more of his letters. But enduring such missives is vastly superior and small price to pay for not having to endure a repeat of his unenlightened misgovernance.”

    To Tinubu, the former leader is at war against his deeds and the least qualified to complain about rigging.

    According to him, Obasanjo is unrivalled in the history of election manipulation; a record he said was confirmed by the former president, the late Umaru Yar’Adua, who succeeded him in 2007.

    Obasanjo had in a 16-page statement on Sunday alleged that Buhari was manipulating the electoral process to perpetrate himself in office like the late Head of State Gen. Sani Abacha.

    Tinubu, who is the Co-Chairman of the All Progressives Congress Presidential Campaign Council, said the former president was projecting on to the APC the misconduct he would have perpetrated if still in power.

    “Yet, the ways of Obasanjo are not those of the APC. And this difference has meant the better for Nigeria,” Tinubu said yesterday in his strongly-worded response in which he described the former president as an election rigger without peer.

    He said: “There is no election which occurred under Obasanjo’s watch or in which he participated that did not involve cheating on his part. Even, the late President Umaru Musa Yar‘Adua admitted he was the beneficiary of a flawed election engineered by none other than today’s vociferous complainant.”

    The riposte, personally signed by the former Lagos State governor, has its title as: “Chief Obasanjo – At war against his own deeds”.

    Tinubu’s statement reads: “Former President Obasanjo is many things to many people; but he is all things unto himself. His recent contribution to our political discourse wherein he alleges plots to steer the coming elections shows he benefits from an exceedingly faulty memory, is purely shameless or has a most wicked sense of humor. Perhaps all three are facets of his makeup and were equally on display in his latest prosaic display.

    “The crux of his long tirade was the allegation that INEC is poised to cook the election results. Chief Obasanjo should not get his dander up and waste good ink for nothing. This election will be a free and open exercise of the people’s right to choose their leaders.

    “Obasanjo makes fiery allegations against this right but offers no corroborating evidence; he presents only reams of words. This is because Obasanjo is projecting onto the APC the misconduct he would wrought if still in power. Yet, the ways of Obasanjo are not those of the APC. And this difference has meant the better for Nigeria.

    “Moreover, Chief Obasanjo should be the last to complain about election rigging. His administration was an unalloyed miscarriage of justice and of the best aspirations of the Nigerian people.

    “This man should have positioned himself to be the father of the nation. All the goodwill that could be granted a political figure was bestowed on him.  The global economy was such that it fueled our growth.

    “Everyone wanted Nigeria to succeed after emerging from years of noxious military rule. Despite the flawed exercise that rendered him president, we all bit our tongues in hope that he would say and do the right things that would move Nigeria forward.

    “Instead of being a unifying figure as Commander-in-Chief, he lowered himself to being a divisive, vindictive conniver. There was no table which he neared that he did not upset and overturn. There was no one who came into his company for any period of time with whom he did not fall out if he expresses a thought contrary to one of his.

    “He tried to convert our young democracy into a one party state. His PDP boasted that they would rule for 60 uninterrupted years. Never did they boast that they would govern us well during even one year of the sixty.  He could have placed the economy on the path to durable growth and shared prosperity through diversification, industrialisation and creation of a social safety net for the poor.

    “Instead, he handed the economy over to a tight group of cronies, turning what should be a modern economy into a version of the mammoth trading companies that dominated the 17th and 18th century. The Transcorp conglomerate was intended to be a throwback to monopolistic enterprises, such as the East Indian Company wherein a select handful would control the national economy’s strategic heights.

    “We hoped that Obasanjo would personify statesmanship, thus showing the way to a more benign political culture. Instead, he bickered and feuded with his vice president and mostly anyone who dared remind him that he was human and thus infallible.

    “Given the vast margin between the good he could have achieved and the nebulous feats that comprise his true record, Chief Obasanjo is the person most responsible for the flaws in the Nigerian political economy since 1999. His ego is as expansive as the firmament but his good deeds would fit into a modest sachet with ample room to spare.

    “The worst of Obasanjo’s record, I have yet to describe. When it comes to elections, he has been a rigger without peer. There is no election which occurred under Obasanjo’s watch or in which he participated that did not involve cheating on his part. Even the late President Umaru Musa Yar ‘Adua admitted he was the beneficiary of a flawed election engineered by none other than today’s vociferous complainant. For Obasanjo to lament over electoral malpractice is tantamount to the ocean complaining that a few raindrops are causing it to get wet.

    “In his writing, Obasanjo alleges the Osun election indicates rigging will take place in the coming contests. Let’s go straight to the truth, Obasanjo has no grievance with the process. His personal history suggests fair process is the least of his concerns.

    “What knocks Obasanjo off kilter is that he could not dictate the result in Osun. He told those in the PDP that he held sway in Osun and throughout the Southwest. They believed him. He led them to defeat, notwithstanding the almost impossible voter turnout in PDP strongholds in that state. Obasanjo can only win an election when he has the final say over the final vote tally. Otherwise, he is a troubled man.

    “In an attempt to relieve his trouble, Chief Obasanjo makes reference to a joke about INEC. He says, “The INEC was asked if the Commission was ready for the election and if it expects the election to be free, fair and credible. The INEC man is reported as saying in response, ‘we are ready with everything including the results.’”  The joke has a touch of humor; we are glad that Obasanjo is not completely devoid of this most human of traits. However, he makes a telling omission by failing to give you the vintage of this bit of sarcasm.

    “The jest was not born last week. Its vintage is circa 2003- a time when a certain President Obasanjo rode roughshod over INEC. He would summon the nervous INEC chairman to the Villa, proceeding to hector the man until he gave way to Obasanjo’s demands.

    “At Obasanjo’s urging, INEC improperly published fake election results on the gubernatorial race in Lagos.  Not until a public outcry did INEC back away from rigging Lagos. A similar attempt was made in Lagos in 2007. In essence, for Obasanjo to laugh at this joke means he has belatedly developed the ability to laugh at himself.

    “If Obasanjo was so committed to free elections, how could he countenance Atiku’s recent boast of single-handedly rigging elections in the Southwest. Atiku claimed that he took all states for the PDP but left Lagos alone due to some misguided affinity for me. By this statement, Atiku publicly admitted to rigged elections in the Southwest.

    “Beyond resort to wholesale rigging, Atiku could never deign to be more popular and potent in the Southwest than the panoply of good and decent leaders that guided the defunct Action Congress (AC). Moreover, I can assure you that we did not need Atiku’s false beneficence to win the elections in Lagos.

    “The people voted for us and their votes countered the ill-designs Obasanjo and Atiku set in motion. Thus, if Obasanjo cannot chastise Atiku for publicly boasting that he rigged elections, then Obasanjo’s display of righteous indignation is but a magician’s trick.

    “His fine words and sentiments come a dozen years too late. These noble things would have greater effect had he placed them into practice when he was at the helm of affairs. At that time, he was powerful so he did as he might. Now that he lacks power, he has taken to preach that which he never did.

    “In his commentary, he mentions that INEC has a record of past rigging. I wonder if he understands the admission he makes. No other president has exercised such tight control over INEC for as many years as Obasanjo. No president has had the domineering relationship with INEC that Obasanjo enjoyed. If there are reports of past INEC rigging, those reports are of Obasanjo’s making. It is the irony of ironies for Obasanjo to complain of the fruit on the table when his was the hand that planted the tree.

    “Chief Obasanjo tries to further confuse matters by pointing to the case of the CJN’s assets declaration as evidence of future vote-rigging via tampering with the judiciary. Again, Obasanjo goes into a personality shift.  For years, Obasanjo has boasted of himself as our corruption fighter nonpareil.

    “The very aim of this current letter is to attack imagined INEC malfeasance. Yet, with regard to the CJN, he blithely ignores the large cache of dollars in the CJN’s account and the millions of dollars that passed through the accounts. Obasanjo seems unbothered by the unexplained presence of such sums. Perhaps Obasanjo’s nonchalance regarding the money is that he expected the funds there because he knows both the origin and reasons for the trove.

    “Chief Obasanjo sinks so low as to suggest that the VP, during the exercise of his official duties, was taking the PVC numbers of market women and traders.  This statement reveals the bilious nature of the man. Obasanjo even quotes the notorious Bode George in claiming that the VP  was ‘gutting our collective treasury’ by giving loans of N10,000 to market women under the administration’s empowerment programmes.

    Read also: TouchStone: Atiku a political prostitute – Sam Omatseye

    “What? Giving money to poor people to enhance their lives and escape the maw of poverty is, by PDP metrics, gutting the collective treasury.  If helping the poor is gutting the treasury, Atiku’s privatising large chunks of the economy into his own pocket must have been seen by the PDP as a vital public service.

    “Jonathan and his Petroleum minister’s siphoning government coffers of several billion dollars to enrich the already-rich must have been viewed by the PDP as the epitome of a social safety net. Obasanjo’s and the PDP’s disdain for the common person could not be clearer.

    “Obasanjo should be ashamed to even raise this issue.  When he was president, the economy was on an easy sledding due to positive global trends. Obasanjo did not raise a finger to do anything for the poor.

    “He and Atiku were champions of trickle-down economics. If anything good trickled down to the poor it was by accident. Obasanjo left the poor unattended because he cared nothing for them. Poverty increased under his cold indifference. Not one meaningful social programme was established during his watch.

    “The banking and pension deregulation he brought were geared to profit the wealthy CEOs and managers of these financial entities. The malpractices attendant to these deregulation fiascos extinguished the savings of millions of Nigerians.

    “In reliance on these artifices of Obasanjo and his ilk, many Nigerians were thrust down the lower rungs of the poverty they so desperately sought to avoid. Obasanjo’s allies gobbled the savings of the poor and still feast on them to this day.

    “Chief Obasanjo is one of the last people to preach to anyone about using public funds to care for the poor. He had the gall to fret that funds should not be given to the urban poor because they are not poor enough.

    “But his grouse does not show any defect in the administration’s programme. His complaint shows the defect in Obasanjo’s humanity or lack of it. To complain that some people are not poor enough for his liking is to reveal that seeing human suffering does not motivate him to cure it.

    “He would rather that people suffer it the more. Your unease and distress becomes his entertainment or at least evidence he is superior to the common man.  Watching a laborer struggle against penury is no more than a spectator sport for Obasanjo.

    “The most fantastic of all his claims is that this administration has returned Nigeria to the days of Abacha. If this were true, the press would be constantly closed. Obasanjo would be constricted in writing such letters. Elections would not be upon us. Atiku would not be able to freely campaign and the diversity of opinion in the public space would be suppressed.

    “For Obasanjo to utter such an outrage is that he hopes lighting strikes twice. He was ushered into office after Abacha’s demise. He thinks if he can invoke Abacha’s name, the same thing will happen again.

  • Buhari, Obasanjo meet at Villa

    It would have been a routine spectacle attracting no curiosity.

    The President and a former leader who used to be a frequent caller at the seat of power. Smiles, banters and handshake – that’s all.

    That was not the situation yesterday when President Muhammadu Buhari and former President Olusegun Obasanjo met at the Council of State meeting at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

    All eyes were on them as the President and Obasanjo moved towards each other, hands stretched out. They shook hands and exchanged pleasantries.

    Obasanjo’s face was wreathed in smiles – not the toothy, broad smiles or laughter that he is known for when in a cheery mood. His face was firm; it was a wry smile.

    Buhari also smiled, his trademark gap tooth on display.

    Why the animosity?

    Not a few thought the former leader would not show up at yesterday’s meeting following his 16-page statement in which he lashed Buhari, accusing him of planning to rig the February 16 election and behaving like the late Head of State Gen. Sani Abacha.

    But Obasanjo proved bookmakers wrong as he made his way into Council Chamber, venue of the meeting scheduled for 11am at exactly 10.51am.

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    His presence immediately drew the attention of those who had arrived before him as well as those who came after.

    Some of those in the hall standing or sitting on the path he followed to take his seat greeted him and he was in his usual element, exchanging pleasantries with them.

    He also exchanged pleasantries with former Interim National Government (ING) Head Ernest Shonekan, who was already seated.

    He sat down momentarily, stood up and walked back towards the entrance to greet some of those in the hall, including former Head of State Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar.

    Obasanjo was still discussing when it was announced that everyone should settle down.  The President was on the way.

    He was still in transit when Buhari entered the Chamber.

    Buhari immediately went straight to exchange pleasantries with Shonekan, who remained seated and then Gen. Abdulsalami, who walked towards him.

    By the time he finished with Gen. Abdulsalami, Obasanjo was close to him.

    So, standing eyeball to eyeball and smiling, the duo greeted and shook hands- to the admiration of all in the hall.

    The President returned to his seat and called for the rendition of the National Anthem.

    After the national anthem, the President asked Obasanjo, a theologian, to say the Christian prayer, which he did.

  • Obasanjo and the power withdrawal syndrome

    Professor Itse Sagay, in this reaction to former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s remarks on the President Muhammadu Buhari administration, argues that the ex-president is suffering from what he described as power withdrawal syndrome.

    The status of an ex-president is one of quiet dignity, respect, discretion, decorum, discipline and restraint.  Obasanjo does not have a single one of these qualities. We have had a number of former Heads of State, namely, Gowon, Shagari, Babangida, Abubakar Salami and Jonathan.  All of these former Heads of State have exercised discretion, restraint and self-discipline in relation to their successors, but not Obasanjo.

    Obasanjo’s boisterous, aggressive and hectoring attitude towards succeeding Presidents, strikes me as a case of one who has never recovered from the loss of power.  By his meddlesomeness, rude and uncouth attitude towards later Heads of State, it is clear that he is addicted to a substance called “power”, and is angry and resentful towards any other person exercising it.

    Gowon was Obasanjo’s boss from 1966 to 1975 (nine years).  Not once did Gowon utter a public criticism of Obasanjo throughout his two tenures from 1976 – 1979 and 1999 to 2007.  The same thing applies to AbdulSalami Abubakar, who handed over power to Obasanjo in 1999.  Not a single word of public excoriation against Obasanjo was uttered by AbdulSalami Abubakar throughout Obasanjo’s eight years in power.  Abubakar demonstrated only decorum and self-respect.

    Babangida had no peace when he was in power with Obasanjo ripping him open with sarcasm at close intervals.  When Yar’Adua was hospitalised in Saudi Arabia, his condition did not restrain Obasnajo from launching a missile against him in his hospital bed.

    Then came the epistle of St. Matthew Obasanjo to Jonathan in 2014  It was explosive, even including the allegation that Jonathan was training a squad of snippers.  Now it is Buhari’s turn.  The truth is that Obasanjo has never recovered from his power addiction and in his own mind, he is the President-General of Nigeria for life.

    Another strange phenomenon is Obasanjo’s capacity to launch vitriolic attacks on his successors allegedly doing what he Obasanjo did repeatedly as president without a thought of his own gross misdeeds; a clear case of amnesia.

     

    Removal of governors

     

    First, he accuses Buhari of being a dictator like Abacha, brooking no alternative views.  What of Obasanjo?  Was he himself not an African Hitler?

    Perhaps the most blatant display of naked fascism and violation of the Constitution, by Obasanjo, was his removal or attempted removal of State Governors which Prof. Ben Nwabueze describes, as coups d’ etat!  The method used by Obasanjo was simple and brutal.  The EFCC (under Ribadu) moves into the State of the targeted Governor in full force.  It arrests all the State legislators and takes them away for detention in Lagos or Abuja.  Whilst in detention they are offered incentives to sign already prepared notices of impeachment of the victim Governor.  Once sufficient signatures are obtained, the Legislators are ferried under armed guard back into their State capital and taken straight to the House of Assembly, already secured by heavily armed police or military personnel.  Once inside the Chambers of the House, they follow a tightly prepared script, involving a compromised Chief Judge who pursuant to a resolution of the captured legislators, appoints a pre-selected panel of partymen with the single mandate of finding the Governor guilty of misconduct.  Without giving the Governor any hearing, the panel finds him guilty as charged, and the hostage legislators are rushed in again to accept the report.  In 5 minutes, it’s all over, the Governor is removed and by a strange coincidence, the EFCC is there on standby to arrest the ex-Governor and take him away to detention.

    This is exactly what happened in Bayelsa, and in Plateau States, except that Dariye slipped quietly away whilst the EFCC was playing its power games to remove him.  In Anambra State, Obasanjo actually used an Assistant Inspector-General of Police to arrest the Governor (Dr. Ngige) and compel him under duress to sign a letter of resignation.  In Oyo State, the strong man of Ibadan, Lamidi Adedibu, was the one used in the purported removal of the Governor Ladoja in a beer parlour.  The removal of Governor Fayose of Ekiti State followed the same script, except that the ambitions of the Speaker, of the State House of Assembly and that of the Deputy Governor, to be the Acting Governor, clashed and resulted in a distortion involving equally compromised and shameless members of the Judiciary.

    Remember Alamieyeseigha, Governor of Bayelsa?  Obasanjo got him arrested in London a few days after a surgical operation.  Blood was dripping down from his wound as the British Police arrested him at London Heathrow Airport at Obasanjo’s request.

    Some pathetic details of what happened to Governor Alamieyeseigha needs to be exposed.  When Governor Alamieyeseigha managed to escape from London back to his State Bayelsa, Obasanjo ordered the EFCC then under Mr. Ribadu to move in on members of the House of Assembly in Bayelsa and arrest all of them.  Following the collective arrest, they were all relocated to a prison in Abuja where they were threatened with dire consequences if they did not sign an impeachment resolution prepared by the EFCC on Obasanjo’s instructions.

    Whilst all this was going on, Obasanjo closed down radio Bayelsa and ordered the banks in which the Bayelsa government had accounts to freeze those accounts.  This paralyzed the Bayelsa government, and led to starvation of public servants.

    After this, the Assembly men were brought back to Yenogoa were they proceeded to complete the process of impeachment under duress.

    Immediately after the brazen illegal impeachment and removal of Alamesiegha, he was arrested by soldiers who had already taken over the whole of Bayelsa for trial and imprisonment.

    In Plateau State, Obasanjo using the military force of the EFCC and Ribadu got Governor Dariye of Plateau State removed by 5 members of the House of Assembly, in a house composed of about 28 Legislators.

     

    Declaration of Illegal

    States of Emergency

     

    The declaration of States of Emergency by the Obasanjo Federal Government in Plateau and Ekiti States, were prime illustrations of Obasanjo’s gross subversion of Nigeria’s federal system.  Not only did Obasanjo fail to comply with the conditions precedent for the declaration of a State of Emergency, even if the declarations were valid, the exercise of power under the declaration was grossly ultra vires the Federal Government, unconstitutional and illegal.

    A state of emergency can only be declared if as stated in section 305 (3); (a) the Federation is at war, or (b) in imminent danger of invasion, or involvement in a State of War, or (c) there is actual breakdown of law and order and public safety in the Federation or any part thereof to such an extent as to require extra ordinary measures to restore peace and security, or (d) a clear and present danger of (c) above, or (e) there is a disaster or natural calamity affecting a community or part of it, or (f) threat to the existence of the Federation, or (g) request by a State Governor for such a declaration over his or her state, as a result of a situation similar to (c) and (e) above.

    The infringements of the Constitution in the two declarations of emergency are legion.  In the first place, the factual situation that must exist as a condition precedent did not exist.  There was no breakdown of public order and public safety at any time in Plateau or Ekiti States, “to such an extent as to require extraordinary measures to restore peace and security”.  Infact the whole tenor of section 11 of the Constitution, (which is the section containing all the powers exercisable during an emergency) shows that an emergency declaration is intended to be a cooperative endeavour between the Federal Government and a state Government whose organs, Governors, House of Assembly and Judiciary, are fully functioning.  Section 11(2) provides that nothing in that section should preclude a House of Assembly from making laws in respect of the maintenance and securing of public safety and public order, etc, in an emergency, just like the National Assembly.  Section 11(4) prohibits the National Assembly from performing the work of a State House of Assembly, as long as the House can hold a meeting and transact business.  The same section prohibits the National Assembly from removing a Governor from office at any time.  Nowhere is power conferred on anyone to suspend a Governor or House of Assembly.

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    Thus, the removal of Fayose (Ekiti) and Dariye (Plateau) by declaration of a State of Emergency was blatantly illegal and unconstitutional.  President Jonathan complied with the Constitution when he declared a State of Emergency in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe States in 2013.  The positions of the Governors and State Houses of Assembly were not affected.  But Obasanjo, the great Dictator swept away Governors and State Houses of Assembly when he declared his States of Emergency; Law or no Law, Constitution or no Constitution.  Obasanjo was higher than both Law and Constitution.

    The same Obasanjo  who says Buhari  is not entitled to his constitutional second term , enjoyed two terms after which he attempted to arm-twist the National Assembly and Nigeria in general, into permitting him to go in for an unconstitutional third term.

    Can we forget how Obasanjo in the period 2004 to 2006 unconstitutionally seized the Federal Allocated Funds for Lagos State?

     

    Reckless Abuse of Power

     

    Obasanjo treated fellow politicians in his own party with contempt and disdain.  He installed and removed PDP party Chairmen as if they were his personal cooks and stewards.  Solomon Lar, Barnabas Gemade and Audu Ogbe, had bitter stories of remorseless exercise of Presidential terror to tell about their sudden and peremptory removal as PDP party Chairmen by Obasanjo, without reference to the Constitution of the party.

    What about Senate Presidents, Evans Enwerem and Chuba Okadigbo who were forced out of the Senate Presidency by Obasanjo without any reference to the Members of Senate in a situation requiring two-thirds majority of their members.  Saraki is a very lucky man that Buhari, not Obasanjo, was President, when he stole the Senate Presidency on June 9, 2015.

     

    Genocidal slaughter

     

    Nigerians will never forget how Obasanjo ordered troops to level the town of Odi In Bayelsa State in November 20, 1999.   Both the human population and their homes were brought down by military force.  Hundreds were slaughtered in cold blood.

    The same thing happened in Zaki Bian on October 22, 2001 when out of displeasure with General Malu, who came from the town, he dispatched heavily armed troops again to level both the human population and structures in that small town.  These crimes against humanity have been ignored by the local and international community, leaving Obasanjo strutting all over the place in his full pride and vanity.

     

    Election rigging

     

    The very idea of Obasanjo suggesting that Buhari plans to rig an election constitutes unsurpassed irony.  Obasanjo rigged out Mr. Olu Falaye in the 1999 Presidential elections.  He rigged out Buhari in the 2003 election.  He committed the mother of all rigging in 2007 when Nigeria suffered the worst elections in its political history. The Governorship election results were nullified in Cross River, Rivers, Bayelsa, Delta, Edo, Ondo, Ekiti, Osun, Adamawa, Kogi and Sokoto States; eleven States.  All this occurred under Obasanjo’s “Do or Die” war cry against free and fair elections.  In fact, Yar’Adua, beneficiary of this rigging acknowledged it, felt repentant and set up the Uwais Committee to proffer fundamental changes in our electoral system in order to avoid Obasanjo’s do or die type of elections in 2011.

    Outraged by this endless series of brutal exercise of power and inordinate love of it, the renowned Prof. Ben Nwabueze, wrote a whole book entitled How Obasanjo subverted the Democracy and the Rule of Law. 

    As I stated earlier, Obasanjo believes that he can break all rules and ethics but it is a crime for others to even appear to follow his footsteps in that regard.

    He is a man who is not conscious of a sense of wrong doing and is probably unaware of the long list of depredations trailing his footsteps.  The man is not just immoral, he is worse; he is amoral, i.e., he lacks a sense of right or wrong.

    Obasanjo is now an old man.  It is now imperative that he learns to exercise some discretion and restraint in his public statements.  His bombastic, false, misleading and destructive outbursts, are not befitting of a so-called elder stateman. Even more less of a former president.

    Obasanjo, let Nigeria be!  Go to Owu and rest!

     

  • Adewale hails Obasanjo, seeks protection for Southwest votes

    A chieftain and former Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Lagos State, Otunba Segun Adewale, popularly called Aeroland, has hailed former President Olusegun Obasanjo for his exemplary leadership concerning the State of the Nation.

    Adewale said Obasanjo’s letter “Point of Concern and Action” came at the right time because he has been echoing in the same direction, the need for stakeholders to be vigilant, and ensure that our nascent democracy is not truncated.

    According to him, the biggest threats are those who do not care about our constitution anymore but only care about “Regime Protection”. He advised that Nigerians must remain resolute by voting for a candidate who can get the country working again.

    Adewale, however, reiterated his earlier call that Southwest votes will determine who will become the next President. According to him,  Atiku and Buhari will slug it out in the North, while the Southsouth and Southeast are the PDP’s strong areas, but the total number of votes there will be complimented by what the Southwest can add.

    The party chieftain added that PDP must work hard to secure the bloc votes in the Southwest, noting that some factors which may militate against this victory was if the wrong people are engaged to coordinate the region. “There will be big trouble for the party,” he said.

    “PDP has always won convincingly in the Southwest, but our polling agents are too weak, and the elections are rigged right from the polling units to collation centers with, intimidation and forceful declaration of fake result, outright refusal or allowing PDP voters to even vote in some of polling units.”

     

  • Comment on Obasanjo harsh, says PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) yesterday took on All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart Asiwaju Bola Tinubu over his comments on former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    It said the former Lagos State governor was took harsh on the former leader.

    In a statement by its spokesman Kola Ologbodiyan, the PDP said the attack was because of Obasanjo’s allegation that President Muhammadu Buhari plans to manipulate the forthcoming elections.

    The statement reads: “However, PDP states in unequivocal terms that President Obasanjo, contrary to Tinubu’s claims, did not at any time, assure our party that he holds sway throughout the Southwest and as such will deliver Osun State to the PDP.

    “It is also important to state that the people’s candidate, Atiku Abubakar, did not also claim to have rigged election in the Southwest.”

    The opposition party said it will be difficult for the APC leader to deny ever being close to its presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar.

    Atiku, who defected from the PDP, contested the 2007 presidential election on the defunct Action Congress (AC) platform. The party was sustained until it metamorphosed into the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).

    The PDP went on: “Moreover, it is an established fact that Obasanjo remains a statesman and a global figure who always speak the truth to power and put the interest of our nation above all.

    It is on record that President Obasanjo and PDP genuinely fought corruption in this country. With the establishment of ICPC, EFCC, SFIU in the police as well as the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) to investigate economic crimes and corruption activities as well as trial of Nigerians believed to have committed wrongdoings.”

  • “Do-or-die” Obasanjo tars INEC

    Olusegun Obasanjo, author and finisher of “do-or-die” 2007 (which winner got utterly ashamed of his “victory”); and creator of ace election magician, Maurice Iwu, is pointing fingers at the current INEC!  Ridiculous, isn’t that?

    At long, long last, the self-over-rated Ebora Owu of Nigerian politics is unravelling so fast, it is so, so dizzy!  Suddenly, one of the so-called owners of Nigeria has suddenly found out his beloved “Nigeria” (in which he has an unrestrained sense entitlement) may finally have slipped from his sticky fingers!  The panic is real!

    Obasanjo’s is tantamount to the tale of the tortoise, who swore he wouldn’t return from his travel until he was disgraced.

    Since the late Benjamin Adekunle aka Black Scorpion did all the work but Obasanjo plucked all the Civil War glory, he has developed a tragic sense of entitlement.

    He loves Nigeria more than the rest of us.  And like the scoundrel tortoise, who greedily renamed himself “All of you”, in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, Obasanjo has developed an “All of You” syndrome!  So, whatever he does, even if it’s a bare-faced swindle like his so-called Presidential Library, he is doing it because of  his “love” for Nigeria — some avid love of the cat for the rat!

    That is why Obasanjo would release his latest rigmarole, ringing with self-indictment, half-truths, wild rumours, pure fantasies, raw gossips which put good old old wives’ tales to shame, all sewn together by a steady flow of name-calling, absolutely unbecoming of a former elected president, military head of state and a self promoted statesman, who also happens to have a PhD!  Where is the class?  Where is panache?

    “Trader moni” is skewed against the rural poor!  But which category of people, rural or urban, did the Obasanjo era empower, beyond “Keke NAPEP”, which was nothing but a PDP racket?

    An illegal third term hustler is dreaming “self-perpetuation” in another working hard to earn a legit second term!

    The president has surrendered his campaign to “Jagaban” — but how is that Obasanjo’s headache?

    All of sudden, asking the CJN to “remember” his “forgotten” assets; and account for them has become virtual persecution.  Yet, Baba Iyabo is the holy Pope of Nigerian politics, before a serious smear like the CJN’s ceases to matter!

    And the sheer cheapness of invoking Abacha!  Did Obasanjo think that also would wipe out his grand political miscalcutions, of backing what is turning out to be a wrong horse, after the dismal collapse of his so-called Third Force?

    Which other inanities did Obasanjo pile as cards, in his grumpy, pitiable attempt to cry wolf when there was none?  So, the election would be rigged simply because Obasanjo said so?

    And the so-called “international community” would just barge in and do exactly what?  Because the candidate he endorsed, for which he himself said God would never forgive him, might just taste bitter defeat?  But perhaps all these are early manifestations of a self-imposed curse from God?

    Obasanjo has always been petty and graceless.  But this letter hit the very nadir of it all.

    Still, nobody should forget its sinister motive.  Four years ago, everything was pointing to a loss by sitting President Goodluck Jonathan.  The trick back  then was to postpone the election.

    Now, another presidential election is only three weeks away.  But all Obasanjo wants to do is scuttle it, by crying wolf, all because he’s mortally scared his camp might suffer a crushing loss?  Nice try!