Tag: Obasanjo

  • I won’t keep quiet over Nigeria — Obasanjo

    I won’t keep quiet over Nigeria — Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said he would never keep his mouth shut on issues concerning Nigeria.

    The former President, who was in Bayelsa State yesterday to inaugurate projects, especially in the health sector, initiated and completed by the state Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson.

    Obasanjo, who commissioned the Bayelsa Specialist  Hospital, the Bayelsa Drug Mart and the Bayelsa Diagnostic Centre, also declared that he had no regrets in all the leadership roles he played even at the Presidency.

    The former President, in a special interactive session with pupils of the famous Ijaw National Academy (INA) in Kaiama, Kolokuma-Opokuma,  said nobody would stop him from speaking if he noticed things were going wrong.

    But he noted that Nigeria would rise above its challenges, disclosing that in his recent trip to Rome, the Nigerian Ambassador there informed him that 1,600 Nigerians were languishing in Italian prisons.

    Responding to the question of one of the pupils, he said: “If I believe that Nigeria has no hope, I will find a way of committing suicide immediately. Then what am I living for? I am an incurable optimist about Nigeria. Nigeria has hope.

    “There are many things that we should have done that we have not done as we should have done them. There is no doubt about that. But that doesn’t mean that Nigeria has no hope. Hope is what drives human beings.

    “If you are a person without hope, you are a person without life. How can I therefore say Nigeria has no hope? Nigeria has hope. And you are part of the hope of Nigeria. The question you have asked me is a very sensible question and that means with you asking me that type of question it heightens my own conviction that Nigeria has hope.

    “My generation or the generation before me gave us independence. It doesn’t matter what you think about them. My generation fought for the unity of this country and laid the foundation of democracy.

    “Then people of governor  Dickson generation should be able to say they built on our foundation. That is how a nation continues to make progress. The governor is doing wonderfully well. Anybody coming after him will do something else. The person will not start building the INA from the scratch. The academy has already been established.

    “In spite of our difficulties; I came back from Rome last night. Our Ambassador there, who was a kind man, he was in the Navy; he told me that his major problem is that there are 1,600 Nigerians in Italian prisons. That is a problem.

    “But we shouldn’t because of that say there is no hope for Nigeria? No. I will say we have a problem that we have to address and if we don’t address it we are postponing the evil day. That doesn’t mean that Nigeria has no hope. Never lose hope.

    “Nigeria has great hope because of you; great hope because of what the governor is doing and great hope because I will not keep my mouth shut when I see anything wrong in Nigeria”.

    On whether he had regrets in office as the President, Obasanjo said: “With the knowledge, resources and facilities that I had, was there anything that I did not do? No.

    “If I had more resources, then I think I would have done differently, but with what I had and the resources at my disposal, I would say no, I did all that is humanly possible when I was President. I was not perfect, only God is. “Also bear in mind that people you work with will make sure you don’t see certain things. Some of them will do everything. What is important is that you should not have a regret. I do not have a regret when I was in government or in any leadership position I have held. No regret”.

    Obasanjo, who earlier paid a courtesy visit to the secretariat of the state Traditional Rulers Council, chaired by the King of Brass, King Alfred Diette  Spiff, further said that one of the things Nigeria needed to do and do it well to be stable was the issue of security.

    He expressed shock over the rapid transformation in the state under Dickson commending him for maintaining the peace in Bayelsa.

    He said that Dickson had set a security model that other states in the country should emulate to ensure peace in their domains.

    He said: “One of the things that struck me about your (Dickson’s) administration is the relative peace that you have maintained in the state. I do not know how you have done it, may be we should all come to learn under your tutelage.

    “This is so because one of the things we need to do and do well today in this country today is the issue of security. Security is, and of course, stability.

    “The point is this:  If one state is peaceful, secured and safe in Nigeria, it is an example to others and it goes a long way because the aggregate peacefulness, the aggregate security and the aggregate security is what makes for peace, security and stability of our country.

    “You called me a Bayelsan and I ought to be. I said to the governor that any good man must feel proud to be called a Bayelsan. Because here, you have seen real transformation. If there is a place where you can say, come and see transformation taking place, this is one place in the country.”

    He, therefore, suggested that the younger generation should be accommodated in the nation’s political leadership because “although they are future leaders, tomorrow might not come again.”

    Obasanjo said: “We have to make allowance for them where we have to make allowance for them but we must make provision for them. We must make accommodation for them because they are not only the leaders of tomorrow.

    “Their leadership must start from today because if we leave them only till tomorrow, they will never be left waiting for tomorrow that may never come. Today must be their time; let us accommodate them, let us make room for them, thus carry them along.”

    The former President also said that despite other qualities a leader should possess, Nigeria was in need of a leader with the fear of God.

    “One thing the books on leadership don’t always talk about which I found very important is the fear of God. If you are a leader that fears God, the chances are that you will be a good leader. If you are a leader that doesn’t fear God, forget it”, he said.

    Dickson on his part highlighted some of the roles Obasanjo played for the state, including ensuring that an Ijaw man became a Vice-President from where he rose to be the President of the country.

    Describing himself as a student of Obasanjo’s school of leadership, Dickson showcased his achievements in health, education and agriculture.

    “These things were built for the benefit of our people. In this state, there is democratisation of health care.  I believe in fair and just leadership because leaders in the end are also human beings.

    “While it is right to expect perfection from leaders, you cannot find perfection in any leader. While we strive towards perfection, what I have found useful in my own little way, is that I always want to convince myself knowing that actions and inactions of leaders have consequences.

    “You have to convince yourself that what you are doing or not doing is in the best interest of the people and you remain true to yourself and to God. Let it be said that you did your best. There must be corresponding courage to do what is right”.

    While receiving Obasanjo at the Traditional Rulers’ Council, Spiff expressed delight at the brand new secretariat donated to the council by Dickson, saying it was a clear indication of the value he attached to traditional stools.

    He said the governor promoted eight other stools in the state to first-class status, adding that Dickson created a fourth class for village heads to reach the grassroots for developmental and political reasons.

    He congratulated Obasanjo for his doctoral degree describing his style of life as unique.

  • Obasanjo pays tribute to Akunyili, praises Dickson

    Obasanjo pays tribute to Akunyili, praises Dickson

    NIGERIA’s former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo and Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson yesterday paid tributes to the late Prof. Dora Akunyili, for her contributions to the fight against counterfeit drugs in the country. Obasanjo spoke in Yenagoa at the commissioning of the Bayelsa State Drug Distribution Centre and other state -of-theart health facilities in Yenagoa. While commending Governor Dickson for investing in the health sector , Obasanjo said the vision of the governor was worthy of emulation.

    The former president also enrolled in the Bayelsa State Health Insurance Scheme, making him an honorary enrollee. According to a statement signed by the Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Mr. Francis Ottah Agbo, the former President commissioned the Bayelsa State Specialist Hospital, Drug Distribution Center and the World-Class Diagnostic Centre. Other projects commissioned include, the Gloryland Drive at Igbogene, renamed as Chief Olusegun Obasanjo Drive as well as unveiling of the Government House Heliport, which is now known as King AP Diete Spiff Heliport. Chief Obasanjo who took a facility tour of the health projects, said he was highly impressed by the level of commitment demonstrated by the governor in providing world-class health facilities and services to the citizenry.

    He also commended Governor Dickson for keying into the vision of the late Director General of NAFDAC, Prof Akunyili in the establishing the Drug Mart and Distribution Center, noting that the facility would assist in curbing the menace of fake drugs and drug abuse. In his remarks, Governor Dickson said, as part of his administration’s revolutionary intervention in the health sector, government decided to expand quality health services to accommodate the average Bayelsan. Acknowledging the contributions of late Prof Akunyili, Governor Dickson assured that, he would continue to identify with any worthy cause aimed at promoting the health of the people.

    According to him, the state government decided to name one of the halls of the Drug Mart and Distribution Center after Prof. Akunyili as part of efforts at immortalising her. In their separate remarks, the Commissioner for Health, Prof. Ebitimitula Etebu and Managing Director of the Bayelsa Diagnostic Centre, Prof. Ifiemu Nwariaku, noted that the facilities have started providing world-class services before their inauguration. According to them, the governor’s vision of turning Bayelsa to a health hub through medical tourism is being achieved as people from within and outside the state now patronise the facilities, which boastof cardiovascular, renal and stroke centres.

  • There is hope for Nigeria – Obasanjo

    There is hope for Nigeria – Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo said on Friday he would commit suicide if there is no hope for the country and appealed to the people not to lose hope on Nigeria.

    Obasanjo, who was in Bayelsa State on Friday to inaugurate health projects initiated and completed by the state Governor, Seriake Dickson, insisted that there is great hope for the country.

    The ex-President, who commissioned the Bayelsa Specialists Hospital, the Bayelsa Drug Mart and the Bayelsa Diagnostic Centre, also declared that he had no regrets in all the leadership positions he occupied even at the Presidency.

    In a special interactive session with pupils of the famous Ijaw National Academy (INA) in Kaiama, Kolokuma-Opokuma, he said the country had myriads of challenges.

    But he noted that Nigeria would rise above its challenges, adding that during his recent trip to Rome, Italy, the Nigerian Ambassador there informed him that 1,600 Nigerians were languishing in the European nation’s prisons.

    Responding to a question from one of the pupils of the Academy, he said: “If I believe that Nigeria has no hope, I will find a way of committing suicide immediately. Then what am I living for? I am an incurable optimist about Nigeria. Nigeria has hope.

    “There are many things that we should have done that we have not done as we should have done them. There is no doubt about that. But that doesn’t mean that Nigeria has no hope. Hope is what drives human beings.

    “If you are a person without hope, you are a person without life. How can I therefore say Nigeria has no hope? Nigeria has hope. And you are part of the hope of Nigeria. The question you have asked me is a very sensible question and that means with you asking me that type of question it heightens my own conviction that Nigeria has hope.

    “Those of us, who have gone before, people of my age and then it will be followed quickly by people of Governor Dickson’s age; you may be asking, what have we done? Have we destroyed your future?

    “My generation or the generation before me gave us independence. It doesn’t matter what you think about them. My generation fought for the unity of this country and laid the foundation of democracy.

    “Then people of governor Dickson’s generation should be able to say they built on our foundation. That is how a nation continues to make progress. The governor is doing wonderfully well. Anybody coming after him will do something else. The person will not start building the INA from the scratch. The academy has already been established.

    “In spite of our difficulties; I came back from Rome last night. Our Ambassador there, who was a kind man, he was in the Navy; he told me that his major problem is that there are 1,600 Nigerians in Italian prison. That is a problem.

    “But we shouldn’t because of that say there is no hope for Nigeria? No. I will say we have a problem that we have to address and if we don’t address it we are postponing the evil day. That doesn’t mean that Nigeria has no hope. Never lose hope.

    “Nigeria has great hope because of you; great hope because of what the governor is doing and great hope because I will not keep my mouth shut when I see anything wrong in Nigeria.”

     

  • Tinubu to Obasanjo, IBB: let Nigeria move forward

    Tinubu to Obasanjo, IBB: let Nigeria move forward

    All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu yesterday enjoined former President Olusegun Obasanjo and former military president Gen. Ibrahim Babangida to retire and “allow us to move our country forward”.

    Obasanjo, in a “special press statement” last month, slammed the Muhammadu Buhari administration and “advised the President not to seek reelection”.

    Babangida followed it up with a controversial statement which was also not complimentary to the Buhari administration.

    Tinubu and Chief Bisi Akande, the former interim chairman of the APC, met with President Buhari at the Aso Villa one and a half hours after the President’s meeting with another former Head of State, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar.

    Responding to a question on the statements made by Obasanjo and Babangida, Tinubu said: ”I don’t address those shadows. We should let our former presidents join retirees’ club and take pensions but they can participate in our politics if they are interested.

    “It is a free world but this freedom is not served a la carte. They should allow us to move our country forward. It is a challenge to every Nigerian.”

    On the chances of the APC in the 2019 elections, the former Lagos State governor said: “You are asking me an obvious question. I belong to this party. My commitment is to this party. We have a better chance and we are strongly determined to prosecute election in a most transparent and democratic manner and we will win.”

    Tinubu, who is the head of a presidential panel to reconcile APC leaders and unite the party,  told reporters that he felt “greatly honoured” being offered the job.

    .He said: “I feel greatly honoured with the mutual confidence that the President has reposed in me, which is a very strong political challenge. We have started in earnest.

    “He has given me a free hand to put cohesion, confidence and trust in the party. Democracy is about conflict resolution process. You can’t do it without resolving conflicts.

    “We can’t build it without understanding the conflicts and sources where we are coming from. But we want to leave the country with a legacy. It’s not about Mr. President. That is what he’s telling the country.

    “It’s about our country and no other choice to democratic tenets than through political party platforms.”

    Tinubu described President Buhai as “one of those rare beings around the country, around Africa who have experienced both worlds: he fought a battle to save Nigeria and came to politics to save Nigeria.

    “Very rare people have such an opportunity in their life time and that’s what we talk about legacy, and where we have all the challenges, do what we should do. I’m enjoying the challenges so far.”

    Gen. Abubakar met with the President immediately after he received letters of Credence from the Ambassador of Niger to Nigeria, Mr Alat Mogaskia; the High Commissioner of Ghana, Alhaji Rashid Bawa and that of Apostolic Nuncio of the Holy Sea to Nigeria, the Most Rev. Archbishop Antonio Guido Filipazzi.

    The former Head of State declined to speak to reporters after the meeting, which lasted for less than one hour.

  • Obasanjo to Buhari: fight corruption on your nose

    Obasanjo to Buhari: fight corruption on your nose

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has launched another attack at President Muhammadu Buhari over his administration’s handling of anti-corruption fight.

    In his latest attack, the former President maintained that Buhari has corruption on his nose.

    In an interview with German international broadcasting outlet, Deutsche Welle, Obasanjo said the President’s anti-corruption fight has been polluted by people in his inner circles.

    Obasanjo said the president could do better on how he goes about the war on corruption.

    He said if he was the president, “I would make sure people in charge of anti-corruption institutions are people of integrity. There is no point in fighting corruption beyond you and you have corruption on your nose.”

    On his newly formed movement, Coalition for Nigeria movement (CNM), the former president said the movement will truly help Nigerians to move away from the old order of politics and into a new age where the interests of the citizens are truly represented.

    He said: “It (Coalition for Nigeria) is not an old wine in a new bottle, but a new wine in a new bottle. I will not stand in the way of that movement if it decides to become a party. But in that case, I will withdraw.”

  • Tinubu to Obasanjo, IBB: Join retirees’ club

    Tinubu to Obasanjo, IBB: Join retirees’ club

    The National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, on Tuesday advised former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Ibrahim Babangida to join retirees’ club and take pensions.

    The leaders had sent open letters, accusing President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration of ineptitude and sectionalism.

    But reacting to questions on Obasanjo and IBB’s statements while speaking with selected journalists after meeting with President Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, Tinubu said: “I don’t address those shadows. We should let our former presidents join retirees’ club and take pensions. But they can participate in our politics if they are interested.

    “It is a free world. But this freedom is not served a la carte but they should allow us to move our country forward. It is a challenge to every Nigerian.”

    On the chances of APC in 2019, he added: “You are asking me an obvious question. I belong to this party. My commitment is to this party. We have a better chance and we are strongly determined to prosecute election in a most transparent and democratic manner and we will win.”

    And on his appointment as the head of APC Presidential Reconciliation Committee, the former Lagos State Governor said he felt greatly honoured with the mutual confidence the President has reposed in him.

    “I feel greatly honoured with the mutual confidence that the President has reposed in me which is a very strong political challenge. We have started in earnest.

    “He has given me free hand to put cohesion, confidence and trust in the party. Democracy is about conflict resolution process. You can’t do it without resolving conflicts.

    “We can’t build it without understanding the conflicts and sources where we are coming from. But we want to leave the country with a legacy. It’s not about Mr. President. That is what he’s telling the country.

    “It’s about our country and no other choice to democratic tenets than through political party platforms. He’s one of those rare beings around the country, around Africa who had experienced both worlds. He fought a battle to save Nigeria and came to politics to save Nigeria.

    “Very rare people have such an opportunity in their life time and that’s what we talk about legacy, and where we have all the challenges, do what we should do. I’m enjoying the challenges so far,” he concluded.

     

  • Obasanjo has done his homework on CNM, says Osuntokun

    Obasanjo has done his homework on CNM, says Osuntokun

    •Ex-president, others opt for zonal launch

    THE Coalition for Nigeria Movement (CNM) said yesterday that ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo has done enough homework on how to effect change in the presidency in 2019 and the movement will not fail.

    Its spokesman, Chief Akin Osuntokun, who was a former Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), gave the assurance in an interview with The Nation.

    He spoke following the alleged snub of the movement overtures by governors and some top politicians.

    The ex-President and other CNM leaders will this week begin the launching of the group in the six geopolitical zones.

    The ex-President will personally lead the launch, which is targeted at membership drive.

    There were indications that the coalition has started informal talks with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and other parties.

    But a former PDP National Chairman, Senator Ahmadu Ali may not be the Chairman of CNM.

    He was said to be only chairing the movement pending the election of its national officers.

    Osuntokun said: “Does Obasanjo strike you like a leaders, who will set out to do something without doing his homework? He has done enough homework before launching this movement. Go and look at his track records and you will know whether or not this coalition will work.

    “This movement seeks to prove that you can play a big role in the politics of Nigeria without belonging to a political party. Did Obasanjo not support APC in 2015? Did he not campaign against ex-President Goodluck Jonathan and PDP in 2015 without belonging to a party?

    “As events unfold, you will see whether CNM will work or not. It is not my job to tell you who has subscribed to the CNM or not, but you are sufficiently experienced enough to see the signs.

    “But I am sure Nigerians will buy into it. What has the coalition said it wants to do which is at variance with what Nigerians want.

    “Will it be better if ex-President Obasanjo had kept quiet? If Obasanjo had not talked, will this government be able to hold 2019 elections when Nigerians are being slaughtered in their country?”

    He debunked insinuations that it was late in the day to form a coalition against President Muhammadu Buhari and the APC.

    The CNM spokesman added: “The way the APC came about was novel. Now, we have the experience of the APC to work with. Secondly, APC was also going to be a bit difficult to put together, it was always going to task those who were putting it together.

    “Elections are still going to hold next year, do not assume that the CNM will not make impact. From experience, five months in politics is still a very long time.

    Osuntokun said the CNM would not employ violence in effecting change in 2019.

    He said: “As dissatisfied, we are with the system, nobody wants violence. We will never promote violence or chaos.”

    On the next step for CNM, Osuntokun said: “We are going on zonal trip this week. There will be zonal launching of CNM by Obasanjo himself.

    “We will also get our national officers soon. If we have officers at this stage, it will look like a kind of imposition. The ex-National Chairman of PDP, Sen. Ahmadu Ali, is just chairing the meetings of CNM.”

    Osuntokun confirmed that the CNM might work with willing parties and groups.

    He said: “Of course, we are approaching PDP informally, we are approaching everybody. At the end of the day, we know that Nigerians will do what is in their best interest.”

     

  • Obasanjo to perform refinery’s groundbreaking

    Obasanjo to perform refinery’s groundbreaking

    Bayelsa State government has chosen ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo to inaugurate Governor Seriake Dickson’s projects.

    Speaking at the weekend in Yenagoa at a news briefing, the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Mr. Kamela Okara, said the former President would be involved in the groundbreaking of a private refinery.

    He said an event tagged: “An hour with former President Olusegun Obasanjo”, had been arranged at the Ijaw National Academy (INA) to enable students tap from Obasanjo’s wealth of experience.

    Okara said the ex-President would be involved in inaugurating health projects, such as Bayelsa Specialist Hospital, drug mart, diagnostics centre and others.

    He said the link road to Glory Land Drive in Igbogene, Yenagoa, would be inaugurated by the former President and renamed Olusegun Obasanjo Drive.

    Okara, who said projects had been lined up for inauguration, added that Obasanjo would inaugurate Bayelsa 500 pond aquaculture village.

    The SSG, who was accompanied by government officials, including the Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, said the former President would be honoured with command performance.

    He said the government had reinforced its belief in restructuring by arranging for a lecture on the burning issue to be delivered by a patriot and retired General, Alani Akinrinade.

    “As you know, for a governor who believes in a positive future for Nigeria, we know that restructuring is at the heart of what needs to happen for a new Nigeria.

    “So part of what we’re doing is organising a public lecture and the guest speaker will be retired General Alani Akinrinade, a well-known patriot.

    “We’re going to have a panel discussion, which will involve eminent Nigerians. It will be a surprise. It will be a very rich and fulfilling panel discussion that we’ll have after the lecture,” Okara said.

    He listed other projects to be inaugurated as the Pavilion at Oxbow Lake, 12 power projects across the state, projects at the popular St. Jude Girls Secondary School, police mess and doctors’ quarters at the 500-bed hospital.

    Others are secretariat annex, cultural boulevard, which he said were fulfilments of the promises made by the governor.

    The SSG said: “We want the media to know that what we are doing is not a jamboree. The 6th anniversary of the Restoration Government is dear to us as a government because in the coming weeks, we will inaugurate projects.

    “To us as a government, these projects that will be inaugurated are essential to our development. They have impact on the lives of our people. It is the reason we’re in government, to serve our people.

    “Some of the projects are in use, but we’re inaugurating them because of our attitude here that projects should be inaugurated.”

  • Between Obasanjo and Babangida

    Between Obasanjo and Babangida

    Before the open letters by Nigeria’s former leaders, Olusegun Obasanjo and Ibrahim Babangida, it had become public knowledge that the Nigerian project was malfunctioning. Perhaps, the interest their letters generated is on account of the weight they added to raging feelings of distrust, despair and frustration.

    That was not the first time the two spoke out in times of great national apprehension and distress. In the hey days of the Boko Haram insurgency when that terror group bombed churches resulting in the killing of thousands of innocent worshippers, they had issued a joint statement in which they deprecated the situation and called attention to the slide in our national affairs and the urgency to halt it.

    They had said even those they regarded as patriots were fast losing faith in the basis for the unity and continued existence of the country. As it turned out, Boko Haram was soon to change tactics. It began to attack mosques and Muslim places of worship. Soon, their activities were degraded with its murderous onslaughts confined to the northeast.

    It became easy for some to argue that since the terror group kills both Christians and Muslims, it cannot be accused of harbouring a religious agenda against Christians even when the group has never hidden is theocratic mission. The successful outcome of the 2015 elections appeared to have restored some hope that the worst had been averted especially given the threats, tension and bitter altercation it generated.

    But, it was a matter of time for the same malfeasance to rear its ugly head again. This time, we are confronted by the same pass through acts of omission and commission by the incumbent president. Not only has the economy refused to improve, the country is more divided and fragmented along ethnic, religious and other primordial lines than ever before in its history. The life of the Nigerian is worth nothing any more as we have virtually been reduced to a killing field. And in the face of these killings, government’s response has at best remained suspect.

    When the two former leaders came up with their observations as to the direction of the ship of this country, they were only confirming, adding further weight and impetus to prevailing views in the country. Though there was initial controversy over the authenticity of the first letter released by Babangida’s Media Adviser Kassim Afegbua, events have since shown that the views expressed in that letter were actually authorized by his boss.

    Curiously however, the police authorities in their indecent haste were quick to accept the rebuttal by those who apparently felt uncomfortable with the contents of the first one. And in that haste to fault the first letter, they wasted no time in declaring Afegbua a wanted man even without a prior invitation. Ironically, the same police made no effort to get clarifications from Babangida but quickly presumed the rebuttal was the right one to accept. Whatever led them to that position remains largely cloudy.

    As events turned out, they were wrong in their presumptions as Babangida in an interview with a national daily, stood by all the contents of the release by Afegbua. The conduct of the police was not entirely surprising. It portrayed it jittery of the contents of the letter especially coming soon after the damning assessment by Obasanjo. For that, everything had to be done to discredit the one that is critical of the government.

    But that only exposed the bias of the police on the matter. It showed how overprotective of the government that institution is. There is virtually nothing in that letter that is not in the vortex of public opinion. There is not much in it that is a sharp departure from the views earlier expressed by Obasanjo. If there were gaps in their letters, the Catholic Bishops filled them in their presentations to Buhari during their visit also last week. The only point the police had was the purported rebuttal which it made no effort to establish the authenticity. In matters of such nature, the police ought to have got to the root of the matter before taking position.

    There was no emergency thrown up by the letter to warrant them reacting the way they did. But that is not the only instance in recent times the police reacted to issues of public interest in a manner that does not depict it as an unbiased institution. The running battle between it and the Benue State government is another ponderous case. Even after the Inspector General of Police IG, Ibrahim Idris had apologized to the people of Benue for his careless remark tagging the killings a result of communal clashes, the state governor, Samuel Ortom has again accused him of bias in handling the continued killings in that state.

    Ortom raised an issue the police must address. He alleged that the police usually arrest livestock guards employed by his government to monitor the implementation of the anti-open grazing law, display sophisticated guns purportedly recovered from them and label them armed ‘Benue militia’ in order to sabotage that law. He then contends, if the so-called Benue militia were that armed, how come Fulani herdsmen serially overpowered them slaughtering their people in their homes without resistance?

    That is the big question and until the police offer cogent response to this, it is difficult not to share in the position of the governor. Again, why is it so easy to arrest the so-called Benue militia with sophisticated guns and not the murderous Fulani herdsmen that regularly slaughter children, women and the aged with an air of invincibility? The most sensible thing expected of the police is to arrest those behind the killings in Benue. Parading the so-called Benue militia is no solution to the killings unless we are being made to believe they are responsible for murdering their own people.

    When Ortom therefore accused the police of seeking to change the narrative of the Benue killings, he is on serious point. It was not surprising that this bias has manifested in the indecorous language deployed by force spokesman in labelling the governor a drowning man.  He was right in a way irrespective of the strong exceptions taken by the House of Representatives on his ranting. After all, is Ortom not drowning in the pool of the blood of innocent and helpless people of his state regularly butchered by herdsmen without any help from the same police authorities?

    Beyond these and the dismal rating of Buhari, the two letters struck a common chord on the imperative for generational shift in leadership. They want leadership to be in the hands of a new set of knowledgeable, well-educated and visionary people in tune with the wider dynamics of the 21st century. Obasanjo wants that through his Coalition for Nigerian Movement. Babangida still has confidence in the two-party system. They want new approaches; new paradigms. You cannot toe the same old path and expect anything different. They are right.

    My reading of their positions is not that they want young people just because of their age alone. They want energetic young people of knowledge, experience and skills.  They are rooting for very exceptional and knowledgeable people and not the recycled leadership that has failed to serve our collective needs. They are looking for what Plato aptly tagged ‘philosopher kings’.

    But they failed to lead us into how such leadership will emerge given the very complicated power equation in this country. They ought to have gone further to factor the role of ethnicity and primordial proclivities in the emergence of such leaders. These are the irreducible decimals that shape and direct the pattern of political recruitment. Babangida came close to it when he talked of systemic and structural re-engineering. State police and ranching for herdsmen as canvassed by Osinbajo are only an infinitesimal symptom of the larger systemic dissonance. The resolution of all these dysfunctions should presage generational shift in leadership for it to endure.

  • Obasanjo, His Obasanjo

    At a time like this, the counsel is appropriate: Concentrate on the message, and leave the messenger safely alone. So, I will resist the temptation to lay into an irretrievably flawed character and concentrate on the value of the message.

    For Obasanjo, whether with his spouses, children, peers or those who occupy or aspire to the offices he once held, it is a contest in which there must be one winner: Obasanjo. And not just Obasanjo, but Olusegun Obasanjo. One cannot but ruefully retrospect that if he somehow achieved his ambition of becoming the UN Secretary General, perhaps the country would have been rid of his megalomania and messianic  hypocrisy, and unbundled him on the world stage; for he is an actor who craves the klieg light long after the ovation is over.

    Obasanjo, as he admitted in the letter, had advertised Buhari’s so-called weaknesses on the economy and foreign relations to no end. And, yes, Buhari may be weak in those areas, but there are certainly men of quality and vision helping out in those areas. Buhari’s economic team, though understated and often maligned is proving to be one of the most effective yet in the nation’s history.

    The failing of past governments has been clear. From a rural agricultural base at independence, the country transformed to an import-dependent economy upon the discovery of oil at the turn of the decade. Instead of growing our agricultural base and using the new wealth from oil to transform to a globally-competitive human capital and industrialized giant that we could be, we abandoned even the rudimentary agriculture that had served us very well until then and engaged in the export of crude oil for the personal aggrandizement of the new men in power and their collaborators, home and abroad.

    This was the challenge that faced the country for several decades until the inception of this democracy in 1999, and which Obasanjo as president couldn’t do much to reverse unfortunately. So, when Obasanjo talks of ‘round-tripping’ in the inner circles of the present government, one wonders what exactly he means. In fact, my enquiry did not yield much apart from the mild rebuke: “You know Obasanjo knows everything!”

    But on reflection, the retired General must have had the humungous sums in local and foreign currencies found in the NIA vaults and in places where they should not be in mind. What he accuses the Buhari government of however has indeed been the business of every past government, and that it is much in the public domain these days means that the present one is serious about eradicating it or at least reducing it to its barest minimum.

    If anyone, more so Obasanjo who knows the inner workings of government wants to be fair, what is on display, whether with the former SGF Babachir Lawal, NIA’s Oke and now Maina’s cases, is deep-rooted systemic rot which needs painstaking and proper interrogation to get to the root. Especially in the Maina case, he is certainly not alone, but in fact represents a racket that has been at the bottom of the many failed civil service reforms. A purported sack cannot be enough, no matter how quickly executed. Obasanjo, I recall, was part of the Murtala Mohammed’s experiment, full of fury and decisiveness, which many later adjudged to be a failure, and in fact, having the opposite effect of promoting the malaise that it sought to cure in the first place.

    Buhari lived through it all. And that is why when he made his recent statement about taking his time to come to decisions and having to live with his conscience thereafter. I thought that instead of the insults he got, what he deserved was praise. This is indeed our country, and we have seen it all. The good, and the mostly bad times!

    Which makes one to ask: do we really know the nuances of the system of government we have chosen and the change we voted for? Sadly, even Obasanjo betrayed his ignorance of both in his recent communication. Like God’s mills, the mills of democracy grind slowly, but unlike God’s mills, they hardly grind exceedingly well. This is the bitter truth we must tell ourselves. I remember many commentators judging Obasanjo’s first term (1999-2003) as having achieved very little. In fact, the most that could be pointed to was the reforms in the military and the liberalization of the communication sector. Of course, a lot more was cooking on the economic front, like the debt-forgiveness negotiations which benefit was reaped in his second term.

    Change, by its very nature, is like birth pangs of a woman. It comes with excruciating pains and dislocations. It can be slow and gradual too. As an individual, I am perhaps one of the worst affected. In my middle years and with no gainful employment, apart from a part-time job, I admonish myself and millions of others in my shoes that we may be hungry now, but we must never fall for the trap of anger. Anger is a negative emotion which does not yield anything good and lasting. What the present situation of the country requires is a deep introspection and to understand that every great nation went through these painful birth pangs before setting on the path of irrevocable development. The often cited Lee Kwan Yew’s Singapore endured his benevolent dictatorship for 15 years before the breakthrough came; Gorbachev’s USSR swallowed the bile of Glasnost and Perestroika and the dismantling of the anachronistic USSR to break forth in the 15 wonders of freedom and progress that it has become today.

    The journey that the immediate past government and the PDP as the party then in power was taking us on, could only have arrived at one destination: Golgotha! Obasanjo cannot completely absolve himself of blame from this outcome. As soon as he took the reins of office, he re-created the PDP that brought him to power in his own image. The organs of the party which are supposed to facilitate a robust generation and processing of government policy were discountenanced and completely discarded. The few like the present agriculture minister, Audu Ogbeh who had the presence of mind to caution were humiliated and thrown out. Under who did Chris Uba’s Anambra, Zaki-Biam and Odi massacres occur? Under whom did EFCC become a vindictive machine for achieving narrow and little political ends, despite the best efforts of the pioneer leadership of the outfit?

    All this go to show that the problems we have in our polity, go beyond strong men. We need institutional and structural reforms. I am glad that stakeholders including the ruling APC which committee just submitted its report continue to interrogate the issue. Some of the lapses observed so far under the present Buhari administration should have proved conclusively to all doubters, if there are still any, that our country is in urgent need of real reforms. And unlike, the maddening crowd out there, that is not something to take lightly or without deep contemplation. That is why again, instead of crucifying President Buhari for calling for more reflection on the subject in his New Year message to the country, we ought to take a step back and reflect. He may not be necessarily averse to restructuring like many career reformists would have us believe. His might rather just be a caution that we cannot run away from the reality that men run, and processes would be built on, whatever structure we eventually come up with. There is some merit in the argument that perhaps our problem is not structural alone, but also men and attitude! And one does not cure the other.

     

    • Owaiye is a public affairs analyst.