Tag: Obasanjo

  • Obasanjo, Jonathan, Alban, others for CGIAR science week

    Obasanjo, Jonathan, Alban, others for CGIAR science week

    The United Nations and CGIAR have held a significant conference at the UN headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya, themed “Science Week” from April 8 to 12, 2025. 

    This event brought together leading scientists, decision-makers, and prominent figures from around the globe, including the former president of Nigeria, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan. 

    The conference aimed to address urgent global challenges in agriculture, climate, and health, fostering collaboration and innovation to secure sustainable food systems.

    The gathering was particularly timely, as the world faces unprecedented challenges in food security and environmental sustainability. With the global population projected to reach nearly 10 billion by 2050, the demand for food is expected to increase significantly. 

    The Science Week conference serves as a platform for experts to share research findings, best practices, and technological advancements that can lead to more efficient food production systems.

    Among the distinguished attendees was Dr. Emem Alban, a renowned crop scientist and agribusiness entrepreneur. She has consistently demonstrated her commitment to advancing agricultural practices and enhancing food security through innovative research and sustainable methods. 

    Dr. Alban has been involved in various projects that focus on developing resilient crop varieties, improving soil health, and promoting sustainable farming practices that empower local communities.

    Her participation in the Science Week provided her with a unique opportunity to connect with other experts and organizations, such as the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), and the World Food Programme, facilitating valuable exchanges of ideas and potential partnerships. These interactions are crucial for fostering collaborative research efforts and mobilizing resources to tackle pressing agricultural challenges.

    Participants at the conference explored innovative financing models, public-private partnerships, and policy frameworks that can support the transition to sustainable agriculture. The dialogue also focused on the role of technology, such as precision agriculture and biotechnology, in increasing crop yields and reducing waste.

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    Dr. Alban’s involvement in these discussions not only reflects her expertise but also her dedication to making a lasting impact in the agribusiness sector. 

    She actively engaged in panels and workshops, sharing insights from her own research and experiences. As a delegate, she is poised to leverage the insights gained from this event to further her initiatives, ultimately contributing to a more sustainable and resilient agricultural future.

    In conclusion, the Science Week conference at the UN headquarters in Nairobi represented a significant step forward in addressing global challenges in agriculture, climate, and health. 

    The collaboration between the United Nations, CGIAR, and various stakeholders highlights the importance of science and innovation in creating sustainable food systems. As leaders like Dr. Alban continue to champion these efforts, the potential for transformative change in the agribusiness sector remains strong, paving the way for a more food-secure and environmentally sustainable future.

  • Obasanjo, Otedola, Hamzat for Olivet Baptist High School 80th anniversary

    Obasanjo, Otedola, Hamzat for Olivet Baptist High School 80th anniversary

    Eminent persons, including former President Olusegun Obasanjo, business mogul Femi Otedola, Lagos State Deputy Governor Obafemi Hamzat and former Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose are expected to grace Olivet Baptist High School National Old Students Association’s three-day celebration to commemorate the school’s 80th anniversary from April 10 to 12.

    Obasanjo is expected as the chairman of the fundraising and book launch event billed for Saturday at the school hall in Oyo town.

    The 2-in-1 event is aimed at rallying alumni worldwide for legacy projects to support the structural and technological development of Olivet Heights.

    It will also witness the launch of Olivet book compendium titled: ‘’Olivet’s 8 Decades Journey and Inspiring the Future.”

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    Other personalities expected at the fundraising event are former Vice Chancellor, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Prof. Wande Abimbola and Akeem Adeyemi. The Royal Father of the day is the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Abimbola Owoade.

    Chairman of the Anniversary Central Planning Committee, Dr Olusegun Ahmadu, said the old students’ mission for the fundraising initiative was to drive renewal of critical educational and infrastructural projects that would ensure the current students enjoyed a superior learning experience. 

    He said: “The National Old Students Association has, from time to time, undertaken projects designed to preserve the rich history of the school and burnish its enduring impact as an iconic educational institution. In continuation of this mission, the 80th anniversary fundraising will be further channelled towards restoring and enhancing the glory of the school.”

    Ahmadu called on old students home and abroad to see the school’s 80th anniversary milestone as an opportunity for all to come together to relive old times, give back generously and chart an impactful future for their alma mater.

    Located in Oyo town, Olivet Baptist High School, formerly Baptist Boys’ High School, was founded by the American International Mission Board on January 29, 1945 and affiliated with the Nigerian Baptist Convention. As one of the nation’s iconic public secondary schools, it has remained a beacon of learning, growth and community transformation, nurturing generations of thinkers, leaders and visionaries.

  • Presidency: Obasanjo’s position on Rivers emergency hypocritical

    Presidency: Obasanjo’s position on Rivers emergency hypocritical

    The Presidency yesterday chided former President Olusegun Obasanjo for criticising President Bola Ahmed Tinubu over the declaration of emergency rule in Rivers State.

    It accused the former leader of hypocrisy and  poor democratic legacy, urging him to purge himself from deceit.

    Special Assistant to the President on Social Media, Dada Olusegun, who reflected on Obasanjo’s tenure, highlighted many undemocratic actions of his administration between 1999 and 2007.

    “Obasanjo is trying every trick possible to whitewash his bad democratic records by attempting to exonerate himself from blame for how Nigeria’s democracy has fared,” Olusegun said in a post on his verified X handle.

    The former president, who spoke at the colloquium marking the 60th birthday of Emeka Ihedioha, had condemned Tinubu’s decision to suspend Governor Siminalayi Fubara, Deputy Governor Ngozi Odu, and members of the House of Assembly, warning that “democracy is dying in Nigeria.”

    Olusegun flayed Obasanjo over his remarks, recalling instances where the former leader allegedly undermined democracy.

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    He cited Obasanjo’s involvement in the controversial removal of opposition governors, interference in legislative processes, and an  attempt to extend his tenure beyond the constitutional limit.

    “This is the same OBJ that turned himself into a kingmaker and a demigod in his second term in office. Anybody who disagreed with him became prey,” Olusegun added.

    The presidential aide recalled Obasanjo’s role in the controversial 2003 elections, where Alliance for Democracy (AD) governors were rigged out of office, leaving only former Governor Tinubu of Lagos State as the last man standing

    Olusegun also accused Obasanjo of masterminding unconstitutional impeachments, recalling how former governors of Anambra, Ekiti, Plateau, Oyo, and Bayelsa states were removed through “kangaroo impeachments,” most of which were later overturned by the courts.

    He recalled the infamous abduction of former Anambra State Governor Chris Ngige, who was  forced to sign a resignation letter at gunpoint by senior security operatives under Obasanjo’s watch.

    “This is the same OBJ who unilaterally declared his Vice President’s seat vacant over a corruption indictment and even declared unnecessary public holidays just to prevent courts from ruling on Atiku’s legal challenge,” Olusegun said.

    He also recalled how the former president imposed a state of emergency in Plateau and Ekiti states and suspended the governors and the Houses of  Assembly without directly accusing them of any wrongdoing.

    “In Obasanjo’s case, his reason for suspending Joshua Dariye and the Plateau legislature was failure to end violence between Muslim and Christian communities.

    “He didn’t accuse the Assembly of anything. Yet, he suspended them. Now he’s criticising Tinubu for suspending those who are the direct actors in the Rivers crisis,” Olusegun fumed.

    The presidential aide described Obasanjo as “the grandfather of hypocrisy in Nigeria,” insisting that he lacks the moral standing to lecture the current administration on democracy.

    But the decision to declare the emergency rule in the Southsouth state gained more support, with the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State hailing the president for saving the state from anarchy.

    To resolve the conflict that heralded the governor’s suspension, the people of Ikwerre called for the setting up of a peace committee to reconcile Fubara and his former leader, Nyesom Wike, Minister of Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    Ikwerre leaders urge reconciliation

    The umbrella body of the Ikwerre ethnic nationality, Ikwerre People’s Congress (IPC) Worldwide,  appealed to President Tinubu to set up a committee to reconcile the governor and the minister.

    The group said in a statement by its Chairman, Livingstone Wechie;  Vice-Chairman, Ihunwo Obi-Wali and Secretary-General, Stanley Nworgu, that the committee should be made up of  eminent leaders and stakeholders.

    “This is with a view to immediately restore the democratic order in Rivers state in the best interest of Nigeria and for the better legacy of President Bola Tinubu,” it added.

    The group expressed concern over said the suspension of democratic structures, saying it had given the state a bad image.

    It added:  “ Mr. President, the message you sent has been passed through your intervention but Rivers people must not suffer a shortlived democracy for any reason because we have paid our dues despite this political imbroglio.

    “ We believe that Mr. President is motivated by the aspiration of Nigerians on this matter and that he is committed to take steps to solve than escalate the matter. It is doubtless that we did not bargain for this unfortunate development and the innocent populace in Rivers should not be punished for it as in this circumstance.

    “Whereas as a people we are unhappy with the unwarranted political feud among the two sides, Ikwerre people are worried about the false image now created about our dear state which has now led to serious capital flights, fears of uncertainty among citizens, loss of investors confidence among others.

    “Rivers people are very desperate to have their democratic rights restored so they can enjoy the liberty of the democracy the voted for that should be accountable to the masses. All we want is a government we can call our own”.

    ‘Tinubu averted anarchy’

    Rivers APC Chairman Sir Tony Okocha said the emergency rule was timely, stressing that it saved the Niger Delta state from political anarchy.

    He exonerated Wike from any complicity complicity crisis, insisting that the minister had been on the path of peace with the suspended governor.

    He berated the critics of President’s proclamation for subjectivity, recalling that before the emergency rule, many non-state actors were brandishing sophisticated weapons anf threatening the peace of the  state.

    He recalled President Tinubu’s efforts at mediating between the governor and the Assembly before the emergency rule.

    Okocha disagreed with the position of former President  Goodluck Jonathan on the state  of emergency, arguing that he closed his eyes and failed to react to many infractions of Fubara in the past.

    He noted that the Supreme Court judgment had ruled that there was no government in the state.

    Okocha said: “The governor jettisoned 27 lawmakers and was dealing with three and withhold the finances of the Assembly,  which was abnormal.

    “Pulling down the Assembly under the guise of renovating it following structural defect without a prior notice was an afront on democracy.

    “Before the declaration of the emergency, Rivers was heading towards anarchy as non-state actors were seen brandishing sophisticated weapons, uttering statements that tend to lead to lawlessness.”

    The APC chairman also disagreed with the positions of former Presidents Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan on the isdue, saying that as former leaders, they should know better.

    He stressed: “President Jonathan had been president. General Obasanjo had been president. And they knew that on their table every day is what they call security reports. So one wonders how they will jump into the matter, not recognizing or realizing that in their time they also had security reports.”

    He also faulted the position of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), saying the body failed to decry the impunity in Rivers.

    Okocha stressed:  “I don’t want to take on individuals, but I hear the NBA have come out to say, oh, it’s an affront on democracy and all that. When the Assembly complex was pulled down, when it was bombed and the next other day, 11 equipments were deployed to the assembly to bring it down, NBA was alive.

    “But we didn’t hear anything from them. So one wonders why this plenty talk. It’s good that they are approaching the court, and so we should allow the Supreme Court to decide on the actions of Mr. President.

    “Security and intelligence has been beefed up in Rivers since the state of emergency was declared in the state. With the emergency declared, people like us who are in the opposition in the state could now move around.”

  • Presidency slams Obasanjo over comments on Rivers Emergency Rule

    Presidency slams Obasanjo over comments on Rivers Emergency Rule

    The Presidency has strongly rebuffed former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s criticism of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s recent declaration of Emergency Rule in Rivers State

    It accused the former leader of hypocrisy and a poor democratic legacy.

    Special Assistant to the President on Social Media, Dada Olusegun, took a retrospective look at Obasanjo’s tenure, highlighting a series of alleged undemocratic actions carried out under his administration between 1999 and 2007.

    “Obasanjo is trying every trick possible to whitewash his bad democratic records by attempting to exonerate himself from blame for how Nigeria’s democracy has fared,” Olusegun said in a post on his verified X handle Wednesday evening.

    The former President, while speaking at the Ihedioha Colloquium, condemned Tinubu’s decision to suspend Governor Siminalayi Fubara, Deputy Governor Ngozi Odu, and all members of the Rivers Assembly, warning that “democracy is dying in Nigeria.”

    Olusegun, however, countered Obasanjo’s remarks, recalling instances where the former leader allegedly undermined democracy. 

    He cited Obasanjo’s involvement in the controversial removal of opposition Governors, interference in legislative processes and an alleged attempt to extend his tenure beyond the constitutional limit.

    “This is the same OBJ that turned himself into a kingmaker and a demigod in his second term in office. Anybody who disagreed with him became prey,” Olusegun alleged.

    He pointed to Obasanjo’s role in the controversial 2003 elections, where several opposition Governors from the defunct Alliance for Democracy (AD) were allegedly rigged out of office, leaving only Lagos State under then-Governor Bola Tinubu.

    Olusegun also accused Obasanjo of masterminding unconstitutional impeachments, recalling how sitting governors in Anambra, Ekiti, Plateau, Oyo, and Bayelsa states were removed through what he described as “kangaroo impeachments,” most of which were later overturned by the courts.

    He further referenced the infamous abduction of former Anambra Governor Chris Ngige, who was allegedly forced to sign a resignation letter at gunpoint by senior security operatives under Obasanjo’s watch.

    “This is the same OBJ who unilaterally declared his Vice President’s seat vacant over a corruption indictment and even declared unnecessary public holidays just to prevent courts from ruling on Atiku’s legal challenge,” Olusegun stated.

    Turning to Obasanjo’s history with emergency rule, Olusegun recalled how the former President imposed a state of emergency in Plateau and Ekiti States, suspending the Governors and State assemblies without directly accusing them of any wrongdoing.

    “In Obasanjo’s case, his reason for suspending Joshua Dariye and the Plateau legislature was failure to end violence between Muslim and Christian communities. 

    “He didn’t accuse the assembly of anything, yet he suspended them. Now he’s criticizing Tinubu for suspending those who are the direct actors in the Rivers crisis,” Olusegun argued.

    The presidential aide concluded by labeling Obasanjo as “the grandfather of hypocrisy in Nigeria,” insisting that the former leader lacked the moral standing to lecture the current administration on democracy.

  • Africa needs democracy that delivers to all- Obasanjo

    Africa needs democracy that delivers to all- Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo says Africa needs a democracy of its own context that delivers to all people.

    Obasanjo said this on Monday in Abuja, while speaking at a Colloquium to mark the 60th birthday of former Imo Governor, Emeka Ihedioha.

    He said that to sustain democracy in the continent, Africa needed one that delivers to all people, not to few section.

    He noted that the Greek model of democracy, ensured that all citizens participated directly in their affairs, adding that what was praticable now was a representative system, that does not taken care of everybody.

    He added that before the colonial rule, Africa practiced democracy, a system of government which attended to the needs of her people.

    Obasanjo lamented that in Africa, democracy was becoming a system of government by a small number of people over a large population.

    “Is democracy failing in Africa? Are we talking of democracy or western liberal democracy?

    “Abraham Lincoln describes it as a government of the people, by the people and for the people. But what do we have today?

    “The Greek democracy affects everyone, but democracy has now become representative democracy and it doesn’t taken care of everyone.

    “Democracy in Africa has failed because it’s not African, it doesn’t have our culture and way of lives.

    “Democracy is dying in Africa and to save it, it should be made in the context of Africa,” Obasanjo said.

    Similarly, the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto, Bishop Hassan Kukah, described democracy in Africa as a work in progress.

    “We Africans inherited a system that’s not ours, but we can’t say its not relevant to us.

    “There are differences between democracy in Asia and that of Africa. What do you make of the tenets of democracy in Africa?

    Kukah noted that democracy was about equity and justice, adding that there must also be a mechanism for measuring the growth of democracy.

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    “The democratisation of development leads to the development of democracy. That is if you decide to equitably democratise development, and not take every institution, university, medical school whatever to your village and if all the roads are done

    “If we do not have a mechanism by which we are measuring our growth, our chase for a democratic society becomes an empty chase.

    “Democracy and its principle are endless contestation of ideas, opportunity and privileges. Those who are privileged want to hold on to their privileges and those who are victims want to insist that life can be better,” Kukah said.

    In the same vein, Peter Obi, the Labour Party Presidential Candidate in the 2023 Presidential election, advised Nigeria to imbibe the Indonesian democracy, which endures a proportional representation system of government.

    Also, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, said that Nigeria could get rid of the crises which impede her development, through stable democratic governance.

    Anyaoku said that Africa and Nigeria in particular, have the responsibility to get a stable democracy and change the Eurocentric narrative.

    “True federalism is the answer to the management of national issues. The recent coup in Mali, Niger tend to take us back.

    “The nature of our politics and the conduct of our politicians is another problem of our democracy. They have become instruments of capturing political power,” he said.

    In his remarks, Ihedioha commended the guests for celebrating him at 60.

    He urged Nigerians to continue to defend the country’s democracy.

    According to him, my father told me that the most expensive habit is having friends. I have lived my life pursuing the cause for democracy.

    “We should all rise to defend democracy. I urge all men to always speak truth to power and protect democracy.

    “There’s life after money. I will remain who I am. For me and democracy, it is till God do us apart,” Ihedioha said.

    (NAN)

  • Obasanjo, Sowore and misguided revolutionaries

    Obasanjo, Sowore and misguided revolutionaries

    In his book, Nigeria: Past and Future, former president Olusegun Obasanjo continues his pastime of inciting the youth to rebellion. Since the last presidential election, he has made it his sing-song to indirectly call for a revolution, pretending that circumstances and hardship would inevitably lead to more aggressive and assertive action by frustrated and disenchanted Nigerian youth. In his new book, he says: “We are currently sitting on a ticking time bomb partly because of the system we practise, how corruptly we practise it, and how exclusively we practise it with impunity, callousness, brazen outrage and total disregard for any element of righteousness, integrity, accountability, sensitivity, compassion, inclusiveness and the fear of God. If the incumbent leaders do not shape up and satisfy the yearnings and demands of their people, especially the youths, who are disappointed, dissatisfied, bitter, hungry, angry, unemployed and disempowered, then the future is indeed very bleak, with no light at the end of the tunnel.”

    Then he adds: “These young people watch helplessly as their leaders tell them blatant lies unabashedly, while continuing their orgies of vulgar and ostentatious lifestyles rather than investing the money from the nation’s commonwealth in SMEs to create jobs and generate wealth. Should we have the misfortune of pushing these young people to the point of crossing the Rubicon, the country will pay a very high cost because a chain of events will be unleashed, the end of which no one can predict… I am not calling for violent change, but it will become a reality if we continue on the present trajectory.” The sanctimonious Chief Obasanjo is too clever by half. He identifies the country’s political system as a predisposing factor for the revolution he has seemed to hanker after since he lost the argument and the influence he loved to wield over Nigerian leaders. Yet, he operated the same ‘despicable’ system for eight years, and did not even remember to advocate its reform when he infamously lobbied for a third term. But, today, he is wise after the event.

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    Last year, he began calling for political reform that would create an amalgam of African or indigenous political system different from either the parliamentary or presidential system. No one gave him a hearing, for they recalled how a while ago he blamed the practitioners of the system for the inoperability of the system, suggesting that no matter how beautiful a system, the operatives’ insular and ossified worldview would make any system inoperable. In his new book, it was, therefore, not surprising that he frontally blames the system for the country’s malaise and adds that political leaders by their orientation have worsened the crisis. Chief Obasanjo is not dishonest about his panaceas. After the 2023 presidential election, and unwilling to learn from Nigeria’s recent history, he called for the cancellation of the results that were yet to be fully released. Failing that, he called for insurrection to stymie the entire electoral process. He desperately longed for a revolution. But he is not the only one.

    Days ago, on Channels Television, activist and founder of Sahara Reporters, Omoyele Sowore, also called for a revolution, employing sarcasm to deliver his message. Insisting that what was taking place in Rivers would make Nigerians rise against poor leadership and bad governance, he said that the proclamation of a state of emergency in Rivers would spur the revolution he dreamt about. But just in case anyone doubted his bona fides, he described himself as a proponent of justice, not an anarchist. According to him, “To be clear, I am not here to defend godfather and son. I don’t care about them. I hope they destroy themselves. I am happy because maybe this is going to force Nigerians across the country to wake up. They have been too complicit and docile as a result of cowardice. It will force Nigerians to complete the 30 days challenge and move on to the stage where it will be complete revolt. That is not me saying I love anarchy but love Justice.” That was of course not the first time he would campaign for revolution. His activism in the past few years has centred on ‘revolution now’.

    Chief Obasanjo and Mr Sowore are just archetypes of the many highly-placed Nigerians who romanticise revolution. Their fascination with revolution will likely continue for a fairly long time, as long as social contradictions exist. They imagine that revolutions happen to others, that their course can always be managed, and their outcome predictable and guaranteed. It is not clear how they read their history, or whether they took the trouble at all of perusing any history book. Had they made time to study History, particularly those of them eager to either influence Nigerian politics or determine who rules, they would be less dogmatic. They do not look like they are willing to moderate their revolutionary talk until it happens, if at all it ever happens. But as long as there is hardship, as long as discord persists among the ruling class especially, the revolutionaries will continue to shout themselves hoarse. They will completely ignore lessons from the French, Russian, Cuban, Italian revolutions, among many others.

    Despite his noise, Mr Sowore is incapable of deep reflections, as he is often led by emotions, bitterness and self-importance. But Chief Obasanjo is supposed to be significantly informed about national and global affairs. That he has chosen to remain superficial is a reflection of his personality flaw, the jaded leitmotif of his worldview and books. Added to the fact that he is incapable of appreciating insults, and because he thinks he is the sun around which everything revolves, there is nothing any book on world revolutions or counsel from experts on revolutions can tell him to sober him up and be less sanguinary about his political interventions. He is approximately 92 years old. If age has not tempered his hysteria, nothing ever will. For Mr Sowore, he appears sensible enough to know that his piffle about revolution does not stand a cat in hell’s chance of coming to reality except nature, not the social contradictions he parrots, plays a joker on Nigeria.

  • Fubara denies reports of PANDEF, Obasanjo’s visits

    Fubara denies reports of PANDEF, Obasanjo’s visits

    The Rivers State Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, has denied viral reports that a delegation of the Pan-Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF) and former President Olusegun Obasanjo visited him in Government House at the weekend.

    A statement signed by Fubara’s Chief Press Secretary (CPS), Nelson Chukwudi, said there was a need to debunk the fake news to avoid creating erroneous impressions on the minds of gullible and unsuspecting members of the public.

    The statement said: “For that reason, let it be clarified that there was no such visit by any delegation of PANDEF to Governor Fubara on the said date, neither did Chief Obasanjo visit him as claimed by our detractors. 

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    “So, whatever the purveyors of the vexatious narratives are pushing on social media are only the imagination of enemies of the State, who do not want peace, good governance and even development that the present administration has been working hard to bequeath to the present and future generations. 

    “The governor has made it abundantly clear that he would comply and implement to the fullest the judgment of the Supreme Court on the political crisis in the state.  

    “He has already initiated processes to ensure that orders of the Apex Court are implemented, but the Rivers State House of Assembly has refused to cooperate with the Governor to facilitate the resolution of all issues raised by the Court. 

    “As stated earlier, the governor is ready any day, any time to do the needful to ensure the resolution of the issues and smooth functioning of all arms of government in the State.”

  • Obasanjo delivers another sucker punch

    Obasanjo delivers another sucker punch

    Ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo’s sucker-punch book, the latest in his often one-sided and provocative books, must have caught his victims off-guard. The former president’s books are seldom about him, except when they are delivered in panegyrics, but all about his enemies, opponents, and anyone he happens to take a dislike to. Presented at his 88th birthday event, a birthday some notable personalities insisted probably took place more than four years ago in a time warp, seeing that he is actually about 92, the book excoriates a number of public personalities and leading politicians. Without those exposed personalities constituting the raison d’être of his books, Chief Obasanjo would make heavy weather of his angry and menacing memoires.

    In the book, one of the two he presented on his birthday, newspapers indicated he reserved the most potent bile for both former president Muhammadu Buhari and his man Friday, Abubakar Malami, former Justice minister and Attorney General. Of President Buhari, Chief Obasanjo writes: “The most atrocious waste, enthronement of corruption and discouragement of officials fighting corruption took place under the watch of President Buhari and the devil’s workshop, his Attorney General, Abubakar Malami…Words are cheap and what needed to be done was left undone during Buhari’s civil administration regime from 2015 to 2023, the worst civil administration regime so far in Nigerian history…Maybe those ideas and thoughts were not his; he just came to read them as  written for him.” It is a merciless and unflinching putdown. But he says still worse things about the former president.

    And of Mr Malami, whom he nicknames or puns as Buhari’s ‘devil’s workshop’, he has this to say: “It was all part of Malami’s financial shenanigans and he played many of such to his advantage. His principal concurred, condoned, turned a blind eye and a deaf ear and paid lip service to fight corruption while cohabitating comfortably with corruption in multifarious ways…I was made to understand that some officials of the EFCC were terribly disappointed, discouraged, downcast and lost the pep in doing their work of fighting corruption as a result of this government action.” These are direct and actionable allegations, but Chief Obasanjo has never let public or legal opinion deter him. The former Justice minister, however, insisted he had not read the book, and would thus need some time to study it. He even doubted that anyone, not to talk of a former president, would pen those disgraceful allegations. He obviously seems to doubt the fecundity of Chief Obasanjo.

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    In effect, neither the Buhari crowd nor the Malami people have yet prepared themselves to respond to Chief Obasanjo’s sanctimonious rage. But they will. They will give their own thoughts after painstakingly studying the book so as not to miss anything of value to the case they might want to make against the former president. It is suspected that the responders will be thorough. They will squirm at some of the allegations the former president has leveled against them, and will be seriously upset that he is so merciless and so condescending; but they will find themselves compelled to rationally and convincingly refute the allegations. That task will not be easy, especially for Mr Malami whose reputation precedes him. But for President Buhari, whom Chief Obasanjo lampoons freely  in general and circumstantial terms, he can afford to be also vague and scurrilous.

    What makes the whole exercise gut-wrenching for President Buhari and former Justice minister is that no matter what they say, Chief Obasanjo will remain unflappable and implacable. He has given his enemies a piece of his mind, and has had the joyous pleasure of saying his worse first. He will shrug off whatever anyone might say about him even before getting the chance to read the pesky little book. It is Chief Obasanjo’s custom first to damn his enemies, and sometime his friends too, and to stoically ignore his enemies’ rebuttals, no matter how damaging. Nothing affects Chief Obasanjo, whether it is an allegation or not, no matter how personal or intimate, whether it comes from an outsider or an insider and family member, including his children or wives. The former president thrives on controversies, indeed luxuriates in them, and can’t live or breathe without them, even if you find his superior airs riling to the uttermost.

    In a measured way, President Bola Tinubu’s aides have offered some tentative responses to the scud missiles fired at their boss. The president suffered nothing more than collateral damage in the book, but his aides have been impelled to respond somewhat copiously as a result of what they describe as the serial illogic of the former president and his absolutely tendentious writings. It is not clear whether they have read the book yet, but they have probably depended on newspaper excerpts and interviews and social media offerings to compose their angry refutations. They have reminded Chief Obasanjo of his lethargy during his eight years reign, and the many unfinished projects that probably prompted him to aim for tenure elongation. President Tinubu’s aides, President Buhari’s spokesmen, and Mr Malami himself will soon find out that President Obasanjo is his own chief salesman, and that he has contrived yet again to stay in the limelight by making incendiary statements and allegations. He knows from experience that should he write a tame, lifeless book, no one would pay attention: not newspapers, nor social media, nor his enemies, nor those in office whom he relentless tries to outshine or denigrate. 

  • Corruption: Fresh knocks for Obasanjo over attacks on Tinubu, Buhari

    Corruption: Fresh knocks for Obasanjo over attacks on Tinubu, Buhari

    • Girei: Ex-president least qualified to accuse anyone of corruption

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo yesterday drew flak from across the country following his accusation of the Tinubu and Buhari administrations of corruption.

    Obasanjo in his latest book ‘Nigeria: Past and Future’, claims Buhari’s government oversaw “the most atrocious waste” and that “corruption was at its peak” during his tenure.

     The Tinubu government, according to him, appears to be following the same path of misgovernance and corruption and may surpass Buhari’s record.

    Reacting to the accusation yesterday, a  prominent citizen from  Adamawa State, Senator Abubakar Girei, said the former President lacks the credentials to brand anyone or government corrupt  in view of the level of fraud  that characterised his own government.

    Former Secretary General of the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), Anthony Sani, said it is in Obasanjo’s character to run down every one who has ruled Nigeria except himself.

    National President, Campaign for Democracy (CD), Dr Ifeanyi Odili, said Obasanjo could not have been serious with his claims, and recalled that the Halliburton scandal happened during his own tenure as president, while the Osun State Chairman of Allied Peoples Movement (APM), Hon Adewale Adebayo said Nigeria recorded the worst election in its history under Obasanjo.

    Girei who represented Adamawa Central Senatorial District between 1999 and 2003 when Obasanjo served his first term as president, told The Nation Friday night that he worked with Obasanjo and knew some of his corrupt tendencies first hand.

    Girei said he was an eye witness to how Obasanjo forced the late Evans Enwerem on the Senate as president and how the senators fought back by impeaching his choice and bringing in the late Chuba Okadigbo.

     “Obasanjo is the least qualified of all past presidents to accuse Buhari or anyone of corruption,” Girei said.

    He challenged the former president to tell Nigerians what exactly he did with the N16 billion that his regime claimed to have spent on electricity supply that never was.

     “Buhari might have had some people around him who might not have been so upright, but till today, Buhari remains a man of integrity,” Girei said.

    On Obasanjo’s claims that the Tinubu administration is tending toward corruption, Girei said he did not understand what he meant by that  and stressed  that whatever money the Tinubu administration may have committed to  any project is nothing  compared to the huge sums that Obasanjo spent on projects that yielded little dividends.

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    He said Obasanjo, who did eight years as president and could hardly show any results, should leave Tinubu alone to continue to concentrate on the job for which he was elected.

    Girei further advised Obasanjo to stop seeing himself as a sort of god who knows everything and got everything right as president.

    Provide basis for your allegations, Sani tells Obasanjo

    Sani said the former President is notorious for finding fault with everyone who has ruled Nigeria except himself.

    “When former President Obasanjo alleges that corruption under President Buhari was worse, and that under President Bola Tinubu is also worse than their predecessors, many Nigerians would expect the former President to back up his claims with evidence through some trend analyses,” he said.

    “This is because a former president is not expected to make such allegations with a sleight of hand.

    “What is more, I do not remember a regime in the history of Nigeria which the former President applauded except his own regime. That is why most Nigerians would expect him to make public the basis of his allegations.

    “Yes, many Nigerians believe the N15 trillion for the Lagos-Calabar coastal road is too high precisely because of competing demands on the limited resources. It would therefore be helpful if the former president can provide more information as to why he believes the project is utterly wasteful.”

    Odili to Obasanjo: Halliburton happened under your nose

    Odili said the Halliburton scandal, one of the worst in Nigeria’s history, happened under the nose of Obasanjo and wondered why the former President thinks he is a saint.

    He said: “I don’t believe that Buhari’s administration is the most corrupt government in Nigeria so far. What about Obasanjo’s government? Can he claim he was a saint throughout his government?

    “What about Halliburton? Did it not happen under his administration? What can he point to under Buhari that is a serious corruption case that is so obvious like the Halliburton case? I don’t think we have any such corruption case under Buhari.

    “To me corruption was more prevalent in Obasanjo’s government than Buhari.

    “The Campaign for Democracy of which I am President, we have written him once to leave Nigerian politics. He should stop imposing people. He is old enough to retire.

    “He is so restless. He just wants to be heard all the time. He wants to control the presidency, he wants to control everybody. He cannot continue like that. He should go and rest.”

    Halliburton, one of world’s largest providers of products, services and integrated solutions for oil and gas exploration, development and production, paid bribes to high-ranking Nigerian government officials between 1994 and 2004.

    The controversy generated by the bribery scandals forced  the American company to reach a deal with the US Department of Justice to pay $382 million to settle the bribery case.

     Some individuals were prosecuted and sentenced while others made plea bargains with the American authorities.

    Obasanjo government conducted Nigeria’s worst election, says Adebayo

    Adebayo, a former Chairman of Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC), said apart from conducting the worst election in Nigeria’s history, the Obasanjo government was also neck-deep in “greed, corruption, witch-hunting and most tragic to us, his administration killed Bola Ige, our own.”

    He added: “There is nothing like patriotism in him but individualism. That kind of person should not come out to condemn any leader but bury his head in shame.”

    Adebayo said the Lagos-Calabar Highway which Obasanjo sought to belittle is a game changer for Nigeria and “the best that will connect regions and zones of the country.

    “Obasanjo should stop all this wailing and focus on God to seek for forgiveness for all his misdeeds as a fortunate leader who mismanaged the mandate given to him,” he said.

     Buhari Administration could have done better—Ruwagodia

    Katsina based civil rights activist, Dr Bashir Ruwagodia, said the Buhari Administration could have done better in dealing with corruption.

    The former Special Adviser on Higher Education to Ex-Governor Aminu Bello Masari of Katsina State vouched for Buhari’s own integrity but wondered why his government could not stop or bring to book some of its officials who dipped their hands into the treasury.

    Shittu too

    Communication Minister in Buhari’s first term, Alhaji Adebayo Shittu, shares Ruwagodia’s view on Buhari’s personal integrity, but he said the conduct of some officials of the government left much to be desired.

    His words: “Even though the EFCC has not gone to probe the entire government, we do know that the former Minister of Aviation, Hadi Sirika, is currently facing trial at the behest of EFCC.

    “The crisis with Emefiele’s multidimensional corruption is also a case in point, and I don’t see former President Buhari’s government coming completely clean of it.

    “But I know that Buhari as an individual is absolutely incorruptible. But we do also know that, by his nature, he never exhibited any capacity to ensure that all those people working closely with him did a thorough job in ensuring that they were incorruptible.

    “So, it is a pity. No matter how incorruptible a leader is, once there are cases of you approving projects for ministers and not seeking to ensure that there’s effective supervisions of such ministers, then one will be indirectly responsible also for their misdeeds.”

    “I know that Emefiele had a lot of insiders within the Presidency, who he was using to get a lot of approvals from the President. And that is why we had the gargantuan nature of his misdeeds as Central Bank Governor in the regime of Ex-President Buhari.

    “While I agree that Ex-President Buhari is personally incorruptible, the fact that he never exhibited the capacity to properly supervise people around him, particularly people around his office and so on, then that calls to question his capacity for governance.

     “I can’t recall any specific effort done to re-launch the erstwhile War Against Corruption in Nigeria. I think he performed better as a military head of state in the fight against corruption than he did as a civilian President.

    “The truth now is that he’s no more in government and so the new government must look at the weakness of the Buhari’s administration and put in place new measures to ensure that the hope of Nigerians for better and more incorruptible governance is in place.”

    Don’t use Lagos-Calabar highway when completed, Umahi tells Obasanjo

    Works Minister David Umahi, who is supervising the construction of the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway project, said critics of the project could as well keep off the road on completion.

     “This Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway is one of President Tinubu’s four legacy projects. For those saying it is a waste of resources, they should not use the road when it is completed,” he said in Akure on Thursday.

    “There is nothing wasteful or corrupt about the project, he said, adding that “if someone calls this project fraudulent, they are also calling me a fraud, and I am definitely not.

    “This project has been very transparent, and we continue to engage stakeholders. Every step of the process is in the public domain.

    “The man (Obasanjo), by his age, deserves our respect. But it’s my duty as the Minister of Works to clarify that the project is not wasteful and not corrupt.

    “I read on social media where they said why is it me explaining and not the contractor?

    “What should the contractor say? It is my duty to explain, and I’m eminently qualified by reason of my years in public service and training as a fellow of the Nigerian Society of Engineers to explain the project.

    “I think anybody still criticising the project is waking up to say, ‘How can one man be attributed to this kind of legacy?’ Especially if you had the opportunity to contribute to this kind of investment and didn’t do so.

    “The truth remains that Section One of the Lagos-Calabar, which is 47.7 kilometers, is already about 70 percent completed within one year, and I will be asking those criticising it not to follow the road.

    “They should not follow the road.”

    Speaking at the event, Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa of Ondo reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to the successful completion of federal road projects in the state, emphasising the crucial role of infrastructure in driving economic growth and development.

    Mr Aiyedatiwa also thanked President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for increasing federal presence in Ondo state through numerous infrastructural projects, including the ongoing Ore-Ondo-Akure dualization project, the federal teaching hospital, and the new aviation school, among others.

    “We have not had it this good in recent times with federal projects in our state. Permit me to mention but a few: the Akure-Ore Dual Carriageway, the Akure-Ado Ekiti Dual Carriageway, the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, and the Federal University of Technology Teaching Hospital, Akure.”

    He further stressed the importance of completing these projects, noting their potential to boost economic activities in the state and the South-West region.

    He also appealed for additional federal support to actualise critical projects such as the Ondo Deep Sea Port and efforts to mitigate the Ayetoro sea incursion.

    Mr. Aiyedatiwa assured Mr Umahi that the Ondo State Government would provide an enabling environment for the successful execution of these projects.

    “We are resolute in our commitment to ensuring that these projects are completed for the benefit of our people.

    “In this regard, I pledge the Ondo State Government’s unflinching support and commitment towards their completion.”

  • Obasanjo under fire for downplaying Tinubu’s landmark projects in new memoir

    Obasanjo under fire for downplaying Tinubu’s landmark projects in new memoir

    The Presidency has berated former President Olusegun Obasanjo for downplaying President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s infrastructure projects.

    The Presidency faulted the former President’s criticism of the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, in his new memoir, titled: Nigeria: Past and Future.

    Taking exception to Obasanjo’s upbraiding of the current administration’s landmark projects, the Special Assistant to the President on Social Media, Dada Olusegun, accused him of attempting to rewrite history while neglecting his own failures in office.

    In a post yesterday on his verified X handle, @DOlusegun, the presidential aide noted that Obasanjo’s claims in the memoir would “further relegate his integrity as the leader who opened Nigeria to the cankerworms of corruption”.

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    “By underplaying the importance of the Lagos-Calabar project in his latest book, ex-President Obasanjo has not only affirmed to those who witnessed his administration’s several failures to address the needs of the country when he had the opportunity, but he has also put in written form a position which generations to come will indeed question,” Olusegun wrote.

    The presidential aide accused Obasanjo of failing to deliver key infrastructure projects during his eight-year tenure, particularly in his home state of Ogun.

    According to Olusegun, the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, one of Nigeria’s most crucial road projects, stagnated for 16 years under Obasanjo and his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), until former President Muhammadu Buhari revived it.

    “Despite spending eight years in government and failing in his attempt to force himself on Nigerians for a further four years as President, Baba Obasanjo failed woefully in addressing the infrastructural needs of his state.

    “Indeed, it took former President Buhari just three years to deliver the first modern rail to pass through Baba’s backyard in Abeokuta,” he said.

    Also, Works Minister David Umahi has urged Nigerians to ignore former President Obasanjo’s comment that the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway is wasteful and riddled with corruption.

    Umahi spoke in Akure, the Ondo State capital, at the unveiling of the 71-kilometre alignment section of the road that falls within the state.

    He said: “The man (Obasanjo) deserves our respect. I have not read the book, but the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway is not wasteful and corrupt. Anybody criticising the project is waking up to say how can one man (President Tinubu) be attributed to these types of projects?”