Tag: Obasanjo

  • Legal profession’s support critical for national growth – Obasanjo

    Legal profession’s support critical for national growth – Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said the support of the legal profession was necessary for the resolution of the many challenges plaguing the country.

    He said both the Bench and Bar have roles to play in rescuing the country from the claws of social vices that had hampered its development.

    Obasanjo spoke at the launch of a book titled: “S.T. Hon’s Constitutional and Migration Law in Nigeria,” held on Tuesday in Abuja.

    The book written by a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Sebastine Tar Hon, addresses critical and current constitutional and legal issues of contemporary times.

    Obasanjo, who expressed similar view as the book reviewer, Prof. Dakas Dakas, said, “with all the criticism that had been said about the practitioners, I concour with the book reviewer that if our country must make progress, the judiciary and the law profession must have a lot to do.”

    The former president prayed that Nigeria would continue to make progress.

    He commended the author for producing a book that would be useful not only to legal practitioners and law makers but to the entire citizens of Nigeria.

    Vice President  Yemi Osibanjo in his remark hailed the author for being lucid and unequivocal in addressing controversial legal issue of law, especially the law of evidence and recommended the book to Nigerians.

     

  • Obasanjo hails Aregbesola for dousing tension on hijab

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, at the weekend, hailed Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola for being neutral in matters relating to religion.

    The former president said the religious unrest that greeted the court ruling permitting the use of female head scarf (hijab) in Osun public schools was one good example.

    Obasanjo spoke as the chairman of the occasion at the handover ceremony of a multi-purpose hall and a library donated by Senator Yinka Omilani to Ode-Omu community.

    He stated that the utterances of Aregbesola on the court verdict doused tension in the state.

    Aregbesola had at the wake of the controversy that trailed the order of court said he had at no time ordered the use of hijab in schools.

    He noted that since he could not order his wife and daughter on the use of hijab, he could not have done that with Osun.

    The former president, who was represented by Gbaabile of Egbaland, Dr. Femi Majekodunmi, said the statement from the governor confirmed his neutrality in the conflict.

    He said: “He (Obasanjo) is in China now. He said the governor (Aregbesola) said something which confirmed his neutrality in the matter; that word went a long way in dousing the tension which recently heightened in the state.”

    Obasanjo described the donor, Senator Omilani, a former Vice Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party in the Southwest, as a great philanthropist, noting that his contribution to his community, Osun State and Nigeria at large can never be overlooked.

    He urged the community to make the judicious use of the facilities, which he described as a significant legacy.

    Aregbesola reaffirmed his administration’s determination on provision of infrastructures in nooks and crannies of the state regardless of the present economic situation.

    He announced that the ongoing construction of Gbongan/Ode-Omu dual-carriageway would be completed before the end of the year.

    The governor attributed the slow-pace of work at various construction sites and projects by his administration to the effect of fall in the revenue accruing to the state.

    He assured that all the ongoing projects would be completed before the end of his tenure.

    The donor of the library attributed the construction of the ultra-modern library and multi-purpose hall as part of his compassion and commitment towards the growth of education and Ode-Omu community.

    Omilani said the provision of supplementary readers in schools and public libraries was one sure way of expanding the horizon of knowledge and acquisition of life-long skill, saying the act will save the teeming youths from idleness and juvenile delinquency.

  • Obasanjo, Seychelles president to attend Afreximbank AGM

    The African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) on Thursday said former President Olusegun Obasanjo and President James Michel of Seychelles will join other leaders as its Annual General Meeting (AGM) in Seychelles next month.

    A statement by the bank noted that the bank’s 23rd AGM would hold from July 18 to July 24.

    The statement indicated that others being expected at the AGM were Nobel Prize Winner in Economics, Joseph Stiglitz, Chairman of Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, and Chairman of Heirs Holdings Limited, Tony Elumelu.

    Former United Nations Under-Secretary-General, Ibrahim Gambari and ex-World Bank Chief Economist, Justin Lin, will also attend the AGM, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    The statement added that Obasanjo and others would speak on the theme – “Africa’s New Economy: Intra-African Trade and the Blue Economy as Catalyst for Economic Transformation.”

     

  • OBASANJO PLEDGES SUPPORT FOR ENTERTAINMENT INDUSTRY

    FORMER President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo has expressed his determination to support any venture that would promote the development of the entertainment industry as a major wealth creator and an effective tool against the pervasive youth unemployment in the country.

    Chief Obasanjo, disclosed this recently at his residence in Otta, Ogun State while playing host to the Performing Musicians Association of Nigeria (PMAN), Edo State Chapter led by its President, Hon. Maleke Idowu Moye.

    The ex-president praised Nigerian musicians whom he said had used their expertise to stamp their authority across Africa and the world at large. Chief Obasanjo, who was honoured by the Edo PMAN with Life Grand Patron of the association, thanked them for the recognition and promised to always be of assistance to them whenever the need arose.

    He used the opportunity to task Nigerian musicians to use their music to promote national cohesion and growth in the face of current challenging moments.

    Speaking earlier, Hon Maleke Idowu Moye said the Edo PMAN Executive Committee decided to appoint the former president as its life Grand Patron in recognition of the invaluable sacrifices he had made for the country, especially his knack for people oriented policies and programmes when he held sway as Nigeria’s president.

    “This certificate symbolises the admiration, love and reverence Edo musicians have for you,” he said.

    The Edo PMAN boss used the opportunity to solicit Chief Obasanjo’s support towards the actualisation of the Edo PMAN Entertainment Village project which he said upon completion would serve as a fulcrum for the advancement of the entertainment business in the state and

    indeed the nation, and in the process generate employment for the teeming unemployed youths.

    Highpoint of the visit was the presentation of the architectural design of the village to the former president who received it with admiration.

  • Governors have bastardised our local council system, says Obasanjo

    Governors have bastardised our local council system, says Obasanjo

    THE 774 local government areas (LGAs) have been rendered “impotent” and almost “bastardised,” following the massive encroachment into their affairs by state governors, former President Olusegun Obasanjo said yesterday.

    He stressed that the “glaring injustice and overbearing influence of the governors on the LGAs are such that they cannot tolerate it should the Federal Government elect to treat them the same way.

    The ex-president spoke when a 60-member delegation of the National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE) visited him at his home on the Presidential Hilltop Estate, Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital.

    The delegation, led by the NULGE National President, Ibraheem Khaleel, came to Obasanjo’s home to solicit for his support towards freeing the LGAs from the alleged “asphyxiating grip of the nation’s 36 state governors”.

    The NULGE President said the union had come to Obasanjo to join in the rescue mission of the LGA system, noting that as founding member of the administration in 1976, they had autonomy of the third tier in mind.

    But Obasanjo, who listened to them, said he was helpless about their plights. He noted that when the LGAs were reformed in 1976, by the then military government, which he was a part, it gave LGAs” functions, responsibilities and duties” to perform.

    He said it is saddening now to observe that state governors’ interference has completely eroded the “sanctity and constitutionality” of the law establishing LGAs.

  • Southwest TUC seeks Obasanjo’s help over salary arrears

    THE Southwest arm of the Trade Union Congress (TUC) has sought former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s help over its members’ outstanding salary arrears and other entitlements.

    TUC said it was disturbed by its members’ plights, who, it said, are owed over 13 months’ salary arrears in some Southwest states.

    The union added that it decided to enlist the help of Obasanjo in resolving the matter.

    Its southwest coordinator, Olubunmi Fajobi, who led a delegation to Obasanjo’s Hilltop residence in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, yesterday, spoke about their mission to reporters after a meeting with the former president.

    Fajobi noted that the labour leaders have decided to enlist the assistance of the former president because they were convinced that Obasanjo commands greater respect among the affected governors.

    The union’s coordinator, who doubles as the Chairman of the Ogun State Chapter of TUC, however, listed some of their grievances as including non-payment of workers’ 13 months salaries, unremitted contributory pensions’ deductions for 19 months, unremitted cooperative deductions and others.

    “As labour leaders, we are particularly disturbed about the issue of unpaid salaries in our states and we mobilise that the sweat of workers must not be in vain.

    “We know that Obasanjo has the ears of these governors and that is why we are seeking his assistance to intervene.

    “We disagree with the position of some Southwest governors, who have threatened to apply the no-work no-pay” rule because we believe such was against the rules of fair play in labour engagement,” Fajobi said.

    Present at the meeting with the former president were: Comrade Akinyemi Olatunji (Osun), Francis Ogunremi (Lagos), Andrew Emelieze (Oyo), Clement Fatunase (Ondo Secretary), Adebisi Adebayo (Ekiti Secretary), Gbenga Ekundayo (Lagos), Bola Fajulugbe (Ekiti Women Leader) and Olaniyi Okewole (Ogun Secretary).

     

     

  • Olusegun  Obasanjo: Ideas, politics  and the love  for country II

    Olusegun Obasanjo: Ideas, politics and the love for country II

    Let me restate the objective of my unending search for the core of the heroism in the Nigerian narrative and my painstaking effort to celebrate and not to denigrate those who have impacted the Nigerian socio-political unfolding, no matter how unpopular they might be in popular imagination. Odia Ofeimun says my search is in “the spirit of an almost occult pursuit of Nigeria The Beautiful”. At the risk of a boring repetition, I took the challenge for this series from Claude Ake who in the foreword to my 1997 biography of Prof. Ojetunji Aboyade said that “the country has no heroes, acknowledges none, and it devalues and derails those who could be.” As is to be expected, I have received tons of comments on this series on OBJ, with some saying, in a manner of speaking, that the only way I would have retained my reputation as an objective and seminal public intellectual in this particular series would have been for me to take the position that affirms their ‘hatred’ for OBJ. I certainly won’t say ‘I don’t give a damn to such suggestion’. Rather, I would say that I belong to the core of those who see deep meaning that is worth unearthing and interrogating in what OBJ stands for even in all its complexity, and that is what I have utilized my being entitled to my opinion to give expression to in this 3-part serial.

    That said, permit me to proceed by saying that, since independence in 1960, the Nigerian state has been implicitly searching for a leader, civilian or military, with the right proportion of heroism, steely character and patriotic commitment to direct the ship of state outside of the confines of colonial limitations. All plural states, and especially those that had the unfortunate experience of colonialism, are all saddled with this leadership imperative. Singapore found Lee Kwan Yew. South Africa found Nelson Mandela. India found Mahatma Gandhi. These states share with Nigeria a profound pluralism founded around a cramped national space housing different religions, ethnicities, cultures, nations and languages. Since plural states are combustible, it becomes imperative for them to have a leader with enough charisma and sufficient national perspicacity to hold the country together and lead it to development.

    Nigeria has not been that lucky in the art of patriotic (re)engineering. The leadership redemption keeps getting mangled within the fissures of geo-national manoeuvrings. Clearly and indisputably, it was such manoeuvrings that frustrated the patriotic yearnings of the likes of Chief Obafemi Awolowo, often regrettably but unarguably referred to as “the best president Nigeria never had.” Awolowo had all the attributes of Lee Kwan Yew; a transformation disposition, charismatic aura and, most importantly, a framework for change founded on ideas, ideals, dynamics, strategies and processes. Awolowo understood governance and its politics. Yet it was that political configuration he aimed to refine for progress that constrained his presidential aspiration, among many other variables that have been documented in numerous narratives that bear no repeating. He died, as a wasted Nigerian asset of inestimable value, a tragic hero.

    It is this same geo-national question of nationhood and integration that threw up Chief Olusegun Obasanjo. The emergence of OBJ into the Nigerian political firmament gives a new twist to the political saying that every state deserves its leaders. Nigeria deserves Obasanjo essentially because her political configuration throws up leaders who must, through the perceptive lens of political realism, explore and exploit all possible political means, negative and positive, to foist a vision of progress on the state. That is what Machiavelli counselled. It is in this sense that OBJ deserves the Machiavellian label. I made the essential point in the earlier parts of this series that no one who understands Nigeria can ever doubt the patriotic zeal of the Obasanjo. But patriotism, most time, makes a monster of those who get caught in its complexities. Call OBJ whatever you might; he was only responding to the demands of realpolitik in the Nigerian state.

    Take the third term agenda issue as an instance. There are so many things hidden on this issue that ordinary Nigerians may not know. I confess that I am also not privy to the confusing complex of political gamesmanship that made the issue a spectacle of the public sphere. But I can speculate. The third term agenda smacks of political messianic complex at first reading. This complex derives either from an acute awareness of one’s worth as a political leader or a delusion of grandeur, if you will. There is actually nothing wrong with patriotism transforming into a messianic complex, except that the constitution subverts it as a dangerous and anti-democratic tendency. Robert Mugabe always looms large in this regard. Yet, it was such kind of messianic ethos that Lee Kwan Yew latched onto; and it got Singapore out of the third world! It would constitute a good point of political revelation to know what OBJ thinks of LKY.

    There is one fact that faults the third term agenda: Those who conceive it ought to have grasped the limit of patriotism. A third term agenda does not say much about a patriotic respect for the constitution. In this instance, we would be wise to think more of Mugabe than Lee Kwan Yew. But what if the third term agenda had succeeded? With this question, I am calling attention to something more fundamental than the conceited succession plan. Behind the whole drama of the third term agenda, I see the disturbing dynamics of how the national question in Nigeria can corrupt the social question. Put in other words, all the intrigues attached to governing the Nigerian state are so potent as to ruin any good governance intention.

    Any well-meaning Nigerian leader will invariably be caught in a dilemma: How to move Nigeria forward within the complex and combustible mix of national limitations and democratic imperatives? How does answering the national question engender the implementation of the vision of a vast social infrastructure that empowers Nigerians? Or, even better still: How to circumvent the national question in order to attend to the more critical social question? Accepted: OBJ is no Awoist. Both were caught in the web of their national visions. Both attempted to break out of the ordinary national mode; the extent to which the two may have lost out or achieved their aim in the process is for posterity to judge. How many Nigerians, for instance, would take kindly to Machiavelli’s assessment of national reform? For him, “It never or rarely happens that a republic or monarchy is well constituted, or its old institutions entirely reformed, unless it is done by only one individual.” Maybe Machiavelli is wrong, and trusting solely in an individual’s force of character is not only anti-democratic but also megalomaniac. But then, who can escape the towering achievement of LKY?

    Maybe the national question in Nigeria, or even anywhere else for that matter, is too complex to be left to the imperatives of democracy alone. Maybe OBJ was too much of a visionary or is it a soldier to be patient with democratic niceties. After all, says Milton Friedman, “[Christopher] Columbus did not seek a new route to the Indies in response to a majority directive.” OBJ is not open to a simple or simplistic assessment. On the contrary, he generates thoughts. I have known Chief Olusegun Obasanjo for a while now. I may not agree with his politics, but I have no doubt whatsoever about him and his context.

    What is the quintessential OBJ? I doubt if that question can be asked of anyone, or of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo himself. I was once in deep intimate conversation with him on several issues at his Abeokuta home. Two issues stand out as characterising his passion. The first is the need to undermine the messy national structure of Nigeria through a sustained and consistent social infrastructural framework that works for the empowerment of Nigerians. In fact, that passion gives a lot of sense to his “no go areas” clause in the 2005 National Political Reform Conference. One, there is no government that wants to supervise the breakup of Nigeria as is being suggested by those calling for a sovereign national conference. Even the great Abraham Lincoln baulked at that prospect with the United States. Second, the breakup, in OBJ’s view, would be precipitate since Nigerians have never been given the full benefit of a viable and efficient social infrastructural system that could undermine their suspicion about Nigeria. If Nigeria remains intact, then we have more opportunity of translating the “Fundamental and Directive Principles of State Policy”, enshrined in the Nigerian Constitution, into a solid programme of social empowerment and social justice, though that also begs the question of whether the commonwealth could be built on the foundation of injustice.

    The second of Obasanjo’s passion is no less patriotic. And it consists in the burning desire to pass on the baton of national consciousness to the upcoming generation of Nigerians. This passion derives from an acute awareness of the failure of preceding generations, though many would ask, and rightly so, was he not the most opportune in his generation? And he is better placed to understand these trans-generational deficiencies because he straddles these generations in his very personality. Nigeria’s preceding and present generational capital has been too caught in the grip of national circumstances and prebendal politics to be utilised for the common good. The African Leadership Forum (ALF) is the first leg in jumpstarting this passion. The second leg derives from the participation of OBJ in the Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy (ISGPP)’s Olusegun Obasanjo Intergenerational Platform and Dialogue Series as the institutional plank that connects the old to the young for the sake of Nigeria.

    I suspect that the legacy of OBJ in Nigerian politics ought to be reckoned in terms of these components of his political passion. Furthermore, I suspect that it is in this sense that OBJ becomes critical to the success of the Buhari change administration. Beyond the generational capital lost in the dynamics of continuity and discontinuity in Nigeria’s political history, Buhari brings another scarce political commodity to the tablea unique integrity factor that is required to connect passion with the knowledge of how to make Nigeria work.

    Whatever we may have against him, Obasanjo is a statesman rather than a mere politician. It will be a grievous sin to consider him otherwise. And why does he qualify for that honorific epithet? Simple: according to Georges Pompidou, the former French president, he places himself at the service of his nation. Every other way we analyse him must not forget that critical fact of patriotism, and his humanity. He is no ordinary human being, but he is all too human.

    • Dr. Olaopa, is the Executive Vice Chairman, Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy (ISGPP), Ibadan
  • Obasanjo: humanity, globalisation began in Africa

    Obasanjo: humanity, globalisation began in Africa

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has identified Africa as the origin of humanity and globalisation.

    He said the continent’s rich and diverse cultural heritages should be explored and harnessed as part of activities for the 40th anniversary celebration of the Second World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC).

    The ex-president, who spoke when members of the Centre for Black and Civilisation (CBAAC) of the Federal Ministry of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation visited him in Abeokuta, Ogun State, said the event would get his support and mobilisation.

    The delegation was led by the Director-General (DG), CBAAC, Dr. Anikwe Ferdinand.

    Obasanjo, who noted that the past might have eluded Africans, was confident that the future would not.

    The former president was the head of state in 1977, when the last edition of FESTAC was observed in Lagos, after the first in Dakar in 1966.

    He noted that 40 years after, the continent was yet to have the third event, saying that Africa must take the lead again to celebrate 40 years after the last one.

    Obasanjo, who watched a 30 minute-documentary of some parts of the FESTAC’77, observed that “it will ginger our people to be proud of showing the world the culture of Africa and the black man”.

    “This brings happy memory and nostalgic feelings. I think it is very thoughtful on the part of the management to put some events in video. I want to congratulate the group for coming alive with this, which is coming 40 years after it was held.

    “It will show the world that humanity starts from Africa. That migration starts from Africa before entering Middle East, Asia, Europe and cross to the Americas and Australia. We are the centre of the world and we must be proud of it.

    “We started the process of globalisation and we exported humanity to the rest of the world. But the past have eluded us; the future must not evade from our land. I am totally supporting this anniversary, which will be coinciding with my 80th birthday anniversary,” Obasanjo said.

    The former president promised to facilitate the coming of past African leaders to the country for the anniversary.

    The CBAAC director-general explained that the centre came to intimate the former president, “who incidentally was the head of state in 1977, of the 40th anniversary of FESTAC’77″.

    “And as you can see, we got his blessings.

    “Since the FESTAC’77, past African leaders have not looked at the direction of hosting cultural festival of such magnitude. We only use sports to show our culture since we realise that it is the only unifying factor.

    “We did not tap from the experience of FESTAC’77 and we believe that it’s this 40th year anniversary that can allow us to bring Africa together once again like we did in 1977,” Ferdinand said.

  • Lawyers condemn Obasanjo for insulting judge

    A group of lawyers under the aegis of the Legal Vanguard for Rules of Law and Democracy, have condemned comments credited to former President Olusegun Obasanjo, describing the person of Honourable Justice Muhammed Idris as a “silly, stupid and ignorant person” following the judgment delivered by His Lordship ordering the different regimes that have been in power from the Obasanjo era to publish recovered funds as part of the anti-corruption campaign.

    The lawyers in a statement issued by their President, Barr. Toluwani Adebiyi, said Obasanjo’s outburst was unbecoming of an elder statesman and was clearly contemptuous of the court and must not be allowed to stand.

    “We decry the abysmal state of affairs in our country wherein the “big shenanigans that make up our political elite throw caution to the wind and attacking notable judges of integrity. We hold that if not checked and vehemently resisted, this could be the beginning of the journey to judicial disaster and inordinate subjugation of our legal system. This is the only way the voice of social justice can be amassed against the voice of an incongruous individual,” they said.

  • Obasanjo’s criticism of Justice Idris

    Obasanjo’s criticism of Justice Idris

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo recently launched a stinging attack on the authority of the Federal High Court and the competence of Justice Mohammed Baba Idris after the judge ruled that details on the spending of recovered stolen public funds under Obasanjo’s government between May 1999 and May 2007 should be widely published including on a dedicated website.

    Justice Idris’ judgment, which followed a Freedom of Information suit brought by Nigeria’s Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP), also called for publication of records of spending of recovered funds under the governments of former president Umaru Musa Yar’Adua and former president Goodluck Jonathan.

    Reacting to the judgment, Obasanjo reportedly said: “They said the money recovered from Abacha, I should account for it. What stupidity! The man who asked for it, the man who gave the judgement or who answered them are all stupid, with due respect. I don’t keep account, all Abacha loots were sent to Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, and every bit of it was reported to Minister of Finance. My job was to write where we can get help to recover the money. Every penny that comes out of it went to CBN, so if they want to know what happened to the money, they should call CBN governor or call the Minister of Finance. But again, it shows ignorance, total ignorance, which is lacking and you wonder, are these people educated? They can also approach the man who helped us in recovering process to give the list of money recovered and where he took it.”

    This statement, coming from a former president, flies in the face of leadership by example and can only help to frustrate the objective of the Freedom of Information Act, and by extension, undermine the authority of the country’s judiciary and erode the rule of law.

    Judges are not infallible but there’s nothing stupid in Justice Idris insisting on transparency and accountability of leaders who once held a position of trust and control over the public treasury. Judges don’t act or give judgments according to their personal whims and fancies: they apply the laws as they find them.

    Although judges may sometimes fail to live up to the ideal – and the present is not a case of such failure – the principle should be generally understood and respected that judges would draw conclusions from the evidence before them in accordance with legal precedent, ordinary norms of legal reasoning, and established constitutional and legal principles.

    If judges have to decide cases on the basis of what politicians or someone else wanted the law or the result to be, the very principle of independence of the judiciary would be forfeited. While it’s within Obasanjo’s right to disagree with the judgment or even criticise it, calling Justice Idris “stupid and ignorant” simply for doing his job amounts to inappropriate political criticism as it threatens the judge’s independence and integrity.

    It’s unfair to see individual judges as ‘fair game’ because they cannot publicly defend themselves against inappropriate criticism.

    But Obasanjo’s attempt to browbeat Justice Idris simply for upholding the Freedom of Information Act is hardly surprising especially given that he ignored wise counsel to sign the Bill into law during his time in government.

    What is the point of “government of, by, and for the people” if opinion leaders and former presidents like Obasanjo by words or deed seem to want to dodge responsibility for their action or inaction while in office by implicitly promoting policies of secrecy?

    Imagine if the disclosures of corruption, compendiously known as Dazukigate, which weakened the ability of the country’s military to fight and defeat Boko Haram, and debased institutions of governance, have remained a secret.

    If anything is to be learned from the country’s current experience with disclosures of corruption among high-ranking government officials, politicians and the military, it’s that the government of President Muhammadu Buhari must open public affairs, including regarding details on spending of recovered funds under governments since the return of democracy in 1999, to public scrutiny.

    Non-disclosure of Dazukigate would have deprived the Nigerian people of a much-needed opportunity to know what former President Goodluck Jonathan was doing while in office, and to cleanse some level of government.

    Justice Idris’ judgment is without doubt a great victory for transparency and accountability in the country. Thanks to Justice Idris, Nigerians will now be able to know exactly how recovered stolen funds were spent including under Obasanjo’s government. They will be able to find out if recovered funds were appropriately spent on real projects, mismanaged or re-stolen.

    The judgment recognizes that corruption is never flaunted in the open and it’s invariably practiced through secrecy; secrecy found in every level of government from local governments to Aso Rock Villa and National Assembly.

    It buttresses the point that openness promotes the appearance of fairness and enhances public confidence in the integrity of government action. Openness serves as a check against incompetence, venality, or bias; and promotes the constitutional values of encouraging elected officials to act in the public interest. This in turn can stimulate more knowledgeable public consideration of transparency, accountability and human rights issues and perhaps even encourage individual citizens to come forward with constructive suggestions.

    Thus, by ordering publication on a dedicated website of projects on which recovered funds were spent by the governments of former presidents Obasanjo, Yar’Adua and Jonathan for inspection by the citizenry, Justice Idris has enhanced the status of the Freedom of Information Act as a veritable legal framework of protection against governmental deception and arbitrariness.

    Without the disclosures ordered by Justice Idris, high-level official corruption will continue to flourish with official action and with almost absolute impunity. And Nigerians will continue to be denied effective enjoyment of their human rights if they don’t know what their leaders and government are doing and unable to hold them to account.

    Nigerians do not demand infallibility from their leaders and institutions, but it’s difficult to accept the proposition that a judge granting Nigerians the right to know what their leaders and government are doing is “stupid and ignorant.” Nigerians indeed have a right to compel their public officials particularly the high-ranking among them like Obasanjo to keep the avenues of information open so the public can know and evaluate their work, accomplishments and derelictions regardless of whether they are in or out of office.

    How Buhari responds to Justice Idris’ judgment will without question be a significant aspect of what defines his anti-corruption agenda.

    One immediate step for Buhari to take is to instruct the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, the Accountant General of the Federation and the Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria to put in place mechanisms for the full and effective enforcement and implementation of the judgment by Justice Idris.

     

    • Olaniyan, is Legal Adviser, International Secretariat of Amnesty International, London.