Tag: Obasanjo

  • Olusegun Obasanjo: Ideas,  politics and love for country

    Olusegun Obasanjo: Ideas, politics and love for country

    Just recently, I published The Labour of Our Heroes, a collection of my newspaper commentaries on issues, and especially on those I call heroes who, in one way or the other, have impacted the trajectory of national progress in Nigeria. Chief Olusegun Obasanjo was not on the honoured list of heroes even though he eminently deserves to be among the top list of those who cannot be omitted in the drama of Nigeria’s postcolonial unfolding. His non-inclusion in the book came from the logic of discretion: I was a civil servant when the essays were written and published, and discretion was the very definition of my status. The civil service was already tolerating, as much as it could, my unheard of active writing status as a public servant who is more to be seen than heard. It would be tipping the balance for me to initiate a critical profile of one of my bosses, especially the enigmatic OBJ. But then, I am no longer a civil servant, and it seems the time is now ripe to take on the inescapable – the OBJ of Nigeria!

    There is a need to preface this reflection with a confession, some clarification and a caveat. First, this is by far the most difficult commentary I have ever had to write. Like Winston Churchill’s perplexed summary of the Russians during WWII, Chief Olusegun Obasanjofarmer, soldier, military head of state, prisoner, democratic President, statesman, pan-Africanist, father, husband, sturdy octogenarian and national scourge all rolled into oneis indeed “a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.” There are so many commentaries that have been written in an attempt to situate OBJ within some specific profile; I doubt if any has succeeded. I doubt if I have what it takes either to get behind the scene and reveal the enigma. The caveat: This is certainly far from an attempt to unravel him. No one can do that and say it’s final and complete.

    Olusegun Obasanjo is complexity personified. This is one personality without which Nigeria’s historical narrative would be incomplete. Whether we like it or not; whether we hate him or not, we cannot mention the likes of Obafemi Awolowo, Tafawa Balewa, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Herbert Macaulay, Ahmadu Bello and all the other nationalists without remembering Olusegun Obasanjo. Whether we accept the fact or not, Obasanjo has earned his status as an irreplaceable avatar on the Nigerian political scene. In fact, it is not too difficult to make the claim that OBJ is the most colossal political figure that bestrides Nigerian politics at the moment. And he has been here right from the beginning and right through the major political unravelling of Nigeria from the dark military days to the bright experiment of democratic governance. He is still here through all the current shaping and reshaping of our democratic experiment.

    I have always been fascinated with OBJ the same way Chief Obafemi Awolowo fascinated me, especially with his ideas about governance and nation building. My fascination is largely an extension of my being a student of politics and of society. Besides, I have had the privilege of observing the two at very close range. But just as Awolowo has been much vilified in Nigerian politics in spite of his many glaring achievements, OBJ has also come across to many as a modern day Nigerian Machiavellia ‘devilish’ manipulator with no iota of public interest and patriotic feeling, as his detractors would like to surmise. Both Awolowo and OBJ are in good company. Over the many centuries since he lived, Niccolò Machiavelli has become one of the most misunderstood historical figures of all time. “Machiavellian” is now synonymous with being politically cunning and unscrupulous, yet Machiavelli is not Machiavellian. On the contrary, he understood the politics of 16th century Florence, a city caught in the intricate web of zero-sum politics very much like modern Nigeria. Machiavelli’s legacy is simple and brilliant: politics is a matter of what is rather than what ought to be! The set of pragmatic rules and principles Machiavelli gave to the ruler in The Prince was meant to orient him on the practical necessities of realpolitik. So, what is the lesson? To achieve any governance objectives, the politician must first learn how to walk the minefield of political intrigues, murders and limitations that constitute the death of many good governance ideas, insights and policies.

    Politics intersects political philosophy in the quest for a social organisation that makes it possible for citizens to live an empowered life in terms of the capacities they have to do what will enrich their lives. While political philosophy is concerned with the question of what kind of social arrangement will make this possible, politics is concerned with the direct use of power for the allocation of resources that will facilitate mutual coexistence. The relationship between politics and political philosophy as well as the ideas and insights the two are supposed to generate to facilitate governance is what links Machiavelli, Awolowo and Obasanjo. Ideas, realism and practicality, in other words, are the essence of politics.

    Awolowo had this understanding. The ‘wild wild West’ had some valid resemblances to wild Florence that brought out the genius in Machiavelli. Awolowo owed his political brilliance to his capacity not only to understand human nature but also how to bend it towards edifying political objectives. How did we know this? We simply examine the policy architecture and infrastructural masterpieces that made the western region the wonder of the Nigerian First Republic. For Harry Truman, the former US president, “A politician is a man who understands government, and it takes a politician to run a government.” In another breath, OBJ is the politician par excellence. I suspect that Machiavelli would have approved of Olusegun Obasanjo as an appropriate master of political realism. And just as many scholars failed to understand the republican credentials of Machiavelli, so most Nigerians have not been able to fathom the nationalist credentials of OBJ.

    Let us be clear: Nigeria is a tough and intractable political terrain, the sense in which Awolowo was and still is right to describe it as a “geographical expression” still struggling unsuccessfully to transform into a “cultural expression”. Since independence, the full weight of the postcolonial realities has unfolded to a point that has transformed Nigeria’s fortune negatively. The rough political manoeuvres of the First Republic that led to the Civil War was also responsible for the succession of military administrations and political dynamic, one of which threw the young Olusegun Obasanjo right into the maelstrom of Nigerian politics. Obasanjo cut his political teeth as part of a revolutionary or is it radical military regime that meant well for Nigeria in its determination to pursue change with a big bang, contrary to the global democratic suspicion of all military governments. When General Murtala Ramat Muhammad came to power in 1975, his band of revolutionaries, including the then Brigadier Obasanjo, was confronted with a post-civil war Nigeria that was already too far away from the euphoria of independence, and a larger continental space that was still under colonial denigration largely represented by apartheid South Africa and strangulating colonial presence in Namibia, Algeria, Angola, and so on. The range of policy rearticulation which the Supreme Military Council undertook between 1975 to 1976, when Murtala Muhammad was assassinated and up unto 1979, was sufficient enough to open the eyes of the younger Obasanjo to the intricacies of governing of Nigeria’s complexities.

    It was as if providence conspired to steer OBJ’s course away from his beloved professional military life, even if with its nuanced bureaucratic politics, by dragging him into the whirlpool of politics and government. By his own admission, “By training, inclination, and aptitude, I was averse to being in government.” Yet, willy-nilly, he had to undergo what he called his “first step into government” when General Gowon drafted him as a federal minister of works. The ministerial appointment did two important things which would later prove to be preparatory template for a mind that would confront Nigeria. First, he had to take mandatory visits around the lengths and breadths of Nigeria to ascertain the extent of his brief as commissioner for works; and he saw firsthand the bureaucratic manifestations of the civil service and how it limits the working of government. Finally, as if his tutelage was not complete, the mantle of governmental leadership fell on his shoulders immediately after the assassination of Murtala Muhammad, and it is instructive that the defining act of his administration was his supervision of Nigeria’s first transition to civil rule in 1979. And was it just coincidental that Obasanjo was also the first one on the saddle at the inception of the democratic experiment in Nigeria in 1999?

    From 1975 till date, Obasanjo came of age politically under a vibrant barrage of acrimonies, political intrigues and doubtful legacies. Of course that is the uneasy lots of any who is courageous enough to desire the crown. John Webster, the English playwright, puts this poetically better:

    A politician is the devil’s quilted anvil

    He fashions all sins on him, and the blows

    Are never heard.

    Against all the odds of life, OBJ waded through uncertainties of military hierarchies, through the horrors of the civil war, through Abacha’s gulag, through the perils of political disaffection and disjuncture and at that having more genuine claim in truth and in spirit to what really should be the brand identity of a truly Nigerian leader: “I belong to everybody and I belong to nobody” which as history is proving so very fast, is easier said than done. He came, he saw but did he achieve all that his noble national intention imposed upon him?

    -Being excerpts from a series ‘Olusegun Obasanjo: Ideas, politics and the love for country’ by Dr Olaopa, the Executive Vice Chairman of Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy (ISGPP) Ibadan.

  • Photo: Buhari receives Obasanjo in Aso Rock

    Photo: Buhari receives Obasanjo in Aso Rock

    President Buhari receives Former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo GCFR in Statehouse on Friday
    President Buhari receives Former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo GCFR in Statehouse on Friday
  • Buhari meets Obasanjo, Anglican bishops at Aso Rock

    Buhari meets Obasanjo, Anglican bishops at Aso Rock

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday met separately with  former President Olusegun Obasanjo  and a team of bishops of the Church of Nigerian (Anglican Communion) led by the Primate of the church, Archbishop Nicholas Okoh on the state of the nation.

    Buhari first met with Obasanjo who was accompanied to the Presidential Villa by his long standing friend, Chief Oyewole Fasawe.

    Obasanjo declined to speak to reporters on his mission to the Villa, his third since Buhari assumed office a little over a year ago.

    Shortly after his departure came the Anglican Bishops.

    Archbishop Okoh told State House Correspondents at the end of the meeting that they discussed the herdsmen attacks across the country and oil pipeline vandalism in the Niger Delta region with their host.

    “We told him many things. We are all looking for solution to issues of the herdsmen, issue of vandalism, security in one way or the other because the people are asking us and we want to have explanation for the people whom we lead,” he said.

    Asked what the President’s disposition was on the issues, he said: “very favourable. He gave us detailed explanations of what he is doing to ensure that these things are solved.

    “So we have hope, we have a message for our people.”

    Okoh opined that the President spent his first year in office clearing the table and was optimistic that things will improve in the country over the next one year.

    “We believe that so far it’s been okay because of the difficulties of the times and between now and the next one year we are looking forward to something more direct now, something that will get to the people easily.

    “So far, for the first year he is trying to clear the table, prepare the place and make the work move forward.

    “We look forward to a better 2016-2017 budget .You can see that with the long delay in budget, with the issue of padding, we were not able to begin easily.

    “So the next one we know will be better.  That is why we are taking it that way. It’s okay for now but it could be better,” he added.

  • Obasanjo, Ajimobi extol Soun’s virtue at 90

    Obasanjo, Ajimobi extol Soun’s virtue at 90

    Governor of Oyo State, Sen Abiola Ajimobi has described the Soun of Ogbomoso, Oba Oladunni Oyewumi, Ajagungbade III, as a man who epitomises integrity and loyalty.

    He spoke at the 90th birthday and 42nd coronation anniversary of the monarch, held in Ogbomoso on Friday.

     “On behalf of myself and my wife we are grateful to God for the life of our father. God will grant him long life more on earth. God really love and cherish him. Some live long and doesn’t live a land mark, but our father lives long and well.

    “He is a prince that became a king later. He has a royal personality and he is very regale and we are very proud of him. This position fits him best. Ogbomoso people are very luck. He epitomises integrity and loyalty. He is a very fortunate man.” Ajimobi said

     Also, the former President Olusegun Obasanjo who was represented by former Secretary to Oyo State Government, Chief Olayiwola Olakojo said:” You( the monarch) have been reigning for over four decades. The creator has been protecting you to rule in peace. It is remarkable so far and the economic achievement has been remarkable not only in Ogbomoso but in Nigera at large.

  • Obasanjo on Buhari

    The recent outburst credited to retired General Olusegun Obasanjo on the occasion of a lecture he is said to have delivered at Covenant University Otta, Ogun State on May 14, regarding the competence or lack of competence of President Muhammadu Buhari in the areas of economic policy and foreign affairs visibly represents a gross indiscretion that deserves to be strongly condemned by all right-thinking citizens of Nigeria.

    In the first place, it is very unfair that Obasanjo should take undue advantage of the fact that President Buhari once served under him in the Nigerian military to make unguarded statements based on his alleged assessment of Buhari’s characteristics as a military officer. The people of Nigeria did not elect President Buhari to perform military duties, so we have no need whatsoever to know how he was graded by retired General Olusegun Obasanjo in the course of his military career.

    In the second place, Obasanjo is probably one of the least qualified to offer opinions on the current state of the country or on the quality of President Buhari’s performance in public office.

    The fact of the matter is that Obasanjo hardly achieved anything worthwhile in the course of his two stints as Nigeria’s Head of State, first as a military ruler from February 13, 1976 to October 1, 1979 and as a democratically elected president from May 29, 1999 to May 29, 2007.

    The vast majority of unbiased political commentators agree with the observation that has been made that all through his years in public office as Nigeria’s Head of State, retired General Obasanjo consistently revealed himself to be self-opinionated. As the saying goes, the proof of the pudding is in the eating: If Obasanjo had any meaningful contributions to make to the running of Nigeria’s national affairs, the time for him to have made such contributions was while he had the power to put his ideas into practice while he was Head of State.

    Why didn’t he do so then?

    It makes absolutely no sense for Obasanjo to start pontificating now about what ought to be done or not done by the current Nigerian President.

    Obasanjo has had his turn: What he should now do is to withdraw peacefully to his farm and his so-called African Leadership Centre in Otta and allow his successors to implement their own solutions for Nigeria without any further interference from him. After all, can retired General Obasanjo be said to have been successful during his lengthy cumulative terms of office as Nigeria’s Head of State?

    Did Obasanjo leave any worthwhile legacy behind after his stints in office?

    If the truth is to be told, one must conclude that over 70% of Nigeria’s current problems should be laid at Obasanjo’s doorstep. Obasanjo’s sins against the people of Nigeria are simply too many to be recounted in detail!

    To begin with, he might have been forgiven for having been a lacklustre successor to General Murtala Mohammed if he had not gone out of his way during the build up to handing over power to an elected civilian leader to do all that lay in his power to prevent Chief Obafemi Awolowo from being elected President, choosing instead to foist a weak, incompetent and confused leader on the nation in the person of Alhaji Shehu Shagari.

    It is entirely symptomatic that in the detailed account of this sorry episode in Nigeria’s recent history in his carefully researched book entitled “People, Politics and Politicians of Nigeria 1940-1979 (published by Heinemann Educational Books), the late Chief Bola Ige had no hesitation in designating General Olusegun Obasanjo as the real mastermind of the obnoxious 12 two-thirds fraudulent Presidential election formula that was maliciously concocted by Chief Richard Akinjide, and which permitted the 1979 Presidential elections to be stolen by a cabal of reactionary political adventurers led by Obasanjo, who handed the Presidency over to Alhaji Shagari, thus setting the stage for Shagari’s disastrous performance as a do-nothing and know-nothing Nigerian President…

    A few years later, during the uproar over the annulment of the free and fair Presidential election that was won by Chief Moshood Abiola in 1993, retired General Obasanjo provided strong backing for General Ibrahim Babangida’s illegal and highly reprehensible act by publicly declaring that Abiola was “not the messiah”…

    Within this context, Obasanjo must bear some degree of responsibility for the subsequent emergence of General Sani Abacha as fascist ruler of Nigeria.

    Most ironically, Obasanjo eventually fell out of favour with Abacha because he felt that, having helped to install Abacha in power, he could order this evil military dictator around and talk down to him…

    However, rather than agree to dance to Obasanjo’s tune, Abacha promptly clamped him in jail!

    As often happens to the proverbially over-clever tortoise trickster (ijapa) in Yoruba folk tales, it was a situation in which Obasanjo eventually fell victim to his own convoluted over-clever manoeuvres.

    Quite tellingly, on his release from prison following the providential demise of Sani Abacha, Obasanjo did not turn over a new leaf or endeavour to learn from his past mistakes!

    How well did Obasanjo perform in office after he wangled himself into power in1999?

    The fact of the matter is that in many respects, Obasanjo’s two terms in office as civilian President proved to be an unmitigated disaster for the people of Nigeria!

    Another of Obasanjo’s sins against the people of Nigeria was the loss of the Bakassi peninsular to Cameroun.

    As for the manner in which the funds that served to build the white elephant Obasanjo library in Abekuta, this was one of the most shameful episodes in a long series of activities that Obasanjo engaged in both during and after his tenure as civilian President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    Even though widespread allegations of financial impropriety have never been conclusively proved against him, it is widely believed within informed circles that Obasanjo may actually be the richest man in Nigeria as a result of his alleged ownership under assumed names and fronts of substantial stocks and interests in giant financial conglomerates as well as in several major banks within and outside Nigeria.

    It is for reasons such as this, as well as the unresolved mystery of the Siemens bribery case that people in informed circles tend to collapse into uncontrollable fits of laughter whenever Obasanjo struts out in public with bogus claims of having valiantly fought against corruption during his tenure of office.

    Unfortunately, Obasanjo’s habitual tortoise trickster manoeuvres eventually went awry when Dr. Goodluck Jonathan ultimately refused to dance to his tune, prompting a deeply frustrated and angry Obasanjo to dump his erstwhile protégé and begin campaigning to have Buhari elected President.

    In recent times, there are signs that the wily trickster is once more up to his usual tricks, in view of the fact that General Obasanjo has been observed sneaking in and out of Aso Rock at regular intervals since Buhari became President, under the pretext of offering “advice” to his former military subordinate.

    Within this context, it is highly probable that Obasanjo has now grown frustrated over President Muhammadu Buhari’s seeming unwillingness to dance to his tune, hence his latest treasonable statements about Buhari’s alleged unsuitability to lead Nigeria in the economic and foreign affairs fields…

    It’s all deja vu!

    The Nigerian security agencies would do well to keep a close watch on Obasanjo, in view of the fact that his statement that ‘the good thing about democracy is that the power you have to elect a leader is also the power you have to remove him’.

    Forewarned is forearmed! A word is enough for the wise!

     

    • Dr  Balogun, a film maker, author and musician, sent this piece from Cotonou.
  • Obasanjo backs Buhari on new national carrier

    Obasanjo backs Buhari on new national carrier

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has supported moves by President Muhammadu Buhari to refloat the national carrier.

    He, however, bemoaned the liquidation of the Nigeria National Shipping Line (NNSL) and warned that the Federal Government must not float a government-controlled national shipping line.

    Speaking yesterday in Lagos at the opening of a two-day conference organised by the Federal Ministry of Transportation, Obasanjo said he was unhappy that the 19 new ships he bought as a military Head of State disappeared 20 years before he became the civilian President in 1999.

    The former president, who was the chairman of the occasion, wondered how 24 ships bought during his administration in the 1970’s disappeared.

    His words: “During my time as military Head of State, we had four ships and bought 19 new vessels, making 24 ships all together. Today, all those ships have gone. We should be asking ourselves why those ships disappeared; that should be the focus our discussion here today.  How those vessels disappeared should be a major concern to us so we don’t repeat history with the proposed floating of the new national shipping line.

    “The Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) is still in operation and doing fine because it is not wholly-government owned. About 51 per cent of the LNG is private-owned while government controls 49 per cent.

    “So, the current administration, in its quest to float another shipping line, should not make it a fully-owned government entity. That was the mistake we made with the defunct national shipping line.”

    Minister of Transportation Rotimi Ameachi assured the former president and the stakeholders of the Federal Government’s readiness to create an enabling environment to allow the maritime sector take its rightful position.

    He said the new national shipping line will be a private-driven initiative which would involve indigenous and foreign investors.

    The sector, he said, has over the years lacked a befitting policy but the President Buhari-led administration is ready to address and reposition it.

    “We have learned from history and will avoid the mistakes of the past. The new national shipping line will be thrown open to private investors. I have constituted a committee on this and their report is due for submission in June,” he said.

    The Federal Government, the minister said, has embarked on moves that would make the country’s sea ports competitive by delivering quick, reliable and flexible services at reduced costs to customers.

    “This government is committed to ensuring a seamless multinational transport system to facilitate backward integration of all sectors of the economy,” Ameachi said.

    He called on the people to support government’s initiatives to reposition the maritime industry for greater productivity and efficient service delivery.

     

  • Obasanjo to FG: Don’t revive National Shipping Line

    Obasanjo to FG: Don’t revive National Shipping Line

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Monday advised the Federal Government against resuscitating the defunct Nigerian National Shipping Line (NNSL).

    Obasanjo gave the advice in his address as chairman of a two-day stakeholders’ conference on the maritime industry held in Lagos.

    The former president blamed the demise of NNSL on lack of professionalism and high level corruption at the time.

    He said: “NNSL had been liquidated, they tried Nigeria Unity Line and  it collapsed.

    “19 brand new ships were specially built for Nigeria, we did not take delivery of some of them until I left office in 1979.

    “When I came back in 1999, NNSL had been liquidated with all the 19 ships gone as well as the five ships in existence.

    “Two of the ships were missing for almost two years and it was discovered that one military man was using them all over the world and no accountability,” the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) quoted the ex-president as saying at the summit.

    The former president urged the present administration to “think out of the box and come up with what should be done to grow the maritime industry.”

    “Until NIMASA became a source where people steal money, nobody knew too much about it.

    “Before we tried to privatise Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), I went to Singapore where you get your container within one hour of arriving the port.

    “If we cannot perform like Singapore, we have to do better than what we are doing now,” Obasanjo said.

    The Minister of Transportation, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi, said the Federal Government was ready to create an enabling environment for steering the maritime industry to its rightfully position.

     

  • Buhari, Jonathan, Yar’Adua in the eyes of Obasanjo

    Buhari, Jonathan, Yar’Adua in the eyes of Obasanjo

    In his typically sanctimonious manner, ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo early this week passed harsh judgements on his successors while speaking at an international conference organised by the Covenant University, Ota, Ogun State. There was nothing unusual about the judgements, for he had passed similar ones in the distant and recent past. And there is nothing in his behaviour and antecedent to indicate that his abrasive and dismissive characterisation of his friends and enemies will ever end. The purpose of his judgements is not only to offer frank opinion on their qualities, assuming he believes they have any, but to put them in perfect contradistinction to his own qualities as the incomparable palladium of correctness and leadership. In fact, the only new thing about his harsh dismissal of his presidential peers is the inclusion of President Muhammadu Buhari in the equation.

    President Buhari, he suggested condescendingly at the conference, knew little about economic policy and foreign affairs, but might be strong on security matters and, to some extent, anti-corruption war. Damning the president with faint praise, and speaking at length, Chief Obasanjo volunteered: “I will tell you what I know and I will tell you what I don’t know. I know General Buhari, he served under me in the military. His characteristics that I know, his behaviour that I know, he hasn’t deviated from it. He was not a perfect man and he would never be a perfect man and no leader would be a perfect human being. But if you really read my book ‘My Watch’, what I said about him is still correct. He is not a hot person when it comes to economy; he is not a very hot person when it comes to foreign affairs. But he will do well in the matters of military and he will do well in fighting Boko Haram.”

    He gloated on: “I’ve gone to Maiduguri, I have met the Theatre Commander, I’ve met the General Officer Commanding (GOC), and Buhari has got that right. That, yes, the final nail on the coffin of Boko Haram is not military, it will be socio-economic development, and to be able to do that, the security of the area must be taken care of. So, for me, if we have no hope, we would have no future, we would have no life. I’m an incurable optimist as far as Nigeria is concerned. If somebody doesn’t get it all right, for now, we would get somebody who would come on and get it. Whatever the situation is, the administration before this had no clue on how to deal with Boko Haram. There is no doubt about that. This one is dealing with Boko Haram. The administration before it was deep in corruption. This one says it’s fighting corruption; you may not like the way he is fighting it. I fought corruption. We recovered $1.25 billion, £100 million and about N30 billion from Abacha and his henchmen. We didn’t make noise.”

    This was a definitive and skewering impression of an imperfect President Buhari in the eyes of the all-rounder ex-president Obasanjo. Nigeria would struggle in economic policies, he suggested gloomily, and foreign affairs would continue to be shambolic. But even on the two achievements he grudgingly conceded to President Buhari, to wit, counterinsurgency operations and anti-corruption war, Chief Obasanjo clarified with an insinuation that he hoped everyone understood that what would knock Boko Haram into a cocked hat was not military action but ‘socio-economic development’. And on the anti-corruption war which he thought the president was waging somewhat admirably, Chief Obasanjo also insinuated it was accompanied by too much noise and publicity. Under his own presidency, the former president noted dryly, the anti-corruption war was effective, what with all the retrieval, and ‘we didn’t make noise’.

    President Buhari should not rejoice at Chief Obasanjo’s qualified endorsement. The former president is notorious for putting down his foes and friends alike, regardless of how well they are performing. With a natural and unabated fondness for his own person, which some see as narcissism, he believes he is a matchless leader. If a friend or opponent betters him, he is scurrilous and unrelenting; and if the same friend or opponent is unable to match him, he is contemptuous. It is indeed impossible for anyone to satisfy him, no matter how hard they try. Had it not been impolitic of him, going by the almost universal manner he condemned his predecessors as military head of state, and his successors as elected president, he would have given Murtala Ramat Mohammed, the late military head of state who took him as deputy, the full length of his acerbic tongue. To continue to receive qualified endorsement in the eyes of so impatient a man, President Buhari would have to struggle valiantly to retain the admiration and goodwill of his countrymen. This will not be easy.

    Chief Obasanjo saw nothing good in ex-president Goodluck Jonathan, whom he dismissed hideously as tactically incompetent and a cipher who initiated another ‘spate of corruption’ rather than build on what he (Obasanjo) did. But since he had said more than enough on Dr Jonathan in the past few years, he reserved his most cynical and sarcastic condemnation of any of his successors for the late ex-president Umaru Yar’Adua. Describing the late president as a revisionist, he added that instead of recognising the failures of successive Nigerian leaders, analysts were distracted by what they erroneously suggested were the failings of the constitution. “There is no constitution that is bad,” sneered Chief Obasanjo. “If I am given opportunity to write a new constitution for Nigeria today, there are aspects of our constitution that I would change. But in all seriousness, it’s not a matter of constitution that we are to worry about. If you remember, Yar’Adua (may his soul rest in peace) campaigned on the slogan of continuity. That was the content of his campaign. When he got there, he jettisoned continuity and began discontinuity. After his death, I asked one of his close associates. I said tell me what really happened. He said as soon as we left, some people got hold of him (Yar’Adua) and said ‘look, you will never succeed unless you run down Obasanjo’. He believed that. So, that is what he believed and that is what he did.”

    Then, vaingloriously, he added the clincher against Mallam Yar’Adua: “Some of the things that we put in place that would help the country  I’ve talked about agriculture, I talked about debt; in fact, if debt relief was possible to be reversed, Yar’Adua would have reversed it. ” In short, none of his successors could pass muster. In Chief Obasanjo’s conceited opinion, he was nonpareil, and he should be hoisted aloft as the lodestar of leadership. Yet, it never occurred to him he was the architect of the misfortune he so acerbically and eloquently enunciated at the Covenant University conference. Not only was he the sole architect of that misfortune, he bears sole responsibility. He singlehandedly foisted Mallam Yar’Adua on Nigeria, knowing full well he was almost an invalid. And he rested the fulcrum of that government on the outmanoeuvered Dr Jonathan whom he thought could not call his soul his own. Chief Obasanjo in fact believed the pair of an invalid president and a docile vice president would enable him, out of government, to exert as much influence on the presidency as he would like, in addition to cleverly achieving the secondary goal of producing successors who could not hold the candle to him. Failing in both, he has become hysterical, gruff, peevish and inconsolable. The country is consequently still subjected to the periodic eruptions of his searing truculence.

    Neither Mallam Yar’Adua nor Dr Jonathan had the physical or mental capacity to manage the affairs of Nigeria wholesomely. Nor was Chief Obasanjo himself able to give anything extraordinary beyond his piddling capacity and accomplishments. What is even worse is that the country is yet to rid itself of the deleterious effects of the chain reaction he triggered in 2007. Much more than the incapacity of his successors, what is indisputably evident about his successors is that Chief Obasanjo is a poor mentor, someone so wholly incapable of following anyone, let alone anyone following him. He belongs to no school of political or economic thought, and he has no expansive vision of anything, including of Nigeria and Africa. It was, therefore, out of the injurious limitations of his constricted worldview that he sought out his enfeebled successors and foisted them on a country enervated by its own ethnic and religious contradictions and structural weaknesses. Chief Obasanjo should not complain, for even if he were to get another chance in government, he would still be incapable of remedying the great moral wrong he committed against the nation. Indeed, there is nothing in his few books to indicate he is capable of the reflection and mortifying hindsight great leaders permit themselves after retirement.

  • Obasanjo, Ogwu for Covenant varsity’s conference

    Obasanjo, Ogwu for Covenant varsity’s conference

    Former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, and Nigeria’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations,  Prof. Joy Ogwu, are expected to deliver keynote address at the International Conference on African Development Issues (ICADI) at Covenant University, Ota, Ogun State.

    The theme of the event which will hold from May 9 to 11, is “Driving Inclusive and Sustainable Development in Africa: Models, Methods and Policies.”

    This year’s edition of ICADI, a platform for intellectual discourse, which attracts and engages the best brains known to humanity in proffering viable solutions to the diverse issues relating to Africa’s development, will also feature other speakers, panelists and discussants drawn from various walks of life within Nigeria and the diaspora.

    These include Prof. Bonny Ibhawoh, Associate Vice-president, Research, at McMaster University, Canada; Mr. Timothy Oguntayo, Managing Director of Skye Bank; Dr. Tunji Olaopa; Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Communication Technology; Dr. NdukaOkoisor, President Africa’s Young Entrepreneurs, South Africa; Senator Foster Ogola, Chairman Senate Committee on ICT and Cyber Security; and Deaconess Doyin Ogunbiyi, Chairman of Ogun State Board of Technical and Vocational Education amongt others.

    The  Chancellor of Covenant University, Dr. David Oyedepo, who expressed delight at the sustenance of the conference, which had in previous editions featured three Nobel Laureates as Keynote Speakers, assured that participants at this year’s event would have a memorable time.

    “I have no doubt in my mind that this carefully selected team of erudite scholars and technocrats will do justice to the central theme of CU-ICADI 2016,” he said.

     ”I do also expect that the inclusive and sustainable approach to this year’s conference, as well as its expanded approach, will make the outcome of the conference much more beneficial to the development of the African continent.’

    Highlighting the significance of ICADI, the Vice-Chancellor of Covenant University, Prof. Charles Ayo, described it as one of the strategic platforms targeted towards the actualization of Vision 10:2022 of the university, which is to get the university listed among the Top 10 universities in the world by 2022.

    “We are gradually approaching the end of the fourth year of the vision with proofs to show,” he said.

    Prof. Ayo, who attributed the success so far recorded with ICADI to the support of the CU Chancellor, Dr. Oyedepo and the university’s Board of Regents, said getting Chief Obasanjo and Prof. Ogwu to feature in the third edition “is the best choice of speakers ever made in the history of ICADI”.

    “Nobody would be able to understand and solve the problems of Africa like Africans,” he added.

  • Obasanjo urges Obas to shun supremacy tussle

    Obasanjo urges Obas to shun supremacy tussle

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Thursday urged the traditional rulers in Yorubaland to use their exalted offices to further develop their domain and not to engage in needless supremacy battle among themselves.

    Obasanjo, who deplored the supremacy battle among Yoruba monarchs, said the Obas must respect the throne they occupy and guard it jealously.

    The ex – President spoke on Thursday when the new Olubadan of Ibadanland, Oba Saliu Adetunji, visited him at his residence on Presidential Hilltop, Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    He lamented that the “I am greater than you in throne” syndrome among some royal fathers had drawn Yorubaland backward over the years.

    He urged them to always put good governance and welfare of their people first rather than engaging in an unnecessary rivalry among themselves.

    He said: “I think that what is more important is to give good governance to the citizens and also have mutual respect for ourselves. When I was President and even now, I usually accord respect to all presidents, particularly to the ones with small populations.

    “I do this because I realised that no matter how densely populated a country might be, it has the same one vote at the United Nations just as a country with smaller population.

    “For instance Nigeria with a population of about 180 million has the same one vote with a country such as Sao Tome with a population of 150, 000.”