Tag: Obasanjo

  • Obasanjo meets Olubadan-designate

    Obasanjo meets Olubadan-designate

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo yesterday held a close door meeting with the Olubadan-designate, High Chief Saliu Akanmu Adetunji, in his palace at Popoyemoja.

    Obasanjo arrived in company of Alhaji Lateef Gbadamosi, a Federal Commissioner for National Population Commission (NPC).

    The meeting lasted about five minutes during which important and private issues were discussed.

    Dressed in cream guinea brocade with brown cap and shoes to match, the former President emerged beaming with smiles, he entered into his waiting black Toyota Prado Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV).

    Also, a delegation of the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar, visited the Oba-elect on Sunday.

    The delegation, which was led by Sarkin Sasa, Alhaji Haruna Maiyasin, brought good wishes from the eminent royal father.

    Also former Minister of State for the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Oloye Olajumoke Akinjide also visited Adetunji.

  • NASS budget and Obasanjo’s unending sanctimoniousness

    NASS budget and Obasanjo’s unending sanctimoniousness

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has a mind seething with many contrivances. One of these contrivances is his customary habit of inveighing, through his bothersome letters, against what he perceives as other people’s failings. He never sees his own failings, nor thinks much of them. Middle of January, in the same mood as he is wont and with the same fierce and unrelenting temper he had embraced since his youth, he wrote a letter addressed to the National Assembly leadership in which he decried their budgetary profligacy and callousness. He didn’t have much to anchor his rage on, but he singled out the plan of the legislators to buy N4.7bn cars for themselves, notwithstanding the parlous economy. The former president knew his letter and the views expressed therein would resonate with the emotive and impulsive public, for the issue of buying cars, which he described as insensitive and unnecessary, and which President Muhammadu Buhari briefly, emotionally and superficially addressed during his last media chat, remains on the front burner, triggering angst and snickers.

    Chief Obasanjo’s letters troll public mood in a sinister manner. His biographers will probably remember exactly when he acquired the habit of exploiting moods. But the public will remember some of his contentious letters, not to talk of the acidity of the words he deployed with pleasurable and malevolent frenzy. He wrote twice or thrice in recent times to, but chiefly against, Wole Soyinka, professor of literature and Nobel laureate, on wide-ranging issues spanning politics, religion and morality, all designed vaingloriously to enhance his own image, steal the professor’s thunder — and steal a march on him too — and depict the former president in far more superior ethical light than he merits. He was not always successful, considering how unsparing Professor Soyinka is of bunkum, but he was satisfied achieving a stalemate and reveling in the noxious publicity that often accompanied both the letters and the stalemates. The former president also wrote many times to other less fortunate victims, including his former party chairman, Audu Ogbeh, and former president Goodluck Jonathan. What is clear is that though the letters lacked soul and oomph, Chief Obasanjo always carefully selected his targets to derive maximum publicity advantage and dividend.

    The former president contrived last week’s letter in the same mould as the others he had written over the years. It was bitter, vengeful, rambling and sanctimonious. Apart from the core of the letter– his so-called concern about the legislators’ insensitivity to the country’s parlous economy — the former president undergirded the letter with a number of other self-serving complaints. They had allocated to themselves salaries and allowances in excess of what the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) approved for the legislature, he whined; and collecting constituency funds without applying them to the purposes for which they were meant was irresponsible. Chief Obasanjo doubtless has legitimate concerns about some of the issues he raised in his latest letter, and unfortunately the national legislature itself has never really proved to be a responsible body mindful of the weighty role and responsibility entrusted to it. But to embalm such concerns in a provocatively mocking letter when other media would have sufficed is nothing but caviar to the general.

    In their deeply cynical responses to Chief Obasanjo’s gratuitous attack on their bona fides, both the Senate and House of Representatives dismissed the former president as misdirected and ill-motivated. Not only did they question his timing, wondering whether he did not have the 4th and 5th NASS in mind, they also questioned his integrity and read into his diatribe a vendetta propelled by the traumatic rejection he faced when he pushed his third term agenda. The legislators are wasting their time responding to Chief Obasanjo. Surely they can’t have forgotten that the old soldier gradually mummifying in their presence is inured to insult. He shrugs off the worst invectives as if they are nothing more than a feather duster on his skin. After giving a brief and elegant reply to the old general, the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, has indicated that at a later date, he would send a formal response to the ex-president. It is hard to imagine why he needs to do that. Yes, Chief Obasanjo is a former president who appears to be concerned about the well-being of the country. But beyond that, the legislature does not owe him any explanation. He has attacked them and, like the current federal government is attempting to do, is instigating the country against them. To that extent, the lawmakers owe the country explanations on how they intend to spend their budgetary allocations. For, after all, the people are suspicious of their representatives and distrustful of their intentions.

    While the NASS needs a better appreciation of the harshness of the times the people they represent live in, and must necessarily be more realistic and frugal in their spending habits, they must by their display of patience and commonsensical approach to the economic and social exigencies of the moment resist the attempt by the executive arm, of which Chief Obasanjo is a vestige, to undermine or weaken them in the esteem of the electorate. That is why they need to discipline their spending culture and bring it in subjection to the dictates of the moment. But it is also important that the country should not be carried away by the criticisms of the former president. His observations are not entirely altruistic. The former president was fortunate to preside over Nigeria when oil price rose and peaked at a dizzying height. While he liquidated Nigeria’s external debts using questionable economic parameters and paradigms, he virtually laid the foundation for the country’s ruination in the years that followed his presidency.

    The country remembers that he dedicated almost his entire time in office to propounding and nurturing appalling economic policies. His years as a military head of state between 1976 and 1979 saw him as an impressionable, gullible and fanatical proponent of nationalisation; but his years as an elected president contradistinctively saw him exercise a dangerous volte-face, dedicating his entire presidency to selling off everything the country owned under an equally poorly reasoned pot-pourri of privatisation programmes. The country has not recovered from his brusque and unwise economic measures. But rather than reflect on his policies that miscarried very badly in his years in office, the former president has carried himself extravagantly and without substantiation as the best thing that has ever happened to Nigeria.

    Chief Obasanjo’s economic policies were in many parts obnoxious and unworkable, but they were the least of the troubles that accompanied his presidency. Throughout his two terms in office, he undermined virtually every democratic institution, including the legislature and the judiciary, in favour of the executive. He was a dictator at heart, and he nurtured that habit extraordinarily at the expense of the country. Where he could not browbeat his opponents, he induced them; and where he could not induce, he harassed and oppressed. And if the oppression and harassment failed, he attempted to instigate the country against the evidently underperforming lawmakers. It was, therefore, in one final act of desperation that in 2007 the legislature, which had heedlessly and enthusiastically connived at his many anti-democratic measures, rose up as one man to put an end to the many buffooneries of his presidency.

    As this column has maintained over the months, had Chief Obasanjo laid the right foundation for Nigerian democracy in 1999 when God and man gifted him the role of a pathfinder; had he ruled like a philosopher-king, thoughtful, reflective and innovative; and had he abjured all forms of depredatory habits and established a honest and altruistic culture of leadership, he would not today need to question the integrity of federal lawmakers nor denounce their profligacy. Indeed, had he been the man for the moment in 1999, Nigeria would not have voted into office the late Umaru Yar’Adua, nor embraced Goodluck Jonathan, nor yet engaged in the jinxed pirouette of returning to the democratic starting block every time there is a change of office. The consequence of Chief Obasanjo’s dereliction of responsibility is that both democracy and the rule of law are still either alien to the country or embraced only when it is expedient. Nigeria has Chief Obasanjo to thank for this galling abnormality. He casts aspersion on the legislature and at other times views the judiciary contemptuously, but comparatively, despite their weaknesses, profligacy and incompetence, the legislature and the judiciary have kept democracy alive.

    It is important that the public put Chief Obasanjo’s objurgatory letters in perspective. He often does not mean well, even when his criticisms and observations are a true reflection of reality. He does not know as much as he pretends to know, though he carries himself with statesmanlike airs. His appreciation of issues are often coloured by selfish motives, but no man ever preaches altruism with as much fervour as he does. And no man ever sought publicity and advantage over others, whether friend or foe, as much as he does. Let the country engage their lawmakers, but let it not be on Chief Obasanjo’s self-seeking terms. And let the presidency not imagine that in Chief Obasanjo, they have an ally and defender. For when the spirit takes hold of him, he is quite capable of launching scathing attacks on President Muhammadu Buhari as he has brutally savaged the legislature. He did it to former military ruler Ibrahim Babangida, who civilly ignored the attack; he did it to late military ruler Sani Abacha, who felt so incensed he sought his life; he did it to Dr. Jonathan, who watched helplessly as his reputation ebbed under the old soldier’s withering blows; and he did it to many others: laureate, politicians and sundry personalities, not minding whether he was right or wrong. His constant and exuberant malfeasances, not to say his personal follies and foibles, nevertheless make him unqualified to be the country’s conscience.

  • Obasanjo under attack over letter to National Assembly

    Obasanjo under attack over letter to National Assembly

    Ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo’s letter to the National Assembly over lawmakers’ “reckless spending” and insensitivity to the country’s economic downturn yesterday generated ripples.

    The ex-President received knocks from the House of Representatives whose spokesman described his correspondence as “a distraction”.

    Obasanjo, in a January 13 letter to Senate President Bukola Saraki and House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara, accused the lawmakers of reckless spending and abuse of office. He asked them to return to the path of honour.

    Obasanjo also asked the lawmakers to open their financial records for external audit.

    The leadership of the National Assembly acknowledged receipt of the latter and Saraki, in a “preliminary” response, said the 8th Senate was committed to transparency and accountability.

    The chairman of the Senate Committee on Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Dino Melaye, accused Obasanjo of introducing corruption into the legislature. He described his letter as “a misplacement of anger”.

    Vowing not to take up issues with Obasanjo over the letter, the House said it believed that it was not directed at it but at the 4th and 5th House that operated when Obasanjo was President between 1999 and 2007.

    House spokesman Abdulrazak Namdas said: “We don’t want to join issues because we see the letter as a distraction. Moreover, we don’t believe the letter is directed to this Assembly but to the 4th and 5th Aseembly when he was the President.

    “I say this because the subject of the letter is about tranparency and for us, we have keyed into transparency and very open about our activities.”

    House Minority Leader Leo Ogor said buying vehicles for oversight functions is not in contravention of the constitution.

    Obasanjo criticised the lawmakers’ planned purchase of vehicles for oversight functions after obtaining car loans.

    Ogor said if the former President and Nigerians do not want oversight functions of check and balance against the executive, a process of amending the Constitution should be initiated.

    Melaye, who represents Kogi West, wondered why Obasanjo should mistake the 8th National Assembly as the one that allegedly defrauded him in 2007 by collecting his money and refusing to actualise what he called his Third Term agenda.

    He hoped that the letter was not an attempt to cover up and distract attention from the Halliburton and Siemens corruption allegations.

    Melaye said: “I have tremendous respect for President Olusegun Aremu Okikiola Obasanjo.

    “Elder statesman, respected Pan- Africanist and committed patriot.

    “I went through the letter written to all Senators and members of the House of Representatives.

    “The letter I can see is a misplacement of anger. Our leader is mistaking the 8th National Assembly as the same Senate Assembly that defrauded him in 2007.

     ”I appeal to Baba that we are not the ones please.

    “After nine years of that bribery saga, the first of its kind, I expect forgiveness to have taken place.

    “There was the case of bribery introduced by the Obasanjo regime in the desperate attempt to remove Speaker Ghali Umar Na’abba from office then.

    “In fact, there was an open display of that bribery money on the floor of the House. That government exposed the National Assembly to corruption and easy money.

    “I hope this is not an attempt to cover up and distract attention from the Halliburton and Siemens corruption allegations.

    “While I am against corruption anywhere in Nigeria, I will not support accusations based on anger and vindictiveness.

    “The 8th Senate should also look inwardly and purge herself of all the deliberate misgivings of the past. Nigeria must work and we must support the anti-corruption stand of the Buhari Administration. God bless Nigeria.”

  • Melaye to Obasanjo: Your letter a misplacement of anger

    Melaye to Obasanjo: Your letter a misplacement of anger

    Former Chairman, Senate ad-hoc Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Senator Dino Melaye, on Thursday responded to former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s letter to Senators and members of the House of Representatives, describing the ex-president’s outburst as misplacement of anger.

    Obasanjo had accused the lawmakers of reckless spending and abuse of office and asked them to return to path of honour.

    The ex-President also asked the lawmakers to open their financial records for external audit.

    But Melaye told journalists in Abuja that Obasanjo’s letter was borne out of a misplaced anger.

    He also accused the former Nigeria leader of exposing the National Assembly to corruption during his celebrated third term agenda.

    The Kogi West lawmaker wondered why Obasanjo should mistake the 8th National Assembly as the one that allegedly defrauded him in 2007 by collecting his money and refused to actualize his third term plot.

    He noted that it is hoped that the letter was not an attempt to cover up and distract attention from the Halliburton and Siemens corruption allegations.

    Melaye said, “I have tremendous respect for President Olusegun Aremu Okikiola Obasanjo.

    “Elder statesman, respected pan Africanist and committed patriot.

    “I went through the letter written to all Senators and members of the House of Representatives.

    “The letter I can see is a misplacement of anger. Our leader is mistaken the 8th National Assembly as the same Senate Assembly that defrauded him in 2007. I mean those that collected his money and refused to implement the 3rd term agenda.

    “I appeal to Baba that we are not the ones please.

    “After nine years of that bribery saga, the first of its kind, I expect forgiveness to have taken place.”

  • Obasanjo accuses Senators, Reps of reckless spending

    Obasanjo accuses Senators, Reps of reckless spending

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has asked Senate President Abubakar Bukola Saraki and House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara to open the financial records of the National Assembly since 1999 for external bodies.

     Besides, Obasanjo said that the National Assembly should also have the courage to publish its recurrent budgets for the years 2000, 2005, 2010 and 2015 for transparency and accountability.

     The former President’s views are contained in a January 13th, 2016 letter.

     The letter, first published by PremiumTimes,  was received in the office of the Senate President on January 18th.

     Obasanjo, Nigeria’s president between 1999 and 2007, accused members of the National Assembly of lawlessness and abuse of the constitution by overturning the recommendation of the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission on their entitlements and emoluments.

     The former President said that there was no valid argument for the action of the members of the National Assembly in hiking their emoluments, except to see it for what it is – law-breaking and impunity by lawmakers.

     He urged them to return to the path of “honour, distinguishness, sensitivity and responsibility.”

     Obasanjo said that cars for legislators would fall into the same category of reckless expenditure. They are unnecessary and insensitive.

    A pool of a few cars for each Chamber, he said, will suffice for any Committee Chairman or members for any specific duty.

    The former President insisted that the waste that had gone into cars, furniture, housing renovation in the past, was mind-boggling and these are veritable sources of waste and corruption.

     “That was why they were abolished. Bringing them back is inimical to the interest of Nigeria and Nigerians,” he said. 

    The National Assembly, he said, should take a step back and do what is right not only in making its own budget transparent but in all matters of financial administration and management including audit of its accounts by external outside auditor from 1999 to date.

    According to him, if it is done, the measure will bring a new dawn to democracy in Nigeria and a new and better image for the National Assembly and it will surely avoid the Presidency and the National Assembly going into face-off all the time on budgets and financial matters.

    The Senate President who spoke through his Special Adviser Media and Public Affairs, Mr. Yusuph Olaniyonu, acknowledged receipt of the letter.

  • Obasanjo bags  MA degree from  NOUN, eyes PhD

    Obasanjo bags MA degree from NOUN, eyes PhD

    •15 graduate with first class

    The National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) yesterday awarded a Master degree in Christian Theology to former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    Obasanjo was among the 10, 653 students who bagged degrees in various academic fields at the 5th convocation ceremony of the institution held in Abuja yesterday.

    Obasanjo with Matriculation no NOU 146058901 bagged a pass in Christian Theology with a GPA of 4.25 from the Abeokuta centre of the institution.

    The former president is expected to continue his PhD degree at the institution.

    Udo Ukeme Effiong, from the Apapa centre, Lagos, emerged the best graduating student of the institution with a GPA of 4.71 in environmental sciences and resource management.

    President Muhammadu Buhari, in his address, said education remained the most important sector that defines the life, values, political culture and economic power of a nation.

    Buhari noted that recent events in the oil and gas sector had demonstrated the nation’s economy would not survive mainly on oil and gas sector.

    The president said that Nigeria must diversify its economy into other sector like agriculture and mining to survive.

    “The success of such diversification of the economy will depend on the application of the benefits accruing from the development of human capital through education.

    “Education is the bedrock for the development of any nation. In democratic societies, universal access to education is a priority and tertiary education is seen as a fundamental responsibility of the state.

    “Nigeria as a nation acknowledges this responsibility and will spare no effort at delivering quality education to its citizens,”  he said.

    Buhari, who was represented by the Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof. Julius Okojie, said that government had through NOUN tried to deal with the additional calls for an opportunity for lifelong learning and for those unable to engage in a regular full time formal education.

    The president added that enhancement of access to tertiary education remained a focal point of his administration.

    “Consequently, one of the consistent focal point of government for the development of the education sector is the expansion of access to tertiary education.”

    NOUN’s VC, Prof. Vincent Tenebe, said new programmes had already been added to the institution.

    He maintained that the university would continue to strengthen its existing academic programmes.

    The NOUN VC promised to bring positive revolutionary changes in tertiary education.

  • Obasanjo bags MA from NOUN

    Obasanjo bags MA from NOUN

    The National Open University of Nigeria, Saturday awarded a Master Degree in Christian Theology to a former President, Olusegun Obasanjo.

    Chief Obasanjo was among the 10, 653 students who bagged degrees in various academic fields at the 5th Convocation ceremony of the institution held in Abuja on Saturday.

    Obasanjo with Matric no: NOU 146058901, bagged a pass in Christian Theology with a GPA of 4.25 from the Abeokuta Centre of the institution.

    The former president is expected to continue his PhD degree at the institution.

    Udo Ukeme Effiong, from the Apapa center, Lagos, emerged as the best graduating student of the institution with a GPA of 4.71, in environmental sciences and resource management.

    President Muhammadu Buhari, in his address said that education remained the most important sector that defines the life, values, political culture and economic power of a nation.

    Buhari noted that recent events in the oil and gas sector had undoubted demonstrated that Nigeria’s economy would not survive mainly on oil and gas sector.

    The president said that Nigeria must diversify its economy into other sector like agriculture, mining and other sectors to survive.

    “The success of such diversification of the economy will depend on the application of the benefits accruing from the development of human capital through education.

    “Education is the bedrock for the development of any nation. In democratic societies, universal access to education is a priority and tertiary education is seen as a fundamental responsibility of the state.

    “Nigeria as a nation acknowledges this responsibility and will spare no effort at delivering quality education to its citizens,”‎ he said.

    Buhari, who was represented by the Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission(NUC), Prof. Julius Okojie, said that government had through the NOUN tried to deal with the additional calls for an opportunity for life long learning and for those unable to engage in a regular full time formal education.

    “Government remains determined to continue to pursue the objectives above despite the many challenges been encountered.

    “Ever increasing demand for higher education and the need for innovation and technological advancement in this era of globalization are just two of the challenges.”

    The president added that enhancement of access to tertiary education remained a focal point of his administration.

    “Consequently, one of the consistent focal point of government for the development of the education sector is the expansion of access to tertiary education.

    The Vice Chancellor of the institution, Prof. Vincent Tenebe, in his address, said that new programmes had already been added to the institution.

    He maintained that the university would continue to strengthen its existing academic programmes.

    The NOUN VC promised to bring positive revolutionary change in tertiary education.

    “NOUN is properly positioned to effect efficient entrepreneurial programmes for the benefit of all Nigerians,” he added.

  • 1966 coup altered Nigeria’s history,says Obasanjo

    1966 coup altered Nigeria’s history,says Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo  yesterday in Lagos called the January 15,1966 coup as a monumental error, wh

    The coup,led by the late Major  Chukwuma Nzeogwu he said, brought  the military into politics.

    Obasanjo made the  remark  at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA) on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the  assassination of First Republic politician and Minister of Finance, Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh.

    Also killed in that coup were Prime Minister Abubakar Tafawa Balewa;Northern Region Premier Ahmadu Bello and Western  Region  SLA Akintola,among others.

    “Exactly 50 years ago darkness enveloped Nigeria. Many who were around then were confused; many of us were taken by surprise,” Obasanjo said.

    “That we are able to gather here today to remember and in a way acknowledge the life of our early leader who, whatever may be his deficiency , is a testament to the fact that he gave us the best.”

    Okotie-Eboh’s colleague, Alhaji  Yusuf  Maitama Sule, said the former Minister of Finance was a true Nigerian.

    He said: “Festus was a friend of the people; he was a friend of the East, friend of the West and  friend of the North.

    “He had  fantastic public relations. That was why he was loved by all; you could  never guess the political party he belonged to.”

    He said  that whenever  Okotie-Eboh walked  into parliament, his nickname, Omimiejor would rent the air.

    “He was full of humour, even when members of the opposition were attacking him. But, it was not the kind of attack you have today,” he added.

    Another First Republic politician, Chief .Mbazulike Amaechi, said Okotie-Eboh was one of the financial pillars of the defunct NCNC.

    He said even when many of his kinsmen – Itsekiri – left the party for the Action Group (AG), Okotie-Eboh elected to remain in the NCNC.

    Amaechi noted that the First Republic Minister of Finance was a man of vision who managed the finance and the economy of the country far beyond the expectations of everyone.

    The event, which was chaired by Obasanjo, also witnessed the public presentation of the book, “Chief Okotie-Eboh, in Time and Space” and it attracted many dignitaries, including former Vice President Alex Ekwcueme, Chief Akintola Williams, Ahmed Joda, Philip Asiodu, Great Ogboru, Dr. Wale Babalakin and a host of others.

    Royal fathers from all parts of the country, including the Emir of Kano,Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi also graced the ocassion.

    In a tribute read on his behalf, Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola called for the establishment of a foundation in Okotie-Eboh’s name, to teach  young Nigerians the country’s history.

  • Biafran agitation borne out of ignorance, frustration — Obasanjo

    Biafran agitation borne out of ignorance, frustration — Obasanjo

    The renewed agitation for Biafra yesterday came under attack from former President Olusegun Obasanjo who dismissed it as a product of error,ignorance and frustration.

    Obasanjo who said he ‘very cautious’ in  getting involved in any debate or conversation with “the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), its many hydra-headed iterations and its resurgent Biafra agitation” said : “at best, the agitation was at regional level and that no inadvertent helping hand should be lent to it, to make it national.”

    He spoke at a Development Discourse  organised by Nextier Limited on the Biafra issue Abuja.

    Reading from his  prepared speech and speaking extempore at times,the former President said it is also wrong to say that the South East  is marginalised in the scheme of things.

    He hailed  South-East leaders who,at a stakeholders’ meeting on December 17, 2015 dismissed the Biafra agenda and called for improvement in their region’s socio-economic situation.

    He advised them  to ensure sanity among their youth.

     “No right-thinking person who has experienced the horror of war will ever agitate for more war… If the elders abdicate their responsibility to the immaturity, inadequate experience, unrealistic idealism and the frustration of the young, it will no doubt lead to disaster.

     “Biafra as a secession issue is dead and nobody should follow that way. It can again, only lead to disaster.

    “The devil finds work for idle hands and fills empty minds; there is even some suspicion that the agitators embarked on the act in order   to extort   money from outsiders and to also extract financial support from the government.

    “The commercialization and exploitation of Biafra agitation is obscene to the point of criminal fraudulence; or, how do you explain the issuance of Biafran passport that takes no one anywhere and for which unwary people are being charged exorbitant prices.

    According to Obasanjo, Biafra agitation is “a hopeless and fruitless exercise on which nobody in seriousness should embark”.

    “Proffering solutions, the ex-President stated that the resurgent Biafra agitation should be treated as “a cry for attention, amelioration and improvement of socio-economic conditions” of South East youth and their counterparts in other parts.

    “Above all, good governance at all levels is the key solution. The welfare and well-being of the citizenry with equity, justice and fairness must be the main pre-occupation of government at all levels”, he added.

    On alleged marginalisation of the Igbos,he said: “When I became an elected President, an Igbo man was made the minister of finance;an Igbo man was made the governor of Central Bank;an Igbo man was made the minister of transport.

    “One day some people came to me and said that the civil war is not over yet and I asked why. They said since the end of the civil war no Igbo man has been the minister of Defence and explained to them that what matters is the service chiefs and we have had Igbos in that position. And I appointed Thompson Aguiyi- Ironsi  (as Minister of State for Defence).”

  • Let’s develop rural communities, says Obasanjo

    Let’s develop rural communities, says Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has called on Nigerians in urban areas to develop  rural communities, instead of waiting for the government.

    Obasanjo recalled his childhood in his ancestral agrarian Ibogun village in Ifo Local Government Area of Ogun State, saying there was neither a toilet nor clinic.

    He urged the people to embark on “village renewal” projects.

    The ex – President made the call at the weekend in his message at the 2015 edition of the Ibogun-Olaogun Day.

    Obasanjo noted that government alone cannot be expected to satisfy all the infrastructural needs of rural folks.

    According to him, the physical, social and educational development of the rural dwellers largely depends on whatever contributions members in urban areas can facilitate to such communities.

    He said Ibogun can now boast of a primary health clinic, modern toilets, good roads as well as a modern primary school all of which were products of communal efforts.

    Obasanjo said: ”As responsible people, we should not wait for the government.

    “When I was growing up in this community, there were no latrine, bathroom and clinic.

    “Today, several people would have died if the clinic we built through communal efforts had not been in existence.

    “Each of us can encourage village renewal; we don’t need to wait for the government if we don’t want to tarry for too long.

    “The need to raise fund for our community secondary school is borne out of the need that we can not wait for government to do it for us.

    “We have to carry our load by ourselves before we say the government should come to our aid. That is the reality today.

    “We don’t need to wait for government before developing our communities, particularly some of us who were raised in the village.

    “We should not wait for any government ticket. Let us think of what we can do for ourselves and our communities; what can we do for ourselves to make the rural communities more habitable for us.”

    Also speaking at the event, former Oyo State Deputy Governor Taofeek Arapaja said developing the rural areas would curb rural-urban migration in search of the non-existence “white-collar” jobs.

    Arapaja urged the rich to fraternise with the rural communities and establish industries there.

    “If Baba Obasanjo could be championing the call for rural development, there is nothing stopping us the younger ones to heed his call and go back to our rural areas to bring in development,” he said.