Tag: Olusegun Obasanjo

  • Atiku’s endorsement: OBJ suffering from dearth of vision, conviction — ACF Scribe

    The Secretary General of Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), Mr. Anthony Sani, has reacted to former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s endorsement of former Vice President and presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, saying that Obasanjo is suffering from a dearth of vision and conviction required of a statesman.

    Sani, an elder statesman, however noted that with the level of Obasanjo’s inconsistency, he may change his mind again and withdraw his support for Atiku before 2019.

    Sani said Obasanjo as a statesman is expected to be an embodiment of national ideals and moral values for the nation, but the way he has conducted himself by tearing his PDP card and saying he would no more play partisan politics and forming a movement which he said is third force only for him to convert it to a political party of ADC, culminating in the endorsement of former Vice President Atiku reeks of inconsistency which comes with a dearth of vision and conviction required of a statesman.

    According to the ACF scribe, “it is democracy in action which at once confirms the saying that the only thing that is permanent in politics is interest; no permanent friends or enemies.

    “If you consider what the former President has written about his former Vice President Abubakar Atiku to the extent of saying God would not forgive him if he endorsed Atiku for president, then you can hardly avoid the conclusion that common decency is yet to take root in our democracy, especially when regard is paid to the place of the former president in the order of things in Nigeria.

    “President Obasanjo is a statesman who is expected to be an embodiment of national ideals and moral values for the nation. But the way he has conducted himself by tearing his PDP card and saying he would no more play partisan politics and forming a movement which he said is third force only for him to convert it to a political party of ADC, culminating in the endorsement of former VP Atiku reeks of inconsistency that comes with dearth of vision and conviction required of statesmen.

    “That may explain why most Nigerians may be curt and dismissive of the former president out of fear that he is just like a reed who can change his mind before the day of elections in 2019.”

    Asked whether the North will go with Obasanjo in endorsing Atiku, Sani said: “It is not possible for the whole North to be with former President Obasanjo in that endorsement precisely because the former Vice President is a major challenger of the incumbent President who is also a Northerner and a Hausa/Fulani Muslim.

    “As a result, politics of identity as symbolised by ethnicity, religion and of region would give way for those of real issues of real concern to real ordinary Northerners and by extension Nigerians.”

  • Obasanjo lobbying US to lift travel ban on Atiku, APC alleges

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said that former President Olusegun Obasanjo has commenced moves to make the United States government withdraw its alleged travel ban on PDP presidential candidate and former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar.

    In a statement signed by the Acting National Publicity Secretary of APC, Yekini Nabena, the party said it has credible information that Obasanjo has started lobbying the US government to issue Atiku an entry visa.

    The statement reads: “We have come across credible reports that former President Olusegun Obasanjo has made moves to secure United States entry visa for the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, whose candidacy he endorsed on Thursday.

    “It is learnt that that the former president, who during and after leaving office insisted on Atiku’s unsuitability to govern Nigeria based on his knowledge of the latter’s extensive corrupt practices while he served as Vice President, is lobbying US authorities to withdraw the ban reportedly placed on Atiku from entering the United States following a 2005 $500,000 bribery scandal that involved Atiku, his fourth wife Jennifer and former United States Congressman, William Jefferson.

    “Recall that the former president while in office had deployed enormous resources of the country on a global dragnet coordinated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in getting Atiku prosecuted for corrupt enrichment and money laundering.

    “A report by the United States Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, chaired by Senator Carl Levin reported that Atiku used offshore companies to siphon millions of dollars to his fourth wife in the United States, Jennifer, while still the vice president of Nigeria between 2000 and 2008.

    “The report further stated that then President Bush had on the strength of his report, barred Atiku and other corrupt politically exposed persons from being issued visa to the United States, a reason for which he has been unable to travel to the United States till date.

    “Former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s intervention in Alh.Abubakar Atiku’s ban from the United States of America is evidence of Obasanjo’s legendary hypocrisy and self-serving interest in national affairs.”

  • OBJ on Atiku: Yesterday, today and tomorrow

    Change, they say, is as constant as the northern star. In other words, we are bound to change at one point or the other. It is one thing that is as sure as the rising and setting of the sun. And so, some would say there is nothing wrong with former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s 360 degree turnaround in acknowledging that his once estranged deputy, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, has acquired the requisite experience and maturity to become Nigeira’s President, some 13 odd years after they both parted ways. I concur, based on the fact that certain principles and dynamics must occur before change happens. Even at that, I guess it would be a bit hasty to generalise that Obasanjo’s new reality about Atiku must be informed by the belief in politics that the meeting point is a belief in permanent interest while enemies are expectedly varied. That is why political ideology has become nothing but a slogan in the lexicon of politicians. What binds most is what slices of the national cake falls into their plates or corners at every negotiating discourse. Scary? No, not really.

    Before we dissect the Obasanjo that spoke so glowingly of Atiku’s capacity to captain this sinking ship of state, let’s meet the OBJ that serially took Atiku to the cleaners, both nationally and internationally, some few years back. In an article titled “Now, Obasanjo spits on own grave” published September 14, 2013, I had surmised that: “There are a thousand and one reasons to dislike former President Olusegun Obasanjo. What one can’t help but admire is his infantile garrulousness. After close to 12 years in office at the highest level of governance, many had expected that Baba would gloriously retire to his Ota farms, tending his chickens and enjoying fresh palm wine away from Abuja’s intriguing politics. No one had thought he would still be that active to disturb a nation’s peace with scathing parodies. It turned out that we had placed too much value on a man who worships nothing but his own ego. We may not have a sense of history but we are not that dumb not to understand why an Obasanjo would forever find it convenient to run his mouth riot on his former deputy, Atiku Abubakar or anyone for that matter.

    “This man sees himself as some kind of superhuman. And he may deny it till the end of life; Obasanjo knows that there is more to his sour relationship with Atiku than the allegations of corruption. Central to this pathological heckling of Atiku at any given opportunity is the ‘disloyal’ role Atiku played in frustrating the self-perpetuation agenda otherwise known as tenure elongation in the days of the long knives. Second was the humiliation that Obasanjo went through in the hands of Atiku before he was eventually given the green light to contest for a second term in office. Aside these two, all other things seem to exist in Obasanjo’s fantasies.

    ‘Before I proceed, I hasten to make this clarification. Atiku does not, by any standard, come close to anyone’s definition of a man without blemish. Like Obasanjo, he is part of the Nigerian problem. He may be a dogged fighter for whatever reasons; he is clearly not doing that purely out of a patriotic calling. He may not have won the war against Obasanjo in the struggle to remain in power; Atiku should be given the credit for winning a battle aimed at consigning him to the dustbin of history. It is also to his credit that the sucker punch he delivered on Obasanjo’s jaws some seven years back has turned the retired Army General into something of the proverbial bird with the broken beak. Perhaps, Obasanjo would have looked elsewhere for a toothpick if Atiku had not chickened out when his lieutenants had expected him to pull the trigger. Today, he is the victim of that grave mistake of 2003 when General Obasanjo was seeking a lifeline on bended knees!’

    That was when OBJ spat hot phlegm into the air and never care a hoot that the rheum landed on his face, swearing with magisterial infallibility, that Atiku must be arrested by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission for what he considered to be Atiku’s unforgivable crimes against his government and the Nigerian state. He had, in the in-house publication of the EFCC, Zero Tolerance, gone on a binge of delirium by not only labeling Atiku an international money launderer ‘frantically being sought by the Government of the United States of America but also accepted that he could not bear the fact that the man still walked on the streets as a free man despite his many sins.

    Reminded that Atiku still travelled to other countries, OBJ blurted: “He travels? Travels to where? To Dubai? Let him go to America and return to Nigeria. Well, I don’t know what the EFCC has found out about him, but I don’t know if he can go to America. Do you know? I am asking you, do you know?”

    That was then. Today, the narrative has changed. Having won the presidential ticket of the Peoples Democratic Party with the potential of realising a life-long ambition to rule this country, Obasanjo, who once said God would never forgive him if he turned his eyes the other way and allowed Atiku to mount the mantle, has started singing a new song. What did the magic? Could it be Atiku’s contrition which had not yielded any positive result in the last 13 years until last Thursday in Abeokuta or the fact that he had sworn to install any other person as President as long as President Muhammadu Buhari is retired to tend his cows in Daura? Well, it could be both. It could even be the fact that these two, in cahoot, with some forces must work together in the battle to defeat a common enemy and retired General, Buhari. Isn’t that what they call permanent interest?

    Suddenly, all the anger and deep bitterness had disappeared. Atiku, the butt of OBJ’s rabid attack, is now the poster boy for Nigeria’s glorious past, the present and the future. Though still magisterial in speech with an air of infallibility around him, Obasanjo said he had carried out a thorough psychoanalytical study on Atiku and discovered that the person sitting before him has undergone a personality cleansing that places him in a good stead to become Nigeria’s next President in 2019.

    Take a listen: “Yes, when it started, it was meant for Atiku to succeed Obasanjo. In the presence of these distinguished leaders of goodwill today, let me say it openly that we have reviewed what went wrong on the side of Atiku.  And in all honesty, my former Vice-President has re-discovered and re-positioned himself.  As I have repeatedly said, it is not so much what you did against me that was the issue but what you did against the Party, the Government and the country. I took the stand I had taken based on the character and attributes you exhibited in the position you found yourself.  I strongly believe that I was right. It was in the overall interest of everyone and everything to take such a position. “From what transpired in the last couple of hours or so, you have shown remorse; you have asked for forgiveness and you have indicated that you have learnt some good lessons and you will mend fences and make amends as necessary and as desirable.”

    Don’t ask me how, in just a couple of hours, the ever gregarious Obasanjo jumped to the conclusion that Atiku has changed. It is a possibility not just because change is permanent but because change is dependent on certain dynamics which, in this case, are known to only Obasanjo. Some four years back, he saw the need to change his hardline opinion about Buhari when he dramatically tore his PDP membership card and endorsed the All Progressives Congress candidate as he then was. Before then, former President Goodluck Jonathan enjoyed that privilege until OBJ started writing his tendentiously lengthy and acerbic letters to disengage the gear of friendship.

    He had equally mete out the same treatment on Buhari which explained why he would dine with anyone with the capacity to kick him out of the office. For now, candidate Atiku towers above every other person with the likelihood of repeating a feat Buhari achieved in the 2015 general election—beating an incumbent to the race for Aso Rock. It is Buhari’s turn to feel the heat Jonathan got burnt in some years back.

    Will Obasanjo be fourth time lucky? Would Buhari put an end to his serial enthronement and dethronement of presidents from Umaru Yar’Adua to Jonathan and Buhari? No one can tell. But one thing is sure. Atiku should, if he wins, expect the same ‘love’ notes OBJ was fond of writing to the other presidents God granting the old man more years on earth. Should such letters get to his table, let it be seen as the change that happens when permanent interests are no longer permanent. That is a projection of Obasanjo in the future in a democracy that runs in circles and under the firm grip of an old, wily fox who speaks from both sides of the mouth! Shouldn’t Obasanjo be making a call to his publishers to inform of the revise the lies he wrote about his ‘boy’ in that trilogy called My Watch?

     

     

  • Obasanjo lobbying US for entry visa for Atiku, says APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said that former President Olusegun Obasanjo has commenced moves to make the United States government with it’s alleged travel ban on PDP Presidential candidate and former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar.

    In a statement signed by the Acting National Publicity Secretary, Yekini Nabena, the party said it has credible information that Obasanjo has started lobbying the US government to issue Atiku with an entry visa.

    The statement reads “we have come across credible reports that former President Olusegun Obasanjo has made moves to secure United States entry visa for the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alh. Atiku Abubakar, whose candidacy he endorsed on Thursday.

    “It is learnt that that the former President who during and after leaving office insisted on Atiku’s unsuitability to govern Nigeria based on his knowledge of the latter’s extensive corrupt practices while he served as Vice President, is lobbying US authorities to withdraw the ban reportedly placed on Atiku from entering the United States following a 2005 $500,000 bribery scandal that involved Atiku, his fourth wife, Jennifer and former United States Congressman, William Jefferson.

    Read Also: I’m under pressure to leave APC – Yari

    “Recall that the former president while in office had deployed enormous resources of the country on a global dragnet coordinated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in getting Atiku prosecuted for corrupt enrichment and money laundering.

    “A report by the United States Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, chaired by Senator Carl Levin reported that Atiku used offshore companies to siphon millions of dollars to his fourth wife in the United States, Jennifer while still the vice president of Nigeria between 2000 and 2008.

    “The report further stated that then President Bush had on the strength of his report, barred Atiku and other corrupt politically exposed persons from being issued visa to the United States, a reason for which he has been unable to travel to the United States till date.

    “Former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s intervention in Alh.Abubakar Atiku’s ban from the United States of America is evidence of Obasanjo’s legendary hypocrisy and self-serving interest in national affairs.

  • Obasanjo has right to support any candidate, says Falana

    Activist lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN) has said that it is the right of former President Olusegun Obasanjo to support any presidential candidate of his choice.

    Reacting to his recent endorsement of People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, he said Obasanjo has a constitutional right to do so.

    According to him, “Former President Obasanjo has a constitutional right to support any presidential candidate of his choice.

    ” It is however hoped that God will forgive him for supporting Alhaji Atiku Abubakar”, he said.

  • Atiku, Secondus meet Obasanjo in Abeokuta

    … Seek his blessings, support for Atiku

     

    Former Vice President and Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, on Thursday visited former President Olusegun Obasanjo in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, to seek his blessings ahead of the 2019 presidential election in Nigeria.

    Atiku who arrived Obasanjo’s residence within the sprawling Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL) by 1.09pm with entourage comprising the PDP National Chairman, Uche Secondus, former Governor of Cross River State, Liyel Imoke, Director – General, Atiku Campaign Organisation(ACO), Otunba Gbenga Daniel, Spokesperson of ACO, Segun Sowunmi among others, went into a closed door meeting with his erstwhile boss.

    Atiku’s visit is coming about 48 hours after an elder statesman, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, led a delegation the Afenifere leaders to the Ebora Owu, where the spokesman of the Socio – cultural organisation, Yinka Odunmakin hinted that the Yoruba race in Nigeria would support a presidential candidate with an agenda to restructure the nation’ flawed federation.

    Read Also: Photos: Obasanjo, Atiku, Oyedepo, others meet in Abeokuta

    So far, former Vice – President Atiku had continued to promise Nigerians that he would restructure the country within his first year in office if given the mandate to preside over the affairs of Nigeria.

    Today’s meeting may redefine Obasanjo’s position on Atiku and perhaps, tilt towards supporting him in the 2019 presidential race against the incumbent, President Muhammadu Buhari.

  • Nigeria needs a leader who understands economics, says Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Tuesday said Nigeria needed a leader who understood economics.

    He spoke at a lecture organised by the Foursquare Gospel Church in Lagos.

    Obasanjo, who chaired the event, did not name which of the presidential candidates meets his prescriptions.

    He also avoided press interview after the event.

     

    Details shortly…

  • Nathaniel Bassey: A blessing in our time

    Popular gospel artiste, Nathaniel Bassey, widely known for his song “Onise Iyanu”, is a blessing to our generation today. His song is known to heal the broken-hearted, touch lives and give strength to the weak.

    Looking at the song, “Onise Iyanu”, Bassey described God as “a God of awesome wonders”, who also shows much mercies to his children. It follows that anyone who is need of a miracle in his life can call on God, and he will be answered. It also means that if anyone sins against God, He is faithful and just to forgive, because he shows so much mercy.

    Born in Lagos in 1978, Nathaniel Bassey had his higher education at the University of Lagos, where he studied international relations and politics for two years, before moving to London to study Politics.

    The singer studied music at Middlesex Summer School, and started his career with a group of friends. They formed a group called ‘Spectrum 4 Jazz Group”.

    At a point in his life, Nathaniel Bassey was travelling all over the world, making money from music, but his orientation remained the same, that gospel music is an avenue to minister to God, and not just for  profit making.

    Read Also: Tope Alabi, Nathaniel Bassey, Cobhams, others for Excel

    Bassey, who grew up in the church, joined the Rhodes Orchestra where he played the trumpet for two years. He had wanted to be an ordinary trumpeter, but every changed for him when he composed a song during the visit of the late wife of former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    His songs glorify God and edify men. A look at the “Alagbada Ina” song describes this fact. In the song, God is described as clothed with fire, and shines brighter than the moon and stars.

    Comparing Nathaniel Bassey songs to other secular songs today, it is clear that the lyrics of his songs contain good words. From observations, they are just songs that reign for a short while, and then it loses its value. This is not so for Nathaniel Bassey, and other spiritual songs, as they are always ever-green.

    We have experienced many secular songs that have been banned.  “Science Student” by Olamide is an example.

    Secular songs corrupt the mind, and lead youths and young ones astray.  They are songs that focus on the pleasure of sex, drugs and alcoholism, which end up destroying the life of youths.

  • Nigeria’s self-styled Macron wants to win power by ending corruption

    First there were the Brics. After coining that acronym in 2001, Jim O’Neill, then chief economist at Goldman Sachs, came up with the “Next Eleven” two years later, identifying 11 economies capable of joining the Brics as the world’s fastest-growing. Fidelity Investments developed this further when, in 2011, it identified the Mint economies, which it said could prove as rewarding for investors over the next decade as the Brics had been in the previous decade.

    The Mints — Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey — have not kept that promise. Indonesia probably has been the most reliable, its economy growing at just under 5 per cent or more in every year since 2011. Turkey and Mexico have delivered variable growth. The worst of the four and the biggest disappointment by far has been Nigeria, which slid into recession in 2016, going on to achieve GDP growth of only 0.8 per cent last year.

    Yet Nigeria boasts vast resources and huge potential. It is the world’s seventh most populous nation and by the middle of the century the United Nations expects it to be the third largest, with its population doubling from the present 200 million. Moreover, that population is urbanising rapidly, with Lagos projected to become the world’s biggest city by population by 2100.

    As well as one of the world’s youngest and fastest-growing populations, Nigeria enjoys vast natural resources, most obviously oil and gas. It owns 2.2 per cent of proven global oil reserves, according to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy, while accounting for 1.3 per cent of global natural gas production. It also boasts generous gold, lead, zinc, coal and uranium reserves.

    Why, then, does Nigeria’s economy underperform so dramatically? The most obvious answer is corruption. Nigeria is ranked 148th out of 180 in the latest corruption perceptions index published by Transparency International. Corruption and poverty go hand-in-hand, poverty is still rising and so is the jobless rate, because GDP growth is not keeping pace with population growth.

    All this will be keenly debated in Nigeria’s presidential election, due in February next year, in which the incumbent, Muhammadu Buhari, will be standing. So, too, will be Atiku Abubakar, one of the candidates of the People’s Democratic Party, the party of former presidents Goodluck Jonathan and Olusegun Obasanjo, under whom Mr Abubakar served as vice president.

    The most intriguing candidate is Kingsley Moghalu, a former deputy governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria and candidate of the Young Progressive Party. A lawyer who worked for the United Nations for 17 years and who was educated in Nigeria, the United States and Britain (he has a PhD in international relations from the London School of Economics), Mr Moghalu presents himself as a thoroughly modern presidential candidate in the mould of Emmanuel Macron.

    Last week, while on a visit to the UK, he said: “One of the major things I am going to do is move away from dependence on oil and move the economy towards innovation. We will have to look very seriously at the philosophical foundations that drive successful capitalist economies, make sure that there’s property rights, make sure that there’s innovation, make sure that there is capital. I shall be introducing a major venture capital fund that is going to fund small businesses and stimulate the economy.”

    Mr Moghalu’s policy prescription also includes more infrastructure investment. He accepts that while Nigeria has benefited from the process of “leapfrogging”, where a lack of landlines has encouraged rapid take-up of mobile technology and a lack of established electricity grids has enabled the rapid adoption of off-grid solar power, that can go only so far: “Nigeria, in particular, has a very high level of mobile phone technology and that’s a good thing, but I don’t think you can apply leapfrogging to every aspect of development. I still think Nigeria needs an industrial base. You can’t go into a post-industrial society, as some people recommend, without having been an industrial society.”

    The would-be president also has controversial views on Chinese investment in Africa. He says that many African nations have not benefited as they should have done, arguing that a lot of the continent’s leaders have lacked the “intellectual soundness” to drive a harder bargain with the Chinese. He argues it has exacerbated debt traps around Africa and increased dependency on foreign loans. Two thirds of taxes raised in Nigeria go on servicing its debts.

    Another key policy of Mr Moghalu is greater equality for women. He argues that Nigeria’s education and legal systems prevent too many women from reaching their potential and is promising a 50-50 gender balance in his ministerial appointments.

    But is Nigeria ready for a technocratic president? Mr Moghalu, who points to his work nation-building in Rwanda, Angola and the former Yugoslavia during his time at the UN, insists that it is. Pointing out that the country has become poorer since it became a democracy in 1999, he argued: “The people of Nigeria are tired of the old, recycled and corrupt political class, which President Buhari’s government represents.”

    Many will wish him luck. If this is to be the African century, the continent’s biggest country must fulfil its economic potential. If it does not and poverty continues to grow, the chances are that an increasing proportion of Nigeria’s growing population will head elsewhere, adding to the global migration crisis.

    .Ian King is the business presenter for Sky News.

  • Boxing champion, Larry Ekundayo is an asset to Nigeria – Obasanjo

    Former President, Olusegun Obasanjo has commended European International Boxing Federation welterweight champion Larry Ekundayo, stating that ‘Larry’s achievements are Nigeria achievements’.

    The former president who hosted the boxing champion at his residence in Ota, Ogun state, on Tuesday, called on Nigerians to support Ekundayo while urging the boxer to remain focus and bring more honours to Nigeria.

    Meanwhile Ekundayo has called on  the private and public sectors to invest in boxing in Nigeria  by establishing academies.

    Ekundayo, who was hosted  by the General Overseer of the Love of Christ Church, London, Rev. Mother Esther Ajayi, in Lagos on Monday,  said establishment of boxing academies would  help develop the sport  in the country.

    “I must confess that the road to fame for me has been a very torturous one. I started boxing since the age of 12 and truth is that, I lacked the basis foundation or springboard with which I would have launched myself into the career.

    “In fact, I kept asking myself if I was doing the right thing but my spirit kept telling me not to lose focus,’’ he said.

    The 36-year-old pugilist commended Ajayi for her investment and support for boxing.

    ‘’With Rev. Ajayi and her Church, I found a home and that is why I cannot embrace any other Church than hers because she stood for me when there was no one to call upon other than God and I am sure God sent her to me because it has been one success or the other since I became a member of her Church,” he added.

    Ekundayo who arrived Nigeria at the weekend on a six-day tour is to pay a courtesy visit to President Muhammadu Buhari in Abuja, Governor of Lagos state, Akinwunmi Ambode, and ex-Lagos governor, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.

    He would also pay homage to the Ooni of Ife, Adeyeye Ogunwusi and Oba Saheed Elegushi