Tag: Olusegun Obasanjo

  • Buhari approves payment of pension  to retired Biafran police officers

    Buhari approves payment of pension to retired Biafran police officers

    Succour has come the way of police officers who served in the defunct Biafran Police during the 30 months Civil War as President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the payment of pension to those who were granted presidential pardon in 2000.

    The Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate ( PTAD ) yesterday announced that about 162 of such retired police officers and 57 next of kin of those who died will be paid their pension benefits in the first phase of the payment with effect from tomorrow in Enugu.

    A statement from the PTAD management said after their pardon, a verification exercise was conducted for them by the defunct Police Pension office and recently by PTAD and the Police Service Commission.

    The statement reads: “The general public would recall that Nigeria witnessed an ugly Civil War between July, 1967 and January, 1970 and as a result of that unfortunate period in our history, some members of the Armed Forces, the Nigeria Police and paramilitary officers who took part with the secessionist were dismissed from the service.

    “The dismissal of those officers was commuted to retirement in the year 2000 through a Presidential Amnesty granted on May 29, 2000 by the Administration of the then President, Olusegun Obasanjo.

    “A verification exercise was conducted for the pardoned officers by the defunct Police Pension Office and recently PTAD on one hand and the Police Service Commission on the other.

    “Despite the presidential pardon and verification of these officers, many of them remained unpaid years after the pardon.  However, the present administration under the able leadership of President, Muhammadu Buhari has graciously given approval for the payment of pension entitlements to these officers and their next of kin.”

  • Obasanjo: I don’t believe in true federalism

    Obasanjo: I don’t believe in true federalism

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has dismissed as unnecessary the call for true federalism and devolution of power.

    To him, there is nothing like true federalism because the governors already have the powers.

    The former president who has been travelling to promote his new book, Making Africa Work, told his interviewers:  ”I don’t believe in true federalism. What is true federalism?”

    On the governors and the call for devolution of power, he said: “Why are they not accountable? What powers do they not have?

    “They have power. In fact, state governors are more powerful than the president. That’s the truth. If anybody tells you they want devolution or true federalism, he doesn’t know what he is talking about.”

    A broad range of current and former lawmakers, civil society groups and millions of Nigerians would beg to differ. So too would the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), which Obasanjo backed in 2015, at least in its manifesto, which pledged to “amend our constitution with a view to devolving powers”.

    But Obasanjo said: “The fact (that) anybody talks about it doesn’t mean it’s right.”

    Obasanjo’s new book describes itself as “a guide to improving Africa’s capacity for economic growth and job creation”. Co-written with Greg Mills, Jeffrey Herbst and Dickie Davis, it provides a detailed overview of various political and economic challenges facing the continent. It warns of a growing youth bulge, and provides dozens of recommendations on how to encourage the private sector, diversify the economy and deliver forward-thinking leadership.

    On the Buhari administration, Obasanjo said: “Buhari has made some announcements. He has tried to keep on going in the area of agribusiness, but not enough.” “It is not yet enough to prepare the ground for uninhibited growth of the economy, which we need”.

    ”Is Buhari doing enough about it?” he asks at one point of youth unemployment. “I don’t believe he is. Can he do enough about it? Of course he can.”

    Obasanjo’s vague and uncommitted answers contrast with the book he just co-wrote, which packs a handful of statistics into virtually every paragraph and offers dozens of recommendations. But the former president does eventually hone in on one specific: Nigeria’s frustrated young people.

    The median age of Nigeria’s population is under 18, and the youth demographic continues to swell. There aren’t enough jobs for them, and if Obasanjo were back in office, his priority would be education. “Youth empowerment, skill acquisition and youth employment – education must be able to do that,” he insists. “If you do that, the ticking bomb of possible youth explosion out of restiveness and anger will subside.”

    Obasanjo attributed young people’s frustration to many of Nigeria’s problems today, including the ongoing agitation in the Southeast.

    The former president maintained that secession is not the solution.

    “All youth in Nigeria have legitimate reasons to feel frustrated and angry,” Obasanjo added.

  • Who said Nigerian youths are unemployable?

    Who said Nigerian youths are unemployable?

    Mary Mcleod Bethune once said: “We have powerful potentials in our youths, and we must have the courage to change old ideas and practices so that we may direct their power toward good ends”.

    There is no denial that Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa with one of the largest populations of young people in the world, having about 33,652,424 members with a lot of innate potentials and resources. Unfortunately, they have been described paradoxically as a ‘demographic majority’ and a ‘resource minority’ in the country.

    They’re often regarded as unproductive, lazy and useless to the economy, and this assertion has lingered for so long that the youth are beginning to believe they are unproductive, unreliable and straight up lazy fellows.

    The advent of technological innovations and advancements in the 21st century has been blamed by several researchers, scholars, schools of thoughts, as the primary cause of the unproductivity and unemployability of an average Nigerian youth.

    Lots of scholarly articles and journals have been published on how Nigerian youth are unemployable, unproductive and incapacitated in the country and people hardly criticize or take a stand against these works because they believe the points are valid and the assertion is true, but contrary to popular belief, this is very wrong!

    In furtherance, a popular adage–you can’t put new wines in old bottle. The youth are the new wine of the society and they are always crop-fitted into the old bottles of the Nigerian Educational system and at the end of the day, they still take the blame for their unproductivity and ineptitude.

    According to statistics from the British Council, since 2002, the number of Nigerians being educated in the UK increased by over 75% and that figure was generated in 2010. Thus, it can be expected that the percentage is higher given the continued dilapidation of the country’s education system.

    Most of these young people running away from the country have become successful in their diverse fields abroad. So, who is to blame?

    The most recent Census Bureau study reveals that African immigrants have the most success in the American higher education system Nigerians appear to be especially, successful when it comes to attaining advanced degrees. The data shows that 17% of all Nigerians in the country have a master’s degree, and 4% have a doctorate. To put that in perspective, the same data reveals that only 8%of native-born whites hold master’s degrees, and 1% have earned doctorates.

    Why are our youth abroad doing so well? If Nigerian youth are truly unproductive, unemployable and lazy, how are they able to compete favourably with their counterparts abroad when they get there?

    They’re perceived to be unemployable because the nation is deplorable! Let’s take a look at the number of graduates poured into the labour market every year, Over 500,000! All these people go into the labour market in search of jobs, and quite a good number of them graduated with fairly good grades.

    What then is the problem? They blame it on lack of skills and talents, when they hardly made provisions for skill acquisitions in their educational system.
    They don’t know because they were not taught!

    The youth are agile, easily adapt to situations and are always ready to proffer solutions when need be. They have greater mental strength than their predecessors; they’re seen in most sectors of the economy using their technological, communication and marketing skills to rebuild the broken walls of our economy

    The youths are the brains behind the technological progress in Nigeria. They are the cyber Lords; the political activists and campaign managers, the industrial labourers, the marketing managers, etcetera, of the nation yet they’re called unemployable!

    They’re found in almost every sector; some of them don’t have a good training base and are subjected to learning these skills in a few months – what should have been incorporated in the school’s curriculum.

    Many Nigerian youths are grounded in different skills acquired through apprenticeship, education, observation and teaching which does not take very long and they become professionals at it.

    When harnessed, this population brings into life, goods that satisfy everyday needs although most times, they lack good manufacturing equipment for mass production.

    It can be deduced that the problem of the so-called unemployability of Nigerian youths lies not with the youth, but the leadership of the country. Perhaps they don’t want tomorrow to have leaders.

    Consequently, former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said it all, saying: “the youths constitute Nigeria’s only hope for a real future, if we want a real future, we should never look down on our youth”.

  • Togo: Gnassingbe must have exhausted his ideas – Obasanjo

    Togo: Gnassingbe must have exhausted his ideas – Obasanjo

    Former Nigerian President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo has urged the President of Togo Faure Gnassingbe to step down “unless he has something new” for his people.

    This is following the continued protest against the 12-year rule of President Gnassingbe by some Togolese in the country’s opposition party.

    The Owu Chief made this known in an interview with BBC, adding that the county should have a new constitution that will reduce the years or term a President will stay in power.

    The former President’s position is in tandem with the demands of the protesters who are seeking a review of the country’s constitution to limit the terms a President will be in power.

    Recall that President Gnassingbe who has been in power for 12 years in power took over from his father ruled Togo for 38 years. Thus, Chief Obasanjo advised the Togolese President to step down, saying he believes President Gnassingbe “must have exhausted whatever ideas he has.”

    According to Obasanjo, “I believe that President Gnassingbe will have to do something about it (the protests),” he said.

    “I believe they should have a new constitution that will have a limit to the number of terms anybody can be president and he should abide by that.

    “I [also] believe whatever he has to do in terms of development, whatever ideas he has, he must have exhausted them by now. Unless he has something new that we don’t know.

    “After twelve to fifteen years, some of them (African leaders) up to thirty…and maybe, if you don’t leave office, office will leave you.”

  • Echoes from the ‘Third Term’ project

    Echoes from the ‘Third Term’ project

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo seems fated to be dogged by the “Third Term” project he was widely reported to be hatching the way the former military president, General Ibrahim Babangida has been haunted by his annulment of the June 12, 1993, presidential election, however much Babangida may pretend to the contrary.

    No sooner was it bruited in 2006 that Obasanjo was scheming to change the rules to allow him remain in office beyond the two terms warranted by the Constitution than his one-time collaborators in the PDP worked themselves into a froth and warned of the direst consequences if he went ahead.

    The rumours were not unfounded.

    Obasanjo’s loyal followers had declared that he deserved a third term to continue the titanic job of rebuilding Nigeria after the depredations of military rule.  These were no fringe elements.   They came mostly from, and were backed enthusiastically by the organized private sector, which sponsored lavish wrap-around newspaper advertisements to press their case.

    A leading captain of industry said Obasanjo had been so good for business he could remain in office for another 35 years as far as operators of that sector were concerned.

    Obasanjo did not help matters by his mixed signals and studied evasions.  When he declared at a reception in Germany that “some well-meaning people” had been urging him to stay longer  in office to see his reform measures to a logical conclusion, alarm bells pealed back home.

    He calmed the waters somewhat when, when, asked by visiting but since defenestrated World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz whether he would leave office at the end of his term, he answered in the affirmative.

    Even after that affirmative statement, Obasanjo was not quite forthcoming. And so, every utterance or chance remark of his, every gesture, every action or failure to act, every clearing   of the presidential throat, his coming and his going, and every breath he drew, was deconstructed through the prism of the third-term bid.

    Those who claimed to know Obasanjo’s mind could not communicate his intentions clearly and coherently. They said he would surely leave, because he had assured them that he would  do nothing subversive of the Constitution. But that assurance left open the possibility that Constitution could be amended to accommodate Obasanjo’s rumoured ambition.

    Arguably the most definitive statement on the issue came from Ojo Madueke, Minister of Transport, who said that here was indeed a proposal for a constitutional amendment before the National Assembly, but that it was only one of more than 100 amendments under consideration.

    The strategy for the actualization of the Third Term rested on the calculation that at least 24 state governors  would be able to persuade, induce, bribe or corral their state assemblies into approving an enabling enactment, after which he National Assembly would be procured  by similar methods to approve it.

    Teams from the National Assembly fanned out to the so-called geo-political zones and staged “national consultations” to ascertain public opinion on the proposed amendments. In the Osogb centre, Ekiti Governor Ayo Fayose burst into dance, chanting “emi lowo si,” meaning that he fully endorsed the move.  After the consultations, the amendment was reported to have won popular endorsement.

    It all looked like a done deal.

    But when the question was put before the Senate for a voice vote, it elicited only a faint response from the Third Term lobby.  In stunned disbelief, the incumbent President of the Senate, Ken Nnamani put the question a second time.  Again, the response was barely audible.

    The protagonists of the Third Term had lost their voices and their nerves at the most crucial moment, after reportedly obtaining the N50 million and other inducements on offer for each vote.

    To this day, Obasanjo maintains that he never sought a third term.  He said God had given  him everything he ever asked for, and that God would have granted him a third term if he        had asked.

    There the matter rested until two weeks ago, when Ayo Fayose – who else –breathed new life into and perverted the narrative the way he has perverted everything he has ever touched.

    Hear him, as reported by the newsmagazine The Interview, in which he claimed  he personally witnessed  Obasanjo go down on his knee to beg the late Libyan president Moumar Ghaddafi to assist him realize his third-term quest.

    “It was such a pathetic scenario, so shameful. Obasanjo was speaking rapidly like a parrot. I was shocked beyond words. I never knew Obasanjo would be that humble.

    “He was on one knee till the end of the conversation. Ghaddafi kept quiet and was just watching Obasanjo. When Obasanjo stopped rambling, Ghaddafi said, ‘Have you finished? Just know that I will not attend that meeting. I have other engagements.”

    Obasanjo has his flaws, to be sure.  But the Obasanjo I know will never kowtow to any foreign leader.  When he was a statesman-at-large holding no substantive office, he carried himself with the dignity of a head of state, and was received as such everywhere he went.

    I accompanied him on trips to Benin Republic, Togo, Angola, Zambia, Namibia and to South Africa during and after apartheid.  These visits were like summits at which important bilateral issues and African issues were discussed.  He always informed military president Babangida before setting out, and always briefed him in writing on his return.    I contributed talking points and sat in at meetings, at once observer and participant.

    Obasanjo is too self-regarding, too proud of his being a Nigerian, too conscious of the responsibility that status confers on him as a citizen and statesman, and too steeped in the nuances of international diplomacy to kowtow to Ghaddafi or any foreign leader for that matter.    Remember his “Dear Margaret” letter joining issues with British Prime Minister Margret Thatcher over her no-sanctions policy on apartheid South Africa?

    I say nothing of his being a battle-tested general of the army, and an Owu chief to boot.

    Fayose’s claim that Obasanjo kowtowed to Ghaddafi is of a piece with earlier reports that Obasanjo had prostrated before his estranged vice president, Abubakar Atiku, and begged him not  to enter the race for the PDP’s  presidential ticket for the 2003 general election.  It speaks volumes about Atiku’s character that he has categorically disavowed that tale.

    In what way could Gaddhafi’s support have advanced  Obasanjo’s quest?  In what way could Ghaddafi’s demurral have hurt that quest?  Even if Libya belonged in ECOWAS, where Nigeria is  the dominant player, Ghaddafi’s support or demurral would not have mattered in the least.  Ghaddafi became chair of the African Union only in 2009, two years after Obasanjo had vacated power.  So, in what guise could he have helped or hindered Obasanjo’s bid?

    Besides, if Obasanjo was for any reason inclined to get down on his knees to beg for Ghaddafi’s support, I doubt whether he would have done so with the notoriously incontinent Fayose as witness.  Obasanjo would have asked his host for a private audience.

    The Obasanjo the world knows is in speech inclined to be slow, measured, and focused, very unlike the rambling parakeet Fayose made him out to be in the encounter with Ghaddafi.  This, surely, will not go down as the last installment in Fayose’s unspeakably tawdry career in public life.

  • Obasanjo, others to write book on Adeboye

    Obasanjo, others to write book on Adeboye

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Tuesday hinted that he and many other writers would team up to write a book soon about the General Overseer (worldwide) of the Redeemed Christians Church of God (RCCG), Pastor Enoch Adeboye.
    Obasanjo who had authored many books including My Watch and Story of the Tortoise, since leaving office in 2007 as Nigerian President, said Adeboye has touched more lives in the country more than most politicians, and worth documentation in form of “epilogue.”
    The PhD Student of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) gave the hint in his remarks at the book presentation titled: “Pastor E.O Adeboye: His Life and Calling” at the Auditorium of the RCCG  Youth Centre, on the Lagos – Ibadan Expressway, Ogun State.
    Although Obasanjo did not name the people that would participate in doing additional book on Adeboye,  but noted that whatever had been written earlier about the man of God by others, was not adequate to capture the life of the exemplary man of God, whom he added, “personally influenced” his life.
    The ex – President as as a politician he and other politicians are supposed to touch lives, but declared that  Pastor Adeboye has affected more lives positively than the nation’s  politicians.
    He prayed that when he and others would be chronicling Adeboye’s life and calling, he would be around to witness it.
    “Adeboye has been a man of God with a difference, whom I benefited from personally when I was consulting to contest the 1999 election.
    “I was told not to reveal my coming here by Mummy (Adeboye’s wife). How can I come to you without calling you? But, that was instruction.
    “Until I am I this hall, I never saw anything about this programme. That means we have committed sins by keeping this secret from you and we seek for forgiveness from you and I am sure we have been forgiven.
    “On this book, the 40 authors that are said  to have written the book are not enough, because we are still going to write the epilogue of Daddy and when we are going to do that, we are not going to be 40, but millions and I pray that you will be there to witness the epilogue of your live and calling,” Obasanjo said.
    In attendance at the event were the Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo, his wife, Mrs Dolapo, Pastor Adeboye, his wife; Mrs. Folu Adeboye and top RCCG members.
  • Wrest power from old politicians, Obasanjo tells youths

    Wrest power from old politicians, Obasanjo tells youths

    Former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo has advised  Nigerian youths to brace up and democratically wrest leadership position from the old guards and occupy it since old generation politicians seemed unwilling to quit the stage.
    Obasanjo declared that leadership positions were never given on platter of gold and urged the youth to work for it.
    The ex – President who spoke on Saturday in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital at the Youth Governance Dialogue organised to mark this year  International Youth Day, added that those seeking to occupy leadership positions in the country must also carve a niche for themselves through hard work.
    The programme was organised by the Youth Development Centre, an arm  of the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library(OOPL), Abeokuta.
    He lamented that moral values had been eroded in the society today compared to what obtained in the 50s and the 60s, saying sound  moral values were the necessary ingredients required for leadership position.
    He also noted that the nation was in a dire need of leaders who were academically and spiritually sound.
    He appealed to the youths  to stop complaining, moaning and agonizing, urging them to get ready to fit into  elective offices as there were moves now to lower the age into positions of the President, Governor and National Assembly.
    “I joined politics from the top. The only position I contested for in Nigeria is the Presidency, but I had track record of achievements which led to that.
     “Nobody will choose you, you have to choose yourself. Why should you have to become president at the age of 40? Why can’t you become president at the age of 35? Why can’t you become president at the age of 30?
    “General Gowon became Head of State at 33. I became Head of State at 39. And it is because of my track record, and thanks to Abacha(late Gen. Sani Abacha) for putting me in jail.
    “Those were the reasons why I have opportunity to come back as elected President of Nigeria.
    The point is this -how are you prepared? Are you really prepared?
     “You should engage in things that will bring about unity and integration. You see yourselves as  Nigerians and  one family instead of pursuing things that could divide the country,” Obasanjo said.
    Also,  former Attoney-General of the federation, Kanu Agabi, SAN, in his paper presentation titled “The role of our youth in contributing to the Peace and stability of the nation,” asked Nigerian youths to strive towards unity and peace of Nigeria.
    Agabi described Obasanjo as an embodiment of perseverance and urged the youth to emulate him.
    “If Obasanjo can make it, you can also make it. He joined the army and survived. When he was sent to prison, he survived. He was sentenced to death but here he is,” Agabi said.
    The Chairman of the occasion, Chief Bayo Ojo (SAN) advised  Nigerian youths to shun violence and “remain committed to Nigeria’s development.”
  • Get ready for the second coming of Jesus, says Obasanjo

    Get ready for the second coming of Jesus, says Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Saturday at Apostolic Faith Church said that  Christians should be prepared for the Second Coming of Jesus Christ  as the end of the world is near.

    Obasanjo made this remark during the 2017 Camp Meeting Concert by Apostolic Faith Church Choir and Orchestral at the Camp Ground Igbesa in Ogun.

    He said that as a person, he would like to make to  heaven  so as to sing with the angels.

    “You have to be fully prepared for the second coming of our Lord, there is no compromise.

    “I have a friend who will always say that when we get to heaven that we will be exhausted  praising God and it will be like a prison and will be very boring.

    “But what I have seen this afternoon by the choir, I will want to go to heaven and join the hosts to sing.

    “If this is an example of what  praising God in heaven will be, then I want to be  part of it. If what I have seen here is an indication of how heaven will be, I will like  go to heaven.

    “Jesus Christ came to the world to show us the way to salvation and eternal life. We have a good heritage and we have everything to be proud of,” he said.

    Obasanjo said that God could not  fix Nigeria  except Nigerians invite God into their lives collectively and individually.

    “We have a lot of things wrong with this country, if all Nigerians are sincere.

    “Nigeria can be fixed by God but we have to invite Him into our lives. What we have to do about this country is in our hands.

    “God’s grace abounds when we do not abuse it,” he said.

    The District Superintendent, Apostolic Faith, West Africa, Rev. Adebayo Adeniran,  said that only tolerance, peaceful coexistence and harmonious living amongst Nigerians , irrespective of religious and political differences,  could lead to meaningful development.

    He said that all hands must be on deck to build again a virile nation, where love and harmony, forgiveness and peace, equity and prosperity would reign supreme.

    “Our country’s shoulders will be raised high among the comity of nations. All Nigerians , irrespective of religion , should pray for the resurrection of what our nation has lost.

    “Nigerians should remain patient in the face of political and religious intolerance, insecurity and economic hardships. God will make us triumph over all of them,” he said.

    He also urged Christians to pray for the country’s leaders to lead the citizens with the fear of God.

    “We should pray for fresh outpouring of Holy Spirit on our leaders so that they can lead us aright .We must not trade the unity of our nation.

    “Therefore, as a nation, those who have responsibility for  our nation should ensure there is true federation; they must establish trust among the leaders and the led, they must work for the unity of our country, ” he added.

  • PDP begins sale of Anambra governorship forms

    PDP begins sale of Anambra governorship forms

    …Slashes cost of forms from N11m to N6m

    The national leadership of the People’s Democratic Party has commenced the sale of interest and nomination forms for aspirants in the Anambra State governorship election billed to hold in November.

    As at Tuesday, only one of the aspirants, Dr. Alex Obidigbo had collected his form.

    Spokesman for the PDP, Prince Dayo Adeyeye announced the reduction of the nomination form for the race from N11 million at which it was sold during the 2015 elections, to N6 million.

    According to him, the crash in price was to allow broader participation in the race by intending aspirants, adding that Nigerians have not lost confidence in the party.

    Adeyeye said that the PDP was working towards winning 30 of the 36 states by 2019.

    The party’s Caretaker Organising Secretary, Dr. Abdul Ningi declared that the PDP had recovered from the shock it received when former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and five governor defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) before the 2015 elections.

    Ningi said, “We said one of our cardinal principles is that the party is not a one man party. This party has individuals that left the PDP, beginning with former President Olusegun Obasanjo and Atiku Abubakar.

    “That has been our plight. This party can do without a single individual or groups of individuals. Five of our governors left, we were wounded but not defeated and we are rising from the ashes of those who have left”.

    He added that the 14-month leadership crisis the PDP went through has strengthened rather than weaken the party, as it has provided the opportunity for reflection.

    Continuing, Ningi said, “We are also happy that the crisis has given us the opportunity to look inwards, to look at mistakes, look at where we went wrong and try to make amends.

    “This party has also left it doors open to those who have left to come back because the PDP is their natural turf. A lot of them have discovered that where it matters is this party”.

    The party chief observed that the crisis bedeviling the country today were not there in the 16 years the PDP held power, stressing that Nigerians have now seen the difference.

  • N50m given to federal lawmakers to support Obasanjo’s third term-Fayose

    N50m given to federal lawmakers to support Obasanjo’s third term-Fayose

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose has not spoken with President Muhammadu Buhari in the last two years.

    Fayose, who has been critical of the President, especially on his state of health before election and after his inauguration, said he refused to speak with the President’s security chief to whom his calls to the Presidential Villa were diverted because he considered it an “insult”.

    He also spoke on ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo’s Third term bid, how the late President Umaru Yar’Adua was picked as the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in 2007, among other issues, in an interview published by The Interview magazine.

    He said: “Well, we met twice or so during the Council of State meetings. There is nothing personal. I represent Ekiti State, he represents Nigeria. That is the basis of our interaction. Nothing personal.

    Asked if he had said as much as ‘hello’ to the President, Fayose added: “No.”

    “For me, during our meeting, whenever any issue arose and I felt I should make a contribution, I raised my hand and spoke. That is it.

    “I remember I tried to call him several times before he took ill. Then, there was this day I called again and the switchboard told me that any call from me must be diverted to President Buhari’s Chief Security Officer (CSO). And I felt that was very insulting.

    “The CSO to the President is an ordinary policeman, who I assume, is just a little over and above my own CSO. I am a governor, a governor of a state. I felt that was an insult to the people of Ekiti State I represent.

    “Yes my calls to him (the President) were diverted twice to the CSO. I refused to talk to the CSO because I consider it insulting.”

    On the aborted Third Term agenda of ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo, Fayose said bribed were offered.

    He said while the principal officers of the National Assembly in 2006 got N100million each, the other lawmakers were given N50million each.

    He alleged that the former President knelt down for the late Libyan leader Mouamar Ghaddaffi to seek his backing for Third Term.

    He also said Obasanjo knew about the ill-health of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua before he was picked as PDP candidate.

    Fayose said: “Yes it is true. The people I am going to mention here, two of the key players are now dead. That position of Presidential Selection Committee that I headed was set up by all PDP governors. Initially, they wanted Dr. Olusegun Agagu. Then, the majority insisted that they wanted Fayose. So, since the majority wanted me, Baba (Olusegun Obasanjo) invited me to Ota and encouraged me to go ahead. I remember the committee was made up of Governors Danjuma Goje, Ahmed Makarfi, Bukola Saraki, James lbori, me and one other person who I cannot remember now. I want to tell you that, at some point, the majority of the committee was more disposed to having Markafi as the presidential nominee. l and one other person were the only dissenters

    “So, as a loyal Obasanjo boy then, I went to Obasanjo and told that this committee that was set up, everybody seemed to prefer Markafi except me and one other person and we were in the minority.

    “Five out of seven governors wanted Makarfi. Then Obasanjo pointedly told me that Markafi was too smart and would not be easily controlled by him and, therefore, I must ensure that Markafi did not emerge the presidential candidate. He mandated me to be briefing him often about the way things were going.

    “He confided in me that whether it was Markafi or anybody that he was not prepared to leave. At that time, the Third Term agenda had begun to unfold in Abuja. I can tell you that l was co-opted into the secret committee that was behind it. In that body, we had had this senator from Plateau, Ibrahim Mantu, Senator Andy Uba and many others. We were the key players. Let me tell you the truth: at that time, I did not have a choice. l was just a young man without experience.

    “…The Senators started at about 11am in the morning and by 1 pm each senator was asked to stand up and say ‘yes’ or ‘no’ before live television coverage whether they supported Third Term or not, and the majority had their way. So Obasanjo’s dream of Third Term was shut down. Thereafter, he called a national meeting of PDP, termed reconciliation meeting and denied that he asked or worked for Third Term.

    “Meanwhile, before that time, N50 million was given to every federal lawmaker to support Third Term. The majority collected the money and still voted against Third Term. Principal officers got N100 million each. Where did that huge sum of money come from?”

    Fayose opened up on the politics behind the choice of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua as a presidential candidate of PDP.

    He said the current Chairman of the PDP, Sen. Ahmed Makarfi was sidelined in favour of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua.

    He added: “Let me now come to the Yar’Adua issue. Obasanjo now called me and said, ‘Now that Third Term has failed, you should go ahead with the PDP committee. And in order for me to check those rooting for Markafi, I should go and sound Yar’Adua out on the ticket. He told me, ‘Don’t tell him I asked you to come. You psyche him up’. So, l met Yar’Adua in his lodge in Katsina. I met Yar’Adua in the company of Yakubu Tanimu (who became his influential chief economic adviser) and his police orderly.

    “I remember that while our interaction lasted, the orderly knelt down close to Yar’Adua. I acted as directed by Obasanjo, but the man told me expressly that he was not well enough to aspire to be Nigerian president; that the job would be too rigorous for him.

    “After much persuasion, he then told me the only condition under which he might consider running was if all stakeholders would sign up and reach an agreement to pick him as the consensus candidate because he did not want any hassles.”

    He said: “ I remember, before then, Yar’Adua was hardly attending Council of State meetings because of his health. So, l went to tell Baba what Yar’Adua told me. On the issue of Yar’Adua’s ill-health. I remember Obasanjo told me, ‘Don’t worry about his sickness; government money dey to manage his ill-health.’ Baba told me to go and put the outcome of my interaction with Yar’Adua in writing.

    “Then Masari became the first loser; because, until then, Bello Masari as the Speaker of House of Reps was very loyal to Baba and did all the dirty jobs Baba wanted him to do, with the promise that he would be made the next Katsina governor after Yar’Adua. But once Yar’Adua became anointed as PDP candidate, he preferred Shema to be his successor. That was one of the conditions he listed. That was how a wedge came between Yar’Adua and Masari.

    “That was the genesis of the rift between Shema and Masari up until today. Shema was then the deputy national chairman of PDP. That was how Masari defected to CPC. What I am trying to say is that Obasanjo engineered all the bitterness that exists in Katsina politics today.”