Tag: Olusegun Obasanjo

  • With March on my mind

    With March on my mind

    In these days when the seasons are becoming less clearly defined, when snow falls in Sahara and you can venture outdoors casually dressed in midwinter as you would on a hot summer day, the coming of spring is still as eagerly awaited as of old.

    Heralded by March, spring is the season of new life, of rebirth and renewal; the return of long days, when the drab uniformity of winter wardrobe yields  to a riot of rich colours on the streets;  when flowers come into full bloom and fill the air with their fragrance;  when,  to borrow from Victor Hugo, “it seems that everything laughs.”

    March also marks the birthdays of many notable Nigerians, starting off with Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s on March 6, which the lady of the house proudly shares with the sage.  Fittingly, Awo’s 108th posthumous birthday lecture was given by the respected historian and author, Professor Banji Akintoye, a member of the Sage’s Brains Trust and a leading member of the opposition in the Second Republic’s Senate. Compared with that legislative assembly, faults and all, what currently passes for a Senate is a sad regression.

    Akintoye spoke on a subject that was always at the core of Chief Awolowo’s thoughts:  the imperative of true federalism in Nigeria multinational state, and the centrality of knowledge in human affairs.  He challenged Nigerian youths to emulate Awolowo who had carved a path to greatness by the time he was 40 years old

    The challenge was not misplaced, considering that in Awolowo’s home state of Ogun, the school-age population reportedly knew much more about Obafemi Martins the international soccer star than they knew about  Obafemi Awolowo. To shut History out of the school curriculum in Nigeria as they have done is to condemn the younger generation to a future innocent of the ennobling achievements of the past as well as its chastening lessons.

    Awolowo was a polymath:  economist, lawyer, journalist, philosopher, parliamentary debater, and  brilliant organiser.  He was also a writer of the first rank, though not generally recognised as such.   Consider his Path to Nigeria’s Freedom his allocutus when he was about to be jailed on a dubious charge of treasonable felony.  Consider before that his 1944 letter to a wealthy fellow Ijebu asking for an unsecured  loan in the staggering amount of £1, 400 to enable him go to study law in the United Kingdom, and this summation in his autobiography AWO on the joys of lawyering.

    “To engage , without bitterness or animosity, in the fiercest contention; to cultivate the habit of always examining  both sides of a problem, and to present the side you espouse with forensic forcefulness and assuredness; to identify yourself with your client and to enter into his feelings as if you were the plaintiff or the defendant or the prisoner at the Bar; to propound and urge points of law which are sometimes difficult, sometimes not all too tenable, or sometimes so fine and abstruse that it is not at all easy to distinguish one point from another; to be utterly fearless and unsparing in combat; to acquire an independence of outlook in all things and to enjoy immunity in all you say and do as long as it is legitimate and within the bounds of professional etiquette; to take part in fostering the cause of justice  and equity in their total impartiality before the very bulwark of the citizens’ liberty and individual freedom – all these and more are the inherent and distinctive attributes of a noble profession  which I love and will forever cherish.”

    That is a whale of a sentence, but also a beauty.  Only a gifted writer could have pulled it off.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s 80th symbolic birthday came up on March 5, just one day before the Awo anniversary, symbolic because, like many in his generation, he has no record of his birth.  Because of this gap in his personal history, he celebrated his 65th birthday twice

    The anniversary marked the grand unveiling of his controversial Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library, about which I had written scathingly when he embarked on it.  It was gracious of him — unusually gracious, some would say — to thank Chief Olusegun Osoba, former Governor of Ogun State, for allocating the choice real estate on which the majestic edifice stands.

    One day, as Obasanjo was waxing lyrical in his Otta Farm House about how the prize Awolowo had sought in vain had literally fallen into his laps, he who was reared in poverty, I interjected in a fit of impetuosity that, nevertheless, he was condemned forever to live in Awo’s shadow.

    His face tightened, his eyes bulged, and his frame swelled.  I surveyed the room for the nearest exit.  His aides told me later that he must have a high regard for me.  If any other guest had said the same thing to Obasanjo’s hearing and in his home, they said, that person would have left bearing a mark of his rage.

    That was long before his second coming as a two term-president.   Like all great men, he made great mistakes.  But given his cumulative record of achievement and his standing in his own right as a statesman of global renown, I must now take back my taunt that he was forever condemned to live in Awo’s shadow.  To his credit, he never held it against me.

    Dr Onukaba Adinoyi-Ojo, journalist, playwright and public intellectual, was killed in a bizarre accident on March 7, two days shy of his 57th birthday.  He was unassuming, personable, and full of promise.  Incidentally, the accident that claimed his life occurred as he was returning to his Abuja base from the unveiling of Obasanjo’s Presidential Library.

    I gather from those “on ground” that Obasanjo has issued no statement on the passing of Onukaba, his estranged protégé, biographer and collaborator.

    Please, Mr President, say that this is not true.

    Our much acclaimed poet and future Nobelist, Professor Niyi Osundare, turned 70 on March 12.  His     joy on attaining this milestone was somehow muted by the deaths  in quick succession  of the erudite and retiring literary scholar of the first rank, Professor Ben Obumselu, and the great Caribbean poet and Nobel laureate in Literature,  Derek Walcott, both of whom he knew quite well.

    His eloquent tributes to their memory say as much about him as it says of his departed friends.

    Subomi Balogun, corporate lawyer, pioneer merchant banker, founder and chairman of First City Monument Bank and philanthropist, turned 83 on March 12.  The celebration was modest, compared to that of the 80th as well as the 60th, which I had the pleasure of attending in his Ijebu-Ode country home in 1994 at his personal invitation.

    He is still driven by the passion for excellence and Christian doctrine that made him what he is.

    Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, a pivotal figure in the political landscape and prime architect of the grand coalition that swept the All Progressives Congress into power, turns 65 tomorrow.  To take a good measure of his political stature and influence, look no farther than the disarray and the insolvency in which the PDP has been mired since its crushing defeat in the 2016 general election.

    For the 16 years it held power, the PDP advertised itself as Africa’s biggest political party.  It had ample access to resources for all manner of grandiose projects, including a N16 billion, 12-storey national headquarters, for which its well-heeled supporters and governors in PDP-controlled states plonked down more than N6 billion at the launch.

    Today, the project stands abandoned, a monument to excess and misplaced priorities. Within months of losing power, the PDP could not even pay the salaries of the skeleton staff hanging out in its secretariat, for want of a better alternative.

    Then consider that at the time the PDP was threatening to hold power for 60 years in the first instance, Tinubu and his associates in the Action Congress, and later in the Action Congress of Nigeria, constituted the only barrier to the PDP’s total takeover of Nigeria.  Stolen election after stolen election shrank his political base in the Southwest and Edo.  Abuja tightened the screws.

    It was in this hostile climate that Tinubu set out to reclaim, ward by ward, constituency by constituency and state by state his base on which the PDP had foisted its visionless rule by electoral fraud on a scale almost beyond belief.

    They called him “the last man standing” for good reason.

  • Fare thee well Adinoyi–Ojo

    Fare thee well Adinoyi–Ojo

    Last Saturday, friends and colleagues converged on the The Journalism Clinic in Surulere, Lagos Mainland, to celebrate the life and times of Dr Adinoyi-Ojo Onukaba, journalist, author, thespian and poet, who died on March 5. They recounted the memorable times they had shared together. Evelyn Osagie reports.

    It was not the kind of end they envisaged for him. One could see it from their look. Death has struck again, taking away their friend, Dr Onukaba Adinoyi-Ojo, former Managing Director of the Daily Times of Nigeria Plc.
    Adinoyi-Ojo was killed on March 5, four days to his 57th birthday, while trying to escape a robbery attack at a village near Akure, the Ondo State capital.
    He was on his way back to Abuja from Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, where he attended the inauguration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library. He was buried penultimate Monday at his ancestral home Oboroke-Ihima in Okehi Local Government Area of Kogi State.
    His life was full of excitement and purpose. His colleagues gathered to reflect on the happy moments they shared and to pay him last respect.
    It was an evening of reminiscences, readings and performances, convened by his friend, Taiwo Obe. His long-time friends in the media and other worlds were at The Journalism Clinic on Surulere, Lagos Mainland venue of the event in their numbers. They praised his sense of duty and professionalism.
    The late Adinoyi-Ojo obtained his first degree in 1982 in Theatre Arts from the University of Ibadan (UI) and joined The Guardian as one of its pioneer reporters in 1983. He rose to News Editor before travelling abroad in 1989 for graduate studies. He became the Managing Director of the Daily Times of Nigeria Plc in 1999. The late Adinoyi-Ojo was a Senior Special Assistant on Media to former Vice President Atiku Abubakar.
    Chief Executive Officer of Diamond Publication Lanre Idowu described the late Adinoyi-Ojo as “that aviation reporter who brought out wonderful stories that made the news pages of The Guardian very interesting”.
    To Idowu, Adinoyi-Ojo was a true professional who believed in standard. “It is painful. But the lesson is that it is not how long but how well. Let’s keep his memory alive. May his soul rest in peace,” he said.
    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Managing Director, Bayo Onanuga, said the late Adinoyi-Ojo was one of those few seasoned journalists who wrote well and made the sub-editor’s day. He said: “He was not part of the cartel at the airport, that was how he sprang up. That was why he was the only one who got the scoops, like the ‘53 suitcases’. I called his number and somebody picked and narrated how it happened. His death was very tragic and very dramatic. I pray that God will protect him and put him in paradise.”
    A friend, Mr Niyi Obaremi, said the late Adinoyi-Ojo’s life “was full of drama”. He noted that it is difficult to think of him in the past tense. He said: “Physically, he won’t be with us again but he is ever with us in our hearts. I call him a ‘fountain of inspiration’. The same words I used for Taiwo because I have known the two of them since the 80s. As a young man, Onukaba was already the one who could break a mountain that Obasanjo was in the whole of Africa then. And he was the one who was able to get across to anybody no matter how tough they were at his airport beat for The Guardian. He was not just another young man under 25, but one that was empowering those of us who were around at that same age to reach for the skies.
    “And it was the reason I chose to be Onukaba’s friend. And I am forever grateful that I knew him. I loved him and he accepted me as a friend and a brother. And we learnt from each other. And his life enriched mine. And I am sure wherever he is he would be happy to see this gathering convened in his honour: happy that he made his mark while he was with us. And wherever he is I am sure he is representing us very well. So, I say ‘Fare thee well my brother. God bless your soul!”
    A trust fund which will be named after the late Adinoyi-Ojo to cater for his children’s education and welfare is in the works, it was learnt. It is being coordinated by the late Adinoyi-Ojo’s friends, Obe and Sonala Olumhense. “When opened, it would be named ‘Onukaba Adinoyi-Ojo Memorial Trust Fund”, Obe, the event’s convener, said.
    He recounted how the late Adinoyi-Ojo became Obasanjo’s friend. He said: “The airport was one of the beats that lots of journalists swam to because that was where you can get the story and other things like ‘brown envelope’. It was only Onukaba who would go to Obasanjo when others wouldn’t. And Onukaba dressed well as a reporter.
    “Whenever he approached him for an interview, Obasanjo would decline, saying: ‘I am a farmer. I don’t talk to the press’ and not say any other thing. Onukaba would come to the newsroom and write it; and Lad Bone would put it on front page. And it went on like that; then one day, he invited him to his farm. Onukaba was persistent; he never chased after ‘brown envelope’. And that was why Obasanjo believed in him.”
    A former Director at Taijo Wonukabe Limited, Chido Nwakanma, recollected: “I met Onukaba Adinoyi-Ojo then Shaibu Ojo on July 1, 1983. It was a Friday. The Guardian was to go daily on July 4. Fred Ohwahwa and I had come as undergraduates who were seeking an internship. Shaibu was already a graduate, looking for full-time job. We became very close, Onukaba was extremely friendly.
    “He would reach out to you and help. I remember when we started Taijo Wonukabe, we talked about books and he sent a number of them from America. That morning I just saw a quote on a WhatsApp page and called Taiwo to confirm. The news came like a bolt. Maybe the drama of life continued with Onukaba till the very end. He likes to make a great entry and he has made a sudden exit. We wish him well.”
    Some friends like the Executive Editor, The News, Kunle Ajibade and Toyin Akinosho read the late Adinoyi-Ojo’s articles and creative works. Gani Kayode, formerly of The Punch, read the translated song by Alhaji Sikiru Ayinde Barrister on death, entitled: Ajara Iku, which when translated means Ode to Death. This reporter, known on stage as Evelyn D’Poet, performed a tribute poem in his honour.
    Also at the event were the Editor of The Nation, Gbenga Omotoso; pioneer Photo Editor of The Guardian Express and ace photographer, Sunmi Smart-Cole; the General Manager, External Relations NLNG, Kudo Eresia-Eke; Special Adviser, Communications to the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola (SAN), Hakeem Bello, who represented the Minister at the event; renowned photographer Tam Fiofori; Obe’s wife, Yemisi; Dele Agekameh, Ayo Asagba; Dotun Adekanbi; Mrs Bunmi Akinkugbe; Gbile Oshadipe; Bode Modupe and Temitope Lakisokun.

  • Obasanjo: Son (father?) of controversy

    Obasanjo: Son (father?) of controversy

    By Olayinka Oyegbile

    Olusegun Okikiola Mathew Aremu Obasanjo is no doubt an Akanda eda (special being). He is like the folk character, Ajantala, in the Yoruba fokltales. Ajantala spoke and walked the very day he was born. He was a child of controversy who defied all human limitations. Former President Obasanjo may not belong in the same class with Ajantala, but there is no doubt that he shares a lot in common with this Yoruba folk hero.

    As the former president gingerly steps into the class of the octogenarians, it is clear that he has lived a life that is surely the envy of many. He has lived and continues to live his life trailed with so many controversies. In fact, many believe that he deliberately courts or stirs controversy as a way of remaining relevant in national and even international politics. Here we are going to restrict ourselves to only his home front controversies but not forgetting that at the height of the obnoxious apartheid regime in South Africa he advocated the use of juju, African charms, to free the country from the deadly claws of the obnoxious system.

    Obasanjo has remained a constant feature of Nigerian political life since his fortuitous rise to power in 1979 after the murder of Gen Murtala Muhammed, the then Head of State, who he was second in command to as Chief of Staff Supreme Headquarters. This was perhaps the beginning of his life in controversies. On the day of the coup, while officers like Col Ibrahim Babangida et al reportedly were on the streets to capture the coup plotters, Obasanjo, a senior officer and second in command to the slain head of state, allegedly went into hiding in a civilian friend’s house in Ikoyi until the rebellion was crushed! Until today the man has been silent on where he was on that fateful day.

    Stepping into the shoes of the late head of state, he never tinkered with the transition programme but went ahead with the handover of power to a civilian president on October 1, 1979. Prior to the election and in the heat of the campaign he made the famous statement that the “best man in the race may not win the contest.” This was the first iota of doubt that trailed that year’s election. Those in the camp of Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the then presidential candidate of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN), saw the statement as a confirmation of their fear that the election would not be free and fair against their candidate who they considered the ‘best’ among the then five candidates of the registered political parties. The other four were Alhaji Shehu Shagari of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) who was eventually declared the winner of the election, the late Malam Aminu Kano of the Peoples Redemption Party (PRP), Alhaji Waziri Ibrahim of the Great Nigeria Peoples Party (GNPP) and the late Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe of the Nigeria Peoples Party (NPP).

    The acerbic author

    After his time in office as a military leader, Obasanjo found a new vocation by turning into an author. This was a very unlikely vocation for a man who many have viewed as, to say the least, a ‘nitwit’. His first offer as an author was a record of his role in the Nigerian civil war of 1967-70. During that critical period in the country’s history and towards the end of the war, Obasanjo was asked to take over the command of the Third Marine Commando which had played a crucial role in the prosecution of the war. He took over from the then Brigadier Benjamin Adekunle, popularly known as Black Scorpion. At the public presentation of the book in 1980, the late Chief Bola Ige, who was then governor of Oyo State and a friend of Obasanjo, was the special guest and characteristic of Ige, the Cicero of Esa Oke, he told the author blankly that his book was controversial and that he had opened a can of worms with the memoir. True to his prediction, the book attracted and continues to attract criticisms from those who were at the theatre of the war who felt Obasanjo over stated his role and diminished that of others, especially Adekunle’s.

    That was not all, in 1987 he courted the ire of the north. Both the young and old were offended that he wrote the biography of Major Kaduna Nzeogwu, a close friend of his who was the leader of the 1966 coup that killed the late Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto, who was regarded with awe and respected as an icon of the region. In fact, the anger against Obasanjo was so venomous that his name and anything connected with him became endangered in the north. Bookshops across the northern states were raided by irate mobs who had not read or could not even read, with copies of the book seized and set on fire. For a very long time, anyone holding a copy of the book or found speaking in support of the author in the north was a target of attack.

    Before the embers of the anger over the Nzeogwu book died down in the northern part of the country, in 1990 again he wrote another book that brewed another heated controversy in his region of the country. The 1990 book Not My Will, which is a memoir of his time as military head of state, ruffled feathers of Awoists because of the way he wrote about the respected politician. In it, Obasanjo stated that what the respected politician spent all his life fighting to get (leadership of the country) was given to him on a platter of gold. This didn’t go down well with his people and the controversy raged for many years. The former president was not done with his controversies; last year he wrote a three volume book, My Watch, in which he wrote damning reports about several other people. These include the man who served as his vice president for two terms, Atiku Abubakar; a former friend and supporter, Senator Buruji Kashamu. The two, among others, were at the mercy of the former president’s acerbic pen. In fact, Kashamu who is now a senator made spirited efforts through the courts to make sure the book did not see the light of day. He got the nod of the court but typical of Obasanjo he went ahead with the public presentation of the book.

    On the political front

    The former president does not suffer fools gladly. During the reign of the former military president, General Ibrahim Babangida, he was in the forefront of those who pilloried the military president for his long winding transition to civil rule and wasted resources. He never ceased to state his mind over the dubious nature of the transition programme. The peak of his criticism was in an interview with a magazine in which he dismissed the entire programme of the Babangida administration and said that if the former military leader sees him and says “good afternoon”, he would have to look out the window to confirm whether it was really afternoon!

    His intervention in national politics did not end with the exit of Babangida from power. At the height of the brutal reign of the late Gen Sani Abacha, when many generals kept their heads under their wives’ or mistresses’ boubou, Obasanjo did not relent. In fact, there was a time that he was told while abroad not to return home because he would be arrested. He dismissed it and stepped into the next available flight home. A few weeks down the road he was arrested and tried for an alleged coup plot against the Abacha regime. He was along with the late General Musa Yar’Adua sentenced to death with some other persons. Yar’Adua died in prison. Obasanjo, a man of destiny, was almost killed too. He later became president and ruled for eight years.

    Toward the end of his second term, he was alleged to be interested in a third term, which was not in the country’s constitution. He never got the chance because the National Assembly turned it down. Up till today, despite widely held belief that he wanted a third term, he continues to deny it. Former National Security Advisor to President George Bush in her memoir confirmed that Obasanjo tried to get the former American president’s support for his bid but was rebuffed.

    The former president had a spat with his anointed candidates in the late Yar’Adua and later President Goodluck Jonathan. Although the disagreement with Yar’Adua never came to a head, perhaps because of his failing health and the fact that he never completed his term, his falling out with former president Jonathan is believed to have led to the man’s loss of the presidential seat.

    His gale of controversies is not with politicians only; he is always at the opposite end of arguments with his fellow Egba, the Nobel laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka. The two octogenarians have never been known to stand on the same side of any issue.

     

  • Obasanjo’s ex-wife organises prayer for Nigeria

    Obasanjo’s ex-wife organises prayer for Nigeria

    Ex-wife of the former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Mrs Taiwo Obasanjo, will hold a national family prayer on Sunday. The religious gathering, which is to seek genuine repentance from God, will start at2pm at Dike Hall in Air Force Officers’ Mess in Kofo Abayomi, Victoria Island, Lagos. It will last for two hours.

    Mrs Obasanjo said the occasion would be used to say prayers for the nation to overcome its challenges and achieve peace. She said participants would say the prayers in honesty and genuineness in order to achieve God’s plans over the country.

    She said: “The prayer is being organised to promote unity, peace, honesty, love, justice and to deliberately expel traits of hatred, division, bloodshed, religious intolerance and greed from our nation.”

  • Apo Six: The history

    Apo Six: The history

    June 7, 2005: 22:00 Apo Six meet Danjuma Ibrahim at a party

    June 8, 2005: 02:00 Four shot at police roadblock

    04:00 Ifeanyi and Augustina seen alive at Garki police station

    11:00 Police try to bury six in a cemetery near Apo

    Two days of rioting in Apo and Garki districts

    June 13, 2005: Police begin internal investigation

    June 24, 2005: President Olusegun Obasanjo orders inquiry

    July 5, 2005: Police witnesses testify the six were slain in cold blood

    July 6, 2005: Police armourer admits weapons planted on bodies

    July 13, 2005: Court rules the suspects will face trial

    Dec. 15, 2005: Bodies buried by families

    Jan. 18, 2006: Trial of police officers begins

    Aug. 3, 2006: Danjuma Ibrahim released on “exceptional and special’’ medical bail

    March 9, 2017: Court condemned to death two policemen –Emmanuel Baba and Ezekiel Acheneje — while Danjuma Ibrahim, Nicholas Zakariah and Sadiq Salami were discharged

     

  • Obasanjo, best President Nigeria ever had, says Sunday Mbang

    Obasanjo, best President Nigeria ever had, says Sunday Mbang

    Former President of the Christian Association of Nigeria(CAN), His Eminence, Dr. Sunday Mbang, on Sunday declared that ex – President Olusegun Obasanjo remained the “best president Nigeria has ever had” since independence.

    Mbang who said he owes no one any apology about his opinion on Obasanjo and leadership in Nigeria, added that one of the things that ensured the former President’s success was the habit of always bringing the government’s policies and programmes first to God in prayer before making it public.

    The former Prelate of the Methodist Church, Nigeria, spoke in Abeokuta while delivering a sermon during Thanksgiving Service at the Chapel of Christ the Glorious King(CCGK) within the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library(OOPL), Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, to mark the 80th birthday ceremony of Obasanjo.

    The church service was attended by former President Goodluck Jonathan, former Head of Interim National Government, Chief Ernest Shonekan, Chairperson of Chairperson of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Ellen Johnson – Sirleaf, Governor Ibikunle Amosun, Governor of Abia State, Victor Ikpeazu, Senator Godswill Akpabio, former Governor Gbenga Daniel, the Ooni of Ife, Oba Enitan Ogunwusi among others.

    The retired christian leader said Obasanjo succeeded as leader because he recognised the place of God in the affairs of man and accorded it to him through regular morning devotion in Aso Rock as well as getting some men of God to also join him to seek God’s favour on every of his decision and programme in government.

    He recalled that God in his mercy was with the two term President of Nigeria on the ticket of the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP), not only to help him excel, but also to ensure that all conspiracies and plans (by the National Assembly) to impeach him failed while his tenure lasted.

    He said whatever that is being done in the country to move it forward – be it the anti – corruption crusade or the reviving of the agricultural sector since Obasanjo left office, were not new but just a continuation of all that the elder statesman had started.

    He noted that his successors did not even handle some of them right.

    According to Mbang, if successive government after Obasanjo had followed the agricultural policies with the same vigour and diligence displayed while in office, the country would not have been in a precarious economic condition today.

  • God has been partial to me, says Obasanjo

    God has been partial to me, says Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has taken another critical look at his life, achievements amid daunting challenges and admitted that God has been quite “partial” to him all through.

    Obasanjo who would be 80 years old by March 5 said his narrow escape from death in prison during the regime of Late General Sanni Abacha and later becoming an elected President is an indication of God’s extra – ordinary mercy, grace, favour and partiality towards him.

    The Ebora of the Owu Kingdom who also declared that he does not deserve all the favour bestowed on him by God, spoke on Sunday at a thanksgiving service organised in his honour by the Christian Association of Nigeria, Ogun State chapter, preparatory to his 80th birthday.

    The thanksgiving service tagged ‘Celebration of God grace at 80, held at the Treasure House of God, Agbeloba, Abeokuta.

    The ex – President said considering his humble background in a remote Ibogun Olaogun community and the illiterate parents that gave birth to him, he never knew his name could even be heard in the next village, let alone the whole of Nigeria, Africa and globally.

    He recalled that during the heady days of Abacha, three persons including him(Obasanjo)were marked for elimination while in detention, saying by providence, he was the only one that survived the death scheme.

    The other two according to him were late Major General Shehu Musa Yar’Ardua and the acclaimed winner of the annulled June 12, 1993 Presidential election and Philanthropist, late Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola – two of them died prison.

    Obasanjo however revealed that when he was being pressured to run for the office of the President upon leaving the prison, he prayed to God, consulted with Dr Nelson Mandela before his death and Arch – Bishop Desmond Tutu before making up his mind to make himself available for the office.

    He however, used the occasion to also call on the Egba traditional rulers to work for the greater unity and progress of Egbaland, saying the unity among Obas in Egba fall short of expectation.

    State.

    “Let me say most sincerely I thank all of you, and more importantly I thank Almighty God for this day and for what God has done in my life. I used to say and I mean it that God has been so partial to me by giving me so much favour that I do not deserve.

    “My Lord spiritual, Kabiyesis, if you don’t know anything at all, you just go and locate the village where I was born. There should be no one born in that village by the parents, who are my parents, stark illiterate, no road to our village where I was born and you should hear his name beyond the next village. So God has done for me, much more than I deserve and I praise God for this.”

  • Obasanjo canvasses for Igbo presidency

    Obasanjo canvasses for Igbo presidency

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has subtly made a case for other geo-political zones that have not produced a President since 1999 to have a taste of it in the interest of justice and fairness.
    The Southeast is yet to produce a President while the Southwest, North and minority Southsouth have had shots at the Presidency at different times.
    Obasanjo said it was his view that the Southeast should produce a President as Ogun West Senatorial District in Ogun State should also produce a governor soon.
    The ex-President spoke yesterday when the leadership of Ogun State chapter of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Bishop Tunde-Akin Akinsanya and other people visited him at his Hilltop home for a special New Year service.
    According to him, in justice and neglect lie the instigators of conflicts along with ethnic and regional lines in the country.
    Obasanjo said it was part of his resolve for a just and fair country that informed his decision to work for a Southsouth President in 2009.
    He said: “Irrespective of the thinking of the people ahead of 2019, I personally think that Southeast should have a go at the Presidency too.
    “The same is happening here. If Ijebu and Egba have produced the governor, it is only fair and just to allow the Yewa or Ogun West to also produce a governor. Or else, one day, they will also stand up and take up arms against this injustice against them. That is my personally position on this.”
    The former President cautioned Nigerians against unguided comments over Southern Kaduna crisis.
    Obasnjo said unenlightened comments about the violence were largely responsible for the escalation of the situation.
    He said: “My findings so far show that everyone is talking from the position of strength. People are not talking from knowledge of what they know. This is not helping. We must be able to dump all our sentiments to overcome the challenges.
    “Just like other cases of injustice around us, we need peace. It is only peace with justice that can solve all these crises. Genuine peace is what everyone is craving for and this can only come when there is justice.”

    Bishop Akinsanya described Obasanjo as a special gift to Nigeria and the world, considering his exploits and fatherly role in Nigeria and beyond.
    The cleric hailed the former President for facilitating the building of Ecumenical Centre in Abuja, adding that the state chapter of CAN was working on a similar project in Ogun State.

  • Obasanjo to Jonathan: We have a lot of experience to share

    Obasanjo to Jonathan: We have a lot of experience to share

    …As GEJ pays him secret visit in Ibogun

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan was on Friday in Ibogun village, Ogun State, home of ex – President Olusegun Obasanjo for  a surprise visit to him.
    Jonathan who arrived Obasanjo’s home around 12 noon, was accompanied by his former Minister of Special Duties, Kabiru Turaki and three other close aides and entered a closed door meeting with his host.
    The visit lasted about an hour, The Nation learnt and Jonathan declined to disclose to journalists why he was in Ibogun, but merely said the visit was a “private one.”
    Jonathan who stole into Ibogun village in Ifo Local Government Area of the state, later told Obasanjo that he and General Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida (IBB) had initially planned to pay him a visit during the yuletide but they could not make it because of some unforeseen events that prevented them.
    The former president who explained his mission to Obasanjo’s home through Kabiru Turaki, added that he had decided to come in fulfilment of the earlier planned Christmas visit but rued that it was now without IBB.
    He lauded Obasanjo who has since quit partisan politics to become an elder statesman for the warm reception accorded him and entourage.
    Obasanjo who commended Jonathan for having the time to visit him since leaving office, said that both of them now have residual responsibilities in the country as past leaders that bowed out of power gracefully.
    The former Chairman, Board of Trustees (BoT) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) also tactically told his chief guest he went into the office of the President with “have little or no experience” but has now amassed more wisdom and experience about leadership after leaving office.
    Obasanjo said:”the first point I want to make is to thank you very sincerely and most sincerely for taking it upon yourself to pay us a visit at this point in time and at this location.  Secondly, since you left office, you hardly have time to sit down and relax like you have been able to do today and I hope, I sincerely hope and pray for more such relaxed situation where we can reminiscence situations of the past that we have been through in this country and we can also look at what the future portends.
    “When leaders come, they have little or no experience. When they have to go is when they have really amassed a lot of experience, where they have wisdom, their  experience will be in high demand.  Those like you and me who have the grace of God to bow out gracefully if there is now what I call constitutional office we have residual responsibilities for Nigeria.
    “I believe that not only Nigeria, West Africa and Africa and indeed the world will continue to tap into our experiences,   our wisdom and I hope and pray that when the call is made to you will be more than ready to put your experience, the lessons you have learnt into the service of this country, for African and indeed for humanity in general.
    ” I have said to you before and I will say again that there are plenty of opportunities out there, within the country, within West Africa, within African and indeed in the larger world where people will want you to make contributions.
    ” I believe that you are resting now and when you have fully rested and you will be hearing from me because I have this opportunity to be around the world and if I mention your name in dispatch…. I thank you sincerely that you have received us as we are in this village to prove to you that we are in a typical village, I was telling you that your village is better than mine.
    “I want to say that we have it, Nigeria is a good country and we must never be tired of lifting the country up to the height that God has created it to be and God did not make a mistake when he put all of us together and if He doesn’t want us to be together no power in the world will have made us come together.
    “My regards to everybody at home, especially your wife, please tell her that my wife sends her regards and I hope sooner or later we will be on your part of the world to enjoy the atmosphere together.  I want to thank you on behalf of everyone here on this village.”

  • Jonathan sneaks into Ibogun village to visit Obasanjo

    Jonathan sneaks into Ibogun village to visit Obasanjo

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan on Friday sneaked into Ibogun village, Ogun State, home  of ex – President Olusegun Obasanjo for a surprise visit.

    The visit lasted about an hour, The Nation learnt.

    Jonathan who was accompanied by few former aides, was said to have told Obasanjo that he and General Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida(IBB) had initially planned to pay him a visit during the yuletide, but they could not make it because of some unforeseen events that prevented them.

    According to him, he had decided to come today (Friday)  as part of that planned Christmas visit but without IBB.