Tag: Yakubu Gowon

  • Yakubu Gowon as essence of the Nigeria project and spirit

    Yakubu Gowon as essence of the Nigeria project and spirit

    • By Tunji Olaopa

    Between 1967 and 1970, Nigeria prosecuted a blood civil war, one of the bloodiest in the annals of modern history. And at the center of that terrible national tragedy is that man of destiny, General Yakubu Gowon, the head of the military administration—the second in the history of Nigeria’s chequered post-independence political history. After the deep euphoria of independence, the 1966 coup and the aftermath of civil war were too disjunctive for a state that was aiming for the status of a key player on the continent and on the globe; a nation state that was supposed to reverse the ills of colonialism and increase the well-being of her citizens. These series of national events were also something that no national leader should be saddled with. And this is because the position General Gowon was meant to defend—upholding the postcolonial status of one Nigeria even in the face of gross national inconsistencies — one which led to the 1967-70 civil war. But then, who would want to be associated with the dissolution of a state that destiny has called on one to protect?

    General Gowon’s entry into the trajectory of Nigeria’s national project implies that he was called upon to supervise the direction Nigeria would go right from the commencement of nation-building. The responsibility to channel the political development of the Nigerian state was thrusted on his unwilling head, and from a critically debilitating point of extreme disunity. And it is in this sense that we can regard General Yakubu Gowon as the grand personification of the resilient Nigerian spirit. It is very difficult not to believe that Providence had a hand in inscribing Gowon’s life with a very unique purpose that came to finally intersects Nigeria’s. From the face-off with the late General Odimegwu Ojukwu to the crafting of the Aburi Declaration which broke down eventually because of contrasting interpretation of what the accord demands of the federal and Eastern regional governments. The entire trajectory of incidences and events constitute quite an interesting field of study not only for political scientists, but also political psychologists. For instance, what mix of political ego was responsible in tilting the critical situation into a pissing contest between the two national gladiators?

    War is always a terrible business. In the Nigerian case, the variables involved are all too multiple and complex to make any coherent sense. From external business interests to the internal social and ethnic cleavages whose fissiparous tendencies were the primary causes of the conflict. And yet, that war had to be fought, and Gowon had to supervise the looming disintegration of a national project that had barely taken off. If we agree that Providence had thrusted this national destiny on Gowon, we should also know that it is not deterministic. He could have capitulated in following through with the divine responsibility. He did not. He accepted it as God’s will even if he might not have had that spiritual understanding at the time, and he brought Nigeria as far as he could with a mixture of sound and unsound decisions and judgments. Let me highlight just two that speak to how contradictory leadership decisions can sometimes be.

    Read Also: Yakubu Gowon @ 90 Can history absolve him? (1)

    On October 1, 1970, General Gowon promised to set in place a political and electoral process that will lead to the handing over of the rein of authority to a civil government by October 1, 1976. Unfortunately, the Supreme Military Council was forced to renege on its promise. And the reason was that the political class did not seem ready to take up the great task of moving forward a state that was still reeling from the consequences of the civil war, and the ethnic bitterness that attended it. That decision could be approached from multiple interpretive perspectives. One could ask what gave Gowon the messianic audacity to legislate on the future of Nigeria. After all, the political behavior of Nigerian politicians has not changed since then. Others could point at a key patriotic sensibility that did not want to scuttle the progresses made since the end of the civil war. No one who went through the gruesome war would want to ever have a repeat of it.     

    One of the infamous moments of the Gowon administration is the lost opportunity of transforming the public service system in Nigeria through the adoption of the Udoji Commission report and the implementation of its grand managerial paradigm shifting recommendations. The report was initiated as a result of a global managerial revolution that insisted that the old Weberian administration must give way to a new public service that will be flexible, economical, lean, effective and efficient in the achievement of service delivery. The new public service is meant to be modernized and boosted for an output-oriented performance that increase Nigeria’s productive base within a grand architecture of a developmental state – one with a hold on the ‘commanding heights’ of the national economy. Udoji was motivated in its critical assessment of the Nigerian public service by the Fulton Commission Report of 1968 that also took on the British Civil Service and the urgency of its institutional reform. The Udoji Commission was at once inaugurated to deal with the protracted wage and incentives issues that the civil service had been dealing with before independence and which final resolution the Adebo 1971 report passed on to the Udoji Commission for a holistic systemic reconsideration. Unfortunately, the Gowon administration (presumably as concession to the sentiments of his super-permanent secretaries) cling on to the wage components of the Udoji Report and left off the more fundamental dimensions of institutional reform that would have radically improved the capability readiness of the public service system. How could an administration that balked at handing over power to a bunch of unprepared political class not see the significance of preparing the public service system as a condition for national productivity and good governance? Professor Lars Konlind’s perspective on why institutions enter into irredeemable decline, attributed this sense to what happens when an organization shun changes at the peak of its success. Consequently, leaders (political and administrative) develop selective deafness, one which in the Nigeria’s case over-glorifies the ‘I am directed’ Weberian bureaucratic tradition by disregarding the innovations that managerialism portend, one that has earned Nigeria the reputation of the “hesitant reformer”.

    And yet, without being flippant or hagiographic, General Gowon is in my assessment one of the most heroic of Nigerian leaders. He represents a sense of statesmanship that stands in sharp contrast to the intense sense of gratification that characterizes politics today. The trajectory of his statesmanship is significantly defining. To be born before the founding of such a combustible nation as ours, and to have matured to receive a calling to fight a war to elevate an artificial creation of the British colonialist—’a mere geographical expression’, to quote Chief Obafemi Awolowo—to the status of a state worth preserving, is nothing less than a defining trajectory. When as a nation we were confronted with a “to be or not to be” dilemma in our evolution, General Gowon chose Nigeria.

    With that choice, General Gowon brought a significant dimension to the importance of the minority ethnic groups in crystallizing the Nigeria Project. That being a clarion call to the majority ethnic groups that Nigeria did not only belong to all of us; it is God’s divine project.

    Despite the faux pas concerning the Udoji Commission Report and its momentous recommendations, the Gowon administration still left an indelible administrative example that replicate the Awolowo-Adebo administrative model in the old western region. The corps of the super-permanent secretaries significantly backstopped the Gowon administration in the policy space that was stampeded during the years of the civil war. I can hypothesize that without that fundamental model as a crucial fulcrum, the civil war would have been worse that it was. And so, as a testament to the possible greatness of the Nigerian state, we already have two versions of the politics-administration model that could be reinvented to stimulate good governance.

    Besides, General Yakubu Gowon was not just a normal run-of-the-mill soldier. He was an officer and a gentleman. At a time when the figure of the solider or the image of the Nigerian army has dipped significantly in reputation, Gowon embodied the very essence of military professionalism and reputation for excellence. As a commissioned officer, he was minded about the educational and training extent so much so that he was ready to go the full lengths to prove his thirst for learning to be more and more professional. General Gowon was not content with his prestigious training at Sandhurst, Camberley and Latimer. He just had to eventually undergo the academic rigor of adult education to earn a doctorate degree at the University of Warwick in the United Kingdom. That might have been a personal vision of fulfilment, but it elevated the public perception of what and who an officer should be. With that accomplishment, Officer Gowon became a composite image of a true military professional that is not defined by his brawn or capacity to wield the gun, but by intelligence, intellect and humaneness in a profession defined by its unique masculinity.

    In all, General Yakubu Gowon believes in Nigeria. Only the most wrong-headed critique would not take that as a consequential fact. Indeed, after he had left the corridors of power, General Gowon still holds on to a spiritual responsibility to keep up the Providential imperative that Nigeria is on a divine course to greatness. For being so politically, professionally and spiritually involved in the courses of Nigeria’s nation-building efforts, there is no other way to see General Yakubu Gowon order than as a patriot, and one of Nigeria’s eternal heroes. And there is no other way to cap his many efforts as seeing Nigeria fulfill her divine mandate than to explore his political and nationalist legacies while he is still with us. At ninety, our nonagenarian statesman and general deserves more than national accolades. He deserves to see the Nigeria of is dreams and aspirations. 

  • Go on with one Nigeria

    Go on with one Nigeria

    • General Yakubu Gowon, a statesman at 90

    Anywhere in the world, long life is something that calls for celebration. People associate old age with wisdom and the aged are seen as repository of the history of the society. This is more so in a country like Nigeria where, for some time, life expectancy has remained around 54 and 56 years. So, anyone who crosses into the sexagenarian age is considered a survivor of sort. The few who move into the rank of nonagenarian are viewed as great even by virtue of age alone, except they had grievously hurt the society.

    On October 19, General Yakubu Gowon, a former head of state, doctorate degree holder, businessman and Christian gentleman turned 90, and the government and people of the country turned out to honour him. It is an honour well deserved.

    Born in Pankshin, in present day Plateau State in 1934, he was quick to identify his career path from secondary school as he decided to join the Army. He went to Ghana, India and the famous Academy at Sandhurst in the United Kingdom for training, and the departure of the colonial masters from Nigeria in 1960 helped many officers of his generation in running up the ladder.

    Another thing that helped his ascent was the January 1966 coup. As a Lieutenant-Colonel, he was quite visible and became Major-General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi’s Chief of Staff, but when the Commander-in-Chief or Supreme Commander as he was called then was killed in the July 29 counter-coup and the country was turned upside down, the coupists saw Gowon as a suitable replacement. By then, the likes of Brigadier Samuel Ademulegun, Brigadier Zakariya Maimalari, Col. Raphael Shodeinde, Col. Kur Mohammed, Lt. Col. Abogo Largema, Lt. Col. James Pam and Lt. Col. Arthur Unegbe had been murdered in January, and Col. Adekunle Fajuyi in July.

    His seniors in the army, including Brigadier Femi Ogundipe, Col. Adeyinka Adebayo and Col. Hillary Njoku were sidelined as masterminds of the putsch went for Gowon, seen as a gentleman and the likely person to command respect of the rank and file, following the uproar in the country that had consumed both military and civilian leaders.

    The pogrom and pervading ethnic distrust had suggested that General Gowon at his age could not succeed. It appeared that he was punching above his weight as he lacked the administrative, political and educational requirements to bear the country’s burden. A 31-year-old seemed not suitable for such a time. But the Head of State’s moves surprised both the political class and the international community. He swiftly courted the support of the aggrieved Western Region whose leader had been imprisoned by the conspiracy of the political establishment of the First Republic, by not only releasing Chief Obafemi Awolowo, but appointing him Vice Chairman of the Federal Executive Council. He also deftly neutralised the creation of the Mid West Region that had caused rumpus since the Northern minorities of the Middle Belt and Eastern minorities of Calabar- Ogoja-Rivers had also clamoured for regions of their own. So, Gowon, in a move that belied his age created 12 states from the four regions.

    Although such moves did not stop the 30-month civil war that broke out on July 30, 1967, they calmed nerves among leaders of the West and the North. It helped earn support from the Niger Delta area.

    During his rule, the country witnessed so much development, much of it attributable to the oil boom, but also his integrity and hard work. The National Development Plans helped in setting the country on the path of progress, and his style of inclusive leadership ensured that Nigeria attained a measure of respect in the international community. Nigeria was respected in the Organisation of African Unity (as it then was), the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) which he played a prominent role in establishing in May 1975, and even the United Nations.

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    On the domestic plane, he was the brain behind the establishment of the National Youth Service Corps in 1973. He had envisioned it as a vehicle for cementing national unity.

    As a man with a pure mind and motive, he assured the Easterners after the war ended in January 1970 that there was no victor, no vanquished and they would be treated as compatriots. Towards this end, he came up with the Three ‘Rs’ principle, Reconciliation, Rehabilitation and Reconstruction. For as long as he remained in power, he was faithful to the principle.

    However, it is debatable if his successors, military and civilian, had carried through the plan in terms of provision of facilities and appointments into federal positions.

    General Gowon who was overthrown in July 1975 could not have made a good politician. He once ventured into the murky waters under the Option A4 but failed flat as he could not understand the nuances of Nigerian politics.

    When put through the crucible, he came out shining as he did not even have the fund to give himself a comfortable life when he enrolled for his degrees at Warwick University, United Kingdom.

    The man has been blessed with the opportunity of living into grand old age and celebrated by his compatriots. We join others in saying that he is indeed a gentleman.

  • Yakubu Gowon @ 90 Can history absolve him? (1)

    Yakubu Gowon @ 90 Can history absolve him? (1)

    It was Fidel Castro who once used such an expression  while facing trial for the July 26 attack on Moncada Barracks, Castro who defended himself at that trial declared “Condenmade, no importa, la historia mi absolveria” in English it simply means “Condemn me, it does not matter, history will absolve me”.

    For General Yakubu Jack Gowon , Nigeria’s Second military leader, History as well as posterity must be hearing his ‘Closing Statements’ as he clocked 89 recently, even celebrating his birthday amidst the ugly rumors of his demise just a week ago, the man who once declared that to “ Keep Nigeria one was a task that must be done” will certainly need no soothsayers or pastors  to tell him that his time with his maker will surely come.

    So what verdict will history pass on General Gowon, this one time Chief of Staff of the Nigerian Army and later maximum ruler for 9 solid years ? There are a number of strands of thoughts or should I say answers to this question, each possessing a different tangent to the rest, each conceived as a result of one’s perception which has been shaped probably by a number of singular and  aggregate factors.

    For me as an avid student of our nation’s history and politics, I very much possess a view about Gowon’s place in our history and It is my intention to share such a view here with the admonition to those who may choose to disagree to do so or even write their own!

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    Yes,  even though General Gowon wouldn’t naturally fit in to the description of a statesman by Mark Hatfield. Here in Africa, most especially Nigeria, by virtue of serving in some high office, even if you where thrust there and wobbled and fumbled while in office, you would naturally earn the appellation of an Elder Statesman. It is in this context that we may grudgingly confer such on the founder of the Nigerian Prayer Movement and kudos to him Nigeria recently emerged as the Second Most Prayerful country , losing the first position only to the Taliban controlled Afghanistan. I am sure the Nigerian Prayer Movement led by Gowon must have contributed its quota to such a feat!

    Now asides the Nigerian prayer movement, General Gowon also has a number of enduring legacies to his name, legacies such as the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC which has sought to create avenues within the nation for national cohesion and unity.

    The creation of states within Nigeria is another legacy of the Gowon administration which has much influenced the pattern and operational dynamics of the Nigerian Federation or Quasi Federation as it actually is.

     The creation of more Unity Colleges is another befitting legacy to Gowon, who in his attempt to patch through the elusive threads of unity within Nigeria established more of such schools all over the Federation.

    Gowon’s biggest feat would be his prosecution of the Nigerian/ Biafran War which he presided over. Notwithstanding the resultant horrors that came with the 33 months struggle, his singular mandate to keep the Eastern Region within the Federation by force of arms could be chalked of as successful and while one may not resent a number of his actions as regarding the war, since the pervading situation  at that time demanded such of him, however, the same war as well as the taxing events that led the nation to that war  also remain as a tarred brush to Gowon’s statesmanship stature.

    General Gowon came at a period the Nigerian nation needed a leader, even after desecrating the military tradition or dictates of military command and succession, by assuming power while Brigadier Babafemi  Ogundipe his senior in the army was muscled away, Gowon despite his avuncular like mien and gentleman officer posturing behaved more like a member of the mob and engendered forever that indiscipline Nigerians witnessed in the military even to this present day.

    At the time of his triumphant entrance to become the nation’s number one helmsman , the nation was much in crisis. The Head of State, General Aguiyi Ironsi  and Governor of the Western Region, Adekunle Fajuyi were missing, brother officers were reportedly slaughtered in their numbers while Igbo and minority  civilians who had no say nor participation in either of both the January and the July 1966 coups were also massacred in their numbers. Gowon had not only gone on to betray his Supreme Commander but also a number of moderates in the military then who were shocked at Gowon’s inveterate dawdling while these pogroms occurred.

    Even his half hearted attempt at finding a solution to the crisis via the Ad Hoc Constitutional Conference of 1966 appeared to be a ruse as it only encouraged further killings in the North under Gowon’s watch. He was later to suspend the conference after tinkering with the ideas of secession, confederation and then one indivisible unitary cum quasi federation(Another legacy of his)

  • General and gentleman at 90

    General and gentleman at 90

    The cake for Ripples, aside the thrill at 90 for General Yakubu Gowon, quintessential officer and gentleman if ever there was one, is former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s remarks at the special lecture marking the epoch.

    Gen. Gowon turned 90 on October 19. Obasanjo spoke on October 18. Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, President, African Development Bank (AfDB), was the guest lecturer.

    “This is a national celebration, and you’re worthy to be nationally celebrated while you’re still alive …” Obasanjo gushed, “I will just thank God on your behalf.”

    Wow!  But was it not this same Gowon, on whom Obasanjo poured concentrated scorn, in his Not My Will — Obasanjo’s post-Head of State memoirs?  Wow!

    The subject — highly emotive, to be sure — was the Bukar Sukar Dimka coup.  That coup failed.  But it took the life of Gen. Murtala Ramat Muhammed.

    In that venom-in-print, Obasanjo’s petulance knew no bounds. “Mr. Gowon”, he thundered down at his former commander-in-chief; and growled he would, pronto, be nabbed anytime he set foot on Nigeria — for alleged coup involvement not yet proven!

    Why, the Obasanjo junta would, in the passion of the moment, pass a draconian coup decree which — had the British government fallen for the regime’s rabid extradition howling — would posthaste have despatched the General to premature death!

    But irony of ironies: Gen. Sani Abacha, symbol of the starkest and most degenerate era of military rule in Nigeria, would dust up that same decree to can Obasanjo — and his No. 2: Major-General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua — in own harsh gulag, for a phantom coup!

    Obasanjo made it out of that harsh odyssey to become a two-term elected president.  Not so lucky, Yar’Adua: he died in prison in controversial circumstances.  So long for the savagery of military rule, to which we must all say: never again!

    But thank God — now on Obasanjo’s behalf! — for keeping him alive to recant, live, the anti-Gowon fulminations he wrote in Not My Will, which he released In 1990!

    By the way, Gowon and Obasanjo epitomize the two strands of military rule in Nigeria — the one mild, the other harsh.  That unfortunate epoch had own bright spots.  But on the balance, it was clearly ruinous. 

    Nevertheless, a civilizing flash into that dark era would remain Gen. Gowon, though he made own mistakes too.

    Post-Gowon monstrosity peaked with Abacha. So, did the political military’s exit after decades of huffing-and-puffing in the wrong direction — brash and haughty messiahs.

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    Which is why the First Lady, Mrs. Oluremi Tinubu’s toast, at the Gowon thanksgiving at 90, was apt.

    “Your life of simplicity, humility, grace, dignity and patriotism to our nation gives us hope that Nigeria is all we have,” she said, “and we have to do everything in our power to make it work.”

    Simplicity.  Humility.  Grace.  Dignity.  These four words weave the Gowon essence — that noble penchant to have power, yet not lose your head over it.  These words fused in him sublime lessons in untrammelled, yet humane patriotism.

    If that was not glaring on the hill of his nine power years, it was clear in the dale of his power fall, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, when an aide whispered to his ear his overthrow.

    “Don’t you worry,” the smiling ex-Head of State told a world press conference — did anyone ever see merrier stoicism in anyone? — “just take care of Nigeria for me.  I’m a professional soldier and I’m ready to serve my country in any future capacity.”

    The one they fondly called “Jack” has lived that self-imposed covenant — which makes his 90th birthday a clear national treasure.

    Ripples never met General Gowon, one-on-one.  But among hundreds of other Lagos Island public primary school kids, arrayed on both sides of the old Lagos — now the Inner — Marina, we all waved, screaming “Gowon! Gowon!”, as the newly wed General drove out of Christ’s Cathedral with his beautiful bride, Victoria. 

    It was a slow-moving, show-stopping, jaw-dropping motorcade, back in 1969. Magical!

    The kids’ zest was not altogether happenstance.  Their teachers had put them up to it, to honour the young, dashing and lovable Head of State. 

    But that Gowon love oozed — at least from my own personal experience — from the felt love of a caring state.  The Gowon government in Lagos, then the federal capital, with the Mobolaji Johnson Lagos State government, had put in place a highly subsidized mid-day meal regime, complete with fruits and chilled milk.   It was the kids’ — mostly from poor homes — earliest feel of Nigeria’s emerging oil wealth.

    Many of us had such exciting meals first at school — and even kept a part of it for our waiting siblings at home!  Such early state care builds patriotism in young hearts.

    But the Gowon-era felt benevolence wasn’t limited to feeding Lagos primary school kids alone.  To access university education, all you needed was an acute mind, a few pair of jean trousers and shirts, and you were game! 

    The high fees of yore were gone! Again, but for the Gowon state benevolence, Ripples, who passed out of a Lafiaji-Lagos public primary school, wouldn’t have accessed two universities — Universities of Ibadan and Lagos — and joined the commentariat in a national newspaper.  There simply would have been no family cash to attain all that!

    Now, Gen. Gowon didn’t get it all right — no.  His government was the first to expel striking academics from their campus cloisters — the mother of all humiliations!

    He also went after the likes Prof. Wole Soyinka (for his Civil War “Third Force”), the great Gani Fawehinmi, SAN, SAM, and sundry campaigners for human rights against creeping military despotism.

    Some eternally raze his rather infamous quip that cash wasn’t Nigeria’s problems but how to spend it. Bitter Biafra survivors sneer at his twin post-Civil War rally: “No Victor, No Vanquished” and the 3-Rs: “Reconciliation-Reconstruction Rehabilitation”, calling both a ruse. 

    But had Biafra won, it’s a moot point if Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu would have been capable of Gowon’s rare magnanimity and grace.

    Others say Gowon was so “soft” the so-called “super-permanent secretaries” became too powerful.  But the Murtala-Obasanjo regime, with their “immediate effect” purges, smashed a once secure and vibrant civil service into today’s loose and venal “evil servants” always on illicit hustle!  We know now which is better!

    The successive “corrective” regimes, of Gowon-era corruption, emerged as worse state captors — except Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, whose integrity fetched him two terms as elected president. Gowon, by the way, didn’t own a house after his overthrow.  Compare and contrast that to the illicit wealth his successors swam in!

    That’s the Gowon mystique — keeping your head while others lost theirs.  Again, his only peer, in that lonely chamber, is Gen. Buhari.

    Which is why, Gowon’s noble deeds earn him quiet awe.  He needn’t — like Obasanjo — drone for the rest of his life, rustling up others’ faults to bury own glaring ones, just to corral suspect respect.

  • Gowon’s enduring legacy inspires generations of military personnel, says CDS

    Gowon’s enduring legacy inspires generations of military personnel, says CDS

    Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), General Christopher Musa, has extolled the virtues of former Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon who clocked 90 years yesterday.

    The CDS said the discipline, dedication, patriotism and vision of the former Head of State, have continued to inspire generations of Nigerian military personnel and civilians alike.

    He added that General Gowon’s exemplary service and leadership have left an indelible mark in the history of Nigeria.

    The CDS said this in his congratulatory message on the occasion of General Gowon’s birthday.

    In a statement by the Director of Defence Information, Brig.-Gen. Tukur Gusau, yesterday, October 19, General Musa described the elder statesman as an “extraordinary leader, exemplary statesman, detribalised Nigerian and peace ambassador.”

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    The CDS said: “Indeed, General Gowon’s exemplary service and leadership have left an indelible mark in the history of Nigeria.

    “As Nigeria’s Head of State from 1966 to 1975, General Gowon played a key role in promoting and maintaining Nigeria’s peace and unity despite all the challenges of the period.

    “It is on record that his vision and commitment on peace and national reconciliation since his famous speech ‘no victor, no vanquish’ at the end of Nigeria’s civil war have contributed greatly to a stable and prosperous Nigeria.

    “It is worthy to mention that General Gowon has sustained his good work to humanity through his NGO, the Yakubu Gowon Foundation.

    “In recognition of the former Head of State’s numerous contributions to the country, the Armed Force of Nigeria honours his enduring legacy.

    “His virtues of discipline, dedication and patriotism as well as vision of a united Nigeria continue to inspire generations of Nigerian military personnel and civilians alike.”

  • Why we didn’t seek FG’s funding for Gowon’s 90th birthday anniversary – Jerry Gana

    Why we didn’t seek FG’s funding for Gowon’s 90th birthday anniversary – Jerry Gana

    • ADB’s Adesina slated to deliver anniversary’s lecture

    The organisers of the series of events lined up to celebrate the 90th birthday anniversary of former Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon (rtd) has debunked the news that the Federal Government and the Presidency were funding the programmes scheduled to start on Friday, October 18 with a public lecture.

    According to the Chairman of the Central Planning Committee for the anniversary, Prof. Jerry Gana, there was an urgent need to set the records straight as Gowon and his family personally insisted that none of the members should seek or accept any financial assistance from the government or its agencies.

    Gana, who spoke at a press conference in which he unveiled the programme of events in honour of Gowon, said that the President of the African Development Bank, Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, would deliver a lecture titled ‘Salute to Excellence” to kick start the event, noting that the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammed Sa’ad Abubakar, will be the chairman of the occasion.

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    The lecture will be held at the ECOWAS Secretariat, Asokoro, Abuja.

    Describing Gowon as an iconic Nigerian with an undiluted patriotic zeal, Gana, who was accompanied by other members of the planning committee including the former Minister of Information and Deputy Governor of Nasarawa State, Mr. Labaran Maku; the former Director General of the National Orientation Agency, Dr. Mike Omeri; former member of the House of Representatives, Hon. Timothy Golu; and former Executive Secretary of TETFUND, Prof. Suleiman Bogoro, said there would be a 90th birthday thanksgiving service at the National Christian Centre, Abuja on Saturday, October 19 to be presided over by the Primate of the Church of Nigeria, Most. Revd. Henry Ndukuba and the President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Archbishop Daniel Okoh.

     Over 50 other prominent clergies spread across the six geo-political zones of the country are also expected to grace the occasion. They include Pastor Enoch Adeboye of the Redeemed Christian Church of God; Cardinal John Oniayekan; Bishop David Oyedepo of Living Faith Church Worldwide; and Rev. Dr. Job Bagat of ECWA.

    The grand finale, according to Gana, is the 90th birthday bouquet scheduled for the State House Banquet Hall, Abuja.

    The attendance to the event is strictly by invitation and it will be chaired by General Theophilus Danjuma (rtd).

      Explaining why the banquet was shifted to the State House facility, Gana said the original venue that the committee paid for, the International Conference Centre, was undergoing renovation works and it was important the seek a secure and better facility which the authorities in the State House graciously approved after the committee requested for its use.

  • Transformation: Gowon praises Gombe governor

    Transformation: Gowon praises Gombe governor

    … Inuwa sues for prayers in the face of hard times in Nigeria

    A former Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon yesterday commended Gombe State Governor, Muhammadu Inuwa Yahaya for transforming the state.

    He said he was impressed by Yahaya’s commitment to the welfare  of the people of the state.

     Gowon made the observations when he led a delegation of some eminent Christian leaders on a courtesy visit to the governor in Gombe.

    The team included Governor Caleb Muftwang of Plateau State, a former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and a  former Minister of Information, Professor Jerry Gana amongst others.

    The delegation  was in Gombe State to attend the dedication of a church in Shongom Local Government Area.

    The church was built by Mr. Jerry Damara for his community, Kulishi.

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    The former Nigerian leader said although he had not met the governor personally, Yahaya had  left a good impression on him since his assumption of office as the governor of Gombe State in 2019.

    Gowon said: “I may not have the chance to personally witness the transformation taking place under your leadership in Gombe, but I must commend you for your remarkable strides in governance.

    ” It’s been quite some time since my last visit to Gombe, and I must acknowledge the evident change. The improvements I’ve observed are so significant that I find myself unable to recognise certain places from my previous visit.

    “Your Excellency, let me commend you for your efforts and urge you to continue the excellent work you are doing.

    “We are closely observing the positive transformations taking place in Gombe, and you are certainly making us proud. 

    “Your genuine care for the welfare of your people, as well as the development and progress of your state and the nation, is highly commendable. I extend my best wishes to you for continued success throughout your tenure”.

    On his part, Yahaya described the visit as an honour done not just to his administration but to the entire people of the state.

    He emphasized  the hospitable nature of the people of the state.

    He said the gracing of the commissioning of the church by General Gowon and other distinguished Nigerians couldn’t have come at a better moment.  

  • Gowon on ECOWAS sanctions

    Gowon on ECOWAS sanctions

    On the same day he visited President Bola Tinubu at Aso Villa, former military head of state Gen. Yakubu Gowon released a letter he wrote to ECOWAS leaders asking them to initiate reconciliation with countries it had imposed sanctions on. Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger Republic, which are all under military rule, had served notice to the regional body of their intention to take their exit. They also went ahead to form the Alliance of Sahel States to replace ECOWAS. The trio had been subjected to withering but largely ineffective ECOWAS sanctions for overthrowing their elected governments and scorning democracy. The overthrown elected governments might have been irresponsible, but the populist military governments that replaced them are untrained for the responsibilities they have presumptuously assumed. But regardless of the protesting military rulers’ attitude to democracy, Gen Gowon has asked the regional body to lift sanctions against them and Guinea, which is also under military rule but had not announced any exit plan. However, the former Nigerian military ruler’s letter to ECOWAS leaders was neither exhaustive nor persuasive. Indeed the letter seems largely nostalgic and nugatory.

    Said Gowon: “I have noted with deep concern and sadness, the past and recent developments unfolding in the West African sub-region, particularly the pronouncement by  Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger of their intention to exit from the Economic Community of West African States. As one of the founders of our regional economic community, it is incumbent upon me to speak on behalf of the 14 Heads of State and Government who joined me in Lagos, on 27th May 1975, to establish ECOWAS. Since its inception, the regional bloc has made a number of major accomplishments, including trade liberalisation, right of West Africans to live legitimately in any country within the community, as well as successful peacekeeping operations in Liberia and Sierra Leone.

    He went on: “ECOWAS, despite its shortcomings, has become an example of regional integration for the wider continent. Having achieved all of the above, it saddens me to learn that ECOWAS is threatened with disunity following the announcement by Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, three important member states, of their intention to leave the community. The impact of such a decision will have far-reaching implications for the ordinary citizens who have been the major beneficiaries of regional integration. Therefore, on behalf of all the founding fathers of the community and myself, I urge the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government, including the leaders of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, to put aside their differences and reunite for the peace, stability and prosperity of our sub-region.”

    When ECOWAS was launched in 1975, it made no distinction between military governments and elected governments. In the passing of time, the reigning regional wisdom grew to view coups d’etat as anathema, and for many years until 2017, no West African country was under military rule. The tide is, however, changing for the worse, and it is high tide spreading ignobly through West and Central Africa. In his letter, Gen Gowon offered no thoughtful exposition of the coup culture nor a definitive measure for its extirpation, nor attempted to draw a comparison between elected and unelected governments. Though he acknowledged ECOWAS shortcomings, which he didn’t itemise, he rather emphasised its many beneficial sides, which he adumbrated. The imposition of sanctions did not predate the coups; they were a consequence of the unlawful seizure of power and overthrow of the constitution. Dialogues had proved spectacularly useless, far worse than sanctions, in the face of the principle of non-intervention in the internal affairs of sovereign countries. So, how does Gen Gowon hope to discourage coups? He did not say. And if sanctions were lifted without irreversible steps taken towards the restoration of civil rule, would return to elected governments not depend on the whims and condescension of military rulers?

    Gen Gowon’s visit to President Tinubu, given its coincidence with his letter to ECOWAS dated February 13, may have elucidated that subject. Yes, he suggested that the Tinubu administration be given some ample time to allow its policies and measures mature, but the circumspect former ruler may in fact be trying to save a child whose conception and birth he was partly responsible for. He should have dwelt on the far more exigent issue of disallowing the contamination of the sub-region by military coups, and entrenchment of democratic rule. He should have stressed the original principles of the regional body, condemn their violation, and offer insights into how to reclaim and inculcate them in the region’s political elite. He should have minced no word in denouncing military rule and extolling the virtues, beauty and advantages of civil rule.

    Read Also; State Police: Pipe dream or panacea?

    The coupists, including those of Guinea, fouled the region and baited the rest of the bloc. Gen Gowon should have told ECOWAS leaders to shorn compromise rather than advocate lifting sanctions. The coupists prefer Russia, which is also ruled exploitatively and brutally by the dictatorial Vladimir Putin, as their new overlord; they should be left to stew in their juice. More voices, including that of Mohammed Ibn Chambas, pioneer president of the ECOWAS Commission, are calling for the lifting of sanctions. Should those voices be heeded, it would imply a sad capitulation by the regional body to the three triumphant, renegade and antidemocratic military adventurers. ECOWAS leaders face cruel and unforgiving choices; whatever they decide will have consequences for the future of the regional body, a road other economic and political blocs all over the world had traversed at one time or the other. Principles must never be betrayed or compromised. After all, Mauritania was a founding member of ECOWAS but exited in 2000, Britain was a founding member of European Union (EU) but left in 2020, and much of Eastern Europe and the Baltic States were a part of the Soviet Union until 1991. Entry and exit should not imply the death of the mother organisation.

    Ndume, northern critics and ‘Lagos boys’

    The relocation of a few Central Bank departments and the Aviation ministry agency of FAAN brought into the open snickers about the so-called Lagos Boys massed into the federal administration by President Bola Tinubu. The Lagos Boys, rather than incompetent and lackadaisical state governors, are blamed for the country’s economic hardship, soaring prices, and plummeting exchange rates. Nothing is heard anymore about decades of misbegotten policies that ruined the economy, inflame and stoke insecurity, and made a national reset doubly difficult. Nothing is said anymore of the crazy debt binge of the past few years that plunged the country into the abyss. Everything wrong with Nigeria, in the eyes of Senator Ali Ndume and other regional critics bristling with anger over loss of certain and minor privileges, is caused by the Lagos Boys. Labelling is hardly the right way to examine a country’s crisis and weigh its panaceas.

    Well, ex-president Muhammadu Buhari had his cabal, and former president Goodluck Jonathan had his Ijaw and Igbo conspirators. The next president, years from now, will have either his ‘Boys’ or his cabals. Somebody somewhere must always be the scapegoat, as long as there is a crisis. As it has been evident in the past few months, including the Sultan’s umbrage and the Kano emir’s irritation, has no one wondered why there is such a fascinating convergence of all the demons that plague Nigeria, all of them at the same time, without exception, particularly insecurity and inflation? Meanwhile, ‘Lagos Boys’, stop vexatious preening.

  • Gowon: How we saved Obasanjo from impeachment

    Former military head of state, General Yakubu Gowon on Saturday went down the memory lane, revealing how he and other prominent Nigerians saved Chief Olusegun Obasanjo from impeachment by the National Assembly during his second term as president.

    He named General Abdulsalami Abubakar and Chief Ernest Sonekan, both of them ex-heads of state, as some of the other eminent Nigerians involved in saving Obasanjo from getting the sack.

    Gowon, speaking during a lecture ‘Nation Building or Nation Fragmentation: Reflections on 20 Years of Post-Military Rule in Nigeria’  in Abuja  said it took them some effort to convince the then Senate president Pius  Anyim and House of Representatives Speaker Ghali Na’Abba  to drop the impeachment plot in the national interest.

    Read Also: Oba of Lagos: Obasanjo is problem with Nigeria

    He said their move was to prevent subsequent presidents from arbitrary impeachment.

    Na’Abbah was at the lecture which was organized by the Major General Emmanuel Olumuyiwa Abisoye Foundation.

    Gowon thanked the former House of Reps speaker  for not only  giving him and other prominent Nigerians the honour to intervene abut also granting their request to shelve the impeachment threat.

  • Buhari, Jonathan greet Clark at 92

    President Muhammadu Buhari and former President Goodluck Jonathan has extolled the virtues of former Information Minister, Chief Edwin Clark on the occasion of his 92nd birthday anniversary.

    In his tribute to Chief Clark, who served as Information Minister during the regime of General Yakubu Gowon, President Buhari noted “even if you don’t agree with the elder statesman sometimes, you must acknowledge his patriotism and commitment to peace.”

    In a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and publicity, Garba Shehu, Buhari said: “Peace building is one of the greatest contributions we should expect of our elders, and I am proud that Chief Edwin Clark has played this role remarkably during trying times in our country.’’

    He described the nonagenarian as a man of strong convictions who doesn’t hesitate to speak his mind on national issues and added ”this gentleman expresses his mind without malice, one of the outstanding virtues of a statesman that he is.”

    “While felicitating with you on this joyous occasion, accept my best wishes and deepest goodwill of my government. You have served your country with distinction and untainted record.

    ”You should be proud of this legacy. The country would always look up to you to tap from your fountain of wisdom”, the President said

    Read Also: Call Oshiomhole to order, NANS tells Buhari

    Jonathan described him as a crusader for equity and justice.

    In a goodwill message he personally signed, Jonathan noted that Chief Clark has made significant contributions to Nigeria’s growth and development, adding that the nonagenarian has continued to work for the nation’s unity and progress.

    A statement by Ikechukwu Eze, the former President’s spokesman further described Chief Clark as a respected leader and statesman who has been at the forefront of peace-building initiatives in the country.

    The message read: “I join your family members and other well-wishers to congratulate you on your 92nd birthday.

    “I am grateful to God for blessing Nigeria and the Niger Delta with someone like you.

    “Your patriotism and commitment to nation-building is evident in your legacies both as a public servant and as a private citizen.

    “You made significant contributions to Nigeria’s growth and development while serving the nation as a regional and federal commissioner in different political dispensations and you have continued to serve her as a foremost leader and statesman.

    “Even in old age you have remained committed in your advocacy for equity, resource and environmental justice, especially in the Niger Delta.

    “You have been at the forefront of different  peace-building initiatives with a view to building a united and prosperous nation.

    “You have remained a role model to the younger generation and an icon of service and sacrifice.

    “May God Almighty who has blessed you with age, strength and wisdom continue to grant you sound health and multiply His grace upon you as you celebrate.”