I am certain that many Nigerians have been waiting to hear my own side of the
story since the imbroglio between former President Olusegun Obasanjo and his
son Gbenga broke out. I deliberately decided to keep quiet because I am flabbergasted
by the unwholesome dimension the whole saga has assumed.
For those who know me very well, it takes me time to join issues with anybody.
By my training and upbringing, I have learned to be patient, calculative and
pointed. Even the designs by my adversaries to provoke me into impromptu and
rash reactions have been rebuffed. It is this attitude that has made it difficult
for me to promptly respond to the wild and misguided allusions made to me over
the issue in discussion by Obasanjo.
Gbenga and his father are well known to me. This is already public knowledge.
I came very close to Obasanjo immediately after he was released from prison
by then Nigerian head of State, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, in 1998. I was
approached at that time by some notable politicians and retired military brass
to work for the emergence of Obasanjo as President. Even though I was sceptical
about his presidency, because of his antecedents, I was eventually convinced
to support him as a way of resolving the political logjam precipitated by the
annulment of the June 12, 1993 Presidential election, which the late Chief M.K.O.
Abiola presumably won. As a believer in equity and justice, I threw my weight
and resources behind Obasanjo.
I personally gave him US$1m in support of his aspiration. My closeness to Obasanjo
made him visit Abia State from February 25-26, 2000, where he christened me
the action governor of Nigeria after commissioning several projects started
and completed by my administration less than 7 months in office. That visit
was his first and last until he left office on May 29, 2007.
I would not want to go into all that transpired between me and Baba thereafter.
But it is pertinent to state, for the benefit of hindsight, that Baba did everything
humanly possible to destroy me. He unleashed the machinery of the federal government
on me and made several failed attempts to remove me as governor. He started
by closing down all my business concerns in Nigeria and revoked all the oil
licences allotted to my companies. He did not stop at that he went a step further
to frame me for money laundering using the EFCC as a willing tool.
What is the cause of our disagreement? One may ask. The truth is that Baba is
not amenable to the truth. He hates to be told one. My grouse about Baba was
that I alerted Nigerians on his surreptitious plan to perpetuate himself in
power. Even though many people called me an alarmist then, subsequent events
have since proved me right. By 2006, it was no longer a secret that he wanted
to remain in office by trying in vain to amend the constitution. The money wasted
on that ego-tripping by Obasanjo would have been sufficient to give the nation
steady electricity. He saw me as the only obstacle between him and his life-president
project and fought with all arsenals at his disposal to undo me.
But the God I serve, who has created me for a purpose, did not allow his devious
plot to pull through.
I was, therefore, not too surprised when he pointed fingers at me as the perpetrator
of the bad blood between him and Gbenga. I think it was preposterous and mischievous
on his part to have drawn me into the impasse.
Gbenga is an adult and well-educated and as a result knows why he made such
a damaging comment about his father. The veracity or otherwise of his claim
against his father is left for the Obasanjo Family to sort out. It has nothing
to do with me.
It may be pertinent at this juncture to state that I saw Gbenga last about 12
months ago. We are mutual friends and share business ideas quite all right,
but we don’t discuss our families. Our relationship is strictly business-oriented,
and this is why I am baffled at Baba’s plot to drag me into the whole
fuss as scapegoat.
I have more important things doing than intruding into Baba’s private
affair. His family is his own and how he runs it is entirely his own business.
If his family is passing through the storm it is his business as well.
I have my own family and will not blame him if anything goes wrong tomorrow
with my family.
One thing Obasanjo has failed to appreciate is that whatever one sows here on
earth is what he reaps. He cannot sow cocoyam and expect to reap cocoa. His
tenure as President, I am sorry to state, remains a sad chapter in Nigeria’s
political history. He bequeathed to us a failed state: a nation steeped in persistent
ethnic wars, insecurity and poverty, as a legacy.
We exist today as a surviving nation due largely to the urgent and remedial
measures taken by President Musa Yar’Adua to right the wrongs of the past.
My heart bleeds when I recall how Obasanjo, as president, fluffed all the opportunities
he had to write himself into the annals of this country. He rather spent his
time and the nation’s stupendous resources building personal castles and
massaging his ego. All that he promised the nation when he assumed office as
president never came to light. Did he not promise steady power supply, in which
his government had sunk over $25billion, by the end of 2006? What did we get
as his parting gift? A largely retrogressive and disenchanted nation was all
we got.
He claimed to have spent billions on poverty eradication, rail, roads, and security,
yet there is nothing on ground to show for it. Instead of showing remorse for
his misdeeds and seeking God’s face in penance he has found it fanciful
to make other innocent people scapegoats. He left the economy worse than he
met it and made many criminals out of our youths instead of creating jobs for
them.
What Yar’Adua has done is to capitalize on Obasanjo’s indiscretions
and make a name. He saw the obvious need to subject himself to the rule of law
and the constitution. The two are the basic ingredients for any democratic polity
to succeed. Unfortunately Obasanjo did not see the need to divorce his military
stance from his position as a civilian president.
He ruled instead of to serve and embarked on intimidation and arm-twisting to
cow his perceived political opponents.
No nation as large as Nigeria with a huge population of over 150 million people
can make progress without basic infrastructure to enhance the living standards
of the people. How can Nigeria emerge a global power without regular electricity,
functional rail and road system, sufficient employment for its teeming youths,
and adequate security? These amenities were what Nigerians had expected Obasanjo
to put in place before leaving office in 2007. Today, there are more poor people
than was the case before his advent to power on May 29, 1999.
Obasanjo owes Nigerians an apology for misleading and misruling them for 8 solid
years. He should seek the face of God by exiling himself into a foreign land
where he will have an ample opportunity for soul-searching and restitution.
He should do this fast, instead of parading himself, as he is doing at present,
as a leader. There is nothing the nation can profit from him any more. After
all, what will he do now that he could not do for the 8 years he called the
shots form Aso Rock?
The truth is that Obasanjo might have forgotten that power is ephemeral. He
carried himself with so much air that he forgot that one day he would vacate
Aso Rock and become an ordinary citizen of Nigeria, just as many of us are today.
The fall of Obasanjo is a great lesson for our present and future generation
of leaders.
I doff my hat for the Nigerian journalists for joining forces with us to defeat
third term. They stood stoically behind us as we battled Obasanjo for the soul
of the nation. Nevertheless, I cannot fail to berate those journalists that
stood on the fence throughout the epic battle. Some of them played the Judas
while we toiled and laboured to free Nigeria from the clandestine machinations
of the enemies of democracy. These black legs opted to pander to whims of the
third term apologists instead of standing up in defence of democracy.
I state without any equivocation, that Nigeria would have been doomed if third
term had succeeded.
To salvage Nigeria from its present decrepit state, there is the need to rebuild
our societal values and ethos in order to entrench discipline, order and good
conduct among our people, especially the youth who are the leaders of tomorrow.
This is what should dominate national discourses rather than the present distractive
posturing of Obasanjo, who is looking for who to sink with him. As for me, I
have done nothing to warrant the slur he is casting on my person. He should
seek the solution to his family problem elsewhere and leave me alone.
My hands are clean and God is my witness.