Only God can rescue Nigeria
from the monster called PDP – Osoba By Muyiwa Oyinlola
Monday, May 28, 2007
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•Osoba
Photo:Sun News Publishing |
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Former governor of Ogun State and a stalwart of the Action
Congress (AC), Chief Olusegun Osoba, has accused the ruling Peoples Democratic
Party, (PDP) of rigging the 2007 general elections, praying that God would rescue
the nation from the party. "But I have faith in God. My God is not a God
that would approve or sanction robbery. It’s just that we are always too
much in a hurry. One day, there’d be divine intervention," Osoba assured
, during a chat with Daily Sun.
He also accused the Inspector
General of Police, Mr. Sunday Ehindero, and the Chairman of the Independent National
Electoral Commission, (INEC) Prof. Maurice Iwu, of aiding and abetting the PDP
in the alleged electoral fraud.
While calling for the disbandment of the
INEC, he expressed disappointment in Ehindero over his recent comment that his
men should not allow the masses to protest against the polls result. "The
IG disappointed me. On the eve of his departure, and on the eve of his retirement,
he got himself involved in a lot of political mess," he said, adding, "Mr.
Ehindero has my pity and sympathy. I just pity him." Osoba, an Egba chief,
also described as "unfortunate" the impression that Egba chiefs are
not enthusiastic to welcome President Olusegun Obasanjo home after leaving office
at the end of this month.
"This again is another unfortunate situation.
I have been calling people back home in Abeokuta, to ask for arrangements being
made for the return of Chief Obasanjo, and nobody seems interested," he said.
Excerpts. One
of your contemporaries, Alhaji Abubakar Audu re-contested the governorship of
Kogi State. Did you also consider re-contesting in Ogun State? I have
never believed that there could be a smooth transition under a PDP-controlled
government. I, therefore, did not consider it at any time that it was worth my
consideration.
People felt that a coalition of ANPP and the AC
would have defeated the PDP in Ogun State. Did you at any time try to facilitate
a merger? Was there an election last month? What happened in Ogun
State and throughout the country was allocation of votes. The votes were pre-determined.
It is, therefore, a useless exercise to look back and say that if ANPP and AC
had joined forces it would have made any difference. PDP had made up its mind
and it went ahead to allocate votes. You can also stretch it further and ask the
question, Anambra State, which is not bigger than Ogun State in population, returned
over one million votes. Does that reflect a free and fair contest, particularly,
where the governor of the state, Peter Obi, former governor, Chris Ngige, and
Ukachukwu of ANPP, all came out to say there was no voting in Anambra?
You
said you have never believed there could be a credible election under a PDP government,
why then did you support the Vice President, Alhaji Abubakar Atiku, for the presidency? Personally,
I went out campaigning because I believe we would get to a stage where we might
have to call out our supporters to insist on our right. If you listened to some
of the statements that I made, I said AC was beyond being a political party. It
is a mass movement, planned in such a way that if we have to come out and insist
on our right as the people in Georgia did, as the people in Ukraine did, we would
be better off. We needed a structure. To me personally, AC was just a vehicle,
not for the election of 2007, but beyond 2007.
When the results
of the presidential polls were released, were you surprised at the paltry figures
Atiku polled? I was not bothered. I was not worried. I was not shocked.
I had always believed that PDP would do worse than they did in 2003. No votes
were counted anywhere in Nigeria. There was no result. What you have is allocation
of figures. I keep repeating it. The PDP went out to rob the whole country,
and they carried out a "successful" electoral robbery. To them, that
is "success." But unfortunately for them, the entire country reacted
negatively. Even the international community reacted negatively to the robbery.
What
they have is not victory at all. How come they themselves cannot roll out the
drums? They’re only gathering in their closet and shaking one another’s
hands. Let them come out anywhere in the country and roll out the drums in the
streets, and start dancing that they’re victorious. They’ll see what
the reaction of the people would be to them.
In case they extend
an olive branch to the AC, would the party participate in a PDP government? We
have discussed that and resolved that this is beyond just going to share in the
booty. How do you share in the booty of armed robbery? If somebody has stolen,
how do you share the booty? No. We’re not interested. That’s not part
of the AC’s agenda.
You said there was no election throughout
the country, how do you reconcile that with the AC’s victory in Lagos State? The
case of Lagos is different for many reasons. Lagos State is a city-state, just
like Kano State is a city-state. The PDP knew that if they made any mistake of
tampering with places like Lagos and Kano, the 300 casualties that we had would
have been in thousands.
Second, there was a heavy policing of Lagos. In
actual fact, we would have scored higher than we scored if the PDP government
had not created fear in the mind of the people. If the PDP had not intimidated
them, we should have scored a minimum of two million votes.
I know many
people who felt there could be violence, mayhem, and they quietly locked themselves
inside their houses. If there had not been intimidation and harassment on April
14, and election had been free and fair on that day, Lagosians would have come
out in a larger numbers for the presidential election on 21st. Take Lagos
out of it; in fact, Lagos was able to really show to the world that where you
practice democracy, Nigerians would get the fruit of their labour.
Aggrieved
politicians have been advised to seek redress at the electoral tribunal. Do you
think anything good would come out from there? I have faith in the
judiciary, particularly the way the Supreme Court had displayed its independence
in the last few months. I, therefore, would not write off the tribunal.
But
are you not worried that the tribunal is yet to commence sitting weeks after the
elections? I’m not. It’s not that easy. Even those who
are going to go to the tribunal will have to collate their evidences, especially
in a situation where the PDP ensured that Iwu’s INEC, which is a wing of
the PDP, did not even go to the polling booths with the result sheets. They had
to go home and start cooking up the result. And in some cases, they are still
thumb printing ballot papers to match the figure that they released. It’s,
therefore, not going to be easy to collate information, and that’s why the
tribunal has not started sitting. It’s not the fault of the judiciary.
Was
the Inspector General of Police’s threat to deal with protesters the reason
the AC, which you describe as a mass movement, did not protest the result of the
polls on May Day? I think the public and the Press got it mixed up.
Originally, we were going to use the May Day to just make a political statement
on the current situation, but labour people said they would not want to mix politics
with labour. The NLC president advised that we should let them celebrate the May
Day without getting involved in politics, and that they would be involved at subsequent
time when we decide to take any action. May Day was not planned to be a day for
mass protest. It was to be a day to educate the public on what happened.
But
what do you have to say about the IGP’s threat? The IGP disappointed
me. On the eve of his departure, and on the eve of his retirement, he got himself
involved in a lot of political mess.
I was not happy that a lawyer, a highly
educated man like Ehindero would decide that all cases, particularly political
cases, should immediately be transferred to Abuja. This was the same thing we
witnessed in March 2004 when Tafa Balogun locked up about 20 youngsters from Ogun
State for three months, at the end of the day; they found no case against them.
I pity Mr. Ehindero. I sympathise with him. I just pity him. That’s all
I would say. I won’t say more than that.
The elections have
no doubt been condemned. Some people are even calling for the resignation of Prof.
Maurice Iwu. Do you share their view? Resignation is a mild word to
use. The entire INEC should be disbanded. I said it before in The Sun that Iwu
is evil, and that nothing good can come out of Iwu. He and I met at Daily Trust
annual dialogue, and I repeated my statement that nothing good would come out
of this INEC. He felt upset that day. But today, my prediction has come to pass.
What
is even nauseating to some of us is the manner in which he’s now pushing
the monster of results down our throats, and damning everybody. It’s so
nauseating and I hope in his sober moment, he would reflect and pray for forgiveness
from God.
Given the recurring situation, when do you think Nigeria
will get its elections right? Not in the foreseeable future. The PDP
has introduced another evil into our culture, the evil of electoral robbery. I
feel sorry for the country because a government that is supposed to provide security
has now gone to tamper with cultism, using cultists in our institutions, arming
youngsters to openly, in broad daylight, rob people of the only right left to
them, the right to vote, the right to change their government. They’ve
even taken it to a higher level. Those that you’d think are supposed to
be responsible, decent, educated Nigerians got involved in the 2007 electoral
fraud. In Abeokuta, for example, a deaconness, and a former commissioner in Ogun
State, a former chief executive of a bank, and a top civil servant, were all involved
in snatching, at gun point, the ballot box in one of the polling booths at GRA,
near my house in Abeokuta. They didn’t even care who was watching them.
So,
we’re now telling the whole world that robbery is now part of our culture
in this country. We have graduated beyond 419. We have now turned our nation to
a nation of fraud, a nation of armed robbers, who accepts robbery as part of our
culture. What do you think would become of the products of this kind of electoral
robbery? Governors who are the products of this robbery, would they have the right
to query young students cheating at JAMB or NECO?
I read in the papers
that some students were cheating at JAMB; I said that’s no news in any case.
If their fathers can openly go and rob voters in broad daylight, that children
rob or commit fraud at WAEC, JAMB, NECO is a child’s play.
Is
the AC going to challenge Yar’Adua’s victory or have you accepted
it? The AC as a party is going to go to court. That was decided immediately
after the election at a caucus meeting that we had.
Do you think
any good thing will come out of it? As democrats, we must explore
all legal means to express our shock and displeasure. That’s the main reason
we’re going to go to court, and expose the havoc that the PDP has wreaked
on this country.
You said earlier that AC is future political
movement, how soon would the AC take over the governance of the country? I
am not a prophet and I am not going to prophesy. I am, however, convinced that
the entire country is in a state of mourning. You can see the mood of Nigerians.
What happened in the last three weeks in the country has been a shock. There is
disillusionment, some are beginning to lose faith in the government, most people
don’t believe in the ballot box any more.
It is in that light that
I know that some day, sometime, most Nigerians who feel this way would come together
and look for a channel and an avenue, and that is when AC as a movement would
gather steam. For now, the PDP believe they are riding high, and we are just watching
them as they dance naked in public.
A lot of people have adjudged
Alhaji Umar Yar’Adua as a gentleman and prudent politician. Take him away
from PDP; do you think Nigeria can move ahead under his government? I
have always wanted us to remove the person of Umar Yar’Adua out of this
mess. He, as a person, is an unfortunate victim of a cabal who just want to use
his good name, his enviable pedigree and background, his good upbringing as somebody
from a family with a good name to sell. I, therefore, would not want to drag his
name into this situation at all.
You are an Egba chief, what preparations
are the Egba chiefs making to welcome President Obasanjo back home in the next
few weeks? This again is another unfortunate situation. I have been
calling people, back home in Abeokuta, to ask for arrangements being made for
the return of Chief Obasanjo and nobody seems interested at all. Yesterday
afternoon, I spoke to one of his cousins, and that one said the family is not
interested in welcoming him back to Abeokuta. It hurts me that the president has
driven himself into such a situation that people are not that enthusiastic about
his person, his philosophy as a politician. People are just not interested in
his legacy.
I felt greatly hurt when I watched the president on television
on Monday night (last week), speaking at the commissioning of the National Assembly
extension complex, and I was shocked by some of the statements that came from
the president.
For example, he said he’s happy that the situation
is such that it’s not north and south that are quarreling this time around,
that it’s not a religious crisis, that it’s not an ethnic issue. I
held my head and told my wife that I wish somebody would save Mr. President from
the world of illusion that he’s living.
He still hasn’t realized
that the entire country is bonded together by the evil that they have foisted
on us. He didn’t realize that the issue is beyond all the primordial factors,
and that the entire country is united against his performance, against PDP, against
his election. If a referendum is held tomorrow, 99 per cent of Nigerians would
vote against this election, against PDP, against what has happened, and that’s
what has united us together. We’re back as if we are on the football field,
the entire country. There’s no sector that has not felt the impact of
this havoc, and Mr. President is not seeing it that way at all. It’s a big
pity.
Is INEC’s problem, that of the system or the operators? Both.
I halla, halla and preached open-secret ballot system as the best mode for election
in this country, which means election would take place simultaneously at every
polling booth at the same time, and nobody would be able to move from one place
to the other. Also, the auditing of the number of ballots issue would be taken
before the election begins, to match the number of those accredited, so that the
number of ballot papers that would be issued would match the number of accredited
voters, and the votes would not exceed the audit and voting would take place at
the same time. This would reasonably guarantee a level of fairness. A future
INEC must have representatives of all political parties to be involved in all
the arrangement of elections.
And when it gets to elections, the number
of printed ballot papers, the numbers issued out, the location of all the election
materials must be endorsed by the political parties. It is only then that we can
talk of a free and fair election.
Nigerians are capable of conducting a
free and fair election. I have faith in my country. I have faith in the citizens
of this country. There are more honest Nigerians than the fraudulent ones. It
is only a little cabal led by a godfather that is holding the entire country to
ransom and for how long they will hold us like that, only God knows. |