Thursday, 19 December 2013

This Obasanjo Sef & Other Unreplied Letters (1999-2007) By Rudolf Ogoo Okonkwo


From 1999 to 2007 when Olusegun Obasanjo was president of Nigeria, I wrote him over three dozen letters. None of them were replied.
In light of his recent 18-page letter to President Goodluck Jonathan, I indulge your patience as I ‘leak’ to the press 18 pages from some of my letters to Olusegun Obasanjo during that period.
The first letter I wrote was on February 13, 1999, just before he was sworn in. It was titled, “Dear Uncle Segun”. I wrote many more in the 8 years that followed. For the purpose of capturing the trajectory of Obasanjo’s presidency (for those who have forgotten), in all its triumphs and tragedies, I have selected the following: February 24, 2000: Gospel According to St. Aremu; November 27, 2000: Obasanjo and Acts of God; March 19, 2004: This Obasanjo Sef!; December 19, 2001:The Need To Examine Obasanjo’s Head; January 19, 2004: Why Obasanjo Failed; June 15, 2004: Obasanjo’s Funeral and April 2, 2007: Obasanjo: The Last King of Nigeria. 

Going through these letters, I found myself asking if there are things going on under President Goodluck Jonathan that did not happen under former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
The only funny thing about the letters was the reactions of people who bought into all the hypes of that era. I felt sorry for those who invested in Obasanjo/Onyiuke’s stock market and the new generation banks of those days. They rained abuses on anyone who dared to criticize any of the voodoo going on, all in their belief that Obasanjo had set Nigeria on an irreversible path to greatness.
Enjoy.
***
February 13, 1999: Letter to Uncle Segun
Dear Uncle Segun,
My heart was full of sadness when I heard the unfortunate news- your victory in Nigeria's presidential election. It was such a cruel thing for them to have done to you. I could not ever imagine that anyone with a pint of that substance called the milk of human kindness would have to sacrifice the peace and tranquility of an old retired man like you. For what? Don't they have shame in them? Haven't they heard that when a wood insect gathers sticks, on its own head it shall bear them? What river of uselessness did they drink? Which juju goddess did they say sent them to you? You, living jeje, a low profile life, in your little farm house, in the village of Otta, like your fellow African statesman, Julius Nyerere of Tanzania.

I was wondering why you didn't say no. Then I heard that you said a resounding no but they wouldn't take no for an answer. I was told that you even ran away. You traveled from Britain to America to Canada, asking for political asylum but they wouldn't grant you one. They all said you should go home and save your people. As if your second name is Moses. How could they all conspire against you? You even told them what your fellow General, Collin Powell, told the Americans that, "There is no fire in your belly." How could they mess up that country and want an innocent man like you to come and redeem it. Iro!
I said iro when we talked on your U.S. visit. I say iro again, today. It is the head that touches the wasp nest that is stung by wasps. I don't want my Uncle stung. Not while I am still alive. Is it too late to stop all these nonsense? Is it too late to avoid this train wreck ahead? It still makes no sense to me, that after bringing Nigeria to its knees, those who claim they were born to rule have run out of options and now turn to you, my Uncle. Don't tell me one of those Igbo proverbs your friend Kaduna Nzeogwu taught you.
This is no time to make sacrifice so that the spirits shall remain guilty. Let other people make the sacrifice this time. Remember you can cure a mad man but you cannot end his blinking eyelids.
Are you telling me that you are really ready to return to that hot seat? The same seat that roasted Gen. Sani Abacha. The seat that set Gen. Babangida's behind on fire. I know you are going to Abuja with the juju from the medicine man of Ijebu Edo. You remember what happened to Shehu Shagari? I don't want you to suffer the same fate, Uncle. I know you mean well, you want to restore the dignity of that country of ours, but look at the other side of the coin. How do you run the country with those millionaires in the senate who are used to giving orders than debating issues? How do you deal with those moneybag generals whose money I understand you refused to accept during the election?
Uncle, I have bad news for you. Have you heard Hillary Clinton talk about right wing conspiracy after her husband? Those guys are already there in Nigeria. They are poised and ready to take you on. They will dig up your own Paula Jones, your own Monica Lewinsky. This time it is not just the Lagos-Ibadan press, not just the legions of ex-communists who baptized themselves and are presently known as civil rights activists. Supported by rich international organizations, these guys have their daggers drawn. And that is not all. The Oduduwa ancestors and their battalions of Baloguns, Odua brigades, and Area boys are all waiting in ambush. Let me not talk of the Brutus and the Cassius in your inner circle. Daggers are sharpened and tested. I can see the splash of blood. I don't want it to be yours, Uncle.
Remember the other time, when they lied against you. They accused you of taking billions of naira and hiding it somewhere in Uganda. This time, after Babangida and Abacha, no one reports about missing billions. Since every small boy with a long hat in Abuja has billions of Naira, they will now accuse you of stealing trillions. Please, Uncle, don't do this to yourself. Don't give them another chance to kick you around. Did you notice that Obafemi Awolowo is turning in his grave? That is not a good sign. He is complaining that you have once again stolen the chance for Yorubas to produce a president of Nigeria. Do I need to tell you his definition of who a Yoruba is? You and I who think with our own brain do not count. To count, we have to be one of his cronies.
Uncle, if I were you, I would have told them the famous saying," If I am drafted, I won't run; if I am nominated, I won't accept; and if I am elected, I won't serve." But then, I am aware of your eternal love for Nigeria, your undying sense of commitment to the Nigerian dream. But sometimes, like the Bible says, we have to let the dead bury their dead. Remember that no matter how much the snail tries, it cannot cast off its shell. I know what you are thinking now. That even though emergency situation is the only thing that surpasses the brave, but that it is also the test of bravery. Deep down, I share your conviction but for the sake of Auntie Stella, give those Nigerians back their corpse.
Have I ever told you what happens to good gamblers who do not know when to walk away, when to run, and when to quit? They lose everything. Are you aware that Great Ugboru has been pardoned? And that General Diya after escaping the hang man changed his song from crying wolf to saying he had no regret about joining the plot to overthrow Abacha. Thank God it is too late for him to make it to the senate. You think you can deal with all those brain-damaged people. The man eating human flesh, Clifford Orji. The angry young men of Ijaw. And what about those restless Igbos? How are you going to handle them now that you took over a party their son, Ekwueme, helped form. Remember, if you give them too much, they start getting some ideas into their big heads, and if you give them too little, they will keep grumbling. We are safer with the later.
I don't envy you in any way. Remember that you tactically escaped debating Falae during the campaign. You won't be so lucky next time. If you look into the crystal ball I am looking at, what you will see will make you skip a heartbeat. Fela may be dead, but his spirit is still alive. So is the spirit of Major Okar. His army of shakara boys is in heightened alert. Simply put, what is ahead is beyond your wildest imagination.
In one speech, you rightly noted that, "There will be sweat and blood for Nigeria to be great again." Do you know whose sweat and blood that is needed? It’s not Al Gore's or George W. Bush's. It is yours. They won't tell you now until you take that oath. Nigeria today is like a cracked up windscreen of a car. The cracked up lines are everywhere. Any little shake, the whole structure would collapse. Democracy, our kind of democracy, would not do anything to fill up the crack. Rather, what democracy will bring about is a permit for circus operators, like late Ken Saro Wiwa, to parade their animals around. And when a circus operator who has elephants on his line up (e.g. The Islamic fundamentalists) arrives, the cookies would crumble.
If you had never been the Commander-in-Chief before, I would understand why you want to be that. If you had never been a political prisoner, I would understand why you are putting yourself on the path to that famous place. But you have been all these things. So why do you want to repeat yourself? Don't you know that when an old woman falls down twice, we can count what she has in her "market basket"? All I am saying is that I want the best for you. And by my honest assessment, governing that bunch of ingrates is not the best for you. Our elders say that the grasshopper that is eaten by the noisy okpoko bird must have collapsed ears. Not talking, you know, is the fault of the month, not hearing, that of the ear.
Let me go over with you some possible scenario of events when you take over power. The rainbow of professional politicians and generals who dominate the legislative branch would be in perpetual stalemate. With their absolute ignorance of democratic tenets, you will be left alone to rule with your internationally acclaimed democratic acumen. That would have been good for everyone if you ruled with executive power, but the gang of fools in your cabinet, all puppets of one General after another, will turn the pit upside down. What about the Judiciary branch, full of activist judges, all sworn enemies of yours? How do you navigate around them? They will find a way to upset your well-known cool temper.

The military may not plan a coup. Not because you are there or because you understand them. No. All those are silly assumptions. They may not because the ambitious ones are dying off in Sierra Leone. But those born to rule still have another tool they can apply effectively. They can apply the Yaradua's lotion on you. Or Abacha's virus. Remember Abiola's cough. And when that happens, power will return to their man who is your Vice-President. Uncle, the pit holes are many. No matter what truck you drive, be it Lincoln Navigator (aka, okwu oto ekene eze), your shock absorber would fail sooner or later. And just like Ezego, you will die, just like that. Say tufiakwa.
Uncle. Say oburu ogwu, ya so ha. (If it is juju, let it follow them.) Uncle, I'm sorry I've to go. The agency that employs me to clean toilets for Americans is calling. I’m gonna go or else... If you wish to discuss this further, send me an email when you are less busy. My email address is Nnobi@aol.com.
Finally, Baba, May I remind you that, Alaseju pr ni it; esuru se aseju o t lw oniyan; iyawo se aseju o fi ata taaba.
Good Repose the while.
Your nephew, Rudolf Ogoo Okonkwo

February 24, 2000: Gospel According to St. Aremu

The Book of the generation of Nigerians, dwellers of the upper and lower Niger, on the western coast of Africa, by the banks of the Atlantic, some creatures of the British, the bride of Europe.
And Aremu, the son of Obasanjo received a call from heaven to be an apostle and was anointed by the Almighty to write to the people of Nigeria. For it was written, “Therefore my people are gone into captivity, because they have no knowledge: and their honorable men are famished, and their multitude dried up with thirst.”
Long after the days in the wilderness, when the British had gone, Abubakar Tafawa Belewa was anointed to lead His people. Abubakar begat Aguiyi Ironsi and Ironsi begat Gowon. Gowon begat Murtala and Murtala begat Obasanjo. Obasanjo begat Shagari and Shagari begat Buhari. Buhari begat Babangida and Babangida begat Abacha. Abacha begat Abubakar. And Abubakar begat Obasanjo again.

And even before the chorus of His reincarnation Amen died, He arose and flew to Britain.
And it came to pass, that a battered people were handed over to Aremu. On the day of his coronation as the new King of Nigeria, the one elected by the people, He declared that Nigeria would be great again. He called on everyone to put his or her hands on the deck and push Nigeria forward. And He said unto them that corruption would come to an end. That there would be no sacred cows.
And as soon as He dropped off the commandments, He arose and flew to Libya.
And behold, He kicked off his father’s call by purging from the military, officers who had soiled their hands in the honeycomb of Nigeria. And the masses hailed Him. And He felt strengthened. Then, He appointed his disciples. He chose them from fishermen, tax collectors, Alhajis, Ozo title holders, Baloguns. But when He distributed portfolio, cries of maginalization were heard in the land of Nigeria.
Elderly men wept for what they called yeye ministry they were given.
And from thence, He arose and flew to Ethiopia.
And at the temple of the Synagogue, the Sadducees and the Pharisees clashed. Mud was thrown and gowns were lifted. It was a feast of exposure and advertisement of sins. Men fell off the pinnacle of the temple. For those seeking signs of something good coming to the New Jerusalem, they were left to wear long faces. For a long time, there was no hope for a baptism of repentance or for the remission of sins.
His people waited and worried. And from thence, He arose and flew to Sierra Leone.
Still, after hundred days of His coming, there was the voice of the cherubim and the seraphs shouting hallelujah, the messiah has come. And one of the Baloguns shouted that he was the one running the show. That it was from his goatskin bag that the crusade was coming from. And that statement annoyed the Alhajis. And they too began to cry over maginalization.
And He said nothing to them. And from thence, He arose and flew to South Africa.
And a certain Alhaji wearing a long white garment and tall hat came up in Zamfara. He had a vision from the other God. He wants the children of the Niger not to drink any more wine and strong drinks. He was in trance and he saw city upon cities where no woman played soccer. He looked further; he saw towns where harlots had given up their trade for life in the corporate world. He looked further; he saw pigs surrendering to Mullahs as they get cloned into fat cows. He saw people following life as it was written. Young men masturbating rather than having sex. Young women covering their bodies and avoiding any contact with men.

And as Alhaji and his apostles gathered and plotted how to take their jihad down to the Niger Delta, He said no word to them. From thence, He arose and flew to the U.S.
And when the unclean spirits seemed to be leaving the bodies of soldiers of the Niger, behold, it entered the multitude at the Niger Delta. And they went forth, fighting and biting. And at Odi, the old clashed with the new. As it was in the beginning, the soldiers of Aremu went into Odi and nothing breathing was left standing. The Pharisees who were kidnapped and killed were avenged. But that did not bring peace in the land.
He glanced at them with one eye. From thence, He arose and flew to Liberia.

And He cometh to Lagos where one Ganiyu Adams and his gang of pirates have been ruling. He fired a warning. He threatened to send down thunder and lightning if the members of OPC, the children of Oduduwa, of which He is one do not put their plough into the plough-shade. Once again, there was panic in the land over the wrath to come. He rebuked their Governor calling them generation of vipers. And this time there was no doubt He meant business.

There was shock. And everyone waited. From thence, He arose and flew to India.

And one of his apostles announced to the world that he had come up with how to bring home Nigerian Professionals abroad. He would get the scribes to imprint in the Dead Sea Scroll their names and addresses. And they would be ashamed of themselves and go back home to roast. And lo, a voice from heaven came down saying, “We have no other country but Nigeria. We must stay here and salvage it together.” And the prophets and prophetesses abroad laughed.
He did not give them any mind. And from thence, He rose and flew to Germany.
And the storm was gathering. For there was a certain Herod who once put Him in jail. Upon Herod’s death, his sins have been transferred to his kinsmen. One of his sons is in the Golgotha of Kirikiri awaiting justice, as well as his friends and well-wishers. And people began to ask, what about Pontius Pilate, what about Pontius Pilate. If Herod killed one, Pontius Pilate killed a million. If Herod stole a thousand, Pontius Pilate stole a million.
And He closed His ears to all the noise they were making. And from hence, He arose and flew to France.
And at that time, the choir has decided to follow him. On and on, they keep asking Him the question. Tired of it all, He said onto them, Verily verily I say unto you. If any of you knows where Herod kept the money, the bank name and account number let the person say so and see if we would not take action.
And his people were shocked at his proclamation. And from thence, He arose and flew to Portugal.
And the Holy Spirit came into the Pharisees in the Synagogue. And they passed the anti-graft ordinance requiring any adult member of His nation to have not just clean hearts but also clean hands. He sent them an epistle containing some turtledoves and two young pigeons. And he spoke many things unto them in parables. He talked about paying the salary of workers of neighboring state of Galilee called Niger. Then he dropped the bomb. He asked for some millions of dollars to buy a new donkey.
And before he could jump into the plane and fly, the ancient city of Kaduna was set on fire.
As it was fourscore-and seven years ago, He sat alone in his lonely room and said what he would have said long time ago, “Get you behind me Satan.” But it was late. He covered himself in ashes and wept. Eli Eli lami sabachthani? (My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?)”

November 27, 2000: Obasanjo and Acts of God

Sometime in 1992, the Independence Building that housed the Ministry of Defense was set ablaze. The fire began on the 12th floor and moved down. The Fire Service of Nigeria was helpless as the fire raged. Though they managed to drive their trucks to the scene, they had no ladder that could reach the 12th floor. Lagosians with their fire brigade simply waited and watched as the building was consumed by fire. Afterward, a smiling Chief of Defense Staff, General Sani Abacha came to inspect the scene. In his comment to the press, General Sani Abacha declared the unfortunate incident an act of God. President Ibrahim Babangida also confirmed Abacha’s observation in Abuja. Immediately after, Nigerians had a sigh of relief, threw their hands up in heaven in thanks and praises to God and continued with their daily routine as if nothing happened.
Since Obasanjo came to power, God has been working overtime for Obasanjo’s Nigeria. When we are not being reminded that Obasanjo is the beloved son in whom God is well pleased, we are told that the Messiah has arrived. Because Nigerians had not really bothered to question anything, the ridiculous kept developing wings. And before we know it, the ridiculous would fly. Just last weekend, Obasanjo took it to another level. He told us that the amalgamation of the Northern and Southern Protectorates by the British was an act of God. Obasanjo did not stop there. He then warned that, “Anybody who wants to work against this act of God, I leave the person in the retributive hand of God.” You may ask, why then are MASSOB members in jail and not left in the retributive hands of God?
The truth is that Obasanjo has prolonged this use of God as an excuse not to think. If the amalgamation of the Northern and Southern Protectorates was an act of God, then, Obasanjo must be God’s first mistake. It has to be so because the two acts were contradictory. By Obasanjo’s reasoning, the British ignorance led to the amalgamation but it is Obasanjo’s ignorance that will undo it. For all I know, God does not do a half-hearted job. If God had wanted Southern and Northern Nigeria to be one, He would not have amalgamated it. God would have welded it. Regardless of what you have heard, believe me, God did not make Obasanjo President. Babangida did. Unless of course, Babangida is God. And I bet, he is to some. Or probably, an act of Babangida, is an act of God.
Unlucky, Bertolt Brecht said, is the country that needs a hero. But unlucky is the country that makes God its hero. God, the holy book says, is a zealous one. That, Obasanjo does not seem to understand. Obasanjo seems to run to God when he wants to know what Nigerians think. Mr. President, God is not a Nigerian. Pliny the Elder said that “Amid the miseries of our life on earth, suicide is God’s best gift to man.” So far, suicide it seems, is what Obasanjo is offering Nigerians. That may well end up being Obasanjo’s gift to Nigeria if he continues to resist calls to renegotiate the unity of Nigeria.
If Obasanjo wants to talk about God, his God, he should begin by talking to the likes of Tony Anineh. By claiming to be divine, Obasanjo has assumed the role of a physician. Perfectly, he has surrounded himself with ill patients. Obasanjo should begin to cure the sick patients in his inner circle before he starts to bully the rest of us from his pulpit. There is nothing wrong with saying, my Lord, my Lord as long as one is doing what the Lord wants. But if one is not, that fellow is running the risk of using the name of the Lord in vain.
If Obasanjo cares about leadership, he should begin to do more than he says. He should begin to produce more than he promises. He should stop joking around. God does not joke with the lives of his children. The business of governance is a serious business. It is not a performance on theatre stage full of dances and showmanship signifying nothing. The Son of God, when he came to earth pursued His task with a sense of seriousness. If Obasanjo truly wants to pay tribute to the God he claims to worship, he should try to emulate Christ every step of the way. He may have to try this popular question, “What would Jesus do?” next time he thinks of sending soldiers to kill the innocent kids in Odi.
Paraphrasing Daniel Defoe’s poem “The True-Born English”, the house of prayer that Obasanjo thinks he has built for God has a devil’s chapel within. If Obasanjo would care to conduct an examination, he would see that the devil has the largest congregation. The task before Obasanjo is to put on the iron shirt and chase the devil and his cohorts into utter space. Wining and dining with them is a betrayal of God’s trust. If Obasanjo really wants to be nearer to God, he needs to stand further from injustices, corruption and inequality.
When two lovebirds are on the street corner, all over themselves, pretending to be experiencing an everlasting love, passersby usually say to them, "Go get a room!" It is time for Obasanjo to take his romance with God into a room. It is becoming preposterous. It is beginning to irritate.
Over 400 years before Christ, Greek dramatist, Euripides, wrote that “Those whom God wishes to destroy, He first makes mad.”
Now, that would be an act of God.

March 19, 2001: This Obasanjo Sef!

“Do not forget that the Biafra war that almost divided this country was caused by resource control. If Biafra had won, I would have been dead, your governor would not have been in the position he is today.”
- President Olusegun Obasanjo
This Obasanjo sef!
As of last week, I was leaning towards the school of thought that suggests that the man is not as dumb as he sounds. This school of thought believes that Obasanjo is one smart fox that knows what is really going on in that country but is playing dumb. They argue that he is looking for a perfect time to strike. Having been around for long, this school of thought insinuates that Obasanjo knows right from wrong, that he is calculating on the right time to make a turn and do the right thing. This right time, the proponents of this idea claim, is a time when Obasanjo’s moves will be irreversible. They contend that we could begin to see these new and improved Obasanjo as soon as he wins the second term or as soon as he decides against running for a second term. That is such a chosen time when he will move fast to deal with the inherent problems of Nigeria that he could not have been ignorant of, even if he is mentally dead. I heard that at this appointed time, Obasanjo could threaten to resign if a National Conference is not convened. That at such arranged time, Obasanjo could go after the likes of Babangida with tons of evidence that Obasanjo’s boys had been collecting. That at this designated time, Obasanjo will follow the tradition of Egba people and ‘open book for them’. I was studying this thesis and cross-checking its validity when Obasanjo went to the Niger-Delta and once again opened his foul mouth.
This Obasanjo sef!
I have never given anyone the benefit of the doubt as much as I have given Obasanjo. I have never reduced my expectations for anyone as much as I have reduced them for Obasanjo. I spend hours wondering if I am the one who does not get it. I bend myself round and round, trying to be in the same book with Obasanjo. I see what I think is reality, I twist it round and round, trying to find the angle at which Obasanjo is looking at things, but, still, I fail. I spend sleepless nights wondering why Obasanjo is reserving the greatest resistance for the simplest truth. I observe as mental, spiritual and even silent protest overwhelms the nation, I wonder why Obasanjo is seeing everything differently. I ask myself several questions: What happened to Obasanjo’s mind? Is his mind weighed down by the low level of the minds of men around him, or what? What happened to Obasanjo’s reality? When will the child who insists that its mother will not sleep know that it will, itself, not sleep either? I watch as he offers a cup of water to the monkey, I wonder how he is going to get the cup back.
This Obasanjo sef!
Whatever is Obasanjo’s mission, he is working very hard to betray it. His fear of the known and the unknown is crushing his courage to dare. I guess Obasanjo is a broken man. He has lost the vigor needed to renew Nigeria. It is sad that he entered the stage without the desire to perform. He is now hopping around, wasting his time and the time of the country. How come he is this clueless? How come he is this stubborn? How come he is lost in the confusion of his own misunderstanding? When all is said and done, history will classify Obasanjo’s second coming as low in productivity as Shagari’s era. Obasanjo’s would be seen as a poor sequel of Shehu Shagari’s administration. Ten years from now, history will remember Abacha’s government as one ran by a stupid man surrounded by wicked men. As for Obasanjo’s second coming, history will remember it as a government ran by a wicked man surrounded by stupid men. Babangida destroyed the fabric of Nigeria but Obasanjo is systematically destroying the spirit of the Nigerian people. His destruction would be much more deeper and long lasting.

This Obasanjo sef!
I am no longer mad when Obasanjo opens his big mouth and provokes me. I have passed that stage. For Obasanjo to open the mouth he uses to eat pounded yam and ewedu and say that the Biafran war was caused by resource control finally made my brain numb. The fact that he chose to say so in Bayelsa State showed how deep in his heart, he is just a wicked man. A wicked man seeking to divide and rule. Not Babangida, and not even Abacha stooped this low. For Obasanjo to say that if Biafra had won, that Diepreye Alamieyeseigha would not hold his current position, was a belittling of the spirit of the people of the Niger Delta. To suggest that the Niger Deltans could not have ascertained their place in Biafra is mean and a slap on the face of all progressive and courageous people of the Niger Delta who have been fighting for their own place within the space called Nigeria. Such crudeness coming from a so called born-again Christian is a shame to all true children of God. That Obasanjo cannot forgive the Igbos for fighting to stay alive is pathetic. Whatever happens to “forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespassed against us”?
This Obasanjo sef!
It seems like Obasanjo is obsessed with the question, “What shall we do with the Igbos? It seems to haunt him wherever he goes. The only answer I have is the one that Frederick Douglass gave to those asking the question, “What shall we do with the Negro? He wrote:
“Everybody has asked the question ... "What shall we do with the Negro?" I have had but one answer from the beginning. Do nothing with us! Your doing with us has already played the mischief with us. Do nothing with us! If the apples will not remain on the tree of their own strength, if they are worm eaten at the core, if they are early ripe and disposed to fall, let them fall! I am not for tying or fastening them on the tree in any way, except by nature's plan, and if they will not stay there, let them fall. And if the Negro cannot stand on his own legs, let him fall also. All I ask is, give him a chance to stand on his own legs! Let him alone!”
As for me, I have no idea what would have been if Biafra had won. One thing I know for sure is that if Biafra had won, I would not have been here writing about Obasanjo and his Nigeria.
So if you see Obasanjo, tell him to leave the Igbos alone. Tell him to leave the Niger Deltans alone. Tell him to leave Nigeria alone. Tell him to do nothing with us. Tell him he has done enough mischief.
This Obasanjo sef!


 December 19, 2001: The Need To Examine Obasanjo’s Head

"I wonder why in the beginning of this 21st Century, 31 years after the civil war, people are still talking about secession. Anybody talking about that should have his head examined."
- Olusegun Obasanjo
In the last few weeks, President Olusegun Obasanjo has opened two major frontiers in the discussion and understanding of the personalities of the characters who run the Nigerian polity. The first one was when he called university lecturers the bane of education. And the second was this latest suggestion that those talking about secession should have their heads examined.
I want to examine Obasanjo's head but I am scared of things I might find.
In Obasanjo's battle with ASUU, he blamed university teacher for the entire problem with Nigerian education. "It is utter irresponsible, unacceptable and immoral for university teachers to disturb students having examination. Lecturers are the bane of the country and most of them have contributed nothing to the nation yet they still print handout and sell to students, they even harass female students."
The president went on to accuse ASUU of talking about nothing but money for their pockets. He stated that ASUU is not performing and that the standard of education has failed.
As I read Obasanjo's attack on ASUU, I could see that all the charges he leveled could be applied to the bunch of politicians he leads.
It is surprising to see that Obasanjo could define what is moral and what is immoral even as Safiya faces death by stoning. The suggestion that something is unacceptable in the mind of the president is strange in light of the breakdown of law and order and the general sense of injustice and inequity his government has condoned. This is a president who commands a crop of politicians who are as corrupt as they come. Yet, he found a moral authority to chide his poorly paid university lecturers for selling handouts and thinking about their pockets.
I do not think that Obasanjo is just clueless. I simply think he is shameless. Before he makes any statement blaming any sector of the nation for not performing, he should first take a look at himself in the mirror.
The Electoral Act which Obasanjo conceded had "minor imperfections', but one that he had hoped his signing would end the controversies, seem, to be another wrong calculation. Like the Sharia, it is refusing to fizzle out. For Obasanjo, his response is to resort to that obnoxious pattern of attacking those raising questions.

In one reaction to the Electoral Act, Ikemba Nnewi, Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, warned that, without a total reconciliation of the various issues thrown up by the new law and a national conference to decide the way forward, Igbos would call for secession.
Instantly, the mixture of Ojukwu and secession triggered off in the head of Obasanjo the release of some yet to be named bitter hormones. President Obasanjo wasted no time in barking about "irresponsible rascals". He called the idea of secession "madness to the extreme". Those were a kind choice of words for a president who could not raise a finger when confronted with Sharia and ethnic killings in the north.
Obasanjo talked about secession at the beginning of the 21st century as if he understood where the world stands on such concept.
When the United Nations was formed in 1945, there were 51 states. In 1970, when the Biafran war ended, there were 127 UN member nations. From 1970 to present, there has been an additional 62 states. Who says Biafra could not be the 190th state of the United Nations? Who? Obasanjo?
In this 21st century, secession is no longer a dirty political word. It is now referred to as self- determination. Something that someone in Obasanjo's frame of mind is not expected to understand.
"War is not the best means of settling human affairs because it leads to destructive waste", said Obasanjo. "I was in the thick of it all and we still had to do what should have been done in the beginning; that is to talk." Talk? This is a man who has rejected any suggestion of convening a Sovereign National Conference.
The tragedy of President Obasanjo is that he is suffering from a psychological condition that stems from his experience during the civil war. It could be seen in the misplaced anger he exhibits and his penchant to attack people rather than deal with the issues confronting the nation. The president needs to have his head examined. If he can subdue his ego and subject himself to such examination, what we shall see will obviously be dark and ugly.
But only then, could anyone be of any help to the ailing President of an ailing nation named Nigeria.

January 19, 2004: Why Obasanjo Failed

It has suddenly become fashionable to taunt Obasanjo as a failure and to admonish him. Increasingly, bashing Obasanjo is no more an ethnic issue. Everyone now seems to be stepping on each other, trying to outdo one another. The fact that it took this long for it to become glaring that Obasanjo is a spectacular failure is what should worry any keen observer of the Nigerian space. That fact is a troubling indication that Nigerians do not know why Obasanjo failed.

Granted, Obasanjo inherited a fractured country that had been ravaged by years of military misrule. It was a country with so much structural flaws that cracks were visible along its walls, beams and pillars. There was no sense of direction and no purpose for the nation and its citizens. The country lacked the institutions to support any democratic initiative. The Nigeria Obasanjo was handed over was a country on its stomach.
The recipe for failure was put in place when such a country was handed over to someone who had no knowledge and not enough courage to do things that were needed to be done to jump start the failed nation. Obasanjo was like a partially blind, partially deaf, unskilled driver without any knowledge of the mechanics of machines, who was charged with the responsibility to drive a troubled car in rough weather from point A to point B. It did not take two years before it became clear to serious observers that the man was the wrong choice for that mission.
It would be important to recall the barrage of excuses once made for Obasanjo’s failure. It used to be that some elements of past administrations were frustrating Obasanjo’s moves to revive the country. It used to be that Obasanjo was waiting for his second term to unleash his stockpile of reforms that would transform Nigeria. It used to be that four years wasn’t enough for Obasanjo to make a dent in the destruction wrecked by decades of military rule. But do these excuses hold water anymore when Obasanjo has now surrounded himself with his kind and is now well into his fifth year with no change in sight? He has strengthened his grip on the apparatus of the presidency. The way Obasanjo has been dishing out favor to his friends, there is no doubt that he is the king of the jungle. Those elements of past administration who used to be a torn in Obasanjo’s flesh have been successfully pushed to the curb and are seen by the roadside grumbling. But as it is today, only a dummy will think that given one hundred years, Obasanjo would make any inroad.
Obasanjo’s job is not to give billions of naira to certified crooks for the maintenance of the refineries only to spend more billions importing fuel to avoid the shortage we saw during Abacha’s time. His duty is not to spend billions of naira in Tony Anenih’s road contracts without having roads that lead to a brighter future. Obasanjo’s responsibility is not to scold us for expecting a lot and abuse us for being impatient; rather his task is to provide hope. Unfortunately, Obasanjo could not get over himself. He allowed his over-exaggerated sense of importance to prevent him from achieving a victory for the Nigerian-kind.
The litany of crises we are witnessing is the product of the intentional decision by Obasanjo and his cohorts in the ruling PDP to ignore the fundamentals. Basically, they made a deliberate decision to continue from where NPN of the early 80s stopped, as if all that transpired in the late 80s and all of the 90s were of no consequence. In a more sophisticated way, Obasanjo and his friends embarked on a mission to plunder what remained of the Nigeria’s wealth, wellbeing and welfare.
Any other PDP candidate of 1999 who fought to lead Nigeria might have spared the nation Obasanjo’s truckload of embarrassments, arrogance, pettiness, vindictiveness and blatant ignorance, but working within the principles of PDP and with the certified criminals who fill its ranks and file would have also ended up a failure. As long as the fundamental problems of Nigeria, like the very nature of the union, resource control, judicial reform, relationship between the state and the federation etc, are either ignored or shied away from, all efforts at reform, especially the half-hearted ones, would amount to nothing.
Interestingly, we have counted out Obasanjo and have plunged into a vigorous search for another personality on whom we shall hang our hope. We are once again refusing to insist on reforms that would guarantee progress irrespective of who occupies Aso Rock. For some reason, we continue to have the hope that those unprincipled men and women in the National Assembly have in them the right mantle needed to chart a decent course for us. In our stupidity, we are once again betting our survival on some proven crooks, expired characters and loudmouthed egoists. We are propping ourselves to be satisfied in the realization that any of them would be better than Obasanjo. Just like we once convinced ourselves that, come what may, Obasanjo would be better than Sani Abacha.
The primary reason why Obasanjo has failed is his stubborn refusal to implement a deep-rooted structural reform of Nigeria. Obasanjo, full of himself and trusting in his military drill-sergeant mentality, thought he could order around a wounded country. Obasanjo’s resort to patching the wall, managing one crisis after another instead of tearing down the walls and rebuilding a nation has become his waterloo. His choice of actions, or inactions, is the style of cowards and men without vision. What is left to be seen is whether Obasanjo will succeed in saving his thin skin – the same thin skin that prevented him from doing what is right.

June 15, 2004: Obasanjo’s Funeral

Watching President Ronald Reagan’s funeral reminded me of many more funerals yet to come: mine, yours and Obasanjo’s.
Mine is of no consequence. Yours may be significant. But for President Obasanjo, his will be monumental. As the first dictator to voluntarily hand over power to civilians in sub-Saharan Africa, a distinguished citizen of the world who almost became a UN secretary general, the first civilian president reelected in a free and fair election, the planning started many years before May 29, 1999.
The death of any president, whether sudden or anticipated - as was the case with Reagan, raises a lot of emotions. The reaction is always mixed irrespective of whether the president was great or was just a crook – as was the case with Nixon.
The muffled drums will play music solemn and of reverence. The hearse shall carry the coffin gracefully in spite of the tears or jeers of the citizens. And if they choose a horse-drawn caisson, each step shall be a reminder of the days of service or disservice the commander in chief rendered to his nation. Eulogies will fly around, sometimes with the roar of fighter jets greeting the chief. Each of the 21-gun salute pinches the nerves of the nation once traveled by the departed. In more ways than one, the nation pauses to remember.

The death of a president should not be confused with the death of a tyrant. The death of a tyrant, best illustrated by the death of Sani Abacha, is a thing of relief. It is posterity’s way of correcting its mistake. The funeral, whether hastily done as was with Abacha, or a facade put together by associates and sycophants, signifies the woes of a wasted soul.
Ordinary mortals like you and I are lucky, for our lives may not necessarily be examined in life or in death. But for a president, just as thousands will file pass his coffin as he lies in state, thousands more will exercise their right to make pronouncements on his legacy. Newspapers will write editorials and pages of death register will be filled by mourners eager to have their say on his essence.
And many years after, history shall make the final judgment.
* * *
It was the first state funeral since the death of Nnamdi Azikiwe. Friends and relations of the over 1000 people killed in Odi dropped flowers at the feet of Olumo rock. After the first 24 hours of ego-filled procession, military pallbearers switched their positions and allowed members of the Odua People’s Congress to lead the way. The Zamfara Sharia Choir sang, “Hail to the Chief” at sunset. Ashes of victims of pipeline fires covered Eagles Square arena as harmattan wind blew from the Niger Delta to the North. Television stations across the country replayed tapes of Bariya Magazu receiving 100 strokes of cane for having premarital sex.
Millions of unemployed youths busy selling MTN cards while waiting for their dividend of democracy lined up the street to applaud his motorcade. Niger Delta women rolled their naked bodies in the dust, wailing and calling on heaven to pay. Bakassi Boys did nothing to stop Amina Lawal from giving a sensual rendition of “Nigeria we hail thee” - the old national anthem. Her backup singers were the Bakassi peninsula orchestra. On Radio Nigeria, Bode George spoke of the higher purpose he brought to his job, the majesty he brought to the presidency and the moral clarity he instilled in the nation’s leadership.
Isioma Daniels, for the very first time, removed her veil and read the first lesson during service at Abeokuta Methodist church. One after another, the Commonwealth heads of state paid their last respect. Robert Mugabe issued a statement in Harare calling him “a man who should never have been born.” Hovering on top of his flag-draped coffin were the ghosts of Bola Ige, Harry Marshals, Aminasoari Dikibo and OGB. Waiting in the scorching sun to say their final farewell were children of the victims of Ikeja weapon dump explosion.
Under heavy guard, Charles Taylor kissed the president’s coffin. Arthur Nzeribe followed him. From the pulpit, Reverend Sunday Mbang pontificated about his wisdom, his courage and his decency. NTA camera caught Abubakar Atiku hissing at each word. The people of Benue, led by General Malu laid a wreath. In his home in Kaduna, Wada Nas began another of his bad satires by imagining his beloved Abacha welcoming the president to heaven.
The outpouring of affection peaked when the representatives of South African business interests in Nigeria arrived. They brought along the Zulu drummers who sang about the president’s humbleness, his polite and his respectful manners, and how he made us all feel good about ourselves. At the entrance to Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library, the pouring of grief continued. Ifa priests made their incantations. Market women, to whom he gave opportunities and a sense of optimism, waved as his procession passed.
At The Sydney Morning Herald, the following lines were inserted into the lead editorial: Obasanjo’s “tragedy, like that of so many Africans, was to have admired a civilization whose external trappings he strongly desired, but of whose internal workings he had no idea… He was a product of multiculturalism, African-style, and able to use relatively advanced methods to achieve brutal, primitive ends. Like every African dictator, he was confusion’s masterpiece.”
* * *
Though it is preposterous for me or anyone else to conjure up images of funerals, it is necessary for us to do so, with the hope that it will spur us all to reexamine our lives and ponder how posterity will view our contribution. For when all is said and done, the critic goes but posterity stays. What posterity will say about Obasanjo is Obasanjo’s funeral.

April 2, 2007: Obasanjo: The Last King of Nigeria

Should Obasanjo die today, here is a befitting epitaph for him: Here lies a man who admired the trappings of western civilization but was ignorant of its tenets.
I deduced this epitaph from an obituary written by an Australian newspaper following the death of Ugandan dictator, Idi Amin Dada, the Last king of Scotland. In the editorial, The Sydney Morning Herald wrote that “Amin’s tragedy, like that of so many Africans, was to have admired a civilization whose external trappings he strongly desired, but of whose internal workings he had no idea, while at the same time he was partly enclosed in the mental world of a primitive tribalist… he was a product of multiculturalism, African style, and able to use relatively advanced methods to achieve brutal, primitive end. Like every African dictator, he was confusion’s masterpiece.”
Obasanjo is confusion’s masterpiece. He is supposedly an architect of transparency in governance; yet he owned over two hundred million shares in Transcrop, a multinational corporation that is mopping up at giveaway prices Nigeria’s public enterprises. Obasanjo’s share in Transcorp is worth billions of Naira today. And will worth more tomorrow.
Obasanjo is confusion’s masterpiece. He is supposedly an epitome of ethical public servant; yet he launched a presidential library while in office and allowed contractors, cronies and numerous beneficiaries of his administration to funnel ill-gotten billions of Naira to his presidential library, a library that will house a litany of lies, volumes of girlie vengeance and microfilms of squandered hopes.
Obasanjo is confusion’s masterpiece. He is supposedly a born-again democrat; yet he will not let the people of Nigeria decide who to elect into office. He will teleguide the so-called Independent National Electorate Commission, INEC, dictating who should run for office and who should be barred. He is so shameless that he will ignore court orders just to bar everyone who might pose a challenge to the likes of Andy Uba and his other favored candidates.
For just one reason, I am not worried about Obasanjo anymore. I am not worried because I am sure that Obasanjo will be the last king of Nigeria. The brutality he and his fellow scoundrels have achieved, physically, in places like Odi and Zaki-Biam; psychologically, in the final destruction of Nigeria’s collective sense of decency; and spiritually, in his use of God as Nigeria’s shrink, has guaranteed that Nigeria, as it is presently constituted, will never have the misfortune of seeing the likes of him again.
Obasanjo and his cohorts have taken Nigeria to the end of primitivity. There is nowhere else to go but a crawl out of the valley of decadence and rot. Running abroad to cure malaria after spending billions building a white elephant national stadium is the wrong idea of reform. Eight years and $200 billion dollars down the drain, pound for pound, Obasanjo will be leaving Nigerians in worst shape than they were before he came.
The really good thing is that whatever happens this month, the Obasanjo nightmare will be over on May 29th 2007. It is either that or…
If this Republic fails, let no one forget that Obasanjo sowed the seed for its failure. When kleptomaniac politicians are hauled into jail, let it be televised. Let Obasanjo, with his inflated sense of importance, be the first to take his place in infamy. And may his place be in that hottest corner where other murders of dreams languish.
If this Republic succeeds to transit into a second stanza, let it be known that it happened in spite of Obasanjo’s best effort to squash it. And may the wind of our collective tufiakwa wrap Obasanjo up and drag him across the rough roads of Edo all the way to the most remote part of his chicken farm where the songs of mating hens will serenade him through his twilight days.
As for his obituary, no need wasting thoughts on it - the same Idi Amin’s piece will suffice.

Saharareporters

“Iyabo Obasanjo’s Letter Is A Forgery” – Obasanjo’s Family Members Claim


A shocking letter purportedly written by Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello, daughter of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, in which she mocked her father as a liar, an abuser and a hypocrite, is fake, family members, and aides to Mr. Obasanjo have revealed.
obj-4
In the 11-page letter, published by Vanguard newspaper Wednesday, Ms. Obasanjo-Bello denounced her father as a self-seeking man lacking in all key expectations of a father and a leader, but often appearing quick to accuse others of the same ills.
Mrs Obasanjo-Bello, a former senator, purportedly said her father confirmed to her his failed effort at securing a third term as president. She spoke of her father’s “stupidity and cruelty”, and deplored him for all the “many atrocities” he has been able to get away with.
“Nigerians were your enablers every step of the way. People ultimately get leaders that reflect them,” Ms. Obasanjo-Bello was quoted as saying by Vanguard.
She said the letter came in the spirit of open letters since Mr. Obasanjo had last week penned an acerbic piece to President Goodluck Jonathan. But she made it clear her writing was not in support of Mr. Jonathan, or the opposition All Progressive Congress, APC, but an “outpouring from my soul to God.”
But in multiple interviews early Wednesday, close family members of Mr. Obasanjo, who claimed to have spoken to the former President about the matter, and two of his close aides called the letter a forgery and vowed Ms. Iyabo-Bello would not write to her father that way. One family member said Mr. Obasanjo spoke with Iyabo only two days back and apparently both related as cordial as always.
“I can tell you that such letter never existed. I can tell you authoritatively that it only existed in the imagination of those who forged and published it. It the height of desperation by those who masterminded it,” Tunde Oladunjoye, an aide to Mr. Obasanjo, said.
Mr. Oladunjoye said he could confirm that Mr. Obasanjo had not received any such letter from his daughter.
One senior family member, refusing to be named for security reasons, said with all of Mr. Obasanjo’s faults, he knows his children and their likely behaviour, and that the letter does not fit into any of their behavioural pattern.
A former aide to Mr. Obasanjo and former aviation minister, Femi Fani-Kayode, said based on his knowledge of the two individuals, it was impossible for Ms. Obasanjo to have sent her father such mail.
“I can tell you the so-called letter was forged by those in government,” Mr. Fani-Kayode said. “They think they can get at Baba that way. But they are mistaken. One thing is that if they want to fight Baba, they should face him and leave his family out of it. Baba has spoken the truth and they should respond to the issues he raised.
Ms. Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello could not be immediately reached. She is yet to respond to multiple emails sent her by this newspaper.
It was learnt that she is currently in the United States.
However, all family members and aides who work closely with Mr. Obasanjo quickly placed the blame for the allegedly “forged” letter at the doorsteps of the presidency as a desperate response to Mr. Obasanjo’s own stinging letter to President Jonathan last week, in which he accused the president of being inept, corrupt, and clannish.
In the 18-page letter exclusively published by PREMIUM TIMES, Mr. Obasanjo accused Mr. Jonathan of making plans for a violent election in 2015 and preparing to launch snipers against the opposition and critics, of whom at least 1,000 are currently on the government watch-list.
Mr. Obasanjo’s letter has stirred a swell of reactions with calls for investigation into the many allegations. Many Nigerians have also dismissed the former president as lacking the moral authority to condemn his successor.
Beyond asking Mr. Obasanjo to substantiate his claim that the government is training snipers, the presidency has yet to fully respond to the letter. An earlier statement said Mr. Jonathan had directed aides not to respond, as he will personally do so at the “appropriate time.”
Regardless of the directive, groups believed to be loyalists of the president have in the past days launched what appears to be a massive campaign of calumny against Mr. Obasanjo.

 Premium Times

Season Of Open Letters Part 2: You’re A Two-Faced Lying Hypocrite, Manipulator, Legendary Wife Beater, Power-Hungry Man – Iyabo Obasanjo Tells Father


Obasanjo-Iyabo1The proverbial “Hen has come home to roost” for former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo as a scathing 11-page open letter written to him by his daughter and former Senator, Dr. Iyabo Obasanjo, in response to his own missive to President Goodluck Jonathan has found its way to the public domain.
The former president’s daughter vowed never to have anything to do with him for life, describing him as a liar, manipulator, renowned wife-beater, two-faced hypocrite determined to impose on President Jonathan what he would not have tolerated from anybody as president.
Senator Obasanjo in the letter further highlighted her father’s sins which include initiating the infamous ‘Third Term Agenda’, foisting an apparently ill President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua on Nigeria for selfish political interests, abandoning his first wife and her children as well as his other numerous children and grand-children and having an egoistic craving for power and living a life where according to her, “only men of low esteem and intellect thrive”.
In the 11-page letter dated December 16, 2013 exclusively obtained by Vanguard, Iyabo, as she is more fondly known, also swore never to have anything to do with Nigerian politics and denied any political undertone for her open letter just as she described Nigeria as a country that her father and his ilk have helped to create a situation where smart, capable people bend down to imbeciles to survive. She particularly noted her experience as chairman of the Senate Committee on Health when she led the committee on a retreat appropriated for in the budget only for her to be prosecuted for it.
Iyabo, who is the first child of the Owu Chief and former commissioner for health in her home state of Ogun, started the letter titled, ‘Open Letter to my Father’ with a 4th century Chinese proverb by Mencius which states: “The great man is he who does not lose his child’s heart”.
Her letter:
“It brings me no joy to have to write this but since you started this trend of open letters I thought I would follow suit since you don’t listen to anyone anyway. The only way to reach you may be to make the public aware of some things. As a child well brought up by my long-suffering mother in Yoruba tradition, I have been reluctant to tell the truth about you but as it seems you still continue to delude yourself about the kind of person you are and I think for posterity’s sake it is time to set the records straight.
“I will return to the issue of my long-suffering mother later in this letter.
“Like most Nigerians, I believe there are very enormous issues currently plaguing the country but I was surely surprised that you will be the one to publish such a treatise. I remember clearly as if it was yesterday the day I came over to Abuja from Abeokuta when I was Commissioner of Health in OgunState, specifically to ask you not to continue to pursue the third term issue.
“I had tried to bring it up when your sycophantic aides were present and they brushed my comments aside and as usual you listened to their self-serving counsel. For you to accuse someone else of what you so obviously practiced yourself tells of your narcissistic megalomaniac personality.  Everyone around for even a few minutes knows that the only thing you respond to is praise and worship of you. People have learnt how to manipulate you by giving you what you crave. The only ones that can’t and will not stroke your ego are family members, who you universally treat like shit (sic) apart from the few who have learned to manipulate you like others.
“Before I continue, Nigerians are people who see conspiracy and self-service in everything because I think they believe everyone is like them. This letter is not in support of President Jonathan or APC or any other group or person, but an outpouring from my soul to God. I don’t blame you for the many atrocities you have been able to get away with, Nigerians were your enablers every step of the way. People ultimately get leaders that reflect them.
“Getting back to the story, I made sure your aides were not around and brought up the issue, trying to deliver the presentation of the issue as I had practiced it in my head. I started with the fact that we copied the US constitution which has term limits of two terms for a President. As is your usual manner, you didn’t allow me to finish my thought process and listen to my point of view. Once I broached the subject you sat up and said that the US had no term limits in the past but that it had been introduced in the 1940s after the death of President Roosevelt, which is true.
I wanted to say to you: when you copy something you also copy the modifications based on the learning from the original; only a fool starts from scratch and does not base his decisions on the learning of others. In science, we use the modifications found by others long ago to the most recent, as the basis of new findings; not going back to discover and learn what others have learnt. Human knowledge and development and civilization will not have progressed if each new generation and society did not build on the knowledge of others before them.
The American constitution itself is based on several theories and philosophies of governance available in the 18th century. Democracy itself is a governance method started by the ancient Greeks. America’s founding fathers used it with modifications based on what hadn’t worked well for the ancient Greeks and on new theories since then.
“As usual in our conversations, I kept quiet because I know you well.  You weren’t going to change your mind based on my intervention as you had already made up your mind on the persuasion of the minions working for you who were ripping the country blind. When I spoke to you, your outward attitude to the people of the country was that you were not interested in the third term and that it was others pushing it. Your statement to me that day proved to me that you were the brain behind the third term debacle. It is therefore outrageous that you accuse the current President of a similar two-facedness that you yourself used against the people of the country.
“I was on a plane trip between Abuja and Lagos around the time of the third term issue and I sat next to one of your sycophants on the plane.  He told me: “Only Obasanjo can rule Nigeria”.  I replied: “God has not created a country where only one person can rule. If only one person can rule Nigeria then the whole Nigeria project is not a viable one, as it will be a non-sustainable project”
“I don’t know how you came about Yar’Adua as the candidate for your party as it was not my priority or job. Unlike you, I focus on the issues I have been given responsibility over and not on the jobs of others. It was the day of the PDP Presidential Campaign in Abeokuta during the state-by-state tour of 2007 that Yar’Adua got sick and had to be flown abroad. The MKO Abiola Stadium was already filled with people by 9am when I drove by (and) we had told people based on the campaign schedule that the rally would start at noon.
At 11 am I headed for the stadium on foot; it was a short walk as there were so many cars already parked in and out. As I walked on with two other people, we saw crowds of people leaving the stadium. I recognized some of them as politicians and I asked them why people were leaving. They said the Presidential candidate had died. I was alarmed and shocked. I walked back home and received a call from a friend in Lagos who said the same and added that he had died in the plane carrying him abroad for treatment and that the plane was on its way to Katsina to bury him.
I called you, and told you the information and that the stadium was already half-empty. You told me to go to the stadium and tell the people on the podium to announce that the Presidential candidate had taken ill that morning but the rest of the team, including you and the Vice-Presidential candidate would arrive shortly.  I did as I was told, but even the people on the podium at first didn’t make the announcement because they thought it was true that Yar’Adua had died. I had to take the microphone and make the announcement myself. It did little good. People kept trooping out of the stadium. Your team didn’t arrive until 4pm and by this time we had just a sprinkling of people left.
That evening after the disaster of a rally, you said you had insisted that the Presidential candidate fly to Germany for a check-up although you said he only had a cold. I asked why would anyone fly to Germany to treat a cold?  And you said “I would rather die than have the man die at this time.”  I thought of this profound statement as things later unfolded against me.  Then I thought it a stupid statement but as usual I kept quiet, little did I know how your machinations for a person would be used against me.  When Yar’Adua eventually died, you stayed alive, I would have expected you to jump into his grave.
I left Nigeria in 1989 right after youth service to study in the US and I visited in 1994 for a week and didn’t visit again until your inauguration in 1999. In between, you had been arrested by Abacha and jailed. We, your children, had no one who stood with us. Stella famously went around collecting money on your behalf but we had no one.  We survived. I was the only one of the children working then as a post-doctoral fellow when I got the call from a friend informing me of your arrest.
A week before your arrest, you had called me from Denmark and I had told you that you should be careful that the government was very offended by some of your statements and actions and may be planning to arrest or kill you as was occurring to many at the time.  The source of my information was my mother who, agitated, had called me, saying I should warn you as this was the rumour in the country. As usual you brushed aside my comments, shouting on the phone that they cannot try anything and you will do and say as you please.  The consequence of your bravado is history.
We, your family, have borne the brunt of your direct cruelty and also suffered the consequences of your stupidity but got none of the benefits of your successes. Of course, anyone around you knows how little respect you have for your children.
You think our existence on earth is about you. By the way, how many are we? 19, 20, 21? Do you even know?  In the last five years, how many of these children have you spoken to? How many grandchildren do you have and when did you last see each of them? As President you would listen to advice of people that never finished high school who would say anything to keep having access to you so as to make money over your children who loved you and genuinely wished you well.
“At your first inauguration in 1999, I and my brothers and sisters told you we were coming from the US. As is usual with you, you made no arrangements for our trip, instead our mom organized to meet each of us and provided accommodation. At the actual swearing-in at Eagle Square, the others decided to watch it on TV. Instead I went to the square and I was pushed and tossed by the crowd.
I managed to get in front of the crowd where I waved and shouted at you as you and General Abdulsalam Abubakar  walked past to go back to the VIP seating area. I saw you mouth ‘my daughter’ to General Abdullahi who was the one who pulled me out of the crowd and gave me a seat. As I looked around I saw Stella and Stella’s family prominently seated but none of your children.  I am sure General Abdullahi would remember this incident and I am eternally grateful to him.
Getting back to my mother, I still remember your beating her up continually when we were kids. What kids can forget that kind of violence against their mother?  Your maltreatment of women is legendary.  Many of your women have come out to denounce you in public but since your madness is also part of the madness of the society, it is the women that are usually ignored and mistreated. Of course, you are the great pretender, making people believe you have a good family life and a good relationship with your children but once in a while your pretence gets cracked.
When Gbenga gave a ride to help someone he didn’t know but saw was in need and the person betrayed his trust by tapping his candid response on the issues going on between you and your then vice-president, Atiku Abubakar, you had your aides go on air and denounce the boy before you even spoke to him to find out what happened.  What kind of father does that? Your atrocities to some of my other siblings I will let them tell in their own due time or never if they choose.
Some of the details of our life are public but the people choose to ignore it and pretended we enjoyed some largesse when you were President.
This punishing the innocent is part of Nigeria’s continuing sins against God. While you were military head of state and lived in Dodan Barracks, we stayed either with our mum in the two-bedroom apartment provided for her by General Murtala Mohammed or with your relatives, Bose, Yemisi and your sisters’ kids in the Boys Quarters of Dodan Barracks. At QueensCollege, I remember being too ashamed to tell my wealthy classmates from Queen’s College, Lagos we lived in the two room Boys Quarters or in the two room flat on Lawrence Street.
No, we did not have privileged upbringing but our mother emphasized education and that has been our salvation.  Of my mother’s 6 children 4 have PhDs.  Of the two without PhD, one has a Master’s and the other is an engineer.  They are no slouches.  Education provided a way to make our way in the world.
You are one of those petty people who think the progress and success of another takes from you.  You try to overshadow everyone around you, before you and after you.  You are the prototypical “Mr. Know it all”.  You’ve never said “I don’t know” on any topic, ever.  Of course this means you surround yourself with idiots who will agree with you on anything and need you for financial gain and you need them for your insatiable ego.  This your attitude is a reflection of the country. It is not certain which came first, your attitude seeping into the country’s psyche or the country accepting your irresponsible behavior for so long.
Like you and your minions, it’s a symbiotic relationship. Nigeria has descended into a hellish reality where smart, capable people to “survive” and have their daily bread prostrate to imbeciles.  Everybody trying to pull everybody else down with greed and selfishness — the only traits that gets you anywhere. Money must be had and money and power is king. Even the supposed down-trodden agree with this.
Nigeria accused me of fraud with the Ministry of Health.  As you yourself know, both in Abeokuta and Abuja I lived in your houses as a Senator. In Lagos, I stayed in my mum’s bungalow which she succeeded in getting from you when you abandoned her with six children to live in Abeokuta with Stella.
I borrowed against my four-year Senate salary to build the only house I have anywhere in the world in Lagos. I rent out the house for income.  I don’t have much in terms of money but I am extremely happy. I tried to contribute my part to the development of my country but the country decided it didn’t need me.  Like many educated Nigerians my age, there are countries that actually value people doing their best to contribute to society and as many of them have scattered all over the world so have many of your children.
I can speak for myself and many of them; what they are running away from is that they can’t even contribute effectively at the same time as they have to deal with constant threats to their lives by miscreants the society failed to educate; deal with lack of electricity and air pollution resulting from each household generating its own electricity, and the lack of quality healthcare or education and a total lack of sense of responsibility of almost every person you meet.  Your contribution to this scenario cannot be overestimated.
You and your cronies mentioned in your letter have left the country worse than you met it at your births in the 1930’s and 1940’s. Nigeria is not the creation of any of you, and although you feel you own it and are “Mr Nigeria” deciding whether the country stays together or not, and who rules it; you don’t.  Nigeria is solely the creation of the British. My dear gone Grandmother whose burial you told people not to attend, was not born a Nigerian but a proud Ijebu-Yoruba woman. Togetherness is a choice and it must serve a purpose.
As for Nigerians thinking I have their money, when it was obvious I was part of the Yar’Adua (government’s) anti-Obasanjo phenomenon that was going on at the time. The Ministry of Health and international NGOs paid for a retreat for the Senate Committee on Health.  The House Committee on Health was treated exactly the same way. The monies were given to members as estacode and the rest used for accommodation, flights and feeding.  While the Senate was on the retreat in Ghana, the EFCC asked the House Committee to return the monies they received for their retreat and asked us in the Senate to return ours on our return which I refused, as it was already used for the purpose it was earmarked for in the budget that year which was to work on the National Health Bill.
The House Committee had not gone on their retreat. I did nothing wrong and my colleagues and I on the retreat did our work conscientiously. I asked the EFCC not to drag my colleagues into it and I am proud I suffered alone. As is usual in a society where people who are not progressive but take pleasure in the pain of others, most Nigerians were happy, not looking at the facts of the matter, just the suffering of an Obasanjo.
As the people that stole their millions are hailed by them the innocent is punished. When the court case was thrown out because it lacked merit even against the Minister, no newspaper carried the news. The wrongful malicious prosecution of an Obasanjo was not something they wanted to report; just her downfall.  But it really wasn’t about me, it was about right and wrong in society and every society gets the fruit of the seeds it sows.
How do you think God will provide good leaders to such a people? God helps those who help themselves. I have realized that as an Obasanjo I am not entitled to work in Nigeria in any capacity.  I am not entitled to work in health which is my training, or in any field or anywhere in the country or participate in any business. I have learnt this lesson well and there are societies that actually think capable, well-educated people are important to their society’s progress. Apparently, unless I am eating from the dustbin, Nigerians and possibly you will not be satisfied.  I thank God it has not come to that based on God-given brains and brawn.
When I left Nigeria in 1989 for graduate studies in America, you promised to pay my school fees and no living expenses. This you did and I am grateful for because, working in the kitchen and then the library at University of California, Davis and later, working on the IT desk and later as a Teaching Assistant at Cornell gave me valuable work ethics for life. I wouldn’t have it any other way.  As a black woman in the early 21st century, I have achieved much and done more than most. My wish is that black girls all over the world will have the capacity to create their lives, make mistakes, learn from it and move ahead.
Moving back to Nigeria, thinking I wanted to serve was obviously a grave mistake but one brought about by the tragic incident of April 20, 2003. This was the day five people were shot dead in my car.  The mother of the children was an acquaintance I had met only one day before the incident.
We had attended the same high school and university but she was there ten years earlier than I. She had also studied public health in the UK as I had in the US. It was these coincidences that made us connect on our first meeting and then she decided to visit on the Saturday of the election of 2003 when the incident occurred. I am scarred for life by that incident and I know the mother was too as we both looked back to see two men on each side of my car shooting.
I understand her trauma and her behaviour since then can be judged from that. Nigeria is a nasty place that pushes people to lose their compass. I participated in the campaigns leading to the elections that day, more because this was my first experience of electoral process in Nigeria. Growing up there were no elections and I was too young in the 1979 and 1983 elections. It was interesting to see democracy at work.  When Gbenga Daniel who I campaigned for offered me a job, I probably would have declined it, if not for the memory of the dead.
I felt I had to engage in making the country progress and to avoid such incidences in the future.  I don’t need to tell you or anyone what kind of governor and person Gbenga Daniel is. As usual when I found out, you would not listen to my opinion but found out for yourself. I also campaigned for Amosun for the Senate in 2003. I have had some wonderful Nigerians do good to me, I will never forget the then Minister of Women Affairs, who saw me talking in the crowd at a campaign event and was alarmed and said “bad things can happen to you out there, I will give you one of the orderlies assigned to my office to follow you”.  This was the police man that died in my car that day.  I never really thought bad things would happen to me, I moved around freely in society until that shooting scarred me and I accepted a police detail.  I was constantly scared for my life after that.
You called me after your vengeful letter as usual, looking out for yourself and thinking you will bribe me by saying the APC will use me for the Senate. Do you really know me and what I want out of life?
Anyone that knows me knows I am done with anything political or otherwise in Nigeria.  I have so much to do and think to make this world a better place than to waste it on fighting with idiots over a political post that does no good to society.  That letter you wrote to the President, would you have tolerated such a letter as a sitting President?  Don’t do to others what you will not allow to be done to you. The only thing I was using that was yours was the house in Abuja where I left my things when I left the country. I eventually rented it out so that the place would not fall apart but as usual you want to take that as well. You can’t have it without explaining to Nigerians how you came about the house?
As I said earlier, this is not about politics but my frustration with you as a father and a human being.  I am not involved with what is currently going on in Nigeria, I don’t talk to any Nigerian other than friends on social basis.  I am not involved with any political groups or affiliation.  You mentioned Governor Osoba when you spoke to me, yes I was walking down the street of Cambridge, Massachussets a few months ago, when I looked up and saw him reading a map trying to cross the street.
I greeted him warmly and offered to give him a ride to where he was going.  This I did not do because I wanted anything from him politically but because that is how I was raised by my mother to treat an adult who I really had no ill-will towards. Some said he was part of the people that manipulated the elections for me to lose in 2011. I don’t have any ill-will to him for that because I think they did me a favour and someone has to win and lose.
I had told you I wasn’t going to run in 2011 but you manipulated me to run; that was my mistake.  Losing was a blessing.  As usual you wanted me to run for your self-serving purpose to perpetuate your name in the political realm and as the liar that you are, you later denied that it was you who wanted me to run in 2011.
In 2003 I ran because I wanted to and I thought getting to the central government I will be able to contribute more to improving lives and working on legislation that impacts the country. I found that nothing gets done; every public official in Nigeria is working for himself and no one really is serving the public or the country.
The whole system, including the public themselves want oppressors, not people working for their collective progress. When no one is planning the future of a country, such a country can have no future.   I won’t be your legacy, let your legacy be Nigeria in the fractured state you created because, it was always your way or the highway.
This is the end of my communication with you for life. I pray Nigeria survives your continual intervention in its affairs.
Sincerely,
Iyabo Obasanjo, DVM, PhD
Massachusetts,
USA.

InformationNigeria

Angry Olusegun Obasanjo Lashes Out Over Letter From His Daughter


With echoes of the open letter to former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo from his daughter, Iyabo, reverberating nationwide, the daughter yesterday gave reasons she gave up on her father ever changing.
OBASANJO-1
Senator Iyabo Obasanjo spoke against the background of mixed reactions from Yoruba elders and politicians on the import of the letter which she said was the last communication with her father.
The former president himself was furious when approached by Vanguard, yesterday, as he hurled invectives at the newspaper. The exchange between Vanguard and the former president ran thus:
Vanguard: Sir, we tried reaching you all through yesterday, to no avail, over the letter written by your daughter, Iyabo, to you.
Chief Obasanjo: You are a bloody idiot, you have published the paper and you are now looking for me, you are an idiot, don’t call me again. When Iyabo finishes you in court…. (hangs up).
Senator Obasanjo nevertheless flayed the orchestrated attempt in the social media by a network of associates of her father to separate her from the letter.
Aremo Olusegun Osoba, former governor of Ogun State, who was cited in the letter, confirmed the meeting between him and Iyabo in Massachusetts, United States but distanced himself from the plot allegedly cited by her father to empower her with the ticket of the All Progressives Congress, APC for the next round of elections.
Besides, Aremo Osoba, several prominent Yoruba elders spoke on the development among whom were Afenifere leader, Chief Rueben Fasoranti, Afenifere bigwig, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, Dr. Frederick Fasehun, Chief Ebenezer Babatope and Hon. Femi Kehinde, a former member of the House of Representatives.
Senator Iyabo Obasanjo had written an open letter to her father accusing him of being a liar, manipulator, wife-basher and hypocrite who was desperate for a third term despite his denials to the contrary.

InformationNigeria

AN OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT GOODLUCK EBELE JONATHAN (GCFR) ON THE STATE OF THE NATION BY ‘YEMI SAKA



December 18, 2013

His Excellency,
The President, Commander-in-Chief,
Federal Republic of Nigeria, Abuja.

RE: STATE OF THE NATION

Few days ago, the media went frenzy and our nation’s polity was heated up due to an 18 paged letter written to you by former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo. This was not borne out of the sheer length of the letter, but some grave allegations levelled against your person and office.

I am not unmindful of the mixed reactions that greeted the letter, it was the somewhat validation of such allegations that was kafkaesque. I will not castigate you for the improved political fortunes of some opposition parties at elections as former President Obasanjo did, as a Patriot, I consider it a good democratic value of yours which will only deepen our democracy.

You are not a People Democratic Party’s President, but the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, and you swore to protect the Constitution and abide by it. Your action(s) is not only constitutional, but selfless as a true leader.

I will not also blame you for the crisis rocking the PDP, I will not add to the pressure or the call for the removal of the Chairman of your party. I am not a member of the PDP and I can not ask you to do what is fundamentally wrong. Bamanga Tukur was duly elected in compliance to party guidelines and rules, no President or Governor has such right to remove him, it will only amount to gross abuse of office.

I do not believe you influenced the release of Major Hamza Al-Mustapha, or the quashing of the conviction verdict of Chief Bode George, these were pure judicial flip flops; legal milieu.

We all witnessed the era of “Garrison Politics” imposed on the PDP by Chief Olusegun Obasanjo through Sen. Ahmadu Alli, this gives credence to why many insist Chief Obasanjo lacks the moral standing to accuse you of any wrong doing.

Mr. President, before you reply the former President, I will like to state affirmatively that the former President has been vindicated. The reactions to the letter exposed how polarized we have become as a nation under your watch.

As a concerned citizen, and irrespective of my political affiliation and ideology, I must accept the fact that you can exercise your constitutional right by seeking for re-election, but I will like to highlight some issues that if are not clarified, Sir, you are undeserving to hold any public office in the land, no matter how little.

Mr. President, I will like to bring to fore three (3) issues that if not addressed and future occurrence guard against, you should not only forget about re-election, but should be ready to bear the burden of responsibility of compromising the sanctity of our nation’s sovereignty.

1. BREACH OF PROTOCOL:
Taking a cursory look at your administration, I say with utmost conviction that no one has demonstrated brazen disregard and breach of protocol like your Excellency and your wife, the First Lady.

The first of such was your kneeling down in front of Pastor E.A Adeboye of The Redeemed Christian Church of God at the Redemption Camp on December 31, 2010. Another instance is June 30 2012, you were snubbed by the Oba of Benin at his palace in what was described as a desperate move by you to improve the fortunes of your party at the gubernatorial polls of the state. It was believed that you felt the visit would signify endorsement of your party’s flag bearer by the Oba of Benin. I hope you are aware that as the Commander-in-Chief, you do not have to wait on people, people wait for you and ought to be seated before you make your entry at any event.

The last demeaning breach of protocol by you was on July 9, 2013 when on a state visit to China, you were received by Assistant Foreign Minister Le Yucheng. Mr. President, in strict compliance to protocol, as the Commander-in-Chief, you are to be received by the President of any country you visit. Concession can be given for a Vice-President to receive you if the non availibity of the President is made known to you and adequately explained, not a junior Minister.

The list of breach and brazen disregard to protocol by the First Lady were;

- On August 25, 2010, the First Lady at a state function in Rivers State charged at the Governor and grabbed the microphone from him while he was addressing a crowd.

This could be classified as an assault on Governor Rotimi Ameachi of Rivers State.

- On January 23 2012 , she was at it again as she stepped out of the plane before you did and was acknowledging protocol at the JFK airport when you went for a United Nations summit.

2. STATE SPONSORED TERRORISM:
We have had what I can classify as a “sustained state of national insecurity” but there has been an astronomical progression under you watch.

In his letter to you, former President Olusegun Obasanjo boldly asserted that you are sponsoring the training of snipers in Korea to neutralize 1000 opposition figures; a killer squad.

This only validates an unconfirmed reports that, towards the build-up to the PDP primaries of 2011, there were arms build-up and stockpiling in the South East and South-South; Abia and Akwa Ibom were the states speculated. It was further speculated that all they were waiting for was if you would not be given or won’t get the ticket, they were to strike and push for a breakaway.

It was further alleged that you were a major financier of this agenda and had the backing of two great nations..

Also as part of the agenda, militants that have not been rehabilitated were sent to training in South Korea under the guise that they will be used as ‘Coast Guards’, this was never made official because of their sinister agenda.

This claim can be said to have been validated with Tompolo being awarded the contract to secure our nation’s waterways.

I am of the opinion that the huge budgetary spending on National Security, rather than curb or drastically reduce the state of insecurity, has only fueled it.

Sir, according to unconfirmed source, an average “other rank” is paid N5,000 daily as “out station” allowance on paper, but are paid a meager N500 daily, those making the profit as windfall from such shortfall will never want the insurgency to end anytime soon.

Sir, I remember how you hastily exonerated MEND (Movement for Emancipation of Niger-Delta) over the October 1, 2010 Independence day bombing.

Henry Okah made some grievous allegations which he claimed Mr. Orubebe and Deziani Allison Maduekwe had a fore knowledge of the event.

The SSS (State Security Service) was quick to announce at a World Press Conference that Chief Raymond Dokpesi was arrested in connection to the bombing due to having connection with suspects already in SSS custody. A claim the Director of Publicity of the SSS denied at another press conference 10 days later.

As we speak, Henry Okah is serving time in a South African jail for a crime you had exonerated his group and by extension, exonerated him.

It became the modus operandi of the SSS to pick up anyone who is either critical of you, your style of governance, and the sloppiness of the SSS. Classical examples are Sen. Ali Ndume who was picked up and charged to court just few days after moving a motion for a passage of “vote of no confidence” on you on the floor of the Senate. The other is Dr. Nazeef of Kogi State University.

I will not like to go into declarations by the SSS over Boko Haram. There was a declaration that a Former Mauritanian President was the “mastermind” and financier of the sect. There was another one that it was a former Head of State, and an idiotic one that it was started by some student of Abubakar Tafawa Balewa in Bauchi.

While these are going on, Asari Dokubo keeps threatening our national security and sovereignty, and at my last check, he has not been invited for questioning.

On November 25, 2012, the most important Military formation and institution in the country witnessed a serious security breach which bears it all; instrument of the state is being employed to terrorise the Nigerian state.

On December 2, 2013, a similar attack was carried out on an Airforce in Maiduguri.

Sir, it is laughable, stupid, and scandalous how the “insurgents” beat all the security checks and on gaining access to the hanger, all “they” could destroy were decommissioned crafts.

Lastly, your Excellency, during your last media chat, you were asked by a Nigeria from Social Media if Shekau was dead?

Your response was so unpresidential and depicts huge knowledge gap. In your words you said “I can’t tell you for sure if Shekau is dead. Anyone that tells you Shekau is dead doesn’t know what he is saying. I don’t know how these operations are carried out so that is why I can’t tell you if Shekau is dead or not”.

Sir, as the Commander-in-Chief, your Service Chiefs are to update you with what is called National Intelligence Daily Briefing, National Intelligence Estimates, Special National Intelligence Estimates.

Sir, I say with utmost conviction that you play politics with our national security, and any nation that plays politics with her national security could as well kiss her sovereignty ‘goodbye” it is just a function of time.

3. WHOLESOME CORRUPTION:
I must acknowledge the fact that you did not bring corruption into Nigeria, as a matter of fact, a lot of administrations have been accused or either promoting corruption to an utopic state.

Sir, I must also state here that if you leave office, that will not put an end to corruption, Corruption is endemic in Nigeria, but one achievement that can not be taken away from your administration is the making of corruption being perceived as a standpoint of your administration and it be given an official cover.

I said “wholesome corruption” because both moral corruption and graft are being shielded by your administration.

Moral corruption because I can not rationalize how you can grant pardon to Major Bulama that was sentenced to life imprisonment by the late Gen. Sani Abacha’s administration for sexually molesting boys under his watch as a Commandant of Command Secondary School Ojo. He was found wanting of forceful pederasty. Something that all religious and societal values consider as sin and immoral.

Also I found it ridiculous that you can grant the former governor of Bayelsa state Chief Deprieye Alameisgha pardon. I am fully aware that the prerogative of mercy is vested in you as the President, but on the ground that “he has suffered enough” is so insensitive, and morally bankrupt.

That you can personally intervene in the matter of Asari Dokubo to secure his release from the authorities of Benin Republic while being held on charges of gun running is appalling.

In the third quarter of 2012, Dr Olusegun Aganga, minister of trade and investment, wrote a letter to you over some missing $1.6 billion crude oil export.

The Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi recently just raises an alarm that the NNPC failed to remit the sum of $49.6b, a whopping 76% of accrual oil revenue, and as we speak, no arrest has been made. No one has been sent on terminal leave. No one has lost his portfolio.

The EFCC is inactive. The EFCC is not even chasing perceived opponents. It so inactive that it merely exist on the pages of newspapers.

With the recent revelation that the agency is cash-strapped, it can be misconstrued as a deliberate effort by your administration to effect the strangulation of the agency so that corruption can go unchecked.

Mr. President, all the issues I have raised in this letter have not only unleashed untold economic hardship on Nigerians, it has rubbished our foreign policy and threatened our nation’s continuous existence as a sovereign state.

RECOMMENDATIONS:
Mr. President, in a total departure from the norm whereby you are only castigated, I will be coming up with recommendations on how things can be rectified, how our nation can be repaired.

1. I recommend the immediate removal of the Chief of Army Staff, the Director-General of the SSS/DSS, and the Director Publicity of the SSS.

2. A huge cut in the budgetary allocation to national security and combating terrorism.

3. An immediate disbanding of the Joint Task Force.

4. An inquiry into the allegation of the shortchange in the welfare package of the personnel of the JTF.

5. An investigation into the possible involvement of Mr. Orubube and Mrs. Deziani Allison Maduekwe.

6. An immediate arrest for questioning of Asari Dokubo in a bid to ascertain the level of threat he is to this country.

7. A total overhauling or change of your protocol team.

8. A presidential fiat to the EFCC to probe the NNPC saga.

9. A proposed bill should be sent to the National Assembly to move the supervision and control of the SSS/DSS to the office of the Attorney General of the Federation, this will guarantee independence and eliminate executive interference.

Mr. President, if and when the recommendations or a semblance of it is adopted by you, you are not only rebuilding the confidence of Nigerians in you and your administration, you will be starting the repair of our country and have secured my vote and services to get you re-elected.

Sir, I do not await a response or demand a response to this, a positive disposition, and assertive actions is all I need.

Good Bless Nigeria.

Long Live Federal of Nigeria.

Yours faithfully,
‘Yemi Saka.

Cc: Gen. Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida(Rtd)
Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo(Rtd)
Gen. Abdulsalam Abubakar(Rtd).
Lt. Gen. Aliyu Gusua (Rtd)
Col. Abubakar Umar (Rtd)
Bishop Mathew Hassan Kukah
Pastor ‘Tunde Bakare
Mallam Nasir El-Rufai
IG Wala
Amina Faruk
Victoria Ibezim Ohaeri
Abba Gidado
Seyi Odetola
via:- Nasril el'Rufai's fb

Iyabo Obasanjo Refuses To Deny Authorship Of Letter To Her Father


Iyabo Obasanjo 
 
By Saharareporters, New York
SaharaReporters has learned that former Senator Iyabo Obasanjo, the first daughter of President Olusegun Obasanjo, has refused to denounce or deny her authorship of a blistering letter in which she characterized her father, among other unflattering epithets, as a liar, hypocrite, manipulator and opportunist. A source close to Mr. Obasanjo told our correspondent that Ms. Obasanjo had so far defied pressures from friends and family to state that she was not the writer of the letter or that she did not share the views expressed in it.
SaharaReporters also discovered that Ms. Obasanjo, who currently resides in the State of Massachusetts, has refused to take phone calls from the press. Instead, she has only accepted calls from a select few people whose caller IDs she knows, according to a friend knowledgeable about her movement today.
The friend also disclosed that Ms. Obasanjo had virtually stopped taking calls on her cell phone, except from members of a small inner circle. Part of her plan was to thwart relatives and friends of her father who had been sent on a mission to convince her to dissociate herself from the content of the explosive letter in order to save her father’s image. Our source revealed that the former senator’s cell phone rang incessantly all day yesterday, but was hardly answered. Our correspondent ascertained that Ms. Obasanjo’s voice message box was full, making it impossible for callers to leave her any messages.
Since the letter was published yesterday, several blogs have claimed that Ms. Obasanjo had denied writing it, an assertion that SaharaReporters determined to be completely false.
Several sources at Vanguard newspaper told SaharaReporters that former President Obasanjo’s daughter spoke twice yesterday with editors of the paper and stood by her letter. One source added that the former senator also agreed to let the paper release a tape of her confirmation should the need arise.
Late yesterday, SaharaReporters contacted the Harvard University Advanced Leadership Initiative where Ms. Obasanjo is a fellow. Speaking to our reporter, John Kendzior, a director of the program, confirmed that Ms. Obasanjo was in Boston and enrolled in the program. He asked our correspondent to send an email to be forwarded to her for response. However, Ms. Obasanjo did not respond to an email we sent via the director. Nor did she respond to several text messages to her mobile phone.
The fallout between Mr. Obasanjo and his daughter is the latest in a long-running feud between the former president and several members of his immediate family. Several years ago, Gbenga, Mr. Obasanjo’s first son, made shocking claims in a divorce filing to the effect that his father slept with his estranged wife. The former president’s first wife, Oluremi Obasanjo, who is the mother of both Iyabo and Gbenga, also wrote a scathing tell-all memoir titled Bitter-Sweet: My Life With Obasanjo. In the book, Mrs. Obasanjo accused her former husband of physical and emotional assaults as well as philandering.
Former President Obasanjo has come under sharp attacks from aides of President Goodluck Jonathan after the former wrote an open letter accused Mr. Jonathan of deception, encouragement of corruption, and the undermining of Nigeria’s democracy.

A Shell-Shocked Presidency By Sonala Olumhense


Columnist: 
Sonala Olumhense
Dear Baba: I write this letter by myself out of respect for the fact that you wrote by yourself the important letter you addressed to me.
First, I apologize for the many previous letters that you sent to me that I did not acknowledge.  I have to be honest with you: I completely forgot to read them.  I confess I did not know there would be so much to do in Aso Rock!  Sometimes, Patience helps me, but then, one has to be careful because of State House gossip.  People think I do not hear when they refer to her as “Mrs. President.”
With respect Sir, your letters are usually quite long.  The current one is 18 pages, and I am shell-shocked.  I started reading it, but NTA had a nice story about the First Lady. Between Bamanga Tukur, G7, APC, Boko Haram, Rivers State, Transformation, I could only read the first page.  No, it is not that I am such a slow reader; it is just that simply to justify the letter, you gave 10 reasons, averaging one reason per sheet of paper.
Anyway, after they woke me up on Wednesday to inform me the letter had leaked, I finished reading the whole thing.
Baba, you cast me almost as a fictional president, as if I exist only in the imagination.  This is far from the truth.  I am real: the Obateru of Owu Kingdom, a title given to me by your own people in your presence in 2006.  I am not a figment of the imagination.  I am on Facebook.
There is no crisis of leadership, and there is no deceit or deception.  I am the author of the Transformation Agenda, which is changing Nigeria overnight.  I declared a state of emergency in the Northeast, and the soldiers are slaughtering Boko Haram in the streets, from the air, and in the forests.  Once my soldiers have killed all of them, the problem is finished.
The same optimism must apply to security nationwide.  There is nothing to fear: I travel by air.  Namadi travels by air.  Patience travels by air.  The Ministers travel by air. Military and security chiefs travel by air. We know that kidnapping, piracy, abductions and armed robberies are everywhere, but I can assure you we will not be kidnapped or killed.
Baba, you also referred to unemployment.  I have done the research: unemployment is like corruption: exaggerated.  Look at Asari, he is employed.  Look at Timpolo.  Look at Doyin Okupe.  They are proof I am conquering unemployment.
The same goes for corruption.  Only the Americans are fighting corruption more than me, and I will continue to fight it.  That is why you do not hear of anyone in my government going to jail, because nobody in my government is corrupt.
Remember, Baba, last January when Oby Ezekwesili alleged monumental corruption by the Yar’Adua/Jonathan administrations, saying we squandered $67 billion? Several months later, she also alleged that since 2005, about N1 trillion has been spent on the National Assembly. Those figures are just like the Central Bank governor saying NNPC has since 2012 failed to remit almost $50 billion to the Federation Account.
Baba, all these numbers are lies because they cannot be true.  I have never seen that kind of money in my life.  NNPC does not have that kind of money, so how can it be missing?  In fact, they do not even have people to count such money; Dizzy would have told me. If we do not ignore the rumours, people will think Nigerian leaders are rumour-mongers.
If we had that kind of money, Ngozi would have told me.  Ngo is so intelligent, she always knows such things, which is why she did not reply Ezekwesili’s rubbish and did not reply Lamido.  She has learned to ignore nonsense.
Concerning the economy, have you listened to Ngozi lately, Baba?  You were the first to invite her to the government and you know Ngo is a magician with the economy.  When she was at the World Bank, she helped the whole world to fix their economy.  So I said, my sister, please come home and help to fix our own.  By 2018 or 2019 when she would have finished her magic, you will see.  Every town in Nigeria will have an airport.  Every village will have a university so that everyone will have a university degree. Every unemployed youth will have a car.  Every chief will have a new palace funded by the government.  We will ban unemployment.
Baba, mine is an active government.  We are not a “non-action, cover-up, denial or bribing” government.  I have set up dozens of presidential committees: Projects Assessment; Ministries, Departments and Agencies probe; Oil Sector Revenue, headed by Mallam Nuhu Ribadu; contracts and procurements; SURE-P, countless committees.
People speak about NNPC investigation, but I have investigated NNPC already and I can tell you it is not corrupt at all.  They are doing a wonderful job.
All my committees work hard and they write a lot of reports.  One day when I am not travelling, we will start assessing them.  By 2017 or 2018 everybody will marvel at our achievements.
It is not that we are not getting results yet.  Contrary to what you said, we have statistics showing that Nigeria has become the favorite destination of investors in Africa, with the highest investment of $8.4billion.  I put this in my mid-term report this year, my government aims “to attract $20 billion worth of foreign investments in three years,” that is, between 2013 and 2016.

Baba, your letter shows that you may be a little afraid of the future.  I assure you the future is bright.
I don’t know where you heard the information about 1000 people on the political watch list and the training of snipers.  That is classified information the security people are not going to be happy.  Let me just say that if there is a list, it is not up to 1000; I don’t know where Abacha trained his killers; and nobody has said anybody will be killed.
Also sir, talks “about possible abuse and misuse of the military and legitimate security apparatus for unwholesome personal and political interest”?  This is wrong sir.  The military and security are supposed to do the right thing.
Sir, I think leadership by example is overrated.   I have refused to declare my assets publicly because Nigerians will start focusing on what I own, not the sacrifices I am making for them. I am not the issue, Nigeria is.  Remember I declared my assets recently, in 2007. 
Also, remember you put me in office.  I did not expect it.  I was indicted by Ribadu’s committee in 2006 but you wisely destroyed that report and you handpicked Umaru and me.  I have not changed; I am still your good luck charm.
Sir, “before it is too late”?  Success is never too late or too long?  Remember you were the one who said PDP will rule for 100 years.  We have at least 87 years left.  Politics is dynamic, not static, and the plans of the founding fathers, if not good enough, must be made to fit the realities of today.  It is more important for the PDP to be wrong but be in power than to be right but be right but not be in power.
That is why it is in the best interest of Nigeria that I run in 2015.  Otherwise we may all have to run away.  If not PDP, what?  If not me, who?

Saharareporters