Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, in
his latest blistering public criticism of the
Federal Government, said President
Goodluck Jonathan’s response to the Boko
Haram insurgency was slow. This is, no
doubt, arguable. He spoke in Warri as the
moderator of a public lecture by former
External Affairs Minister, Professor
Bolaji Akinyemi, in honour of the
Christian Association of Nigeria
(CAN) President, Pastor Ayo
Oritsejafor, who was marking his 40th
anniversary as a pastor.
He seemed to have chosen the right forum
to express his concern over a scourge that
has become a national security problem, but
his position was defective. The former
president reportedly accused his successors
of allowing the Boko Haram insurgency
to fester and was quoted to have said: “My
fear is that when you have a sore and you
don’t attend to it early enough, it festers
and becomes very bad.
Don’t leave a problem that can be bad
unattended.” When I read the news report
which was accorded prominence on the
front pages of some influential national
dailies of Wednesday, November 14,
2012, I told a friend who was with me that
the old fox was at it again. I reminded my
friend of how Obasanjo slammed the late
Yar’Adua early 2010 at a Trust
Newspaper Forum when the former
president was hospitalized in a Saudi
Arabia. Many people must have felt or
reacted the same way and this is
understandable.
Since 1979, after his lack-lustre
administration as military Head of State,
Obasanjo has characteristically and
uncharitably become a critic of successive
governments in Nigeria. He retains the
unenviable record as being the only former
Nigerian leader (apart from General
Muhammadu Buhari who is
understandably an oppositional
presidential candidate) who relishes open
castigation of the seeming actions or
inactions of the government of the day.
The only administration that did not get
his (Obasanjo) open bashing was his.
Unlike some members of the clan of
former Nigerian rulers such as Alhaji
Shehu Shagari, General Ibrahim
Babangida and General Abdulsalami
Abubakar, for instance, who have taken
advantage of their access to the
Presidential Villa to offer advice on
governance, Obasanjo has incurably
violated that norm. Whereas he is not
denied access to the President; yet he has
chosen to pitiably mount the bully pulpit
on a voyage of open criticism.
The impression Obasanjo creates about
himself is that he is not happy to see the
other man in the leadership saddle. This
tends to confirm the views in certain
quarters that he has the penchant to
destroy people than to build them.
There is even a proposition in some circles
that Obasanjo believes he is the only man
who, perhaps, has been created by God to
offer the right kind of leadership to
Nigeria; and which is why he always
gleefully refers to his administration as a
trail-blazer of sort. He is wont to allude to
some of the things he did while in the
saddle as president from 1999 to 2007 in
his effort to persuade his listeners that his
successors have either lowered the standard
or have not been pro-active.
But, in a bid to present as Nigeria’s
patron saint, Obasanjo’s attitude has
become increasingly confusing. At a
point, he donned the garb of a conciliator
by going to Maiduguri amid the
escalating Boko Haram insurgency to seek
to broker a truce. He claimed to have
obtained the permission of President
Goodluck Jonathan before embarking on
the enterprise.
At the end of the day, the move turned
awry when his host in Maiduguri with
whom he sought to kick-start the process of
reconciliation, was killed about three days
after he (Obasanjo) left the town.
But today, it is convenient for Obasanjo
to wrongly accuse Jonathan of slowness in
responding to the Boko Haram
insurgency simply because he wants to
portray the current administration as weak
and incompetent. It is also game for
Obasanjo to stomp on the Jonathan
presidency just because he was
instrumental to the political arrangement
that threw up the Umaru Yar’Adua-
Jonathan presidential ticket in 2007.
The truth, however, is that Obasanjo
cannot approbate and reprobate at the same
time on the same issue as he has tended to
do in the Boko Haram case. Here is a man
who went to Maiduguri purportedly on a
reconciliation mission now turning round to
recommend the Odi treatment for the town
of Maiduguri and perhaps other towns in
the North just to nip the Boko Haram
insurgency in the bud.
He would have loved to see Jonathan
deploy soldiers to the flashpoints to level
the places-annihilate the innocent and the
‘criminals’ in a military action. To
Obasanjo, this is pro-activeness.
This is how to show that the Federal
Government or the President is not weak.
This approach does not accommodate
rationality that is grounded on humanity:
how can you commit genocide because you
want to take out some criminals? While
reflecting on the crisis at Odi, Obasanjo
had said at the Warri forum: “I attended
to a problem that I saw; I sent soldiers.
They were killed, 19 of them (were)
decapitated. If I had allowed that to
continue, I would not have the authority to
send security anywhere again.
I attended to it…. If you say you do not
want a strong leader, who can have all the
characteristics of a leader, including the
fear of God, then, you have a weak leader
and the rest of the problem is yours.” As
I wrote above, Obasanjo’s attitude is
increasingly confusing. He claims
Jonathan’s response is slow.
He also claims that his successor, the late
Yar’Adua, was soft on corruption; but I
ask: when he (Obasanjo) became president
and inherited the problem of militancy in
the Niger Delta region, what did he do
very quickly to end the scourge?
Was it not the late Yar’Adua who ended
it with his famous Amnesty deal? Is his
claim about the late Yar’Adua being soft
on corruption not tenuous against the
backdrop of the fact that despite his
much-trumpeted anti-corruption crusade,
his administration witnessed, perhaps, the
most bizarre forms of corruption?
For his own pecuniary interest, did
Obasanjo not couple a so-called Transcorp
conglomerate and sold Nigeria’s prime
assets to this group where he kept a
personal N200 million worth of shares in
the blind? Did he not use the vantage
position of his authoritarian presidency,
and the awesome state power, to organise
the launching of a N7-billion
Presidential Library Project in
Abeokuta?
Has it not now become a notorious fact that
Obasanjo was only paying lip-service to
the war against corruption as nearly every
action of his was a violation of the
principle and creed behind the scheme?
Nigerians know that Nuhu Ribadu,
former Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) Chairman, used in
fighting his personal battles, was
promoted Assistant Inspector General of
Police by Obasanjo without any
recommendation from the Police Service
Commission, thereby violating due process.
Where then is the moral high ground that
Obasanjo is standing on to pontificate on
his administration’s fight against
corruption and dismiss his successors as
soft on the anti-corruption crusade?
Indeed, on both scores-Boko Haram and
corruption-Obasanjo has been unfair to his
successors.
It is in his character to be so disposed; only
that I am surprised that he is behaving as
if he has fallen out of favour with the
government he helped to enthrone. But
then by recommending the Odi recipe for
the Boko Haram insurgents, Obasanjo has
succeeded in showing to the world the
inhumanity and irrationality of his
presidency.
He cannot in a self-ignited frenzy
railroad a cruel recipe on Jonathan; and,
as far as I am concerned the president’s
systematic and multi-faceted approach at
tackling the Boko Haram insurgency,
which factors in the innocent civilian
population, is the best in the circumstance
and should therefore be sustained.
Omoregie writes from Benin. Obioha’s
column returns next week.
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