Chief
Olusegun Obasanjo’s damning letter to President Goodluck Jonathan must
rank as the most narcissistic (and the narcissism of our rulers is
legendary) action of any Nigerian ruler in recent times.
In the
18-page diatribe, Obasanjo took President Jonathan to task for his
handling of corruption, insecurity, and the crisis in the ruling Peoples
Democratic Party among other issues.
Like most Nigerians, the
former president expressed deep concern about the tragic consequences of
the current crisis. Unlike most Nigerians, however, Obasanjo has had
two glorious opportunities to help turn around the fortune of Nigeria
and he squandered both. Of course, it is easy to say we should focus on
the message rather than the messenger. But this is one instance in which
the messenger can’t be divorced from the message.
Obasanjo’s
letter dated December 2, 2013, and titled, “Before it is too late” had
all the telltale signs of a deeply troubled man. Rather than writing
this particular letter, Obasanjo should have atoned for his many crimes
against Nigeria and Nigerians.
It was bad enough that his eight
years as president were a tragedy; to have imposed Umaru Yar’Adua and
Goodluck Jonathan on the nation as a farewell gift is unpardonable.
Perhaps, it was payback for the trenchant opposition to his third term
agenda.
In his warped thinking, Obasanjo must have reasoned that
his only option was to foist on Nigerians the very worst amongst us;
people so inept and incapable that after a while we’ll be hankering
after him. Looking back now, that theory has worked well as Nigerians
now look with nostalgia at the Obasanjo era.
All the things
Obasanjo said about President Jonathan and his administration may be
true. But we can say the same and even more about the two Obasanjo’s
administrations, 1976-1979 and 1999-2007. Obasanjo seems to have
forgotten too soon his squabble with his deputy, Atiku Abubakar, that
made a nonsense of governance, the political assassinations (including
that of Bola Ige, his Attorney-General of the Federation and minister of
justice) during his macabre rule, the massacres in Odi and Zaki Biam.
The less said about corruption (who could forget the wholesale pillage
of our patrimony in the name of privatisation) the better. Obasanjo laid
the foundations on which President Jonathan is building and
consolidating. He is acting out the Peoples Democratic Party’s playbook.
Obasanjo’s
latest intervention is no doubt anchored on the politics of 2015. In
his messianic posturing, he feels he has a divine right to determine or
at least have a say on who emerges as president in the 2015 election, an
election that may sound the death knell of Nigeria if we go by the
postulations of Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, Junaid Mohammed and Farouk Adamu
Aliyu for whom the election is a “do-or-die” affair, à la Obasanjo.
A
few months ago, rather than participating in activities marking
Democracy Day (May 29) that he and his military collaborators foisted on
us, Obasanjo was in Jigawa State as guest of Governor Sule Lamido. He
literally made a case for Lamido as the next president of Nigeria, the
same Lamido whose two sons have been accused by the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission of laundering billions of Jigawa State funds
through companies allegedly owned by the governor.
That is the
problem with Nigeria: the Feeling of entitlement which the likes of
Obasanjo and Ibrahim Babangida survive on. Obasanjo should realise that
his “ethnic balancing” theory is not the solution to “strengthening the
unity and stability of Nigeria.”
In the postscript to his letter,
Obasanjo referenced Generals Ibrahim Babangida and Abdulsalami
Abubakar as those “who on a number of occasions in recent times,
have shared with me their agonising thoughts, concerns and
expressions on most of the issues I have raised in this
letter concerning the situation and future of our country.” This
simply, and amply too, shows that Nigeria and we (the 99 per cent who
ought to decide the future of the country) are in a big trouble. It’s
like asking cats to help improve the conditions of rats.
Suddenly,
President Jonathan has become the alibi of a ruling class fearful of
its imminent implosion. Earlier in the week, the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, who superintends over a house that
reeks of corruption accused President Jonathan of paying lip service to
the fight against corruption.
Many Nigerians know the problems of
the country, and if the likes of Obasanjo and Babangida will allow,
perhaps they can seriously begin the long and arduous task of fixing the
mess created by these rulers.
Obasanjo has outlived his
usefulness, if ever anyone found him useful. Now that he has confirmed
that the man he imposed on the country is not fit to rule, we shouldn’t
grant him the opportunity to decide the person to replace him. It is
time we the people rose in unison to decide that.
Let no one be
in doubt where I stand on the PDP, the Jonathan administration and our
so-called democracy: To reecho Karl Maiaer, “This house has fallen.”
There is no amount of letter writing or patchwork that can fix it.
Obasanjo
should know that the train has left the station; that the problem he
and his cohorts caused can’t be solved by letter writing but by a
complete restructuring of the country.
Obasanjo, Babangida and company have lost all moral right to dictate how to define the new Nigeria we envisage.
Thursday, 12 December 2013
Obasanjo’s ‘satanic’ letter
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