[MUST READ- (Full Letter) Obasanjo writes Buhari, asks president to halt 2019 ambition
THE
WAY OUT: A CLARION CALL FOR COALITION FOR NIGERIA MOVEMENT
Special
Press Statement
By
President Olusegun Obasanjo
President Olusegun Obasanjo
Since we are still in the month of January, it is appropriate to wish all Nigerians Happy 2018. I am constrained to issue this special statement at this time considering the situation of the country. Some of you may be asking, “What has brought about this special occasion of Obasanjo issuing a Special Statement?” You will be right to ask such a question. But there is a Yoruba saying that ‘when lice abound in your clothes, your fingernails will never be dried of blood’. When I was in the village, to make sure that lice die, you put them between two fingernails and press hard to ensure they die and they always leave blood stains on the fingernails. To ensure you do not have blood on your fingernails, you have to ensure that lice are not harboured anywhere within your vicinity.
The
lice of poor performance in government – poverty, insecurity, poor economic
management, nepotism, gross dereliction of duty, condonation of misdeed – if
not outright encouragement of it, lack of progress and hope for the future,
lack of national cohesion and poor management of internal political dynamics
and widening inequality – are very much with us today. With such lice of
general and specific poor performance and crying poverty with us, our fingers
will not be dry of ‘blood’.
Four years
ago when my PDP card was torn, I made it abundantly clear that I quit partisan
politics for aye but my concern and interest in Nigeria, Africa and indeed in
humanity would not wane. Ever since, I have adhered strictly to that position.
Since that time, I have devoted quality time to the issue of zero hunger as
contained in Goal No. 2 of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN. We have
set the target that Nigeria with the participating States in the Zero Hunger
Forum should reach Zero Hunger goal by 2025 – five years earlier than the UN
target date. I am involved in the issue of education in some States and
generally in the issue of youth empowerment and employment. I am involved in
all these domestically and altruistically to give hope and future to the
seemingly hopeless and those in despair. I believe strongly that God has
endowed Nigeria so adequately that no Nigerian should be either in want or in
despair.
I
believe in team work and collaborative efforts. At the international level, we
have worked with other world leaders to domicile the apparatus for monitoring
and encouraging socio-economic progress in Africa in our Presidential Library.
The purpose of Africa Progress Group, which is the new name assumed by Africa
Progress Panel (APP), is to point out where, when and what works need to be
done for the progress of Africa separately and collectively by African leaders
and their development partners. I have also gladly accepted the invitation of
the UN Secretary-General to be a member of his eighteen-member High-Level Board
of Advisers on Mediation. There are other assignments I take up in other fora
for Africa and for the international community. For Africa to move forward,
Nigeria must be one of the anchor countries, if not the leading anchor country.
It means that Nigeria must be good at home to be good outside. No doubt, our
situation in the last decade or so had shown that we are not good enough at
home; hence we are invariably absent at the table that we should be abroad.
All
these led me to take the unusual step of going against my own political Party,
PDP, in the last general election to support the opposite side. I saw that
action as the best option for Nigeria. As it has been revealed in the last
three years or so, that decision and the subsequent collective decision of
Nigerians to vote for a change was the right decision for the nation. For me,
there was nothing personal, it was all in the best interest of Nigeria and,
indeed, in the best interest of Africa and humanity at large. Even the horse
rider then, with whom I maintain very cordial, happy and social relationship
today has come to realise his mistakes and regretted it publicly and I admire
his courage and forthrightness in this regard. He has a role to play on the
side line for the good of Nigeria, Africa and humanity and I will see him as a
partner in playing such a role nationally and internationally, but not as a
horse rider in Nigeria again.
The
situation that made Nigerians to vote massively to get my brother Jonathan off
the horse is playing itself out again. First, I thought I knew the point where
President Buhari is weak and I spoke and wrote about it even before Nigerians
voted for him and I also did vote for him because at that time it was a matter
of “any option but Jonathan” (aobj). But my letter to President Jonathan
titled: “Before It Is Too Late” was meant for him to act before it was too
late. He ignored it and it was too late for him and those who goaded him into
ignoring the voice of caution. I know that praise-singers and hired attackers
may be raised up against me for verbal or even physical attack but if I can
withstand undeserved imprisonment and was ready to shed my blood by standing
for Nigeria, I will consider no sacrifice too great to make for the good of
Nigeria at any time. No human leader is expected to be personally strong or
self-sufficient in all aspects of governance.
I
knew President Buhari before he became President and said that he is weak in
the knowledge and understanding of the economy but I thought that he could make
use of good Nigerians in that area that could help. Although, I know that you
cannot give what you don’t have and that economy does not obey military order.
You have to give it what it takes in the short-, medium- and long-term. Then, it
would move. I know his weakness in understanding and playing in the foreign
affairs sector and again, there are many Nigerians that could be used in that
area as well. They have knowledge and experience that could be deployed for the
good of Nigeria. There were serious allegations of round-tripping against some
inner caucus of the Presidency which would seem to have been condoned. I wonder
if such actions do not amount to corruption and financial crime, then what is
it? Culture of condonation and turning blind eye will cover up rather than
clean up. And going to justice must be with clean hands.
I
thought President Buhari would fight corruption and insurgency and he must be
given some credit for his achievement so far in these two areas although it is
not yet uhuru!
The
herdsmen/crop farmers issue is being wittingly or unwittingly allowed to turn
sour and messy. It is no credit to the Federal Government that the herdsmen
rampage continues with careless abandon and without finding an effective
solution to it. And it is a sad symptom of insensitivity and callousness that
some Governors, a day after 73 victims were being buried in a mass grave in
Benue State without condolence, were jubilantly endorsing President Buhari for
a second term! The timing was most unfortunate. The issue of herdsmen/crop
farmers dichotomy should not be left on the political platform of blame game;
the Federal Government must take the lead in bringing about solution that
protects life and properties of herdsmen and crop farmers alike and for them to
live amicably in the same community.
But
there are three other areas where President Buhari has come out more glaringly
than most of us thought we knew about him. One is nepotic deployment bordering
on clannishness and inability to bring discipline to bear on errant members of
his nepotic court. This has grave consequences on performance of his government
to the detriment of the nation. It would appear that national interest was
being sacrificed on the altar of nepotic interest. What does one make of a case
like that of Maina: collusion, condonation, ineptitude, incompetence,
dereliction of responsibility or kinship and friendship on the part of those
who should have taken visible and deterrent disciplinary action? How many
similar cases are buried, ignored or covered up and not yet in the glare of the
media and the public? The second is his poor understanding of the dynamics of
internal politics. This has led to wittingly or unwittingly making the nation
more divided and inequality has widened and become more pronounced. It also has
effect on general national security. The third is passing the buck. For
instance, blaming the Governor of the Central Bank for devaluation of the naira
by 70% or so and blaming past governments for it, is to say the least, not
accepting one’s own responsibility. Let nobody deceive us, economy feeds on
politics and because our politics is depressing, our economy is even more
depressing today. If things were good, President Buhari would not need to come
in. He was voted to fix things that were bad and not engage in the blame game.
Our Constitution is very clear, one of the cardinal responsibilities of the
President is the management of the economy of which the value of the naira
forms an integral part. Kinship and friendship that place responsibility for
governance in the hands of the unelected can only be deleterious to good
government and to the nation.
President
Buhari’s illness called for the sympathy, understanding, prayer and patience
from every sane Nigerian. It is part of our culture. Most Nigerians prayed for
him while he was away sick in London for over hundred days and he gave his
Deputy sufficient leeway to carry on in his absence. We all thanked God for
President Buhari for coming back reasonably hale and hearty and progressing
well in his recovery. But whatever may be the state of President Buhari’s
health today, he should neither over-push his luck nor over-tax the patience
and tolerance of Nigerians for him, no matter what his self-serving, so-called
advisers, who would claim that they love him more than God loves him and that
without him, there would be no Nigeria say. President Buhari needs a dignified
and honourable dismount from the horse. He needs to have time to reflect,
refurbish physically and recoup and after appropriate rest, once again, join
the stock of Nigerian leaders whose experience, influence, wisdom and outreach
can be deployed on the side line for the good of the country. His place in
history is already assured. Without impaired health and strain of age, running
the affairs of Nigeria is a 25/7 affair, not 24/7.
I only appeal to brother Buhari to consider a deserved rest at this point in
time and at this age. I continue to wish him robust health to enjoy his
retirement from active public service. President Buhari does not necessarily
need to heed my advice. But whether or not he heeds it, Nigeria needs to move
on and move forward.
I
have had occasion in the past to say that the two main political parties – APC
and PDP – were wobbling. I must reiterate that nothing has happened to convince
me otherwise. If anything, I am reinforced in my conviction. The recent show of
PDP must give grave and great concern to lovers of Nigeria. To claim, as has
been credited to the chief kingmaker of PDP, that for procuring the Supreme
Court judgement for his faction of the Party, he must dictate the tune all the
way and this is indeed fraught with danger. If neither APC nor PDP is a worthy
horse to ride to lead Nigeria at this crucial and critical time, what then do
we do? Remember Farooq Kperogi, an Associate Professor at the Kennesaw State
University, Georgia, United States, calls it “a cruel Hobson’s choice; it’s
like a choice between six and half a dozen, between evil and evil. Any
selection or deflection would be a distinction without a difference.” We cannot
just sit down lamenting and wringing our hands desperately and hopelessly.
I
believe the situation we are in today is akin to what and where we were in at
the beginning of this democratic dispensation in 1999. The nation was
tottering. People became hopeless and saw no bright future in the horizon. It
was all a dark cloud politically, economically and socially. The price of oil
at that time was nine dollars per barrel and we had a debt overhang of about $35
billion. Most people were confused with lack of direction in the country. One
of the factors that saved the situation was a near government of national unity
that was put in place to navigate us through the dark cloud. We had almost all
hands on deck. We used people at home and from the diaspora and we navigated
through the dark cloud of those days. At that time, most people were hopelessly
groping in the dark. They saw no choice, neither in the left nor in the right,
and yet we were not bereft of people at home and from the diaspora that could
come together to make Nigeria truly a land flowing with milk and honey. Where
we are is a matter of choice but we can choose differently to make a necessary
and desirable change, once again.