Nigeria’s
former president, Olusegun Obasanjo, took some time off his busy
schedule to speak to a PREMIUM TIMES team at his Abeokuta home about
some of the issues he wrote about in his book, “My Watch”.
The
retired army general – in between joking with his interviewers, and
threatening to walk out of the room – spoke at length about the reasons
behind some of the key decisions he took while in office, his
relationship with some key political figures, and the Halliburton
bribery scandal.
Below is excerpt of the first part of the interview.
PT:
Thank you sir for granting us this opportunity to talk about your book.
Some people say it is selling like hot cake, I don’t know if it is true
but that’s what people say. How has it been? What has been the
financial reward from there?
Obasanjo: The book was not
written for financial reward. If it was written for financial reward,
now that…what do you call him… Kashamu had done the silly things he did,
I would have sued him for damages and I would have got damages. But
that’s not what the book was written for. The book was written for my
experience, my understanding, my knowledge, and what you may call wisdom
as a result of all these, to put it for others to be able to learn or
acquire knowledge. That’s one. Two, it was also written to set the
record right. One of the things that people don’t know, people that I
call arm chair presidents is that they don’t know what goes in before
decisions are made or what the man making decisions, what leads him to
making decisions. Take for instance the decision on privatising all
refineries. I explained that what I met were refineries that were not
working, refineries that were given to an amateur for repairs, for
maintenance, what they call turn around maintenance to the company of
Emeka Offor – Chrome Group. Where has Emeka Offor maintained refineries
before? Where has he? That’s what we met. So the refineries were not
working. I called Shell. I said ‘come and help us, just run the
refinery.’ Shell was frank with me. It said that ‘we make our money
from upstream, downstream is more of a service. Two, your refineries are
small. Port Harcourt is 60,000 barrels a day. Refineries now go 300,000
barrels a day. Three, your refineries have not been maintained well.
Four, we don’t want to go into the corruption that is entailed in all
these’. I said ‘ok, come and help me run it’. They refused. Now when I
then saw people who agreed to take 51 percent equity in two of the
refineries; they did not promise to pay, they paid 750 million, I was
dancing and I said ‘look, this is God sent.’ My successor came (and)
they cancelled it and paid them the money back. Those refineries today –
you won’t get them because they’ve become scrap.
PT: They recently said that they are working again…
Obasanjo: Who made them work? (laughs)
PT:
You mentioned Emeka Offor. There were lots of stories about the
refineries you met, how you handled it. But you never recovered anything
from Emeka Offor.
Obasanjo: What can you recover? A man who
was paid upfront. He had people. He got some police…people were there.
And like they have said to you now, look, if it works for a week, that’s
all you get. And Emeka Offor, after I left he became friends with every
government that has come. Now he’s not only into refinery and oil and
all that, he’s now also in energy.
PT: Something came out of
your book. You said that before you were elected, that the feeling and
perception was that only a northerner could be elected in Nigeria. How
did you feel breaking that myth, because you called it a myth in your
book?
Obasanjo: It’s a myth. It’s a myth that….well, before
my election we have had, since independence, three or four elections. We
had election in 1959 that was conducted by the British, NPC won. We
were still in the days of parliamentary. We had election in 1964 that
was conducted by ourselves. It was a coalition of NPC and NCNC but the
head of the government was Tafawa Balewa. We had election again in 1979,
Shagari won. We had again in 1983, again Shagari won. And then we had
the June 12…
PT: (Cuts in) I was thinking that (1993) was when the myth was broken.
Obasanjo:
Election which result has not been declared, you cannot talk of… It
doesn’t matter what you may see but until the election result is
formally declared, it could be anything.
PT: So you think that period was a very momentous period in Nigeria’s history?
Obasanjo:
I think it was good for Nigeria. It was one of the great strides that
Nigeria made. Just as I believe that Jonathan winning election in 2011
was also a great stride for us or 2015, now that the incumbent was
defeated by the opposition. These are landmarks, or if you like,
reference points in our advancement in democracy.
PT: In the
Volume 2 of your book, you wrote extensively about the role God used you
to play in enthroning Yar’Adua and Jonathan. You also admitted later –
extensive analysis – how both leaders performed poorly. There are those
who believe that you owe Nigerians an apology for leading them to
enthrone non-performing leaders.
Obasanjo: (Cuts in) You are
absolutely wrong Now you voted for them. I didn’t just take them and put
them there. And they went through a process. Don’t you know that? Do
you know or don’t you know that they went through a process? Do you know
or don’t you know? Answer (slaps interviewer’s thigh vigorously).
PT: I know.
Obasanjo: Okay. They went through a process. And that is the process that the constitution and the electoral system allow.
PT: In other words, are you saying that all of us are guilty?
Obasanjo: Of course. If you want to put that, everybody who voted for them is guilty.
PT: But you know people believed you. People believed you. When you speak….
Obasanjo:
(Cuts in) When I speak, I am not an oracle. And I’m not infallible. But
on this particular one I have said to all of you, you can get a job for
a man you cannot do it for him. Even your own son if you put him in a
job…. There is a good saying that if you want to know how anybody will
perform, put him in position of power or put money into his hand.
PT: So maybe the thing to say is that you didn’t do enough due diligence…
Obasanjo:
(Cuts in) No. You are wrong. There’s no due diligence that you can do
to allow a man…. You cannot know the quality of a gift from the
wrapping. You don’t know that, you will never go anywhere (slaps
interviewer’s thigh). That is absolute wrong.
PT: That point has to be made…
Obasanjo:
(Cuts in) But I’ve always made it. I keep on making it. In my book, I
said look, Gowon sent me to the war front and because of my performance
there, my popularity started to rise…
PT: (Cuts in) Because he knew you had the capacity, he checked you very well…
Obasanjo:
(Cuts in) No no no. Adekunle was there before me. So he didn’t know
Adekunle had the capacity? Answer me. In that same Division, Adekunle
was there. And if Adekunle had remained there, there’s the possibility
that Nigeria could have lost the war. So will you blame him for that?
PT:
We won’t. But you know a lot of people believe that between 1999 and
2007 when you left was a time that a lot changed in Nigeria for the
better. And people just keep saying that you destroyed everything that
you put in place with the successors you enthroned.
Obasanjo: But
take Ngozi (Okonjo-Iweala), who worked for me. And who worked
competently for me. Because I know Ngozi’s weaknesses, but I know her
strong points. Her strong point is technical competence. But Ngozi needs
to be led and to be supervised. Now will you comment on Ngozi who
worked for me as the same Ngozi who worked for Jonathan? Will you? But
it’s the same person.
PT: At what point do you think she derailed if I may use that word?
Obasanjo: No.
PT:
Is it at the point that you changed her – because you removed her as
finance minister. Was it at that point that she began to derail? Obasanjo:
She derailed because….when Jonathan even said he wanted her, I said ‘I
hope you can manage her.’ And Ngozi herself sent me a text (and) I told
her times have changed.
PT: But why did you change her? She was managing the economy very well for you. Why did you now remove her suddenly?
Obasanjo: I wrote it in that my book.
PT: It didn’t come out clearly enough?
Obasanjo:It
must have come out. Maybe you haven’t read the book very well. I said
I’ve touched reform. I’ve touched almost everywhere except Ministry of
Education and Ministry of Foreign Affairs. So one day, I was in my
office and the Head of Service, Yayale (Ahmed), came in. He said ‘look,
you are looking not happy, what is the matter?’ I said I am worried
about two ministries and the ministers who can do the work I wanted to
be done there in these two ministries are already doing good work where
they are. And he said ‘talk let me see.’ I said education and foreign
affairs. And he said ‘who are the ministers that you think can do the
job.’ I said Oby (Ezekwesili), Ngozi, and El-Rufai. He said ‘what is Oby
doing for you now?’ I said Oby is doing Solid Minerals. He said ‘Sir,
in all sincerity, I know you don’t like to rank ministries, but will you
say Ministry of Solid Minerals is as important as Ministry of
Education.’ I said yes I don’t rank ministries, they are all important.
He said, ‘Can’t you take any of these three to do education and then get
somebody else to do solid minerals?’ So I took Oby there. Now in the
Ministry of Finance we had got debt relief, so I could afford to take
Ngozi to Foreign Affairs. That’s all. And then she had Nenadi (Usman)
who was the minister of state. She’s not a buffoon. And then, which is
also part of her weakness, she came to me and said, look, since it’s
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, she will like to take International Finance
along with it. I said talk to your sister with whom you are working and
I don’t see anything wrong with that provided you work out a
relationship. But she didn’t accord Nenadi the recognition and the
consideration that was necessary. I then said the ministry of
International finance should go back to Finance and that happened. She
said she couldn’t act. She put in a letter of resignation. And she had
done that before, and before she could come and get people to come and
beg, I announced acceptance (of her resignation).
PT: She once resigned before and she took it back?
Obasanjo: Yes.
PT: Which means you were always having disagreements…
Obasanjo: No no no. I know her character.
PT: So why did she resign the first time?
Obasanjo:
She just felt if she cannot have her way, with me…. If I am the one in
charge, then it has to be what I see as what is the best interest of the
nation.
PT: So even when she resigned, if you didn’t announce
the acceptance she would have come back. So all efforts to make her come
back didn’t work?
Obasanjo: No no no. Because I had announced.
PT: In 1999, IBB supported you to become president…
Obasanjo: (Cuts in) I said that.
PT: Yes, you said that. And many even said he helped fund your campaign at the time.
Obasanjo: No.
PT:
You didn’t say that. You said he supported you. But in your book, you
spoke of how in 2011, you chose to support Jonathan…..because you called
a South West PDP meeting where Jonathan was endorsed, even when IBB had
also indicated interest in running. Why did you prefer to act that way?
Obasanjo:
I wrote in my book that this is the opportunity we have for a minority.
And I’ve said that. I’ve explained that. I’ve said that times without
number. And we have scaled that hurdle. Nobody in Nigeria today can say
‘oh, because I’m a minority I cannot get there.’
PT: So was he not angry with you that ‘look, I backed you in 1999?’
Obasanjo:
That’s not…What nonsense is that? Because you backed me I must back
you? It doesn’t matter who you are? And I don’t have consideration for
Nigeria? It’s consideration that you backed me? No, if that is the way
you think then you are short-sighted and myopic and silly. And put that
one. No Nigerian should think that way. You backed me? And if you don’t
back me others will back me. So everybody who backed me that time, I
must now come and say, look, when you want anything, any office…. I
don’t act like that.
PT: It means that you were able to break the jinx of the problem of minority.
Obasanjo: It is necessary that we deal with that.
PT:
You said something very shocking in your book – that the presidency
instructed EFCC to remove a vital document in Gbenga Daniel’s file in
their custody as a way of getting the former governor off their hook.
Obasanjo: No. The president knows about it but it was his chief of staff who gave the instruction.
PT: With the consent of the then president?
Obasanjo: The president knows about it.
PT:
Now listen to what you wrote in page 81 of your book. “To fight
corruption, the leader needs absolute transparency, no skeleton in the
cupboard, clean hands, a clear mind, fear of God, and absolute honesty
and integrity, submission to scrupulous investigation. Search and
enquiries are also good for a leader who wants to lead by example.”
Great message for any leader all over the world! This is prescriptive.
Now what do you say to those who keep linking you with corruption during
your own tenure, especially the unresolved Halliburton scam for which
some of your aides were arrested?
Obasanjo: Look, anybody can
make any allegation. Go and read the EFCC report on me. I’m the only
leader who has left office who has had, I said they should carry out
clinical… did you see that in the book? And if you haven’t seen that in
the book then you haven’t read the book. So what else do you want?
(Ndudi) Elumelu carried out a report. Did you see the report of the
House and the action of the House? What more do you want? So it doesn’t
matter the allegation you make, that’s entirely up to you. Halliburton,
Bodunde (one of his aides) has been taken to court twice and the court
has dismissed the case. What more do you want? The latest was the one
Jonathan did. Just before he left, he took Bodunde back to court. He was
discharged and the case dismissed the first time. The second time
Jonathan took him to court and he was discharged again. So what do you
want?
PT: You may not know about it, you may not have a hand in
it, but it does appear, especially from reports from US investigators
that some officials of your administration perhaps took bribe from
Halliburton.
Obasanjo: No no no! I don’t deny that. But not me! I
don’t deny their reports about Halliburton but not me. I don’t even
know what Halliburton was doing here. So what’s your problem? And EFCC
looked into it. You read the report of EFCC bordering on Halliburton.
PT: The only gap is that people are wondering why you didn’t take steps to bring those officials of your regime to book.
Obasanjo:
(Cuts in) There’s no gap. You can make any allegation. Now EFCC – you
can count number of people who are taken to court. I don’t take anybody
to court, Mojeed. And don’t annoy me. Now you have the system that takes
them to court. I don’t take anybody to court. Because if I have to be
the one to say ‘take this one to court,’ that will be witch- hunting.
That’s not my job. My job is – set up the system and if anybody in that
system is not performing then look for somebody to perform. So it
doesn’t matter what allegation. If you read that report of EFCC, one man
was hired, and he went out with all sorts of spurious allegations and
EFCC took it one by one. Even Ribadu told me that when he gave that
report, because he didn’t give the report to me…I said, look, carry out a
critical investigation. I thought that was good. Then when he wrote his
report, he gave it to Yar’Adua. And he said Yar’Adua asked him, ‘You
can’t find anything at all?’ He brought Metropolitan Police here and he
said whenever they are doing investigation in the past, when they get
somewhere they will say ‘oh, yes, some people are interested.’ But this
is the first time they had free hand to carry out investigation. So what
more do you want? And what I put there is what I believe in. Has
anybody working under me said to you that ‘oh, he asked me to take
bribe?
|
0 Response to "The Iweala Who Worked For Me Is Different From The Iweala Who Worked For GEJ-OBJ "
Post a Comment