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Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 - Politics - Nairaland

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Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by akinladejo: 3:37am On Dec 27, 2014
A central issue in the quest for Nigeria’s greatness is leadership selection. Some 2,400 years ago, the great philosopher, Plato, argued that “As a just and healthy person is governed by knowledge and reason, a just society must be under the control of society’s most cultivated and best informed minds, its ‘lovers of wisdom’…” I have chosen to share the thoughts of our two presidents to encourage a debate on the matter, especially given the pervasive indifference or downright loathsomeness to matters of politics and governance by the so called ‘lovers of wisdom’. I served Nigeria under two presidents. This piece is not part of ‘the book’ on presidential governance.

The date was Friday, March 17, 2006. At the morning prayer session with President Olusegun Obasanjo at the ‘red carpet’ in the villa, I raised a special prayer point and asked the congregation to pray for the new governor of my state Anambra, Peter Obi (who was on his way from Abuja to Awka to be sworn in same day), as well as for Anambra State so that Obi’s regime may mark an end to the brigandage and misrule in the state. We were all upstanding.

The president cut in, and pointing in my direction remarked: “We shall pray as you have requested but the problem with you people from Anambra is that those of you who have something to offer shy away from politics and hooligans have taken over your state”. To the best of my recollection, that was the only prayer point during the four years of daily devotion that received a commentary.  ‘Baba’, as we fondly call him was basically telling us to ‘get involved or stop complaining’.  Periodically, the three of us from Anambra who were regular members of the prayer group (Oby Ezekwesili, Rev.William Okoye and I) had cause to brainstorm on the challenges and limitations of participation in politics especially by those of us who were ‘technocrats’. While we were obsessed with ‘good governance’, we had little interest in the process of acquiring power.
After leaving office as governor of the central bank, I was in London when twice in June 2009 I received calls from Alhaji Mangal to the effect that President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua wanted to see me anytime I was in Nigeria. I returned with my family late July and on Sunday, July 26, I received a call that the president wanted to see me by 9:30pm. After a few banter, he asked what I was doing abroad. As I explained the three offers I was considering, he was shaking his head. “Well”, he started, “it is not because you are here, but I have said this several times to you. Given your age, skills, and your accomplishments for our economy and financial system, it would be a waste for you not to continue to be involved in Nigeria’s public service… For example, there is going to be an election in your state early next year and I want to strongly urge you to show interest… You know that your state has been unfortunate with leadership, and our party has been in crisis there…”

At that point, my heart beat was racing. Before I left office, many people from Anambra had suggested that I should run for governor but it did not make any sense to me and my family. As I began my response, Yar’Adua cut in and suggested that I did not need to respond immediately but instead that I should go home and ‘consult’ with some of the political leaders in the state. He then raised his two thumbs and assured that “if you accept to do this, I will come out fully to make sure that you get there”. If he had allowed me to respond immediately, the answer would have been an unambiguous ‘NO’.  I thanked him and left.

On getting home, my wife was curious. I summarized what the president said, and she asked: ‘so what was your response?’ I told her the president would not let me respond but asked that I go and ‘consult’. “Then go back tomorrow and tell him that you have finished consulting and that the answer is No”, she ruled. I pleaded with her that we should at least give some time, out of respect, before reporting our decision. I confided in a few people and sought their advice. Within a week, the ‘rumours’ were everywhere. In the meantime, Yar’Adua also told a few people of his plans for Anambra and how he wanted to ‘use Soludo to make Anambra a model state’. He specifically requested Chief Tony Anenih to help him make it happen. My wife and I came under inestimable pressure — ‘to go and serve our people’. Some even said it was a ‘divine call to serve’, etc. My wife loathes politics and can’t stand it.

On August 12, 2009, I gave Yar’Adua the ‘preliminary report’ on my consultations. To enable me take a decision, I presented the challenges and threats to his proposal to which he laid out solutions. I told him that after three offices at the Federal Government (as chief economic adviser, de facto Minister of National Planning; and governor of the central bank) I believed I had had my day on duty as far as government was concerned and wanted to return to the international community, academia and private sector. The only reason another public office would make sense to me in the circumstance was if I believed I could really make a fundamental difference
If I would contest, my vision was to transform Anambra’s economy such that after eight years, it would no longer need federation account allocation for recurrent expenditures but would devote 100% of it to capital budget. Consequently, I requested eight things the Federal Government would do to enable me quickly transform the state into an international city, including: an airport; modern seaport for Onitsha and dredging of River Niger to enable medium-sized ship to come to Onitsha; dualisation of Anambra- Kogi road to speed up commerce between the North and Anambra; Anambra as a special line item for Ecological Fund as one third of its land mass was under threat by erosion; completion of the greater Onitsha water scheme; inclusion of Anambra as an oil producing state; Anambra as one of the pilot states for the large scale commercial agricultural scheme; and speeding up the second Niger bridge. Surprisingly, Yar’Adua accepted all of them at the meeting that lasted 76 minutes.

We agreed that the agenda of transforming Anambra would require full eight years of working 24 hours a day. He was happy and said that if he could have two states per geopolitical zone that would become ‘models’, he would have succeeded as president.  I then requested another four weeks to undertake ‘extensive consultations’ and report back early September.
In the meantime, while the ‘consultation’ was to proceed, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) announced a sudden timetable to collect and return an expression of interest form. I was advised to pick the form— almost akin to jumping into the river while still unsure whether or not to swim. Yar’Adua fell ill and travelled to Saudi Arabia. Conspiracy theorists took over and I saw treachery, intrigues, blackmail and mischief at their most banal forms. Propaganda was hatched and effectively marketed that “Soludo is not contesting for governor; he is preparing to contest for president in 2015”.

I was shocked to the marrow about the wicked plot. Of course, the game plan was to put me on a collision course with all those with an eye on the presidency. It worked. The more I tried to explain that I was drafted into the race by President Yar’Adua, the worse my case became because, as I learnt much later, it was interpreted that since Yar’Adua was the one who asked me to run, it meant that he was grooming a successor. In my various positions at the Federal Government, I survived hundreds of evil plots, but this was a different baptism of fire. Yar’Adua never returned and with an electoral body then that literally determined which candidate to ‘return’ or ‘deliver’, the rest, they say, is history! This is subject of a book project.
To be honest, I remain grateful to God and to those who supported and opposed me, for the lifetime experience. I tell my friends that what I learnt in the last five years about human nature is priceless.

To some readers, the foregoing might appear discouraging. Most professionals or so-called technocrats are scared of being ‘rubbished’ by politicians, or fear that politics is so dirty that it is not meant for ‘decent people’. At a recent church event in a neighbouring state to mine, one of the officiating bishops pulled me aside and pleaded with me: “I beg you in the name of God, please leave politics. You are too decent for that”. An elder statesman and my mentor once advised that “God did not create you a politician: He created you an economist. Please leave those people”.

There lies the dilemma for our country. Chinua Achebe was quoted as saying that on matters of leadership, Nigeria is a country that goes for a football match with its 10th Eleven. When Achebe joined the PRP in early 1980s, many people wondered what he was doing with ‘politicians’.  Most people believe that Nigeria can only be transformed if a critical mass of capable people take charge at all levels of governance. How would such people emerge without going through the political process? Power, they say, is not given; it is taken!  Under a democracy, the electorate can only choose their leaders from among the candidates contesting elections. If Lagos State Governor Babtunde Fashola (a cerebral and successful Senior Advocate of Nigeria) did not go through the political process as a ‘politician’, perhaps Lagos would have missed the on-going transformation.

Yes, the system is very rough indeed, and the admission fee for new entrants (without godfathers) is too high. If you are not careful, the crude Nigerian system can destroy you if you are seen as a threat. Is the solution then to shy away and complain in our bedrooms? Now that Prof. Attahiru Jega and the new INEC are restoring confidence in the electoral system that votes count, is it time then for all those who have anything to offer to stand up? Surely I understand the enormous cost that very busy professionals bear by abandoning the glassy offices and certainty of office and income to dabble into the shark-infested waters of politics. Not everyone can or should be in politics. But in an underdeveloped country such as ours, the potential marginal contribution of one skilled professional is many times that of his counterpart in advanced societies.

Thus, the society loses greatly for every one knowledgeable person who stands akimbo as the duty of development beckons.  As I ponder these issues myself, I can only surmise that the import of what Obasanjo and Yar’Adua told me is a reminder to us of the eternal wisdom of Plato that “the penalty good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men”

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Nobody: 3:44am On Dec 27, 2014
Ehn en
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by MeAndYou(m): 4:05am On Dec 27, 2014
Mr Soludo is an embodiment of knowledge and experiences
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by blemon44(m): 4:07am On Dec 27, 2014
Soludo would have been better than the others
if that he eventually made the office in Anambra state

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Caseless: 4:29am On Dec 27, 2014
MeAndYou:
Mr Soludo is an embodiment of knowledge and experiences
His people dont celebrate such feature and character. They'd rather pick a stella Odua, martin Elechi, Theordore orji, etc, to men like soludo and women like ezekwesili.

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by dunkem21(m): 4:38am On Dec 27, 2014
The best governor, Anambra never had.

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Caseless: 4:42am On Dec 27, 2014
Yaradua just made the list of my best leaders in history by that vision when he said " if I could have two states per geopolitical zone as 'models', i would have succeeded as a president".
His corrupt and clueless successor does not think of Nigeria like this, rather, he talks of Nigerians whom he sees as his enemies.

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by theM16: 5:21am On Dec 27, 2014
Caseless:
Yaradua just made the list of my best leaders in history by that vision when he said " if I could have two states per geopolitical zone as 'models', i would have succeeded as a president".
His corrupt and clueless successor does not think of Nigeria like this, rather, he talks of Nigerians whom he sees as his enemies.

Nigeria would v bn far better with that. Cos even the less developed states would hv improved a lot...jst like the influence of abj and lag on neighboring towns. Chai the only achievement of the clueless one is mke our economy broke with his 'gang of chics'

2 Likes

Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by benuejosh: 5:31am On Dec 27, 2014
source please

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Generalkorex(m): 5:33am On Dec 27, 2014
RIP Umar Yar'adua

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by gratiaeo(m): 6:03am On Dec 27, 2014
Soludo was a good man in the wrong party just like Ngige there is no way he would have won Anambra governorship with PDP after what Mbadinuju did to Anambra state

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Kewt: 6:35am On Dec 27, 2014
All I can say is: I miss Yaradua!

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by chidekings(m): 6:51am On Dec 27, 2014
Generalkorex:
RIP Umar Yar'adua


i wish he never died,that man would have changed nigeria beyond our expectations.

1 Like

Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Nobody: 6:56am On Dec 27, 2014
This shows that the people are their own enemies..

We keep talking about non performance of the people elected,yet every four years,we make the same mistake of electing crooks to power,at the detriment of technocrats..

A good example is the Ekiti people,electing a common tout,and criminal to rule them again..

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by frankyychiji(f): 7:00am On Dec 27, 2014
Some commentators above are already derailing this thread by seeing it as another opportunity to insult someone who they should actually celebrate and encourage.
@topic, despite all the sacrifices the great Soludo made for this country, Sanusi still did all he could to rubbish his achievements in the economic sector.

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by mazzi: 8:02am On Dec 27, 2014
Caseless:
His people dont celebrate such feature and character. They'd rather pick a stella Odua, martin Elechi, Theordore orji, etc, to men like soludo and women like ezekwesili.
the way ur Southwest people allow personalities like,tinubu,aragbesola,fayose,alao akala and gbenga daniel to rule them abi?
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Generalkorex(m): 8:02am On Dec 27, 2014
chidekings:



i wish he never died,that man would have changed nigeria beyond our expectations.
sure but I believe God knows what he is doing we will surely get there very soon
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by kakakent: 8:12am On Dec 27, 2014
gratiaeo:
Soludo was a good man in the wrong party just like Ngige there is no way he would have won Anambra governorship with PDP after what Mbadinuju did to Anambra state


Gbam na ngige own pain me pass dude was on the verge of clinching dat ticket when fash deported anambrarians from lag nd dat became an apga slogan d thing still dey pain me anytime I see obiano for abs
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by dridowu: 8:17am On Dec 27, 2014
Hmmmm Nigeria politics is not good enough for a democrat. Nigeria politics is about "Personal Pocket" not for community development. We voted in bad leaders just because of our selfish reason.

1 Like

Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Lee29: 8:42am On Dec 27, 2014
Soludo was deceived to pick anambra governorship ticket to smoothly pave way for Sanusi as CBN governor

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Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by oduastates: 8:45am On Dec 27, 2014
Ekiti comes to mind. According to them.
he built roads, schools, hospitals etc, but he doesn't eat corn with us".

1 Like

Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by HzRF(m): 8:52am On Dec 27, 2014
Yomieluv:
This shows that the people are their own enemies..

We keep talking about non performance of the people elected,yet every four years,we make the same mistake of electing crooks to power,at the detriment of technocrats..

A good example is the Ekiti people,electing a common tout,and criminal to rule them again..
Same way Osun elected (still in court) a pure tout that fayose can't match
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Syphax(m): 9:15am On Dec 27, 2014
Caseless:
His people dont celebrate such feature and character. They'd rather pick a stella Odua, martin Elechi, Theordore orji, etc, to men like soludo and women like ezekwesili.


And yours elect the likes of Senator Yerima,Murtala Nyako,Bukola Saraki,Marwa,Shettima and the old men's league?

Case of kettle calling the pot black.


undecided
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Adminisher: 9:35am On Dec 27, 2014
Caseless:
Yaradua just made the list of my best leaders in history by that vision when he said " if I could have two states per geopolitical zone as 'models', i would have succeeded as a president".
His corrupt and clueless successor does not think of Nigeria like this, rather, he talks of Nigerians whom he sees as his enemies.

Jonathan is the local periwinkle they used to spoil the Yaradua soup. You can see clearly how leaders behave compared with how clueless misfits operate.

1 Like

Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Nobody: 9:48am On Dec 27, 2014
I DISAGREE



Ok after losing the governorship race, what is Soludo doing to improve the lots of Anambra state.


If Igbos had pinned their economic salvation on acquisition of political power, we would be far behind where we are today.

To me

OBJ and YarAdua got it wrong.


You don't have to be a politician to bring development


If you as a technocrat desire to bring development through a political process, you can do so indirectly by secretly financing a person who shares your view on development and has the charisma to influence the public.


If the people of Nnewi Abiriba etc had waited to occupy power, would their towns be what it is today.?

This is the same trash Emeagwali is spewing that has hindered him from transferring his computer advantage to Igboland.



Soludo the great, you got this wrong.

2 Likes

Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by zicoy6k: 10:21am On Dec 27, 2014
A very insightful writing.
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Nobody: 10:45am On Dec 27, 2014
According to The Beast in Temple Run : Life is all about running ,taking opportunities, overcoming obstacles,then continue running ..
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by greaterlove(m): 11:32am On Dec 27, 2014
Y
WhiteTechnology:
I DISAGREE



Ok after losing the governorship race, what is Soludo doing to improve the lots of Anambra state.


If Igbos had pinned their economic salvation on acquisition of political power, we would be far behind where we are today.

To me

OBJ and YarAdua got it wrong.


You don't have to be a politician to bring development


If you as a technocrat desire to bring development through a political process, you can do so indirectly by secretly financing a person who shares your view on development and has the charisma to influence the public.


If the people of Nnewi Abiriba etc had waited to occupy power, would their towns be what it is today.?

This is the same trash Emeagwali is spewing that has hindered him from transferring his computer advantage to Igboland.



Soludo the great, you got this wrong.

Thank you my brother. This year alone I have been to anambra state 3 times, I have moved around the state and conversed with the people, the average anambra man is happy with the present government in anambra state. Yes we want them to do more but they can see that almost all what Soludo mentioned to Yaraduah as his conditions are still being followed up by GEJ and the previous and present governors of anambra state. If Yaraduah would have executed them with more speed is something I can not answer but what I know is that the people of anambra are beginning to be more conscious of what they want from the federal government.
Let men like Soludo help in mapping out a blueprint for anambra's development, let them work with the present government and give their own inputs(which I hope he is doing since he is in APGA now) let us talk about it until it's in the consciousness of every individual in anambra state, let it be so strong that no matter who comes in (from whatever party be it APGA, APC or PDP) already knows what is expected from him or her.

1 Like

Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Nobody: 12:06pm On Dec 27, 2014
greaterlove:
Y

Thank you my brother. This year alone I have been to anambra state 3 times, I have moved around the state and conversed with the people, the average anambra man is happy with the present government in anambra state. Yes we want them to do more but they can see that almost all what Soludo mentioned to Yaraduah as his conditions are still being followed up by GEJ and the previous and present governors of anambra state. If Yaraduah would have executed them with more speed is something I can not answer but what I know is that the people of anambra are beginning to be more conscious of what they want from the federal government.
Let men like Soludo help in mapping out a blueprint for anambra's development, let them work with the present government and give their own inputs(which I hope he is doing since he is in APGA now) let us talk about it until it's in the consciousness of every individual in anambra state, let it be so strong that no matter who comes in (from whatever party be it APGA, APC or PDP) already knows what is expected from him or her.


Gbam


That's why we must keep shouting it until the blank heads understand it
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Caseless: 12:39pm On Dec 27, 2014
theM16:


Nigeria would v bn far better with that. Cos even the less developed states would hv improved a lot...jst like the influence of abj and lag on neighboring towns. Chai the only achievement of the clueless one is mke our economy broke with his 'gang of chics'
grin grin grin grin i wan die...

1 Like

Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Caseless: 12:41pm On Dec 27, 2014
Adminisher:


Jonathan is the local periwinkle they used to spoil the Yaradua soup. You can see clearly how leaders behave compared with how clueless misfits operate.
gej na accident abeg.
Re: Soludo: What Obasanjo And Yar’adua Told Meby Charles Soludo On January 23, 2013 by Collynzo22: 1:02pm On Dec 27, 2014
Read this article and you will know why Yar'adua had the full support of Igbos.
It is not about being a northerner or a muslim, we will only support one who has good plans for us as a people and has shown then in words, body language and past actions.
Buhari doesn't fall into that category.

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