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Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia - Politics - Nairaland

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SKC Ogbonnia Dumps Tinubu, Endorses Peter Obi / Ogbonnia Oko Enyim Resigns As Umahi's SSA Over Interference In His Family / Lifeless President: The World Has Rejected You – SKC Ogbonnia To Buhari (2) (3) (4)

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Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by SKCOgbonnia: 7:40pm On Sep 08, 2022
Why Nigeria’s Rich and Famous Should Support Peter Obi

By SKC Ogbonnia --Former APC Presidential Aspirant

When I was aspiring to become president, a veteran journalist asked me why I decided to cast aside my good life in America and muddle with the murky waters of Nigerian politics. The gentleman appeared perplexed when I answered that the sacrifice was “for me.” I would further explain that a core part of my vision in life is to promote public welfare that can guarantee my individual welfare. I reasoned that I am as good as my immediate environment. I reminded him that like many, including the big men, I am most at home in my hometown; in this case, Ugbo, a serene hilltop habitat in Awgu Local Government Area of Enugu State. Like many Nigerian communities, my hometown sparkles with magnificent mansions and celestial places of worship but lacks standard public amenities.

Yes, I can equally afford quality medical care and quality education for my family members overseas, but it smacks stark ignorance to assume that such privilage would guarantee me peace of mind. That is, what happens if I or any close relation encounters serious medical emergency at any given hour of the day or night while in that small town that has no standard health facilities?

The answer to that question prompted my earlier piece: ‘Every Nigerian Blood Is On The Line.’ I was able to enumerate the fate of many prominent politicians who had lost their loved ones or encountered other serious health scares because of the unfortunate condition in their local environment. The list is long, including David Mark, Ike Ekweremadu, Nemadi Sambo, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Dame Patience Jonathan, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Lamidi Adedibu, Muhammadu Buhari, and Goodluck Jonathan, to name a few.

The exemplar with Jonathan, then a sitting president, best makes my case: His younger brother, Meni Jonathan, suddenly became ill on one fateful day at their hometown of Otuoke and needed urgent medical attention. But any notion of luck ought to have limitations. Hear Mr. Goodluck himself as he narrated the predicament in his own words: Meni “drove himself down to Yenagoa to board the chopper to Abuja. He got to Abuja that Saturday and was admitted in hospital. The following Monday, his breathing changed. I said, let us make arrangement to get him out—to let him get treatment outside. So, an arrangement was being made. Unfortunately, the following day he had cardiac arrest and inflamed heart at the State House Clinic.” Sadly, despite the expedient excellencies, a president’s brother, like an ordinary Nigerian, gave up the ghost in November 2012 at the capital city of Abuja.

The gist of this plea mirrors a famous quotation by an American president, John F. Kennedy: “If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.”

Aliko Dangote needs no introduction. Touted as the richest black man, he is also widely admired for a proclivity to showcase Nigeria at any given chance. It was not surprising therefore that instead of hosting a world class wedding for his beloved daughter in some of the choicest destinations in a foreign land, he brought it home along with a bevy of guests drawn from the who-is-who in both the political and the corporate worlds. It also presented an opportunity for the Nigerian rich and famous to ostend their wealth along with expensive goodies, including the latest samples of private jets and lush cars. Yet, this grandiose show of affluence is common in country that has been established as the poverty capital of the world.

Bill Gate, the famous American billionaire, who deploys billions of his personal wealth to fight poverty in Africa, also graced the wedding of Mr. Dangote’s daughter. Though Mr. Gate appeared to appreciate the African hospitality, which is second to none, he could not reconcile the degree of ostentatious wealth with the degree of poverty in the land. He showed his disgust by leaving the big men with following words: “Nigeria will thrive when every Nigerian is able to thrive. If you invest in their health, education, and opportunities- the human capital we are talking about today, then they will lay the foundation for sustained prosperity.”

Of course, Mr. Gate told the gospel truth. But, as the eminent political historian, Bala Yusuf Usman, once noted, many highly placed Nigerians are some of the most ignorant, because they like to forget that politics should be about the common good of the society. Instead, many Nigerian rich and famous people typically collude to loot the funds budgeted for public projects, thereby denying basic opportunities to the ordinary people. But the realities are setting in.

The long years of elite impunity have led to mass poverty and, consequently, a level of insecurity never imagined in the land. The naked truth is that the masses are angry and cannot take it anymore. Today, no Nigerian—whether rich or poor—is safe anymore. These days, the rich and famous can no longer enjoy their wealth in the Nigerian space, as they would please. Even convoys of contingent of army and the police, which usually trail the big men, no longer stoke fear, let alone deterrence.

Further, if things remain any close to the current situation, the children of the rich and famous—who are being groomed overseas—may never come back home to inherit their riches after all. If the mass exploitation continues, as Bill Gate had warned the big men, their beloved businesses will not sustain.

The most proverbial yet is another quote from the same President Kennedy. The American appeared to have a country like Nigeria in mind when he stated that “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.” The point is that, barring a radical change from the status quo, mass revolution is imminent in Nigeria. And, as recent events have shown, any “violent revolution” will not be a conflict between the tribes or between the Christians and Muslims, as some politicians would wish, the target are the ruling elite and their influential sympathizers.

The only solution is true change. The Nigerian presidential election of 2023 is a make-or-mar for that elusive change. Of the candidates seeking the presidency, only three have legitimate chances of victory, namely, Atiku Abubakar of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP), and Ahmed Tinubu of All Progressives Congress (APC). So, is it Atiku that represents the change? How, and how can? Is it then Tinubu, the National Leader of the ruling APC, who roundly endorses those actions of the current government, as well as its functionaries that have combined to ruin Nigeria?

With every sense of modesty, unless one is unpatriotic and blinded by a timid clad of ethnic, religious or party sentiments, the choice in 2023 is a no brainer: Mr. Peter Obi stands out as the candidate most likely to bring us any semblance of change at this time in history. Moreover, the former Anambra governor is the choice of the Nigerian restless youths and, of course, the sole answer with the potential to avert an adverse revolution.

The youths have made a good choice. Unlike the presidential candidates of PDP and APC, Peter Obi is not only physically and mentally sound, but he also has the right set of visions, character, competence, and the capacity to rescue Nigeria and reposition her to path of honor. In short, no sane Nigerian would wish another absentee president like Umar Yar’Adua and Muhammadu Buhari, which the candidacies of the ageless Atiku and the ailing Tinubu clearly represent.

These stark realities compelled me to dump the candidate of my party to endorse the candidate of the masses in Peter Obi. It is incumbent upon the Nigeria’s elite, as well as the Nigerians in the Diaspora, to join the Obidient movement. This movement is the nonviolent alternative. It is the long-awaited democratic revolution that can save both the many Nigerians who are poor and the few who are rich.

Dr. SKC Ogbonnia, an ex-APC presidential aspirant, writes from Houston, Texas

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Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by Nobody: 7:42pm On Sep 08, 2022
Leave APC out of your shenanigans . Nigerians have chosen to support Tinubu and there’s nothing you can do about it
Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by garriAndsugar: 7:45pm On Sep 08, 2022
Rozross:
Leave APC out of your shenanigans
Why should he leave APC alone.
Why can't you just support something good for once?
. sometimes I do wonder if your brain is upside down

1 Like

Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by Nobody: 7:49pm On Sep 08, 2022
garriAndsugar:

Why should he leave APC alone.
Why can't you just support something good for once?
. sometimes I do wonder if your brain is upside down
It is you all obidients that is delusional, I don’t know how you all think Obi can win a presidential election in a party with no structure
Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by Nobody: 7:53pm On Sep 08, 2022
Rozross:
It is you all obidients that is delusional, I don’t know how you all think Obi can win a presidential election in a party with no structure

One question for you and I will like you to answer it in your conscience.
Would you have supported a candidate from a tribe or faith different from yours if
1. His age is a mystery.
2. His parentage is a mystery.
3. His state of origin is a mystery.
4. His educational qualification is a mystery.
5. His source of wealth is a mystery.
6. Even his name is a mystery.

If you cant support an ijaw, igbo, kanuri, tiv, etc with such baggage but will support Tinubu, just know that your support is purely out of tribal bigotry and you are a tribal bigot, one of those dragging Nigeria backwards
Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by garriAndsugar: 7:53pm On Sep 08, 2022
Rozross:
It is you all obidients that is delusional, I don’t know how you all think Obi can win a presidential election in a party with no structure
Whether structure or no structure. Why would any sane person be supporting a party that has brought untold hardship to Nigerians.
You guys just want to discourage people online not to vote Peter because of the little pennies you are getting from the devilish party
Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by Nobody: 7:55pm On Sep 08, 2022
plusfield:


One question for you and I will like you to answer it in your conscience.
Would you have supported a candidate from a tribe or faith different from yours if
1. His age is a mystery.
2. His parentage is a mystery.
3. His state of origin is a mystery.
4. His educational qualification is a mystery.
5. His source of wealth is a mystery.
6. Even his name is a mystery.

If you cant support an ijaw, igbo, kanuri, tiv, etc with such baggage but will support Tinubu, just know that your support is purely out of tribal bigotry and you are a tribal bigot, one of those dragging Nigeria backwards
I don’t know why you all should conclude that anyone who is supporting the right candidate Tinubu is Yoruba. See ehn, this Tinubu project cut across all tribes and religion. So you are wrong
Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by Nobody: 7:58pm On Sep 08, 2022
garriAndsugar:

Whether structure or no structure. Why would any sane person be supporting a party that has brought untold hardship to Nigerians.
You guys just want to discourage people online not to vote Peter because of the little pennies you are getting from the devilish party
We understand the plight of Nigerians and big daddy has promised to normalise everything, one thing you can boldly take to the banks is Tinubu’s promises, he doesn’t go back on any promises he has ever made. Know your candidate well so as not to blindly support the wrong one
Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by Nobody: 7:59pm On Sep 08, 2022
Even dick and tom!
Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by garriAndsugar: 8:01pm On Sep 08, 2022
Rozross:
We understand the plight of Nigerians and big daddy has promised to normalise everything, one thing you can boldly take to the banks is Tinubu’s promises, he doesn’t go back on any promises he has ever made. Know your candidate well so as not to blindly support the wrong one
Lol.
Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by basybasy: 1:20am On Sep 09, 2022
SKCOgbonnia:

Why Nigeria’s Rich and Famous Should Support Peter Obi

By SKC Ogbonnia --Former APC Presidential Aspirant

When I was aspiring to become president, a veteran journalist asked me why I decided to cast aside my good life in America and muddle with the murky waters of Nigerian politics. The gentleman appeared perplexed when I answered that the sacrifice was “for me.” I would further explain that a core part of my vision in life is to promote public welfare that can guarantee my individual welfare. I reasoned that I am as good as my immediate environment. I reminded him that like many, including the big men, I am most at home in my hometown; in this case, Ugbo, a serene hilltop habitat in Awgu Local Government Area of Enugu State. Like many Nigerian communities, my hometown sparkles with magnificent mansions and celestial places of worship but lacks standard public amenities.

Yes, I can equally afford quality medical care and quality education for my family members overseas, but it smacks stark ignorance to assume that such privilage would guarantee me peace of mind. That is, what happens if I or any close relation encounters serious medical emergency at any given hour of the day or night while in that small town that has no standard health facilities?

The answer to that question prompted my earlier piece: ‘Every Nigerian Blood Is On The Line.’ I was able to enumerate the fate of many prominent politicians who had lost their loved ones or encountered other serious health scares because of the unfortunate condition in their local environment. The list is long, including David Mark, Ike Ekweremadu, Nemadi Sambo, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Dame Patience Jonathan, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Lamidi Adedibu, Muhammadu Buhari, and Goodluck Jonathan, to name a few.

The exemplar with Jonathan, then a sitting president, best makes my case: His younger brother, Meni Jonathan, suddenly became ill on one fateful day at their hometown of Otuoke and needed urgent medical attention. But any notion of luck ought to have limitations. Hear Mr. Goodluck himself as he narrated the predicament in his own words: Meni “drove himself down to Yenagoa to board the chopper to Abuja. He got to Abuja that Saturday and was admitted in hospital. The following Monday, his breathing changed. I said, let us make arrangement to get him out—to let him get treatment outside. So, an arrangement was being made. Unfortunately, the following day he had cardiac arrest and inflamed heart at the State House Clinic.” Sadly, despite the expedient excellencies, a president’s brother, like an ordinary Nigerian, gave up the ghost in November 2012 at the capital city of Abuja.

The gist of this plea mirrors a famous quotation by an American president, John F. Kennedy: “If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.”

Aliko Dangote needs no introduction. Touted as the richest black man, he is also widely admired for a proclivity to showcase Nigeria at any given chance. It was not surprising therefore that instead of hosting a world class wedding for his beloved daughter in some of the choicest destinations in a foreign land, he brought it home along with a bevy of guests drawn from the who-is-who in both the political and the corporate worlds. It also presented an opportunity for the Nigerian rich and famous to ostend their wealth along with expensive goodies, including the latest samples of private jets and lush cars. Yet, this grandiose show of affluence is common in country that has been established as the poverty capital of the world.

Bill Gate, the famous American billionaire, who deploys billions of his personal wealth to fight poverty in Africa, also graced the wedding of Mr. Dangote’s daughter. Though Mr. Gate appeared to appreciate the African hospitality, which is second to none, he could not reconcile the degree of ostentatious wealth with the degree of poverty in the land. He showed his disgust by leaving the big men with following words: “Nigeria will thrive when every Nigerian is able to thrive. If you invest in their health, education, and opportunities- the human capital we are talking about today, then they will lay the foundation for sustained prosperity.”

Of course, Mr. Gate told the gospel truth. But, as the eminent political historian, Bala Yusuf Usman, once noted, many highly placed Nigerians are some of the most ignorant, because they like to forget that politics should be about the common good of the society. Instead, many Nigerian rich and famous people typically collude to loot the funds budgeted for public projects, thereby denying basic opportunities to the ordinary people. But the realities are setting in.

The long years of elite impunity have led to mass poverty and, consequently, a level of insecurity never imagined in the land. The naked truth is that the masses are angry and cannot take it anymore. Today, no Nigerian—whether rich or poor—is safe anymore. These days, the rich and famous can no longer enjoy their wealth in the Nigerian space, as they would please. Even convoys of contingent of army and the police, which usually trail the big men, no longer stoke fear, let alone deterrence.

Further, if things remain any close to the current situation, the children of the rich and famous—who are being groomed overseas—may never come back home to inherit their riches after all. If the mass exploitation continues, as Bill Gate had warned the big men, their beloved businesses will not sustain.

The most proverbial yet is another quote from the same President Kennedy. The American appeared to have a country like Nigeria in mind when he stated that “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.” The point is that, barring a radical change from the status quo, mass revolution is imminent in Nigeria. And, as recent events have shown, any “violent revolution” will not be a conflict between the tribes or between the Christians and Muslims, as some politicians would wish, the target are the ruling elite and their influential sympathizers.

The only solution is true change. The Nigerian presidential election of 2023 is a make-or-mar for that elusive change. Of the candidates seeking the presidency, only three have legitimate chances of victory, namely, Atiku Abubakar of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP), and Ahmed Tinubu of All Progressives Congress (APC). So, is it Atiku that represents the change? How, and how can? Is it then Tinubu, the National Leader of the ruling APC, who roundly endorses those actions of the current government, as well as its functionaries that have combined to ruin Nigeria?

With every sense of modesty, unless one is unpatriotic and blinded by a timid clad of ethnic, religious or party sentiments, the choice in 2023 is a no brainer: Mr. Peter Obi stands out as the candidate most likely to bring us any semblance of change at this time in history. Moreover, the former Anambra governor is the choice of the Nigerian restless youths and, of course, the sole answer with the potential to avert an adverse revolution.

The youths have made a good choice. Unlike the presidential candidates of PDP and APC, Peter Obi is not only physically and mentally sound, but he also has the right set of visions, character, competence, and the capacity to rescue Nigeria and reposition her to path of honor. In short, no sane Nigerian would wish another absentee president like Umar Yar’Adua and Muhammadu Buhari, which the candidacies of the ageless Atiku and the ailing Tinubu clearly represent.

These stark realities compelled me to dump the candidate of my party to endorse the candidate of the masses in Peter Obi. It is incumbent upon the Nigeria’s elite, as well as the Nigerians in the Diaspora, to join the Obidient movement. This movement is the nonviolent alternative. It is the long-awaited democratic revolution that can save both the many Nigerians who are poor and the few who are rich.

Dr. SKC Ogbonnia, an ex-APC presidential aspirant, writes from Houston, Texas

-----------------------
The first tribe to plot coop in Nigeria is Igbo (Aguiyi Ironsi). He also died like dog. Wake up Nigerians, Igbo's will destroy your lives. They will finish all of you. Norths, Igbo's will slit you like cows
Re: Why Nigeria’s Rich And Famous Should Support Peter Obi By SKC Ogbonnia by Nobody: 9:13am On Sep 09, 2022
basybasy:

The first tribe to plot coop in Nigeria is Igbo (Aguiyi Ironsi). He also died like dog. Wake up Nigerians, Igbo's will destroy your lives. They will finish all of you. Norths, Igbo's will slit you like cows

You kids of nowadays just refuse to study but instead just come online to spew ignorance. The 1st coup of 1966 wasnt led by Ironsi or even igbo. Rather the coup plot was a failed one and he being the top ranking military officer and helped subdue the plotters took charge. You just let the fulanis who have a hatred for igbos (for being the obstacle to their fulani conquest of Nigeria) just fill your brain with lies.

Setting the records Straight ... How Fulanis created the hatred for Igbos

- Olusegun Obasanjo

"Let the truth be told. The People involved in that so called 1966 “Igbo coup” were:

1. Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu (Midwest Region Igbo)

2. Major Adewale Ademoyega (Western Region – Yoruba), author of “Why we struck”

3. Capt. G. Adeleke (Western Region – Yoruba).

4. Maj. Ifeajuna (Midwestern Region – Igbo).

5. Lt. Fola Oyewole (Western Region – Yoruba), author of “The reluctant rebel”.

6. *Lt. Robert (Bob) Egbiko* (Midwestern Region – Ishan).

7. Lt. Tijani Katsina (Northern Region – Hausa/Fulani).

8. Lt. O. Olafemiyan (Western Region – Yoruba).

9. Capt. Gibson Jalo (Northern Region – Bachama).

10. Capt. Swanton (Northern Region – Middle Belt).

11. Lt. Hope Harris Eghagha (Midwest – Urhobo).

12. Lt. Dag Warribor (Midwest – Ijaw)

13. 2nd Lt. Saleh Dambo (Northern Nigeria -Hausa)

14. 2nd Lt. John Atom Kpera (Northern Nigeria-Tiv).

The reason for calling the 1966 Coup an Igbo exercise is because the government of Nigeria has refused teaching Nigerian History in our schools. And core North has been busy misinforming Nigerians that the 1966 coup was an Igbo coup.

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