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Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) - Politics (3) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) (37106 Views)

Revisiting Iyabo Obasanjo's Open Letter To Her Father (OBJ) In December 2013 / PDP Reacts To Obasanjo’s Open Letter, Warns Buhari / Why Service Chiefs Were At Buhari’s 2019 Next Level Campaign Launch – Presidency (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by Nasige(m): 10:06am On Jul 16, 2019
In as much i don't really like this man, i see plenty of sense in this particular letter, even the government and Buhari himself will attest to this that all is not well at all, and little or nothing is been done, the bitter truth from the letter is that if no proactive measures are taken what this all thing that look like play will generate to, some few of us will live to tell the story.
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by Angelfrost(m): 10:07am On Jul 16, 2019
A very brilliantly constructed piece... But, we all know how well this will be received: torn to shreds by bigoted and sycophantic imbeciles.

Honestly, the unity of this nation is the first, if not only, step towards liberation and development... As far as that unity is concerned, the ruling cabal is uninterested, hence the refusal/failure to even acknowledge or implement the resolutions of the confab.

Nigeria currently seems beyond redemption, tbh... The fragile unity of the nation prior to 2015 is almost nonexistent now... Disintegration is looking more and more likely, except the cabal in Abuja become smart enough to reach out to every region with an olive branch, with spaces created at the round table for everyone... Till then, the bleakness and darkness upon the future of this nation will continue to grow till it becomes irreversible like Syria and Libya.

Whoever wrote this letter for Obj should be given a raise, this is exceptional work... I hope whoever interprets it for Buhari will be as adept.
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by toprealman: 10:10am On Jul 16, 2019
alphaNomega:
You know when Amaechi (former Rivers state governor ) and Buhari threatened to make Nigeria ungovernable for GEJ, Amaechi even went as far as saying they will run a parallel government, Boko Haram was their end game.

Unfortunately for them, they won the elections and could no longer engage the armed militia they've prepped for destruction.

Now even low budget miscreants are cashing in on the chaos to make the country unsafe.
Low budget miscreant.....kai, you get mouth ooo
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by donpapa(m): 10:15am On Jul 16, 2019
In 2015 everyone pleaded with Obasanjo, they reminded him about Buhari.
Baba thought he was the headboy of Nigeria to make and unmake people. Now we are where were where
One way or the other, the incompetence of this government will hunt each and everyone of us.
DEVASTATED! sad cry angry
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by mkoabiola: 10:16am On Jul 16, 2019
But baba cannot sit and compose a long epistle of letter
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by nwakaibe(m): 10:20am On Jul 16, 2019
LLMG:
To what end is this, is it of any use to the situation at hand right now. sometimes one can't help but wonder the way some Nigerians reason. It's a pity.


The end is: You dont give what you dont have
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by alphaNomega: 10:26am On Jul 16, 2019
Omon605:





This is exactly fake news OBJ talked about in the letter. Is it Amaechi that form the BH? Was Amaechi even a governor when BH started?. If you don't no very well BH started in OBJ first tenure as president

Amaechi did not form BH and BH situation worsened while he was a governor. This does not mean he has anything to do with the sect but he categorically said HE WILL MAKE THE COUNTRY UNGOVERNABLE AND WILL CONSTITUTE A PARALLEL GOVERNMENT. Quote me anywhere bro
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by alphaNomega: 10:27am On Jul 16, 2019
toprealman:
Low budget miscreant.....kai, you get mouth ooo

Hehehe
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by alphaNomega: 10:29am On Jul 16, 2019
Angelfrost:
A very brilliantly constructed piece... But, we all know how well this will be received: torn to shreds by bigoted and sycophantic imbeciles.

Honestly, the unity of this nation is the first, if not only, step towards liberation and development... As far as that unity is concerned, the ruling cabal is uninterested, hence the refusal/failure to even acknowledge or implement the resolutions of the confab.

Nigeria currently seems beyond redemption, tbh... The fragile unity of the nation prior to 2015 is almost nonexistent now... Disintegration is looking more and more likely, except the cabal in Abuja become smart enough to reach out to every region with an olive branch, with spaces created at the round table for everyone... Till then, the bleakness and darkness upon the future of this nation will continue to grow till it becomes irreversible like Syria and Libya.

Whoever wrote this letter for Obj should be given a raise, this is exceptional work... I hope whoever interprets it for Buhari will be as adept.

He would have done worse if he was still president so let him STFU and enjoy his remaining days.

EDIT: I just read the bolded. . . lol. I knew it, these senile men lack the intellectual capacity for such an article.
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by snaketail22(m): 10:31am On Jul 16, 2019
The truth has been said, a word is enough for the wise
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by cuteluks(f): 10:34am On Jul 16, 2019
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by Hkatago: 10:38am On Jul 16, 2019
Obasanjo's long letters are becoming one too many abeg...His vexation over the pronouncement of June 12th by President Buhari may have again informed this lone new note. What did he do while as President...always pointing accusing fingers on everyone...Baba face your phD jare...
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by nnaeyes6: 10:41am On Jul 16, 2019
I now see why we are having this problem!

MIYETTI ALLAH called for the arrest of Obj because, just like their cow leader, the can't read correctly in assimilation nor spell the word PROGRESS.

Anyway I read thoroughly and what Obj said in summary is " Buhari please call the nation for dialogue and it shall be well"

But I say, "keep doing what u know how to do most, maybe the nation can go to war"
Death is a sweet thing to embrace and no single ethnic group has the monopoly cup to measure it.


Time shall come, when ur supposed blood suckers will find no peace in lifting arms again.

When the war comes, we have nothing to lose but our CHAINS.
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by AMUNSI23(f): 10:51am On Jul 16, 2019
Good write up sir.what we need now is disintegration sir not unity the scars of unity wound as one nigeria can not be healed.
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by capitalzero: 10:52am On Jul 16, 2019
Captaintimex:
Buhari government is calamitous. I have never known that fulani herdsmen assassins and kidnappers until one of their own became President of the Federal republic. They have grown in leap and bounds in their dastard acts of killing, raping, maiming since 2015.

I will always say it, Obasanjo and the PDP brought us to where we are today. If PDP had taken their golden chance as the captain of the Nigerian ship with utmost seriousness in addressing burning national issues, nobody will clamour for change in 2015. Eventually we entered one chance... kinda change.

However, let's pay attention to the message and forget about the messanger. Well articulated piece from OBJ, but I remembered Jonathan said living in Aso Villa is like living in a cage, I hope those managing the cage will let the Oga at the top hear what the pulse of the nation is. Obj just spoke the mind of majority of Nigerian...

Meanwhile.... make I continue my snooring until fake change turn to real change (Not when Atiku comes oh..)

pdp failure should not be an excuse of voting a notorious and nepotist leader in name of change
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by Poorboy: 11:05am On Jul 16, 2019
Impactfultemmy:
I want to introduce you to a business that can generate hundreds of thousand legitimately.Chat me up on 07065029380
have you gotten the hundreds of thousands yourself!
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by kernniejay(m): 11:07am On Jul 16, 2019
When is Baba Adeboye going to write his own letter to his son in Aso Rock?
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by MetaPhysical: 11:11am On Jul 16, 2019
God bless Obasanjo!
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by Ibile77(m): 11:11am On Jul 16, 2019
Baba had to rush this letter having heard that NIPOST will soon go on strike.
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by awakeuche(m): 11:16am On Jul 16, 2019
I used to have a love-hate relationship with this man, but I do respect him, he has evolved into a real elder statesman, its a shame he did it after eating his own share of the National cake.

1 Like

Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by Sermwell(m): 11:19am On Jul 16, 2019
Impactfultemmy:
I want to introduce you to a business that can generate hundreds of thousand legitimately.Chat me up on 07065029380
if this is true, you will not introduce us to the business! smh
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by Haynnie: 11:24am On Jul 16, 2019
seunlayi:
We are Nigerians ❤
-We call every toothpaste MACLEAN
We don't care�
-We call every noodle INDOMIE
We are like that�
-We call every insecticide FLEET
We can't help it�
-We call every detergent OMO
It's in our DNA �
-We point at an empty chair and ask “Who's sitting there ”
We are like that�
-We steal your belongings and help you look for them
We are just like that�
-When NEPA takes light, we go out and,check if it's the whole street
We are just like that�
-We use a bar of soap till it looks like a Sim card
We don't have a problem�
-We buy something,skip Instructions & ask neighbors how it's used
We don't care�
-We withdraw money from an ATM then count it before going
We are cautious�
-We lock the car then try to open it 2 times before going
We are strange like that�
-We turn off the volume just to smell what's burning
We are just like that��
How does this concern the above written? cool
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by optimismlaz(m): 11:26am On Jul 16, 2019
He who has ear should list to Obasanjo
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by CoolKlein(m): 11:29am On Jul 16, 2019
immhotep:

I am constrained to write to you this open letter. I decided to make it an open letter because the issue is very weighty and must be greatly worrisome to all concerned Nigerians and that means all right-thinking Nigerians and those resident in Nigeria. Since the issue is of momentous concern to all well-meaning and all right-thinking Nigerians, it must be of great concern to you, and collective thinking and dialoguing is the best way of finding an appropriate and adequate solution to the problem. The contents of this letter, therefore, should be available to all those who can help in proffering effective solutions for the problem of insecurity in the land.

One of the spinoffs and accelerants is the misinformation and disinformation through the use of fake news. A number of articles, in recent days, have been attributed to me by some people who I believe may be seeking added credence and an attentive audience for their opinions and viewpoints. As you know very well, I will always boldly own what I say and disown what is put into my mouth. But the issue I am addressing here is very serious; it is the issue of life and death for all of us and for our dear country, Nigeria. This issue can no longer be ignored, treated with nonchalance, swept under the carpet or treated with cuddling glove.



The issue is hitting at the foundation of our existence as Nigerians and fast eroding the root of our Nigerian community. I am very much worried and afraid that we are on the precipice and dangerously reaching a tipping point where it may no longer be possible to hold danger at bay. Without being immodest, as a Nigerian who still bears the scar of the Nigerian civil war on my body and with a son who bears the scar of fighting Boko Haram on his body, you can understand, I hope, why I am so concerned. When people are desperate and feel that they cannot have confidence in the ability of government to provide security for their lives and properties, they will take recourse to anything and everything that can guarantee their security individually and collectively.

For over ten years, for four of which you have been the captain of the ship, Boko Haram has menacingly ravaged the land and in spite of government’s claim of victory over Boko Haram, the potency and the activities of Boko Haram, where they are active, remain undiminished, putting lie to government’s claim. The recent explanation of the Chief of Army Staff for non-victory due to lack of commitment and lack of motivation on the part of troops bordering on sabotage speaks for itself. Say what you will, Boko Haram is still a daily issue of insecurity for those who are victimised, killed, maimed, kidnapped, raped, sold into slavery and forced into marriage and for children forcibly recruited into carrying bombs on them to detonate among crowds of people to cause maximum destructions and damage. And Boko Haram will not go away on the basis of sticks alone, carrots must overweigh sticks. How else do you deal with issues such as only about 50% literacy in North-East with over 70% unemployment?

Herdsmen/farmers crises and menace started with government treating the issue with cuddling glove instead of hammer. It has festered and spread. Today, it has developed into banditry, kidnapping, armed robbery and killings all over the country. The unfortunate situation is that the criminality is being perceived as a ‘Fulani’ menace unleashed by Fulani elite in the different parts of the country for a number of reasons but even more, unfortunately, many Nigerians and non-Nigerians who are friends of Nigeria attach vicarious responsibility to you as a Fulani elite and the current captain of the Nigeria ship. Perception may be as potent as reality at times. Whatever may be the grievances of Fulanis, if any, they need to be put out in the open and their grievances, if legitimate, be addressed; and if other ethnic groups have grievances, let them also be brought out in the open and addressed through debate and dialogue.

The main issue, if I may dare say, is poor management or mismanagement of diversity which, on the other hand, is one of our greatest and most important assets. As a result, very onerous cloud is gathering. And rain of destruction, violence, disaster and disunity can only be the outcome. Nothing should be taken for granted, the clock is ticking with the cacophony of dissatisfaction and disaffection everywhere in and outside the country. The Presidency and the Congress in the US have signalled to us to put our house in order. The House of Lords in the UK had debated the Nigerian security situation. We must understand and appreciate the significance, implication and likely consequences of such concerns and deliberations.

No one can stop hate speech, violent agitation and smouldering violent agitation if he fans the embers of hatred, disaffection and violence. It will continue to snowball until it is out of control. A stitch in time saves nine, goes the old wise saying.

With the death of Funke, Chief Fasoranti’s daughter, some sympathetic Nigerian groups are saying “enough is enough”. Prof. Anya, a distinguished Nigerian merit Laureate, has this to say “We can no longer say with certainty that we have a nation”. Niger-Delta leaders, South-Eastern leaders, Middle-Belt leaders and Northern Elders Forum have not remained quiet. Different ordinary Nigerians at home and abroad are calling for different measures to address or ameliorate the situation. All the calls and cries can only continue to be ignored at the expense of Nigerian unity, if not its continued existence.

To be explicit and without equivocation, Mr. President and General, I am deeply worried about four avoidable calamities:

1. abandoning Nigeria into the hands of criminals who are all being suspected, rightly or wrongly, as Fulanis and terrorists of Boko Haram type;

2. spontaneous or planned reprisal attacks against Fulanis which may inadvertently or advertently mushroom into pogrom or Rwanda-type genocide that we did not believe could happen and yet it happened.

3. similar attacks against any other tribe or ethnic group anywhere in the country initiated by rumours, fears, intimidation and revenge capable of leading to pogrom;

4. violent uprising beginning from one section of the country and spreading quickly to other areas and leading to dismemberment of the country.

It happened to Yugoslavia not too long ago. If we do not act now, one or all of these scenarios may happen. We must pray and take effective actions at the same time. The initiative is in the hands of the President of the nation, but he cannot do it alone. In my part of the world, if you are sharpening your cutlass and a mad man comes from behind to take the cutlass from you, you need other people’s assistance to have your cutlass back without being harmed. The mad men with serious criminal intent and terrorism as core value have taken cutlass of security. The need for assistance to regain control is obviously compelling and must be embraced now.

A couple of weeks ago at a public lecture, I had said, among other things, that:

“In all these issues of mobilisation for national unity, stability, security, cooperation, development, growth and progress, there is no consensus. Like in the issue of security, government should open up discussion, debate and dialogue as part of consultation at different levels and the outcome of such deliberations should be collated to form inputs into a national conference to come up with the solution that will effectively deal with the issues and lead to rapid development, growth and progress which will give us a wholesome society and enhanced living standard and livelihood in an inclusive and shared society. It will be a national programme. We need unity of purpose and nationally accepted strategic roadmap that will not change with whims and caprices of any government. It must be owned by the citizens, people’s policy and strategy implemented by the government no matter its colour and leaning.

Some of the groups that I will suggest to be contacted are: traditional rulers, past heads of service (no matter how competent or incompetent they have been and how much they have contributed to the mess we are in), past heads of para-military organisations, private sector, civil society, community leaders particularly in the most affected areas, present and past governors, present and past local government leaders, religious leaders, past Heads of State, past intelligence chiefs, past Heads of Civil Service and relevant current and retired diplomats, members of opposition and any groups that may be deemed relevant.”

The President must be seen to be addressing this issue with utmost seriousness and with maximum dispatch and getting all hands on deck to help. If there is failure, the principal responsibility will be that of the President and no one else. We need cohesion and concentration of effort and maximum force – political, economic, social, psychological and military – to deal successfully with the menace of criminality and terrorism separately and together. Blame game among own forces must be avoided. It is debilitating and only helpful to our adversary. We cannot dither anymore. It is time to confront this threat headlong and in a manner that is holistic, inclusive and purposeful.

For the sake of Nigeria and Nigerians, I pray that God may grant you, as our President, the wisdom, the understanding, the political will and the courage to do what is right when it is right and without fear or favour. May God save, secure, protect and bless Nigeria. May He open to us a window of opportunity that we can still use to prevent the worst happening. As we say in my village, “May God forbid bad thing”.

OLUSEGUN OBASANJO
July 15, 2019

Released by
Kehinde Akinyemi
Special Assistant Media.

Source: https://punchng.com/full-text-of-obasanjos-open-letter-to-
As we say in village, God forbid bad thing
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by femicyrus(m): 11:35am On Jul 16, 2019
any letter without the benefit of RUGA settlement is a waste of time to this president
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by german01(m): 11:41am On Jul 16, 2019
I
immhotep:

I am constrained to write to you this open letter. I decided to make it an open letter because the issue is very weighty and must be greatly worrisome to all concerned Nigerians and that means all right-thinking Nigerians and those resident in Nigeria. Since the issue is of momentous concern to all well-meaning and all right-thinking Nigerians, it must be of great concern to you, and collective thinking and dialoguing is the best way of finding an appropriate and adequate solution to the problem. The contents of this letter, therefore, should be available to all






those who can help in proffering effective solutions for the problem of insecurity in the land.

One of the spinoffs and accelerants is the misinformation and disinformation through the use of fake news. A number of articles, in recent days, have been attributed to me by some people who I believe may be seeking added credence and an attentive audience for their opinions and viewpoints. As you know very well, I will always boldly own what I say and disown what is put into my mouth. But the issue I am addressing here is very serious; it is the issue of life and death for all of us and for our dear country, Nigeria. This issue can no longer be ignored, treated with nonchalance, swept under the carpet or treated with cuddling glove.



The issue is hitting at the foundation of our existence as Nigerians and fast eroding the root of our Nigerian community. I am very much worried and afraid that we are on the precipice and dangerously reaching a tipping point where it may no longer be possible to hold danger at bay. Without being immodest, as a Nigerian who still bears the scar of the Nigerian civil war on my body and with a son who bears the scar of fighting Boko Haram on his body, you can understand, I hope, why I am so concerned. When people are desperate and feel that they cannot have confidence in the ability of government to provide security for their lives and properties, they will take recourse to anything and everything that can guarantee their security individually and collectively.

For over ten years, for four of which you have been the captain of the ship, Boko Haram has menacingly ravaged the land and in spite of government’s claim of victory over Boko Haram, the potency and the activities of Boko Haram, where they are active, remain undiminished, putting lie to government’s claim. The recent explanation of the Chief of Army Staff for non-victory due to lack of commitment and lack of motivation on the part of troops bordering on sabotage speaks for itself. Say what you will, Boko Haram is still a daily issue of insecurity for those who are victimised, killed, maimed, kidnapped, raped, sold into slavery and forced into marriage and for children forcibly recruited into carrying bombs on them to detonate among crowds of people to cause maximum destructions and damage. And Boko Haram will not go away on the basis of sticks alone, carrots must overweigh sticks. How else do you deal with issues such as only about 50% literacy in North-East with over 70% unemployment?

Herdsmen/farmers crises and menace started with government treating the issue with cuddling glove instead of hammer. It has festered and spread. Today, it has developed into banditry, kidnapping, armed robbery and killings all over the country. The unfortunate situation is that the criminality is being perceived as a ‘Fulani’ menace unleashed by Fulani elite in the different parts of the country for a number of reasons but even more, unfortunately, many Nigerians and non-Nigerians who are friends of Nigeria attach vicarious responsibility to you as a Fulani elite and the current captain of the Nigeria ship. Perception may be as potent as reality at times. Whatever may be the grievances of Fulanis, if any, they need to be put out in the open and their grievances, if legitimate, be addressed; and if other ethnic groups have grievances, let them also be brought out in the open and addressed through debate and dialogue.

The main issue, if I may dare say, is poor management or mismanagement of diversity which, on the other hand, is one of our greatest and most important assets. As a result, very onerous cloud is gathering. And rain of destruction, violence, disaster and disunity can only be the outcome. Nothing should be taken for granted, the clock is ticking with the cacophony of dissatisfaction and disaffection everywhere in and outside the country. The Presidency and the Congress in the US have signalled to us to put our house in order. The House of Lords in the UK had debated the Nigerian security situation. We must understand and appreciate the significance, implication and likely consequences of such concerns and deliberations.

No one can stop hate speech, violent agitation and smouldering violent agitation if he fans the embers of hatred, disaffection and violence. It will continue to snowball until it is out of control. A stitch in time saves nine, goes the old wise saying.

With the death of Funke, Chief Fasoranti’s daughter, some sympathetic Nigerian groups are saying “enough is enough”. Prof. Anya, a distinguished Nigerian merit Laureate, has this to say “We can no longer say with certainty that we have a nation”. Niger-Delta leaders, South-Eastern leaders, Middle-Belt leaders and Northern Elders Forum have not remained quiet. Different ordinary Nigerians at home and abroad are calling for different measures to address or ameliorate the situation. All the calls and cries can only continue to be ignored at the expense of Nigerian unity, if not its continued existence.

To be explicit and without equivocation, Mr. President and General, I am deeply worried about four avoidable calamities:

1. abandoning Nigeria into the hands of criminals who are all being suspected, rightly or wrongly, as Fulanis and terrorists of Boko Haram type;

2. spontaneous or planned reprisal attacks against Fulanis which may inadvertently or advertently mushroom into pogrom or Rwanda-type genocide that we did not believe could happen and yet it happened.

3. similar attacks against any other tribe or ethnic group anywhere in the country initiated by rumours, fears, intimidation and revenge capable of leading to pogrom;

4. violent uprising beginning from one section of the country and spreading quickly to other areas and leading to dismemberment of the country.

It happened to Yugoslavia not too long ago. If we do not act now, one or all of these scenarios may happen. We must pray and take effective actions at the same time. The initiative is in the hands of the President of the nation, but he cannot do it alone. In my part of the world, if you are sharpening your cutlass and a mad man comes from behind to take the cutlass from you, you need other people’s assistance to have your cutlass back without being harmed. The mad men with serious criminal intent and terrorism as core value have taken cutlass of security. The need for assistance to regain control is obviously compelling and must be embraced now.

A couple of weeks ago at a public lecture, I had said, among other things, that:

“In all these issues of mobilisation for national unity, stability, security, cooperation, development, growth and progress, there is no consensus. Like in the issue of security, government should open up discussion, debate and dialogue as part of consultation at different levels and the outcome of such deliberations should be collated to form inputs into a national conference to come up with the solution that will effectively deal with the issues and lead to rapid development, growth and progress which will give us a wholesome society and enhanced living standard and livelihood in an inclusive and shared society. It will be a national programme. We need unity of purpose and nationally accepted strategic roadmap that will not change with whims and caprices of any government. It must be owned by the citizens, people’s policy and strategy implemented by the government no matter its colour and leaning.

Some of the groups that I will suggest to be contacted are: traditional rulers, past heads of service (no matter how competent or incompetent they have been and how much they have contributed to the mess we are in), past heads of para-military organisations, private sector, civil society, community leaders particularly in the most affected areas, present and past governors, present and past local government leaders, religious leaders, past Heads of State, past intelligence chiefs, past Heads of Civil Service and relevant current and retired diplomats, members of opposition and any groups that may be deemed relevant.”

The President must be seen to be addressing this issue with utmost seriousness and with maximum dispatch and getting all hands on deck to help. If there is failure, the principal responsibility will be that of the President and no one else. We need cohesion and concentration of effort and maximum force – political, economic, social, psychological and military – to deal successfully with the menace of criminality and terrorism separately and together. Blame game among own forces must be avoided. It is debilitating and only helpful to our adversary. We cannot dither anymore. It is time to confront this threat headlong and in a manner that is holistic, inclusive and purposeful.

For the sake of Nigeria and Nigerians, I pray that God may grant you, as our President, the wisdom, the understanding, the political will and the courage to do what is right when it is right and without fear or favour. May God save, secure, protect and bless Nigeria. May He open to us a window of opportunity that we can still use to prevent the worst happening. As we say in my village, “May God forbid bad thing”.

OLUSEGUN OBASANJO
July 15, 2019

Released by
Kehinde Akinyemi
Special Assistant Media.

Source: https://punchng.com/full-text-of-obasanjos-open-letter-to-buhari/


I was reading this message, then I has to stop. I just remembered that "itx a man who they gave 16 billion dollars to stabilize Nigerian electricity supply and Itx fell into a stony ground sad
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by Haddeyholler(m): 12:19pm On Jul 16, 2019
Obasanjo is a nationalist, and the letter is quite reasonable.

1 Like

Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by gebest: 12:24pm On Jul 16, 2019
Buhari hope u hear

Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by akintunde63: 12:40pm On Jul 16, 2019
immhotep:

I am constrained to write to you this open letter. I decided to make it an open letter because the issue is very weighty and must be greatly worrisome to all concerned Nigerians and that means all right-thinking Nigerians and those resident in Nigeria. Since the issue is of momentous concern to all well-meaning and all right-thinking Nigerians, it must be of great concern to you, and collective thinking and dialoguing is the best way of finding an appropriate and adequate solution to the problem. The contents of this letter, therefore, should be available to all those who can help in proffering effective solutions for the problem of insecurity in the land.

One of the spinoffs and accelerants is the misinformation and disinformation through the use of fake news. A number of articles, in recent days, have been attributed to me by some people who I believe may be seeking added credence and an attentive audience for their opinions and viewpoints. As you know very well, I will always boldly own what I say and disown what is put into my mouth. But the issue I am addressing here is very serious; it is the issue of life and death for all of us and for our dear country, Nigeria. This issue can no longer be ignored, treated with nonchalance, swept under the carpet or treated with cuddling glove.



The issue is hitting at the foundation of our existence as Nigerians and fast eroding the root of our Nigerian community. I am very much worried and afraid that we are on the precipice and dangerously reaching a tipping point where it may no longer be possible to hold danger at bay. Without being immodest, as a Nigerian who still bears the scar of the Nigerian civil war on my body and with a son who bears the scar of fighting Boko Haram on his body, you can understand, I hope, why I am so concerned. When people are desperate and feel that they cannot have confidence in the ability of government to provide security for their lives and properties, they will take recourse to anything and everything that can guarantee their security individually and collectively.

For over ten years, for four of which you have been the captain of the ship, Boko Haram has menacingly ravaged the land and in spite of government’s claim of victory over Boko Haram, the potency and the activities of Boko Haram, where they are active, remain undiminished, putting lie to government’s claim. The recent explanation of the Chief of Army Staff for non-victory due to lack of commitment and lack of motivation on the part of troops bordering on sabotage speaks for itself. Say what you will, Boko Haram is still a daily issue of insecurity for those who are victimised, killed, maimed, kidnapped, raped, sold into slavery and forced into marriage and for children forcibly recruited into carrying bombs on them to detonate among crowds of people to cause maximum destructions and damage. And Boko Haram will not go away on the basis of sticks alone, carrots must overweigh sticks. How else do you deal with issues such as only about 50% literacy in North-East with over 70% unemployment?

Herdsmen/farmers crises and menace started with government treating the issue with cuddling glove instead of hammer. It has festered and spread. Today, it has developed into banditry, kidnapping, armed robbery and killings all over the country. The unfortunate situation is that the criminality is being perceived as a ‘Fulani’ menace unleashed by Fulani elite in the different parts of the country for a number of reasons but even more, unfortunately, many Nigerians and non-Nigerians who are friends of Nigeria attach vicarious responsibility to you as a Fulani elite and the current captain of the Nigeria ship. Perception may be as potent as reality at times. Whatever may be the grievances of Fulanis, if any, they need to be put out in the open and their grievances, if legitimate, be addressed; and if other ethnic groups have grievances, let them also be brought out in the open and addressed through debate and dialogue.

The main issue, if I may dare say, is poor management or mismanagement of diversity which, on the other hand, is one of our greatest and most important assets. As a result, very onerous cloud is gathering. And rain of destruction, violence, disaster and disunity can only be the outcome. Nothing should be taken for granted, the clock is ticking with the cacophony of dissatisfaction and disaffection everywhere in and outside the country. The Presidency and the Congress in the US have signalled to us to put our house in order. The House of Lords in the UK had debated the Nigerian security situation. We must understand and appreciate the significance, implication and likely consequences of such concerns and deliberations.

No one can stop hate speech, violent agitation and smouldering violent agitation if he fans the embers of hatred, disaffection and violence. It will continue to snowball until it is out of control. A stitch in time saves nine, goes the old wise saying.

With the death of Funke, Chief Fasoranti’s daughter, some sympathetic Nigerian groups are saying “enough is enough”. Prof. Anya, a distinguished Nigerian merit Laureate, has this to say “We can no longer say with certainty that we have a nation”. Niger-Delta leaders, South-Eastern leaders, Middle-Belt leaders and Northern Elders Forum have not remained quiet. Different ordinary Nigerians at home and abroad are calling for different measures to address or ameliorate the situation. All the calls and cries can only continue to be ignored at the expense of Nigerian unity, if not its continued existence.

To be explicit and without equivocation, Mr. President and General, I am deeply worried about four avoidable calamities:

1. abandoning Nigeria into the hands of criminals who are all being suspected, rightly or wrongly, as Fulanis and terrorists of Boko Haram type;

2. spontaneous or planned reprisal attacks against Fulanis which may inadvertently or advertently mushroom into pogrom or Rwanda-type genocide that we did not believe could happen and yet it happened.

3. similar attacks against any other tribe or ethnic group anywhere in the country initiated by rumours, fears, intimidation and revenge capable of leading to pogrom;

4. violent uprising beginning from one section of the country and spreading quickly to other areas and leading to dismemberment of the country.

It happened to Yugoslavia not too long ago. If we do not act now, one or all of these scenarios may happen. We must pray and take effective actions at the same time. The initiative is in the hands of the President of the nation, but he cannot do it alone. In my part of the world, if you are sharpening your cutlass and a mad man comes from behind to take the cutlass from you, you need other people’s assistance to have your cutlass back without being harmed. The mad men with serious criminal intent and terrorism as core value have taken cutlass of security. The need for assistance to regain control is obviously compelling and must be embraced now.

A couple of weeks ago at a public lecture, I had said, among other things, that:

“In all these issues of mobilisation for national unity, stability, security, cooperation, development, growth and progress, there is no consensus. Like in the issue of security, government should open up discussion, debate and dialogue as part of consultation at different levels and the outcome of such deliberations should be collated to form inputs into a national conference to come up with the solution that will effectively deal with the issues and lead to rapid development, growth and progress which will give us a wholesome society and enhanced living standard and livelihood in an inclusive and shared society. It will be a national programme. We need unity of purpose and nationally accepted strategic roadmap that will not change with whims and caprices of any government. It must be owned by the citizens, people’s policy and strategy implemented by the government no matter its colour and leaning.

Some of the groups that I will suggest to be contacted are: traditional rulers, past heads of service (no matter how competent or incompetent they have been and how much they have contributed to the mess we are in), past heads of para-military organisations, private sector, civil society, community leaders particularly in the most affected areas, present and past governors, present and past local government leaders, religious leaders, past Heads of State, past intelligence chiefs, past Heads of Civil Service and relevant current and retired diplomats, members of opposition and any groups that may be deemed relevant.”

The President must be seen to be addressing this issue with utmost seriousness and with maximum dispatch and getting all hands on deck to help. If there is failure, the principal responsibility will be that of the President and no one else. We need cohesion and concentration of effort and maximum force – political, economic, social, psychological and military – to deal successfully with the menace of criminality and terrorism separately and together. Blame game among own forces must be avoided. It is debilitating and only helpful to our adversary. We cannot dither anymore. It is time to confront this threat headlong and in a manner that is holistic, inclusive and purposeful.

For the sake of Nigeria and Nigerians, I pray that God may grant you, as our President, the wisdom, the understanding, the political will and the courage to do what is right when it is right and without fear or favour. May God save, secure, protect and bless Nigeria. May He open to us a window of opportunity that we can still use to prevent the worst happening. As we say in my village, “May God forbid bad thing”.

OLUSEGUN OBASANJO
July 15, 2019

Released by
Kehinde Akinyemi
Special Assistant Media.

Source: https://punchng.com/full-text-of-obasanjos-open-letter-to-buhari/



Well, I must say I'm forced to admit that this time around, Baba's letter does not portray the anguish of an old, frustrated man, seeking relevance by al means. His tone here is quite reasonable, objective and mature, and solution-proffering.
However, I do think the inclusion of "Some of the groups that I will suggest to be contacted are: traditional rulers, past heads of service (no matter how competent or incompetent they have been and how much they have contributed to the mess we are in), past heads of para-military organisations, private sector, civil society, community leaders particularly in the most affected areas, present and past governors, present and past local government leaders, religious leaders, past Heads of State, past intelligence chiefs, past Heads of Civil Service and relevant current and retired diplomats, members of opposition and any groups that may be deemed relevant.” will amount to nothing but a waste of money and recycling of the same old thieves we all want out of the system. It's seems to be a way of forcing PMB to the negotiating table with the same set of people WHO MIGHT be the ones sponsoring the "killer herdsmen" , in order to make PMB to dance to their tune. It will just be a fiat accompli

1 Like

Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by Pavarottii(m): 12:46pm On Jul 16, 2019
Never been this impressed ... Well articulated ... That's good...
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by OlaDavid2012: 12:58pm On Jul 16, 2019
Longlive OBJ
Re: Obasanjo's Open Letter To Buhari, 2019 (Full Text) by mindtricks: 1:05pm On Jul 16, 2019
Obj remains one of the many failed ex-presidents Nigeria has ever had. Yet he summons the courage to speak truths sometimes when it matters most.
Such warnings from a highly placed person like him should not be taken lightly. There is nothing to gain in treating such serious national issues as security with levity.

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