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Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) - Politics (4) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsSad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) (41083 Views)

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Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by shdemidemi(m): 10:32am On Feb 11, 2015
anukulapo:
Amen,may God bless you too.
Bro, noticed you sent me a mail. I cld not read it because I no longer have access to that address. Hope all is well?
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by hedonistic: 10:32am On Feb 11, 2015
Euckybaby:
Please can somebody summarise what is up therehuh ?thanks
Go and watch Africa Magic or ping on BBM with your fellow bimbos if you are too intellectually lazy to read and understand this write-up. It is not compulsory to dabble into serious issues that you lack the capacity to comprehend.
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by ShaheedBinAliyu(m): 10:35am On Feb 11, 2015
lyntiffany:
Guy you bad oo! grin grin grin
am only desperate to see better 9ja. obj is the cause of every wahala in 9ja
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by hedonistic: 10:46am On Feb 11, 2015
This is one of the most objective and unbiased commentaries I have read in recent times on Nigeria's political situation. The fact remains that characters like Obasanjo and Tinubu cannot be held up as exemplars of integrity and conscientious leadership. They are rogues who are more corrupt and inept than Jonathan can ever be. Their views cannot be accorded any importance because they are mostly driven by personal interests and grievances, rather than by nationalistic motivations.

Then again, I am forced to agree that the likes of Tinubu are necessary evils because they represent a strong (albeit corrupt and discreditable) opposition that is healthy for our democracy.
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by Gbemini(m): 10:52am On Feb 11, 2015
koikoi2:
OBJ will soon die I prophecy.

GEJ til 2019
Your father will first die follow by You.
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by Nobody: 11:01am On Feb 11, 2015
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Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by minx80: 11:18am On Feb 11, 2015
Nice write up. That's why I laugh when Nigerians abuse each other on social media because of politicians. Politics is a game. The earlier people realise this d better. Don't allow yourself to be used by politicians by creating enmity between one another.

Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by millhouse: 11:21am On Feb 11, 2015
really sad
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by babaireti(m): 11:27am On Feb 11, 2015
viccipedia:
WHO KILLED FUNSO WILLIAMShuhhuhhuh
You! You killed the old Man,is dat all you want to hearrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr,eewu
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by MAYOWAAK: 11:49am On Feb 11, 2015
For the life of me, I will never understand how former President Olusegun Obasanjo does it. When you think he is done, he has just begun. I have watched in utter amusement how he has, yet again, wangled his way into the front page of newspapers on a daily basis. I don’t know of any other former head of state elsewhere who has turned himself into the subject and object of national attention long after he has left power. Obasanjo is always there, always scheming, always screaming. It is his luck, I must say, but, as a mere mortal, I often wonder why some guys have all the luck.

Obasanjo, amazingly, has become a god or a saint to many Nigerians. Many politicians, commentators, journalists, activists and youths who used to criticise him are now celebrating him as our moral compass. The people he has brutalised before — such as Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and Rt. Hon. Rotimi Amaechi — go to Abeokuta to genuflect to him. Even Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, of all people, goes to Obasanjo's house to pay homage. And President Goodluck Jonathan goes to Abeokuta to kowtow to him, with two respected pastors in tow.

How does Obasanjo do it? Can anyone help me out? He has a word on every issue. He expresses his opinion so forcefully, so eloquently and so mischievously that you just cannot ignore him. He loves to criticise what he is patently guilty of. He loves to vilify anyone who does not worship at his temple. There is no accusation Obasanjo throws at anyone that he himself is not double guilty of. He has launched ferocious media attacks against most of his successors — President Shehu Shagari, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua and Jonathan. Only Gen. Sani Abacha pre-empted him by throwing him into jail before he could open his mouth.

Obasanjo complains about corruption and Nigerians hail him. What's his moral high ground? Can someone tell me? Has anybody never heard about the Halliburton and Siemens scandals? The damning reports are there in the attorney-general's office. Does the name Dr. Julius Makanjuola ring a bell? Under Obasanjo, he was the permanent secretary of the ministry of defence implicated in a N421 million scandal. Mysteriously, the case was abruptly closed with Nolle Prosequi (no further prosecution) — the first in Nigeria's history.

Well, Obasanjo went on to set up the anti-graft agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), headed by Malam Nuhu Ribadu, which — in fairness — did kick the backsides of many politicians. But EFCC could not tackle Obasanjo's own corruption: from the obscene fundraiser for his private library to his shareholding in Transcorp — a company that was getting juicy stuff from a government superintended by Obasanjo. Have we all forgotten the scandalous waivers granted to all kinds of human beings, officially defrauding our treasury billions of dollars?

Does anybody remember that Obasanjo was in power for eight years and we kept importing fuel, with PDP financiers getting the contracts through local and foreign fronts? Forgotten so easily? Does anybody remember how much we spent on repairing refineries that kept "knocking" for the eight years that Obasanjo was in power? Does anybody still remember Obasanjo saying on national TV that he did not know the price of kerosene and it was "unacceptable" that it was more expensive than petrol? How does Obasanjo get away with hoodwinking Nigerians?

Do we still remember that Obasanjo did not resolve the electricity problem for eight years? Do we still remember the "$16 billion spent on power without results" for which Obasanjo arrogantly refused to appear before the House probe panel? Is it that we have forgotten that the damning report was killed? Do we still remember that Obasanjo did not add one coach to the railways throughout his tenure despite spending billions of dollars? Does anybody still remember how many federal highways were in terrible state for the eight years that Obasanjo spent in power? Have we forgotten the Benin-Shagamu road saga? Just like that?

When Obasanjo discusses insecurity, I cringe. From every available evidence, Boko Haram started right under his nose. If he had aborted the foetus, maybe we wouldn't be engaged in fire-fighting today. I have heard many Nigerians say, perhaps innocently, that if Obasanjo had been in power he would have crushed Boko Haram by now. Really? How well did he crush the less complex militancy in the Niger Delta? Was it not under Obasanjo that the militancy started in 2004 and flourished?

To the best of my knowledge, militants were bombing oil installations and kidnapping oil workers with ease under Obasanjo. At a stage, daily crude oil production fell to about 900,000 barrels — from the height of 2.5m. In fact, we were later told that why Obasanjo picked Jonathan as the running mate to Yar'Adua was to appease the Niger Delta. Of course, nobody was appeased. The attacks continued until Yar'Adau offered an amnesty deal. How these facts conveniently escape us is beyond my understanding.

Insecurity? Abacha's regime aside, more Nigerians were assassinated under Obasanjo's watch than at any time in our history. The abridged roll-call: Chief Bola Ige, a serving minister; Chief Marshall Harry, co-ordinator of the Buhari presidential campaign in 2003; Chief AK Dikibo, PDP chieftain and ally of former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar; Chief Uche Ogbonnaya (OGB), an ANPP senatorial candidate in Imo State in 2003; and Mr. Barnabas Igwe and his wife, Amaka, in Onitsha. The assassins were never unmasked. What is insecurity?

How did Obasanjo become our moral compass? How did he become such a highly sought-after role model? Has anybody ever managed to read the affidavit Obasanjo's own son, Gbenga, filed while seeking a divorce from his wife on the ground of incest and adultery? It doesn't matter? Has anybody ever taken time to read the letter Iyabo wrote to her father, giving graphic details of his megalomania and duplicity? It doesn't matter? Has anybody ever done a recap of the blatant rigging of elections under the "saint"? It doesn't matter?

Obasanjo pontificates on impunity and we hail him. What happened to us? Dr. Chris Ngige, as governor of Anambra State, was abducted by Obasanjo's associates. Have we forgotten the illegal impeachment of Alhaji Rashidi Ladoja as governor of Oyo State? What about the impeachment of Chief Joshua Dariye as governor of Plateau by eight out of 24 lawmakers? For three years, Obasanjo unconstitutionally withheld Lagos council allocations because of political differences. It took Yar'Adua only a few days in power to undo the impunity.

They say, "Oh, Obasanjo is a patriot. He has the best interest of Nigeria at heart." Really? Can Obasanjo look up to heavens and say, solemnly, that he had the best interest of Nigeria at heart when he was picking his successor? Such a character cannot be my own moral compass. With a moral compass like Obasanjo, though, Nigeria is doomed and damned.

BY:SIMON KOLAWOLE
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by anukulapo: 11:57am On Feb 11, 2015
shdemidemi:
Bro, noticed you sent me a mail. I cld not read it because I no longer have access to that address. Hope all is well?
Yea bro,all is well. I wanted you to help with something. Send me an email. Use my NL handle @gmail.com.
Thanks.
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by Euckybaby(f): 12:08pm On Feb 11, 2015
hedonistic:
Go and watch Africa Magic or ping on BBM with your fellow bimbos if you are too intellectually lazy to read and understand this write-up. It is not compulsory to dabble into serious issues that you lack the capacity to comprehend.
hmmmmmm... see me see wahala o
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by honprof1(m): 12:25pm On Feb 11, 2015
Considering the favoured and unfavoured Nigerians of this administration and pls don't be bias , Do u see GEJ winning ?

Ola17:
Nigeria sha!
It baffles me in no small terms seeing men of yesteryears who's actions and inactions put Nigeria in this sorry state, join the bandwagon of those vilifying the current government.

The caliber of people against GEJ's administration actually made me to opt for a reappraisal of the reputation the opposition are trying so hard to sell to Nigerians and all I can say is, it's a SCAM!

It's quite saddening seeing people jubilate when men like OBJ badmouths the government, forgetting that it was these same people's cluelessness railroaded us into this sorry state. What changed? Nothing! It is still the same people. GEJ must have done something right to piss these sharks off so much.

I think it's safer to say #GEJ till 2019!

Let us open our eyes and stop looking at everything through the prism of inordinate sentiments.
Nothing is as it seems.
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by honprof1(m): 12:51pm On Feb 11, 2015
I noticed those who profesize Obj 's death dies b4 him . Take note !

[quote author=Genes1s post=30621351][/quote]
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by Nobody: 12:53pm On Feb 11, 2015
The entire contents of this thread only exposes the fickle and feeble minds that many Nigerian have.

SMH! We are in serious trouble in this country. You know its so odd. A fire is burning down a house. Instead of focusing on putting out the fire, we turn our backs on the fire and face the opposite side nagging as to why a tap was not constructed opposite the house as if the tap would have even sufficed to put out the fire. Meanwhile the fire is still raging.

That is exactly what I see on this thread.
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by mickeymimi: 1:02pm On Feb 11, 2015
So why has he been sending people to beg OBJ
Was Obj a liar in 2011 when he was in GEJ camp? What elder sees while sitting, a child would not see even if he sits on mountain Kilimanjaro
You fail to realise that GEJ is President today ONLY because he was from the minority in 2009 and 2011.

The man who helped him get to the pedestal where we all could help him in his minority to become the President of this nation is Obasanjo, who has today become a villain to Jonathan and his presidency.

You forget (or fail to realise) that Obasanjo will never put the interest of his Yoruba (or any other) people above whatever he perceives as the interest of Nigeria. Jonathan was made Vice President in 2007 and President in 2009 and 2011 only because we all saw it as being in the interest of Nigeria and in defence of the Constitution.

It is a very sad commentary on our collective integrity and intellectualism, where a man will seek to win an election at all cost by shifting the goal-posts because the presidential power is in his hands and some people will urge him on in the name of tribal and religious sentiments.

We are digging the grave of Nigeria by subscribing to tribal sentiments. We did so in 2009 and 2011, and we have seen the result. Many of us do not want a repeat or perpetuation of those results, which is why today we no longer support Jonathan.
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by Blackfire(m): 1:26pm On Feb 11, 2015
reaky:
And I should read all that?
Abeg make person summarise
WATCHING the watcher that is watching the watch
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by reaky(m): 2:01pm On Feb 11, 2015
Blackfire:
WATCHING the watcher that is watching the watch
Airforce1
album lunch
Abeg c some lines here o grin
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by Nobody: 4:25pm On Feb 11, 2015
kay1one2:
Gej till a better alternative!
u said it all
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by Ola17: 5:20pm On Feb 11, 2015
honprof1:
Considering the favoured and unfavoured Nigerians of this administration and pls don't be bias , Do u see GEJ winning ?
Only God knows who is going to win the election.
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by Odibajay(m): 5:31pm On Feb 11, 2015
Most Nigerian Politcal leaders throwing stones are leaving in glass houses
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by holyboss: 8:09pm On Feb 11, 2015
tdayof:
me dey vex gidi gan oo....my time spent online has changed from 29days to 5hours and seun isn't doing anything about it
eeeya kpele tongue boh if u dey vex ontop ds, I wonder what u will do if ur "likes" miraculously get reduced to 1 tongue tongue tongue tongue
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by tdayof(m): 8:19pm On Feb 11, 2015
holyboss:
eeeya kpele tongue boh if u dey vex ontop ds, I wonder what u will do if ur "likes" miraculously get reduced to 1 tongue tongue tongue tongue
chill let me check that one too
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by holyboss: 9:01pm On Feb 11, 2015
tdayof:
chill let me check that one too
grin
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by Anglovel: 4:20am On Feb 12, 2015
"Nigeria sha!
It baffles me in no small terms seeing men of yesteryears who's actions and inactions put Nigeria in this sorry state, join the bandwagon of those vilifying the current government.

The caliber of people against GEJ's administration actually made me to opt for a reappraisal of the reputation the opposition are trying so hard to sell to Nigerians and all I can say is, it's a SCAM!

It's quite saddening seeing people jubilate when men like OBJ badmouths the government, forgetting that it was these same people's cluelessness railroaded us into this sorry state. What changed? Nothing! It is still the same people. GEJ must have done something right to piss these sharks off so much.

I think it's safer to say #GEJ till 2019!

Let us open our eyes and stop looking at everything through the prism of inordinate sentiments.
Nothing is as it seems."

dats my opinion as well as those of wise Sages[/quote]
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by somoyesoji(m): 10:58pm On Feb 19, 2015
They may not generate much for now but for a better GDP and raw materials North can deliver too. Everyday technology is making things easy. What will happen to the oil when all cars start moving with solar energy. Crude oil may go as low as $10. But if we can do mechanised farming and use up half of northern land we will be exporting foods out in big volumes. Why power need to go up north is if we all are ready to start new then each zone deserves to present a president. It goes north comes south vise a vise everybody will contribute. In the real sense we in the south are buznez like the northerns have passions more for the masses so if we have 8 good years of buznez it should be followed with 8years of passions. Major power brokers in the north has lost some key offices that do help them most of them have being out for over 14years but if it goes up come back 8years is ok to regroup but 20years is sucide.every zone have there demands zones can wait for there turns instead of fighting because they can endure
godoluwa:
@somoyesoji, tell us the reason why u think that power must go back to the north? how many years did northerner av spent on tne since d independence? what percentage of revenue do we generate from north? who are the architect of d present Nigeria problem? who destroyed the d first democracy? who are the boko haram?
Re: Sad Day For Obasanjo - Bolanle Bolawole (Nigerian Tribune) by beejaay: 6:28am On Dec 04, 2015
dollyparton:
IS former President Olusegun Obasanjo the devil incarnate he was portrayed to be in Yinka Odumakin’s ‘Watch the Watcher’ and by all the commentators at the book launch? I know OBJ is capable of mischief; I know he is self-conceited; I know he has ego, a very large one for that matter. I have ceaselessly and mercilessly lashed at those downsides of the former President, who, arguably, is the most decorated Nigerian leader living. OBJ can be cantankerous - and annoyingly so! He applies stern rules on others but allows himself the luxury of laissez-faire. Often, he is as guilty, if not more guilty, of the same offences for which he calls upon the executioner to behead others. It was so when he lambasted Babangida’s regime in his “SAP with a human face” letter. It was so when he said MKO Abiola was not the messiah that Nigerians needed. It was so again in his latest “Before it is too late” letter to President Goodluck Jonathan. Often – and I think deliberately – Obasanjo drips with malice when he has decided to grind an axe with anyone. He throws all arsenals at his disposal into battle; he does nothing by halves. He also throws caution to the wind. On occasions, especially when he is out of office and out of favour, he says the right things or fights the good fights; but often, he is the wrong person to do so because he hardly comes to equity with clean hands. I do not know of an instance when OBJ accuses anyone of wrong-doing that it is not the case of the pot calling the kettle black. I have narrowed down Obasanjo’s problem to this: He claims more credit for himself than he actually deserves. He takes his own fair share of credit quite alright; but not satisfied with that, he also gobbles the credit due unto others. OBJ has a voracious and, perhaps, insatiable appetite for accolades. His hubris is taller than Mount Everest. Be it in his role in the Civil War of 1967\1970 or in his place in the political evolution of Nigeria since 1979, OBJ imagines he stands head and shoulders not just above anyone else but also above everyone rolled into one. General JJ Oluleye, now late, who was Obasanjo’s colleague in the Murtala Muhamed\Olusegun Obasanjo Federal Military Government of 1976\1979, had told this columnist: “Obasanjo has equal capacity to do both good and evil”. I agree no less!


Now to ‘Watch the Watcher’: That not a single kind word was said about Obasanjo at the book launch is evidence enough that politics, and not a disinterested evaluation of the man Obasanjo, was at play. Interestingly, the ‘Watch the Watcher’, led by the author, my brother Yinka Odumakin, and my senior professional colleague, Aremo Olusegun Osoba, was also on trial at the book launch. Vividly was the Yoruba adage played out, to wit, that when you point one accusing finger at someone else, the remaining four fingers point in your own direction. This time last election circle in 2011, Yinka Odumakin was the presidential spokesperson for the Buhari\Tunde Bakare CPC presidential ticket, which the Bola Tinubu party machinery supported up to a point before the accord between CPC and AC collapsed like a pack of cards. This time last election circle, too, Osoba was a staunch AC member who helped to install Ibikunle Amosun as governor of his native Ogun State; only recently, he was also a national leader of APC but today, both Yinka and Osoba are no longer on the same page with Buhari\Tinubu. It amuses me when I hear respectable Afenifere leaders portray Tinubu as evil. If he is, then, he is the vintage Frankenstein monster created by them. Sure, I have issues with some aspects of the politics of Tinubu, which I have not tired to express: The culture of impunity, deification of a mere mortal, personalisation of the state, and the primitive capitalist accumulation which he epitomises in many respect cannot but be offensive. But the sadder aspect of it is that Tinubu was the creation of those who today demonise him! They helped to fast-track his meteoric political rise; favoured him above his betters; compelled others to step down for him – and many of them were glad to eat from Tinubu’s hands while the good time lasted. Tinubu eventually proved smarter than them – and for them. When the others fell into Obasanjo’s ambush in 2003, only Tinubu escaped. And that was the game-changer! It is not for fun that Tinubu’s admirers call him “the last man standing”. Tinubu was the only governor of AD in 2003\2007; he successfully kept his hold on Lagos between 2007 and 2011, using godson Gov. Babatunde Raji Fashola as front; thereafter, his political fortunes witnessed an exponential rise when more states fell under his belt. He became automatically the rallying point of the party\tendencies opposed to the PDP. Just like they say of evangelism, money is the oil that lubricates the wheels of politics: the man who has it, who is willing to spend it, and who has favours and largesse to dispense in quantum becomes, inexorably, the beehive. Tinubu, however, has his fault lines: He loves power and will do anything to get and keep it. So he elbows other contenders and soon turns them into enemies. Like IBB, he believes in the “settlement” syndrome. He knows the important role money plays in politics; so he would not mind keeping by any means a hefty war chest. On top of these, he is not an especially humble person: If need be, he rubs it in!

But I am also not able to accept the picture painted of Tinubu as someone without a single redeeming feature. Whenever the APC describes President Goodluck Jonathan as clueless, I have often disagreed. It is not true that Jonathan has done nothing for Nigeria. He may not have known how to present his achievements or his negatives may, by today’s reckoning, dwarf his positives; there is, however, no denying the fact that he has won plaudits in certain areas – agriculture, for example; affirmative action for women is another. How about his making our elections more credible? With OBJ, we would have known by now who would ‘win’ next month’s elections! When tempers calm and politics recedes, Jonathan will be accorded his rightful place in history. As critical of Obasanjo as I have been, I nonetheless expect that whenever he speaks the truth to power, power should listen. I do, of course, understand why Obasanjo speaks speaks truth to power: It may be not as much as he cherishes the truth as he has personal scores to settle. Be that as it may, I will not throw away the baby with the bathwater: If I do, the truth will be lost; more so in our clime where, from time immemorial and not just beginning with Jonathan, power has perfected the art of silencing the mouths of many with filthy lucre. If ‘holy’ men, so to say, will not speak up, then, let us not restrain the ‘devils’ who decide to fill the void for whatever reason. If not for anything else, the role Tinubu has played in the emergence of a viable opposition to PDP - which has ruled since 1999 and which, as a result, had begun to take all of us for granted - is laudable. It bears repeating that democracy without vibrant opposition will sooner than later become autocracy.

I forbid anyone, however, to interpret the aforementioned as an endorsement of any of the two leading political parties. As they stand at the moment, both have a lot of work to do to gain my approval. Each time, therefore, that one points an accusing finger at the other, the remaining four fingers point in its own direction in a case of the pot calling the kettle black. If we accuse Jonathan of being spiteful of a neither-here-nor-there ‘gentleman’s agreement’ that he would not go for second term; how about Buhari who wept openly while telling Nigerians that 2011 was his last shot at the presidency? The only difference between Obasanjo’s Presidential Library donations of over N6 billion and Jonathan’s own campaign donations of over N21 billion is the figures involved; both are proceeds of corruption. At the launch of Yinka Odumakin’s ‘Watch the Watcher’ the reviewer, Prof. Gordini Darah, travelled memory lane to recall the epic battles fought by Nigerian students against Obasanjo’s policies that not only began the commercialisation of higher education in Nigeria but that also eroded the autonomy of the University system. Odumakin, in his vote of thanks, recalled the lecturers who were sacked by the Obasanjo regime for “teaching their students what they (the lecturers) were not paid to teach”. Odumakin was full of thanks to Darah, his lecturer at Ife, for belonging in that genre; otherwise, the author said he would not have become what he is today. “Ali Must Go” was the students’ battle\rallying cry during the struggle against Obasanjo and his Federal Military Government. Yet, the same Dr. Ahmadu Ali, who, as Federal Commissioner for Education (as they were then called), was the ‘Man Friday’ Obasanjo used to destroy higher education in Nigeria, truncate destinies, destroy flowering academic careers, and cause untold hardship in untold number of families, is today the Director-General of Jonathan’s re-election bid! Not a voice was raised against that at Yinka Odumakin’s book launch. Some Nigerians are downright insensitive; have impunity running deep in their blood arteries; have no sense of history; and have been thoroughly compromised! Was Ahmadu Ali’s appointment meant to placate or spite Obasanjo? Notice, also, the deafening silence of APC to the incongruous appointment of Ahmadu Ali: Of course, APC’s dilemma is not far to fetch: With their new-found romance with OBJ himself, castigating Ahmadu Ali would badly expose the opposition party’s ‘yansh’! The grandstanding of our politicians notwithstanding, the politics of compromise, devoid of ideological clarity and integrity of heart, which blurs men’s vision, distorts their focus, serves selfish interests while marginalising the citizenry, cuts across board.


http://www.tribune.com.ng/quicklinkss/opinion/item/27591-sad-day-for-obasanjo-iii/27591-sad-day-for-obasanjo-iii
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