Author/Former
President Olusegun Obasanjo, (left) with the Publisher of the Book ,Dr Eghosa
Imasuen, at the presentation of a Book Tittle: ”My Watch”, By Olusegun Obasanjo
in Lagos… yersterday 09/12/2014
LAGOS— Former President Olusegun
Obasanjo, yesterday, for the first time opened up on the third term agenda in
the twilight of his two-term presidency, accusing some Peoples Democratic
Party, PDP, governors of being behind the third term project because they were
going to benefit from it.
At the
launch of his autobiography titled: ‘My Watch’, at the Lagos Country Club,
Ikeja, Obasanjo
denied seeking a third term but admitted he knew about it.
Obasanjo,
who said he was not afraid of telling the truth, insisted that everything he
wrote in the book was true.
According
to him, “People say that it was obvious that I wanted a third term and I ask
those who say I was behind the third term to bring concrete evidence to prove
that I spearheaded it. I have presented evidence in my book that proves that I
was not behind it, even though I knew about it. Some governors were the ones
behind it because they felt the governors would benefit from it. If people say
that it was obvious that I wanted a third term, they should present concrete
evidence to the public that I am telling a lie. I have evidence to prove that everything
I wrote is true and anyone that feels otherwise should present concrete
evidence to prove his point.
“Third
term was not my agenda or intention although I would not say I didn’t know
about it. I didn’t mastermind third term. Those who were telling me to go on
were the governors that were going to benefit from it.”
The
former president also said he had no regrets in his involvement on how both
late Yar’Adua and Dr Goodluck Jonathan became presidents saying, “I don’t
regret bringing in Yar’Adua and Jonathan. If they don’t do well, those coming
from behind should learn from me and do better”.
He added
that he was not infallible and people should learn from his action.
He also
said that he had sought avenues to ventilate his observations and positions with
President Jonathan but had to resort to writing open letters to him because his
efforts were frustrated.
He also
commented on the injunction restraining him from publishing his autobiography.
He said:
“I had given the book to my editors and to the publisher. As far as I am
concerned, my job is done. I had written the book and printed before the court
injunction. In a normal judiciary, the judge should be sanctioned and I hope
something will be done. We are here legally and lawfully and we will continue
to act lawfully and legally.”
Yar’Adua
deceived me, says Obasanjo
Chief
Olusegun Obasanjo, accused his late successor, Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar’Adua of
deceiving him, before he became the presidential candidate of the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) in 2007 about the seriousness of his illness which he
never recovered from till he died in office.
In his
yet-to-be-released three-part volume of his memoirs titled My Watch,
which was exclusively obtained by an online journal, The Cable Alert,
Obasanjo revealed how late Yar’Adua gave him the impression that he had
overcome his health challenges and did not act responsibly when he eventually
became terminally ill.
Obasanjo
was instrumental to late Yar’Adua picking the PDP presidential ticket but
frequently fell ill after his election and eventually died in May 2010, paving
the way for the incumbent president, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan who was then
vice-president to become acting president. Obasanjo was thereafter accused of
deliberately installing a terminally ill Yar’Adua, a Northerner, as president
in order to eventually return power to the south through the back door.
Apparently
in an attempt to fault insinuations that he knowingly installed a sick
president, Obasanjo in his autobiography revealed how he was kept in the dark
on Yar’Adua’s illness and the extent he went to find out the truth.
Obasanjo
wrote: “As can be expected, I was heavily involved in the transition and exit
process that saw me leaving office for my successor, Umaru Yar’Adua, as
recounted in Chapter Thirty-seven, the ninth chapter of the second volume of
this book. The unprepared and unplanned transition from Yar’Adua to Jonathan
was a more difficult exercise in some respects. One reason was the ‘cloak and
dagger’ manner in which Yar’Adua’s illness was handled.
“The
illness of a President cannot be regarded as private. His health has
implications for the security and well-being of the nation. For the president
and those around him to have attempted strenuously to keep the fact of the
severity of his illness from the public smacks of ignorance of the enormity of
what the job entails and the level of provinciality of their understanding,
attitude, and approach.
“I
remember that in 1978 or 1979, Chief Awolowo visited me while I was military
Head of State and shared with me how he would always stay at home to attend to
the work at hand and only make a private visit to the UK once a year for health
reasons if he became president of Nigeria. I made it clear to the chief that
once he became president of Nigeria, he could have no private visit to anywhere
as such. Wherever he would be, he would be on duty, and the totality of his
life would be public. I jokingly added that the only privacy he might lay claim
to would be when he was at home with Mama Chief H.I.D., and that even then his
security staff would be on twenty-four-hour duty.
“That was
part of the nature of the job. In the case of Umaru’s illness, it took me by
surprise because I had concluded that all was well, judging from his medical
report that I requested and he submitted to me and the specialist advice I
received from it. The report said that once he was off dialysis it would mean
that he had had a transplant or treatment that had caused his kidneys to work
as normal.
BOOK
LAUNCH—From left: Former Vice Chancellor, University of Lagos, Prof. Ibidapo
Obe; former Education Minister, Dr Oby Ezekwesili; author/former President
Olusegun Obasanjo; Guest of Honour, Prof. Olu Akinkugbe and Publisher of the
book, Dr Eghosa Imasuen, at the presentation of a book: “My Watch”, by Olusegun
Obasanjo in Lagos, yesterday.
“Before
he went to Germany, after being rushed to the National Hospital in Abuja, he
phoned to tell me that he was going out of the country for medical reasons.
What he did not reveal was the nature of his illness. I, however, became
somewhat apprehensive when I learned that he was placed on dialysis that night.
The persistence of the illness, and the cover up, caused me more apprehension
especially when he abandoned Germany for Saudi Arabia. I never heard anything
from him after that. The story I heard about his visit to Saudi Arabia was
awkward. He did not inform his deputy as to how to manage things in his
absence.
Nigeria
had no government in two days— OBJ
“On
arrival in Saudi Arabia he was wheeled into the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), and
for at least forty-eight hours nobody was in communication with him as far as
the governance of Nigeria was concerned. What it meant was that for that period
of time, Nigeria had no government. What a great pity! I wanted to know more
about the exact medical condition of Yar’Adua, the president of Nigeria.
“I
realised that a number of countries would know for sure; among them would be
Germany, the US, Saudi Arabia, the UK, France, Israel and maybe Russia. I
decided to indirectly check with the ambassadors of these countries. What I
heard did not allay my fears. One said, ‘Your President is surely not too
well’. Another said, ‘We believe he would be able to cope.’ Both were
diplomatic answers, but one was more so than the other.
“At that
point, I was left in no doubt that the arrangement made was shoddy, tardy,
unpatriotic, selfish, and reckless. No nation should be left hanging in such a
manner. I subtly campaigned for the emergence of Jonathan as acting president
to take the country out of tenterhooks.
“I also
publicly made the point that if you accept responsibility for a job and, due to
no fault of your own but due to circumstances beyond your control, you are
incapacitated to the extent that you can no longer perform to your own
satisfaction or to the satisfaction of those you are supposed to serve,
morality, duty, responsibility, honour, good sense, and patriotism demand that
you act appropriately.
“At the
same time, as debates were going on in the media as to what should or should
not be, I was consulting genuine and objective leaders of thought regarding the
way to go. At that stage, almost everybody realised the position of the
constitution and recommended that we stuck to its provisions. Jonathan became
acting president by the action of the National Assembly.”
Present
at the book launch yesterday were prominent figures like former Vice-Chancellor
of the University of Lagos, Ibidapo Obe, former Minister of Education and VP of
the World Bank, Oby Ezekwesili, Prof. Olu Akinkugbe and several others.
- Vanguard
News


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