Former president Olusegun Obasanjo has literally declared war on one
of his cronies and former Federal Capital Territory (FCT) minister,
Mallam Nasir Ahmad el-Rufai,
over what he said about him in his memoir
which will be presented to the public today, even as his ‘’boys’’ vowed
to boycott the presentation of the book today.
According to the controversial former minister, now a chieftain of
the opposition Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), Obasanjo wanted a
third term at all cost despite the warning of the duo of senators David
Mark and Tunde Ogbeha, his points-men in the Senate. El-Rufai also
portrays Obasanjo as an unreliable, undependable, greedy, power seeker.
But speaking to our correspondent under anonymity, a former minister
who served in the same Obasanjo cabinet yesterday disclosed Obasanjo’s
disappointment in el-Rufai and said the former president had drawn a
battle line with him.
Obasanjo’s loyalists would not honour their
colleague’s invitation today, he said.
The minister said, ‘‘What Nasir wrote about Baba (Obasanjo) was done
in bad faith. He threw caution to the wind, he really ridiculed him and
this is not fair. Baba is angry and he has told some of us that el-Rufai
is walking on a path angels could not run.
I have read the book, it
does not paint Baba well at all. I wonder what came over our friend
while writing the manuscript.
‘‘What we are suspecting was the refusal of Baba to endorse Nasir as
recommended by the economic team and he was not happy about it. It was
our dream that a member of the economic team should succeed Baba in
order to avoid a situation where the foreign reserves would be depleted
as we are witnessing today, but President Obasanjo thought otherwise and
we all worked for the candidature of the late Umaru Yar A’dua which we
are all regretting today including Baba.
Speaking further, the former minister said although the author
singled out a former minister of education, Oby Ezekwesili, for praise:
‘‘I doubt it if Oby would go to the programme where Baba would be the
object of ridicule. I know Nuhu (Ribadu) would not go, Femi
(Fani-Kayode) would not, Uba Sani would not move closer to that place,
and I would be surprised if Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala would be there.
This is
what Nasir has caused and someone like me would not be there. Hear
someone abusing Baba and I would keep quiet? Never. So, it is better we
leave Nasir and his new friends to do their thing.’’
El-Rufai, in the book, discloses how Obasanjo laboured in vain to
remove term limit from the 1999 Constitution using his foot soldiers in
the National Assembly like Senator Mark (now the Senate president) and
Senator Ogbeha.
According to him, if Obasanjo had listened to the two,
the shame and disgrace suffered on the floor of the Senate would have
been avoided.
Even on the eve of the inauguration of Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar’Adua as new president, outgoing president Olusegun Obasanjo and some members of his inner cabinet were still engaged in a war of wits over what they felt were Obasanjo’s ‘huge mistakes in his presidency’.
Even on the eve of the inauguration of Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar’Adua as new president, outgoing president Olusegun Obasanjo and some members of his inner cabinet were still engaged in a war of wits over what they felt were Obasanjo’s ‘huge mistakes in his presidency’.
Former minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Mallam Nasir Ahmad
El-Rufai, in his book, The Accidental Public Servant, presents a vivid
account of Obasanjo’s last night in power, where he was invited to a
meeting in the Aso Rock presidential villa by the former chairman of the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu,
with Obasanjo.
El-Rufai recounts on page 362 that when he arrived the venue of the
meeting, he heard Obasanjo and Ribadu shouting at each other.
“When I arrived there, I could hear them shouting at each other the
moment I got out of my car. ‘You are wrong! We will recover them!’ Nuhu
said. He was banging the table. I entered the room and all of a sudden
they both went silent.”
El-Rufai says that after that meeting he had left with Ribadu who
alluded to the conversation he was having with Obasanjo before he
intruded. According to him, the former president made four huge mistakes
in his presidency.
On page 363 of the book, the former minister writes: “Many of us felt that Obasanjo made four huge mistakes in his presidency.
The first was that Obasanjo had borrowed money to purchase shares in
Transcorp, a company known to have plans to acquire certain government
assets. The shares were offered to many government officials.
Atiku
Abubakar was offered, Ngozi (Okonjo-Iweala) was offered. I dissuaded
both of them from taking up the offer because they were the chair and
vice chair of the Privatisation Council respectively.
“This Transcorp share acquisition made Nuhu very angry and this was
what he was arguing about with Obasanjo when I arrived that night, as
well as the other three mistakes of Obasanjo’s presidency: the third
term effort which we all thought was a blemish for us as an
administration, the fundraising for the Obasanjo Presidential Library
while he was still in office, and the mistake of handing power to
persons who had no idea or any experience in running the federal
government.”
Besides this meeting, el-Rufai also recalls in the 627-page book
that, on that night of May 28, 2007, they had gone to the guest house
where Yar’Adua was staying to put finishing touches to the inaugural
speech.
“Up to that point, Yar’Adua was consulting me, virtually every day,
on things in general and also on his inaugural speech. To Yar’Adua’s
credit, he delivered a speech that called the very elections that
brought him to power ‘flawed’. We finally convinced him to accept this,
then follow it up with a pledge to set up a high-powered commission so
that we learnt from the mistakes. We adjourned at about two in the
morning.”
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