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Home arrow All sections arrow Top headllines arrow Open season on Obasanjo
Open season on Obasanjo Print E-mail
Written by Patrick Smith   
Sunday, 04 May 2008
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Open season on Obasanjo
Page 2

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Obasanjo Olusegun
The humiliation of Nigeria’s ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo is forging ahead, less than a year after he left office. In the past few months, parliamentary committees have exposed allegations of government corruption during his eight-year tenure that sit uneasily with his image as a reformer. Nigeria’s press runs lurid tales of family scandals.

Investigators have charged his daughter, Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello, with complicity in a scam to defraud the health ministry.

A few months before the April 2007 elections, Mr Obasanjo anointed as his successor Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, a relatively little-known state governor from a great family in the Muslim north.

Many Nigerians expected the outgoing president to carry on ruling from behind the scenes, but Mr Obasanjo’s influence has waned and his confidants say that the northern power brokers around Mr Yar’Adua are pursuing a vendetta that will cost him, at the very least, his reputation.

Some of them want him arrested.

Regional divide

Mr Obasanjo is from the south-west. His confidants argue that the powerful northerners, embittered by the liberal economic reforms and privatisations of his tenure, are taking revenge now that one of their own is back in the presidency.

The Obasanjo camp says that this is an attempt to victimise the family.

But one aide to Mr Yar’Adua maintains that Mr Obasanjo’s final three years were the most corrupt since Nigeria’s independence in 1960.

Both sides tend to agree that Mr Yar’Adua is not personally orchestrating the investigations into his predecessor.

The president’s refusal to interfere in various parliamentary and ministerial inquiries is in line with his hands-off style, contrasting with that of Mr Obasanjo, who had a reputation for involving himself in the details of government business.

Since Mr Obasanjo played a key role in so many decisions, legislators want to find out how far he was himself involved in the dubious dealings they are unearthing.

The most sensational revelations stem from an inquiry into the power sector, begun by a panel in the House of Representatives after Mr Yar’Adua said in January that more than $10bn had been spent on electricity under the previous government, with little to show for it.

Score settling

Televised hearings revealing allegations of huge sums given to contractors for little or no work have rankled amid the chronic power crisis.

Some of the investigators’ targets insist that the Abuja witch-hunt is inspired by a host of disgruntled elements with personal scores to settle.

The Senate, for example, is looking into some controversial land sales in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) during the tenure of Malam Nasir el-Rufai, one of Mr Obasanjo’s favourite ministers.

Mr el-Rufai is alleged to have parcelled out land to members of his own family and the former president’s.

He denies any impropriety; supporters note that the chairman of the investigation had his Abuja property bulldozed after building what the FCT said was an illegal structure.

The Senate has looked into the use of a special aviation fund by Femi Fani-Kayode, the former aviation minister, another Obasanjo ally.

Mr Obasanjo’s name surfaced again when the government cancelled the sale of the Ajaokuta Steel Mill, for long a notorious white elephant, to Global Infrastructure Holdings Ltd, controlled by the world’s leading steelmaker, Pramod Mittal.

A panel has concluded that the deal was skewed in favour of the company and Mr Yar’Adua has called for the prosecution of its "promoters".

Governors’ glee

Mrs Obasanjo-Bello, the ex-president’s eldest daughter, hit the headlines when the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), created by her father in 2003, charged her with involvement in a scam to defraud the health ministry.

Mr Yar’Adua dismissed Health Minister Adenike Grange and junior Health Minister Gabriel Aduku, accused by the EFCC of involvement in a plan to embezzle unspent ministry funds, following a directive that ministries should return unspent funds at the end of the year.

The accusation was that Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello, as chair of the Senate Health Committee, received 10m naira ($85,000), which she claimed was for an official committee retreat in Ghana. EFCC agents have raided her home.

One interest group that cheers on every blow against Mr Obasanjo consists of those former state governors who were charged with corruption last year.

They lost their immunity from prosecution after stepping down at last April’s elections and eight of them face graft charges.

They hope that evidence of abuse in the federal government under Mr Obasanjo will weaken the moral authority of the EFCC, a federal body, in prosecuting alleged offences at state level.

The inquiries also divert attention from the incumbents’ failings.

Mr Yar’Adua earned the name of "Mr Go-Slow" after he took office last May, but has had some important victories in recent months.

He won an appeal to the presidential election tribunal in February.

In March, his supporters blocked attempts by Mr Obasanjo to foist his preferred candidate, Sam Egwu, into the chairmanship of the ruling People’s Democratic Party.

There may be nasty surprises to come.

Some lawmakers are calling for an inquiry into the oil sector, in particular the running of the state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, widely perceived as the home of some of Nigeria’s most explosive scandals - and the source of gigantic sums of money.

Smith is Editor of Africa Confidential, a fortnightly bulletin on African affairs. This version of the article is culled from BBC News Online while the full version is in the current edition of Africa Confidential


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Comments (16)
1. 18-07-2008 20:34
 
Obasanjo's Shameful Mask
To the eyes of the world Obasanjo was the most sincere,honest,trusted and above all advocate of democracy in 1999.One wonders how they define him in 2008, with these revealing stories about his tenure,full of political witch hunting,settling scores western style,and above all curuption at the highest level.
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2. 03-07-2008 03:48
 
yar'adua carry on
please let president yar'adua to face the reality,nigerian really need changes,let forget everthing and build a new nigeria.
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3. 02-06-2008 19:23
 
Obasanjo
There is nothing to say. It is nemesis that is catching up with Obasanjo the most corrupt leader nigeria ever had. 
It is a great shame to Yar'adua if nothing was done to Obasanjo with glaring evidences now being adduce b4 the Reps.
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4. 06-05-2008 22:18
 
Remigus' Comment
Your comment about Mr. Obasanjo being called a Mr. is out of context here. Who made him a (t)chief? That is one of the craziest things Africans will rather die than live without. Chieftancy titles. All his thievery is to maintain that title.
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5. 04-05-2008 22:09
 
Consultant
Please, I appeal to all Nigerians for calm. We need to listen attentively as various cassettes are being rewound on the way and manner licensed looting took place. This is a real turning point in our history.All what we require at the moment, is to grant more independence to judiciary for the task ahead, expand the horizon of our prisons and if necessary, build another one similar to Guantanamo Camp for the high class thieves. Haba! Allah ya isa.
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6. 04-05-2008 19:35
 
Biggest Thief
IBB,Abuluslam combined in all their years did'nt get the kind of Revenue OBJ got,What did he do with it.Setup EFCC to pursue his oppenents and got time to become the biggest thief.OBJ is the richest Blackman a man who had only 20000Naira during his election.Let the National Assembly be careful of its leadership they could be some sleepy characters.
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7. 04-05-2008 17:42
 
Nigeria we hail thee
We should know people like Akinyele are no more relevant in today's politricks, therefore they make use of any opportunity, did I hear the editor didn't add thief OBJ in his write up? He should be respected as a high thief. 
Look around we have many animals in human skin in Abuja.
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8. 04-05-2008 17:24
 
Ogbeni
The former president Obasanjo is not in any way different from the other past rulers of our beloved and battered nigeria.Forget about the figures,compare to the time of the abachas,the babagindas etc....the only correction that can clean up all this this mess is to do a generational probe of all past rulers of the country.For me,all this noises been made in both the lower and upper chambers are all going to end up no where at the end of the day.To me,they are all trying to up their stakes(hope you undrestand what i mean)
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9. 04-05-2008 17:02
 
SAINT OBJ
WHAT IS HAPPENNING RIGHT NOW IS NOTHING COMPARED TO THE OIL SECTOR SAGA.AS IT IS NOW,ONLY TIME WILL TELL.OBJ BROUGHT EFCC HE ENACTED THE LAW AND THAT LAW WILL SEND HIM BACK TO YOLA (PRISON)
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10. 04-05-2008 16:42
 
Remember Western Avenue...completed by G
OJU OLE RE...OLE!! 
 
I rest my case. 
 
agbalagba
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 12 August 2008 )
 
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