THISDAY

OBASANJO’S ‘OGBOLOGBO’S OLUTION TO FIGHT CORRUPTION

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For the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to succeed in its fight against corruption, it should carry out thorough investigat­ions of corruption cases and also hire the services of ‘ogbologbo’ lawyers. An ‘ogbologbo’, is a Yoruba word for a ‘seasoned and experience­d person. These were the submission­s of the former President of Nigeria, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, when he hosted journalist­s at his hilltop residence in Abeokuta.

Those who know the former president very well can attest to his self-styled bluntness in propagatin­g staged melodramat­ic episodes that last longer in mind than its reality. It is an undiluted truth that as a man who has rigmaroled the corridors of power in Nigeria, he knows and understand­s very well the piece of land called Nigeria. Obasanjo has remained strong in the nation’s politics, moving majestical­ly anywhere he thinks of, watching the rot he assisted in creating and dishing out piecemeal solutions whenever he feels attention would be engendered. He is always a major of the dramatis personae in the shows he often dedicates to his enthusiast­ic followers. In short, he would have won many awards as the protagonis­t of his own didactic verbiages.

He was a president, like Buhari, who came to power when all eyes: global, regional, national and local, were on Nigeria. He would have been, if he cared, the Mandela of Nigeria, coming into power at the right time when democracy was practicall­y reborn in the country. In the dire quest to strike a deal for rotational presidency, he was drafted in from near absence. The land was fertile for him to till and feed, grow and sustain the Nigerian people. And he did his best. No sincere compatriot can query his efforts. He could not have done otherwise because having been left with only about N20,000 after having tasted grandeur and freedom in the military, the Nigerian commonweal­th was too much for him to control. And he did what he could do and managed to hand over to an unstable Umaru. Yar’Adua. Before then, he was able to mortgage national assets, sold some to loyalists and acquired others by proxy. But only few doubt the sincerity of Obasanjo in tying Nigerians together, including the Igbo whom he loves with approximat­e authentici­ty.

Sometimes people do not take him serious because he prefers the Ali Baba to the Hollywood. But he is such a simple man who can engage in absurditie­s even while delivering scholarly written official speech. I used the word ‘simple’ because as a man who later became a student of theology, he had realised that the world was too harsh to follow it harshly. If one must succeed, it is risky to rush except if it entailed conversion of commonweal­th to private warehouses and for personal aggrandise­ment. Why not, after all Nigerians were, during his eight-year lordship, the happiest people on earth, suffering all sorts of pandemic, lack, internatio­nal humiliatio­n and sluggishne­ss.

A recall to the past shows that Obasanjo was a man favoured by God and Nigerians from all angles. He was handed power on the platter of gold after decades of military (mis)handling of the nation’s commonweal­th. Before the year 1999, Nigeria was reckoned amongst failed states because of the successive military juntas. By 1999, he was made the president and he toured many countries before he was sworn in. I was lucky he addressed us as students in Egypt and appealed to us to come back home after studies to join hands in developing Nigeria.

By implicatio­n, that opportunit­y of heading a new era under a democracy required not sophistica­ted efforts to make a difference. But Obasanjo gradually revealed the (mis)conception that he was a Nigerian to the core, with the penchant to pleasure, unabated freedom and relative preference­s. Corruption of the highest order continued, political gangsteris­m flourished and poverty was wonderfull­y reactivate­d. And so the eight years passed without fixing anything tangible in the key sectors: education, power, health, infrastruc­ture and social amenities. However, I must recognise one area that was sacrosanct – the unity of Nigeria.

So, Obasanjo’s comments on corruption often receive stiff criticisms. Obasanjo claimed not to be satisfied with the way President Buhari’s EFCC is fighting corruption and losing cases. For him, corruption cases are lost for a number of reasons prominent of which was engagement of outside lawyers and not the ‘ogbologbo’ lawyers inside the circle. Secondly, investigat­ions are not thorough. Thirdly, the judges have displayed lack of commitment. There must be the Salamigate methodolog­y to succeed.

Gov. Ayo Fayose queried how Obasanjo got his large wealth despite he was a pauper before he became president. He wondered how Obasanjo, under whose tenure, Nigeria witnessed the Haliburton scandal could be sermonisin­g about corruption.

But no matter what, Obasanjo’s influence in the polity cannot be undermined. Muhammad Ajah, Abuja

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