Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has yet again opened up over the
estranged relationship between him and his former deputy, Alhaji Atiku
Abubakar, saying that despite the fact that the latter was corrupt
during their regime, he (Obasanjo) had to take him along for his second
term in office in 2007 due to expediency.
“At that time, politically, I needed to carry him (Atiku) along but then to put him in check,” said Obasanjo.
Obasanjo,
who said that he was unaware of Atiku’s activities until law
enforcement agencies in America alerted his government, however,
confessed that he could not in good conscience ask that his deputy be
investigated then. He, however, said he could not ignore the
calls by the Americans to investigate the ex-vice president, which the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) did then.
The ex-president added that the allegations by the Americans were justified since Atiku is a fugitive in United
States.
“I don’t know if he can go to America…He travels? Travels to where? To Dubai? Let him go to America and return to Nigeria”.
He
also took a swipe at the same EFCC, saying that the commission had lost
its original vision of a bold and fearless agency capable of fighting
economic and financial crimes in the country.
Obasanjo made this
criticism in an interview published in the current and special edition
of Zero Tolerance magazine, a publication of the anti-graft agency to
mark its 10th year anniversary.
Obasanjo also denied ever
prompting Ribadu to investigate anybody for political reasons but he was
quick to admit that Ribadu went haywire.
The ex-president also
faulted the choice of Mrs. Faridi Waziri to head the commission after
its pioneer chair, Nuhu Ribadu, was unceremoniously removed by the late
Ptresident Yar’Adua, saying she did not have the cognate experience and
connection needed for the position.
Talking about Nigeria’s
position on global corruption index before and now, he said: “There was a
lot of work that was done to achieve that feat (moving from position
number 2 to 45). I think we have come down to only being above 34
countries; that shows that there must be a lot that the EFCC should be
doing that they are not doing.When you have gone that far down, it
becomes very difficult to climb again.”
“I had the vision of an
EFCC that will be fearless, bold, untied to the apron strings of the
executive, legislature or anybody for that matter, and Ribadu was bold,
fearless. I never told him this is the one you should pursue and
investigate.
“When I was personally accused, I sent the mail to
EFCC and to ICPC. I asked him to carry out clinical investigation, leave
nothing out, and they did. And EFCC of my dream carried it out; that is
the type of EFCC that I want,” said the ex-president.
Also
recalling events leading to the build-up to the 2007 general elections,
Obasanjo said: “He (Ribadu) brought a report to me and said these people
are corrupt; how can I, in my position, receive a report that said
these people were corrupt.
“I didn’t ask him to carry out an
investigation. He even came out and said he had found 28 governors as
corrupt and later on, unfortunately, Ribadu hobnobbed with one of the
governors he had found corrupt and that is where things started going
haywire,” Obasanjo said.
He, who said Ribadu did very well until
he lost his direction when he (Obasanjo) left, however, faulted the way
he was kicked out of office and declared if given the opportunity he
(Obasanjo) would re-appoint Ribadu as EFCC chair and warn him to desist
from corrupt company.
“He did so well that he became a threat
even to the incoming administration; that’s what happened. He was so
successful that his success began to be a problem for him,” he added.
On
why Ribadu’s successor was a wrong choice, Obasanjo said he learnt that
it was a now convicted governor who scouted for her for the late
Yar’Adua administration.
“I know that the woman they brought to
replace Ribadu (Farida Waziri) was not the right person for that job,
because I understood that one of those who head-hunted her was James
Ibori. If James Ibori who is now in a UK Prison for fraud head-hunts
somebody who will fight corruption in Nigeria, then you can understand
what happened,” said the ex-president.
Waziri, however, in the
same edition of the magazine, denied ever knowing ex-governor Ibori
until she met him after her appointment at the presidential villa
during one of her routine visits to President Yar’Adua.
“I never
knew him. I never knew James Ibori. When I was appointed, I went to the
Villa very often because the president called his staff and told them
Farida has free access to him 24/7, whether in the office or villa. So I
went there very often and I met Ibori; he was always there,” Waziri
said.
She said the Ibori toga probably stuck to her through a
former minister of justice, Michael Kaase Aondoka, who she called her
“younger brother” on account of hailing from the same local government
area in Benue State who, she said, was close to Ibori.
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