22 Dec 2006 |
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President Obasanjo is incorrigible and shameless. While new revelations were issuing forth from
Compounding the outrage that every reasonable Nigerian should feel at such a criminal display of presidential insensitivity, Mr Obasanjo’s African-American friends, organizers of the celebratory event, seemed to have suggested that they would nominate the president for the Nobel Peace Prize! How comical! Who are these people kidding? Was this event designed to dilute and push off the headlines the impeachable offences and allegations that were meticulously articulated against Mr Obasanjo at the recent PTDF hearings? Are Mr Obasanjo’s foreign friends and local lackeys so smitten by the former’s mystique that they can, without a guilty conscience, lend themselves to what amounts to a celebration of disaster? Where is the outrage? Where is the patriotic anger that is a natural aftermath of the kind of revelations that are daily being made regarding the corruption and misrule of the Obasanjo-PDP axis of our political establishment? Someone said that in the final analysis every country deserves the kind of leadership it gets, and I am beginning to agree. The convenient, willful, and sometimes negligent inattention to presidential misdemeanor lends validity to such a conclusion. How does one explain the fact that in the middle of such a monumental dredging up of Aso Rock filth, the president could take off with an air of impunity and without public outcry for a
As to the occasion itself, what can be more shameful, more criminal, and more despicable than a gathering of a clique of favored presidential associates and sympathizers for the declared purpose of pouring undeserved encomiums on arguably
When the full accounting of the malaise engineered by Mr. Obasanjo is done, the ignoble conduct of Carlton Masters, Andrew Young, and other American enablers of dictatorship, corruption, and incompetence will not be footnoted in obscurity. They will be part of the main text. One eye-witness of the New York charade observed rightly that the president’s foreign friends appeared to be thanking him for almost eight years of unrestricted access to diverse largesse and influence in the Nigerian economic and political landscape. They also appeared to be signaling their intension to corner such access under what they hope would be an Obasanjo-anointed government in 2007. A roll call of the organizers of the
Andrew Young has been a regular fixture on the
The exchange of favors and recognition has been very mutual. We are, after all, saddled with a president who craves validation at every turn, especially from foreigners. We have a president who refused to govern for the first two years of his presidency, preferring to travel around the world to seek the vainglorious and contrived diplomatic validation of foreign lands. His two years of attention-seeking globetrotting is still an African record. The empty and false accolades that Andrew Young and his people routinely shower on Obasanjo have helped satiate Obasanjo’s appetite for foreign recognition, keeping him in
But in satisfying Obasanjo’s juvenile desire for acceptance and validation, these pretended foreign friends of Nigeria have helped produce and nurture a monster who now values what they tell him more than he appreciates the problems, clamors, and aspirations of his countrymen. In telling Obasanjo lies about his place in history and about his non-existent accomplishments, these people are criminally occluding the immense suffering than Nigerians have been subjected to under Mr. Obasanjo—suffering which loudly negates the spirit of the celebration in
We have also been told that Chevron was one of the main sponsors of the
Finally, one must ask what the president and his foreign friends were celebrating. Were they celebrating the recent revelation that Mr. Obasanjo and his cronies turned the PTDF into a cash cow for personal projects and profit? Were they celebrating the Obasanjo-ordered massacres at Odi and Zaki-Biam? Were they celebrating the unprecedented level of crime and the failure of Obasanjo’s government to provide basic human security? Were they reveling in the knowledge that basic social infrastructures are in worse shape than they were in 1999 when Obasanjo became president? Were they celebrating Mr. Obasanjo’s hypocritical and highly selective war on corruption whose most remarkable insignia is the convenient bypassing of corrupt acolytes of Mr Obasanjo on the way to harassing the latter’s opponents and inconsequential expendables? Perhaps they were celebrating Mr. Obasanjo’s transformation from a bankrupt chicken farmer in 1999 to a billionaire in 2006. Or Mr. Obasanjo’s illegal purchase of 200 million naira shares in his government’s favored corporate front, Transcorp. Or the rumored acquisition of several “privatized” government corporations and companies by Mr. Obasanjo’s late wife, Stella. Could they have been celebrating the settlement of the civil litigation surrounding the presidential jet cash smuggling scandal? They may have been celebrating with perverse relish Obasanjo’s role in the Anambra political crisis and in the enthronement of Mr. Adolphus Wabara, the ex-president of the senate who never won an election. They were probably celebrating Obasanjo’s undemocratic imposition of Mr. Yar’Adua on the PDP. Or the monumental failure of the recent voter registration exercise, which has sparked fears of a botched 2007 election. Or the failure to intervene in the unconstitutional removal of
Were they celebrating the fact that under Mr. Obasanjo,
If Mr. Obasanjo’s foreign friends, Nigerian sympathizers, sycophants, and overly generous or naïve observers think that the events and issues listed above warrant a celebration then we should probably follow this “successful” New York event up with similar celebrations in major cities of the United States and in world capitals. Such celebrations should be sponsored not just by Chevron but also by Shell, Agip, Eni, ConocoPhilips, and all the corporate exporters of value from
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