03

Jun

2009

Of Yar'Adua And El-Rufai PDF Print E-mail
By Peter Claver Oparah

I forced myself, I must confess, to read the lengthy and unwieldy narration of former Obasanjo hit-man, Nasir El-Rufai on the two years of the present wobbly Yar’Adua government. My instinctive feeling was that this fellow, who made the upper crust of the greatly deceptive and fraudulently patriotic Obasanjo locust years, cannot give us any honest assessment of the debilitating liability, which the present government has become because he, alongside some of those that perambulate the Diaspora in dubious patriotic toga, played very negatively active role in forcing that mischoice on Nigeria. And to call the Yar’Adua government a mischoice is to glorify a bizarre fraud that was neither committed by the Nigerian people nor have their blessing.

Again, El-Rufai’s views on the Yar;Adua government cannot be value-free because he was worsted in the power struggle in the emerging Yar’Adua contraption in the first instance. All these are if we ignore the obvious bombast, the extensive inflation of self-worth and a discernable feeling of assumed importance meant to give that unnecessary verbose outing some veneer of authority and inflate the worth of the author to issue such self-embellishing epistle. This is vintage El-Rufai, a character that is ever ready to flatter his real worth and who would not mind dabbing himself with enough confetti in a bid to make up for his petite physical frame. He not only was one of the pocket messiahs that predicated their rise to greater glory in the Yar’Adua era on the visitation of a howling scam on Nigerians. One other such fellow (and they are many) remains Nuhu Ribadu, the self-propelled and self-adulated former anti-corruption czar who misinterpreted his role on how he satiated the crazy and gluttonous quest of the Obasanjo-led PDP for unaccountable power.

Again, I know that the duo were the most vociferous in broadcasting whatever they deemed their achievements and the duo invested in the negative roles they played to manipulate the country’s body polity with the hope of automatic pay-back when a regime with no popular mandate is forced down on Nigerians. Again, the duo may not understand why other hatchet men like Bayo Ojo, Maurice Iwu, Sunday Ehindero were either not vindicated or were even rewarded for their acts of infamy, they were hounded out of office and made to account for their bad deeds. While El-Rufai had his well guarded pot of worms that contained the unholy looting of Abuja lands and houses uncovered, Ribadu was demanded to account for acts of insubordination and his pretence that he was cleaner than the co-gangsters with whom he prosecuted the Obasanjo leviathan that was noted for how it grew the fonts of corruption to favour choice lackeys and cronies. Both have been made fugitives from the law as well as from the frankesitan they violently molded and they are still on the run.

So, I believed that an El-Rufai has no heck of a credible account to give about a regime that had disappointingly refused to meet his narrow and often dangerously selfish permutations as well as the basic needs of a well-battered citizenry neighing for redemption from horrible governance. But then, I read the piece just to see if there are newer revelations we can tap from this messy fight among thieves, sharing unearned loot from a bounteous rape. So after reading El-Rufai’s lengthy account on Yar’Adua’s government, I walked away with some of these main points;

  • The Obasanjo regime, of which El-Rufai was a strategic player, had no succession plan after eight years in power and had to settle for Yar’Adua after the failure of a more heinous life presidency project for which Yar’Adua, El-Rufai and Ribadu among so many principalities were fervently committed.
  • The regime opted for a reluctant candidate who was far less controversial, almost invisible and physically encumbered for less tasking but whom the government strangely felt was the ‘best candidate’ to succeed Obasanjo.
  • The Obasanjo regime, of which El-Rufai was a principal apostle, opted for a fraudulent electoral forgery to get Yar’Adua to power even when El-Rufai and co nursed the unprovable and self-serving feeling that ‘he would still have won’ if the election was free and fair.
  • Yar’Adua has deep personal flaws the Obasanjo regime, with El-Rufai as one of the most principal enforcers, overlooked to force him down on Nigerians.
  • El-Rufai, with so many others, played a more than active role in the emergence of Yar’Adua and his subsequent inauguration but was shoved aside for newer menservants.
  • Yar’Adua has a deceptive personality that was carefully cultivated to take out opponents and hand them a deadly punch, as he had obviously dealt El-Rufai and Ribadu. This conclusion was drawn from El-Rufai’s own long acquaintance with Yar’Adua that dates back to 1972.
  • Yar’Adua’s decision to undo some of the houses of fraud Obasanjo, El-Rufai, et al, built with spittle shows that those that forced him on Nigerians made a bad investment.
  • Yar’Adua lacks the courage, the will power and the good intents to pursue critical reforms in critical sectors like electoral process and anti-corruption fight, as he does not necessarily abhor corruption contrary to the managed picture that birthed his emergence.
  • Yar’Adua and the government he runs are hollow and lack the knowledge, will power and wisdom to run the country, as shown by the grim picture of the last two years.
  • Nigerians must brace up for more harrowing times, if the drab and uninspiring picture of the first two years is anything to go by.

These are not the only inferences in El-Rufai’s sermon but these are the critical points he raised. It is very obvious that there is no point he mentioned here that has not been severally rehearsed by Nigerians in the tasking period Yar’Adua has been in power. Even El-Rufai was a reluctant latecomer to the fact that Yar’Adua does not posses the competence to rule Nigeria for Nigerians bayed it loud and clear when he emerged through the dubious selection process Obasanjo and El-Rufai initiated as their tenure elongation project came unstuck. His own grouse started the moment he and his tall dream to rise in the emerging contraption was disappointed and he was set up for a long haul from the law. As has been said by most commentators who have weighed in on the El-Rufai missive, he would not have dared raise any voice of opposition were he given the coveted compensation for his nefarious efforts in the Yar’Adua government. In deed, he would have been at his elements, celebrating himself and the Yar’Adua government and its invisible achievements if he was accommodated in the Yar’Adua government. If he still does not find reasons to denounce most of the damning acts of the Obasanjo regime between 1999 and 2007, he loses all moral rights to point to any of the many flaws of a blundering and practically comatose regime.

So El-Rufai was saying nothing new except that he wanted to tap into the people’s frustration at the steady defrenestation the country is passing through in the hands of the culled creation of the sly hands of Obasanjo, El-Rufai and their culled ilk who maintained a suzerain reign over the sovereignty of the country to the extent that the people never mattered.

So El-Rufai has no patriotic intent or urge for national progress in penning that missive other than to cash in on the people’s angst and frustration on how their country has been stolen by vampires, brutes and ramparts and to employ same to rouse Nigerians to revolt against a Yar’Adua that has roundly shown a predicted unfitness to the task of governing Nigeria. It is very obvious that in doing this, El-Rufai who is a fugitive from the law is aiming to buy himself and those with whom he destroyed Nigeria between 1999 and 2007 a reprieve and if possible position that cabal for whatever outcome that may emanate from the fall of Yar’Adua. It is even more curious that El-Rufai aimed so much on our collective intelligence that he made no effort to offer an apologia for the Obasanjo misgovernance; even if it was on the manner it forced Yar’Adua on all of us. He still found space to laud that locust regime and generously celebrated the self-canonized hustlers and serial rapists that devoured an eight years oil boom reforming Nigeria to a pith or poverty and endless misery between 1999 and 2007.

I know that Nigerians are mad at Yar’Adua just because they want that regime to move them several kilometers away from the deliberate charade Obasanjo and El-Rufai visited here for eight god-forsaken years. They understand very well the frustration of Yar’Adua in engaging in confusing half-measures to undo the Hades Obasanjo and El-Rufai left here. They feel they have merely changed places between a duplicitous adult con star and another deceptive but clearly incompetent power monger and they seriously want out of a dysfunctional democracy that has excelled in duping and deprecating Nigerians for the past ten years. They want a fresh breather from the Yar’Aduas, the Obasanjos and the minions with whom they have completely devastated and laid waste a well endowed but horribly managed country for the past ten years. El-Rufai should therefore hold his peace for he remains one of the principal targets of the anger of Nigerians together with the government he promotes with glee and the one he is seeking to vilify.

Peter Claver Oparah.

Ikeja, Lagos.

E-mail: peterclaver2000@yahoo.com 



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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 03.06.2009 07:31

I forced myself, I must confess, to read the lengthy and unwieldy narration of former Obasanjo hit-man, Nasir El-Rufai on the two years of the present wobbly Yar’Adua government. My instinctive feeling was that this fellow, who made the upper crust of the greatly deceptive and fraudulently patriotic Obasanjo locust years, cannot give us any honest assessment of the debilitating liability, which the present government has become because he, alongside some of those that perambulate the Diaspora in dubious patriotic toga, played very negatively active role in forcing that mischoice on Nigeria. And to call the Yar’Adua government a mischoice is to glorify a bizarre fraud that was neither committed by the Nigerian people nor have their blessing. Again, El-Rufai’s views on the Yar;Adua government cannot be value-free because he was worsted in the power struggle in the emerging Yar’Adua contraption in the first instance. All these are if we ignore the obvious bombast, the ex...Read the full article.

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akuluounoakuluouno is offline

 # 2 | 03.06.2009 11:03

Dear PCO,

I have said it and will continue to say that whatever compelled the demolisher Rufai to pen that article on UMYA should not be allowed to becloud the contents of the same article.
I expected Adeniyi by now to have issued a press release denouncing most of the allegations that Rufai made. There is no doubt that Rufai is not the one to cast any stone against UMYA, but I am just worried about some of the allegations.:twisted:

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K_StationK_Station is offline

 # 3 | 03.06.2009 14:48

...And your point Peter is what? That the people of Nigeria cannot learn anything even from an El-Rufai because he is ‘too tainted’ and that we are doomed to continue this back-and-forth and dumb political bickering that at the end matters very little? While I have to acknowledge that you are a damn good writer with very strong viewpoints (many of which majority of Nigerians agree with in principle), the problem is they come off as too academic and not in sync with the reality in Nigeria. It is a shame because we all want to come to the same end as it concerns our country, but we have to open our minds, be a little more pragmatic and get over this aluta mentality that only sees everything from a puritanical perspective.

For instance, what you called “…unholy looting of Abuja lands and houses…” others see as mostly bringing sanity to land development in Abuja. Do you honestly believe that Nigerian big-men and money-bags care about development master plans or communal green space that is not supposed to be developed under any circumstances? You live in Lagos, are you proud of how the city has developed over the years mostly without planning and without regard to the needs of the general population for recreation and relaxation? I don’t mean that they didn’t make any mistakes but do you honestly believe that El-Rufai could have gotten anything done in Abuja (and same goes for Ribadu, with regards to fighting corruption) without drawing the anger of a section of the elite bloc (and yes, of which he may be one)?

You also mentioned that Ribadu and El-Rufai are “fugitives from the law”. Yeah right, the law that took care of Bola Ige and Alfred Rewane? I’ll like to know what you’ll do if your car gets shot at and your life is constantly under threat in your own country.

Finally all I’m trying to say is that we all need to come to these issues more open mindedly. In every society there is a place for critics, talkers and doers. Critics and talkers do not always appreciate the challenges of doing, which is why they always fail at the test of doing what they’ve always advocated. For instance considering how strongly you feel about the issues at stake isn’t it better for you Peter to mobilize like-minded people and try to get a political organization/party going that can help transform your visions to reality in Nigeria? But as we all know, that is easier said than done because taking such a step will bring you face-to-face with the reality of the entrenched power structure in Nigeria, and how that structure does not like to be threatened. Maybe then you will start to appreciate the context in which many of the folks we all like to vilify attempted and maybe failed to make a change. I know and we all know Nigeria has not been blessed with many decent doers, but the few good men and women among us will continue to distance themselves from politics if we don’t elevate our political discourse. By rubbishing every good deed and every good intention (even if they didn’t always turn out alright) because of our deep and collective anger will only keep us where we now unfortunately almost always expect to be – with dregs in politics and a nation at the bottom rungs of human development!

It is time to come together, internalize the lessons of the past and start to work out how we can make a change and a difference starting now into 2011!

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UGOJIALORUGOJIALOR is offline

 # 4 | 03.06.2009 15:19

Thank you so much K_Station for your post. You articulated my thoughts perfectly, I've nothing to add.

Most of this guys making noise about Nigeria will poo in their pants at the thought of DEMONSTRATING in the National Assembly not to think of forming a political Party.

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Gongo-asoGongo-aso is offline

 # 5 | 03.06.2009 16:40

If I have half of the money Abiola had or a quarter of what Babangida stole, I will sponsor the elimination of ALL the political bastards in Nigeria. Unless we sponsor a Rawlings, this country will never make it. Never.

If that approach doesn't work, I will negotiate with the militants to further "our" operations to the heart of Abuja.

There must be a way to free Nigeria and Nigerians from mental and physical slavery. Something must work out...I'm still thinking.

Make I go come back

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busangabusanga is offline

 # 6 | 03.06.2009 17:19


=K_Station;360705>...And your point Peter is what? That the people of Nigeria cannot learn anything even from an El-Rufai because he is ‘too tainted’ and that we are doomed to continue this back-and-forth and dumb political bickering that at the end matters very little?



C'mon Kstation, you are smarter than that. The writer never said we learned nothing from Rufai. In fact he said to the contrary and I quote:


I read the piece just to see if there are newer revelations we can tap from this messy fight among thieves, sharing unearned loot from a bounteous rape. So after reading El-Rufai’s lengthy account on Yar’Adua’s government, I walked away with some of these main points;

* The Obasanjo regime, of which El-Rufai was a strategic player, had no succession plan after eight years in power and had to settle for Yar’Adua after the failure of a more heinous life presidency project for which Yar’Adua, El-Rufai and Ribadu among so many principalities were fervently committed.
* The regime opted for a reluctant candidate who was far less controversial, almost invisible and physically encumbered for less tasking but whom the government strangely felt was the ‘best candidate’ to succeed Obasanjo.
* The Obasanjo regime, of which El-Rufai was a principal apostle, opted for a fraudulent electoral forgery to get Yar’Adua to power even when El-Rufai and co nursed the unprovable and self-serving feeling that ‘he would still have won’ if the election was free and fair.
* Yar’Adua has deep personal flaws the Obasanjo regime, with El-Rufai as one of the most principal enforcers, overlooked to force him down on Nigerians.
* El-Rufai, with so many others, played a more than active role in the emergence of Yar’Adua and his subsequent inauguration but was shoved aside for newer menservants.
* Yar’Adua has a deceptive personality that was carefully cultivated to take out opponents and hand them a deadly punch, as he had obviously dealt El-Rufai and Ribadu. This conclusion was drawn from El-Rufai’s own long acquaintance with Yar’Adua that dates back to 1972.
* Yar’Adua’s decision to undo some of the houses of fraud Obasanjo, El-Rufai, et al, built with spittle shows that those that forced him on Nigerians made a bad investment.
* Yar’Adua lacks the courage, the will power and the good intents to pursue critical reforms in critical sectors like electoral process and anti-corruption fight, as he does not necessarily abhor corruption contrary to the managed picture that birthed his emergence.
* Yar’Adua and the government he runs are hollow and lack the knowledge, will power and wisdom to run the country, as shown by the grim picture of the last two years.
* Nigerians must brace up for more harrowing times, if the drab and uninspiring picture of the first two years is anything to go by.



How could you possibly have come off with the opinion that he felt we could learn nothing from a witch recanting in the villagesquare? Of course, that does not make the witch stop being just a plain witch right?

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ariteniariteni is offline

 # 7 | 03.06.2009 17:26

Peter, please get serious. Rufai's essay was very informative. He still enjoys a presumption of innocence. He is one of the most intelligent Nigerians to be a Minister. He cannot be inflicted with the "woes" of Obasanjo Regime. Some people were Ministers but very ineffective and useless. If he hurt Nigerians (few) while carrying out his duties in obedience to Presidential directives he does not deserve your condemnation. But if you are affected because he demolished your frineds house build upon sewage at FTC you have no case. I hope the other silent Obasanjo Boys including Soludo, Okonjo-Iweala, Ezekwesili, Fani Kayode and others would summon courage to speak out rather than hide away for decades like a Babangida boy called Humphey Nwosu.

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busangabusanga is offline

 # 8 | 04.06.2009 06:07


=ariteni;360739>Peter, please get serious. Rufai's essay was very informative. He still enjoys a presumption of innocence. .


even after he confessed to the crime of rigging? :confused1 Which innocence? I see that you Nigerians are incredibly gullible!

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ZumaZuma is online

 # 9 | 04.06.2009 07:33

Can we have the next parrot to entertain us please. We are tired of these same ones without any new stories.

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Kay OKay O is offline

 # 10 | 04.06.2009 12:40

K Station, thanks for your comments which I totally agree with. I was just wondering whether El Rufai would have been in this mess if he had instead demolished my father's house in Abuja rather than politicians' houses. When Nuhu Ribadu was nailing 419ners, he was a good man, until he got to politicians. These people did relatively well while in office but that is not to say they are saints. I will be expecting the presidency to react to the issues raised in El Rufai narrative.
 

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