25

Jan

2009

Photos From The Witches’ Dance & Memo To Yar’Adua’s Doctors PDF Print E-mail
By Sonala Olumhense

Photos from the witches’ dance

Everyone is talking about one photograph. It shows our former President, Olusegun Obasanjo, alongside the man who was on the People’s Democratic Party ticket with him in 1999 and 2003, Atiku Abubakar. 

But the gasp of horror that went round the world when the photograph was published last week was not about the image itself. It is about the date: January 19, 2009. In theory, the picture comes only one and a half years after both men left office. Actually, the picture taken last week of Atiku and Obasanjo at the latter’s Abeokuta home comes five or six years after they abandoned any pretence to governance and began the mud-wrestling that showed Nigeria the depths of our decay.

Obasanjo wanted a third term in office; Atiku did his best to make sure that did not happen. Atiku wanted to succeed Obasanjo in office; Obasanjo made sure that did not happen. As their second term wore on, Obasanjo had his VP investigated, first by an administrative panel led by Bayo Ojo, and then by the pro-Obasanjo Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) superintended by Nuhu Ribadu. Both bodies found Atiku guilty on every count that would make the boss happy.

As Obasanjo and his VP called each other a thief and a liar, Atiku was steadily isolated from the government, and his key staff fired. Looking further afield, Obasanjo made sure the electoral commission disqualified Atiku from running for the presidency, although the court eventually permitted him to run. 

In the skirmish, it turned out that between both men, vast funds under the control of the Petroleum Development Trust Fund had largely been used in the manner of a cookie jar without a cover. Obasanjo found Atiku guilty of diverting its funds into local banks and to promote private interests such as Netlink Digital Television and Globacom.

The VP, we remember, fought back aggressively. He accused Obasanjo, among others, of the forgery of a N61 million cheque being used against him. He also published photocopies of cancelled cheques to prove how “[Obasanjo], his family, businesses, and native community…benefitted tremendously from money deposited in the accounts he is now dissociating himself from.” In one account alone, said Atiku, funds were taken out for Obasanjo’s Africa Leadership Forum and the Obasanjo Campaign Organization; over N100 million was paid to a construction company owned by Obasanjo; buses were bought for Obasanjo’s Bells Comprehensive High School, and cars were given to women of the President’s choosing. 

That was in three years ago. One of them was shunted aside from power, while the other left in bitterness in 2007, unable to realize his fantasies of a third term. The only thing they have shared since then is avoidance. And then, suddenly this week, they fall back into each other’s arms, saying it is in the interest of Nigeria?

If Yar’Adua were well enough to tell the time of day, he would have had both men arrested. While they are free to meet, as citizens of the federal republic, what they admit to: dissatisfaction with the state of the nation, is an insult even to a government as helpless as we have, and to the nation. It is an Area Boys’ equivalent of a coup d’etat. 

Perhaps both men know just how “bad” the government of Yar’Adua is—the one from Dubai and the other from the Congo. Perhaps both men truly know just how bad Yar’Adua’s health is. But they are a key part of how we got here in the first place. And this is usually how the political salvation game starts: “patriotic” soldiers who know how “bad” things are, who then conspire to “save” the country. I would rather roast in hell than another heaven of Obasanjo’s design.

Strangely, if there was anything Obasanjo succeeded at in his eight years, it was in reorganizing the military so as to make sure there were no more coups. But he would then take steps to accomplish the dubious objectives not only to set the country back, but to ensure it could neither rise nor come after him. It is easy to prove that he left our nation worse than he found it. He then left the estate in the hands of a sick, complicated man with no idea what is going on. Now, why does Obasanjo want to “save” Nigeria from his very accomplishments? 

If Obasanjo’s motivation is curious, that of Atiku is tragic. He cuts the image of a pathetic man who is grasping at every scent in the wind to lead him into the precincts of power. That he would leave his home and head for Obasanjo’s, given even a sliver of the things that have happened between them, makes writing his political epitaph an easy assignment. 

But while they may make gorillas of each other, neither should fool Nigerians. As a PM News story made clear on Thursday, the real reason for their meeting was not Nigeria, but mutual survival. As America’s Federal Bureau of Investigations of the Siemens bribery scandal wears on relentlessly, the agency is reported to be close to pin-pointing the officials of the Obasanjo administration who received $4.5 million in bribes. As has been previously reported, some of the bribes were paid into the account of a wife of a former Vice-President. In addition, some officials—designated as ‘P’ and ‘V.P.’ in Siemens’ records—also received watches worth about $172,000. 

This is what has driven both men together. There is no Nigerian that Obasanjo loves so much he would forgive him the things Atiku disclosed in 2006. None. There is no country or child or woman that he loves that much. None. Yet, while both men are practically untouchable in Nigeria, they have found themselves to be together in the same foreign minefield. And this is happening at a time Obasanjo is trying to rehabilitate his image internationally, as a statesman. 

On Monday, without meaning to be profound, the ‘facilitator’ of the meeting, Osun State’s Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola, captured the Abeokuta event in a Yoruba adage. “When two witches dance,” he told reporters, “a man does not go there to watch.”

What does he do? Stay tuned, I think. 

MEMO TO YAR’ADUA’S DOCTORS

Your patient returns to you this week, wherever you are. Before he does, it is time to tell you your diagnosis is wrong. You are making no progress because you are looking at the wrong side of the man. 

Here is help: When he shows up this time, set him on his stomach and check his back thoroughly, from the base of his neck down. I predict you will find firewood where his spine is supposed to be. That would explain, for instance, why he would so casually throw the doors of Aso Rock open to a combined visit of almost all the indicted governors: Abdulkadir Kure; Ayo Fayose, Abdul Attah, Bola Tinubu, and their leader, Lucky Igbinedion.

Yes, I saw that picture too. Before you return the man to us, may God spare his life, kindly replace the firewood with fiberglass. And don’t forget the anti-hypocrisy medication.



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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 25.01.2009 12:09

MEMO TO YAR’ADUA’S DOCTORS Your patient returns to you this week, wherever you are.Before he does, it is time to tell you your diagnosis is wrong.You are making no progress because you are looking at the wrong side of the man. Here is help: When he shows up this time, set him on his stomach and check his back thoroughly, from the base of his neck down.I predict you will find firewood where his spine is supposed to be.That would explain, for instance, why he would so casually throw the doors of Aso Rock open to a combined visit of almost all the indicted governors: Abdulkadir Kure; Ayo Fayose, Abdul Attah, Bola Tinubu, and their leader, Lucky Igbinedion. ...Read the full article.

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nijalawnijalaw is offline

 # 2 | 25.01.2009 13:51


MEMO TO YAR’ADUA’S DOCTORS

Your patient returns to you this week, wherever you are. Before he does, it is time to tell you your diagnosis is wrong. You are making no progress because you are looking at the wrong side of the man.

Here is help: When he shows up this time, set him on his stomach and check his back thoroughly, from the base of his neck down. I predict you will find firewood where his spine is supposed to be. That would explain, for instance, why he would so casually throw the doors of Aso Rock open to a combined visit of almost all the indicted governors: Abdulkadir Kure; Ayo Fayose, Abdul Attah, Bola Tinubu, and their leader, Lucky Igbinedion.

Yes, I saw that picture too. Before you return the man to us, may God spare his life, kindly replace the firewood with fiberglass. And don’t forget the anti-hypocrisy medication.



Clearly history will record Yaradua as Nigeria's worst president. He has taken the spot from Shagari & he hasn't even finished his tenure.

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TEchiTEchi is offline

 # 3 | 25.01.2009 14:23


=Robot;317609>MEMO TO YAR’ADUA’S DOCTORS Your patient returns to you this week, wherever you are.Before he does, it is time to tell you your diagnosis is wrong.You are making no progress because you are looking at the wrong side of the man. Here is help: When he shows up this time, set him on his stomach and check his back thoroughly, from the base of his neck down.I predict you will find firewood where his spine is supposed to be.That would explain, for instance, why he would so casually throw the doors of Aso Rock open to a combined visit of almost all the indicted governors: Abdulkadir Kure; Ayo Fayose, Abdul Attah, Bola Tinubu, and their leader, Lucky Igbinedion. ...Read the full article.



I doubt these two old cronies are tunneling their way back into power. Just as you have said they are just trying to patch up their firewood botts. We all know what their diagnosis are, they are really sick pups that need a good doctor.

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iamgodiamgod is offline

 # 4 | 25.01.2009 15:39

I am now convinced that OBJ is an even much bigger fool than we all thought.

How can he be reported to be 'disaffected' with UMYA's government. A president he singlehandedly imposed on the nation, while using all means dirty and foul to keep Atiku from the presidency? The same man he reportedly is now courting. I think the mental state of some of our politicians should really come under serious scrutiny.

As for Atiku, he was never 'real' in the first place. Time and chance plus a greedy malevolent boss and his own personal ambition did help Atiku whitewash his image with the ever forgiving Nigerian populace- ala the failed third term ambition and the resulting 'no holds barred', down n dirty war that went all the way to the supreme court. We have not forgotten COJA and the scam that accompanied it. That was when all was well with Atiku and his erstwhile boss.

If he hasnt been told, hobnobbing with a failed OBJ (who should be in jail if not for UMYA's glass spine) is the surest way to political suicide. Atiku should know that the goodwill he garnered during the third term aftermath was not due to his personality or character, but a unanimous desire of ALL Nigerians to see the back of the aso rock gorilla, and the satisfaction of seeing someone, anyone, tame and cage the beast in aso rock.

Finally, if the AC is serious about any form of opposition, Atiku is clearly not the messiah we all are expecting.

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triggertrigger is offline

 # 5 | 26.01.2009 02:02

Very interesting, $172, 000 bribe to Obasanjo :)
(A president of a country with over $10 bln Oil income)
Anyway, that is left for the US law enforcement agent...
I think, we still have some Nigerians there too.
It is unfortunate that we are so ignorant of so many things that go on around us. We often misinterpret other people’s action or decisions without proper analysis and worst of all, we draw very wrong conclusion by taking rumors for real.
I have no doubt that OBJ had his short comings, mistakes and misunderstanding in some areas, but who dare challenges his personality as an administrator. One thing for sure, when things were going out of hand, UMYA though not in the best 1000, was a soft landing pillow for the government and the country in trouble.
On the other hand, the article stated the battle to keep Atiku away from heading the Aso Rock; it’s like a resident evil driven out from the house, currently being occupied by unidentified spirit.
OBJ is not only smart but really; I have no iota of doubt that he loves Nigeria.
A time will come when history will bring the whole truth to lime light.
I still prefer a sick UMYA to the ambitious and selfish VP. He could have by now become another IBB by transferring the whole reserve OBJ left behind to his private account, and then IMF would have granted us $300 bln interest free by the year 2010, and by 2020 our children will owe IMF 2 trillion US dollars plus more debt restructuring cost.
As for OBJ, I think he would have been a fool to put someone there in Aso rock without any guarantee that at least 30% of his mapped out programs for the country is going to be carried out, as well as taking care of his own personal security.
If anyone who claims that OBJ left a bankrupt Nigeria he inherited in a worst position after 8 yrs in office, then I'll better advise you to get a conscience somewhere.
Does anyone really think that all what Nigeria is recording on a positive scale for the past 1.5 years is because UMYA is such a good administrator?
To point out just very few, OBJ settled IBB and Abacha's 40$ bln debt to the IMF and left almost 30$ bln in surplus to UMYA - do we really understand the economic advantage of that alone, or what would have been the implications on the opposite, to our growing, sick and jobless population today?
The freedom of speech we enjoy today, can you compare it to the one IBB promised land or that of Abacha?
As for EFCC, do we forget that Ribadu charged 31 out of 36 governors to answer questions, and majority of the governors were from the OBJ's ruling party? Even parliamentarians we afraid to take bribe.
If not because of Ribadu the 3rd term bill would have gone through the parliament very smoothly, bearing in mind that those who supported OBJ had stared a rumored N50 mln for each vote.
There are many other things in the micro and macro economics sectors that we ignore, forgetting that our poor population directly depends on these factors.
I really think that it will be much better, that we advise our children and teachers in schools to read well and understand their chosen or given subjects, because we still lack understanding of basic things around us.
I don't think that America, Russia or UK had up to fifty professors when their flying machines were already exploiting their air spaces, whereas Nigeria today can boast of over one hundred thousand professors and PhD holders and all the information of the modern age... And where are we? We really need good managers at all level and a more responsible population, which will make our managers and governors accountable periodically to the society we live.

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folashadefolashade is offline

 # 6 | 26.01.2009 02:14

In the heat of the charade that characterised the ''selection'' of UMYA as presidential candidate of the PDP, I recall telling close friends that Nigeria looked headed for the edge of the precipice. That UMYA ''s sickly disposition gave him away as someone incapable of even saying boo to a goose, how much more ready for the challenges of leading a country as complex and dynamic as Nigeria.

Events in the last two years have not failed to put this in proper perspective, so one is not fully surprised at the level of stagnation and degeneracy that has characterised governance under Umoru's watch.

As for the two ''chummy'' fat cats suddenly turned friends in the 'interest of Nigeria', there''s not a pin to choose between six and half a dozen. Nigerians are not fooled as to the reason for this sudden effusive display of love and camaraderie.

They both cut a pathetic picture on the front page of the dailies last week,looking like two self-confessed felons in a final moment of restitution before the trial judge. And this reinforces the truth most of us have always known. That OBJ and Atiku are cut from the same cloth. Though bound by mutual thieving interests, neither of them will escape the sword of damocles when the wheels of justice eventually grind.

It is simply amazing that a country so blest with some of the finest crop of accomplished people on the surface of the earth could consistently be so cursed and held to ransome by the same bunch of recycled robbers parading themselves as leaders.

Something is indeed rotten in the state of Denmark.

While not advocating violence or a change by another means,the starting point for us as a nation is to speak with one voice and collectively reject the 'political order' that breeds these monsters in the first place.

2011 is not far away.The vultures are already gathering.

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ocnusocnus is offline

 # 7 | 26.01.2009 03:46

It is a small wonder the OBJ was able to pay off Nigeria's debts to the IMF. The budget of Nigeria was calculated on the basis of revenues flowing from oil at USD$28 a barrel during the last OBJ years. That means that the nation's budgetary, investments and social welfare programs were calculated on these lines. Anything over the $28 would be windfall revenue for the nation. During this period the price of oil was much higher, averaging (by my calculations) around $62 a barrel in the last year. That meant there was a surplus of $34 a barrel. Using the conservative figure of two million barrels a day (not counting bunkering) that meant that Nigeria earned $68 million a day above and beyond its budgeted needs. That is, for the last year alone, $24.8 billion dollars above and beyond the nation's budgeted needs. In the previous two years the figure was smaller but around the $10 billion surplus revenue.

Where did that money go?

Nigerians should remember that there is another industry which is even more profitable than the crude oil business, one that rarely figures in commentator's calculations. That is the natural gas market. In this Nigeria is a world leader with five LNG trains (export points) which are constantly busy. More may be built. While the current price of oil has dropped from its $147 high, the price of natural gas has remained high. Nigeria is making vast revenues from its natural gas business. It could be more,. Nigeria flares (burns off) millions of cubic feet of gas every day - a total waste of resources. The total wasted is about 1.8 times the national budget. Many African countries could survive nicely on the value of the gas wasted by Nigeria.

The reason that there is such an animus against OBJ and Atiku is that they were in a position to change things - to allow the millions of poor Nigerians to participate financially in the bounty of their own land. They wasted the opportunity. At the bottom line this is the case against them.

Unfortunately things don't really seem to have improved.

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denkerdenker is offline

 # 8 | 26.01.2009 04:07


Nigeria flares (burns off) millions of cubic feet of gas every day - a total waste of resources.



...imagine, harnessing dis, adequate provision of 24 hrs electricity gonna be guaranteed..anywaz, as i talk'm, nigerians are unserious children...take dem serious at your own peril...useless/corrupted creatures!-nonsense!

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giant stepsgiant steps is offline

 # 9 | 26.01.2009 08:22

im honestly not impressed with that article , it appears to me that after Obasanjo left the scene most Writers and journalists have lost track on what to write ............so they just cook up such unproducticve stuff....(WITH LL DUE RESPECT TO YOUR INTELLECTUAL PROWESS) it reminds me of those days when lazy musicians could not release new songs because mandela had been freed and arpathied was over..........man dont get me wrong , i appreciate your efforts but just thought your article would have correlated with the yar ardua sickness or gotten more objective , ............we need great stffs in NVS

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giant stepsgiant steps is offline

 # 10 | 26.01.2009 08:23

im honestly not impressed with that article , it appears to me that after Obasanjo left the scene most Writers and journalists have lost track on what to write ............so they just cook up such unproducticve stuff....(WITH LL DUE RESPECT TO YOUR INTELLECTUAL PROWESS) it reminds me of those days when lazy musicians could not release new songs because mandela had been freed and arpathied was over..........man dont get me wrong , i appreciate your efforts but just thought your article would have correlated with the yar ardua sickness or gotten more objective , ............we need great stffs in NVS-GIANT STEPS
 

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