SEVENGOVERNORS, 20 SENATORS, OTHERS FOR OBASANJO'S COALITION FOR NIGERIA
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Seven Governors, 20
Senators, Others For Obasanjo’s Coalition For Nigeria
Many of those consulted by Mr.
Obasanjo are said to have signed on to his elaborate plan for a mass movement
away from the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), and his former party, the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), to “rescue” the country
by Abdulaziz Abdulaziz Jan 25, 2018
A former Nigerian president,
Olusegun Obasanjo, is mobilising politicians and other Nigerians to sign on to
his Coalition for Nigeria project, to oust President Muhammadu Buhari from
office.
Many of those consulted by Mr.
Obasanjo are said to have signed on to his elaborate plan for a mass movement
away from the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), and his former party, the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), to “rescue” the country.
Mr. Obasanjo described the two
parties as “wobbling” and unfit to run Nigeria. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo
On Tuesday, the former president
issued a scathing public commentary on the Buhari administration, advising the
president to take a “deserved rest” and urging Nigerians to vote him out should
Mr. Buhari insist on running.
The Nigerian government on
Wednesday responded to Mr. Obasanjo, outlining many achievements of the
government.
But there is an untold story to
the public rebuke.
Impeccable sources told PREMIUM
TIMES the former president repeatedly discussed his concerns with Mr. Buhari,
and then decided to go public after he noticed no improvement in the way the
country is governed.
Frustrated by the worsening
political and security situation of the country, Mr. Obasanjo spent the last
few months consulting key political leaders in the country.
He then used the better part of
January drafting and editing what is now the explosive “special press
statement” that has shaken the nation’s political foundation.
Signs that things were amiss
between Mr. Obasanjo and Mr. Buhari, a man the former endorsed for the
presidency in 2015, manifested early this month in far away Oxford, United
Kingdom.
Giving a talk at the University
of Oxford, Mr. Obasanjo commended some African leaders for their reforms and
economic transformation, but left out Mr. Buhari.
Asked from the audience on when
he would make his feelings about the Buhari government public, Mr. Obasanjo
said the time was not ripe.
However, aides and associates of
the former president said he had actually began expressing his misgivings about
the Buhari administration from late last year, and shared his feelings with
political associates and some elder statesmen.
A number of those consulted,
PREMIUM TIMES gathered, consented to Mr. Obasanjo’s idea that it was time to
intervene in the political course of events.
Mr. Obasanjo has held meetings
with former Nigerian leaders, serving governors, lawmakers and other key
leaders across the country before arriving at the decision.
“At the last count, seven
governors, 20 senators and over 100 House of Representatives members have
agreed in principle with Baba to go into this coalition,” a close associate of
the former president told our reporter.
The personalities have chosen to
remain in the shadows for now but have signaled their intention to move in to
what is envisioned to be a mega coalition at some time.
HOW THE
STATEMENT WAS COMPOSED AND RELEASED
On his return to Nigeria from
Oxford, Mr. Obasanjo commenced work in earnest on the press statement.
He shared a draft with a few
close aides and some of his children to get their comments.
The former president was said to
have made final edits on the document on the flight to and from Liberia for the
inauguration of President George Weah.
“Very early in the morning of
Tuesday, Mr. Obasanjo called a meeting of about eight of his close aides and
associates to finalise the document and what to do with it,” a source familiar
with what transpired that morning told PREMIUM TIMES.
Some of the former president’s
children were said to have cautioned him about his personal security
considering the tones of the letter.
“Baba (Obasanjo) however told
them that was the least of his concerns. He told them that he considers himself
to be living on extra-time and was ready to pay whatever price for this
country,” the source explained.
The meeting then discussed the
content of the statement and came to agreement that time was ripe for the
document to be released.
Mr. Obasanjo then directed that
the statement be released to the media by email at 1pm, Tuesday. He also
ordered for the final copy to be produced into a booklet. Initial 1000 copies
were then produced.
The octogenarian then picked up
some copies of the booklets as he made for Ibadan later that morning.
PRISON
TERM
Mr. Obasanjo took a swipe at Mr.
Buhari in the open letter, accusing the president of ineptitude, clannishness
and callousness in handling affairs of the country.
He described another term of four
years for Mr. Buhari as “prison term” arguing that “Nigeria deserves and
urgently needs better than what they have given or what we know they are
capable of giving”.
“To ask them to give more will be
unrealistic and will only sentence Nigeria to a prison term of four years if
not destroy it beyond the possibility of an early recovery and substantial
growth. Einstein made it clear to us that doing the same thing and expecting a
different result is the height of folly.”
MR.
OBASANJO’S VISION FOR THE MOVEMENT
In the widely reported press
statement, Mr. Obasanjo spelled out his concept of the movement.
He said it would provide
Nigerians a window to determine their fate and chart a new course for the
country, away from the now dominant political parties.
“This Coalition for Nigeria will
be a Movement that will drive Nigeria up and forward,” the former president
said. “It must have a pride of place for all Nigerians, particularly for our
youth and our women. It is a coalition of hope for all Nigerians for speedy,
quality and equal development, security, unity, prosperity and progress. It is
a coalition to banish poverty, insecurity and despair.
“Coalition for Nigeria must be a
Movement to break new ground in building a united country, a socially-cohesive
and moderately prosperous society with equity, equality of opportunity, justice
and a dynamic and progressive economy that is self-reliant and takes active
part in global division of labour and international decision-making.”
A discreet plan is said to be on
afoot to constitute the leadership of the proposed Coalition for Nigeria
movement, with announcement expected sometimes next week.
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