Ex President Obasanjo has taken his time to silence his critics in his new book 'My Watch' with reference to his past relationships with some Nigerian political activists.
Ex President Olusegun Obasanjo
He showered praises on the late Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Gani Fawewhinmi as a man who was not
just a critic of his government, but was also the counsel to his ex-wife, Remi,
during the couple’s messy divorce.
“Gani
was to me a fearless, genuine politico-social critic, who drew no distinction
between friends and associates or on ethnicity, geography or religion,” Mr. Obasanjo
wrote. “He believed in what he did and did what he believed.”
Mr. Obasanjo
also commended Mr. Gani for always speaking up when everyone
else was silent, especially on matters of injustice. He
alleged that his ex-wife, Remi, sought the services of Mr.
Fawehinmi in order to scandalize him as a senior
military officer and a minister in government, but that he (Obasanjo) equally
secured Mr. Fawehinmi’s
match in Kehinde
Sofola.
Late Gani Fawehinmi
“But
that issue did not diminish my respect for Gani,” he said. Mr. Obasanjo
described Mr. Fawehinmi as an advocate for the poor and
the oppressed. He
said the vacuum left by the late legal luminary was yet to be filled in Nigeria.
“For
Wole, no one can be good, nor can anything be spot-on politically except that
which emanates from him or is ordained by him,” Mr. Obasanjo
wrote. “His friends and loved ones will always be right and correct no matter
what they do or fail to do.”
Mr. Obasanjo
said he found the Professor of Literature “a misfit as a political analyst,
commentator or critic,” adding that it was good that Mr. Soyinka
did not go into politics.
“He
is surely a better wine connoisseur and a more successful “aparo” (guinea fowl)
hunter than a political critic, not to talk of what he would do as a
politician,” Mr. Obasanjo said. “I take him seriously on
almost all issues except on the political particularly Nigerian politics.”
Professor Wole Soyinka
He,
however, noted that the Nobel laureate appeared to
have ‘mellowed’ down since turning 80 recently. As
he prayed that Mr. Soyinka
celebrates the centenary of his birth on earth, Mr. Obasanjo
also stated, “If I go before him, I will bid him welcome when he arrives at the
great beyond. I hope he would do the same if he succeeds in getting there
before me and we find ourselves on the same side of the divide.”
On
Mr. Chukwumerije, Mr. Obasanjo said the senator as a younger person used to be sincere, fearless and
uncompromising but as he grew older and the reality of life dawned on him with
the weight of family responsibility “his pen, if not his mouth, gradually
blunted and the fire in him started to dim”.
Uche Chukuwumerije
Mr. Obasanjo also said it then
became easy to sway the once fiery, obstinate critic and he became a tool of
whoever needed to use him.
“Wittingly or unwittingly, he began to do the bidding of the lurer,” he said. “In the process, the intrepidity waned and the fearlessness disappeared. He became called and coiled.” He added that by joining politics, Mr. Chukwumerije sacrificed not only the “fire” in him, but also the “brand,” adding that the real Mr. Chukwumerije that was known in the past was gone.
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