SHAME ON OBASANJO: THE FOILED DESPERATE PLOT BY A POWER-DRUNK PRESIDENT TO RULE
NIGERIA FOREVER, BY DSP ALAMIESEIGHA

He's had everything a man could ask for, and more. But former Nigerian President
retired General Olusegun Aremu Obasanjo wanted more, much more. After eight
years in power as a dubiously elected President at the shamelessly manipulated
1999 and 2003 presidential elections, Obasanjo wanted to achieve what former
dictator Gen Sani Abacha tried but failed to accomplish: Obasanjo wanted to
become President for life.
And yet, he had had everything a man could possibly ask for. He is one of
richest men in the world, and were much of his stolen billions not in other
people's names, Obasanjo would have easily made the 2009 list of Forbes magazine
ten richest men in the world. He also has a gargantuan appetite for women. As
Gbenga, his first son, could testify to. Last year, Obasanjo ensnared Gbenga's
wife, and took her from his son.
Obasanjo has led a charmed life. But obviously, he wanted more, much more. He
became head of state at a rather young age in 1976 following the asssassination
of General Murtala Muhammed. Before then, he had held significant positions in
the military, and after 1979, outside of the military in the course of a long
career.
But after eight years in power as a dubiously elected President, Obasanjo,
whose victory at the 1999 and 2003 presidential elections were widely
acknowledged as an organised fraud by the ruling Peoples Democratic Party, PDP,
was not done yet.
Obasanjo wanted to do what Gen Abacha tried but failed to achieve: he wanted to
become Nigeria's President for life, and Emperor of the Republic, like numerous
greedily corrupt, mentally unbalanced, power-crazed, viciously primitive and
self-centered African Presidents.
Former governor of Bayelsa State DSP Alamieseigha, himself a retired military
officer, told of Obasanjo's devilish plot to impose himself on Nigerians for the
rest of his life, during a recent interview with Vanguard. Excerpts:
ON OBASANJO'S DESPERATE PALN TO REMAIN PRESIDENT FOR LIFE
To be precise, on the 18th of August 2005, that day happened to be Council of
State meeting and we were all in Abuja for the meeting. I got a call from Nuhu
Ribadu, chairman of EFCC, that ‘sir, go and reconcile with Obasanjo, he has
directed that you and James Ibori, by all means should be roped in for
corruption and disgraced out of office; that he believed that James Ibori had
gone to reconcile and that I should also go quickly that he was a public
servant, he carried out orders. I told him that I had done nothing wrong, that
we were on good working terms.
However, after the Council of State meeting, I went to him (Obasanjo) and told
him that I wanted to see him and he even joked that “your friend, Stella”, was
not in town – that was around 7:30/8:00 pm.
Solomon Lar and his wife were there; they had lost a son so the wife came from
Holland and was about going back, so it was a farewell visit of sort.
When he (Obasanjo) came out, he wanted to see me. I said no, please see Chief
Solomon Lar first, which he did and they left. He (Obasanjo) then called me
into his inner office.
As we entered, he (Obasanjo) did not even allow me to sit down, he said ‘DSP,
you and Atiku want to take my job, you and Atiku want to take my job’. I then
asked him, ‘what job’?
He said Atiku had come to tell him that I was going to run with him as Vice
Presidential candidate. And I told him to the best of my knowledge that Atiku
had not told me that I was going to run with him. I asked him, what are you
trying to imply? He charged back ‘I am not leaving in 2007, a military man like
you, instead of you to work with me, you’re supporting a bloody civilian.
I said, ‘Mr. President, are you now saying that in 2007, you are not going to
leave?’
He said ‘Yes’.
I asked, ‘how are you going to do it, the constitution is very clear, you are
serving your second term and at the end of this tenure, you should gracefully
leave for others.
He said "no, I am going to continue. Am I the oldest president in Africa’?
I said ‘Mr. President, can I say something?
He said ‘Yes, go ahead’.
I said ‘you will leave’.
Yes, I told him and he asked how?
I said ‘I bet on my life, you will leave. My loyalty to you will end on May 29,
2007, whether Atiku becomes President or not. I reminded him if he had
forgotten that we all agreed in 1998 that you were only to run for four years –
two years to stabilize the nation and another two years to launder our image
abroad while Atiku would understudy you and take over when you leave.
I reminded him that in 2003, you were almost gone, you were kneeling down,
begging people, including myself. I was the only governor that got you back to
power. I even threatened my other colleagues of what I was capable of doing if
you were not allowed to continue. There is something in leadership and style
that the North recognizes that we from the South do not. Not that I love
Obasanjo more than my colleagues, I told them, but that they must allow Obasanjo
to complete his two terms.
QUESTION: What did your colleagues from the North say?
Not just the North, there were some of my colleagues from the south who were
there at the meeting too. I even told them that if Obasanjo was not allowed to
complete his two terms, there would be no war in this country that we would not
draw blood, but that we would all sit down and agree on how to negotiate and go
our separate ways. I went that far to protect your job, because of that
patriotic feeling that this nation belongs to all of us, that anybody can
aspire.
In that meeting, I even confronted the chairman of the party, Audu Ogbeh. I
asked who nominated him to be chairman of the party – it was Obasanjo. Every
governor was in support of Gemade but for the fact that it was Obasanjo that
nominated Ogbeh, we then reasoned that if we did not support Ogbeh, at the end
of the day, the President, as the leader of the party would not fund the party
and this would not be good. Indeed, Atiku summoned us many times, to accept
Audu Ogbeh and I, Alamieyeseigha was the chairman of the convention that brought
Ogbeh to power. I even asked Ogbeh whether he did not come to my lodge to beg
me for support and that today, he is saying that Obasanjo was not marketable,
that if you Ogbeh were marketable, would you have come to beg me for support. I
did all that for Obasanjo.
QUESTION: You reminded him that night?
Yes, I reminded him of all that. I said ‘Mr. President, I think some of us in
this country have to tell you the truth. I don’t think you have any new ideas
after eight years in power to generate to better the lives of Nigerians. You
would have run out of ideas.
‘Two, Mr. President, you are one of the richest people we know in Africa and
beyond.
‘Three, you have made a name for yourself both in Nigeria and beyond, so what
else do you want?
‘Four, Mr. President, if nobody has told you, you are no longer a young man. ‘I said Mr. President, all your children are grown up and are educated so what
else do you want? I will suggest to you that you should relinquish power based
on the constitutional provisions.
QUESTION: What was his response to all these?
He shouted at me, that ‘I will throw you out of my house’.
I said Mr. President, with due respect, this is not your house; so many people
have passed through this place; you did not construct the place and I’m sure you
know our language “Soldier Go, Soldier Come, Barracks Remain”. I am from Bayelsa
State, the core state of the Niger Delta, that this house was built with my
money.
I reminded him that I am more educated.
QUESTION: As you said all these he kept quiet?
Of course, he was not comfortable but he had to listen. Nigerians do not know
Obasanjo; Obasanjo is a coward but Nigerians do not know. When he’s in a
corner, he is a coward. If you hear Obasanjo shouting, he has people around him
but if he is alone, please forget it.
QUESTION: We heard that you and Obasanjo have a very long history in the
military?
Yes! In 1976, when the Air Force was to become autonomous, I received the
regimental colours from Obasanjo. In 1979, I commanded the Air Force parade
Would you then blame him for his expectation of total support from you?
I don’t blame him but this was about Nigeria and not Obasanjo;
QUESTION: You mean after eight years?
Was Nigeria made for him?
QUESTION: So, let’s go back to that night in the Villa?
After I said all these he piped down but made it clear that it was only over his
dead body that Atiku would be president of Nigeria. I told him that he was not
God and I reminded him that he was sentenced to death and it was converted to 25
years in prison, 15 years, and he served three and a half years, people cleaned
you up and you became the president. I asked him if he would not fear that type
of God. Out of over 140 million people, you were favoured by that God. From
1979, the nation waited for you and in 1999, you became president and you’re
still not grateful to God. I quoted Jeremiah chapter 13 for him, what God said
he would do to ungrateful people.
Then I said Mr. President, you have done so many things in this country that I
know of and for which you should be reminded. And he shouted, ‘what are those
things, what are those things’?
QUESTION: Okay, what are those things?
I said ‘if you want me to remind you I will remind you’. And he said ‘say it,
say it’.
I said in ‘1966, Mr. President, what happened?
In 1969, when the command structure of the armed forces was to be changed, when
Adekunle was to be removed as GOC Third Marine Commando, and you were commanding
Rear Garrison in Ibadan and Colonel Alabi was persuaded to speak to you to
accept, when finally you became the GOC, what did you do to Colonel Alabi? If
not for the late General Hassan Katsina, Colonel Alabi would have been a dead
man you know that. In 1976, Mr. President, what happened to Murtala Mohammed –
can you tell me what you knew about what happened? Mr. President, when Murtala
Mohammed was purging the Armed Forces and the civil service for corruption,
what was your own case and what role did Allison Ayida play in saving your neck
and what did you do when eventually you became the president – Ayida was your
first casualty. In 1979, Mr. President, when you were about to hand over power,
truly what happened during that election between Awolowo and Shagari. I’m
cutting all these
things short because I don’t want to go into details.
I said Mr. President when your military regime was to be probed you went to
Joseph Wayas in the night, what did you do to him and how was a letter issued to
you that you would not be probed? I said Mr. President, what happened and what
did MKO Abiola do to you (all the letters you wrote, I was Special Adviser to
Chukwumerije then as Minister, I was privileged to read them); what did the man
do to you that you hated him with so much passion – somebody from your own
state. Mr. President, you even projected yourself to be interim president. I
said, Mr. President, did Abacha put you in jail wrongly? I said Mr. President,
with all what General Abdulsalam Abubakar did for you, when you took over
office, me and you know what and what you’ve done to that man, this is very
current. He asked and shouted ‘what have I done to him, what have I done to
him’?
I told him to let me just cite one: I reminded him that we were in the Council
of State meeting and message came that his house was burning in Abuja here. He
had to obtain permission, by the time he got there, the house was burnt to the
ground – as I’m speaking to you have you one day asked about that incident?All these made him very quiet.
I said Mr. President, what happened to Bola Ige, what happened to Dikibo, what
happened to Marshall Harry?
I promised you that I was going to take you to the International Court of Justice for the destruction of Odi and I will do it.
QUESTION: Wait a minute. Was this a case of you discovering that you had
crossed the Rubicon and there was no need pretending or a spirit came over you
because talking to your president like that, in all honesty was crossing the
line?
ANSWER: Yes!
QUESTION: Yes what? That you didn’t care any more or that you became possessed?
ANSWER:
Yes I didn’t bother because he had threatened me that he would demonstrate to me
that he wasn’t only Mr. President but that he would show me that he was also the
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. That was his opening statement: ‘I will
show you that I’m not only Mr. President but that I am also the
Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces, by the time I finish with you, you will
know who you are’.
That angered me and it was an opportunity for me to empty what was bothering me
once and for all because the same security forces were used to burn my lodge in
Yenegoa. You won’t believe that I travelled and by the time I came back, they
had gained entry into my house and they repainted my house and planted plastic
explosives. As I entered the bombs started exploding and the whole building
came down. That was in 2001.
QUESTION: But that was before you and Obasanjo had your problems?
ANSWER: Yes! I even went to him because I know, I am an ex-military man and I
can pin point where it was coming from. I called bomb disposal people who came
and established that they were bombs. So I came to Abuja and went straight to
Mr. President who claimed that ‘I don’t know anything about it’, that the IG,
Tafa Balogun would set up a high powered investigation team to look into it and
I told him I did not want any investigation. I just made it clear that such
should never be repeated, that if it happened I would fight back and if I fought
back I may not know when to stop. It’s on record.
QUESTION: But there’s this story that you kept having altercations with him
during meetings and that you were always confrontational – was that one of the
occasions?
ANSWER: We were always having altercations.
QUESTION: So, how did the meeting of that night end?
Ha! It got to a time when the Director General of the SSS, Colonel Are, got
worried and he came in and said, ‘Mr. President, you and your son today, what is
the problem?’
Obasanjo told him that ‘this DSP na bad pickin, I will deal with him’.
It was so bad at a point that his children told him to leave DSP alone. His
children Gboyega and Olu told him.
To cut everything short, he said he was going to let me be if I left Atiku; that ‘when I’m convinced that you are no longer with Atiku, I will leave you’.
QUESTION:
All these happened on August 18?
ANSWER: Yes and at that point, I left.
Some days later I was travelling to Germany for an operation. I wanted to
follow British Airways, BA, I had BA ticket, I got to the airport, I changed my
mind. Instead of going by BA, I bought Emirates and went to Dubai. It was later
I got to know that there was something else awaiting me if I had flown BA. I got
to know this through cross examination that why did I not fly BA which I had
always flown for the past 30 years.
Lord Michaels of the British House of Lords came to my house in London and
revealed to me the plans they had.
In fact, they’d gone further to America, that as long as I remained governor of
Bayelsa State, the free flow of oil could not be guaranteed. America had said
that by the year 2015, 25% of its energy requirement would come from the Gulf of
Guinea and if there was such a powerful man who would disrupt this, according to
the story they sold to them, he should be contained. So there were combined
forces against me. My brother, my neighbour, in the Niger Delta was a local
coordinator to assassinate me.
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