Nearly a year after his daughter, Iyabo, wrote a
well-publicised open letter to him, former President Olusegun Obasanjo has
replied her, alleging that she was induced by President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration
to write the stinker. In portions of his latest memoirs, My Watch, seen in
advance by TheCable, Obasanjo said he had been warned that “this
administration” was attempting to induce two of his daughters to do a “dirty
job” and that he warned both of them against it.
Obasanjo said Iyabo succumbed to the advances because of
“her character” and “the influence of her mother” – who is the retired
general’s first wife. In her letter, Iyabo, a former commissioner in Ogun state
and former senator, recounted Obasanjo’s failings as a father and questioned
his moral right to criticise others. “This is the end of my communication with
you for life. I pray Nigeria survives your continual intervention in its
affairs,” she wrote.
Obasanjo had written a highly critical letter to Jonathan
titled “Before It Is Too Late” in which he raised issues about insecurity and
corruption in the country. He wrote: “You must hold yourself most significantly
responsible for what happens or fails to happen in Nigeria and in any case,
most others will hold you responsible and God who put you there will surely
hold you responsible and accountable.” Obasanjo further repeated an allegation
that Jonathan was training snipers to kill his political opponents.
He had remained silent since Iyabo’s open letter to him was
published in the medai, but has now responded in volume one of the three-volume
memoirs. Obasanjo wrote: “I got a warning that this administration was
attempting to induce two of my daughters, including Iyabo, to do a dirty job.
I warned them both against it, but because of her
character, the influence of her mother and her attitude, Iyabo succumbed; the
other daughter did not. “I was warned about a former minister of finance, who
wrote the reply for Jonathan, and about the writer of the letter to which E. K.
Clark appended his signature. Iyabo’s letter and the response to it has been
treated as a family issue, so that all the members of the family can be
equipped with the other side of the story from me for posterity.
“If Iyabo was childish and unwise enough to allow herself
to be used, no other member of the family should allow himself or herself to be
so used. Tolerance and acceptance of others must be practised in the face of
any provocation, no matter how vile.” Obasanjo has previously been openly
accused of incest and adultery by his son, Gbenga, who sought to divorce his
wife alleging that his father was sleeping with her.
The former president, meanwhile, said a “cabal” surrounding
late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adau framed corruption charges against Iyabo when
she was a senator in order to get back at him because of his personal views
against them. “My adversaries tried other means to get to me,” he stated. “If
Obasanjo could not be cut down to size, they must have thought, what about
those close to him, including his daughter? When Senator Iyabo, my daughter,
was accused of corruption, I took my time to have a serious interview with her
on what exactly had transpired.
She briefed me in detail and I was satisfied. “But I did
not stop there. I spoke with the Senate President, who also briefed me and
assured me that Iyabo had not committed any offence as he had personally looked
into the matter. I was again reassured but did not stop there. I talked to
another senator, Mrs. Ekaette, who was a member of the health committee of
which Iyabo was chairman. Mrs. Ekaette again satisfied me with her explanation.
I was advised to talk to President Yar’Adua but I refused
to do this, especially as I was told he was expecting me to. Instead, I advised
Iyabo to hand the matter over to Chief Afe Babalola, a lawyer and friend, to
deal with it through the court process. She was discharged and acquitted by the
court. “The fact that my ordeal, and that of my daughter, occurred under the administration
of President Yar’Adua, who was brought into power by God through me, did not
surprise me.
I have always held to a belief that any person who expects
commendation, praise, eulogy, or credit from any human being might die a
frustrated wretch.” He named some members of the “cabal” as Tanimu Yakubu Kurfi
and Baba Kingibe “aided and supported by two governors – Bukola Saraki and
James Ibori – for their own personal and selfish reasons”
No comments:
Post a Comment