What had been
whispered as a quarrel between President Olusegun Obasanjo and his one time
protégée, President Goodluck Jonathan burst out yesterday after Obasanjo’s Man
Friday, Femi Fani-Kayode took up Jonathan on issues pertaining to the invasion
of Odi.
At issue is Obasanjo’s swift response to Boko Haram and his
protégée’s alleged slowness to the Boko Haram insurgency.
It was a lecture to mark the 40th anniversary of the repentance of
Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor from the life of crime.
It was thus an
irony that an occasion to celebrate the man of God would turn into a platform
that would generate a quarrel between former President Olusegun Obasanjo and
his one time protégée, President Goodluck Jonathan.
Speaking at the occasion in Warri last week President Obasanjo had
expressed discomfort at what he described as President Jonathan’s slow response
to the Boko Haram insurgency.
“My fear is that when you have a sore and you don’t attend to it
early enough, it festers and becomes very bad. Don’t leave a problem that can
be bad unattended,” President Obasanjo had said.
Noting how he responded to near similar situations during his
civilian regime when militants in Odi, Bayelsa State killed some soldiers and
then in Zaki Biam, Benue State, Obasanjo continued:
“On two occasions I had to attend to the problem I faced at that
time. I sent soldiers to a place and 19 of them were killed. If I had allowed
that to continue, I will not have authority to send security whether police,
soldier and any force any where again. So, I had to nip it in the bud and that
was the end of that particular problem,” he said.
“If you say you do not want a strong leader, who can have all the
characteristics of a leader, including the fear of God, then, you have a weak
leader and the rest of the problem is yours,” he added.
It was a response that several associates of President Jonathan
have been falling over one another to rebuff. The claim by President Obasanjo
is in the wake of what many believe to be actions taken by the incumbent
against the interest of Obasanjo.
It was as such not surprising that when President Jonathan hosted
the presidential media chat last Sunday that the issue of his alleged slowness
would crop up.
Reacting to the issue, President Jonathan dismissed Obasanjo’s
assertion that the invasion of Odi curbed militancy at that time.
Jonathan who remarkably was Deputy Governor of Bayelsa State at
that time said:
“After that invasion, myself and the governor entered Odi…and saw
some dead people. Most of the people that died in Odi were mostly old men,
women and children, none of the militants was killed.”
”If bombarding Odi was to solve the problem, then it was never
solved. If the attack on Odi had solved the problem of militancy in the
Niger Delta, then the Yar’ Adua government would not have come up with the
Amnesty programme. So, that should tell you that the attack on Odi never solved
the militancy problem and we had more challenges after that attack on Odi.”
It was a direct hit back at Obasanjo. Before now, President
Jonathan had undoubtedly to the irritation of Obasanjo and his associates shown
some public displeasure of the actions of the Obasanjo presidency.
During the campaigns for the 2011 elections Jonathan had publicly
disavowed the “Do or Die” political philosophy embraced by Obasanjo in the run
up to the 2007 election.
Jonathan warned that nobody should kill for him.
So when President Jonathan on national television dismissed
Obasanjo’s prompt response to the insurgencies that befell his administration
as a failure, it was not surprising that the Obasanjo camp would react and even
so, swiftly.
Obasanjo who is not given to much talking spoke through a former
Minister in his government, Chief Femi Fani-Kayode who was popularly known as
his attack dog.
Responding to the assertions by Jonathan on Sunday, Fani-Kayode
after being personally briefed by Obasanjo and the then Director-General of the
State Seucrity Services, SSS, Col. Kayode Are, rtd. dismissed what he described
as the revision of history.
Asserting that either Jonathan forgot or was wrongly briefed on
Odi, Fani-Kayode said:
“Whichever way he is mistaken and it is important for those of us
that proudly served the Obasanjo administration to respond to him in order to
clarify the issues, clear the air and set the record straight for the sake of
history and posterity,” he said.
“After the brutal killing of these security personnel President
Olusegun Obasanjo asked the then Governor of Bayelsa state, Governor
Alamesighya, to identify, locate, apprehend and hand over the perpetrators of
that crime.
The Governor said that he was unable to do so and President
Obasanjo, as the Commander-in-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces, took the
position that security personnel could not be killed with impunity under his
watch without a strong and appropriate response from the Federal Government.”
“Consequently he sent the military in to uproot and kill the
terrorists and to destroy their operational base which was the town of Odi .”
“The operation was carried out with military precision and
efficiency and it’s objectives were fully achieved. The terrorists were either
killed and those that were not killed fled their operational base in Odi, were
uprooted, were weakened, were demoralised and were completely dispersed.”
“That was the purpose of the whole exercise and that purpose was
achieved. The truth is that the killing of security agents and soldiers with
impunity by the Niger Delta militants virtually stopped after the operation in
Odi and remained at a bare minimum right up until the time that President
Obasanjo left power eight years later in 2007. I advise those that doubt this
to go and check the records.”
According to him, a similar provocation of the Nigerian military
in Zaki Biam in Benue State after 19 soldiers were murdered led to the invasion
of that community.
“The objectives of the military operations in both Odi and Zaki
Biam were to stop such killings, to eliminate and deal a fatal blow to those
that perpetuated them and to discourage those that may seek to carry out such
barborous butchery and mindless violence in the future. Those were the objectives
and nothing more and clearly those objectives were achieved.”
“There is no doubt that after Odi there was still unrest,
agitations, protests, kidnappings and the blowing up and sabotage of oil
pipelines in the Niger Delta area but there were hardly any more attacks on or
killing of soldiers and security personnel by the terrorists and militants
because they knew that to do that would attract a swift and forceful reaction
and terrible retribution from the Nigerian military.”
“To stop and deter those attacks and killings was the objective of
President Obasanjo and that objective was achieved. President Goodluck Jonathan
was therefore in error when he said that Odi did not solve the problem of
killings in the Niger Delta area by the Niger Delta militants.
Not only did it stop the killings but it is also an eloquent
testimony of how to deal with terrorists, how to handle those that kill our
security personnel with impunity and how to deter militants from killing
members of our civilian population and thinking that they can get away with it.
If President Obasanjo had not taken that strong action at that
time many more of our civilian population and security personnel would have
been killed by the Niger Delta militants between 1999 and 2007. By doing what
he did at Odi and Zaki Biam President Obasanjo saved the lives of many and put
a stop to the killings and terrorism that had taken root in the Niger Delta
area previous to that time.”
Noting the recent disclosure that at least 3,000 Nigerians have
been killed on account of the Boko Haram insurgency in the last two years
Fani-Kayode was to note that that figure was not up to the total number of
lives lost in the 100 years of the Northern Ireland troubles.
Even before Jonathan defended himself on television, some, including
rabid haters of Obasanjo had gone out to blast him. One of such was
Alhaji Shetimma Ali Monguno, a one time Minister of Petroleum
Resources. He was sharply critical of Obasanjo’s suggestion on the use of force
saying that the Boko Haram insurgents should be treated like any other Nigerian
child. Monguno who had been nominated by the Boko Haram insurgent group as one
of its preferred peace moderators with the Federal Government suggested that
the Amnesty Programme that was extended to the Niger Delta militants should
ordinarily have been extended to the northern insurgents.
“The President could come out and still employ the same tactics,
which he and the late president (Umaru Yar’Adua) employed to have persuaded the
militants in the southsouth. He could have employed the same methods for the
Boko Haram of the north. The northerners were expectant that he was going to
use that,” Alhaji Monguno said.
How to deal with Boko Haram, arguably the greatest security
challenge to have faced the country since the civil war remains an issue.
President Jonathan had in time past repeatedly said that it was
something that would peter out going the extent to set a 2012 mid year deadline
for the insurgency to cease. But with the group still active, even though not
as before, Obasanjo’s intervention, even if troubling has found some good
hearers.
Source: Vanguard
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