By
Frisky Larr
I
communicated my interest in having a video-recorded exclusive interview with
former President Olusegun Obasanjo, to his aides as soon as it became clear to
me that I would need to be visiting Nigeria for compelling family reasons. I
moved swiftly, to alert a Nigeria-based and veteran professional colleague in
advance, to get his crew ready for a panel interview to be jointly conducted by
the two of us at the President’s hilltop residence in Abeokuta. The idea was to
do a production that should have been as professional as possible. Bearing the
typically unreliable Nigerian factor in mind, however, I devised a plan B to
fall back upon if my professional colleague failed me. I took my amateur kit
with me to use as a last resort.
No sooner had I
arrived Nigeria on February 29, 2016 than I received a call from the former
President’s Personal Assistant the following morning, telling me that Baba was
in town on Wednesday the 02nd of March 2016 and would be able to squeeze an
interview with me between his tight schedule that was consumed by his upcoming
birthday bash on the following Saturday. No other date could be guaranteed.
I was frozen dumb by
the sudden chill that went up my spine. It was virtually impossible to get my
professional colleague to assemble his crew within the same day and make a
strenuous trip from Benin City to Abeokuta on that same Tuesday for an early
morning interview the very next day. I gave it a try all the same and my
inevitable nightmare scenario became the reality. I had to fall back on plan B.
That was the origin of
my nightmare story of amateurish filming that was only better than nothing at
all. It was the story of an amateur kit operated by a novice that was hastily
converted into a makeshift cameraman.
As usual, Baba received me happily in his opulent living room in
the early hours of that Wednesday. The room was already filled with visitors,
who all arrived on appointment hoping to get hold of the ex-President as early
as possible before he got immersed in the day’s schedule.
There was, therefore, no time for long-drawn pleasantries and I
got down to business as a sole interviewer. I humbly apologize for the
miserable quality of the video material, particularly the audio that was hardly
audible at the beginning of the recording.
Physical fitness and smartness
I started off by asking the former President the secret of his
smartness and physical fitness as this will come as no surprise to people who
know him at close range. Visibly looking nothing less than 70, the President
never fails to enthuse observers with his energy reserve and extraordinary
physical activities. I actually remember a day in his company in London
sometime in the year 2014. He was to locate an address somewhere in Central
London and his embassy-assigned Chauffeur had mistakenly parked his car roughly
half-a-kilometer at the wrong address. Upon noticing the flaw, President
Obasanjo would not step in the car again to cover the 500-meter-distance.
Defying the protest of his Personal Assistant he simply said “We will walk the
distance” and walk he did to the amazement of all. I, therefore, chose to toe
the traditional African line of conduct by not asking an elder what his true
age really is.
His candid insight into his private life, revealing his sporting
activities on the golf course, the squash court and tennis court, marks a rare
moment of getting personal with the former General. In the section of the video
recording that was marred by a very poor audio, the President explains the
psychological state of mind that he has developed over time that sees him not
dwelling on bitterness, hearsays, anxieties and unnecessary worries. He
emphasizes the need to watch what he eats, when he eats and how much he eats.
He sees his present physical condition as the cumulative impact of several
factors.
No, No, No!
When we went political however, I was struck by the fact that he
carefully avoided any statement on where, precisely, he thinks the government
of his political foster son Goodluck Jonathan derailed. I attached much
importance to this question because I know a school of thought that strongly
believes that former President Jonathan derailed in the moment that he
sacrificed the Obasanjo power base for the combined power base of Ibrahim
Babaginda and Edwin Clark. I deliberately refused to press him further on this
question due to limited time and other important questions that I had in mind.
In fact, he does not deny that he played a pivotal role in
seeing the emergence of Goodluck Jonathan as President of Nigeria. The
involvement of ethnic minorities in the business of national leadership in a
country that belongs to all the ethnic groups, was a matter of urgent priority
to keep the nation functioning.
Given the generally accepted poor scoring and rating of the
Goodluck Jonathan’s government and the negative perception that it ended up
embodying, however, I pointedly asked General Obasanjo if he has “any regrets
and apologies” for facilitating the Jonathan Presidency. I was struck by his
emphatic “No, No, No!” The installment of a President from an ethnic minority
was in his views the ultimate fulfillment of Nigeria. If there should be any
regret whatsoever, it would probably be the impediment that Jonathan’s failure
constituted to Nigeria’s progress.
In his inimitable trademark manner, President Obasanjo is simply
candid, down-to-earth and unflinching.
Naira 2.8 billion oil money that was missing
He addresses several issues thereafter, ranging from the
usefulness of President Buhari’s current globe-trotting that is coming under
massive attack through the dwindling price of crude oil, agitation for Biafra
(which he simply considers to be dead and buried), the present state of the
People’s Democratic Party (which he also believes is as “dead as Dodo[sic]”)
down to the contentious issue of the allegedly missing Naira 2.8 billion oil
money of his military days.
President Obasanjo laid the blame for the Naira 2.8 billion oil
money scandal fairly and squarely on mass media sensationalism. The handwritten
note of an external auditor, who sought to figure out, how precisely Naira 2.8
billion – the entire budget of that year and the rough equivalent of $ 5
billion at the time – was spent, somehow found its way into the hands of
journalists, who ended up sensationalizing an auditor’s question mark that they
did not truly understand.
Now simply sit back and enjoy the full video and join the debate
to take Nigeria to the next level.
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