Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Nigerians dare Jonathan to prosecute Obasanjo
On Monday, the social media bristled with
reactions to President Goodluck Jonathan’s
formal response to some charges levelled
against his administration, as contained in an
18-page letter written by former President
Olusegun Obasanjo and published in major
newspapers across the country.
The attention of many Nigerians was drawn to
Jonathan’s claim that Obasanjo had a case to
answer over “questionable waivers of signature
bonuses between 2000 and 2007” when he was
in office.
Also, the President’s reference to scandals
involving Siemens and Halliburton during
Obasanjo’s tenure appears to be giving many
people cause for concern, with some of them
saying the revelation had confirmed the
suspicion that Jonathan was intentionally
shielding his close associates from prosecution
for corrupt practices.
Wondering why Jonathan had to wait till his
predecessor accused his government of
encouraging corruption in the country before
raising the alarm over the said waivers, they
described the current development as
unfortunate.
A political blogger, Japheth Omojuwa,
lamented that Jonathan’s letter had clearly
exposed his “hypocrisy” in the fight against
corruption. Urging the President to direct the
relevant security agencies to spring into
action, he said, “The office of the President of
Nigeria has become an open arena for shame
and hypocrisy. You see, you can’t accuse a man
of all that and then leave him without
prosecution and expect us to believe you.
“The President said enough to let us know that
Obasanjo should be battling for his freedom in
the courts. Who will do that? He mentioned
the Siemens and Halliburton scandals. He
didn’t even say anything about bringing the
former President and others to book for those
allegations.”
Also, Kayode Ogundamisi accused the
President of shielding Obasanjo from
prosecution, saying he was shocked to learn
that allegations of corruption were made
against the latter.
Ogundamisi said Jonathan should not stop at
associating Obasanjo with the scams, but back
his promise not to “shield any government
official or private individual involved in
corruption” with action.
“Jonathan hinted in his letter that Obasanjo
was involved in the Siemens and Halliburton
scams, yet he is protecting him. When will
Obasanjo be made to face the law or is he
above the law? Is he aware that Obasanjo is
corrupt and failed to act?” he asked.
Egghead Odewale also wrote on Twitter that
the allegations made against the former
President proved that the President was
shielding corruption and criminality.
Odewale said, “And thus it was written that
President Jonathan openly admitted shielding
corruption and criminality. You accuse a
former president of corruption and criminality
and he still walks freely? Should he also
present evidence of his own crimes? But how
can President Jonathan write about Siemens
and Halliburton, yet he has done nothing to
prosecute those involved. It beats my
imagination!”
For Seun Fakuade, the President’s letter
depicted him as having lost the moral ground
to fight corruption in high places.
He argued that out of the weighty allegations
of corruption made by Obasanjo, the
President “glossed over” the issue in one
paragraph. “The President’s letter is sad,
petty and out-of-touch with the issues
Obasanjo raised,” Fakuade tweeted. “I expect
President Jonathan to deal with issues in this
situation; go after Obasanjo since he alleges
that he’s corrupt. But he doesn’t have the right
to do so. The President has lost the moral right
to go after corrupt people directly because he
lends credence to corruption: Oduah,
Alamieyesegha, etc. He lost it.
“Mr. President, you lend credence to
corruption. You pardoned a criminal. You have
no moral capacity to lead us. Mr. President,
not one minister, among all those fingered in
corrupt deals, has been suspended and
charged to court for trials. Not one.”
Responding to the matter on Facebook, Soulz
Daniel said that with the letter the President
only tried to convince Nigerians that he should
not be held responsible for Nigeria’s woes,
especially corruption and insecurity.
“Jonathan says he isn’t shielding corrupt
government officials. Can he explain why the
Petroleum Minister, who has been indicted in
many reports, is still a minister? What about
Stella Oduah (aviation minister) who has been
found to violate the due process in the
purchase of the infamous two bullet-proof
BMW cars scandal and her recommendation
for a sack by the National Assembly, just to
mention a few?” Daniel said.
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