Former President Olusegun
Obasanjo has said that late President Yar’Adua was wrong for cancelling the
sale of the Kaduna and Port Harcourt refineries to a Dangote-led consortium by
his administration .
In the second part of an
interview granted a private television station, Channels TV, monitored
by our correspondent on Wednesday, Obasanjo accused Yar’Adua of sacrificing
public interest on the altar of pressure by some people by cancelling the said
contract.
Obasanjo, while justifying
some of the claims he made in his controversial three-volume autobiography, My
Watch, spoke about his efforts to get people to invest in the oil sector
and how the country eventually secured buyers for two of its four refineries.
He said, “Eventually Aliko
Dangote led a group that paid $750m for the privatisation of two of the
refineries – 51 per cent privatisation – and my successor (Yar’Adua) came (in),
he turned it down. In fact, he paid back the money because they (investors) had
paid the money.
“And I went to him; I said ‘look, do you
know…? And he said well, he did it because of pressure. I said ‘pressure?’, so
to you what matters is pressure, not what is in the best interest of Nigerians.
I said, but you know it will not work. Then I said in 10 years, if you
continue, you would have spent two times the amount that these people had paid
and it still would not work. And that is what happened.
“Today those two refineries,
you can never make them work. And if we are going to sell them, we would be
lucky to get $250m out of them because they have become a huge scrap. Now, why
shouldn’t I explain that (in my book)?”
The former President, who
denied leaving out parts that painted him in a bad light in the book, said he
cared less what critics said about him or his book.
Obasanjo said people were
often quick to form opinions about him without taking time to know him, making
reference to a lawyer, Mr. Tunji Braithwaite; and the Publicity Secretary of
the Afenifere, Yinka Odumakin, who had written a rejoinder to his book. The
rejoinder is titled, Watch the Watcher.
He said, “When I wrote a
book, Braithwaite, it was My Command, he condemned my writing the book
and they asked, have you read the book? He said ‘No. Once it is written by
Obasanjo, it cannot be a good book. Now what do you say to that?
“People have invariably made
up their minds (on) what they would do and what they would say. Why should that
worry me? Why should I allow your own opinion, which you have formed,
advertently or inadvertently, and wrongly to worry me? Your opinion which you
have formed because you are being paid to write to castigate a book that you
virtually didn’t read. So, why should I allow that to worry me?
“If I would read all the
criticisms people write about me, most of which are not true, then I would not
have time to do anything really useful and good for humanity. If I can be sent
to jail wrongly, then anybody can do anything to me wrongly and I could jolly
well have been killed wrongly.”
Obasanjo again took a swipe
at Yar’Adua’s successor, ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, for rehabilitating the
railway system with locomotive engines.
He said, “Where I made (a)
mistake, which I know is (a) mistake, I own up. But the point is this, in
government we need to have all the facts that led to a person making a
particular decision before your criticism can be right. Take the railway for
instance, for what reason should anybody in his right senses in Nigeria of
today believe that rehabilitating the railway system, which was completed in
1903 to carry three million tonnes of goods, is what we need today?
“There is no earthly reason
by which a rehabilitated railway system of Nigeria today can serve our purpose,
there is no way.”
Obasanjo said that before he
left office as President, his administration had concluded the design of a
modern rail system to cost $8.3bn that would make a trip of about 120
kilometres in 45 minutes.
He said, “Part of the design
criteria is 150km per hour. You will leave Lagos and in 45 minutes you will be
in Ibadan, and you don’t understand that if we are going to achieve Vision 20
2020, we will need a first class land, water and air transportation.
“Your land transportation
can only be railway and road and if you don’t think this way and don’t think
one generation ahead, how can you make progress? Will you say that a man who
wants to rehabilitate the Nigerian railway system of 1903 is one generation
ahead (in his thinking)?”
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