Former President Olusegun Obasanjo
Says whoever is promising otherwise is lying
Yinka Kolawole in Osogbo
Amid a general mood of cautious optimism about a
successful resolution of the Chibok schoolgirls kidnap saga,
former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said that the girls
may never be found. Obasanjo said this on Friday night at
the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Staff Club, during
an interview with journalists.
He blamed the disappearance of the girls on the
nonchalance attitude of the immediate past president, Dr.
Goodluck Jonathan, under whose government they were
kidnapped by the insurgent group, Boko Haram, in April
2014. The former president’s latest assertion is a departure
from his earlier opinion that some of the girls would never
return.
Obasanjo’s remark is coming two months to the second
anniversary of the kidnap of the Chibok school girls.
President Muhammadu Buhari had said on Wednesday in a
speech at the European Union parliament in Strasbourg,
France, that his government would not rest until the about
219 schoolgirls in Boko Haram captivity were rescued alive.
About 300 female students of Government Girls Secondary
School, Chibok, in Borno State, were abducted in their hostel
by Boko Haram on April 14, 2014, as they prepared to sit
the Senior School Certificate Examination. It was Nigeria’s
worst kidnap incident. Nearly 70 of them later escaped, but
about 219 remain in terrorist captivity.
“In a recent meeting I had with parents of the Chibok girls, I
assured them that government would not rest until all the
girls are rescued alive and reunited with their families,”
Buhari told the European parliament, adding, “I remain fully
committed to this pledge.”
But Obasanjo said on Friday regarding the Chibok
schoolgirls, “Nobody can bring back the girls for they are
nowhere to be found.”
He stressed, “Seventy-two hours after the Chibok girls were
abducted was too late for their rescue, talk less getting to
two years by April.
“So if any leader is promising bringing back of Chibok girls
to Nigeria, he is lying.”
Obasanjo said most of the girls would have died, while
those alive would have been forced into marriages or
consigned to sexual violence and human trafficking.
Obasanjo was in Ile-Ife for the “7th Roundtable with Chief
Olusegun Obasanjo,” organised by the OAU Staff Club, with
the theme, “Reflections of an Elder Statesman: An Evening
with OBJ.” The event was chaired by the former Vice
Chancellor of the University of Uyo, Professor Fola Lasisi,
and it was attended by the Vice Chancellor of OAU,
Professor Bamitale Omole, among others.
During the question and answer session, Obasanjo took
umbrage at some of the questions posed by the some of the
participants as he declined to answers questions he viewed
as insulting.
A Professor of Biology of the institution had asked Obasanjo
to explain why he refused to release funds to the National
Assembly when he was president.
"You don't know so many things that transpired during my
administration and so many things were not resolved, so
don't attack my intelligence and personality," Obasanjo
responded angrily.
Answering a question raised by a student of Political
Science on the prospects of graduates of Political Science
in Nigerian politics, Obasanjo advised the students not to
rely on godfatherism to excel in politics urging them to
work hard so as to excel.
"You have to get your hands dirty and your feet wet in
politics before you can make it. So, I admonish you
(students) to work hard in order to gain ground and not rely
on godfatherism because I never had any godfather," he
said.
During the interaction which lasted for about two hours,
Obasanjo also delved into the unending tirades between him
and Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, noting that he
had issues with professor.
“I will trust Wole Soyinka as an "aparo (guinea-fowl) hunter"
rather than trust him as a political analyst,” he said.
Says whoever is promising otherwise is lying
Yinka Kolawole in Osogbo
Amid a general mood of cautious optimism about a
successful resolution of the Chibok schoolgirls kidnap saga,
former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said that the girls
may never be found. Obasanjo said this on Friday night at
the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Staff Club, during
an interview with journalists.
He blamed the disappearance of the girls on the
nonchalance attitude of the immediate past president, Dr.
Goodluck Jonathan, under whose government they were
kidnapped by the insurgent group, Boko Haram, in April
2014. The former president’s latest assertion is a departure
from his earlier opinion that some of the girls would never
return.
Obasanjo’s remark is coming two months to the second
anniversary of the kidnap of the Chibok school girls.
President Muhammadu Buhari had said on Wednesday in a
speech at the European Union parliament in Strasbourg,
France, that his government would not rest until the about
219 schoolgirls in Boko Haram captivity were rescued alive.
About 300 female students of Government Girls Secondary
School, Chibok, in Borno State, were abducted in their hostel
by Boko Haram on April 14, 2014, as they prepared to sit
the Senior School Certificate Examination. It was Nigeria’s
worst kidnap incident. Nearly 70 of them later escaped, but
about 219 remain in terrorist captivity.
“In a recent meeting I had with parents of the Chibok girls, I
assured them that government would not rest until all the
girls are rescued alive and reunited with their families,”
Buhari told the European parliament, adding, “I remain fully
committed to this pledge.”
But Obasanjo said on Friday regarding the Chibok
schoolgirls, “Nobody can bring back the girls for they are
nowhere to be found.”
He stressed, “Seventy-two hours after the Chibok girls were
abducted was too late for their rescue, talk less getting to
two years by April.
“So if any leader is promising bringing back of Chibok girls
to Nigeria, he is lying.”
Obasanjo said most of the girls would have died, while
those alive would have been forced into marriages or
consigned to sexual violence and human trafficking.
Obasanjo was in Ile-Ife for the “7th Roundtable with Chief
Olusegun Obasanjo,” organised by the OAU Staff Club, with
the theme, “Reflections of an Elder Statesman: An Evening
with OBJ.” The event was chaired by the former Vice
Chancellor of the University of Uyo, Professor Fola Lasisi,
and it was attended by the Vice Chancellor of OAU,
Professor Bamitale Omole, among others.
During the question and answer session, Obasanjo took
umbrage at some of the questions posed by the some of the
participants as he declined to answers questions he viewed
as insulting.
A Professor of Biology of the institution had asked Obasanjo
to explain why he refused to release funds to the National
Assembly when he was president.
"You don't know so many things that transpired during my
administration and so many things were not resolved, so
don't attack my intelligence and personality," Obasanjo
responded angrily.
Answering a question raised by a student of Political
Science on the prospects of graduates of Political Science
in Nigerian politics, Obasanjo advised the students not to
rely on godfatherism to excel in politics urging them to
work hard so as to excel.
"You have to get your hands dirty and your feet wet in
politics before you can make it. So, I admonish you
(students) to work hard in order to gain ground and not rely
on godfatherism because I never had any godfather," he
said.
During the interaction which lasted for about two hours,
Obasanjo also delved into the unending tirades between him
and Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, noting that he
had issues with professor.
“I will trust Wole Soyinka as an "aparo (guinea-fowl) hunter"
rather than trust him as a political analyst,” he said.

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