Obasanjo’s Full Speech as his Movement adopts African Democratic Congress party
Let me start by welcoming and
commending the emergence of a renewed and reinvigorated African Democratic
Congress, ADC, as a political party. Since the inception of Coalition for
Nigeria Movement, CNM, many of the sixty-eight registered political parties had
contacted and consulted with the Movement on coming together and working
together. The leadership of the Movement, after detailed examination, wide
consultation and bearing in mind the orientation, policies and direction of the
Movement, have agreed to adopt ADC as its platform to work with others for
bringing about desirable change in the Nigeria polity and governance. I
congratulate the leadership of the Movement for their decision and their
choice. The emergence of ADC is the beginning of hard work to continue to
consolidate our democracy and to make development in all its ramifications
real, relevant, accessible, popular and reaching out to all Nigerians wherever
they may be.
Let me particularly thank and
congratulate millions of Nigerians who harkened to my clarion call in my
statement of January 23, 2018 that our anger against misgovernance, poor
performance, condonation of misconduct, incompetence, destabilising nepotism,
cluelessness, denial and scapegoatism, lack of understanding of dynamics of internal
politics which have led to greater disunity, inequity, injustice, senseless
killings and destruction, must not be like the anger of the cripple but a
positive anger coordinated and directed to put an end to the era of impotence
and for Nigerians to join hands to seek effective solution through coalition,
cooperation and togetherness that will take Nigeria to where God has created it
to be. You registered in millions for the Coalition of Nigeria Movement, CNM.
Your actions, enthusiasm and commitment, with those of others and other
organisations – political parties, civil societies, social and cultural
organisations – have made possible the new dawn that the ADC will usher in.
With the emergence of ADC as a political party for the Movement and its associates
and in line with my clear position which I have often repeated, the first phase
of my job is done and I will not be a member of the Party but as I have always
done since I quit partisan politics in 2014, I will keep alive and active on
Nigerian and African issues and interests and I will be open to offering advice
to any individual or organisation for the unity, development and progress of
Nigeria and indeed of Africa. I will, of course, continue to exercise my right
to freedom of speech where and when I consider necessary in the interest of
Nigeria, Africa and humanity. The second phase will involve galvanisation of
all like-minded forces for enthronement of new order in Nigeria.
In recommending the CNM to join the
ADC, let me give you some points that are of interest. From the beginning, CNM
is not a political party but a popular grassroots movement to stimulate the
interest and participation of youth and women in particular in bringing about
change in democratic dispensation, governance and development in Nigeria in
such a way that power addicts will be forced to yield places for new entrants
and participants in the power equation in the country. They will sanitise the
system. With the ADC, embracing the policy of 30% youth of under 40 and 30%
women in all organs of the Party, a significant paradigm shift has been brought
about in the power equation. The ADC is a reformed and reinvigorated party, it
will embrace all the features and policies which make CNM attractive and a
source of hope and inspiration to millions at home and abroad. The ADC welcomes
associates, other parties, groups and civil society organisations such as
cultural, township unions and social organisations and interests. No former
political party, movement, social or cultural organisation should claim the
sole ownership of the renewed ADC. In name, it is relatively old but in
establishment, organisation, membership, policies, programmes, orientation and
focus, it is new. If this is not understood, accepted by all and made the
foundation and pillar of the political party, it will be starting on a very
shaky foundation and it will soon fall. I will advise others to join this
political party platform to usher in a new dawn for Nigeria, but I may not be
able to advise anybody to join PDP or APC no matter what window-dressing
reformation they may claim. Although PDP would seem to have realised its
mistakes of its immediate past of the last eight years or so, its present
evolution would, by itself, not give confidence to well-meaning Nigerians who
are interested in a new Nigeria in the hands of God that will have leadership,
governance, development and values within our culture as its guiding principles
with the attributes of honesty, integrity, patriotism, love, unity, industry,
incorruptibility, good neighbourliness, faithfulness, trust, courage and love
and fear of God held aloft. PDP offered apology without disciplining those who
set Nigeria on a course of ruin and some of them are still holding leadership
roles in their party. Nigerians may forgive, but Nigerians should never forget;
otherwise they will be suffering from amnesia and the same ugliness may raise
its head again. APC, as a political party, is still gloating and revelling in
its unrepentant misgovernance of Nigeria and taking Nigerians for fools. There
is neither remorse nor appreciation of what they are doing wrong. It is all
arrant arrogance and insult upon injury for Nigerians. Whatever the leadership
may personally claim, most Nigerians know that they, Nigerians, are poorer today
than when APC came in and Nigeria is more impoverished with our foreign loan
jumping from $3.6 billion to over $18 billion to be paid by the present and
future generations of Nigerians. The country is more divided than ever before
because the leadership is playing the ethnic and religious game which is very
unfortunate. And the country is more insecure and unsafe for everybody. It is a
political party with two classes of membership.
Before I leave this point, it is
pertinent to make the point that PDP and APC are not actually made of men and
women who are totally evil. There are sprinkles of good men and women out there
and among them. But as political parties and the government they led or they
are leading in the last eleven years, they have failed and failure should
neither be hoisted for embracement nor reinforced. What must be done is to take
what is best from all to come together on a new alliance platform that will
take us to the promised land. There must be basic and fundamental ground for
change and for people to change. What is not desirable is to take the leprous
hand of either PDP or APC as the instrument to clean Nigeria up. The clean
fingers in either of them can and must be grafted to the clean hands of new
entrants and participants to move up and move on and that is what I understand
the reinvigorated party platform is all about – change, new order and progress.The party, ADC, as I understand it,
is neither based on the immediate past, condemnable records of PDP as a ruling
party in Nigeria nor on the present disastrous and distabilising performance of
APC. It is a new platform and a new page in our political history. Some of us
must hold ourselves as watchmen and watchwomen for the nation without
necessarily belonging to any political party as genuinely concerned and
interested citizens and statesmen and stateswomen beyond the ambition of office
and enticement of grandeur of position or fortune.
Nigerians must keep their eyes wide
open, their ears quite attentive, their minds very clear, their hands very
clean and must not remain dumb in the face of atrocities and impunities of the
governors against the governed. Those who govern us at all levels must be made
to realise that it is our collective rights and sovereignty that they hold in
trust for us and to be used for the good of all of us and with all of us having
interest and having a stake in how we are governed. It is our God-given right
and we must not allow the abuse of it. In the past, we have laid back and we
have been taken for a ride. How did we allow Nigeria to be run by K34 without a
murmur? Of course, that was followed by the running of Nigeria by Ijaw nation
with four women and now by kith and kin and we are still jubilant in the face
of atrocities, insecurity, disasters and degradation politically, economically
and socially. When I was in school, tolerating what we have tolerated in the
past twelve years with our tails within our legs like frightened dogs, we would
be asking if we are collectively mesmerised and we needed to go to ‘aro’ for
mental or psychological examination.
Some have asked cynically and
skeptically if there would ever be change. I can understand their cynicism and
skepticism. If we are doing the same thing and we expect a different result, we
would be fooling ourselves. As I said earlier, I believe that what we are
having is new with some paradigm shift in power equation involving youth and
women. The grassroots involvement which CNM has advocated must be maintained
consistently. Inclusiveness must take care of over 25 million Nigerians living
with disability so that they can make meaningful contribution to societal
discourse and development. They must be made part of popular participation.
Elitism must be drastically reduced. All the political parties that have emerged
since the present dispensation in 1999 have been too elitist, and have
gradually lost internal democracy, leaving room for corruption and
dictatorship. The greatest lacuna in political party administration in Nigeria
since the present dispensation is the ownership of the political party through
regular contribution of the members of the party for the upkeep of the party.
Worse still is what PDP has now accepted as part of its failure and
disappointment of the nation which is looting government treasury to finance
individual and party elections. Unfortunately, APC has followed suit. To curb
corruption, primary elections should cease to be by delegates but by all
card-carrying and financial members of the party within their constituencies.
This will save lives as many people have died by being shepherded to a central
location as delegates to vote at primaries. It also introduced corruption into
the system. At one of the PDP primaries within the last eight years, one
candidate distributed $10,000 per delegate, the one who distributed $15,000 per
delegate won the primary. It was not necessarily on merit but certainly, dollar
talked.
Concluding my point on corruption in
politics particularly at the primary elections level, there must be strict
control of campaign funding and transparent accounting by the Independent
National Electoral Commission, INEC, of all funds contributed and all funds
utilised by individuals and political parties for campaigns. I was shocked when
an insider in the PDP told me that the amount of money the party used for 2015
elections would be in the neighbourhood of $3 billion. It was all directly or
indirectly from the government treasury.
The change we expect to be
forthcoming, realistic and effective, will have to come from all of us – citizens,
political parties, executive, legislature, judiciary and electoral
organisations. We must stop the blame game and must all realise that Nigeria
will be as good as we all make it to be – a good, effective, efficient,
performing, equitable, fair, just, peaceful, secure, prosperous, united,
wholesome and God-fearing country. I stand on the platform that change is
possible and human beings are agents of change and we have seen that in our
country both for good and for ill. I remain positive and optimistic. If we
believe we can, we will. Political parties must do their own with a
country-centered and value-laden philosophy, orientation and service. We should
have one INEC for all elections at local government, State and national levels.
We have all seen the ridiculous phenomena of local government elections
conducted by States’ so-called INEC being always almost completely won by the
ruling party in the State. We all know it is a sham. The National Assembly must
rid itself of corruption; and it can do it. It must also make its remuneration
relevant to Nigerian economic and social reality. It can also do it. Then it
must make laws and amend the Constitution to have one INEC for all elections in
the country, strict and scrupulous funding and accounting of all electoral
campaigns and all elections. The INEC must be given power to supervise, control
and regulate campaign funds and funds and contribution to political parties.
The National Assembly must amend the Constitution to allow Nigerians in
diaspora with current Nigerian passports to vote in all Nigerian elections at
Nigerian Embassies abroad. The National Assembly should also legislate 30%
youth of under 40 and 30% women into all organs of political parties and into
all institutions of governments. It should be a great step forward.
The Executive which emerges on the
platform of one political party must avoid ‘winners take all’ especially in
utilising the best brains available in running the affairs of the country.
While the government of the day must be run essentially by the political party
that wins the election, there must be consultation and cooperation especially
on national issues of unity, economy, security and foreign affairs. There must
also be minimum acceptable national position on these issues and which will
also allow members of other parties that are good enough to be utilised by the
government without necessarily running a government of so-called national
unity. Rather, all governments should be government of national common
interest.
If we get the platform right, we will
get the system right particularly in running the government which should be
participatory and all-encompassing, not exclusive, discriminatory but
talent-hungry and talent-targeting for the good of the country. Governance must
not be myopic, restrictive and limited to circle of tribe, friends and blood
relations but open-armed, transparent, open-minded, accommodating and seeking
for the best wherever the best can be found to achieve the best for the
country. We must all be guided and inspired by Nigerian Dream which must be
inclusive, elevating and giving hope, great future and conquering spirit to all
Nigerians.
In all situations, let us stand for
good leadership, good governance, all-round development and enduring and
authentic values within our culture. If we get it all right, our demography
will be an asset and not a liability nor indeed a disaster. What is more, our
democracy will move from strength to strength dynamically, inclusively,
workingly, prosperously, equitably, communally and satisfactorily for all, by
all and with all. When democracy goes symbiotically with development as they
should, a happy, wholesome, united and inclusive society emerges which is
secure, formidable, prosperous and respected within the comity of nations. That
is God’s plan for Nigeria which Nigerians must make manifest. There is only one
reason for where we are now, it is leadership failure.
My points are borne out of my
experience, learning, knowledge and interaction with others. Let us use these ideas
as the basis for discussing and debating the course for advancing democracy and
development on a sustainable trajectory for Nigeria founded on good leadership
and good governance with welfare, well-being and progress of all.
Once again, I congratulate all
members of Coalition for Nigeria Movement, all the political parties and civil
society organisations that have adopted ADC as a political party platform to
move Nigeria up and forward and I wish them success for now and the future. The
eyes of the nation and the world are on you to show that with people and
organisation of like mind, a real difference is possible and you will make it.
I wish you well. But always remember that Nigeria belongs to you as it belongs
to those in power. If you fail to use the potent weapon democracy offers you
and that is your vote, then you have yourselves to blame. You can move on to
the next stage in the democratic advance for change, unity, security,
stability, good governance, prosperity and progress. So may it be for Nigeria.
President Olusegun Obasanjo
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