Political
activist and National Publicity Secretary of the Yoruba socio-political
organisation, Afenifere, Mr. Yinka Odumakin, talks about why he is now an
ardent supporter of President Goodluck Jonathan with GBENGA ADENIJI
In 2011, you were the
spokesperson for Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd) who was then vying for the
presidency. He is now contesting same position on the platform of the All
Progressives Congress but you are no longer speaking on his behalf. Why did you
shift camp?
There
are so many shiftings. Gen Buhari himself has shifted. When I worked with him
in 2011, he was the presidential candidate of the Congress for Progressive
Change. In 2015, he is now with the APC. APC is not CPC. The characters around
him in 2011 are not the same characters around him in 2011. In all honesty,
Buhari is an honest man.
I have made my feelings known to him that I cannot function in a new environment. I was with him in 2011 within a period of six months. I have been on the public scene for two to three decades in Nigeria. I have my goals and objectives. My being in politics is not for any pecuniary means. It is about issues that I think are fundamental to me, what I represent and the people I represent.
I have made my feelings known to him that I cannot function in a new environment. I was with him in 2011 within a period of six months. I have been on the public scene for two to three decades in Nigeria. I have my goals and objectives. My being in politics is not for any pecuniary means. It is about issues that I think are fundamental to me, what I represent and the people I represent.
Some
think these issues fundamental to you may be driven by whoever is able to pay
for your services.
Those
who canvass such viewpoint are people of low intellect who cannot understand
me. What did Buhari give me in 2011 to support him? I see a lot of childish
comments all over the place. Interestingly, many of the people that are saying
these things read themselves into others. Those who clearly have taken a
position based on pecuniary interests begin to point fingers at other people or
what they would do if they take such a position. That is what I see in Nigeria.
I see a lot of false moral grounds in this election. The truth of the matter is
that I see a lot of funny people all over the place now congregating or taking
positions and trying to demonise others as if we do not even know what is going
on. For me really, between the APC and the People's Democratic Party, there is
no difference. The only difference is that we have Jonathan who convoked a
national conference, which we had stood upon over the years. We have the report
of the confab on the table.
Now,
on another side, we have those who campaigned vigorously against that
conference; who worked tirelessly against it; and who said nothing about it in
their manifesto. And now, they are promising us change. Which change? Change
from what to what? Who are the change agents? You take half of PDP and you
sprinkle it. The only change that we need before we can move to any other
policy change is to change the structure of Nigeria. The current structure of
Nigeria cannot work except we change it. People of low intellect insinuate
things. They do not react based on convictions. The best thing is for one to
pursue one’s goals and history will vindicate who is right and who is wrong.
One
of the leaders of Afenifere, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, said the group endorsed
President Goodluck Jonathan because it was convinced he would implement the
report of the confab. Is this enough to earn the president an endorsement?
It
is more than enough. Afenifere has taken a position. The leaders of the Oodua
Peoples Congress have taken a position that based on the national conference,
they are supporting Jonathan. Let us check history. When Chief MKO
Abiola’s mandate was annulled, members of the National Democratic Coalition and
Afenifere were in the trenches for years. One of the plans of NADECO, Afenifere
and others was to have a national conference. In 1998, after Abiola and Abacha
died, the position of NADECO and others was that we should demand a new
constitution before conducting elections. But some people said, ‘No, let us go
for the elections. Don’t let this opportunity to slip by. When we get there, we
will even get more resources to finish the struggle for the restructuring of
Nigeria.’’
The
same people today are the ones who opposed the national conference; they are
telling people now that we have passed the stage of restructuring Nigeria
because they have restructured the country to their own interest. They have
taken what they want from Nigeria because we know what they were worth in 1999
and today they are multibillionaires and trillionaires at the expense of our
people. They are now pumping money all over the place for people to write
nonsense; maligning people that they have been bought. We are bought by our
convictions that Nigeria is not going to work as it is. It is only political
merchants who want to short-change our people that are selling a lie to them
and calling it change. Which change? You can see the billboards all over Lagos:
One meal for pupils in school in one day. Is that a change for us in Yorubaland?
In
1964, in one day, Chief Obafemi Awolowo enrolled 400,000 pupils into schools.
The children of those enrolled that day are now professors. Fifty years after,
some people now turn us to almajiris,
putting billboards all over the place to tell us that one meal a day for our
children in school is change. We have a history; we have a place where we are
coming from. Strange children have taken over this place and people should know
better. The people carrying all kinds of things are the ones who cannot question
what is going on. They are the people who have sold their conscience. This is
what Awolowo lived for all his life that this structure cannot work. Go and
read Awolowo’s ‘Thoughts on Nigerian Constitution.’
Awolowo
wrote the book on June 12, 1966. He made it clear on page 52 of the book
that any attempt to run Nigeria on a unitary constitution would make the
government unduly complex, unwilling, in disharmony and the administrative
machine of governance would collapse under bureaucratic centralism except we
get super humans to run the affairs of Nigeria. Is that not where we are today?
Somebody is now telling me that at this stage, I should abandon the path of
freedom. The APC said in its first manifesto that the 1999 constitution is
sacrosanct. When the party got the views of those close to it, its leaders
brought another manifesto out which is silent on anything relating to the
restructuring of the country.
The
only person who has commented on this in the party is Alhaji Lai Mohammed, who
said they would study the report. Now, let look at this analogy: I am in a cage
and somehow wants to open the cage so that I have my freedom. But someone now
says I should stay in the cage but will make sure my children get a meal a day
inside it. If the only thing I will get to stay inside the cage is for my
children to have a meal a day, I will not stay. Even if the person has a
political party willing to make my father its presidential candidate and my
mother his running mate, I would go on the path of freedom.
Why
didn’t you see the ruling party as the path to freedom in 2011?
I
have told you that this is not about political party. What is party? Let no one
deceive me with any label. Some of us work on convictions and principles. When
we worked for Gen. Buhari and Bakare in 2011, we were largely influential to
the manifesto of the Buhari/Bakare campaign. We said we could restructure
Nigeria through elections. We have not abandoned our beliefs. That is our
conviction. It is online. The twelfth item on the document is on restructuring.
There is nothing of such in the APC manifesto.
What
makes you think that your convictions are sublime and genuine?
My
convictions are my convictions. We have not attacked anybody for believing in
the change mantra. Why are they now attacking us for taking a position? We
believe our beliefs are right, they also think their positions are right. We
should go with our different views since March 28 is just around the corner.
Why the blackmail?
Don’t
you think the ruling party is also not free from the situation you just
painted?
I
do not know about that. I am talking about the one I know. I do not trade in
abuses. I engage people on salient issues. Now they are talking about
corruption. If not that the world is coming to an end, is it some of the people
in APC that will be talking about corruption? Individuals who are poster boys
of corruption; some have cases before the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission. The way some people are desperate for change, if some notable armed
robbers were placed before them and they were told to chant change for such
individuals, some would still shout it. For me, it is not about APC or PDP,
there is nothing being put forward that is different.
We
keep talking about corruption as if it is limited to only the federal level.
Which of the states under APC can pass a corruption test? I once took a former
governor of Oyo State, Adebayo Alao-Akala to the EFCC because he asked all the
local governments in the state to award five kilometers of road at N50m each. I
wondered how there would be such uniform road project. When the commission
charged him, it was part of what he was charged with. But given what APC is
doing in South-West now, if I see Alao-Akala today, I am going to apologise to
him. A five kilometre of road awarded for N50m which I frowned at, is now
awarded for N1bn.
These are the change agents. When the elections dates were
shifted within the law, we saw many things flying about. We read several
vitriolic editorials on that postponement when things actually showed that the
commission was not fully ready to conduct the elections. Local government
elections were supposed to have held in Lagos State since October, no one has
questioned that. I am certain that anybody who says he wants to fight corruption
yet keeps the 1999 Constitution is a fraudster. This is because the
constitution encourages corruption by giving immunity. This is part of the
things the confab addressed. There are a lot of criminals in government who
have enjoyed immunity over the years. They will not want it to be removed. Are
we not in a democracy? Is there a law mandating that if A supports B, I must
support same?.
What
will your group do if the Presidents wins and reneges on his promise to
implement the confab report?
When
he met with us in Akure, he told us categorically that he would implement the
confab report within the 12 months of his return to office. If he reneges, we
will mount the barricade.
You
don’t think it could be late in the day then?
Nothing
is going to be too late in the day. A philosopher said if we fight we can win.
If we don’t fight, we have lost. We can hold President Jonathan to the promise
but we cannot hold APC to it because its leaders did not participate in it.
You
were vocal in condemning the oil subsidy scam. Don’t you think your stance now
contradicts what you once stood for?
What
is the contradiction there? This is why I said there is little scholarship in
the land. That I opposed certain policies of Jonathan does not make me his
enemy. If there is any untoward policy, I will still oppose it. Since the
protest, the administration has not increased price of fuel.
Are
you not bothered working for the same administration that made you return to
the streets then?
Is
Nigeria now a one-party state where there is no freedom of choice? I am not
working for any administration. I am working for issues. Intelligent people
should be able to separate issues from personalities. Fuel was increased, we
called people out and the price was reduced. What happened to those who protested
against the Lekki Toll Gate? They were beaten by the ‘change agents.’ Was the
toll reduced?
Does
your wife, Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin, who is an activist, support you in your
convictions?
It
is not question of whether she supports me or not. She is an independent person
and I am too. She is not political. I am political. She is a civil society
person.
Don’t
you think your current political posture may affect public perception of what
she stands for?
What
have I done wrong? That I am pursuing my beliefs and should not run contrary to
people who do not know what I know. If you wake me at 3am to tell you what my
convictions are I will not scratch my head before reeling them out because I am
convinced about them. Many of us know the issues that are stake and can see
clearly. We cannot follow the madding crowd. I belong to the Awolowo political
ideology. He said Nigeria could only work if we changed the present structure.
Many
believe that the bearing of the current government pampers corruption. Do you
have a different view?
Corruption
is everywhere in Nigeria. The only way we can change it is to change the
structure of the country.
Are
you not convinced that a new leader may tackle corruption better?
Fighting
corruption in Nigeria today is not about one man but the whole country. For
goodness’s sake this is not a military administration where tribunals could be
set up and throw people to jail to serve 300 years term. In 1999, how many
governors were convicted for corruption except those former President Olusegun
Obasanjo exposed for political reasons?
There are cases that are 10 years old
in courts now which have not been heard. Corruption is so endemic in Nigerian
and that is why we have to go to the root. This is why we believe they (political
office holders) should be stripped of immunity so that they can be tried while
in office if accused of corruption. Immunity is dangerous and Section 308 of
the 1999 Constitution stipulates that even if a person has a criminal case
before, once he gets immunity, that is the end of the case.
By
the time these people are in office for four or eight years and they have
amassed enough, they would ensure that the wheel of justice would not move. If
anybody says he wants to fight corruption in Nigeria without the desire to make
sure the constitution is changed, it is a fraud. Under this arrangement, one
cannot gather the proceeds of corruption, make new leaders and promise to fight
corruption holistically. It is not possible.
Your
book, ‘Watch the Watcher,’ was published three weeks after former President
Olusegun Obasanjo released his controversial autobiography, ‘My Watch.’ Was it
a coincidence or a commissioned documented response?
People
make all kinds of insinuations. Go and read the book. I wrote it as far back as
2005. I have not read Obasanjo’s book. Some Nigerians are intellectually lazy
and all they make are insinuations. I do not need the permission of anybody to
title my book.
Why
did you delay its release?
I
am at liberty to release my book anytime. That is my last answer on that.
You
were part of the Save Nigeria Group delegate to the President and you were
offered a bribe. What does that episode tell about the Goodluck Jonathan-led
administration?
Yes,
I was part of the SNG delegate to the President then. When we were leaving,
they offered us money for transportation and we returned it. That is the end of
it.
You
once identified Jonathan as winner of Osun and Ekiti elections. What made you
say so?
Yes,
he won the elections by his disposition. Under past administrations, election
results were changed and they were do-or-die. Election tribunals proved all
these. After the Edo governorship election, the governor, Adams Oshiomhole,
gave the victory to Jonathan who ensured adequate security.
You
left Afenifere to Afenifere Renewal Group and later returned to Afenifere. Why
did you go back?
Many
people do not know the history of ARG. In 2007, when there was an intractable
disagreement between former governors and the leaders of the Afenifere, some of
our friends; Wale Oshun (a former chief whip of the House of Representatives),
Ayo Afolabi (who is currently the director of publicity of the APC in the
South-West) and others said we the below generation should come together and
see how we can bring ideas together. We decided to chart an independent course,
if that would put an end to the crisis among the leaders.
That
was how the idea of ARG came. Some of us were very weary because we knew that
some among us were neck-deep in the then politics of the Action Congress of
Nigeria. We asked ourselves if we were ready. We said we would be independent.
That was how we started it. We mobilised others so we could pursue the cause of
the Yoruba. I was in Ekiti State during a bye election in the state.
It was
there I read a congratulatory advert by ARG in a national newspaper
congratulating Bola Tinubu as its leader for reconstructing Fajuyi House. I
called the chairman, Oshun to know when we decided on the advert. I said since
people were then accusing us of being a Tinubu group, the advert just confirmed
it. I told others that I was leaving but was begged that they would get to the
root of the matter. I had boasted to the public that we were independent only
for the advert to happen. I just decided to withdraw from ARG without making a
fuss about the issue. There are some issues that one will not want to talk
about but people who do not know what happened begin to talk.
Is
Afenifere not tied to the apron strings of any individual?
Whose
apron strings? Name, if you know any. Afenifere is independent and that is why
it was able to take an independent position.
What
is your relationship with Pastor Tunde Bakare now, since you have different
convictions?
Our
relationship is cordial and super. As a matter of fact, we are pursuing the
same thing but our approach may be different. I am not a run-of-the-mill
activist. I am a political person.
Source:
http://www.punchng.com
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