Chief Obaro, let me reply because your inquiry sounds genuine, but make no apologies for Pres Buhari, who, I can say authoritatively and in retrospect with benefit of what I now know of him, is unfit to lead a multiethnic, multinational, and multi-religious country like Nigeria.
I stand before God before whom I shall one day stand and give account of my earthly deeds that what I'm going to tell you now are borne of verifiable facts and, largely, products of my personal observations over time. I share this without bitterness or malice.
President Buhari is an ethnic bigot of the worst kind but he went about it deceptively while seeking power.
I've said this several times. It was a first hint that warned me of the bigot in the man. It's worth recalling.
Late 2014, we of the CPC were asked to submit our list for inclusion in the Interim National Exco of the newly-formed APC. Every other merging party - ACN, ANPP, and APGA - tried to exhibit some national spread in their submissions.
But the CPC list Buhari had the prerogative of compiling was the only one that was ultra-skewed. Out of nine slots, Buhari gave eight to the north! Only one - post of National Women Leader - he conceded to the entire South!
He gave that to his bosom friend, Sharon Ikeazor, presently a Minister.
I was the only person, to the best of my knowledge, who politely protested to him. I told him, rather to his shock and embarrassment, it was wrong. He replied, "I will look into it , Dr." Nothing changed.
I shrugged it off as, perhaps a mere error of judgement in the heat and pressure of compilation.
Then he became president and began skewed appointments. Then I had access to him. I thought of how to deliver my message pungently and in a way that would rattle him and drum it home.
I approached him and said the trend wasn't well received by the public and he should be careful to give every section of the country a sense of belonging.
To rub my point in, I said, "Mr. President, you must be a lot more careful in your appointments to vital security and...
defence positions. It's safer to diffuse the ethno-religious backgrounds of the chiefs. Recall that the coup that toppled your administration in 1985 August was hatched by northerners."
That jolted him and he quietly changed the head of the MOPOL Unit at Aso Rock from Arewa to an Ijebu man called Ogunyannwo. Thought he should be of the rank of ACP.
Then, when critical appointments were being made, after five months delay, I noticed that PDP members were...
gaining the upper hands. Those who had formed a tight ring around the president were in business!
That upset some of us, naturally, including his wife who openly protested thus: "My husband doesn't know more than five percent of his appointees.
They are mainly those who know nothing about the vision, mission, and policies of our party"!
I wrote a series of memoranda to the president, as I was trouble-hearted, and began to receive loud grumbles from those I had mobilised to support him across the Southwest on my old...
political platforms and among the comrades in defunct CPC.
Rather than his errors of exclusion abating, it grew worse. I then granted a newspaper interview, hoping he would read it because he reads newspapers avidly, including the cartoons.
I then sought audience with the VP. It turned out that he was not as influential as I had imagined. I would go there and he would get diplomatic about issues, leaving me to read between the lines. He nonetheless tries to keep a good relationship with me and my followers across...
the states by ensuring we receive xmas/new year hampers.
During Covid-19 he called, personally, and asked me to send a list for his own private largesse. I can only sympathise with the man. He's handicapped!
When I decided to vie against the president in 2019, he invited me to Aguda House twice and tried to convince me the second term would be redeeming. He asked me to join him in reviewing the draft Next Level document. I did. I campaigned for their ticket, once again.
I helped him design propaganda posters, which production he facilitated for pasting across the Southwest.
After the election, nothing changed. Then the Fulani herdsmen killings began to spread southward on a spiral!
People were being slaughtered like animals.
They were being gunned down on their farms as though we were in a state of war. Most alarming was the fact that even when the Fulani killers got apprehended they were released in no time with their guns!
I lost a colleague, Kelvin Izevbekhai, to their bullets on the Benin-Ore highway. Another colleague, Solola, was abducted and released only after ransom had been paid. There were other cases.
Things got so bad that major highways became the killer Fulani operational theatres, simultaneously as farms across Yorubaland were invaded. Women were raped, farms destroyed, ransom extorted. No place was safe.
We began to cry out.
But rabid sychopants who never spent a penny of their money or risked their lives campaigning across cities and hamlets in the treacherous terrain of Nigerian politics were busy harassing us.
They said we were exaggerating things. We were haters.
It's because Buhari didn't give us appointments. Ad infinitum. Because we all realised that the security agencies routinely released the criminals with their guns, we began to think of self-defence. We formed Amotekun.
For the first time in living memory, Yoruba people united across political divides. Obas, the clergy, students, market women, agberos, governors, lawmakers all agreed it was the way to go. Everybody donned the Amotekun regalia.
But a bigoted Buhari with a pernicious agenda of Fulani irredentism refused us gun licence for Amotekun till date. Meanwhile, the so-called Civilian JTF in Borno state carry sophisticated weapons! Every step of the way, he opposed Amotekun with his AG telling us it was illegal.
It was this background that created the Igboho of this world entering into the fray when his uncle was murdered in cold blood in Igangan by Fulani after paying ransom.
Then a couple of Yoruba intelligentsia convened to review the situation.
In September 2019, we met at the office of Prof. Anthony Kila in Lagos. The meeting, chaired by second republic senator and professor emeritus of African history, Papa Banji Akintoye, had others in attendance.
There was Prof. Adeniran, Prof. Ogundowole, Dr. Akin Fapohunda, Chief Tola Adeniyi and other great intellectuals.
After thorough debate and review of submissions, we formed the Yoruba World Congress.
I was made Adviser on Strategy, Kila became Secretary General, broadcasting mogul, Otunba Deji Osibogun, was appointed Organising Secretary and so on. Our goal: Yoruba Nation.
We are no fools. At the risk of sounding immodest, I was in company of some of the most brilliant and experienced people in the world today. Some of them already professors before I was born.
We concluded on mobilising for our own country, while leaving a door open for dialogue.
So far, fierce has been the response while we conduct ourselves peacefully. Tell them we won't back down. The day we would all sit at home & make Lagos a ghost city, maybe they would force us onto the streets! Fools! You're dealing with your intellectual superiors. Keep reacting.
That is the story about Yoruba Nation. Of course, those who lack the depth of thoughts and analysis to interrogate the circumstances that led to our position are free to entertain themselves with insulting labelling such as mouthing secessionists endlessly.
If they're intelligent they should ask if that deters us.
We are not ever going to carry weapons. Our wisdom and intelligence are the ultimate weapons, and so far so good. Our approach is civilised, though barbarians come with force, urged on by demented morons with dead...
consciences and frozen brains.
Anyone who does nothing save to rant on social media, name-calling, is free to do so. It is he who wears the shoes that knows where it pinches.
But note that we are not alone.
I think the only zones not opposed to the president style and actively resisting today are the Northwest and Northeast.
Why? People who lack depth, simply focus on the rumblings on the top of the tree, condemning secessionists without sitting back as sound intellectuals would...
and trace the problem from the roots of the tree.
As far as they're concerned, anybody expressing dissatisfaction with the present order is doing so because he didn't get appointment from Buhari, as if that would compensate for the killings going on in one's homestead and the...
destruction of farmlands. As if that would make one safe on the highway and immune from abduction.
We have a biased president who is in cahoots with his kinsmen.
Imagine how three OPC men who arrested a notorious Fulani terrorist in Ibarapa and handed him over to the police were locked up instead, while Iskilu Wakilu was released. I'm talking of a cold-blooded murderer that have turned several farming communities to a killing field!
Before our very eyes this happened! Google and read about it. And you have the guts to tell me to be a Nigerian patriot, a nationalist bla bla bla. I'm a proud Yoruba man and won't accept to be a Fulani slave.
If we can't be equal citizens in Nigeria, protected under the law, we would opt out. It's a mass movement in Yorubaland, cutting across our diaspora. Yoruba Nation! Yes o!
Those who want to be part of Nigeria are free to uphold their unity in adversity.
They are free to do so and they should mind their own business. We are no kids. Our first Western education secondary school was built in the mid-19th century: CMS, Lagos. We produced lawyers, surveyors etc before Nigeria was created.
I am an Ijebu man. My great grandparents had been trading in firearms etc with Brazil etc long before we were colonised. In the Anglo-Ijebu war in late 19th century, we fought the British with modern guns to their shock.
We have the highest graduates per capita in Nigeria and we have the most educated black ethnic groups in the Western world as a whole and they're solidly behind us. Our Muslim community dated back to the 15th century when Malians introduced us to Islam.
And we began pilgrimage to Mecca long before the grandfather of Uthman dan Fodio was born. We have dignity to protect. We have honour to defend. We know what is good for us.
If you are too dumb to predicate peace and unity of Nigeria on justice and equity, keep shut!
You're a lunatic, if you don't, because you're not making sense!
Alhaji Baba Ahmed, a Mauritanian cow seller, plied his trade from his country to the Gold Coast (now Ghana) and to Dahomey (now Benin Republic). Business was very good but at a point, his customers in Dahomey, with impunity, refused to pay for his cows.
Is it not the law that every seller must collect the proceeds of his sale? This was not the case with the cow seller who was not a son-of-the-soil in Dahomey. The options before him were very limited.
My people say if the landlord offends the tenant, it is the tenant who must go; again, if it is the tenant who has wronged the landlord, it is still the tenant who must go. This trader from Mauritania had to move out of Dahomey, leaving his money behind.
I still remember where I was when I heard the news on the radio. The year was 2006 and I was a greasy teenager studying for my A-level exams the following year.
My favourite subject was Geography, and despite the British syllabus we were using, Mr. Adeleke liked to localise the knowledge and make the class more interesting and interactive that way.
Population dispersion and distribution were among my favourite topics because I was so good at them.
The announcement on the radio that day however, made me briefly wonder whether I knew anything at all.
This is a true life story. There was once a Yoruba traditional ruler who talked down on his subjects. His tongue was so acerbic that even his council of chiefs avoided him.
His hubris was his penchant to extend his bag of insults even to the parents and family members of whoever falls prey to his volcanic eruptions. But one day, his cup was full. A young man was charged to the king’s court over a minor matter.
The young man took his time to explain his points but the king was already in his usual element.
He cut the boy short in the middle of his narration and the boy simply told him that he had not finished stating his own side of the matter that brought him to the palace.
These glorious insults are from an era " before" the English language got boiled down to 4-letter words.
A short thread.
A member of Parliament to Disraeli: "Sir, you will either die on the gallows or of some unspeakable disease."
"That depends, Sir, " said Disraeli, "on whether I embrace your policies or your mistress."
"He had delusions of adequacy."
- Walter Kerr
"He has all the virtues I dislike and none of the vices I admire"
- Winston Churchill
"I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure."
- Clarence Darrow
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I honestly see nothing wrong with GEJ joining APC to actualize his ambitions. PDP hasn't shown seriousness as a party ready to take power, with constant bickerings and dissensions within her fold. Moreover, they've surreptitiously joined the office of the president to the north.
With the alternatives flying around I think he's the best of the realistic candidates for the job. He's had practical experience on same, and with his demeanor as a unifier, the country will benefit from him, especially after 8 fractious years of Buhari in power.
In practical terms, the difference between APC and PDP lies squarely on the character, personality, ideology and policies of Muhammadu Buhari and nothing else. There's been an admixture of politicians in both folds, so this is the only realistic assumption in that regard.