Former chairman of the People’s Democratic Party
(PDP), Colonel Ahmadu Ali (retd) has some harsh words for Yoruba people of
South West. According to him, the Yoruba are “ungrateful kind of people,” who does
not appreciate what others have done for them. He is particularly pained that
the Yoruba do not appreciate what former President Olusegun Obasanjo did for
them.
The former chairman of the PDP also said that the
Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF) does not constitute a threat to the powers and
authority of the President.
In this interview, Ali revealed how those he
described as self-appointed Yoruba leaders have disappointed him. He spoke on
these and other issues.
Read Excerpts after the cut...
Is
it true you wanted to be chairman of PDP Board of Trustee?
Yes.
What
happened?
I was not chosen.
Is
it a matter of choosing a candidate or something the party does through
election?
It is more of choosing than election. At that level,
it is like that. Board of Trustee comprises old men and an experienced person
that we don’t think it is necessary for people to cast their votes. When the
party’s top hierarchy met, they decided it should be Tony Anenih. That is all.
Is
it true that the BoT is advisory?
It is advisory.
So,
the advice of BoT may be taken or be ignored?
Yes. It may be taken or be rejected. Anybody you
advise has a right to take or reject your advice. They are to advise either the
party or the legislature. It is all advisory. Nothing more.
What
is the function of the National Working Committee?
That one is like our executive headed by the
national chairman. They do the day-to-day running of the party. So, it is the
national chairman that has the executive powers.
What
of the National Executive Committee (NEC)?
The NEC is like the parliament of the party that
broadly shapes the policy, which the National Working Committee and the
national chairman carry out. The national chairman and the National Working
Committee produce memoranda and present to the National Executive Committee for
approval before they can act.
Where
does the national convention come in?
National convention is the ultimate authority of the
party. Whatever the National Executive Committee has approved and given out for
execution by the national chairman and his executive and if it has
fundamentally affected the constitution of the party, the national convention
has the final authority to ratify it or reject it.
What
do you say to the powers wielded by governors during your era as chairman of
the party?
Does
the Nigeria Governors’ Forum wield any powers? What powers do they wield?
It is believed that the governors decided who should
be your successor, as we were told that PDP governors interviewed all aspirants
for the position and they settled for one of them…
They did not interview them. The governors played a
major role in that they were interested and they showed their interest. It gave
the impression as if they are doing it all. You know, you can have a pressure
group, if the BoT had been subjected to the public, the pressure from
interested groups would be great. The constitution says it is only members of
that board that can choose their chairman. They could decide to do it by voting
or by consensus. It is left to them.
Many Nigerians are saying that the Nigerian
Governors’ Forum is contesting for power with the executive.
I said there is nothing like that. They (governors)
are paper tigers. The Governors’ Forum is a paper tiger. It is just about
powers and counter powers, sort of crossing each other’s path. What can the
Governors’ Forum do? It is in any constitution? It is not in the Nigerian
constitution and it is not in our party’s constitution either. So, they are
just a pressure group of people who are consulted on things in the economic
council and they feel they must provide a pressure group to have their way.
That is all. They are nothing. I don’t know why anybody is worried about them.
It is believed that they control the national
delegates that vote at the National Executive Committee (NEC) meetings.
Anybody can control delegates. Some youths, PDP
Youth Vanguard, PDP Good Governance Initiative and so many others control
votes.
Control
votes at the National Executive Committee (NEC) meetings?
No. Control votes at the NEC? Governors don’t. The way the NEC is composed, the governors
cannot control anything. Sometimes, they make a contribution and they are shut
down. They are ordinary members and they are all equal
Is
it true that members of the BoT can vote at NEC meetings?
Normally, being advisory, they are there by virtue
of being members of BoT. So, they actually or I should say in actual fact, they
have no voting right. But they have power of suggestion, which is very, very
strong. When they speak, you find that it is from all and sundry who come from
all over the federation. They now get more in-depth into what is happening.
Normally, they don’t know some of the things happening.
Some powerful members of your party told me that BoT
members have right to vote at NEC meetings.
I am not aware. I was a national chairman of the
party and I am telling you they don’t have right to vote at NEC meetings. Who
again are these powerful people who can tell you anything more than I who had
administered the party for three good years uninterrupted? Since my time,
nobody has been able to hold that office for that period. So, I know what I am
talking about.
Nigerians believe that Chief Olusegun Obasanjo has
confidence in you since your days in the military and that is why he will
always support you…
We have confidence in each other. That is all.
Would
that be since your days in the military?
I say we have confidence in each other.
Is
it true that President Jonathan and Baba Obasanjo are not on the same
wavelength politically?
I am not aware of that. You have to be careful
because the perception out there is totally wrong. These people are like a club
– I mean all former Heads of State. So, if you sit down as an ordinary man in
your tombo bar and you think they are fighting, Ekan ntanra yin je ni (You are
only deceiving yourselves).
Are
you satisfied with the PDP as it is today?
Why not? I am
a serious member of the party and there is nothing wrong with the party.
So,
what we read in the papers are mere fictions?
You in the media have a way of looking at things
from a totally different angle. What we don’t see, you people start seeing them
and you write your insinuations. So, we don’t bother ourselves.
What do you say to the coming together of four
strong political parties? I mean the newly formed APC.
Well, APC is a drug that was banned a long time ago.
It was banned because it was ineffective and because of the side effects. That
is what APC is. So, if it an ineffective drug, you can’t bring it to treat any
disease we have in this country today. We have since grown beyond that. So,
those people are totally unimaginative. They come together and call themselves
APC. The groups that are there, you know, make no difference to us. They had
always been there. So what? We have no fear.
The opposition says that President Jonathan is not
doing well and that leaders of the party don’t have good plans for the country
and they have to come together to save the country…
Our leaders have plans. It is executing the plans to
solve the problem. There are many things that are perhaps, hindering such
executions. But I think they are being unfair to Jonathan. He is just doing two
years. How can you start marking somebody for WAEC exam when he is in JS3? That
is not fair. So, you have to wait until
he reaches SS3 before you can say let us test him. What has he done? You know
many things have long incubation periods. So, two years judgment is unfair. You
know, Nigerians are always in a hurry. That is our headache. That is not good
for us. It makes people to make plenty of mistakes.
How
do you see Boko Haram? Is it political?
I don’t know. I can’t comment on that. But all I
know is that if you solve the problem of hunger in this country and you handle
education solidly, we will get rid of all these problems. During my days as
minister of education, the whole of the states in the North West zone today
were called North West states. The six-year-olds in those days, only six per
cent of them were attending schools. General Obasanjo and I launched the
Universal Primary Education (UPE) scheme. I produced the national policy on
education, which we launched in 1976. We physically launched the UPE in Oke
Suna Primary School, Lagos. When we finished and I retired from the army, by
1980/81, I was already in the Senate and I went to the military and asked how
the enrolment rate was going.
They said it increased to 45 per cent from six per
cent.
Now, if that momentum were kept, we will not be
talking about almajiri now. The secret is that we have to go back to basis by
asking the elders for solutions. The late Emir of Katsina, Usman Nagogo, told
me that the classroom I was building all over the federation as minister for
education was only for goats. He said if I wanted it to be inhabited by
students, I should take the almajiri teachers to the teacher training college
to teach religious studies from primary one to six and give them small
allowance, three pounds and fifty, and they will learn how to use chalk and so
on and so forth. They will be there until two o’clock, like the students. So,
when the students reach home, they are free for the almajiri teacher. I
borrowed the idea. The late Sultan of Sokoto, also gave me a similar piece of
advice and wrote letters to all the emirs to cooperate with me on the UPE
scheme.
In Kano, with the extra money I was given for
primary schools and for educationally backward areas, we decided to build
science secondary schools. I established JAMB- the reinvigorated NUC on the
prompting of Chief Obafemi Awolowo because he was a chancellor of one of the
universities. By that time, 1982, we found that not only have we broken the
backbone of backwardness, Kano State started producing the highest number of
students that passed JAMB exams in the sciences into the universities in
Nigeria. That was done by an old teacher, who studied and got degree. His name
is Professor Ayagi. He is still alive. He was a commissioner for education for
Kano State.
The JAMB result showed that the highest mark for
science students into the Nigerian universities came from Kano. It is a
question of maintaining the momentum. In Nigeria, we are fond of somebody
starting something and somebody stopping it. People come into public office and
behave as if they are discovering Nigeria afresh. Nobody wants to make
reference to those who have performed in the past.
Obasanjo is sitting down there; he is a bundle of
knowledge for this country. If you have any difficulty and you cannot go to him
and say come, how did you do it? This is my problem. You are wasting your time.
All the people hanging around all these people (in public office) are just bootlickers.
They are not advising properly. Obasanjo
is the only person who has been Head of State three times in this country.
Sir,
is it three or two times?
Three
times. He did it as a military. He came back twice as
civilian. Is that not three times? That is the man who fought the civil war,
defeated Biafra, arrested the Biafra Commander of the Armed Forces, General
Effiong, brought him to Lagos, presented him to his Commander-in- Chief,
General Yakubu Gowon and he signed the article of surrender. What kind of
sacrifice do you want somebody to do again? He ran government when his boss,
Murtala Muhammed, died and kept the faith. Murtala told us we shall all leave.
I was in his cabinet.
You
were in Murtala’s cabinet?
I was in the cabinet of Yakubu Gowon, Murtala and
Obasanjo. Throughout the three administrations, I was the minister of
education, throughout the three administrations of Gowon, Murtala and Obasanjo.
Murtala said we should all go home after 1978.
Murtala
said that?
Yes. He said that all those who are Generals and
above should go to their villages. Anybody below who is still viable should
return to the units, but I decided to go because as a medical doctor, I thought
I had had enough. I left. This man,
(Obasanjo) kept the faith and voluntarily handed over to civilians. He could
have said he wasn’t going. What can anybody do? After all, it is the gun that
got them there. And you people still don’t recognise him, especially the Yoruba
people who are totally ungrateful kind of people in this country.
You
want me to quote you as saying that?
Put it like that. They are ungrateful.
How
sir?
Yoruba leaders said Obasanjo was unfair to his people throughout his time in
government.
What do you mean by being unfair to them? He is not
a tribalist and he was not ruling a Yoruba kingdom. He ruled Nigeria. My own
kingdom is one of the oldest kingdoms in this country –Igala kingdom. By 1100 or so when the barbarians were
invading Britain, Igala was already a kingdom. How do you expect the man to
behave?
Many Yoruba said Obasanjo was determined not to hand
over to Obafemi Awolowo in 1979. They said Obasanjo administration of which you
are part robbed Awolowo of victory at the polls…
Don’t talk rubbish. You are talking rubbish. That is
the stupidity of the press and the self-appointed Yoruba leaders who are
failures in their various fields of endeavour. They are just a total failure.
How can you say, in an election where one candidate scored 12 million and
showed presence in more than 12 states out of 19 and another candidate scored
five million and showed presence in only five states, you then give it to the
second person? What is democracy about? Is it a game of numbers? All the
argument is about 12 two third? What is two third? The man had 12 states and 12
million votes. Awolowo had only five million and only in five states. You want
to go and give it to him? Yoruba are another character.
Why
were many party members deregistered under your watch in PDP?
Nobody was deregistered. The party wants membership.
There is no question of deregistration. We came to a stage when the President
and his deputy were at loggerheads and people took up positions. We were going
into election and we couldn’t be sure who remained with us. The vice president
had gone to the newly formed AC at the time and many people said they were
going with him. So, we wanted to know our strength. It was a poll. We did not
deregister anybody. If you did not go to your ward to register, that is your
business; we will know you are not for us. If there is a decision going on in
your ward and you went, you are part of the party. That was all we did. Simple
arithmetic.
We did a secret poll to size our strength all over
the federation and we knew we were going to win and we continued. People don’t
have an idea of what was happening.
Culled from Sun News
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