Tag: Obasanjo

  • CIA, KGB once funded Nigeria’s labour movement — Obasanjo

    CIA, KGB once funded Nigeria’s labour movement — Obasanjo

     

     

     

    Ex-President Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has disclosed that Nigeria’s organised labour movement was, at a critical stage in its history, funded by foreign intelligence agencies, a development he said exposed the country’s labour system to external control and raised grave concerns about national sovereignty.

    Obasanjo made the revelation at the 85th birthday celebration and public presentation of the memoir of a former President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Hassan Sunmonu, titled “Memoirs of an African Trade Union Icon: Organise, Don’t Agonise”.

    The gathering of labour leaders, policymakers and civil society actors evolved into a broader reflection on the past, present and future of trade unionism in Nigeria.

    According to the former president, Nigeria’s labour space during the Cold War era was dominated by two powerful labour organisations which, though Nigerian in name, were allegedly financed and influenced by opposing global power blocs.

    He said one faction received support from the Soviet Union’s KGB, while the other was funded by the United States’ Central Intelligence Agency, a situation he described as unhealthy and dangerous for an independent nation.

    “As far as you remember, when Gooduck was leading one of the two major labour then Adebola, these two labour organizations are Nigerian labour organizations but they were not organized or funded by Nigeria,” Obasanjo said. “I don’t know if you know that, but that was the reality.

    “One was being financed by KGB, that is the truth, and the other one was being financed by CIA, that was the truth, and then I came on the scene.”

    He explained that this reality shaped his resolve, as military Head of State, to reform the labour movement and insulate it from foreign interference by building a structure that was organised, controlled and financed by Nigerians.

    “I needed a Nigerian labour union organised by Nigeria, controlled by Nigeria, financed by Nigeria. So I decided there was going to be a labour union reform,” Obasanjo said, recalling that the reform process was spearheaded by Justice Adebiyi.

    He noted that Sunmonu was among those who initially questioned his involvement in labour matters.

    Obasanjo said, “Hassan was one of those who was forefront to ask, what do I know about labour that I’m asking for reform? What is my business?”

    Obasanjo said the reform process eventually led to the restructuring of trade unions and the enactment of laws that gave birth to the Nigeria Labour Congress as a unified national platform.

    He stressed that the emergence of the NLC leadership was achieved without direct government interference, restoring credibility to organised labour and fostering relative industrial stability.

    “Of course, I don’t know anything about labour but I know that I wanted a Nigerian labour organization organized by Nigeria, headed by Nigeria, and funded by Nigeria,” he said.

    “When Justice Adebiyi finished his job and we reformed the labour and party law establishing NLC, what happened? Without government’s hand, they elected their leader and Hassan became the first leader they elected. I don’t know how I felt at that time, but I felt comfortable.”

    Sunmonu, who led the NLC from 1978 to 1984, is widely regarded as one of the architects of modern trade unionism in Nigeria.

    Reflecting on his relationship with Sunmonu, Obasanjo said government and labour were bound to interact and even depend on each other, but must do so without compromising their independence.

    He recalled advising Sunmonu to openly criticise government policies after private engagements in order to preserve labour’s credibility and the trust of workers.

    He added that the introduction of a compulsory check-off system ensured sustainable union funding and permanently eliminated foreign financial influence from Nigeria’s labour movement.

    Obasanjo further praised Sunmonu for elevating Nigerian labour on the continental and global stage, describing him as the most influential figure in the country’s labour movement after the late Pa Michael Imoudu.

    The occasion also provided a platform for the current President of the Nigeria Labour Congress, Comrade Joe Ajaero, to deliver a blistering critique of contemporary economic policies, new tax laws and Nigeria’s rising public debt. Ajaero warned that the systematic exclusion of labour from critical policy processes was deepening poverty and undermining democratic governance.

    He argued that the philosophy captured in Sunmonu’s memoir, Organise, Don’t Agonise, stood in sharp contrast to what Nigerians were currently experiencing, accusing the government of preferring “enrage over engage.”

    “Tax laws that tax the national minimum wage, impose heavier burdens on workers and the poor, and worsen excruciating poverty are not progressive but regressive,” Ajaero said.

    He insisted that labour was deliberately excluded from the Presidential Committee on Tax because workers were “meant to be on the menu.”

    Raising broader concerns about governance and accountability, the NLC president echoed Sunmonu’s recent public interrogation of Nigeria’s growing debt profile.

    “Where are all the monies being borrowed by the federal government?” he asked. “It is from this standpoint that we must speak directly to the Nigerian Government.”

    Ajaero warned that bypassing key stakeholders, distorting Acts of Parliament and ruling “by strong arm” eroded public trust and threatened national stability.

    He said the central message of Organise, Don’t Agonise also imposed a responsibility on the state to engage citizens sincerely rather than provoke frustration and social unrest.

    “The philosophy of ‘Organise, Don’t Agonise’ also implies that the state has a duty to engage, not enrage.

    There is an urgent need for deeper, more sincere, and structured engagement with the trade union movement at all levels,” he said.

    “Policies, from fuel pricing to taxation, from wage to social services, must be crafted with the active, respected input of those who represent the workers and the broader masses.”

    “To sideline the organised voice of labour is to design policies on shaky, exclusionary foundations, destined to generate crisis and agony as is being witnessed currently,” he added.

    The NLC president also demanded the immediate constitution of the PENCOM board and called for clarity and restraint in the implementation of the new tax laws, warning that persisting on the current path was dangerous for tax administration and democracy.

    While celebrating Sunmonu as a symbol of courage, integrity and principled engagement, Ajaero said the event had transcended personal honour and become a moment of national reckoning on the condition of Nigerian workers.

    He urged the Federal Government to urgently address workers’ wages ahead of the next statutory minimum wage negotiation and called for a decisive shift toward inclusive governance.

    “Comrade Sunmonu, as we launch your book today, we pledge to keep its central message alive,” he said.

    “We will continue to organise. We will continue to challenge power. We will continue to fight for a Nigeria where no worker has to agonise over poverty, insecurity, heavy taxation or a stolen future riddled with national debt.”

    Efforts to obtain official government reactions to the concerns raised were unsuccessful as of press time.

    (Nigerian Tribune)

  • PDP:   “Things are not beyond Repair, Soldier on…You are doing very well” – Former President Olusegun Obasanjo to Kabiru Turaki-Led NWC

    PDP:   “Things are not beyond Repair, Soldier on…You are doing very well” – Former President Olusegun Obasanjo to Kabiru Turaki-Led NWC

     

    …Urges current Party leaders to tackle indiscipline frontally.

    By

    The National Working Committee (NWC) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), led by the National Chairman, Kabiru Tanimu Turaki, SAN, received strategic counsel today from former Nigeria President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, GCFR.

    During a consultative visit by the PDP NWC to the former President’s residence in Abeokuta, Ogun State, Chief Obasanjo offered his counsel and praised the current leadership’s efforts to stabilize and reposition the party.

    He commended all the steps taken by the NWC, urging them to remain steadfast in their mission and instill discipline in the Party, saying that “anybody who wants to belong to a political party must adhere strictly to its rules and regulations”

    “Things are not beyond repairs. Soldier on…You are doing very well,” Chief Obasanjo stated, encouraging the committee to continue their work with diligence and tact”.

    He stressed the importance of a strong, focused opposition in any democracy, charging the NWC to ensure that the interest of the nation remains paramount.

    The former President, emphasized that the current challenges facing the nation require all political actors to play constructive roles, putting the country’s interest first. He offered his wealth of experience and political insights to the leadership, affirming his readiness to provide guidance when necessary.

    Chief Obasanjo stressed that the way and manner the Federal Government is going, they can’t take Nigeria anywhere good.

    Responding to the former President’s encouraging words, the Party’s National Chairman,  Kabiru Tanimu Turaki, SAN, expressed profound gratitude on behalf of the entire NWC.

    “Your continued support and wisdom mean a great deal to us, Sir,” Turaki said.

    “Your advice and great counsel are always very helpful and we will rely on them as we work tirelessly to rebuild and unify our party. We came here specifically to tap into your experience and benefit from your invaluable perspective on both the party’s future and the state of our nation.”

    Turaki assured the former President that the NWC under his leadership is dedicated to maintaining internal peace, promoting genuine reconciliation, and preparing the party to meet the expectations of all Nigerians.

    In the entourage of the National Working Committee is the Chairman of the Board of Trustees (BOT), Senator Adolphus Wabara, former Plateau Governor, Jonah Jang, former Niger State Governor, Muazu Babangida Aliyu, the PDP Candidate in Ekiti State, Dr Oluwole Oluyede, some members of the National Working Committee and other prominent Party leaders in the south west and across the country.

    The visit concluded on a high note of enthusiasm and renewed commitment. The PDP NWC is expected to visit other party leaders as part of its efforts to strengthen the party’s unity and resolve all form of political differences in the PDP.

  • President of Sasakawa Africa Association, Chief Obasanjo, IFAD, Ambassador of Japan discuss food security in Nigeria

    President of Sasakawa Africa Association, Chief Obasanjo, IFAD, Ambassador of Japan discuss food security in Nigeria

     

     

    Grace Yussuf

    The President of the Sasakawa Africa Association (SAA), Mr. Shuichi Suzuki, met with former Nigeria’s President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo in Abeokuta to discuss
    food security in Nigeria.

    The visit to the former president on Monday, is part of Mr. Suzuki’s agenda,who is on a week-long familiarization visit aimed at deepening discussions on the Japanese organization’s long-standing involvement in Nigeria’s agricultural development and food security.

    Chief Obasanjo commended Sasakawa Africa Association for its continuous commitment and investment in Nigeria’s agricultural sector, and Africa in general.

    (From Left to Right: Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, Mr. Shuichi Suzuki, and Dr. Godwin Atser during the visit to Chief Obasanjo today.)

     

    The former President said that African leaders needed to emulate SAA, by sustaining investments in Agriculture, stressing that continuity was key and necessary for agricultural transformation.

    In his response, Mr. Suzuki said his visit was aimed at strengthening ties with the country and to reiterate SAA commitment to investing in agriculture in the country.

    He noted that beyond oil and gas, Nigeria’s greatest assets were agriculture and its young population, which is rapidly growing.

    In a close-door meeting, both men explored opportunities for collaboration to further enhance the livelihoods of smallholder farmers and support Nigeria’s agricultural transformation agenda.

    The Country Director of SAA in Nigeria, Dr Godwin Atser described the visit to Chief Obasanjo as strategic, adding that it afforded Mr. Suzuki the opportunity to better understand the importance of agriculture, its challenges, and the impact SAA is making towards improving livelihoods in Nigeria.

    Dr Atser noted that SAA, as an agricultural extension and advisory services organization, had in the last three decades reached 20 million farmers in Nigeria, using different extension models, adding that more needed to be done to impact more farmers.

    Founded in 1986, SAA is a non-governmental organization dedicated to agricultural extension and smallholder farmer development.

    Headquartered in Tokyo, the Association has four country offices in Africa – Nigeria, Ethiopia, Mali, and Uganda.

    Since its establishment in Nigeria in 1992, SAA has partnered with development agencies, agricultural development programmes, and government institutions to strengthen extension systems, introduce climate-smart technologies, and empower farming communities across the country.

    Prior to the visit to Chief Obasanjo today, Mr. Suzuki (last week) visited the Ambassador of Japan to Nigeria, His Excellency, Suzuki Hideo; the Director of Extension, Federal Department of Extension, Mr. Olawumi Ayodele and Country Director, International Fund for Agricultural Development, Ms. Dede Ekoue in Abuja.

    This visit marks Mr. Suzuki’s first official engagement in Nigeria since assuming leadership of SAA. Prior to joining the organization, he had a distinguished career with Sumitomo Corporation, serving in senior executive roles across its international offices in Baghdad, Singapore, Paris, and London.

    He rose through the ranks to become Corporate Officer, Executive Officer, and General Manager of the Steel Pipe Division, and later led the Energy Division, driving global business expansion and promoting sustainability within the sector.

    Following his retirement from Sumitomo in 2019, Mr. Suzuki served as Advisor and Counselor to the Mineral Resources and Chemicals Business Unit, as well as Chairman of GYXIS Corporation.

    Throughout his career, he has been a consistent advocate of sustainable growth, global collaboration, and responsible resource management. End

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  • Group dismisses Obasanjo’s labelling of Tinubu’s administration as inefficient

    Group dismisses Obasanjo’s labelling of Tinubu’s administration as inefficient

     

    By Iyiola Olalere ‎
    ‎The Democratic Front (TDF) has dismissed former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s accusation of inefficiency against the President Bola Tinubu administration as mischievous and baseless.

    ‎In a statement signed by its Chairman, Mallam Danjuma Muhammad, and Secretary, Chief Wale Adedayo, it noted that the former President was in no position to label any administration as inefficient based on his performance in office.

    ‎TDF said: “Obasanjo’s accusation would have been denounced as his usual tirade of a relevance-seeking political gaslighter; but because the accusation illuminated the failures of a former President of Nigeria, whose personal negligence of duty and inefficiency cost the nation $18 billion, as payment to offset a $30 billion loan from the Paris Club in 2006.

    ‎”This was at a time the entire nation was in darkness due to the inability to generate electricity, while the educational sector was also in a coma on account of lack of living wage for teachers and lecturers, leading to endless strike actions that disrupted university programs and the national academic calendar, etc.

    ‎”We are compelled by obligation to provide clarity on who, between President Tinubu and former President Obasanjo, presided over the most economically reckless and inefficient government in Nigeria.

    ‎”Unlike President Tinubu who has visited 17 countries in the last two years and secured a major livestock sector investment from Brazil, as well as attracted a total of $50.8 billion investment commitments from India, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirate, and France, former President Obasanjo gallivanted across 97 countries without any notable foreign investment, or practical evidence of improved trade balance between Nigeria and the countries he visited. A monumental waste of public funds.

    ‎”We sadly remember Obasanjo’s inability to initiate private investments in Nigeria’s petroleum refining sub-sector for 8 years, despite failed attempts to sell state-owned refineries as scraps to vested interests. This is a feat President Tinubu surpassed in less than 7 months in office, by midwifing Dangote Refinery, a few years after the Buhari administration initiated the enabling environment for the establishment of Dangote and other private modular refineries in Nigeria.

    ‎”TDF is therefore not under any illusion that the former president is either exhibiting the symptoms of selective amnesia at old age, or resorting to the antics of a snake-oil salesman, by deceitfully manipulating public opinion to deflect accountability, and excuse his shortcomings for laying the foundation for the executive inefficiency that led to monumental waste of scarce national resources in Nigeria between 1999 and 2007.”

    ‎The group outlined some of the highlights of the Obasanjo years that showcased the inefficiency of that administration

    ‎”The annals of our national history will never forget that Obasanjo’s inefficiency as the President cost the nation billions of dollars in the power sector, and the waste of another $550 million in satellite projects known as Nigeriasat 1 and Nigeriasat 2, which have since disappeared from the orbit.

    ‎”Similarly, his anchorage of executive disrespect for democratic norms and constitutional ethics, which resulted in the infamous kidnapping of an elected State Governor, and the illegitimate impeachment of other State Governors, has also left an enduring infamy in Nigeria’s democratic history.

    ‎”In addition, the former President’s disregard for due process created legal entanglements and contractual liabilities that stalled the Mambila Power Project contract award, and denied Nigeria the opportunity to add 3,500 megawatts of electricity to the national grid.

    ‎” As an octogenarian with such a heavy burden of failure, Obasanjo is expected to act as a statesman and to desist from comments that are derogatory to the nation, and unbecoming of his person as a former President,” it added

    ‎End

  • Tinubu succeeding where Obasanjo failed woefully, says TMSG

    Tinubu succeeding where Obasanjo failed woefully, says TMSG

     

    By Majeed Ishola

    The Tinubu Media Support Group (TMSG) has rated President Bola Tinubu highly over former President Olusegun Obasanjo on governance and described, as hollow and mischievous, the former president’s recent characterisation of the Tinubu administration as second only to that of former President Muhammadu Buhari in inefficiency.

    The group also wondered how a former president with a dismal record in office could accuse any other president, former or current, of performing worse than his own administration.

    In a statement signed by its Chairman Emeka Nwankpa and Secretary Dapo Okubanjo, TMSG argued that the former President misused several opportunities to turn around Nigeria’s fortunes at a time of multiple oil booms.

    The group said: “It is not unusual for former President Olusegun Obasanjo to use every opportunity to cast aspersions on other Nigerian Presidents in a bid to portray his administration as the best the country ever had and himself as the most competent.

    “Which is why we were not surprised that in his new book, “Nigeria: Past and Future”, he tagged President Bola Tinubu as second only to former President Muhammadu Buhari in inefficiency. This is clearly in his character.

    “And in casting aspersions at all Presidents who assumed office after him, former President Obasanjo was, as usual, being himself, an individual who sees everything good about himself, a messiah of sorts even when many Nigerians know that he squandered the goodwill that followed him into office after years of military rule.

    “Yes, the former President secured debt forgiveness for Nigeria by paying $18 billion, but he also left billions of naira in unpaid pension debt and entitlements of several Nigerians who were left jobless after his poorly managed privatisation of hundreds of Government-Owned Enterprises (GOEs).

    “So how many of those companies that were later found to have been sold at a pittance are still operating? Also, former President Obasanjo takes delight in saying that he left an Excess Crude Account (ECA) of $25 billion for his predecessor, which is a tacit acknowledgement of the oil boom while he was President, but it was also a period that Nigeria could not boast of a modern rail network”, the statement said.

    TMSG wondered why a former president who credits himself as the best among the country’s leaders left a legacy of poor infrastructure and waste despite the multiple oil booms of the period.

    “If the Obasanjo era was a period of remarkable efficiency, former President Buhari and his successor, both of whom he claimed were inefficient, would not have been executing rail projects as well as highways and other critical infrastructure at a time of lower crude prices.

    “That was also the time the nation’s four refineries were crippled and millions of dollars spent on questionable Turn Around Maintenance (TAMs), aside from the over 16 billion dollars believed to have been spent on power projects that achieved nothing but left Nigerians in worse darkness.

    “Yet former President Obasanjo always accuses the country’s successive leadership as inefficient and poor managers of the economy.

    “No Nigerian can easily forget the legacy of corruption he introduced into the National Assembly as the first civilian President in the Fourth Republic, as well as carrying the burden of the worst national election in Nigeria’s history in 2027 which he presided over and for which there is still no final result, eighteen years after.

    “We think he needs to drop his messianic complex and accept, for once, that he cannot always absolve himself of blame whenever he talks of Nigeria’s political leadership especially now that he wants everyone to know that he is close to his ‘departure lounge”

    “It is interesting that in his latest book, he admitted that he was not perfect during his time in office, but he is also known to have never accepted his flaws, from the 2007 election to his administration’s handling of the privatisation exercise.

    “The only area he is known to have expressed regret was his choice of Atiku Abubakar as Vice President,” the statement noted. The group urged the former president to assume the role of an elder statesman that he is and desist from casting aspersions on the country’s leaders after falling out with them.

    End