Former
President Olusegun Obasanjo on Tuesday descended on the nation’s
legislature, judiciary and the police, describing them as corrupt, and
that they held no hope for the country.
Obasanjo described the
majority of lawmakers at the national and state assemblies as “rogues
and armed robbers,” and the judiciary as corrupt.
Obasanjo, however, rated the lawmakers as better than the police in crime and corruption.
He said, “Integrity is
necessary for systems and institutions to be strong. Today, rogues,
armed robbers are in the state Houses of Assembly and the National
Assembly. What sort of laws will they make?
“The judiciary is also corrupt. During my tenure, many of the corrupt judges were removed, some are still there.
“If the Judiciary
becomes corrupt, where is the hope for the nation? Justice, no doubt,
will go to the highest bidder. The judiciary did not see anything wrong
with a former governor but the same set of evidence was used to sentence
him in the United Kingdom.
“The police are even
worse. Well, I will not lament; I will only say, ‘let us understand our
problems and emphasise the good ones.’”
The former President,
who spoke at the fourth Academy for Entrepreneurial Studies, Nigeria,
annual national conference in Lagos, also did not spare the citizenry,
accusing them of lacking in diligence and integrity.
The conference had the theme, “Strong Systems: Necessity for Building a Virile Nation.”
“The problem is that the
diligence that was being undertaken before people are appointed or
elected is no more today,” Obasanjo said.
He said the country
needed strong, stable, enduring and sustainable institutions for the
country to remain virile, dynamic and successful.
“I believe we will get there, but all Nigerians must play their roles,” Obasanjo said.
The Lagos State Governor
Mr. Babatunde Fashola, at the same event, made a case for state police
as part of the measures to build strong judicial system.
“The question of whether
we will have state police ‘is not a matter of if, but when’. If we want
our judicial system to be strong, we need a well-motivated, equipped,
remunerated and efficient police system,” Fashola said.
The governor, who said
the Judiciary did not belong to the government but a part of it, added
that there was the need for Nigerians to re-assess their values if
strong systems and institutions could exist.
Former Head of State,
Gen. Yakubu Gowon (retd.), who was the Chairman of the occasion, urged
all Nigerians to work for the unity of the country, saying the country’s
oneness is not negotiable.
“Nigeria is not a bad
nation or where nothing works. It is not a country that anything goes;
we may have got it wrong somewhere, but we are on the right track. This
does not make us a failed nation or people. The need for strong systems
to achieve a virile nation is a necessity,” Gowon said.
Also, former Head,
Interim National Government, Chief Ernest Shonekan, said Nigeria needed a
stable socio-economic environment to grow the economy, stressing that
there was absolute need to improve the security in the country.
“We must improve on our
governance system and the age-long values of hard work, honesty and
integrity. The judicial system also matters. Justice must not only be
seen but must be clearly seen to be done. Corruption must be battled and
exterminated because it tarnishes the image of our country and
discourages investment,” Shonekan said.
A lawyer, Prof. Itse
Sagay, said there was no doubt that Nigeria had strong systems and
institutions but the operators (the political elite) were the problems
of the country.
“There is nothing wrong
with Nigeria but with the 90 per cent of the political elite who have
neutralised all the laws in the country. Nigeria public officers do not
resign on the grounds of principles. The country is a value-deficient
society,” Sagay said.
Former Chief Justice of
Nigeria, Justice Muhammadu Uwais, said the problem of corruption had
spread even to the judiciary, adding that during his tenure as CJN, many
judges were removed on the grounds of corruption.
“Without a strong judiciary, even though you have a strong economy, the economy will find it difficult to grow,” Uwais stated.
President, AES, Dr. Ausbeth Ajagu, urged Nigerians to imbibe ethical values to move the country forward.
“Leadership in Nigeria is characterised
by ego system. Our leaders usually fail to understand that government is
a continuum and this has led to mismanagement of funds by abandoning
the programmes of their predecessors,” Ajagu said.
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