In
this interview, former military president, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida,
clarifies his position on his statement suggesting that he is in support of the
re-election bid of President Goodluck Jonathan.
Babangida also speaks on
the murder of Dele Giwa in 1986, the Interim National Government, ING, Sani
Abacha’s coup and the loss of his long time companion and wife, Maryam.
Aired
last Wednesday on Channels TV, the interview was an episode in the current
affairs programme, STWK (Straight Talk With Kadaria), anchored by Kadaria
Ahmed.
Excerpts:
Do
you support President Jonathan’s attempt at re-election?
Firstly,
I appreciate the fact that he came to visit me and, during our discussion, I
found him to be a man who believes in the unity of this country and I did
allude to that and I said I found him to be someone who has a very strong
belief about the unity of this country.
Those
of us who fought the civil war – I still carry a bullet so I have a permanent
reminder in me – anything that relates to Nigeria’s unity, we get impassioned
about it.
So
what I said is that the President believes in the unity of this country and any
other person who believes in the unity of this country should support the
President to keep this country one.
So,
as far as the 2015 elections are concerned, President Jonathan has your
blessing
Well,
as far as 2015 is concerned, all the presidential candidates – 14 of them –
have my blessings.
The
only difference is (and I did mention it) that I have not been able to read
what they have offered to this country and I am going to do that and whoever
offers what I’m looking for, I am going to vote for.
What
exactly did you mean when you said that if what you read in the papers these
days is anything to go by, then your administration was saintly?
I
am an avid reader of Nigerian newspapers, so when I read a statement like
$16billion spent trying to provide power for this country or somebody kept
under his bed N300m, if what I’m reading is true, then we were angels.
Not
because you did any spending or because your level of spending was less or
because you didn’t touch public money?
We
did have a regulation.
You
can’t, for example, keep more than ‘X’ amount of money in your vault or in your
safe. We followed strictly the financial regulations and now it boggles
my mind how somebody could put N300m under his bed.
I
once removed a governor for N300,000, because he overspent what we had given
him as limit on security.
But
that didn’t mean that your government was squeaky clean because there was the
Okigbo report about the over $12b oil windfall that was allegedly squandered by
your administration.
First
of all, may his soul rest in peace (Sani Abacha). The report was from
1986 to 1994, a period of eight years. By the time the late Pius Okigbo
submitted his report, he said between 1986 to 1994, $12.4b accrued to the
Federal Government. Nobody could deny that. Out of that amount, he
said $1.4 or thereabouts came in during the Gulf War.
But,
if you had done your home work well, you would know that the war lasted three
months and there was no way you could make $1.4b in three months at the rate of
$12 or $10 per barrel, producing about 800,00 per day.
The
government did not indict anybody, neither did the report indict anybody.
He was an acknowledged economist and what he said is that ‘X’ amount of money
would have accrued into the reserves.
The
government had an option to either go and put the money in the bank and say it
was saving it or you meet some of the demands of the situation at that time.
Considering
that you ruled Nigeria for some eight years, do you take any responsibility for
the state of Nigeria today?
Well,
you take responsibility for anything either good or bad – that is what
leadership is all about and I think so far, as far as I am concerned, I take
full responsibility for what we did.
Would
the June 12 issue be something that when you look back you regret?
History
will one day come and apportion blames to various actors in the whole saga.
There
are a lot of people today in this country who supported what we did at that
time.
What
was the rationale behind the annulment?
We
discussed the security situation and we were worried about putting up a
government that would not last.
What
were the conditions that raised those concerns?
There
was this security problem that was dicey and the only people who could tell you
what could happen were those of us in government, we the practitioners of
violence by our profession. We knew there was a high level of frustration
in the society which could provide a very fertile ground for a coup d’etat.
But
in the end that was what happened because …
(Cuts
in) In the end we were right because we speculated
rightly.
Was
it a plan?
No,
it couldn’t have been a plan.
Don’t
forget that there was a speculation by prominent people in the country who were
saying at that time that the worst civilian government was better than this
contraption (Interim National Government, ING).
The
reason for that question was based on what you said about the coup issue
because when you left, you did not retire General Abacha, a man who had been a
central player in many successful coups and you left him in charge of the army
more or less. That is why I asked if it was a plan for him to take over?
When
we established the ING, we wanted to give it teeth; so whoever was in power
would believe that it had backing.
So
it never occurred to you that he (Abacha) wanted the number one job for
himself?
It
never crossed my mind quite honestly.
So
when he executed this coup, what did you think?
It
didn’t come to me as a surprise because all of you in this country at that time
gave him the wherewithal to do it. I’ve always said a coup will always
succeed if there is frustration in the society and that frustration was seen
and orchestrated at that time, if you remember, coming from very prominent
people, that this contraption was not better than the worst civilian
government, and some of us knew at that time that if a coup happened, Nigerians
would jump into the streets to welcome it.
So,
why didn’t you retire Abacha knowing that there was a fertile ground and you
had a coup maker…
(Cuts
in) If there had been pressure on the ING for an
election in six months’ time, Abacha would not have found it easy to stage a
coup.
Given
the fact that Nigerians wanted a government they elected and not the
contraption you put together, why did you find it difficult to understand why
Nigerians would not line up behind it?
I
tell you what happened before that contraption came about
Now
you are calling it contraption by the way?
(Laughter).
No I like the word. I’m very fond of that word.
At
that time in the whole of this country, you can go and check it, there wasn’t a
single voice that said ‘let’s take a chance with the ING, let’s give it a
chance if it would work’.
But
it didn’t have legitimacy because they were not soldiers and they were not
elected civilians
I
governed for eight years, using decree. That contraption was given a
constitution and that constitution was supported by a law. It was
legitimately done as is done all over the world.
You
were away when the Abacha coup happened. But when you came back, did he
get in touch?
We
did discuss and he took his time to explain to me what happened.
Did
you give him any advice on how to run government or how soon he should hand
over to civilians?
Those
were things which he knew very well because he had been part and parcel of the
administration for eight years; he knew the political actors in the country and
he went ahead to call them, explaining to them what had happened, trying to
legitimize what he had done and, believe it, there were a lot of politicians
who supported him because he talked to them.
Are
you surprised at how his government became one that was very repressive and he
became known, perhaps, as one of the worst dictators Nigeria had ever known?
Yes
and no. Yes because people would see him as a military person and
secondly he was a man of limited words, you could not predict him.
No,
because he had worked with us, worked with other people, had a good knowledge
of how the system worked, how to keep security in the country. These were
things that he knew and you could not deny him those things.
In
1986, you decided that Nigeria’s status as an observer at the Organisation of
Islamic Conference, OIC, should change to become a full member knowing that
Nigeria has an almost equal population of Christians and Muslims.
Nigeria
went into the OIC as an observer in 1973 under General Yakubu Gowon and I went
in as a full member in 1986. That was a simple foreign policy decision
that we took. It was a tool to enhance our foreign policy.
But
the view of the ordinary Nigerian is that to be in OIC meant you were an
Islamic country. And Nigeria is not an Islamic country. So why take us in
there?
That
has been proved wrong. Again, this is the beautiful thing about this
country because people speculate a lot. As at the time we went in there,
there were countries that were there which were not Islamic countries. I
was quite surprised by the outrage that followed that decision because people
translated it to mean that our government wanted to make Nigeria an Islamic
country which is stupid. We had a Constitution which stated clearly at
that time that no religion must be made superior to another.
In
the years since then, as far as you know, what has been the specific benefit
that we’ve got?
I
think it helped us to push our foreign policy on issues that were of common
concern because immediately after that I recognized Israel, knowing the
feelings of the Islamic countries about Israel. I went ahead single-handedly to
recognize Israel when everybody in the OAU went against it; we stuck to our
gun; so if you accuse me of joining OIC, you must also accuse me of normalizing
relations with Israel
We
are in a situation in the country today where we have insurgents with a warped
version of Islam which they claim they want to foist on the nation in some
states. Do you think these sorts of decisions are the sort of things that
plant seeds on the minds of some people claiming to want to promote one
religion above another?
I’m
glad you used the word ‘warped’. What is happening now is something that
Nigerians should rise and fight against; Muslims should rise and fight against
it because some people are spoiling the name of Islam, and this is not what
Islam stands for.
Given
the fact that we are a nation of different ethnicities, wouldn’t it have been
better to pursue policies that would not divide us along religious lines – and
this is even outside the Boko Haram insurgency?
I
grew up here in Minna and there is where we call a mixed court where you find a
Christian, a Muslim and an unbeliever, yet three of them will sit together to
preside over cases which touch on traditions of the different groups and this
we have been doing damn well. Everyone has a religion and you keep to it;
even Islam frowns at imposition of the religion on others.
The
question I’m driving at is that if, perhaps, we don’t pursue public policies
that further strengthen the division that already exists, could we perhaps have
had a better chance of making it as a nation and not one divided along ethnic
and religious lines
My
answer to that is yes.
So
any regrets about taking Nigeria into the OIC?
No!
You
don’t see that as a policy capable of further dividing us as a nation even
though, by your own admission, Christians complained?
By
your reaction, as a generation, it would be better not to toe those lines
because they are very sensitive. It has been done before and the
consequences were not so good for the country.
We
had a civil war. Nobody would like to have a war again. The good thing is
that from 1970 till today, I have never come across people who believe in the
division of this country.
So,
in your view, no regrets because we are learning from your mistakes?
The
answer is yes!
What
should we do about Boko Haram?
The
first thing is that people must believe that this affects Nigeria generally and
not just a part or just a religion. Like the civil war, the whole
country was mobilized against secession and there was unity against he
secession and I think we must accept that this problem is a Nigerian problem
and everybody should come together to fight this phenomenon.
In
practical terms, how do we begin to build unity so that Nigerians can see the
problem as a Nigerian problem?
First
of all, the leadership at all levels must be mobilized against Boko Haram. At
the political level, people should watch what they say and the religious
leaders also have a role to play just as the businessmen must be
involved. Once Nigerians see that everyone is mobilized against the
insurgency, no one would want to step out of line. Nigerians have to be
mobilized and that would make it easier to win the war.
From
a military point of view, are you surprised at the performance of our military
against Boko Haram?
What
you should be asking is that is this the same military of Nigeria that has been
exceptional all over the world – in the Congo, Tanzania, UN operations, ECOWAS
operations?
The
question really is that by all accounts, the army you served in was a
formidable army; so what did you people do that time that appears different
from what is going on now?
When
I was 22 as a 2nd Lieutenant, I had been told that I had no other country to
die for except Nigeria, but now you’ve got 18 year olds or 19year olds or
graduates asking ‘what is this Nigerianness they are talking about?’.
They wouldn’t give a damn and, therefore, you have to do a re-orientation to
bring this patriotism back.
Could
it not be that some of us can say Nigeria had been good to us, so we had no
option than to be committed. But you have the young ones today, say, of 30, who
would be asking, ‘what the hell’ because they have had to fend for themselves
one way or the other? They don’t see what the country has done for
them. Shouldn’t government start by providing for the people and making
them responsive to the needs of patriotism?
Government
would have to take responsibility, I agree.
You’ve
repeatedly denied having any knowledge of the murder of journalist Dele Giwa,
but because you were the military head of state at that time and because your
former press secretary, Debo Bashorun, alleged that you knew about it, many
Nigerians are a bit skeptical about what you have said. Do you understand why
they have been skeptical?
It
is because they think I was the head of government at that time and I knew that
anything that goes wrong they will like to blame it on somebody and the fact
that everybody in the media said I knew about it never came to me as a surprise
at all.
What
about the role played by Major Bashorun, did that come as a surprise to you?
I
stumble on the information in one of the papers that he wrote a book. But
I have always maintained one thing: I know the young man very well but I
don’t join issues with people to whom I am senior.
Was
he upset with you and, therefore, would want to make you look bad?
That
is his business, not mine.
At
the time of Giwa’s death, did you order any investigations at all into the
circumstances of the killing?
It
could have been prejudicial because you guys in the media went to court and I
couldn’t have ordered anything because the matter was already in the court.
There were very good lawyers and activists pursuing that case; so we allowed
the courts to try the case.
Aren’t
you curious as to who killed Dele Giwa?
He
was fortunate because he belonged to the journalism profession and the media
kept the issue alive up till today. The issue of Dele Giwa, Alfred Rewane and
Bola Ige would remain and people will like to pin it on somebody.
Is
there any chance that some rogue elements in your government, without your
knowledge, could have decided to teach Dele Giwa a lesson because he was
critical of your administration?
I
have maintained that I dominate my environment and my environment relates to
the people I work with, people who work with me, people I relate to. I am
fairly well-informed about things before they happen or immediately after they
happen.
Do
you have any regrets at all about your time in office?
I
had a good time in office and would continue to be grateful to Nigerians for
supporting me during that period and, if there is one thing I would have loved
to do differently (not regretting), it would have been to make it
constitutional that Nigeria should have a two-party state.
Why?
Because
I believed then and I still believe now that it is the surest way of promoting
the peace and stability of Nigeria and it worked. So, let’s institutionalise
it. It’s just like the Land Use Act, it is in the Constitution.
Some people may not like some aspects of it but it is there; so you have to
work round it.
As
a young soldier, did you ever envisage that your life would take the path it
has taken?
As
a young officer, my intention was maybe not the commander of a unit, so I was
looking at the rank of a major or a Lt-Colonel, comparing the size of the
Nigerian Army at that time.
But
fate dealt you a different hand, how do you feel about that?
I
feel gratified and I feel nice that while I planned, God had His own wish on
His subjects.
You
lost your long time companion and wife, Maryam, in December 2009. What has life
been like without her?
She
was a real companion who got to understand and accept me for what I am and
tried to make the best of me and that is what I am missing. She was the
one who would look at me and say ‘you’re wrong’ and I had to accept and bury my
pride and I will say ‘sorry, you’re right’. That is the sort of
counseling I am missing now.
How
much time do you spend with the children and grand children to try and fill the
vacuum that she’s left?
The
children are doing very well and they have become a sort of friends to me. We
sit down and talk and sometimes we disagree. My greatest source of
pleasure now is seeing my grand children coming to me to say good night or when
they return from school and they come to greet me. It reminded me of my
time when I was growing up.
Many
had thought that by now you would have re-married?
I
will tell you an interesting story. There was a woman I was joking with
and I said, ‘Okay, why don’t you marry me?’ and she said, ‘No I
won’t’. And I asked her why? She said, ‘I am not sure I can spoil you the
way your wife used to spoil you; so don’t put any idea into my head’.
Why I have not remarried and why I support Jonathan — IBB latest
Reviewed by Unknown
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Sunday, February 01, 2015
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Reviewed by Unknown
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Sunday, February 01, 2015
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