Ex-U.S. Ambassador denies working for Buhari, expresses worry over NNPC scandal
Campbell
A former United States Ambassador to Nigeria, John Campbell, has
replied Reno Omokri, a former aide to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan who
accused him of being a political lackey for President Muhammadu Buhari.
Mr. Campbell said Mr. Omokri mistook his appreciation of Mr. Buhari’s
anti-corruption efforts for consultancy services.
“I am not a consultant to any Nigerian, to any Nigerian corporation, to the
presidency, nor to any part of the Nigerian government,” Mr. Campbell told
reporters.
The retired diplomat, now a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign
Relations in Washington, D.C., was responding to a slew of unflattering remarks
Mr. Omokri directed at him.
Mr. Omokri had in a
statement Sunday said Mr. Campbell was trying to divert
attention from corruption
allegations currently rocking the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation in order to protect Mr. Buhari’s public image.
“It is most unfortunate that the former US Ambassador to Nigeria, John
Campbell, who is now a consultant to certain Nigerians and a self-confessed
admirer of President Muhammadu Buhari, would again insult Nigerians with his
procured opinions meant to divert the public from the monumental $26 billion
corruption scam recently uncovered in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation
of which President Muhammadu Buhari is the supervising minister,” Mr. Omokri
said in a statement last Sunday.
The former presidential assistant was responding to a blog post
Mr. Campbell published on the website of Council on Foreign
Relations, a public policy think-tank which has its headquarters in New York.
In his article, Mr. Campbell criticised the Nigerian House of
Representatives for issuing a warrant of arrest for the acting chairman of the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Ibrahim Magu.
The EFCC is currently probing several millions of dollars linked to Mrs.
Jonathan, some of which she claimed to be hers.
Mr. Campbell said the arrest warrant was orchestrated by most “Christian”
Nigerian lawmakers and they were hounding Mr. Magu for daring to go after Mrs.
Jonathan, from whom they benefited while her husband was in power.
Mr. Campbell also castigated Mrs. Jonathan as being “arrogant and
flamboyant” and questioned how she was able to amass such stupendous wealth as
a career civil servant.
In his Sunday statement, Mr. Omokri said Mr. Campbell was ignorant
of issues in Nigeria, adding that Mrs. Jonathan had been a businesswoman who
was never confined to “the other room”, in an apparent mockery of Mr. Buhari
who last October said his wife, Aisha,
belongs to the kitchen and the other room.
Mr. Campbell said although he supports Mr. Buhari’s anti-corruption efforts,
he was equally as worried about corruption at the NNPC as Mr. Omokri.
“I share Mr. Omokri’s concern about corruption within the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation,” Mr. Campbell said while applauding “certain initiatives
taken by President Muhammadu Buhari, especially with respect to corruption.”
The diplomat, however, maintained his assertion that the influence of
Christians was most pronounced in Mr. Jonathan’s government, with the
exception of some powerful Muslims in the cabinet at the time.
“I stand by my characterisation of the Jonathan government as being
predominately Christian in colouration,” Mr. Campbell said. “I did note,
however, that former National Security Advisor, Sambo Dasuki, charged with
corruption, is a northern Muslim. I stand by my characterisation of the former
first lady.”
Ex-U.S. Ambassador denies working for Buhari, expresses worry over NNPC scandal
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Thursday, October 12, 2017
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