Opinion: Obasanjo's letter to Buhari more respectful than Jonathan's by Sunday Adelaja

Opinion: Obasanjo's letter to Buhari more respectful than Jonathan's by Sunday Adelaja

Editor's note: Sunday Adelaja, the founder and senior pastor of the Embassy of the Blessed Kingdom of God for All Nations writes on the outrage over the recent open letter written to President Muhammadu Buhari by former president Olusegun Obasanjo.

Adelaja suggests that Obasanjo's tone in the letter has more respect than the one he wrote former president Goodluck Jonathan during his tenure as president.

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Legit.ng.

Your own opinion articles are welcome at info@corp.legit.ng— drop an email telling us what you want to write about and why. More details in Legit.ng’s step-by-step guide for guest contributors.

Contact us if you have any feedback, suggestions, complaints or compliments. We are also available on Twitter.

The letter is reminiscent of Obasanjo’s December 2013 withering, eighteen-page critique he sent to then-President Goodluck Jonathan.

However, there are interesting differences. First, Obasanjo’s language is more respectful in his letter to Buhari than it was in his letter to Jonathan. Buhari is of the same generation as Obasanjo, and both were army generals as well as heads of state.

Hence, Obasanjo may respect Buhari more than he does Jonathan, a civilian with whom he broke over the latter’s incompetency.

Second, the letter to Jonathan was ostensibly private and was only subsequently leaked to the public. (By whom is not clear.)

This letter to Buhari is open “because the issue is very weighty and must be greatly worrisome to all concerned Nigerians and that means all right-thinking Nigerians and those resident in Nigeria.”

Obasanjo’s letter reflects widespread Nigerian frustration over the persistence of Boko Haram, escalating farmer-herder conflict in the Middle Belt, and the current wave of kidnapping—all of which he mentions. But why did he write Buhari now?

READ ALSO: Buhari approves new official portrait for display in public offices, others

Some suggestions: First, he is, indeed, deeply concerned about the deterioration of security. Obasanjo is a Nigerian nationalist who devoted his life to nation-building, as he sees it.

He may well be deeply concerned that his life’s work is in danger. Second, since he left office in 2007, he has assumed the mantle of an elder statesman. In that role he may well see an open warning letter to the sitting president as appropriate.

Third, he may also be concerned about maintaining his relevance to the current political scene. He has now been out of office for a long time; some Nigerians openly say that he is no longer relevant. While this is speculation, the three are not mutually exclusive and are all likely to be true to an extent.

The respectful tone of Obasanjo’s letter is in contrast with the polarizing responses attacking and supporting it. It is unclear what the practical consequence of Obasanjo’s letter will be.

READ ALSO: NAIJ.com upgrades to Legit.ng: a letter from our Editor-in-Chief Bayo Olupohunda

His call on Buhari to form a broad coalition to address Nigeria’s security crises is often heard in the context of a “sovereign national convention” that would look at the restructuring of Nigeria. However, there is no national consensus among the elites to undertake fundamental reforms.

NAIJ.com (naija.ng) -> Legit.ng We have updated to serve you better

Fasoranti: Groups stage protest in Abuja, say Nigeria is at war | Legit TV

Source: Legit.ng

Online view pixel