FULL TEXT OF THE SPEECH TITLED “How Nigerian Tribune
Newspaper Editorial On General Gowon’s Dethronement In 1975 Will Be
Applicable To Nigerian President Jonathan When He Is Voted Out In 2015”
DELIVERED BY ENGR ROTIMI FABIYI (MNIM, MNSChE, MNSE, COREN Reg) AT THE
54TH NIGERIAN INDEPENDENCE ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATIONS ORGANISED BY
COMMITTEE OF PROGRESSIVES AND REALISTS (C.P.R) AT IKORODU,LAGOS STATE,
NIGERIA ON 1ST OCTOBER, 2014
HOW NIGERIAN
TRIBUNE NEWSPAPER EDITORIAL ON GENERAL GOWON’S DETHRONEMENT IN 1975 WILL
BE APPLICABLE TO NIGERIAN PRESIDENT JONATHAN WHEN HE IS VOTED OUT IN
2015
Good afternoon to everyone present with me in this
auditorium and good afternoon to all that contributed to the success of
this occasion marking the 54th anniversary of Nigeria’s national
independence. My name is Rotimi Fabiyi and I am standing in front of you
to speak
with you on the self-chosen topic “How Nigerian Tribune
Newspaper Editorial On General Gowon’s Dethronement In 1975 Will Be
Applicable To Nigerian President Jonathan When He Is Voted Out In 2015.”
This 25-word topic might immediately present the appearance of being
simultaneously strange and paradoxical (while still being deeply
bewildering and unarguably flabbergasting) mainly because of the oddity
of suggesting that General Yakubu Gowon’s dethronement as Nigerian ruler
39 years ago in 1975 will have some striking resemblance to the
impending ejection of current Nigerian President Jonathan from office
through popular vote in 2015 Nigerian General Elections. Some might even
see the topic as being more than shocking because of the seeming
incompatibility of the topic with the 54th Independence Anniversary we
are all gathered here in our individual humble selves to celebrate in
our humble way but each person in this auditorium and each citizen of
this world should not let it escape his notice that the exact factors
that necessitated the removal of General Yakubu Gowon as the ruler of
Nigeria on 29th July, 1975 (which was exactly his ninth year on that
seat) are visibly and openly manifesting themselves in the current
administration of Nigerian President Jonathan such that when he is voted
out of office in 2015 due to all the selfsame detestable factors that
brought down General Gowon 40 years earlier, the newspaper editorial of
Nigerian Tribune apropos Gowon’s deposition will be more than applicable
despite being written and published 40 years earlier.
General
Yakubu Gowon (an amiable gentlemen soldier who was trained at the
internationally-revered Sandhurst Military Academy in United Kingdom)
became Nigeria’s head-of-government on 29th July, 1966 as a
lieutenant-colonel of 32 years of age after a political crisis led to
the brutal but undeserved and unnecessary murder of the avuncular
Nigerian Prime Minister Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa on 15th January,
1966. The perpetrators of that dastardly act were swiftly rounded up and
a certain Major-General Aguiyi Ironsi emerged as the de facto Nigerian
ruler but his avoidance of taking the bull by the horns by refusing to
prosecute and punish accordingly the said perpetrators up to 6 months
after committing such a brazen atrocity led some mid-level military men
to overthrow him a manner even more gory than that of Alhaji Balewa and
swiftly install then Lieutenant-Colonel Yakubu Gowon as Nigerian ruler
even though he was not at all involved in the gruesome removal of his
superior officer Major-General Ironsi. The political crisis that
expectedly ensued speedily plunged Nigeria into a bloody civil war a
year later and it took the selfsame General Gowon 30 months to smash the
rebellion.
But from January 1970 that the civil war ended in
Nigeria, the internationally–respected (because of being able to
successfully retain Nigerian political unity) General Gowon started
losing focus in the way he was handling his administration such that
when he was eventually bloodlessly ousted by his military subordinates
on 29th July, 1975, his credibility had descended so low that almost all
Nigerian newspapers of that period hailed his dethronement. While the
Daily Times newspaper declared on its front page that the change of
government was “…most timely… [because] General Gowon has lost all moral
authority (which he initially abundantly had) to continue to
govern…”(see page 1 of Daily Times, 2nd August, 1975),the New Nigerian
newspaper vividly stated on its own front page that “…the last few years
of General Gowon’s administration have been [too] characterized by
indecisions …,indiscipline and a progressive drift…’’(see page 1 of New
Nigerian, 1st August, 1975).
Before proceeding beyond this
juncture, it should not be too difficult for everyone present in this
auditorium with me today and for every citizen of the world to see a
similarity between how these 2 now-defunct newspapers (Daily Times and
New Nigerian) described Gowon Administration and what are happening in
the present-day Nigeria during the administration of President Jonathan
which is itself also characterized by a lot of indecisions (e.g. on the
nefarious Boko Haram insurgency), indiscipline (e.g. numerous vitriolic
and inflammatory statements regularly made by Jonathan’s cronies like
Alhaji Asari Dokubo, Chief Edwin Clark, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, Dr.
Doyin Okupe, etc) and a very visible progressive drift (e.g. the
widening poverty gap and the alarmingly increasing insecurity). Relevant
as the statements of these 2 aforementioned newspapers are to Jonathan
Administration, it is actually what another newspaper named Nigerian
Tribune (which was founded by the extraordinarily redoubtable yet
surprisingly modest Chief Obafemi Awolowo and which is the
longest-serving newspaper in Nigerian history because it is still waxing
stronger since its establishment as far back as 1949) wrote about
Gowon’s bloodless removal from office in 1975 that would be most
applicable when Jonathan would be unavoidably and unriggably voted out
of office in 2015.
When Gowon was deposed in 1975, the Nigerian
Tribune expressed non-surprise and wondered why it didn’t come sooner
and subsequently stated 10 reasons why Gowon fell from grace to grass so
flatly and so mightily (see pages 1-3 of Nigerian Tribune, 1st August,
1975). First, Gowon sought to impose a dictatorship on Nigeria and
Nigerians with himself as the dictator (Jonathan has also proved himself
to be an unscrupulous dictator by his wanton, unlawful and clearly
unconstitutional removals from office of the governor of Central Bank Of
Nigeria Lamido Sanusi, the president of Nigerian Court Of Appeal
Justice Ayo Salami and other examples too numerous to mention) while the
second reason for Gowon’s downfall was identified as being the widening
credibility gap between the government and the governed because he
(Gowon) easily moved from “yes” to “no” and “no” to “yes” as if the 2
words were synonymous and interchangeable up to the point that the
Nigerian populace no longer believed whatever he said (when voted out in
2015, Jonathan will similarly be remembered as the irredeemable liar
that promised in 2011 on a national television that he would not seek
re-election in 2015 only to later deny he ever said such a thing and he
would also be aptly remembered as the inveterate fibber who openly said
on national television that members of “… Boko Haram are in my
government…” only to deny ever saying such some months later).
According
to the usually-incisive Nigerian Tribune, the third reason that
precipitated Gowon’s downfall was that he consciously or unconsciously
isolated himself from the Nigerian general public (when Jonathan openly
stated that “…stealing is not corruption…” and subsequently personally
added that ownership of private jets in Africa is highest among
Nigerians therefore Nigerians are not poor people, he was clearly
exposing himself as being completely isolated from the realities of the
hardship faced by the Nigerian public), the fourth reason was that he
(Gowon) lost his head in the deluge of flattery by sycophantic
subordinates and by uninformed hired foreign correspondents (from
observation, Jonathan has clearly lost his head in the deluge of
flattery daily mouthed by Doyin Okupe, Reuben Abati, Edwin Clark, Asari
Dokubo, Ayo Oritsejafor, Tony Anenih, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Adamu Muazu
and other sycophants, toadies, yes-men and stooges that team up to form
the stinkingly-fake and thoroughly misnamed political group called
Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria), the fifth reason was that Gowon
chose to ignore all advices and criticisms which did not fit into his
grand political design (which is exactly the same way Jonathan has
always refused or ignored all suggestions, advices and criticisms that
do not fit into his grand political design of getting himself re-elected
in 2015 at all financial and even human cost), the sixth reason was
that he (Gowon) completely misjudged the character and temper of the
Nigerian people by thinking he can hold on to power by his wanton
distribution of millions of naira for the least deserving of projects
and the least deserving of people (when Jonathan is electorally-booted
out of office in 2015, he will be remembered as someone that deluded
himself into believing that the solution to the question of presidential
re-election simply lied with throwing millions of dollars at the sundry
toadies and yes-men surrounding him), the seventh reason was pinpointed
as being the fact that Gowon’s government was corrupt to the marrow and
he did not even make any attempt to hide this fact from public gaze so
much so that when private individuals attempted to expose this evil
fact, he (Gowon) promptly suppressed the efforts with the very weight of
his high office (Jonathan Administration will in the same vein be
remembered for the disappearance of 20 billion U.S dollars from Nigerian
government’s coffers, the acquisition of several multibillion-naira
private jets as official and personal vehicles by Jonathan’s minister
for petroleum Diezani Allison-Madueke, the flagrant purchase by
Jonathan’s minister of aviation Stella Oduah of bulletproof cars more
costly than U.S president’s official car, the millions of U.S dollars
found in raw cash in South Africa after Jonathan government smuggled it
to that country, etc; he will in addition be remembered for the brazen
and shameful way his administration tried to suppress every effort made
to investigate all these hobgoblinous facts) while the eight reason was
analyzed as being that Gowon gave Nigeria a 9-point programme but never
implemented any of the points in the programme because there was a total
absence of any sense of direction on the part of the government (Dr
Jonathan will be similarly remembered after being removed from office in
2015 as promising to upgrade and uplift Nigeria through his 7-Point
Agenda but never implementing any of the bogus and intractable agenda
one of which is agriculture which he coolly assured Nigerians would be
boosted up to the level of sufficiency and even exportation but Nigeria
under Jonathan has contrastly become the country that imports the
highest tonnage of rice and frozen fish in the world, annually losing
trillion of naira to other countries that export such commodities).
The
fastidiously-researching editorial crew of Nigerian Tribune later
identified the ninth reason for Gowon’s deposition in 1975 as being
that he was incapable of maintaining discipline within his government
(Jonathan will be remembered as someone who was not only incapable of
maintaining discipline within his government but was even too weak to
control many of his cronies like Olisa Metuh, Marylin Ogah, Reno
Omokiri, Ayo Fayose, etc and his strangely uncouth and therefore highly
laughable wife Patience Jonathan who can not speak simple formal English
despite owning a university degree, who confidently says whatever
gibberish she liked at whatever public function she wanted and who
ignorantly created investigative committees she clearly had no authority
to create under Nigerian Constitution) while the tenth reason for the
fall of Gowon’s government in 1975 was explained by the same newspaper
as being that it (the government) had clearly overstayed its welcome
because he (Gowon) and his clique did not possess the qualities of
excellent policy-makers and good politicians (Jonathan will also
remembered as a failed ruler who thought governing a country only
involved civil servants, unachievable transformation agenda, and
millions of dollars in cash being smuggled about in private jets despite
preaching the benefits of a cashless economy, all because the art of
governance is best left for those who have the necessary training,
public confidence, temperament, experience, ability and the gut for this
art of governance).
The aforestated 10 reasons were relevant to
General Yakubu Gowon 39 years ago and they are still relevant to
President Jonathan today. I am therefore deeply concerned for the future
of a Nigeria in which the ruler is a dictator, a liar, completely
self-isolated from the general public, soaks himself in sycophantic
flattery, ignores criticisms and advices, misjudges the character and
temper of his own countrymen, presides over a government that is corrupt
to the marrow, lacks a sense of direction, incapable of maintaining
discipline within his government and has, in conclusion, overstayed his
welcome. My concern for Nigeria transcends what I stand to personally
gain from the country today; it is actually about what generations yet
unborn will benefit from it thousands of years after me. And before
posterity can get the best out of Nigeria, everybody present in this
auditorium with me today including my humble self must exert ourselves
to the safest limit to contribute our best to uplift Nigeria so as to
make it great again, so as to make it grand again.
Speaking for
the past few minutes about the pernicious characteristics of the
administration of the current Nigerian ruler Dr Jonathan is part of my
own contribution to the upliftment of Nigeria. Thanks for listening and
thanks for joining us in celebrating Nigeria’s 54th year of national
independence.

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