PDP lost 1998 LG election in Ogun because I refused to bribe INEC, Police — Obasanjo
Nigeria’s former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, said his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), lost the 1998 local government election in Ogun State because he vehemently rejected plans to bribe officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the police.
He recalled this while speaking at a high-level consultation he organised on ‘Rethinking Western Liberal Democracy in Africa’, held on Monday in Abeokuta.
The former president said he rejected the proposal on the belief that INEC officials and policemen are government workers earning salaries monthly
Obasanjo said he was not an advocate of the slang “Nigerian Factor”, hence his refusal to subscribe to bribing the police and INEC officials.
He said, “When things go wrong, you blame the Nigerian factor. The first thing I learned in politics was this thing I called the Nigerian factor. In 1998, we had the first local government election.
We had parties, and here in Abeokuta, we met in my office and they came up and said, ‘Look, this is money for INEC, money for police.’ At a stage, I said, ‘What nonsense! Is police not being paid, and INEC too?’
“They said, ‘That’s how we do it. I said, ‘You cannot do that.’ So, they didn’t do that. And, of course, we lost all the local governments. We lost all. And then they came to me and said, ‘Baba, you see? If you had allowed us to do it the way we used to do it, we would have won. And I felt guilty.
“During the next election, which was the State Assembly, I just stayed in my house. I said, ‘Well, do whatever you want to do; I will not be part of it’. So, I didn’t even go. But the result was the same. One of the people who got money didn’t even distribute it to where he was supposed to distribute it.”
He insisted that the Western liberal democracy being practised in Africa has not really taken human nature and the African situation into full account.
“When you are hungry, whatever anybody tells you, you cannot go in. Poverty is a great enemy of democracy. Ignorance or lack of education is a great enemy of democracy
“And we seem to be deliberately fomenting poverty and a lack of education,” he stated.
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