Obasanjo had
on Saturday released a sarcastic statement on the death of Senator Buruji
Kashamu, saying that the former lawmaker used politics and legal means to
escape justice but could not use the same to stop death.
Nigeria’s
former President Chief Olusegun Obasanjo has said he does not care what people
say about him when he die.
In his words:
“The life and history of the departed have lessons for those of all us on this
side of the veil. Senator Esho Jinadu (Buruji Kashamu) in his lifetime used the
maneuver of law and politics to escape from facing justice on alleged criminal
offence in Nigeria and outside Nigeria.
“But no
legal, political, cultural, social or even medical manoeuver could stop the
cold hand of death when the Creator of all of us decides that the time is up.
“May Allah
forgive his sin and accept his soul into Aljanah, and may God grant his family
and friends fortitude to bear the irreparable loss.”
Obasanjo’s
statement generated lots of controversies, with former Governor of Ekiti State
and Asiwaju Bola Tinubu attacking him for his reckless statement.
But Obasanjo
is undaunted, he told Premium Times in an interview on Sunday that it was okay
for people to mourn every death but that the living, including himself, must
draw the right lessons from the lives of those who have died.
He said it
was only in doing this that the society can make progress.
“When I was
growing up, in our community, when anyone known with bad character died, we
usually only mourn him and bury him. No eulogy. No praise-singing.
“There is an
English saying that urges us never to talk ill of the dead. But in this case,
we are not talking ill of the dead. We are only drawing lessons from the life
and history of the dead. I am not gloating over his death. It is sad for anyone
to die and we must mourn him.
“But we must
learn from such a passage. There will be bad lessons. There will be good
lessons. But we should not just be praise-singing or eulogising the dead,
especially when there is no need to do so.
“We should
not cover up bad histories and conducts so that the right lessons can be
learnt,” Obasanjo states.
The former
President said he did not care what people would say about him when he died
because he had said the right thing about Kashamu.
“As you know,
I say my mind as truthfully as I know them and in line with my convictions.
People are free to say whatever they want about my comment. I don’t begrudge
people for holding opinions on whatever I say or do.
“Let people
say whatever they like when I transit. Now that I am alive, am I not being
abused? Whenever I transit, let people say whatever they know or think about
me. Let them say it as it is. What my maker thinks of me is what matters most,”
he added.

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