Obasanjo made
the assertion in chapter 31 of the book, where he explained issues centred on
Nigeria and Yoruba, arguing that there was no individual as Yoruba leader
before and now.
Former
governor of Ogun State, Aremo Olusegun Osoba, has condemned former President
Olusegun Obasanjo’s position in his book, My Watch: Political and Public
affairs, that there had never been any Yoruba leader, saying “He (Obasanjo)
wants to distort the history of the Yoruba.”
Osoba, in an
interview in Lagos, lamented that the declaration by the former President, who
was present at the event when late Chief Obafemi Awolowo was ‘unanimously’
elected as the ‘Yoruba Leader,’ on August 12th, 1966, is worrisome.
According to
Osoba, “I disagree with the former President, on whatever claims he made that
Awolowo was hand-picked by some of his supporters. In fact, the day he was
elected as Yoruba leader was two weeks after Awolowo was released from prison
by the military.
“As the
garrison commander in Ibadan at the time, Obasanjo was an active member of
General Adeyinka Adebayo’s erstwhile cabinet. I do not think that Obasanjo
would have forgotten so soon the sequence of events that threw up Awolowo as
Yoruba leader.
“I was
present at the forum where Late Chief Awolowo was unanimously elected the
Yoruba leader. And the election involved all stakeholders, including political,
cultural and intellectuals in Yoruba land. Some who did not belong to Awolowo’s
political camp also endorsed him,” Osoba added.
Osoba however
said that Yorubas cannot have a single leader under current political
dispensation. “What we can have at the moment is ‘cultural’ leader not an
overall leader. By our level of education, exposure and independent mindedness
we like to express our views.”
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