

Nigeria’s former President,
Olusegun Obasanjo on Thursday lamented how Coronavirus affected his 83rd
birthday celebration.
Obasanjo, while speaking at
his birthday lecture in Abeokuta, Ogun State, titled, “The place of
Pan-Africanism in an Emerging World of Besieged Liberal Democracy,” said there
were
supposed to be two events before the lecture, which would bring three
ex-Presidents but that due to coronavirus, they had to cancel it because of the
disease which had taken over the world.
According to him “When we
were thinking of this celebration, two programmes came to mind. One was to see
what Asian countries have done to make their continent become what they have
become, for instance, Malaysia, which was worse than us when we got
independence; South Korea which was below us and Vietnam which was plunged into
series of wars.
“We would have spent the
day before yesterday and yesterday to really consider how the Asians have risen
to greatness.
And what lessons we could
learn from them but because of Coronavirus, that programme was shelved. Some of
them were not able to make it.”
He said: “I do hope that
sometimes in future we would be able to bring it up again because there is a
lot to learn about what they have done and how they have done it.”
On the lecture, the former
president said “Some people will be saying what has Pan-Africanism got to do
with us in Nigeria? We have the problem of insecurity; we have the problem of
restructuring and all other problems, so what has Pan-Africanism got to do with
us?”
“But I am saying
Pan-Africanism has a lot to do with us, no matter what we do or our present
situation. That is why I am particularly happy that we have some of our
traditional rulers here today and we also have some of the victims of policies
that are good and the ones that are bad.
“We have gotten all the
definition that we can have about Pan-Africanism, but the only call I want to
make is this, Pan-Africanism is different from African unity.”
He added: “It goes beyond
African unity and to prove that, when our leader in 1963 established the
Organisation of African Unity (OAU) they did not reckon with Pan-Africanism as
such to the extent that no body outside the continent of Africa was considered
to be part of the OAU.
“When at the end of 20th
century we decided to re – establish or transform OAU to AU, we decided that
instead of five regions which made up of OAU; West Africa, North Africa, East
Africa, Central Africa and Southern Africa, we created the sixth region which
is the Diaspora Africa.
“Therefore, we made AU to
go beyond the continent of Africa and to embrace the Africans in diaspora. So,
we moved from African Unity to African Union, which means we are not only
talking about Africans on the continent of Africa, but also Africans outside
the continent of Africa. I think that’s very important and that’s why we should
talk about Pan-Africanism, what it means and what it can do.”
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