
The Aare Ona Kakanfo of Yorubaland, Iba Gani Adams, has reacted to last Wednesday’s statement credited to ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo, saying that his (Adams’) past ways negated his (Obasanjo’s) principles and standards.
Media reports
stated last week that a reconciliatory meeting between Obasanjo and Adams held
in the Lagos residence of a notable leader of the Yoruba socio-political group,
Afenifere, Chief Ayo Adebanjo.
Adams, who is
also the National Coordinator of the Oodua People’s Congress, was arrested
during Obasanjo administration in September 2001 by the police for alleged
violence in some parts of the country linked to his group.
But Obasanjo
in a statement by his Special Assistant on Media, Kehinde Akinyemi, after the
meeting on Wednesday, said he didn’t visit the residence of Adebanjo for a
reconciliatory meeting with the Aare of Ona Kakanfo.
He said, “I
have no quarrel with Gani Adams, but for his past way of life which was not
in accord with my standards and principles. I have in the past, both in
government and out of government, refused to grant Gani’s request to visit
me.
“If at all
anybody feels I have a quarrel with him or her that needs reconciliation,
such reconciliation will, no doubt, take place in my residence in Abeokuta
only.”
In his
reaction at a press conference today, Adams said he had yet to understand what
Obasanjo meant by “his past way of life.”
He said, “I
don’t know what baba Obasanjo meant by my way of life. I agree with him that we
don’t have the same character because he’s not a progressive. Obasanjo will not
like the character of any progressive Nigerian. I have never at anytime
requested to meet Obasanjo as he claimed. I initially didn’t want to attend the
meeting when Chief Ayo Adebanjo told me. But I decided to honour the invitation
because Chief Adebanjo is one the Yoruba elders I respect so much.
“He
(Obasanjo) stated in his statement that whoever feels he needs a reconciliatory
meeting with him should come to his residence in Abeokuta. I don’t have the
need for any reconciliatory meeting with him. That one has been foreclosed. I
cannot even go to his house.”
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