
Professor Pat Utomi, has disclosed that he turned down a ministerial appointment offered to him by the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. Utomi made the revelation in an interview with Sunday Sun,
explaining that he declined the offer to avoid having his voice and political independence compromised within the system.The Renowned Nigerian economist and political activist, Utomi, who has consistently maintained a critical stance on governance in Nigeria and recently launched a “shadow government” to scrutinize President Bola Tinubu’s administration, recounted that President Yar’Adua personally spent two hours attempting to convince him to join his cabinet. Despite the late president’s efforts, Utomi insisted that remaining outside government would enable him to be a more effective advocate for good.
“I have
been asked to be a minister before. I turned it down. The last person who did
that was President Yar’Adua and he went the extra mile. Two hours, he was
talking to me to persuade me to join,” Utomi said. He explained that although
he holds degrees in political science and understands the importance of public
service, he was wary of what he described as the “corporatist state” that
characterizes post-colonial African politics where opposition voices are often
co-opted into government, only to be silenced or weakened.
Utomi said
Yar’Adua respected his views and believed he could make a greater impact from
within government. The meeting, which took place on a Friday at the
presidential villa, ended with Utomi proposing an alternative. “I now said to
him, look, I’m a patriot. You can wake me up at anytime, at 2:00 a.m, ask for
my views and I will give it to you honestly. I told him that what he needed to
do was to find seven good people and bring them in,” he recalled.
The late
president reportedly agreed with the suggestion and asked Utomi to help
identify the seven individuals. Utomi said he returned to Lagos, compiled a
list of the recommended candidates, and delivered the envelope containing the
names to Steve Oronsaye, then a top government official. However, he never
received a follow-up.
Tragically,
President Yar’Adua fell ill shortly afterward and passed away in May 2010.
Utomi later learned from a senior source that the president may never have
received the list and possibly believed Utomi had rebuffed him during his final
days, a perception he strongly refutes. “I didn’t snub him,” Utomi said. “I was
told by somebody very senior that he probably never got that envelope because
he thought I snubbed him at the time he was dying, which is not correct.”
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