Ekiti State Governor, Mr Ayodele Fayose has told former President
Olusegun Obasanjo to desist from accusing people of corruption in
Nigeria.
He declared that “Obasanjo that I know does not have morals rights to
accuse anyone of corruption because he eats and sleeps with
corruption.”
Governor Fayose, who described the former President’s claim that some
church leaders in the country were not only encouraging corruption but
also celebrating people with questionable sources of wealth as
hypocritical, said; “If anyone must accuse the church in Nigeria of
promoting
corruption, that person cannot be Obasanjo because he presided over the
most corrupt government in the history of Nigeria.”
The former President Obasanjo made the accusation in Abeokuta, Ogun
State, on Saturday at the 2017 Convention Lecture of Victory Life Bible
Church International while speaking on the theme, ‘The role of the
church in the fight against corruption in Nigeria.’
In a statement issued on Sunday, by his Special Assistant on Public
Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka, Governor Fayose asked:
“Where did Obasanjo get the stupendous wealth he is parading since he
was a pauper before he became president? Where did he get the trillions
of naira that he deployed to his failed third term bid “How can
Obasanjo, under whose tenure Nigeria witnessed Halliburton scandal be
sermonising about corruption?”
He said it was during Obasanjo’s reign as president that governors
were made to donate N10 million each to the building of his library,
adding; “Isn’t compelling State Governors to make donations to the
personal project of a serving president part of corruption?”
Maintaining that Obasanjo was the father of corruption in the present
day Nigeria, Governor Fayose asked: “Who introduced politics of
Ghana-must-go bags to the National Assembly?
“Who was the president when sacks of money were displayed on the
floor of the House of Representatives, as bribe money given to some Reps
members to impeach the then Speaker, Ghali N’abba? “Under whose
administration was the out-of-court settlement in the controversial
$1.09 billion Malabu Oil Block initiated in 2006?”
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