Pastor Tunde Bakare |
The
Serving Overseer of the Latter Rain Assembly, Pastor Tunde Bakare, spoke to BAYO
AKINLOYE and TOBI AWORINDE about President Muhammadu Buhari’s list of
ministerial nominees, among other issues.
What do you think about
President Muhammadu Buhari’s ministerial nominees so far and what input did you
have in the selection process?
We all waited for
President Buhari’s list to come out. We have seen it and we trust God for the
best as regards these people he (Buhari) chose by himself after due consultation
with the Vice President (Prof. Yemi Osinbajo) and the party (the All
Progressives Congress). We trust that as some of them had performed well in
time past (in areas) that we can point to, they would had the grace to also do
extraordinarily well for the citizens of Nigeria.
The Punch report continues:
As for whether I have an
input or not, that question is uncalled for because I am not in the
decision-making organ of the party. He (Buhari) said it publicly that it (the
selection) was (made) after due consultations with the Vice President and the
leadership of the party. I am neither the Vice President nor an officer of the
party. So, the question of my input has no basis.
The names of several of
the ministerial nominees had been bandied about for months, prior to the
official announcement. Do you think the delay in releasing the list was
warranted?
In the first instance, he
explained why it took that long. I do not think that President Buhari had no
idea of who he wanted in his cabinet; I believe he had an idea of who he wanted
but he wanted to act democratically: One, by consulting with his people as well
as the vital organs of the leadership of the party. Two, he did mention in his
October 1 broadcast that it was just few days to May 29 that he received the
handover notes, then, the transition committee they set up had the opportunity
of some weeks to go look into the notes. Three, they then sat down to harmonise
the ministries with a view to making them lean and mean so that we don’t have a
bogus government. If you do not know what ministries you are going to have,
what would be the basis for appointing ministers for such ministries, which you
have not agreed upon? It was after they had done that that they began to fill
the places; that was when he decided, ‘I think A can go to ‘A’ ministry, B can
go to ‘B’ ministry and C can go to ‘C’ ministry.’ That is why he took that
long. It is not that he had no idea of who he wanted in his cabinet. But he had
to do it thoroughly. Slow and steady wins the race.
A number of the
ministerial nominees, especially some ex-governors, have been singled out in
petitions and allegations of corruption. Is there anyone on the list who you
may have doubts about?
Nigeria is a very complex
country to govern. I am a preacher; permit me to digress a little to bring some
wisdom from the Bible. In Deuteronomy 1, while doing his handover notes, Moses,
the servant of God and the leader of Israel who led them (the Israelites) out
of Egypt to the Promised Land, said, ‘May the good Lord multiply you a thousand
times more.’ In essence, population is no problem. You can look at China and
India, population is no problem; it should actually be an asset. ‘May the Lord
multiply you a thousand times more, but I cannot bear — (three things) — your
complaints, your problems and your burdens.’ This is the primary task of
government. My understanding of this is that complaints that are not looked
into become problems, and the problems that are not solved become burdens.
It is legitimate for some
people to have petitions and complaints about an individual, based on their
knowledge of that individual. But if you look at the other side of the
spectrum, there are people who are thanking God for that individual because
they benefitted from him while in office. Therefore, I have no comments that I
will make publicly about any individual. President Buhari and his leadership
team must have spent quality time to look at those things (issues) and you can
rest assured of one thing: he is law-abiding and, because he is law-abiding, he
will do the needful if any of them is found guilty. Remember, an accused person
is presumed innocent until the contrary is proved. So, allegations do not
translate into the committal of a crime. They remain allegations. But the
Senate has said it will look into those things and I pray that the best,
brightest and fittest will come out of their screening so that Nigeria can move
forward.
What is your general
assessment of the list? Are you disappointed or otherwise?
To be honest with you,
disappointment does not arise at all because I am in the ‘amen corner’ of Mr.
President. I wish him well. I want him to succeed and I know he is a person of
deep thought, who has put a lot of considerations into it. If the leader says,
‘This is the person I want,’ how am I going to be disappointed in that? Let me
see the man who is so perfect that he does not have any faults here and there;
even those who were used by God in the Bible. Once upon a time, Moses killed
and God said, ‘Those who are looking for you are there.’ Once upon a time, Saul
of Tarsus was murdering Christians and throwing them into jail. Remember the
thief on the cross who said (to Jesus), ‘Remember me in your kingdom.’ He
entered Paradise that same night. Let us not judge people only by their past.
Let’s put the totality of the picture; let’s consider all. I do not think that
President Buhari, who is a champion for order and who wants to fight corruption
with everything God has given him, will condone corrupt people around himself.
But until those things are proved, they remain in the realm of allegations.
There is therefore no disappointment whatsoever. To be honest with you, I know
at least five or six of them very well. The ones I don’t know, I give the
benefit of the doubt.
Earlier this year, you
said, “I trust Buhari and this is because I have worked closely with him but I
doubt his environment.” What did you mean by “environment”?
That comment was made at
the (Island) Club, where I gave a Lenten lecture. It was during that lecture
that I said, ‘I can vouch for the integrity and honesty of Gen. Muhammadu
Buhari (as he was then called). But I see some around him that I can’t say the
same thing about.’ Remember, the APC is an amalgam of all kinds (of parties).
But then, this is not heaven; this is the earth. In heaven, you may have angels
attending to the duties in the throne room, but on earth, you still have men.
And the best of men are still men, at their very best. Even in heaven, Satan —
as Lucifer then — rebelled against God and created war, so how much more on
earth? But I think likes attract likes. I believe in the power of influence
more than the influence of power. If a leader is ramrod straight, he will
influence his environment. And because of that, there can be a bandwagon effect
of, ‘Look, this will displease the leader. Let’s do it right.’
That time was a time of
politics, when there was still fight for this and that. In fact, I do not think
that at the time I gave the lecture, we had gone to election. It was few weeks
before the election. We have past that stage now. We are now face-to-face with
the stark realities and I think the President put a lot of that into
consideration before coming to his final list.
What lessons should
President Buhari learn from former President Goodluck Jonathan’s failures?
To start with, President
Buhari is not the new kid on the block. He had been governor of a total of six
north-eastern states. He had been petroleum commissioner – what we now call
minister of petroleum, and he had been Head of State for a brief period—between
1984 and 1985. He knew why he fought doggedly for those 12 years to unseat an
entrenched regime or rather a political party (the Peoples Democratic Party)
that had the vision or illusion of ruling Nigeria for 60 years. Whatever was
his motivating factor should not be forgotten because what takes you to the top
will sustain you at the top.
Now, there is what is
called the PVC (Permanent Voter Card) revolution in Nigeria. He can’t afford to
rest on his oars until his good becomes better and his better becomes best,
because the promises made, and even those that are not made but are needful for
this society, must be on the front burner for him to still stand before
Nigerians and give account of his stewardship and expect them to vote for him
or his party in the future. Those two things are enough to keep him going. And
if he keeps on doing the right things, then the wrong things and the wrong
people will leave him alone.
A number of big shots in
the PDP have been jumping ship and pointing fingers at Jonathan for failing to
fight corruption. Do you think that the party today would be what it is today
if Jonathan had won the last election?
I will put it this way:
failure is an orphan, success has many fathers. I’ve seen in this country that
we are quick to shoot the wounded. If Jonathan did not accomplish much in the
time he was president or vice president, I thank God for one thing: he did not
allow a bloodbath in the process of handing over power. If he had decided to
use all the powers at his disposal, he could still be unseated but there would
have been bloodbath that was unnecessary and President Buhari alluded to that
both in Washington—I was there with him when he made that statement—and here,
when he received the baton in May. On October 1, he still alluded to it that he
(Jonathan) saved Nigeria from an unnecessary bloodbath.
As for those who are
talking, especially those he (Jonathan) looked up to as father figures; it’s
too soon to abandon a person, no matter what he has done wrong or right. Let
the law take the full effect if he has done anything that borders on crime. I
am not supporting abuse of office, but please, ‘Do not rejoice over me, my
enemy,’ as the Bible says, ‘because if I fall, I will rise again. The righteous
man falls seven times; the Lord picks him up again.’ What am I saying? I am
trying to say, ‘let’s give credit where it is due and let’s give correction
that is necessary.’ We must not shoot the wounded because we are now teaching
future people to sit tight because of the shame that will come as a result of
handing over power.
The Minister of Petroleum
Resources under Jonathan’s administration, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, is
facing charges in the United Kingdom bordering on money laundering and bribery.
What are your thoughts on accusations that she was high-handed during the last
administration?
I was not part of that
government. It stays in the realm of best guesses and I don’t do well with
guesses. I like facts. The matter is in a court of competent jurisdiction
outside of the realm of a ‘cash-and-carry’ legal system. So, let the law take
its full effect. I do not think money can bribe a British judge. We have seen
from (ex-Governor of Delta State, James) Ibori’s case that though he was
discharged and acquitted on the same charges, he got to Europe and faced the
music. If Diezani had abused power, that abuse must have been condoned by those
who gave her free rein. So, you can’t blame Diezani alone; you (have to) look
at the systemic failure that produced such people. Where is the place of checks
and balances? Where is the oversight that the Senate was supposed to have in
the National Assembly? Where is the collective effort of those in the cabinet?
You can’t blame one man; the fall of one is the fall of all. It is a shame on
the nation that they are arresting our ministers abroad and finding money in
their hands. Like the people, like the priest.
What do you make of the
pleas by Bishop Matthew Kukah of the Catholic Diocese of Sokoto; the President
of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, and others in
the National Peace Committee against probing Jonathan?
He who wears the shoe
knows where it pinches. The individuals you mentioned — the Bishop of Sokoto
and Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor — they are people I can pick my phone (to call) and
ask them about their opinion on what they have said. I have learnt not to
follow what I read in the newspapers in Nigeria. My first daughter got married
in August this year and it was all over that Pastor Bakare gave his daughter
away (in marriage) in London, whereas it took place in Lagos. So, when they say
things about people, I have learnt to be careful. And about what transpired
between Bishop Kukah and President Muhammadu Buhari, until we get to hear from
both sides, I am careful not to pass judgment.
I am not avoiding your
question because it’s been done to me a number of times. In 1999, it was
reported that I said (ex-President Olusegun) Obasanjo would die. I didn’t say
such a thing. But where will I be going to say I didn’t say such a thing? I
don’t waste my time. I just focus on what I am doing. If I gave a false
prophecy, why did Obasanjo invite a thousand pastors to Ota to start praying
for intervention? I just said, ‘Hey, be careful; if these take place, these are
the consequences that will come.’ Nobody paid attention to the details of what
I said that, ‘If by an act of omission or commission Obasanjo is sworn, in as
President of Nigeria, three things would happen: One, corruption will reach its
peak; two, the revival of the occult will claim the lives of many; and three,
family life will disintegrate in Nigeria.’ Go back and check those things,
whether they came to pass or not.
Here we are, I have no
reason to hate Obasanjo, but it is what you blow into the flute that it brings
out. I have heard claims that I said Obasanjo would die. Propaganda is the
machinery of the wicked; they have a way of making a mountain out of a
molehill. Why would anybody who believes in equity and fairness say that if
someone has done evil, he should be overlooked? No! The Bible makes it clear
that when judgment is not speedily executed, the hearts of men are set in them
to do evil.
When I went to the US
with the delegation of President Buhari, part of the little contribution I made
during a meeting we had with (the first female US Secretary of State) Madeleine
Albright was that we should learn from the past and we should not put the cart
before the horse. In the past, what we were asking for was restitution— ‘return
our money’ — but we didn’t do any prosecution. This time, we should prosecute
and do it legally so that others will learn that there are consequences for
what they have done. When you know that if you steal, you will face the music,
you will think twice; except your father’s name means nothing to you and you
are not a person of dignity and integrity. I don’t want to spend my life in
jail over stolen wealth of the nation. No. But if for my conviction, for asking
that Nigeria should be restructured, for asking for order and discipline to be
in our nation, you jail me, then, I will become the moral conscience of the
nation. I do not think any preacher in his right mind will say, ‘wherever you
see wrong done, overlook it.’ I don’t think those people (peace committee
members) will say so or else they know more than we know.
What if Jonathan is found
to be guilty of looting the country’s treasury?
If he had looted the
treasury, take the money back. Take the money back and let the world know; let
the law take its full effect. A president is a servant of the people. Power is
a trust from God. If he had looted the treasury, take the money back and let
the law take its course. But don’t deliberately impugn his integrity; don’t
give a dog a bad name in order to hang it.
Obasanjo has been meeting
with President Buhari. Are you wary of his closeness to the President?
Buhari is not a young man
that can be influenced by anyone. He knows his onions and his door is open to
past leaders. And he must cross-check with them some things that are not clear
to him. So, because people change, who knows? If a Saul could become Paul, if a
Jacob could become Israel, who knows what an Obasanjo could become? He could
become the person who says, ‘Oh my God! I regretted that I had the opportunity
to do my best and I did not do quite well.’ If I had any pain where Obasanjo is
concerned, it is not a pain born out of envy; we are poles apart age-wise, in
terms of exposure and status. (In life) we are miles apart — he’s much older
than I am. There is no competition at all. My pain is that I have not seen
anyone as specially endowed and blessed in Nigerian history and political
history like Obasanjo.
There is a portion of the
Scripture in John 4, where Jesus met the woman at the well of Samaria and he
said to his disciples afterwards, ‘Lift up your eyes and see, the harvesting
field is white already and I am sending you to reap where you do not bestow
labour.’ It is as if every time something major happens in Nigeria, he is the
recipient of the blessings. Can you compare the role of Benjamin Adekunle of
the Third Marine Commando Division in the Nigerian Civil War; can you put it on
the same pedestal with the role of Obasanjo? Obasanjo joined them at the war
front; not long after, he was the one that received the surrender note (from
the Biafran troops). Obasanjo was not part of the coup that brought Gen.
Murtala Muhammed into power but he became his deputy. And immediately Gen.
Muhammed was murdered, he became the Head of State.
I remember him saying,
‘Against my personal wish and desire, the mantle of leadership has now fallen
upon me.’ I mean, I heard his English and I said, ‘Oh my God, this is an Egba
man speaking.’ But, he was our Head of State. Whether he was rough or rugged,
take it or leave it, there is an invisible hand positioning him. Obasanjo
handed over power whether out of being afraid or not, we don’t know. But he
handed over power and he became a global power well received. Abdulsalam
Abubakar was a parade commander the day Obasanjo handed over power to Shehu
Shagari, only for Obasanjo, years after, – more than 20 years after – to come
and receive power from the same Abubakar straight away from prison.
Those eight years
(Obasanjo spent as president) should have been formidable years of putting
Nigeria upon a pedestal that nobody can reverse it. And above all, whether it
is insecurity or selfishness, which is the greatest curse on the face of the
earth, he gave the weak and the sick to the nation. Whatever happened during
Umar Yar’Adua and Goodluck Jonathan era – yes, they will have their own portion
of the blame – but Obasanjo thought he could manipulate things from Ota. That
is my opinion; that is my pain. He robbed this nation of quality leadership and
he robbed this nation of being put on a pedestal of predictable progress. That
should be his regret. Now, he should repent and contribute his quota towards
giving quality leadership to this nation.
Are you saying Obasanjo
messed up things during his eight years?
He did (mess things) big
time; time will tell.
Some people are asking
for immunity for some principal officers in the National Assembly. What do you
think about this?
Immunity is the breeding
ground of impunity. What I think should be enshrined in our Constitution, no
matter the position you occupy, including that of the president, when it
borders on crime is that immunity should not be something you feel you can
cling to. Because immunity breeds impunity, no one should be above the law
regardless of the office you occupy. In fact, in decent climes, such people
should resume. But here, it is not so.
Will you, therefore, say
that the immunity clause should be removed from the Constitution?
No. if you remove
immunity clause, presidents and the governors can be overwhelmed by assailants
–not those who just want to shoot them –but, those who want to bring petitions
and false allegations against them all the time. But where a crime is proved,
that someone has committed a crime, regardless of the office you occupy
immunity should be taken away. That is why I said in decent climes –look at the
Watergate scandal, Richard Nixon (a former president of the United States)
resigned. Whenever crime is involved there should be no immunity –because
immunity breeds impunity.
Some Nigerians are asking
the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, to resign following the charges
levelled against him by the Code of Conduct Bureau?
No. I am not saying that
because they remain charges until he is proved guilty. But, if he knows in his
heart of heart that he is guilty of those things, nobility will compel such a
person to say, ‘Upon this consideration, I will remain on the floor of the
Senate.’ But, if he knows that he is not guilty, let him wait there and let it
be proved in the court. And if he is found guilty, even if he goes on an appeal
or not, they will ban him from public life; it had happened before. History has
a way of repeating itself.
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