Monday 16 December 2013

I spent N3 billion to help Obasanjo defeat Gbenga Daniel, fugitive Kashamu says Dimeji Kayode-Adedeji - 5 hours ago

Buruji Kashamu, the fugitive that ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo made reference to in his letter to President Goodluck Jonathan, has described the former president as an ingrate who used him to achieve his political aspirations.
Mr. Obasanjo, in his letter to the president, condemned Mr. Jonathan’s relationship with Mr. Kashamu, a man wanted in the United States for drug related offences. The former president called for Mr. Kashamu’s extradition to the U.S. to face charges. Mr. Kashamu is currently the leader and financier of Nigeria’s ruling Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in Ogun State, Mr. Obasanjo’s home state.
In a statement titled ‘We are Partners’, which was a response to Mr. Obasanjo’s letter, Mr. Kashamu said the former president had used him to achieve his political aims in Ogun in the past.
“He used me to fight Gbenga Daniel and I spent over N3 billion to fight his cause and took the PDP structure from Daniel and handed it over to him,” Mr. Kashamu said of the former president. “He later brought his friend, a 77-year-old Gen. Adetunji Olurin, to be the governorship candidate. Now, he is casting aspersion on the person of the President and my humble self.”
Mr. Obasanjo had a running battle with Mr. Daniel, who was Ogun State governor from 2003 to 2011. Mr. Daniel was eventually forced out of the PDP prior to the 2011 elections and moved his supporters to the Peoples Party of Nigeria, PPN.
Mr. Kashamu also described Mr. Obasanjo’s 18-page letter as satanic, self-serving and mischievous.
“When you have a man who should be a father figure descend into the arena, clutching at every opportunity to play to the gallery,” he said. “Who should be ashamed among us? How many former Presidents and Heads of State would do this? He thinks he is disgracing his people but unknown to him, he is making himself a laughing stock in the eyes of the discerning.”
The billionaire lamented that following Mr. Obasanjo’s letter, he has “been inundated with calls from family members, friends, business and political associates as to his real intentions.
‘In the 18-page letter dated 3rd December, 2013, Obasanjo called me a shameless criminal. Pray, why should I be ashamed when I am not a criminal or the one being looked for, and he knows! They have called all manner of names to silence and sabotage me so as to take over party structure in the Southwest in order to work against the government.”
The Ogun politician also condemned the former president for writing such a letter.
“If Obasanjo could write this kind of letter against his own people, with a view to inciting Nigerians against the man he introduced to them, then it leaves much to be desired,” he said. “The was the same man who said Jonathan was the only one fit for the job having been cleared by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). He told Nigerians to vote him as President because of his unimpeachable character and integrity. It is unfair for him to round to insult the President.”
Mr. Kashamu said the former president was only bitter because he had lost out in the PDP.
“Initially, he was given everything he wanted but he was still not pleased. Now that things have changed, he is grumbling,” he said. “He merely ventilated his frustrations over the new political reality that has stripped him bare of any claim to Ogun State and the South West geo-political zone.”
‘ Ordinarily, a person of his standing should tower far and above such parochialism. But he won’t have any of such. He would rather eat the fat of the land and still struggle for the crumbs while at one playing the ostrich. If the truth be told, the letter to President Goodluck Jonathan is, to say the least, satanic, self-serving and mischievous.”
The politician also said restated his earlier claims that it was Mr. Obasanjo that introduced him to the presidency and leaders of the PDP.
“Can he (Obasanjo) deny that we wined and dined together in the past? Can he deny knowledge of my closeness to his daughter, Senator Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello, especially during the events leading to the 2011 general elections? Can he deny that he introduced me to some leaders of the PDP in the South West, such as the Minister of Police Affairs, Navy Captain Caleb Olubolade; his Agric counterpart, Dr. Adesina Akinwunmi; and Engr. Segun Oni, among others, as his political son in whom he is well pleased?

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