By
Ademola Adegbamigbe
culled
fron THE NEWS, May 30, 2006
It was Ramadan in 2005,
the month-long period when Muslims give up food, drink, smoking and
sexual activity during the hours of daylight in the observance of
Sawn (fasting), the fourth pillar of Islam. The acrimony between
President Olusegun Obasanjo and his ambitious deputy, Atiku Abubakar,
had reached a height in this period, with the President having
earlier denounced Abubakar as a liar over the matter of Obasanjo’s
vow to respect his constitutionally scheduled exit in 2007. All
sorts of political and personal manoeuvres were going on in Aso Rock
Villa among the leading players.
Perhaps in want of more allies or sympathy among the key players,
the Vice-President decided to break his fast in the official
residence of the National Security Adviser (NSA), General Aliyu
Muhammed Gusau, perhaps Nigeria’s longest surviving spy-master, a
man who, as sources close to him confessed, operates like a military
submarine. There was no love lost between the two men of power, but
the one knew as much as the other that they couldn’t ignore each
other. But, more important is the fact that the month of Ramadan,
being a time for spiritual reflection, prayer and doing good deeds,
teaches Muslims self-discipline, self-restraint and generosity.
The Qur’an commands: “O ye who believe! Fasting is prescribed to you
as it was prescribed to those before you, that ye may (learn)
self-restraint...Ramadan is the (month) in which was sent down the
Qur’an, as a guide to mankind, also clear (signs) for guidance and
judgment (between right and wrong). So, every one of you who is
present (at his home) during that month should spend it in
fasting...” (Chapter 2, verses 183 and 185). Therefore, it was not
surprising that Abubakar and Gusau were sharing the iftar (meal
after sunset).
As the two men enjoyed their meal, President Obasanjo was also
hosting Muslims and others to iftar in his presidential quarters.
This was part of Obasanjo’s promise of goodwill to men of all faith.
Some of Atiku Abubakar’s aides, particularly Prince Olusola Akanmode,
his Deputy Chief of Staff, attended Obasanjo’s feast. In the jolly
mood that pervaded the sharing of meal, Akanmode stood up to speak.
He thanked the President profusely for hosting them and for his
“exemplary leadership”. He noted that the last few weeks had been
quite testy in terms of the relationship between the retired general
and his deputy. He asked that in the spirit of the Ramadan,
particularly the challenge of forgiveness and charity that the month
required, the President should forgive his deputy and reconcile the
divided Villa.
The Ota farmer broke into Akanmode’s ‘homily’, and asked him to shut
up. What manner of “stupid reconciliation and forgiveness” was he
preaching when, as he spoke, his boss, Atiku Abubakar, was in Aliyu
Gusau’s house, with both men planning to destabilise his (Obasanjo’s)
government and displace him from power? Every person present was
shocked. Akanmode was nonplussed. First, that statement revealed
that Obasanjo monitored the veepee’s every movement, because even
Akanmode was unaware that his boss was with Gusau. This, for
goodness sake, Akanmode must have thought, was a month in which all
obscene and irreligious sights and sounds were to be avoided, while
purity of thought and action should be paramount. But, as usual,
Obasanjo would not stop. He went on and on, accusing Akanmode of
complicity in the whole conspiracy against him. At a point, Akanmode,
who was initially on his feet, sank into his seat. When the insults
became too intense, Atiku’s DCOS burst into tears. Here was a man
who had given the greatest benefit of doubt to Obasanjo on the
sit-tight plan, so much so that his loyalty was doubted among the
VP’s crowd.
Some had thought he was Obasanjo’s secret informant. Perhaps,
indeed, Obasanjo wanted that, but Akanmode never obliged. And what
was worse was that the man had, unknown to him, chosen the most
inauspicious time to broach the issue of the bitter relationship
between Obasanjo and Abubakar, at a point when the VP was assumedly
meeting the dreaded Gusau to map out strategies to end Obasanjo’s
conceited presidency. The act of fasting was supposed to redirect
the hearts men and women away from worldly activities, towards the
Divine. On the contrary, the three men – Obasanjo, Abubakar and
Gusau - were focussing their minds on the most dangerous, but most
tantalising, of all worldly possessions: Power.
Atiku Abubakar was enough worry for the President. But, that Gusau
was being added to the list must have scared Obasanjo. Why was the
President so livid about the meeting between his deputy and his
security chief? Informed sources within the Villa told TheNEWS
that, given Obasanjo’s fear of Gusau’s “endless mischief” and the
man’s “capacity to wreak maximum havoc on anyone that he targets,”
it was understandable that Obasanjo would fret at the possibility of
the two teaming up against him. Atiku was easier to handle alone;
but, with Gusau in the equation, the President would be dealing with
a most accomplished man in the deadly game of power in Nigeria, and
one who has an enviable network both within and outside of the
military.
General Aliyu Mohammed Gusau (retd.) has been everything that any
accomplished soldier in Nigeria’s largely odious history can be,
except head of state. He was the head of the Nigerian intelligence
network under General Ibrahim Babangida. He was the General Officer
Commanding the Second Mechanized Division of the Nigerian Army and
therefore a member of the Armed Forces Ruling Council. And he was
the Army Chief under General Sani Abacha. More important, top
students of Nigeria military history told the magazine, is the fact
that Gusau had always wanted to be the head of state too, in the
“Turn-By-Turn Nigeria Limited” that was the military incursion into
politics in Nigeria. But at every turn, fate had cheated him.
The last time was when he and General Oladipo Diya and others were
thinking of how to end the political crisis following the annulled
June 12 election and terminate the life of the Interim National
Government (ING). Then it was said that Diya preferred to work with
Abacha than Gusau, because he feared that given that the latter was
an intelligence chief and one of Babangida’s “old boys”, it would be
very difficult for him (Diya) to work with, or “handle”, Gusau.
Gusau was later retired by Abacha who was also aware of his ambition
to become the commander-in-chief. Diya was to rue his decision.
Gusau was said to have enjoyed Diya’s eventual terrifying experience
with Abacha, given how the Odogbolu General denied him of an
“Allah-ordained destiny” to rule Nigeria.
Despite the setback and his retirement from the Army, Gusau, sources
said, oiled his awesome machine across the country, particularly in
the north, that spans the military elite, the traditional elite, the
political class, the business elite, the media, the intelligentsia
and others, preparing for another encounter with his destiny. When
Abacha’s experiment collapsed, he swung into action as General
Abdusalami Abubakar prepared to hand over power to civilians.
TheNEWS learnt that contrary to popular view, it was not
Babangida, but Gusau working with General Theophilus Danjuma and
Justice Alfa Belgore who rallied the retired military and the
northern establishment behind Obasanjo in 1998/1999 for the coveted
presidency.