Vice-President
Yemi Osinbajo on Wednesday night cleverly avoided to be dragged into
the raging controversy over who nominated him to be President Muhammadu
Buhari’s running mate in the 2015 presidential election.
Although
he confirmed that “somebody somewhere” must nominate one before
occupying a position, Osinbajo refrained from disclosing who nominated
him.
Controversy
broke out recently when the author of Buhari’s biography, “Muhammadu
Buhari: The Challenges of Leadership in Nigeria”, Prof. John Paden,
claimed in the book that the President chose Osinbajo as his running
mate despite the alleged opposition of a national leader of the All
Progressives Congress, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.
Despite
the general belief that Tinubu was instrumental to the emergence of
Osinbajo who served as his Attorney-General when he (Tinubu) was the
governor of Lagos State, the author claimed that the names of Tinubu;
the then Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola; and Osinbajo were
forwarded to Buhari for him to pick a running mate shortly after he
emerged the party’s candidate at its convention in Lagos.
The author claimed that Buhari chose Osinbajo above others despite enormous pressure from Tinubu to do otherwise.
Tinubu’s loyalists have since faulted the account of the author, saying he (Tinubu) nominated the Vice-President.
Speaking
at a dinner organised for former Niger Delta agitators at the
Presidential Villa, Abuja, Osinbajo made a veiled reference to the
controversy when he admitted that he was nominated by “somebody
somewhere.”
He said, “I was in a group of young men and women and one of them asked the question how did I become Vice President?
“I
was never a politician or anything like that. So I tried to explain it
is quite simple that someone somewhere has to recommend you.
“Somebody
somewhere has to give you a helping hand, whether to be a Vice
President or to be an aircraft pilot or to be an engineer, somebody
somewhere has to give you an opportunity.
“I
think that all of you that are here today are the beneficiaries of the
opportunities that you have somehow received. And this is why this event
is so important. I think that it is one way we have to remind ourselves
that we are bound as individuals to give opportunities to everyone.”
Osinbajo
said all Nigerians, including the future generation, will remain losers
once Niger Delta militants continue attacking oil and gas installations
in the region.
Source: Punch
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