Lt-General Jeremiah Useni is among other things a former
Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, and former military governor of
the old Bendel State and is presently, senator representing Plateau South in
the National Assembly.
In an interview with Marie-Therese Nanlong
, he gives his
views on sundry national and state issues. Going by what has been happening in
Nigeria since the return of democracy in the country; do you think the military
was right in interfering in governance in the past?
The military was very
justified because looking at what was happening at that time, there were lots
of crises all over the place, the situation in East, West and so on.
I’m sure you know that there were lots of indiscipline in the
democratic rule and civilians were going round saying to the military, do you
want us to die before you do something?
So the military did not just wake up
and said give us power, Buhari and Obasanjo it was the
civilian who instigated the military to come into governance and to see what
was happening.
It is just the way the coup took place was one sided, it was
mostly Igbos, what did they do, they killed the leaders in the West, killed
Sardauna in the North. If not, if it was a general thing and in agreement with
the military, that type of selected killings wouldn’t have taken place. Do you
think President Buhari is upholding the rule of law in the way he is handling
national issues including the trial of Nnamdi Kanu?
He is following the rule of
law and I don’t know where he has gone wrong, unless you will tell me where he
is going wrong.
We just fought a war on Biafra and we now have peace, so for
some people to come again and start reviving Biafra they are not asking for
peace and you want a responsible government to just keep quiet? Biafra issue
had been locked up, it should remain locked up. May be that time the person in
question was very young , he didn’t know how people suffered; we fought for
three years so you can imagine the number of people dead and you want to revive
that?
How do you foresee governance in the north ahead of 2019? Well, the
problem of the North now is this Boko Haram which affects about three states,
Borno, Yobe and Adamawa but the government is really taking care of that.
What
the North needs now is to really organise itself and think of one thing,
getting a credible leader like we had in Sardauna.
Sardauna was a real leader
in the North but when Sardauna died, young politicians brought many things into
politics like tribalism, the Boko Haram hide under religion that they don’t
believe and everything changed but now that we are taking care of the Boko
Haram and people are returning to their villages and also with this
rehabilitation scheme headed by General Danjuma, maybe by the end of this year,
things will be much better and people must have learnt their lessons.
I know we
have problems not only in the North but in other places like in the Niger Delta
area and what the Biafra people are trying to create in the East, but the whole
country needs to readjust itself and move ahead but I’m sure we will still
remain relevant.
Recently, former President Obasanjo indicted the National
Assembly, accusing it of corruption, as a senator what is your take on that?
He
has been replied and I agree with the response.
He brought corruption to the
National Assembly with the way he was giving out money to senators especially
when he wanted to go for third term.
He spent a lot of money he can’t account
for.
What Buhari is doing now, is like what Awolowo said when he was Minister
of Finance under General Gowon and the government then put up a probe and
wanted to go backward to past government.
But Awolowo said no; new logs go on
top of old ones, to get to the old ones; you must remove the new ones first.
That is what Buhari is doing now, trying to clear the new logs so that he can
get access to the old ones; when he clears the new ones and gets access to the
old ones, the case of Obasanjo will come up.
So he has no excuse at all to say
such a thing because if there is any corruption at all in the National
Assembly, he was the cause.
The PDP in Plateau State since after the last
elections seems to be falling apart. Do you regret joining the party at this
time, if not, what are you doing to revive the party ahead of the 2019
elections? No, no, no; I don’t. I’m not regretting anything at all.
You know I
don’t like running from party to party but I am only sorry for our boys who
were deceived by those who were saying PDP is going to rule for another 60
years and when they were given some money to campaign they just put the money
in their pocket thinking that people will just go and vote for them.
It is not
like that, some of these people need to transport themselves to where you want
them, and you have to feed them so a lot of things went wrong.
I can’t say I
regret joining PDP but I’m just sorry for some of our people who indulged in
such things and put us in this situation but we are trying to sort them out.
What is your personal effort at reviving the party in the state?
The first
thing I tried to do was to get my Senatorial district intact and I have done
that. I had meetings about seven times but none of the other Senators have had
even a single meeting in their senatorial zones.
I have done that and have been
going round and I am concentrating on my senatorial zone but I have spoken with
my colleagues that whether we like it or not we must take responsibility for
our senatorial zones then three of us will see how we can move the whole zones
forward.
Whether Plateau South, Central or North, there are Senators like me
and when we meet, if it comes to doing something for the entire State, we are
saying that we made mistakes by losing the governorship, we must learn from our
mistakes and work hard now to gain the governorship in 2019.
So we are working
on that and I’m already spearheading that as far as my senatorial zone is
concerned. We have gotten the message and we are working hard towards it. Do
you envisage a mass defection from the PDP to APC?
If there was any, you would
have known but no more movement anywhere, it is APC that will come back to us.
How do you see the Lalong’s administration in the last eight months?
I am not
against Lalong as an individual, he is a friend but all I have been saying to
him is look, you won on the platform of the APC that is what the constitution
says that you must win an election on a platform of a party.
Having won, you
are not a governor of APC and we call Buhari President of Nigeria, we don’t
call him President of APC. He must take everybody along whether in your party
or not but if you think someone is good somewhere who can handle any assignment
for you, call the person, that is what the civilized world is doing.
So if you
do that, you will gain more for your party but if you think that the winner
takes it all which of course will not go down well with the majority then go
ahead.
He should be grateful to the PDP because if not for the imposition of a
candidate by Jang, he wouldn’t be there. The people voted for him out of
annoyance, they are not talking about APC, it was out of annoyance and the same
people are still in the PDP anyway.
As an individual I have nothing against him
but that is my warning. Let him govern properly so that he has a good name, but
if he fails, he knows why he failed.
PDP failed in the State because we made a
wrong choice of candidate and somebody insisted on imposition of a candidate
but we are not out. Okay sir, what is your advice for the people of Plateau at
this time? Well, they should remain calm and peaceful.
I am happy that all
these killings, killings have been on the reduction though there are still
concerns in some parts of Plateau North especially Riyom and Barkin Ladi. It is
still not very peaceful yet around Northern Plateau but I am saying that there
is no excuse for people to continue to fight and kill. In my area for instance,
in the South, places like Wase where Hausa/Fulani and the Tarok people were
having issues and in parts of Shendam and Langtang South, things are improving
because if you go there, you see the people moving together and it is very
peaceful. We have high hopes that the peace will be sustained, people should
just live in peace with one another.
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