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Defections, Tinubu, And The Return of Abacha Democracy

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By SKC Ogbonnia

A famous American journalist, Sydney J. Harris, once wrote that, “History repeats itself, but in such cunning disguise that we never detect the resemblance until the damage is done.”

Once upon a time Nigeria had a military Head of State, Sani Abacha, who ruled as a maximum dictator.

He would eventually yield to pressure to transition the country to a democracy, but he also plotted to succeed himself as the president.

Keenly aware that he was unpopular and had no chance of winning the presidency in any free and fair election under a multiparty democracy, Abacha turned to unholy schemes.

His regime staged an aggressive montage of propaganda to launder his image behind a facade of positive narratives–all suggesting a show of overwhelming public support for the military head of state to succeed himself.

They portrayed him as the best leader ever and his candidacy as the second coming of the Messiah. But that was not all.

Buoyed by the false public support, General Sani Abacha used the instrument of power to coerce opposing political parties to endorse him as a sole candidate.

All coasts were clear for him to enthrone a sham democracy featuring only one party and, of course, without internal or external opposition.

But providence has a way with destiny, as well as with ambitions. Sani Abacha died unexpectedly. And his brand of democracy also died suddenly, or so we thought. That was in 1998!

Fast forward to 2025, history is repeating itself in a disgusting disguise. The objective fact is that the Abacha model of democracy or resemblance of it is back in our naked eyes, and the man in charge has a similar trait and background.

Like Sani Abacha, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu did not gain power by popular account.

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While Abacha became Head of State by the way of a military coup, a majority of Nigerian voters (64.7%) rejected Tinubu in the election that he used to assume power. Like Abacha, Tinubu is widely rated as one of the most corrupt leaders in the world.

Like Sani Abacha, amid a woeful record of performance, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is employing underhand tactics, undermining democratic norms in order to win a re-election.

So far, the former Lagos governor is in full control of both the Legislature and the Judiciary.

The gravest of all, however, is a grand design to emulate the Abacha model by using all manner of political intimidation to decimate the structures of the opposition parties.

The objective is a one-party state or a semblance of it. This explains the wave of defections of legislators and governors to Tinubu’s ruling APC. Nothing more!!

Of course, the defecting politicians or the Tinubu enablers have continued to labour so hard to offer nothing but tantalizing reasons for abandoning the people and the parties that brought them to power.

However, every reason or excuse they have offered is in conflict with history and common sense.

Interestingly, the governors who have decamped so far happen to hail from the South-East and South-South zones of the country. This is a region that ‘aligned with the center’ for 16 of the 25 years in the Fourth Republic.

This is a region that has produced a President, Vice President, Senate Presidents, Deputy Senate Presidents, Deputy Speakers, Ruling Party Chairmen, and some of the other most powerful portfolios when PDP held sway. Yet, there is nothing to show for the support or the patronage.

Needless to remind them that this same region includes Imo and Ebonyi states, which have been under the control of the same APC since the previous regime; yet, such a gesture did not stop Bola Ahmed Tinubu from waging a shadow war against the Igbo people of Nigeria.

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Let us even choose not to factor the common knowledge above, but common sense dictates that only an enemy of Nigeria will be singing praises of the APC regime that has plunged the country into untold hardship with no end in sight.

Only a corrupt mind would be rushing to a ruling party that is leading the most criminal and unjust regime in national history.

The truth of the matter is simple: Their reason for the defections is purely for selfish interests.

Specifically, these defecting politicians are lily-livered leaders who lack principle and have either corrupt baggage, afraid of winning elections on their own merit or those eager to benefit from the ruling party’s corrupt ecosystem.

The whistling charm is the prevailing pledge by the then National Chairman of the APC, Adams Oshiomhole, that the sins of the members of the opposition parties would be forgiven if they defect to the ruling party.

Former British Prime Minister, Sir Winston Churchill, probably had in mind the type of unfolding political crisis in Nigeria, when he noted that, “Those that fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it”.

Bola Ahmed Tinubu ought to be able to dig deeper in history and remember that brute attempts by then ruling parties to win broad political mandate was the central reason commonly cited for the fall of both the First and Second Republics.

Recall the situation under the very Second Republic. Similar to the case of Tinubu, President Shehu Shagari (who scored only 33.7% of the votes ) failed to garner majority votes through the 1979 polls.

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The National Party of Nigeria (NPN), being the ruling party at the time, was desperate for a clear majority in the subsequent election of 1983.

It followed the mission by boasting and threatening that it must capture the states where the regional capitals of the First Republic–namely Enugu, Kaduna, and Ibadan–were located.

The NPN brushed aside the fact that those states were controlled by political parties featuring popular native presidential candidates, namely Nnamdi Azikiwe, Aminu Kano, and Obafemi Awolowolo, respectively.

With the timber and calibre of the ruling NPN behind him, Shagari threw caution to the wind and went ahead to deploy heavy duty federal might to deliver those former regional capitals through the 1983 elections.

Accordingly, the election result was greeted with mass discontent and unrest.

Not surprisingly, mass jubilation greeted the military coup of 1983 that overthrew the Shagari government.

While military coups must no longer be an option, Tinubu can learn from recent history that the restive masses have become even more potent.

In sum, it is clear that Nigeria’s hard earned democracy is at its lowest ebb. This failure is because the overbearing influence of the Executive branch under President Tinubu has weakened institutional independence and, by consequence, lack of checks and balances, dictatorship, systemic corruption, and abuse of civil liberties. Today, Mr. Tinubu is widely seen to be above the law.

He is widely seen to dictate who gets what, who wins or who loses. Sadly, instead of holding the ruling party accountable, the opposition leaders are succumbing, defecting to become a part of the state corrupt ecosystem. The posterity beckons!

SKC Ogbonnia, a former APC Presidential Aspirant, writes from Houston, Texas.

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Nigeria’s 2026 Budget Delay – A Comedy of Fiscal Errors

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Tinubu presenting Nigeria budget plan before the senate.
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For the umpteenth time, Nigeria has been thrown into a theatre of fiscal absurdity.

With barely six weeks to the end of the year, the Federal Government is yet to present the 2026 budget to the National Assembly.

What should have been a routine exercise in governance has become a tragicomedy: endless delays, hasty excuses, and a sense that planning is merely optional.

Budgets are not fancy stationery; they form the skeleton on which the nation’s development muscles hang.

Delay it, and everything wobbles: contractors scramble unpaid, civil servants freeze, and markets jitter nervously.

Yet, here we are again, holding on to the illusion that procrastination is a form of strategy.

To its credit, the Senate has insisted on the 2024 performance report, the 2025 capital projections, and a revised MTEF before considering the 2026 budget. Quite reasonable, one would think.

The Fiscal Responsibility Act actually demands it. But the executive, inspired by the art of suspense perhaps, has not obliged. In Abuja, timelines are suggestions, not law, it would appear.

Meanwhile, MTEF a document intended to anchor medium-term fiscal stability has become a casualty of neglect.

Outdated assumptions are its hallmark, oil price forecasts are at best delusional, and the targets of production read more like fiction rather than achievable goals.

And yet, the framework remains unsubmitted, leaving the ministries and agencies in some type of purgatory.

MDAs: Demoralized and Underfunded

At the heart of this chaos are the MDAs: demoralized and resource-strapped. Critical training programmes remain on hold; equipment procurement grinds to a halt. There are complaints from directors about dwindling motivation.

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Budget Implementation Reports, once sacred quarterly rituals, have vanished for nearly two years, lowering transparency to levels that would make even the most secretive magician blush.

Meanwhile, the 2025 “Budget of Restoration” that was to resurrect the nation’s fiscal soul has remained in limbo. Contractors protested; plenary had to be abruptly suspended.

And with no money to warrant, the new rule requiring MDAs to secure warrants before spending is almost laughable. It is beginning to feel like governance has become performance art.

While the federal government dithers, states have moved ahead: Bayelsa, Cross River, Ekiti, and Osun have already presented appropriation bills to their legislatures.

Governors hold town halls, engage citizens, and get budgets moving. In other words, the states are doing what the federal government can’t or won’t.

The administration of President Bola Tinubu had promised the early submission of the 2026 budget.

In July, a circular was issued by the Budget Office directing MDAs to prepare personnel cost estimates. The said circular optimistically assumed that the MTEF for 2026–2028 would be completed on time. That optimism now reads like a cruel joke.

Rubber-Stamping: Expensive and Dangerous

Such a tendency, though apparently expedient, might be appealing to these officials.

But for the country, it is disastrous. Rubber-stamping, without due diligence, has left in its trail a litany of spurious assumptions, padded projects, unexecuted allocations, and abandoned infrastructure. Nigerians endure this costly habit year after year.

Public spending is the beating heart of the economy: delay it, and the body trembles, jobs are postponed, private sector activity stagnates, citizen confidence declines, and inflation, unemployment, and social hardship make the waiting game even crueler.

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Uncertainty: Delivered on Schedule

It is high time the government shed its procrastination cloak. The revised MTEF must reach the Senate, and the 2026 budget must be presented, debated, and approved. Budget Implementation Reports must be revived. Anything less is not just incompetence; it is a betrayal of the people.

It is time Nigeria stopped building prosperity on promises, delays, or polite excuses. For now, uncertainty is the only thing delivered on schedule.

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When the Hunter Becomes the Hunted: How the APC is Tasting the Karma of 2015

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President Donald Trump of the United States versus President Bola Ahmed Tinubu of Nigeria
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There’s something bitter ironic in the way history folds back on itself.

Ten years since the United States quietly turned the tide of events against Goodluck Jonathan’s presidency, Nigeria’s ruling All Progressives Congress might now face the same foreign policy playbook it earlier applauded.

Only this time, the moral lecture from Washington is not about corruption or electoral reform it’s about the killing of Christians and the alleged genocide unfolding across Nigeria’s northern states.

The American government has spoken with growing urgency about what it calls the “systemic persecution of Christians” in Nigeria.

Human rights reports have once again deluged the Western press on many fronts, painting a grim picture of a government totally indifferent to the daily massacre of innocent believers.

The rhetoric sounds familiar. Once, these words were leveled against Jonathan; today, they are directed squarely at President Bola Tinubu with proves.

Just as in 2015, the accusations are coming not from a whispering fringe but from the very heart of US policy circles, with President Donald Trump himself threatening action and sanctions if the Nigerian government “continues to allow Christian blood to flow.”

It’s a story the world has heard before. And those who helped write the last chapter are finding themselves suddenly recast in its sequel.

A Familiar Script, New Targets

In 2014 and into the beginning of 2015, the insecurity crisis in Nigeria was framed almost exclusively by the U.S. and its Western allies as a matter of Jonathan’s inability to combat Boko Haram.

The media portrayal became unrelenting: a weak, indecisive head of state who had lost control of his country. Washington hardened its tone; aid slowed; military cooperation became conditional.

Human rights groups, many of them funded by Western partners, amplified reports of abuses committed by the government and soft-pedaled the insurgents’ atrocities.

That pressure helped cement a narrative that Nigeria needed change. And the APC then a bold, insurgent opposition seized it.

Every press briefing, every policy statement echoed the international language of accountability, reform, and security. When Washington frowned at Jonathan, APC smiled.

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Now the shoe is on the other foot.

Under Tinubu, the United States has resurrected the same human-rights-driven moral argument.

Only this time, the story isn’t about Boko Haram’s war; it’s about genocide against Christians. The framing is powerful, emotional, and politically dangerous.

It strikes at the moral legitimacy of the government and directly threatens its international standing.

Trump’s Return and the Faith Narrative

Donald Trump’s renewed political momentum has only added fuel to the fire.

No American president before him had linked U.S. foreign policy with evangelical Christian activism.

His administration once classified Nigeria as a “country of particular concern” over religious freedom violations-a diplomatic scar that has never quite healed.

Now, in his post-presidency resurgence, Trump’s rhetoric has turned harsher. He openly accuses African governments of “complicity in Christian killings” and vows to “act differently” if given the chance.

In conservative U.S. circles, Nigeria has become a symbol a Christian nation under siege, betrayed by its own leaders.

For Tinubu, that framing is politically explosive. It doesn’t just threaten sanctions or frozen aid; it chips away at Nigeria’s diplomatic capital. If the rhetoric crystallizes, then it could influence how Western nations approach Nigeria in the lead-in to the 2027 general election much like it did in Jonathan’s twilight years.

APC is Tasting Its Own Medicine

There’s poetic justice at play in all this: the APC once leveraged Western disapproval of Jonathan’s government to galvanize its rise to power.

The same U.S.-driven human rights language that was used in undermining Jonathan’s image has now returned to shine its spotlight on the APC’s own failures.

The current wave of reports complete with grim photographs, survivor testimonies, and faith-based outrage echo the very tactics once used to discredit the previous administration.

Then, the APC presented itself as the reformist alternative, the patriotic defender of the persecuted.

Today, it is the accused scrambling to explain why so many Christians have been killed without consequence.

If the whispers from Washington grow louder, the consequences may be very large: visa bans, economic sanctions, and the suspension of military aid-all familiar tools once used to corner Jonathan-could find use again.

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In this regard, Tinubu’s foreign policy team seems aware of this risk; however, the domestic crisis has already overtaken diplomacy.

Regime Change or Religious Politics?

That is the question hanging over every conversation in Abuja’s power circles now: Is the U.S. pushing for a regime change or merely signaling moral disapproval?

To some political insiders, this feels like déjà vu: When Washington began raising alarms about Boko Haram a decade ago, it wasn’t just humanitarian concern it was soft power at work. By 2015, international sentiment had so completely turned against Jonathan that his legitimacy seemed unsalvageable.

Today, a similar pattern emerges. Trump’s open talk of sanctions, coupled with congressional lobbying from Christian rights groups, suggests a coordinated ideological agenda.

It’s not necessarily about Tinubu himself; it’s about controlling the narrative of who speaks for “Christian freedom” in Africa’s largest democracy.

And that’s where things get even more complicated: Tinubu is a Muslim from the Southwest who fronts a government often accused of freezing out Christian voices, particularly in the north.

The optics are grim. And in an era where Washington’s moral compass so frequently aligns with religious activism, optics can matter just about as much as policy.

The 2027 Factor: Lessons From 2015

Nigeria’s next general election looms like a thundercloud. The international narrative forming today will almost certainly influence how that election is perceived.

If the U.S. and its allies adopt a hardline view of Tinubu’s government as “complicit in Christian persecution,” opposition parties could find unexpected sympathy abroad just as the APC did in 2015.

That is the kind of moral framing that shapes everything from election monitoring reports to media coverage and international funding channels.

In an increasingly globalized information space, perception is power. And if Washington’s tone hardens, Tinubu could find his government diplomatically isolated by 2026.

The irony is almost Shakespearean: the very foreign playbook that elevated the APC’s rise could now script its downfall.

Faith, Power, and the Price of Moral Politics

Nigeria’s tragedy is that the faith question-Muslim versus Christian-keeps reappearing not as a unifying struggle but as a political weapon.

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The United States too plays its part in this global moral theatre, amplifying whichever story best fits the conscience of the moment.

The US invoked humanitarian sympathy to pressure Jonathan when Boko Haram was terrorizing the northeast; the very same US moral conscience now insists on action as killings of Christians proliferate under Tinubu-as if the core insecurity had not outlived governments, tribes, and regimes.

For Nigeria, however, the danger is the persistence of external moral narratives ordering domestic politics.

The killing of innocent Christians is indeed a horror that warrants justice, but when that tragedy becomes the scaffolding for foreign political influence, the victims become nothing more than a diplomatic talking point.

History’s Iron Hand

If history teaches anything, it is that political alliances built on foreign moral endorsement rarely end well.

Once, the APC celebrated America’s cold disapproval of Jonathan’s government as proof that change was needed. Now, it has to live with the uncomfortable truth that moral diplomacy is no one’s permanent friend.

These are the same Western partners who once framed the APC as reformers but now paint them as negligent rulers presiding over silent slaughter.

The tone in Washington has changed. Tinubu’s circle feels it. If the trend continues, the 2027 election might echo 2015 in ways Nigeria is not ready for.

Because when America starts mixing faith, foreign policy, and moral superiority, it rarely stops at rhetoric.

A Prophecy of Politics

Perhaps that is Nigeria’s self-fulfilling prophecy: that every government that rises on the wings of moral outrage will someday have to face its own reckoning. For the APC, that reckoning may already be underway.

The U.S. didn’t change its playbook-only its targets. And in the quiet corridors of Abuja, one question lingers like a ghost from 2015: If America helped open the door to power, what happens when it decides to close it again?

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Between Obasanjo’s Lies and Kalu’s Bible: Nigeria’s Crisis of Truth

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By Vitus Ozoke

There are lies, and then there are Nigerian political lies – those brazen acts of verbal vandalism that not only dishonor the nation’s collective memory but also mock our shared morality. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s latest attempt to rewrite history concerning his failed third-term bid clearly falls into the latter category.

 

That Obasanjo barely eighteen years after the event, would casually deny the obvious tells you everything about the poverty of truth in Nigeria. That a man whose words carry weight would dismiss his own overreach so nonchalantly reveals how endangered truth has become in Nigeria. Obasanjo’s third-term project was not just a rumor. It was a calculated, consistent, and coordinated campaign that consumed the nation’s political oxygen between 2005 and 2006. It sought to stretch the Constitution like elastic to fit one man’s narcissistic ambition.

 

Olusegun Obasanjo didn’t just seek a third term – he actively fought for it. It dominated the final years of his presidency, divided the National Assembly, strained his party, the PDP, and sparked both domestic outrage and international concern. His ambition was halted not by humility or principles, but by resistance – from internal rebellion and the pressure of global democratic opinion. It failed – not because Obasanjo relented, but because the resistance was fierce: from within his party, from the press, from civil society, and from wary foreign allies. Obasanjo didn’t walk away; he was pushed away. That is history. That is the truth that Obasanjo can only retell but not revise.

 

Yet here we are, nearly two decades later, listening to Obasanjo tell the nation that he never sought what we all saw him fight for.

He speaks as if the witnesses to that constitutional siege are all buried, as if Uche Chukwumerije’s death took the last testimony with it. But no, not everyone who watched that sordid drama is gone. Some of us remember.

The ghosts of that betrayal still walk among us. History’s witnesses still breathe.

The arrogance of Obasanjo’s revisionism is the same arrogance that once believed Nigeria could be bent to one man’s will.

So yes, it is refreshing that Senator Orji Uzor Kalu stepped forward to challenge Obasanjo’s lies. But it is tragic that in doing so, Kalu created a second wound – one of hypocrisy so thick it could drown the truth itself.

Kalu, in what should have been a moral correction, instead performed a tragic parody of virtue. In his interview with Seun Okinbaloye on Channels TV, Kalu – with all the solemnity of a man invoking divine witness – declared:

“I told him [Obasanjo at the Villa] that I am a committed Christian. That I have taken an oath with the Bible that we will do 8 years… Let President Obasanjo not annoy the gods of our land, because he wanted third term, and they stopped him from going to be third term.”

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The irony is intense. The hypocrisy borders on the theatrical. For Orji Uzor Kalu – a man whose time as governor of Abia State remains a case study in plunder and decadence, and whose name has been engraved on the ledgers of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) – to call himself a “committed Christian” is an insult not only to religion but also to reason.

It’s the very definition of sacrilege. It’s not just ironic; it’s offensive. It’s as if corruption now seeks refuge beneath the shadow of the cross.

Let the truth be told: Orji Uzor Kalu cannot suddenly appear as the defender of divine order.

Kalu’s political record does not reflect commitment to God or country; it is a litany of self-enrichment and misrule. He may have taken an oath on the Bible, but his actions have been a standing violation of everything that sacred book teaches.

A man who cried his way out of prison for corruption cannot now anoint himself the defender of constitutional virtue. When Kalu says he told Obasanjo not to “annoy the gods of our land,” one wonders which gods he meant – for certainly not the God of justice, truth, or accountability.

Kalu then delivered what he thought was a seminal sermon on democracy: “The beauty of constitutional democracy is time limit. If you are in democracy and the Constitution says 8 years, nobody, anybody who wants to go more than 8 years in our country is asking God what will you do? And it’s not right.”

Here, one must pause and ask: when did Orji Uzor Kalu discover the “beauty of constitutional democracy”? For a man who has spent his career defiling every democratic principle – through vote buying, political manipulation, and moral compromise – this sudden evangelism for democracy’s sanctity is as laughable as it is insulting.

No, Senator, the beauty of constitutional democracy is not found in term limits. It is rooted in truth, justice, and service – virtues that individuals like you have often betrayed.

The beauty of constitutional democracy resides in electoral integrity – in the sanctity of elections, in the humility of leadership, in respecting the will of the people, in upholding the rule of law, and in faithfully managing public resources – not in the convenient piety of politicians who discover God only when out of power.

The real test of democracy is not how swiftly a person leaves office, but how honorably they serve while in office.

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By that standard, Kalu failed. His years as governor left Abia State poorer and disillusioned.

His reemergence as senator is a testament not to repentance but to Nigeria’s broken political morality – a system that rewards notoriety and punishes conscience.

The truth is, Kalu does not understand democracy because he has never practiced it. He has only survived within its ruins. His career is a testimony to the corrosion of public morality – a man who treats conviction as an inconvenience and power as inheritance.

So, when Kalu lectures the nation about “the gods of our land,” we must ask which altar he stands upon because this is the same man who, by his own public conduct, has repeatedly desecrated both altar and constitution.

So, what exactly did we witness on national television? Not a defense of truth, but a contest between two deceptions.

Obasanjo and Kalu’s interviews are not a clash between truth and falsehood; they are a contest between two shades of deception. One man, Obasanjo, lied about the past; the other, Kalu, lied about himself.

One rewrites history; the other pretends to embody virtue. One denied his ambition; the other denied his sins. Together, they staged a grotesque drama – Nigeria’s theater of sacred hypocrisy.

They form the perfect portrait of Nigeria’s political decay – a land where truth is negotiable, integrity is theatrical, and religion is weaponized for self-cleansing.

The tragedy is that both men understand the power of their words, and both depend on a national culture that has forgotten how to be outraged.

In a country where corruption and deceit are normalized, truth no longer shocks; it just amuses.

And this is the deeper corruption. Obasanjo lies because he can. Kalu preaches because we allow him. It’s easy to laugh at Obasanjo’s denial of a third term or Kalu’s self-righteous sermons, but these are not harmless moments of comedy.

They expose something darker – a nation where public figures no longer fear contradiction because truth itself no longer carries consequences. In Nigeria, moral shame has lost its sting.

In societies where memory still has muscle, such performances would provoke outrage. But in Nigeria, the moral stage is vacant. The audience no longer demands truth; we simply watch for entertainment.

The same political class that wrecked the ship of state now argues over who saw the iceberg first – and expects applause.

Obasanjo and Kalu are mirror images of the same political culture: one that believes history is pliable and conscience expendable.

Their separate interviews were not just political performances; they were moral confessions – confessions of how much we have declined as a people, that these men can speak so openly and expect to be believed.

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Let us be clear: Obasanjo’s third-term bid was real. It was corrupt, coercive, and contemptible. Kalu’s claim to moral guardianship through his invocation of God as a shield for his own record is as obscene as it is deceitful.

The two interviews – one self-absolving, the other self-anointing – expose not only the moral decay of Nigeria’s elite but also the collective amnesia of its people.

Together, they remind Nigeria why it remains trapped – because even when we talk about truth, we do so through the mouths of men who have long divorced it. Both men are symptoms of a larger disease: the collapse of shame as a public virtue.

In Nigeria, we no longer resign over dishonor; we run campaigns on it. The worse one’s record, the louder the sermon.

The most sobering truth is that between Obasanjo’s lies and Kalu’s hypocrisy, Nigeria is left with no moral witness.

The guardians of memory have instead become its murderers, and, once again, the Nigerian public is left as witnesses and victims – listening to lies dressed as testimony, to hypocrisy masquerading as principles.

So, while Obasanjo revises his history and Kalu recites his Bible, the nation trudges on – cynical, jaded, weary, and accustomed to deception.

We are ruled not by leaders but by storytellers, each twisting and rewriting the same tragedy for his own benefit.

It should terrify us that in 2025, the truth about 2006 can still be debated – not because evidence is missing, but because liars have louder microphones. Maybe Obasanjo thinks he was the only one to survive that era.

Maybe Kalu believes his piety will erase his past. But history, like conscience, never truly sleeps. It may rest, but it always remembers the sound of betrayal.

For now, all we can do is watch this theatre unfold – two men, each pretending to be the lesser evil, both confirming why Nigeria’s democracy drags behind like a wounded animal.

The tragedy isn’t that Obasanjo lied. The tragedy is that when he did, the only person available to correct him was Orji Uzor Kalu – a man whose entire career is an argument against truth itself.

So, for now, let’s just sit back and watch this epic Nigerian sequel titled “Historical Lies and the Histrionics of Liars.”

And in the end, perhaps the gods of our land – the true ones, of truth – will rise in rage and revenge and not be mocked forever.

Dr. Vitus Ozoke is a lawyer, human rights activist, and public commentator based in the United States.

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