Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, on Saturday April 30th, shared the journey
that led him to become the Vice President of Nigeria. Speaking at the
Platform Abuja, Osinbajo narrated how his drive for integrity and
forthrightness led him and some others to form a group of concerned
professionals that will speak against corruption. According to
Vanguard,
Osinbajo also narrated his clash with the Abacha government and how
providence brought him and Buhari together as running mates
“Permit me to begin (the speech) with a story about myself. All my adult
life, I have always believed that our country was performing far below
its potentialities, in practically every aspect of life. In governance,
corruption was always so outrageous that it made the majority poor and
development almost impossible. Law and order was always a problem,
usually no consequence for wrong-doing. Doing business and even our
daily existence have always been difficult, no power, no fuel. Getting
anything done in government establishments, a nightmare of delay and
extortion. So as a conscious decision, I joined various pressure groups.
From human rights groups to good governance advocacy groups. In 1995, I
co- founded an organization called Integrity, an anti-corruption
organization. I joined various think tanks and professional groups,
including the Concerned Professionals. Under the Abacha regime we
Concerned Professionals, one day gathered at Yaba Bus-stop and some were
thoroughly beaten by Police and the Army. From that day on, people
disappeared and did not show up again. I served as a two-term Attorney-
General in Lagos State and pushed reforms in governance and the justice
sector, I believed and continued to believe that the Nigerian people
deserve better lives. In December 2014, the unexpected happened; I was
nominated as Vice Presidential candidate to then General Muhammadu
Buhari.”
Osinbajo recalled that he was still a young man when Buhari became head of State
“As a young university lecturer, then I was impressed by his, President
Buhari’s single-minded fight against corruption and indiscipline. There
was a serious war against indiscipline. For the first time, government
held corrupt officers accountable. 30 years later, providence brought
us together. A retired general now and a Professor of Law. We both
believed that our country needed to change. We argued about how and what
needed to be done. We reached consensus on many of the major issues.
Certainly our country need a different set of values; a new way of doing
business; an economy that is able to give opportunity to young people
to work in their chosen professions and to build strong and profitable
businesses. We knew that we had to provide social protection for the
poorest and the most vulnerable. We recognised that innovation and
change will be key, and that we must implement and not just talk about
diversification of our economy. So we led our party’s campaign on that
single, simple, but profound word, CHANGE! Nearly a year on- there are
many problems and many have asked where is the change? Is this the
change we voted for? Even some fifth columnists in our midst have
suggested bring back corruption! “But let me just say here for the
records that the government of Muhammadu Buhari is completely and
irrevocably committed to change".
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