https://37bloggers.blogspot.com/2016/04/i-dont-regret-anything-i-did-as.html
I don’t regret anything I did as governor –Gbenga Daniel
Former governor of Ogun State, Otunba
Gbenga Daniel, who marked his 60th birthday recently, shares his life
experiences in this interview with ADEOLA BALOGUN
When you left office as governor, did you find it difficult to adapt to your normal way of life before you became governor?
Not at all. When I was governor, I
remained myself. I wasn’t living extraordinarily. I kept my office here
and once in a while, I would come here and tell my secretary that she
should ensure that they dust and keep the place clean. So when I left as
governor, I didn’t find it difficult to acclimatise and there wasn’t
any issue. I just resumed with my life where I stopped eight years
earlier.
So, are you now fully back or you pop in once in a while maybe just to supervise or something?
Before I went into office as governor, I
was the Chairman and Managing Director, but in my absence, the
positions were separated. On my return, we now have the Managing
Director, I am now the Chairman.
I do come in here to give advice and to support, because this is my profession and I enjoy the work.
Do you still have the intention of running for an elective office again?
I have always explained that in this
country, the maximum anybody runs for is governorship. Above that, it is
really by invitation. I have run for governorship twice and that is
the maximum anybody can run for. In Nigeria, it may appear as if you are
running for a position but when you look carefully, it doesn’t work
that way. Some powerful people would have reached a consensus somewhere
and invite you to come and run, not that you would have decided to run.
All the people that have tried to run on their own for the post of
either the President or the Vice President in the past have not been
successful in Nigeria, and if you know any one instance, please tell me.
Why were you very close to the late Professor Ayodele Awojobi?
As young, secondary school students, you
read several great people in history, you heard about them and you got
motivated and attracted to them. Awojobi was one Professor that I was
attracted to because of his capacity. It happened during our time that
young men gravitated towards people we had respect for. Some people
gravitated towards Professor Wole Soyinka and because of him went to
read literary arts; some would gravitate towards army generals but I was
more or less attracted to him. That’s what happened and he was the main
reason why I went to study Mechanical Engineering.
And when he died, how did you feel?
Oh, it was probably one of the saddest
days of my life. I was abroad in Germany then in 1984 when I heard that
he passed on. I did not believe initially until reality dawned on me
later that it was true. He was celebrated all over the world because
people knew his value and academic prowess even much more abroad than in
Nigeria. I watched the whole scenario on German television even at that
time. He remains even in death one of the greatest professors of
Mechanical Engineering with specialty in Mechanical Vibrations and
Automatic Controls in history and his contribution to the body of
knowledge in his chosen field remains indelible till date.
During your birthday on Sunday, there was praise worship for a couple of hours. Have you always been a man of God?
My father, His Grace Most Rev Abraham
Adebola Daniel JP was a clergy man; I was born and raised in the
vineyard of the Lord. So, it is in my gene to praise and worship God and
that is precisely why whatever I touch, the first thing I do is to
praise and thank God. And in any case, if you examine my life journey, I
do have more than enough reasons to praise the Lord. The Bible teaches
us that if you know how to give thanks, then God would multiply your
blessings.
I asked that question
because of some things that circulated around when you were governor
which were inconsistent with the life of a man of God, like some people
said you compelled them to take oath in the shrine and all of that.
They were all deliberately fabricated
lies by political opponents and orchestrated by the media; that is all.
They were tales by the moonlight, fictions by James Hardley Chase. Tales
formulated by political opponents and largely amplified by the media.
What shocked me however was that people even supposedly educated and
intelligent believed those tales.
When you were governor, particularly during your second term, controversy virtually became your second name…
No, quite on the contrary, principle was
my second name; it wasn’t controversy. It was about being principled.
There is just a minimum that I would not go beyond under any
circumstance based on my training and long cherished value systems. That
is what happened.
You were said to be a governor that did not tolerate argument or dissent.
That is the opposite of what I am. All
of that was media orchestration. Quite on the contrary, I remain a
democrat; quite on the contrary, what I enjoy most is if people can
come, sit with me and argue, I always respect superior argument and fall
in line. So that is precisely the opposite of who I am. I am very
comfortable in the company of highly intelligent and cerebral people.
Would you say that you were probably misunderstood then?
Deliberately so, all what happened then
is what I call deliberate falsehood, formulated by political opponents
and orchestrated by the media. I have described it correctly and I am
not joking: tales by the moonlight, fiction by James Hardley Chase. That
is how I think I can describe what happened. It was the exact opposite
of who I am and I cannot be any other thing. My father was a clergy man
and he didn’t run into it by accident. He started it as a teenager and
he remained like that until he passed on in 2011. I was a strong
Scripture Union member at the Baptist Boys High School, I became the
School Chaplain at a stage and I was a chorister and later the school
church organist. I have never at any time in my life and till date,
belonged to any cult or secret society. So, when would I begin to be all
those things I was accused of? When would I start to be the son of
Lucifer? ‘It is a tale told by idiots full of sound and fury signifying
nothing…’ if you permit me to quote from the Tragedy of Julius Caesar by
William Shakespeare.
You became a successful engineer at such a young age. If you were that successful, why did you dabble into politics?
Well, I also explained in one of my
recent interviews that the fact of the case is that there is so much
that’s required to be done to lift the generality of our people from the
shackles of poverty, and that there is a limit that can be done in the
framework of being in the private sector. The challenge we have in our
country is that public servants must use public service to accelerate
development to make things happen. My going into service was not about
me at all; if it was about me, like you said, I had no business there.
But I believed and still believe that we could seize the opportunity of
governance to turn around the society which we did to a large extent
and I am sure that even skeptics and critics in their quiet moments
would admit. Let me tell you something that somebody told me recently;
the person wasn’t from the state but he met one of my political
colleagues from the state, who confessed to him and said, ‘Look, that
guy(that is me), he did the right thing o, we were just telling lies
against him,’ a true confession. He said they were just telling lies
against me because I was becoming too strong and popular. A lot of that
happened during the time and to answer your question in a very
straightforward manner, basically, public service for a few of us is not
because there was something we were looking for but we wanted to change
the society and if you want to change the society, it’s all about
maintaining the minimum principles. And if you want to maintain the
minimum principle, you would not therefore go and dine with the sons of
Lucifer. If, for instance, that’s what people think politics is all
about, no. So when you insist that this is the minimum you will not go,
people will then say you are difficult.
With the benefit of the hindsight now, did you regret the decision?
No regret whatsoever. We met Ogun State
as a complete civil service state; it is now fairly one of the best
industrial locations you can go in this country; that was exactly what I
went to do there. Three Free Trade Zones, several Industrial Estates,
several housing estates, three new Stadia. etc. People were not going
to Ogun State before, now, everybody is now going there. And while I was
there, I had opportunity to put a few landmarks; I was able to prove
that things can be done effortlessly without breaking your nose, the way
we did our projects; we woke up the civil service, we computerized the
whole thing. God enabled us despite the paucity of funds, we were able
to build probably the best state secretariat any state can build in this
country; we were able to build probably the best NYSC camp anybody can
build in this country. With our little or no resources, we were able to
build three brand new stadiums; we were able to host the Junior World
Cup, the best National Sports Festival to date called Gateway Games; we
turned around tourism. Everything we did opened our eyes to areas where
hitherto nobody was paying attention to and everybody is now talking
about Ogun State.
Looking back, do you have regret for any decision you took as governor?
None. To the extent that at any point in
time when you take decision, you only take it within the limit of
information available to you. So I would say I have no regret for
decisions I took with what I had at my disposal at the time I took them.
I believe that I took the right decisions.
Because of your political
position, you probably took some decisions which ordinarily you would
not take. When you look back now, can you mention some of the decisions?
None, but if you remind me of any, I will be able to explain myself.
There was a time the Alake
of Egbaland made a genuine comment concerning the state of road
infrastructure which you were said to take as offence and you were said
to have wanted to remove him.
Oh really, why was he not removed? Was
he not removed because I was not governor then? You see, as the
governor, if I really wanted to remove him, he would have been removed.
There was never any intention to remove the Alake; that is not to say
that we couldn’t have disagreements, or misunderstandings and all of
that but the fact of the case is that I as a person have a lot of
respect for the institution of the traditional rulers including the
stool of the Alake of Egbaland. I revered them, respected them, promoted
them, built the Obas Complex, the first of its kind in Yorubaland.
Don’t forget that I also handed his instrument of office to him. I
approved his selection. I started the complete renovation of the palace,
so why should I begin to undo what I did? All Obas and Baales in Ogun
State are my genuine friends without exception. Go and research that.
In any case, as I said, these are parts
of the misinformation and manipulations that happened as a result of
political differences among some people during my administration. That
was not even a decision but mere speculation. People easily forget that I
led a full delegation of my cabinet to the palace of the Alake on a
courtesy visit to douse the unnecessary tension and with that visit, I
have closed that matter.
Chief Doja Adewolu, an elder
from OgunState once told me that it was the present governor, Senator
Ibikunle Amosun that actually took you to the former President Olusegun
Obasanjo when you wanted to be governor and actually put down money for
your political take off.
Well, these are some of the things I
would not want to talk about but to set the record straight, I think you
should tell Chief Adewolu that he probably had forgotten that I
attended the same school with Chief Obasanjo; we both attended the
Baptist Boys High School and to that extent, Chief Obasanjo is somebody I
had known as a young man and if I needed anybody to take me to him, it
wouldn’t definitely be Governor Amosun. People should also not forget
that I was privileged to host Chief Olusegun Obasanjo with my colleagues
in my Maryland residence in 1999 before the election and I am proud to
assert that we actually contributed our own widow’s mite to his election
even at that time. Chief Obasanjo came in the company with Otunba
Fasawe, Dr. Bode Kalejaiye and Kenny Martins amongst others. They are
all still alive. That is part of the lies I am talking about. Quite on
the contrary, people should not forget that while I was running for
governorship, Governor Amosun ran for Senate with our political
machinery called OGDCO and we cooperated effectively then. If you are
talking about Amosun providing money, I think Chief Adewolu was making a
big mistake and he was talking about something he doesn’t know anything
about.
I will however be happy if he is able to make public any proof of his assertions.
Now that you are out of office, I am sure you have met and probably made up with some of these people.
There is no issue; it was politics.
Chief Adewolu wanted his kinsman to be governor and his kinsman has
become governor. So, God has answered their prayers. I cannot be
governor again; God has answered my prayers, I have been governor for
eight years and God has answered his own prayers too. His kinsman has
become governor even though in the process, they told loads of lies
against me, but that is all right, no problem. It’s the way God desires.
My Bible teaches me that a man cannot attain anything if it’s not
ordained from Heaven, so I am at peace.
What would you say is the priciest thing to you?
Ha, I have not thought about that but I
guess that if you are talking about human beings, I think I have a lot
of value for my wife.