Atedo Peterside, founder of Stanbic IBTC Bank Plc and Anap Foundation, says the Nigerian elite may “normalise” deceit if they have their way.
Speaking on Sunday Politics, a programme on Channels TV,
Peterside said the Nigerian elite need to speak the truth always and not treat
serious matters with levity.
Peterside was reacting to the recently released
autobiography titled, ‘A Journey In Service’ by Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida
(IBB).
The book chronicled the events before and after the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election.
In the memoir, Babangida, among several revelations, said he
was in Katsina when the annulment of the election, won by MKO Abiola of the
Social Democratic Party (SDP), was announced by the press secretary of his
second-in-command without his knowledge or permission.
He said he later discovered that the forces against the June
12 election were led by Sani Abacha, his chief of defence staff who later
became military head of state.
Peterside said Nigeria needs the emergence of elders who
will speak the truth and show the younger generation the right path.
“I’m not here to indict anybody but I think if we are not
careful, the Nigerian elite would normalise deceit or fraud and things like
that. They would normalise all sorts of things. That is why some people have
pointed out that enough is enough. Let’s draw the line somewhere. There are
some issues you cannot joke with,” Peterside said.
“The other thing I want to explain is that, very recently,
we lost two very respected elder statesmen. People who showed examples in terms
of standing for the truth repeatedly.
“When you hear something from Chief Ayo Adebanjo, you can
take it to the bank. When you hear something from chief Edwin Clark, you can
take it to the bank. Two of them passed on very recently. I served at the
national conference with both of them. We were together in Abuja in 2014. We
were delegates.
“So, we have to be careful because elder statemen like that
who helped to set the right values for some of our young stars in terms of
standing for something. Always telling the truth and so on.
“We have to make sure that a different group of elders also
appear to fill that vacuum — stand for the truth. Tell the same story the same
way. Tell the whole truth that would set them free. Because at the end of the
day, it is a struggle for the soul of the nation.
“When IBB annulled that election on June 12. That was the
first time we had mobile phones. I voted on my street in Victoria Island. We
saw the results coming from all over the country except Taraba state. I was in
my 30s. I knew what happened. I was among the people that came out after the
annulment to say we can’t do this.
“Interestingly, one of the articles I wrote then. I have
never heard anybody use that expression. I sat in my house and wrote it because
there was no internet. I called it the ghost of June 12. What I was writing
then was that June 12 would be like a ghost and it would haunt some people
forever.”
Peterside added that the book launch “was the ghost of June
12 haunting some people and it is still haunting them, unfortunately”.