My life with Mandela –Obasanjo
A
former Nigerian President, Olusegun Obasanjo, on Friday joined other
world leaders to pay tributes to the late ex-South African president,
Nelson Mandela.
Obasanjo in a statement he read to newsmen at his Hilltop Mansion in Abeokuta on Friday said Mandela lived an exemplary life.
Obasanjo relived various encounters he
had with Mandela saying that his style of leadership helped South Africa
to overcome the pains of apartheid. He described Mandela’s death as a
loss to his family “who would miss a caring patriarch, the people of
South Africa, who would miss a guide, Africa who would miss a role model
and the world who would miss a leader.
The statement reads in part: “One of my
earliest contacts with Nelson Mandela was in February 1986 when I
visited him at Polls-moor Prison in my capacity as Co-Chairman of the
Commonwealth Eminent Persons Group on Southern Africa. He dressed
defiantly in ANC belt and reminded me of his visit to Nigeria in 1962.
Though appalled by Apartheid, I left his
prison cell deeply convinced that the history of South Africa and,
indeed, Africa would be worse off and would not be complete if the
purpose for which he was in jail – elimination of apartheid – did not
end for him to be in a position to lead his country from racial and
tribal division into a rainbow united society.
“As we discussed during the visit,
Mandela mentioned in passing that ‘if he got out of prison’…I
interrupted him that ‘it was not if, but when…’ From that moment on, I
resolved to do everything humanly possible, personally and working with
my group to facilitate the release of Nelson Mandela from jail because
South Africa and the world needed Mandela to be alive and released to be
able to give South Africa the smooth transition it would need from an
apartheid system to popular participation by all South Africans in their
own governance.
“The eventual release of Nelson Mandela
from prison was inevitable. On a visit to South Africa, I called on
Mandela after he was released from prison on Sunday, 11 February 1990.
He pulled me out of the hotel and made me to stay with him and his
family in their house in Soweto.
“During the first non-racial democratic
elections in 1994, I was on election observation assignment in South
Africa and was there for his campaign and when he, Nelson Mandela, cast
his own vote in a post-apartheid South Africa.
“He was devoid of bitterness or anger
against anybody except he hated apartheid system. He won the election
and more importantly led South Africa to the extent that the country was
able to cast aside its apartheid legacy and take its place in comity of
nations.
“Certain that his task was completed,
Nelson Mandela modestly refused to seek re-election after his first term
in office as his presidency elapsed. I still recall his pragmatic words
when he said to me ‘Olu, show me a place in the world where a man of 80
years is running the affairs of his country.
‘This, to me, reflects an unequalled
sense of modesty for a man who spent 27 of the prime years of his life
in prison for a just cause and still kept a calm and peaceful
disposition to those who took away his freedom for all those years of
his life.
“The last time I saw him was about two
years ago. I went to visit him at his Johannesburg residence. His health
had deteriorated somewhat but he was still very alert but did not talk
much during our discussions; Graca did more of the talking.
“As the whole world pays tribute to
Madiba, I join them in celebrating the life of a man who raised the
beacon of human struggle to lofty heights of nobility and whose life is
an example of what we should all aspire for. His struggle and our
struggles remain the same and as we all seek for answers to deal with
today’s challenges.
“In all situations, he lived nobly and
died in nobility. Let us bear in mind that we all have the opportunity
to act nobly in whatever position we find ourselves. When we teach our
children the lessons for tomorrow, let us be reminded of the lessons
Mandela gave the world in forgiveness and forbearance. May his soul rest
in perfect peace.”
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