How I Was Asked to Deliver Osun to PDP – Ex-IGP Suleiman Abba
In
his first tell-all interview since his sack as IGP in 2015, Suleiman
Abba has revealed why he was given the boot by the then President
Goodluck Jonathan. He gave Daily Trust on Sunday a rare peek into some
of the dirty jobs he was asked to do and why he believes that the
appointment of an IGP should not be the business of the Presidency
alone, among many other issues.
You have maintained a very
low profile since you were relieved of your duties during the last
administration. What has informed your silence?
First and
foremost, welcome to the headquarters of Fasaha Solicitors, which is a
law firm I chair. It is also the office where Kany Computer Technologies
is domiciled. We also have Kany Aviation International Limited all, of
which I chair, with their head offices here. That can give you a bit of
what I have been doing after service.
But before we come back to
that for more details, I think you asked a very important question: Why
the quiet? It is in our training and character as police officers to
hear more and speak less; that is one of the guiding principles.
Furthermore,
because of the very high sense of discipline instilled in me right from
home, coupled with my training as a police officer, I have also learnt
to go by my training. This is, perhaps, why I have been quiet, but that
doesn’t mean that we are not interested in what is going on in the
country. I have been following with keen interest. It is my hope that
God will continue to give me the strength to be interested in the
development of my dear country, which I served in the management of
crime for good 31 years. Let me also say that perhaps until there is no
strength in me, I will continue to serve my country.
The
circumstances leading to your removal were rather controversial as the
announcement was made on Twitter. How did you receive it?
Believe
me, I have always counted myself lucky. I think because of the little
background I gave you about the strength of discipline in me, both
personal and professional, I received my sack as a normal development. I
was not shocked for a reason that I knew it would happen. Right from
the time I started work as Inspector General of Police, I knew that I
may not reach the date of my retirement, which would have been 2019, by
which time I would have been 35 years in service and 60 years of age. I
am saying this because the very first week I took over, we had the
elections in Ekiti; that was August 2014. Arrangements had been made for
the election by my predecessor and I think it was the same team that
also did the Osun election, it was the same AIG.
One of the
leading stalwarts in the PDP then said to me: “IG (you know I was acting
then) deliver Osun to us and we will confirm you quickly.” I was
shocked! That was when I knew that I may not last long in the office.
Immediately, I said to myself, “How could I deliver when I am not an
electorate? The voters are the ones to deliver, my own was to protect
the whole process.” Of course I said to myself that what happened to one
of my predecessors (may his soul rest in peace), Adamu Suleiman, was
going to happen to me, maybe I would never be confirmed. He was
Inspector General of Police and till he left office he was not
confirmed.
So that is my approach; I accept things the way they
come. I said to myself that I was going to leave that office without
confirmation; but then, I went to Osun and did what I was supposed to
do. Of course, having made up my mind that I wasn’t going to take the
dictates of someone on what I had been doing for decades, I went to
Osun, addressed the police officers who were very cheerful because they
were seeing their IGP for the first time. I told them to go and do what
the law protect the electorate, all other stakeholders, INEC officials,
observers, and of course, any other person that had the right to be
around the polling areas, collation areas.
I also told them to
go and protect the outcome of the election itself. I warned them also
that if they allowed themselves to commit any offence against the
electoral act, their punishment would be double because they would lose
their jobs and may be charged to court. They heeded my warning and did
exactly what was expected of them and the outcome was that a winner
emerged. Apart from that, the then INEC chairman, Professor Attahiru
Jega and I addressed the stakeholders, including the contestants, and I
assured them that this IG they were seeing had come to do the right
thing, which was to tell my personnel to do the right thing and to
assure stakeholders that the police would protect the process before,
during and after the polls.
That was exactly what happened. From
then on I knew that, perhaps, I was not going to get confirmed or last
long in office. So it didn’t come to me as a surprise at all. I also
think it was a blessing from the Almighty God, so I wasn’t shocked or
disturbed.
I lost an office I should have held for four years,
but that was my destiny. And that was why I refused to go to court, even
when people were prompting me to do so.
Some of your
associates were reported to have advised you to leave the country
following your removal, for your own security. Were you under threat at
the time?
I will say you are right. It wasn’t only my
associates, anybody that had interest in my life and activities had
expressed to me that I should be careful. In any case, there were
threats, even from high places.
How were you threatened after they were done with you as IGP?
It
is only a few people that can get annoyed by somebody’s action and
forget it after, perhaps, taking whatever action they would have taken. I
want to believe that for threats to have come, even after the action,
was an indication that whatever reason that made them to remove me from
office was out of annoyance. This is because I was not even given the
chance to express myself, which to me is an act of injustice. In justice
you listen before you act. Whatever white and dramatised lies that were
said against me as an IGP, one would have expected that I would be
called to defend myself before any action would be taken. But I leave it
to the members of the public to judge whether there was justice or not.
All those reasons I heard later on were nothing but white lies.
What were the reasons then?
Well,
the reason given to the public was that the police was undisciplined.
That was the official reason. If I were only about nine months in office
and I could lead the police to conduct themselves in the most
disciplined manner ever, that can tell you whether or not indiscipline
could have been a good reason to remove me from office.
But did you heed the advice of your associates to leave the country after leaving office?
No!
I had time to sit down and reflect properly and decide what to do with
my life. Remember, we had just finished the most tedious election; an
election that everybody believed the country was going to disintegrate,
but we successfully prevented that. Of course, I left the country a
week thereafter.
Can one say you went on self-imposed exile?
I
didn’t go on exile. I wasn’t a politician to have gone on exile. People
who go on exile are those who commit an offence or people who the
government was after or those who lost an election. I didn’t lose
anything. In fact, I was the one offended, so there was no way the issue
of going on exile would apply here.
Were you requested to compromise the 2015 general elections as you were asked in the case of Osun?
Absolutely.
Let me put it to you in a way that you would understand and perhaps now
see the justification for my action. As AIG, I chaired the committee
that planned the security of the 2015 elections. In the report we came
out with we emphasized that police officers should be sensitised enough
to do what is expected of them, to distance themselves from experiences
where the police get accused after every national election the police
help the party in power to manipulate the result. So when I became the
Inspector General of Police and with the elections about six months
ahead, the first thing I did was to begin the implementation of that
report, particularly the sensitisation of officers. In doing that, I
addressed senior police officers and asked them to sensitise those
within their commands, heads of departments, commissioners of police and
others. down to the constable. A commissioner of police, for example,
would go back to his state, address his DPOs, and the DPOs in turn would
conduct lectures routinely. I was emphatic that every police officer
should be impartial and non-partisan. In that address, someone went to
the Villa and told them what the IGP was doing and one of the big shots
there called me - and in a form of query - saying, “IGP why are you
telling your officers to go and be non-partisan while you should be
telling them to help us.” Of course, they knew there was no way I could
do a thing like that. He even advised that if you cannot talk to them in
general why don’t you call the commissioners one by one. Of course, we
went ahead and did the right thing and the result was obvious; the
police was impartial and non-partisan.
Are you implying that there were demands to make you look the other way while electoral malpractices were being perpetrated?
I don’t think there was any way for them to put it than the way they did. It is all encompassing.
The ruling PDP then accused you of working in the interest of the APC, which was then in the opposition…?
I
am hearing this from you for the first time. What I heard was that
after the election I became close to the president-elect and even went
to the airport to receive him. In any case, the public could judge if
there was anything like that.
Did you try to go close to the then president-elect?
The
only time I met the president-elect was like all the other service
chiefs did, to go and congratulate him. It was a common agreement that
we were going to congratulate him. I attended the presentation of
certificate to the president-elect. Let me tell you why I did that. One,
it is only the police that had a seat at that function. Let me also
draw your attention to the fact that if you check the electoral act, the
police are clearly mentioned as the custodians of security of the
elections. Now the IGP had a seat and I appointed at that time,
according to tradition, an AIG to represent me in all the activities of
the collation, but when it got to the peak I went. In any case, if it
was the then PDP candidate that won, I am sure if I didn’t even go there
a bigger query would have come. So if we are talking about an election
where a candidate that wins legitimately should get all the support,
then I don’t see any reason why anybody should query me for attending
those functions. Secondly, I went because I wasn’t sure if the
desperation shown by those who wanted to disrupt the election or the
results of the election would also attempt again.
I wanted to be
there personally to take over the command of what was happening because
in earlier efforts I was giving directives from my office. So there
were good reasons for me to be there, and that was why I was there. Even
while I was there, I never went to the president-elect to say
congratulations. He was sitting on the far right of the sitting
arrangement while I was sitting on the far left. So as I said earlier,
it was just a gimmick; lies that were properly dramatised to sway the
minds of people to call me what I wasn’t. I have never been a traitor to
anyone and at that age I couldn’t be a traitor. I only did what was
expected of me and I will repeat it uncountable times if I get the
opportunity to do so (to protect the law and do what is expected of me.)
Talking
about people attempting to thwart the process, one is reminded of the
drama that played out during the collation of the presidential result.
There were also speculations that security agencies heard about
something being planned to stop the results from being announced. Was
the police in the picture of such a ploy?
Yes, the police was in
the picture. And thank God the police were in the picture because it did
what was expected of it. It disrupted the efforts.
How?
Let’s
talk about the one you saw because there were other efforts the police
under my leadership halted. If I may put it in a general form, the
police in 2015 stopped another June 12 from happening. What you say was a
clear indication that there were deliberate efforts to disrupt the
results and, perhaps, bring about chaos that only God knows where it
would have led us to. My happiness is that we were able to stop it from
happening. Coming to your question, as to whether the police had prior
information; yes the police had and we didn’t share it with anyone. This
is because the police had reached a stage where, with information and
efforts to disrupt the election, we were able to halt it. There was no
need for me to trust anyone again. It is true I had prior information
about what you saw that day. And that is because one of us who
participated in the meeting where the disruption was hatched came and
informed me. When he informed me, I immediately knew what to do. We
already had men on ground, so we blocked all routes leading to the
Conference Centre and only allowed those with cause to be there, like
observers and party leaders. In any case, they were even there before
that scene. We reinforced our personnel outside and inside the
International Conference Centre, which served in many ways.
One
of the ways was that the people who were mobilised to come in and
demonstrate around the centre could not get access. Secondly, those who
were in the Conference Centre, like the one you saw protesting, had no
supporters. The people who were to demonstrate were expecting the police
to assist them by releasing teargas so that there would be serious
chaos in the centre so that they would be able to take away the results
that had been brought so far. Only God knows what they would have done
to the senior officials of the INEC that were administering the
collation.
A lot of questions have been asked as to why Orubebe
who spearheaded the drama at the International Conference Centre was not
arrested by the police.
Let me tell you why. I had worked in the
Presidential Villa for four years. I was in charge of presidential
escort as a mobile commandant. I was an aide de camp to the head of
state for almost three years. I am also a lawyer; and I had served in
the Police Force for over a decade, so I should know where power
belongs. I was talking with my AIG and was the one who directed him to
prevent that person from doing what he wanted to do, but at the same
time to be careful. Only God knows if he was arrested and handcuffed
like you are saying; maybe that was what they were expecting so that
their plan ‘B’ could take place.
Did they have a plan ‘B’?
I
don’t know, but normally, people who want to do serious things like
that usually have alternatives, so maybe they had a plan ‘B’. Mature
actions may have also prevented the plan ‘B’. I was more experienced in
knowing where power belongs.
In any case, I made the best
decision because no problem came out of it. Maybe if we had acted that
way, their next plan would have come in. Who knows I could have been
sacked the same day. Remember that the results were not announced yet.
Remember that there were also elections of the governors coming up. I
wouldn’t have been there to ensure that it was done properly too. So I
took the best decision, in my view.
In their attempt to have you compromise the outcome of the 2015 elections, did they also offer you financial inducement?
No! Rather the money was distanced from me because maybe I didn’t belong.
What are your fears for the 2019 general elections?
Well,
my only concern is that there doesn’t seem to be honesty on the part of
the players of the game. A situation where , just yesterday somebody
moved out of a political party and condemned it, giving reasons to
justify his action, then without a change of name you run back to the
same party, is not proper. I think there needs to be more caution
because if there is any security threat, it is from those political
actors. I hope the aim is not to bring the whole process to a halt. My
happiness is that the government is firm in tackling the security
threats.
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