EL-RUFAI'S BOOK AS INTELLECTUAL FRAUD by CHUKWUMA C SOLUDO

Although there is no single definition of fraud, the online definitions
that come to mind as one reads Nasir el-Rufai’s book (The Accidental
Public Servant) is “fraud as course of deception, an intentional
concealment, omission, or perversion of truth”, or “an intentional
deception made for personal gain or to damage another individual”. I
know el-Rufai as a brilliant fellow and I certainly expected a
definitive book. His stated objective was to “tell the story of my
public service years…” but it turned out a very bad example of how to
write a memoir. It is more of wild concoctions and commentaries on
imagined events outside of his “public service years”. As I read parts
of the book that relate to things that I should know about, I shook my
head in disbelief. I could not believe that el-Rufai could descend so
low. While I will surely correct many of his wrong narratives in my
book, I thought I have a duty to make a preliminary response – for
public records!
Contrary to his narrative, most of us in
government knew that el-Rufai desperately wanted to succeed President
Olusegun Obasanjo as president. He plotted and schemed, destroying
anyone perceived to be potentially in his way. Obasanjo scorned him; the
scheme through the PDP Reform Forum failed; and with the bid to replace
Major General Muhammadu Buhari in Congress for Progressive Change (CPC)
still a work in progress, it is understandable that the bitterness
would find succor in a book to smear and destroy any known potential
threat. The only good person in the whole book is el-Rufai, and perhaps
also my dear sister, Oby Ezekwesili. For him, it is either that Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala was power hungry or that “Charles was not grateful”. We
understand his motives, but for him to also fabricate stories about
Obasanjo, Atiku Abubakar, and Mallam Nuhu Ribadu the way he did (the
three persons that literally made him tick in government) speaks
volumes. What a very grateful person! My people have a proverb that when
a foolish and disrespectful child utters abomination before his elders,
he beats his chest that he has exhibited uncommon courage.
The
book is grossly dishonest. It is amusing to read the purported
conversations he had with President Obasanjo on the third term bid. One
reads almost two or three pages as quotes from the conversation and most
parts of the book are replete with similar long quotes of purported
conversations (all in inverted commas). This tactic was deceptively
employed to give the impression of authenticity to the claims of such
conversations. Surely, it is impossible to report the proceedings of a
meeting or conversation verbatim after the meeting. It would therefore
mean either that he was tape-recording every private conversation he had
with people or that he simply fabricated those long quotes. If he
cannot produce the tape recordings of those conversations (which I
believe he doesn’t have), he should be honest enough to admit that he
made up those stories/quotes. It is too cheap of him to fabricate those
quotes and seek to exploit the gullibility of the reading public to
damage other people.
I was amused by el-Rufai’s disingenuous
attempt to frame stories about the Economic Management Team, which he
forced himself upon and probably destroyed. As pertains to me, he lied
all the way in an attempt to concoct a mischievous narrative or plot. He
calls Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala “Ngozi”. I call her “Madam”. He tells a fairy
tale of how I was a student or protégé of Ngozi’s father. Sorry
el-Rufai, the respected Prof. Okonjo had left University of Nigeria,
Nsukka (UNN) before I became a student, and our paths did not cross
until the mid-1990s (while my Ph.D was in 1989). If you even called
Ngozi on the phone, she would have confirmed to you that she never got
any consulting contract for me at the World Bank or any multilateral
institution as you claimed. If you cared for the facts, you would have
known that I began to interact with Ngozi in late 1999, in the fourth
month of my 18-month consulting assignment at the World Bank (an
assignment to which I was nominated by three pan-African Institutions –
ADB, UNECA, and AERC – for the project on “Can Africa Claim the 21st
Century”). You don’t lie about matters that have records.
For
your information el-Rufai, before I met anyone of you at the original
Economic Management Team, I had (for a decade) lived in Ethiopia, United
Kingdom, and United States of America (USA) and traveled to 45 other
countries as an itinerant scholar and consultant; worked at the United
Nations; been to Oxford, Cambridge and Warwick Universities; was a
visiting professor at Swarthmore, USA; and consultant to 18
international organisations including the World Bank, IMF, OECD, EU,
ADB, various UN agencies, etc. I have been consultant to different
departments of the World Bank at different times, including being on the
Chief Economist Advisory Council (CEAC) for the period 2005 - 2012 and
no Nigerian had anything to do with any of them. I spent 19 months at
the Brookings Institution, USA (January 1991 – July 1992; and three
months in 1998) but according to el-Rufai, I went to Brookings after a
consulting job at the World Bank (which would then mean ‘after 2000’?).
According to el-Rufai, I became Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria
(CBN) in “mid 2005” instead of May 2004. He manufactures both the facts
as well as the comments.
By el-Rufai’s own account in the book,
the approval to embark on the demolition of properties in Abuja was
obtained on 30th August, 2003. I state (and challenge him to prove
otherwise) that Ngozi was no longer staying at Bolingo Hotel by the time
he started his demolition programme. How can you then fabricate a story
that we met at her suite in Bolingo Hotel and also fabricate a
purported quotation of what I told you, which among other things,
referred to your demolition programme? I thought you were smart enough
el-Rufai to at least lie consistently. Is this not fool proof that you
made up all the quotations in the book?
As at the last count,
no less than 15 persons claimed to have recommended me as Chief Economic
Adviser or Central Bank Governor. My simple response to all is: thank
you! Thank you also el-Rufai if indeed you played the role I have just
read from your book that you played in my appointment as Chief Economic
Adviser. Of course, President Obasanjo is still alive and several of the
actors are also alive. In my own memoir, I will detail how I joined
President Obasanjo’s government. I have also heard fantastic claims of
some people that they literally appointed me governor of CBN. In a
recent chat with President Obasanjo, he for the umpteenth time insisted
that nobody can ever claim to have advised him to appoint me as governor
of CBN. He reminded me that even I did not know—which is a fact!
El-Rufai also conveniently forgot that he first met me in late 2000
when I came from the US to help the federal government prepare for the
IMF Article IV consultations and also train senior staff of CBN,
Ministry of Finance and National Planning on the macroeconomic and
technical computations involved (paid for by USAID). el-Rufai chose to
forget that he pleaded for my technical assistance to Bureau of Public
Enterprises (BPE) as a consultant but I told him I was too busy with my
international assignments. I rather offered to attend any of his
privatisation committee meetings anytime I was in the country and to
offer my services free of charge. He forgot that I wrote several
technical notes to help him succeed, including being the sole author of
the initial draft “Anti-trust and Competition Policy” – all free of
charge!
El-Rufai seemed unhappy that I gave every credit of our
achievement to President Obasanjo. Well, I am informed enough to know
that in a presidential system of government, only the president is
elected with the mandate to govern and every appointed person in the
executive branch has a delegated responsibility to assist him. Only in
Nigeria would you see a minister or appointed official write books to
take credit for achievements in office. As governor of the central bank,
I made it clear that I received every award or recognition on behalf of
the president. I have no apologies for that.
Interestingly,
el-Rufai tells the story of the great achievements of President Obasanjo
in restoring the Abuja masterplan, using him as an assistant. I thank
him for at least acknowledging that the idea to restore the masterplan
was Obasanjo’s and that he drove it all the way. What he did not tell is
the story of how el-Rufai’s vindictiveness almost ruined the exercise
as well as the monumental fraud associated with it. This is for another
day!
Of course, el-Rufai could not hide his opposition to the
banking sector consolidation. Unfortunately as we say in my place, you
cannot cover the moon with your palms. You may not like Soludo or
Obasanjo, but in the last 27 years, there are two fundamental structural
transformations of the Nigerian economy that have taken place – the
telecommunications revolution, and the banking sector revolution
(consolidation). Ours was not a mere reform, it was a revolution!
Nigeria’s only transnational corporations were built in three years.
We put two Nigerian banks in the top 300 banks in the world and they
remain there, and nine others in the top 1,000 (there was none before my
tenure). The Nigerian private sector as we know it today (especially
the new economy in oil and gas and emerging big businesses) largely owes
its wealth to our revolution. The world acknowledges that without our
foresight and courage, the Nigerian financial system and economy would
have collapsed during the global financial crisis. We developed a
robust, transparent and no-nonsense regulatory and supervisory regime
before the global crisis, and left behind one of the strongest banking
systems that was globally rated in the same league as those of Israel,
India, China, and Russia. You chose to forget that we revoked the
licenses of 14 banks in one day (unprecedented in our history),
including banks owned by my friends. This is a story for another day!
The story of how we built the world’s fastest growing financial system
and Nigeria’s largest transnational corporations in three years, rescued
the entire system from collapse despite the unprecedented four shocks
that buffeted the system during the global crisis, on course to fully
restructure the few ailing banks before the end of 2009 with or without a
penny from government; and designed the comprehensive roadmap for
sustainability and growth (under FSS 2020) is told in my book. Our
Financial System Strategy (FSS 2020) remains the roadmap till date.
Sorry el-Rufai, there is little you can do about this record. Even with
ten 234NEXT newspapers, and 20 other books, you cannot re-write history!
Since el-Rufai takes pleasure in reporting what ordinarily should be
private conversations, let me also take the liberty to report that he
admitted to me on April 28, 2013 that what he wrote about me were the
“impressions” he was given. That for me summed it up. My advice
el-Rufai, is that you don’t collect some hair dressing salon gossip,
hearsay, ‘impressions’, and wild imaginations – all intentionally
designed to damage others, and bind them into a book without
crosschecking the facts. That is intellectual fraud!
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