The N2.1bn libel suit instituted by a leader of the Peoples
Democratic Party in Ogun State, Buruji Kashamu, against former President
Olusegun Obasanjo, has sparked abusive exchange between the two men.
The suit, which is before Justice Valentine Ashi of a High
Court of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, turned into a sort of a name
calling platform, as Obasanjo in his statement of defence described Kashamu as
a notorious debtor and a man lacking in local and international reputation.
He described the PDP chief’s suit as “frivolous, speculative
and gold digging” and urged the court to dismiss it for lack of jurisdiction
because it failed to disclose any reasonable cause of action against him.
But in his reply to the statement of defence, Kashamu
faulted what he described as Obasanjo’s “self-praise” referring to the former
President as a social misfit and a poverty-stricken school dropout.
Kashamu had on February 6, 2014, sued Obasanjo, asking the
court to award N20bn as aggravated and exemplary damages, and another N100m
against the former President for “maliciously and recklessly” publishing a
letter entitled, ‘Before it is too late’, addressed to President Goodluck
Jonathan.
Through his counsel, Dr. Alex Iziyon (SAN), Kashamu claimed
that the words used by Obasanjo to describe him in the said letter, which was
published in both the print and electronic media, portrayed him “as a criminal
wanted for drugs related offences in the United States of America and the
United Kingdom.”
But in his statement of defence filed on May 14, Obasanjo
stuck to his allegations in his letter to President Jonathan, stating that he
had no reason to retract the words in the said letter as requested by Kashamu’s
lawyer “because the statement/words are correct, true and justified.”
He added, “The plaintiff has no iota of good reputation
locally and internationally.
“Aside the plaintiff’s illicit drug business for which he
was indicted and wanted in America, the plaintiff has penchant for taking loans
from unsuspecting banks/financial institutions with the intention to
permanently elude/avoid repayment or liquidation of such loans.
“Further to that, the plaintiff has been judicially
adjudged/confirmed a debtor by a competent court of law in Cotonou, Republic of
Benin. And the plaintiff presently occupies a choice position on the Assets
Management Corporation of Nigeria’s list of notorious bad debtors.
“The plaintiff is a person, who with his true name/identity
supplied, will not be granted visa by the German government or any country of
the world having good relationship with the United States of America.”
But in his reply, dated May 21, to Obasanjo’s statement of
defence, Kashamu stated that the former President’s claims in his statement of
defence constituted “an aggravation of the libel.”
He said Obasanjo’s use of his touted national and
international acclaim to “malign more productive members of the society is
uncalled for and could be symptomatic of megalomania.”
Kashamu stated, “The plaintiff acknowledges that the
defendant (Obasanjo), a poverty-stricken dropout from school and otherwise a
social misfit, eventually found fame and fortune by joining the Armed Forces of
Nigeria and benefitting disproportionately from opportunism of military
adventure into governance in Nigeria…”
He said Obasanjo’s “vaunted international acclaim” was
tested in 2008 when the former President contested for the position of the
Secretary General of the United Nations with “a barely known diplomat from
Egypt.
“The defendant (Obasanjo) was put in his place as he failed
to fly the flag of the nation successfully and lost the contest disgracefully,”
the plaintiff’s lawyer, said on behalf of his client.
Apparently embarrassed by Kashamu’s response, Obasanjo,
subsequently filed a motion on notice dated June 6, asking the court to expunge
the parts of the plaintiff’s counter-affidavit which he said constituted a
“personal abuse” on him.
The matter was then adjourned till July 28 and 29 for
hearing.
Punch
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