Nigeria’s former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, has described the late Nelson Mandela as a man who raised the beacon of human struggle to lofty heights of nobility.
Obasanjo, who addressed journalists in his home in Abeokuta on Friday, said
Mandela’s life was an example of what people should all aspire for.
“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,”
he added.
He described Mandela’s death as a monumental loss to all human races and
called on all to emulate the life and times of the great leader.
“His demise
is a loss to his family who will miss a caring patriarch; the people of South
Africa who will miss a guide, Africa who will miss a role model and the world
who will miss a leader.
“When we
teach our children lessons for tomorrow, let us remember lessons Mandela gave
the world in forgiveness and forbearance,’’ Obasanjo said.
Obasanjo, who eulogising Mandela, recalled the times when he was voted to
become South-Africa’s post-apartheid president.
“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 cast his
vote.
“He was
devoid of bitterness or anger against anybody except the hated apartheid
system.
“He went on
to win 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, 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.
“Yet he still kept a calm and peaceful disposition to those who took away
his freedom for all those years of his life,’’ he explained.
NAN
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