Document your stewardship – Shettima urges public officials
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By Salisu Sani-Idris
Vice-President Kashim Shettima, on Thursday in Abuja, urged former and serving public officials to summon the courage to document their life and stewardship in service.
Shettima made the call at the public presentation of a book titled, “OPL 245: The Inside Story of the $1.3 Billion Oil Block,” written by a former Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Mr Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN).
“Each of us who has had the privilege of serving this country owes the people an account of our stewardship.
“Our stories are not ours alone. They belong to the nation. They belong to history,” he said
According to the Vice President, public servants live under perpetual scrutiny, as life itself is a litigation with no end and no final adjournment in the pursuit of justice.
The Vice President emphasised the need for transparency and accountability in Nigeria’s public service.
He also emphasised that public service must be remembered, scrutinised, and preserved as part of national history.
Shettima described the culture of secrecy in Nigeria’s public institutions as a form of silence that must be broken.
“There is silence to preserve relationships. There is silence to protect secrets too delicate to disclose. And there is silence for memories we would rather forget.
“But as a generation of leaders, we must summon the courage to document our journeys,” he said.
Recalling the highly litigious (Oil Prospecting Licence 245) OPL 245 deal, Shettima said the book serves as an access card to the next phase of hearings in the court of public opinion.
He described Adoke’s personal reflections in the book as courageous, saying the former minister’s claim of being “bloodied but unbowed” will resonate with anyone who has walked the corridors of power in Nigeria.
“There is no doubt that those named in this book will tell their own side of the story. That, indeed, is how history finds its balance.
“Every witness must speak. Every accused person must speak. Every participant must speak.
“Life itself is a litigation with no end. There is no final adjournment in the pursuit of justice. There is no permanent discharge in the reckoning of history.
“We are always being summoned—not by a judge, but by conscience and by posterity,” he said.
The Vice-President emphasised the need for public officials to see themselves as custodians of national memory.
He stressed that the importance of storytelling is not in perfection, but in the necessity of preserving the truth for future generations.
“The courts may close. The headlines may fade. The official records may be revised. But the conscience of a nation never adjourns.
“In that eternal courtroom, we are all on trial—not only for what we did, but for what we dared to remember. For what we dared to reveal. And for what we dared to pass on.
“This culture of accounting for our place in history shall remain our solemn pact until we draw our final breath. It is a duty that binds us to one another and to the generations yet unborn. “
Former President Goodluck Jonathan applauded the author’s wisdom, courage and doggedness in the face of intimidation and blackmail.
He described the public presentation of the book as a celebration of victory over deliberate persecution.
Represented by former Senate President, Sen. Anyim Pius Anyim, Jonathan cautioned politicians against recklessness and abuse of office.
He urged all public office holders to always commit to the virtues of justice, fairness and service to humanity.
Gov. Seyi Makinde of Oyo state commended the commitment and hard work of the author in chronicling his account of stewardship as Attorney General of the Federation.
Makinde noted that beyond contextualising the disputed OPL 245, the book x-rays broader issues of institutional, governance and justice framework in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry.
He said the public presentation of the book will, among other things, emphasise the need for policy reforms and the reinvigoration of the culture of documentation in public service.
According to the governor, it is essential ingredients of national development.
The author of the book, Adoke (SAN), said the motivation behind writing the book was not to denigrate any individual or group, but to set the records straight.
He said the book provides insights into the issues surrounding the 1.3 billion dollars Nigerian Oil Bloc transaction.
He said he had forgiven the individuals and organisations that played active roles in the saga that caused significant damage to his person, family and business.
He reiterated that he remains unwavering in his belief and commitment to the Nigerian project and its success.
Adoke called for holistic reforms in the Nigerian justice and public service systems to forestall a recurrence of his unfortunate experience.
While reviewing the book, former Special Adviser to ex-President Jonathan on Media and Publicity, Dr Reuben Abati, agreed with the author that the book is, indeed, therapeutic.
He stressed that the book actually needed to be written to set the records straight for posterity.
“The focus is on the OPL245, in an extensive and comprehensive account of the allegations about his role, the burden he has actually endured.
“The burden of what he called clinical persecution, or “the lies and lies and more lies” that were told against him and his eventual vindication.
“Adoke’s OPL 245 is, by his own admission, therapeutic – a book that needed to be written to set the record straight for posterity and to clear his name through a documentation of facts. (NAN)(www.nannews.ng)
Edited by Rotimi Ijikanmi
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