Atiku and Obasanjo, who served as vice president and president
of Nigeria respectively, between 1999-2007, had an estranged
relationship during the last lap of their second term in office.
Both men were among a retinue of VIPs invited to the opening of the
week long Comptroller-Generals’ conference held at the newly inaugurated
auditorium of Katsina State University.
Obasanjo, who arrived
ahead of Atiku, was seated next to second republic President Shehu
Shagari and the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade.
Atiku, who
arrived nearly 40-minutes after his former boss, first greeted the Emir
of Gwandu, Alhaji Muhammad Iliyasu, Emir of Katsina, Dr. Abdulmimini
Usman, the Ooni and Shagari who were seated at the podium.
When he got to Obasanjo, the former Vice President knelt down and bowed his head to greet his former boss.
The delighted crowd followed the mild drama with a loud applause and cheers.
A man who sat opposite the VIP podium raised his two hands up and shouted “Alleluia”.
Earlier,
Vice President Namadi Sambo who represented President Goodluck Jonathan
had inaugurated the 1,500 capacity auditorium of the Katsina State
University, venue of the conference.
Two former heads of state,
top traditional rulers from different geo-political zones in Nigeria,
former Comptroller-Generals of Customs and Customs chiefs from Africa
attended the opening event.
Speaker of the House of
Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal delivered a goodwill message, where he
challenged the Customs to go beyond its “statutory role” of combating
smuggling of goods.
Tambuwal listed other roles of the service to include revenue collection, trade facilitation and border protection.
He urged the service to collaborate with other relevant agencies in the country to improve their services.
He
pledged that the National Assembly would support the ongoing review of
the Customs and Excise Management Act (CEMA) to enable the service
discharge its function optimally.
The theme of this year’s annual Comptroller-General’s conference is “Border Divide, Customs Connects.”
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