Chidiogo Akunyili-Parr, the daughter of the late ex-
Minister of Information and Communication, Dora
Akunyili, said her mum foresaw that the
administration of former President Goodluck
Jonathan would fail after he announced candidates
for his cabinet.
She quoted her mother to have described Jonathan’s
ministerial appointees as the cabinet of mismatched
candidates, with square pegs put in round roles.
This is contained in a biography of the former
director general of the National Agency for Food and
Drug Administration and Control titled, ‘I am because
we are.’
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In the 382-page book published by Safari Books
Limited, Akunyili’s sojourn as the NAFDAC DG,
minister and senatorial candidate of the All
Progressives Grand Alliance was presented in the
first person narration as though she told the story
herself.
The author, Akunyili-Parr, stated that upon
Jonathan’s election as President, her mother
expected that she would be appointed as Minister of
Health given her experience and remarkable success
at NAFDAC but was asked to remain the Information
and Communication minister.
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She wrote, “I was not the only square peg in a round
hole. The announcement of his cabinet of
mismatched candidates and portfolios was one of
the first signs of the woes that would cripple
Goodluck Jonathan’s government.
“The very talent for which he was chosen to be vice
president to (former President Umar) Yar’Adua was
marring his presidency. Nigeria needed a decisive
leader who was willing to rock the boat as needed.
Instead, we got a quiet, slow-moving man with
distaste for speed and a preference for neutrality to
the point of inaction.”
The author recalled that Akunyili, frustrated by
Jonathan’s decision and sensing an ominous failure
of the administration, stepped down from her
position.
“I cited my official reason as being ready to begin a
new chapter of my life. Unofficially though, I wanted
to have more authorship on the direction of my
journey, free from the whims of a seated president,”
she added.
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The book also chronicled a series of attacks on
Akunyili and NAFDAC offices due to the war she
waged against drug and food counterfeiting.
One of such was in March 2004, months after an
assassination attempt on the late ex-DG, when the
Lagos operational headquarters of the agency,
described as the key artery of NAFDAC’s activities,
was burnt down.
She said, “Everything was destroyed including office
equipment and sensitive files with data on registered
products. Someone wanted to cripple the agency
and erase all its records.
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“On March 10, 2004, barely 72 hours later, the
laboratory complex in Kaduna, which was critical for
testing large quantities of medicine and food, was
set ablaze and also razed to ashes.
“The entire building, laboratory equipment, chemicals
and reagents, furniture and office equipment were
destroyed by the fire. The destruction was valued at
about N228m, a colossal loss to NAFDAC and a
setback to our operations.”