👇David-West went from being a professor at the University of Ibadan, 
to becoming Rivers state commissioner for education, then minister of 
petroleum and energy under the military leadership of President 
Muhammadu Buhari, and minister of mines, power, and steel under 
ex-President Ibrahim Babangida.
On Monday, the life of the 
octogenarian, who hails from Buguma, Kalabari kingdom of Rivers state, 
came to a halt. President Buhari was quoted to have described him as
 “a consultant virologist of national and international standing” who 
had “an indomitable spirit, stood resolutely by whatever he believed in,
 and was in a class of his own”.
FIRED OVER A CUP OF TEA AND WRISTWATCH

Babangida retained him as minister of petroleum but fired him later
Tea
 has a special place in Nigeria’s history, but little did David-West 
know that a cup of tea would land him in prison. He was tried by the 
Babangida regime for drinking tea with the executives of a firm, which 
the regime claimed compromised the ex-minister of petroleum in the 
process. The regime made reference to a $57million contract between 
Nigeria and Stinness oil company, in New Jersey, United States of 
America.
The deal, which was made during the era of ex-President 
Shehu Shagari but negotiated during the Buhari military era, landed 
David-West in a “huge mess”. However, in an interview with TheSun, the elder statesman said the company which offered him tea was not the same as that which made an oil deal with Nigeria.
“The
 company that gave me tea and wristwatch was different from Stinness. 
But the government mixed up the two. The company that gave me tea did 
not have any contract with Nigeria. How can an oil minister take as 
bribe a lady’s wristwatch and a cup of tea? Stupid. In fact, $157 
million can buy a tea factory and wristwatch factory,” he said.
“I
 met the president of the company that gave me the tea and wristwatch in
 Geneva. The company’s president invited myself and my team for dinner. I
 was there with my team from Nigeria. All of us were served cups of 
tea.  The company’s president said he wanted to have an oil contract 
with Nigeria. Then, I asked him to negotiate with my team so that my 
team would report the outcome of the discussion to me. I insisted he 
must come to Nigeria to open the negotiation. The company was in Geneva 
and Stinness was in Vienna.”
SENTENCED TO LIFE IMPRISONMENT

The young David-West
The
 Babangida regime accused David-West of “trading off the country’s 
interest” for a cup of tea and wristwatch, which was linked to the 
proceeds of the $157 million offshore processing contract with Stinnes 
Oil Company. The contract, which involved exporting crude oil from the 
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) for refining and sales 
outside the country provided revenue for both Nigeria and the company. 
However, an outstanding $157 million payment came up after the Shagari 
government fell, which made Buhari mandate David-West to negotiate a 
deal.
In a 2018 interview,
 the professor narrated how he made needed effort to recover the funds 
from the US oil company, but was only able to reconcile $100 million. 
The Babangida government subsequently charged him for $57 million 
corruption, which it believed David-West traded with a cup of tea and a 
piaget wristwatch.
“All they said about the tea and wristwatch was
 a fat big lie and fraud. It was tagged $57million tea and wristwatch. 
When Shagari’s government fell… Buhari called me for discussion on the 
$157million with Stinness. He gave me a mandate to negotiate with the 
company, so that we would reconcile and Nigeria would get its own share.
 We negotiated with the company. The company finally agreed to pay 
$93million or so to Nigeria as our share, after three negotiations with 
my team.
“Then, I told the MD of NNPC and other members of the 
team, that they should tell the company that the minister is a 
simple-minded professor, who likes round figures. They should make it 
$100million. We were surprised that the company agreed to pay the 
$100million, and everybody was happy. The $100million was not paid 
during Buhari’s era.
“In 1991, which was about five years after 
leaving the government, the Babangida government accused me that out of 
the $157 million, I accepted $100 million for Nigeria and got the 
remaining $57 million for myself. They said the company must have given 
me $57million as bribe. The government set up a tribunal, which sat many
 years after I had left office. In December 1990, I was summoned on a 
two-count charge to appear before a Special Military Tribunal. I was 
surprised when SSS invited me for interrogation.
“My lawyer filed a
 no-case submission, which the judge did not accept. They jailed me for 
life. Then, my lawyer, Tunde Olojo, who is now a monarch, and Peter Ige,
 who is now a judge, and A. Raji, who is a Senior Advocate of Nigeria 
(SAN) now, told the tribunal presided over by Justice Gusau that the 
maximum sentence by law was 22 years for the two counts, not life 
imprisonment.”
SPENT DAYS IN KIRIKIRI, 9 MONTHS IN BAMA PRISON

David-West spent some time in Kirikiri prison
As
 part of the judgment given under the Babangida regime, David-West was 
denied bail and sentenced to prison. In the interview with TheSun, he 
narrated how he spent six days in Kirikiri maximum prison in Lagos 
state, followed by a nine-month stay as an inmate in Bama prison, Borno 
state.
“It was stated in the judgment, contrary to the law, that I
 should not serve my jail term in Lagos. Why he (Babangida) did not want
 me to serve in Lagos was because the support for me was too much. 
Students all over the country were coming to Lagos. He thought if I had 
served in Lagos, they might break out the prison for me.”

Buhari is stiff and sincere, David-West said
While
 Buhari appointed him as minister of petroleum in January 1984, 
Babangida retained him when he came into power in August 1985, but later
 redeployed him to the ministry of mines, power and steel.
Describing both military leaders, David-West said Buhari is stiff but sincere, while Babaginda is foxy but lacks sincerity.
“Well,
 Babangida was a very foxy person and likable. Buhari is stiff, but 
pleasant. But Babangida is foxy, smiles all the time, but not sincere. 
Buhari is stiff and sincere. Buhari will not plant evil to the best of 
my knowledge,” he said.
![]()  | 
| EARNED MORE AS AN ACADEMIC THAN MINISTER OF PETROLEUM | 
In
 his days as minister of petroleum, David-West said he earned lesser 
compared to when he served as a professor at the University of Ibadan. 
In an interview he granted a year ago, he said he worked an average of 
12 hours on most days, including weekends, while he was minister of 
petroleum, yet earned lesser than his previous job in academia.
“I
 was earning less salary as a minister than I was earning at the 
university. How many people know that? My salary in the university as 
Professor/Consultant Virologist at the University of Ibadan, was higher 
than the salary I was earning as Minister of Petroleum.
“Buhari is
 here to confirm it. Later on when Buhari discovered that I was earning 
less as a minister, they wrote to the University of Ibadan to get my 
payslip, and they increased my salary as a minister. So, how can you 
serve your country so well with so much dedication and sacrifice, and go
 through this absolute nonsense?”
![]()  | 
| David-West supported but criticized Buhari | 
Until
 his death, the social critic was an ally and loyalist of Buhari, 
perhaps because he gave credit for the lessons he learnt while serving 
as minister under him. But despite being a loyalist, David-West never 
failed to criticise the Buhari’s government when things went wrong.
In 2018, he criticised Buhari’s ministerial appointments
 and faulted his handling of the economy, saying the president’s 
mistakes are haunting his government. In one of such cases, he 
criticised Buhari for appointing Kemi Adeosun, former minister of 
finance, over Udo Udoma, ex-minister of budget and national planning.
“I
 have said it before that the economy is not doing well. People are 
suffering. I told him to alleviate the suffering. Give greater happiness
 to the greatest number. Let me be personal, if I were Buhari, the 
person I would have appointed the minister of finance is Udo Udoma, who 
is the minister of budget. That is not a good place for him,” he said.
“The
 economy is not doing well because of the mistake in appointment. I am 
not saying the minister of finance is not doing well. I do not know her.
 From what I have seen on television, she talks well, but talk is not 
enough. People are suffering. I am a diehard Buharist, but I cannot 
close my eyes and my conscience to admit there is not a lot of 
suffering. And something should be done about it.”

David-West on stage during Buhari’s presidential bid declaration in Abuja in 2014
Unlike
 the average minister or loyalist who wills membership card of a 
political party, David-West never joined a political party until his 
death. In an interview with TheGardian, the virologist said he would rather support principles and persons than hold party affiliation.
“I
 have never joined any political party, but I support principles and 
persons. I do not see anybody in the political terrain that can contest 
against Buhari on moral turf. That is his greatest asset.
“Buhari 
is clean and upright. I cannot say that of any politician. All of them 
who are saying he should not re-contest are not better politically and 
on a moral turf. None of them can contest integrity with him,” he added.

David-West said Kachikwu, former state petroleum minister, was a minister without portfolio
The former minister of petroleum, in an interview with Punch,
 called Ibe Kachikwu, ex-minister of state for petroleum, a “minister 
without portfolio”. He was reacting to a petition Kachikwu wrote to 
Buhari, which accused Maikanti Baru, group managing director of the 
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), of insubordination. 
David-West said Kachikwu’s office was redundant, superfluous and should 
be scrapped.
“Actually, Buhari should be the chairman of the NNPC 
board and not Kachikwu, who is a minister without a portfolio in 
reality. It would be better if we scrapped the ‘minister of state’ which
 is superfluous and redundant,” he said.
“When you say that a 
minister of state is the boss of the GMD of NNPC, it is wrong. That 
cannot be. People are making those claims because of misconception. The 
minister of state in the first republic was a minister without a 
portfolio. He cannot be a boss of the GMD of an oil industry, who is the
 livewire of that sector.”
No more politics, no more prisons, no 
more academic interventions — at 83, David-West has had enough of this 
earth, and has now taken a journey home, to be with the ancestors.
- The Cable
 


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