President Muhammadu Buhari |
The image was reminiscent of how the Governor of Imo
State, Rochas Okorocha felt when he shook hands with the former U.S President
Barack Obama while visiting the White House with President Muhammadu Buhari in
July, 2015.
The picture was on a popular page on Instagram and
many commenters were mocking the child. I was forced to rise to the child's
defense. I boldly commented that I could do the same if I have a personal
encounter with President Muhammadu Buhari. I love his personality but detest
his leadership style. He is tall, handsome, funny, quiet and above all very
modest. Being modest deserves some accolades especially in a country that
culturally celebrates materialism especially unfounded wealth. I used to be a
Buharist and I have no regrets about that. Life is a teacher, the more we live,
the more we learn.
The President did no wrong in my sight till I
started lying to myself to uphold the belief that my idol is the panacea to the
myriad of challenges bedeviling Nigeria. I lost my objectivity, balance and
professional scepticism in the process. These are the golden values that make
or mar a journalist or academic.
The President who is being tagged 'Mr Integrity'
might be a good man with sincere intentions as he is being portrayed by his
party - All Progressives Congress but the million dollar question is if he is
good enough for Nigeria considering the present tumbledown state of affairs.
Honesty is an intricate leadership attribute but it’s pointless as far as its
not accompanied by the competence to effect a positive change. Even his wife,
Aisha Buhari has insinuated severally that her husband isn't in charge.
The former British Prime Minister, David Cameron
had the honesty and competence to preside over the affairs of the United
Kingdom but he resigned honourably in 2016 as his vision didn't align with Brexit.
Theresa May took over to oversee the divorce of the United Kingdom from the European
Union and it has been a wild goose chase all along with several of her top
advisers namely Boris Johnson, Dominic Raab, David Davis, Esther McVey, Shailesh
Vara, Anne-Marie Trevelyan, and Suella Braverman apparently abandoning her in
the snow without a jacket.
It is not debatable that Nigeria is terribly ill and
it was in the dire need to rescue her life in the Emergency Ward that 'Doctor
Buhari' was called upon in 2015 through the ballot box. But the question is
this; is Nigeria showing any signs of recovery from her numerous ailments? The
sincere answer lies in us. It’s time for us to undertake a truthful process of
self-evaluation and introspection in order to take the right political
decisions in the 2019 presidential polls. We need to do a comparative study of
where we are and where we are coming from as well as our destination. The truth
nowadays has not only been doctored, it has also been 'lawyered and engineered'
for low-hanging political gains.
I have no issues with those who support Buhari on
the basis of family ties or bloodline; I could have done the same if I were in their
shoes. I hold no grudge against those who are paid to campaign for Buhari and
launder his image, they are only doing their jobs diligently as professionals
and they have their family members to feed. I also have no issues with those
directly or indirectly enjoying the proceeds of a political appointment awarded
by the presidency to their benefactor, it’s really hard to "talk while you
are eating"; table manners should be duly observed.
My major grouse is with the die-hard supporters of Buhari
who have tasted nothing close to good governance or personal benefits in the past
three and a half years of his administration. I mean the 88 million Nigerians living
in extreme poverty and the 20.9 million people who remain unemployed not to
talk of the underemployed whose take home pays never take them home.
The issue of 'Uninformed Voting' is a huge quandary
even in developed countries. It has militated against the efficacy of
democracy. It is worse in Africa due to the challenge of illiteracy and rise in
populism. Politicians tend to take advantage of the over 60 million illiterates
in Nigeria. The fact that we have over 40 million people with mental illnesses
in the country also threatens the 2019 general election. Who can vouch for
their political judgement? We pray most of them don't have PVCs because they
could end up voting for nothing. The level of poverty in the land has been a
catalyst for vote-buying. Many opinion leaders today believe the Federal
Government is the biggest vote-buyer in the country through its Trader Moni programme.
The resultant effect of all these is the presence of an opportunist or unfit
leader at the helm of affairs.
Buhari campaigned on three cardinal points in 2015 namely;
the economy, fighting corruption and combating security. Can we sincerely say
there has been any major upswing in these key areas? Unemployment is rocking
the economy, the supply of electricity which is the lifeline of every modern
economy remains short on demand, investment in infrastructures is only experienced
on paper, the naira has continued to share the same value with a used
contraceptive, cost of living is very high and there is food crisis in several
remote parts of the country. Today, every Nigerian is dreaming of migrating to
Canada for a better life. In the same vein, no fewer than 10,000 Nigerians have
died between January and May 2017 while trying to illegally migrate through the
Mediterranean Sea and the deserts according to the Nigeria Immigration Service.
The European Union had also disclosed that 22,500 Nigerian illegal migrants
crossed the Mediterranean Sea to Europe between January and September 2016. We
all know what is chasing them.
On corruption which is like Buhari's economic plan,
it has become glaring that the president is fighting the opposition party under
the guise of corruption. As far as the dollar bribe videos of Governor
Abdullahi Ganduje who promised Buhari 5 million votes from Kano State remains
accessible through Google amid his freedom, the anti-corruption fight remains a
mere charade. Even the Transparency International scored the anti-graft war
low. Eight prominent politicians accused of a gargantuan fraud of over N232
billion are also supporting Buhari's re-election bid. Buhari must be a magician
to believe he could combat corruption in the face of abject poverty and weak
governmental structures.
What about security? 3,641 people died in the last 3
years according to the embattled Amnesty International and a former minister of
defence, General T.Y Danjuma (retd), alluded to the conclusion of the international
body. With over 100 Nigerian troops reportedly dying in the infamous Metele
attack in Borno, our soldiers now fear the Abu Musab al-Barnawi faction of Boko
Haram sect more than their creator. Even as some of us prepared for Christmas,
the sect killed 13 soldiers including a policeman in an ambush along the
Maiduguri-Damaturu highway during the eve. What about the sorry plight of the
Internally Displaced People in various camps across the country?
What about the regular massacre of farmers with their
crops set ablaze by the insurgents? Contrary to the claims by the Federal
Government that Boko Haram has been decimated and no longer holding territories,
the chairman of the House Committee on Internally
Displaced Persons, IDPs, Sani Zorro, recently gave a staggering revelation that
17 local government areas are occupied by terrorists and they are allegedly
collecting taxes from the locals.
If the lives of Retired Major General Idris Alkali and
that of Chief of Air Staff (retd) Alex Badeh could be cheaply taken away from
them, then that means the ordinary citizens are not just surviving on the grace
of God, they are only alive today because they are of no use to the assailants.
With the way Nigeria is competitively chasing the
records of oddities across the world, I can see the road to Venezuela without
the aid of binoculars. May that day not come when we will begin to feed from
the dustbins and migrate in millions to other neighbouring African nations due
to hunger and public unrest like we have in Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador,
and Nicaragua. The convenient and effective excuse is that the purported 16
locust years of the main opposition
party - PDP led us to where we are and Buhari is cleaning the mess. But the
truth is that the mess might be getting messier with lack of any visible
headway. Today, Buhari nicknamed 'Baba Go Slow' even brags about his
'snail-speed' leadership style which is at the detriment of the people.
Below
are other disturbing indices that you should consider before casting your votes
in 2019 (credit to Clifford Ndujihe, Vanguard newspaper):
Nigeria is the 11th worst place to be born (2018),
second worst country with electricity supply in the world (2017), third most
terrorized country in the world (2018) of which, as of November 30, 2018, no
fewer than 6,652 Nigerians had been killed through terrorism, Boko Haram
insurgency; farmers/herdsmen, ethno-religious and cult clashes, and armed
robbery among others.
Other indices include: One of the most dangerous
places in the world to give birth and third country with the worst maternal
mortality rate (2018), seventh worst country on World Bank’s Human Capital
Index (2018), worst police in the world (2017), third worst city to live in the
world (2018), worst country in the world at fighting inequality (2017), 10th
worst army in the world (2018), highest number of children out of school – 13.2
million (2018), one of the most corrupt countries in the world (2018), the
fourth country with the highest deforestation rate in the world (2018), the
country with the highest number of road fatalities in Africa (2017, FRSC), and
the 9th most dangerous country for women (2018), Nigeria is projected to be the
highest importer of rice behind China in 2019, Nigeria to overtake India in
open defecation with 47 million Nigerians lacking basic toilet facilities -
UNICEF, 2018, the World Justice Project in its 2017/2018 Rule of Law Index
ranks Nigeria 97 out of 113 countries. Nigeria made the list of the top 7 Sub-Saharan
African countries with the highest foreign debt which stands at $22.08 billion.
Inasmuch as I agree that most of what constitute
this muddle have roots in the past, and can't be resolved in 4 years, but can
we beat out chests that there has been any major rectification in the last
three and a half years? The truth nowadays is not the truth. It has become
relative. It depends on who you ask and where the person stands. What some
people call 'corruption' is what others regard as 'connection'. A vote for
Buhari is an endorsement for the continuation of the present hurdles and it
might get worse in the coming years as The Economist, HSBC, IMF, World Bank and
other reputable bodies have projected for Nigeria.
As we vote, we should think
about the fates of incarcerated people like Sheikh Ibrahim El Zakzaky, Sambo
Dasuki, Deji Adeyanju and the hundreds of people reportedly housed in the
underground cells of the Department of State Security, DSS considering the fact
that they remain innocent until proved guilty by a court of competent
jurisdiction.
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