President Buhari: The bigger the head, the bigger the headache (5)
President Buhari: The bigger the head, the bigger the headache (5)
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/03/nigeria-is-sliding-into-economic-recession-under-buharis-watch-olisa-agbakoba/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/03/nigeria-is-sliding-into-economic-recession-under-buharis-watch-olisa-agbakoba/
As I
was saying last week, given the large amount of money set aside in the budget
for the comfort of President Buhari, his family members and the top echelons of
the presidency, he is not on a moral high ground to put pressure on members of
the National Assembly to drop their silly plan. Hence, another headache for
Buhari is his gradual but steady loss of the much-needed moral authority that
can compel positive attitudinal change among high-ranking public officials,
including legislators. President Muhammadu Buhari President Muhammadu Buhari
Sometimes I sympathise with the President, because he might genuinely be
interested in changing Nigeria for the better. But the physical and mental
infirmities associated with increasing old age, entrenched military habits of
thought, and conflict of interests between him and key members of the Northern
establishment who fanatically supported his presidential ambition – all these
constitute real obstacles for the President on the road to actualising the kind
of change we need at this time. On top of that, he still has to grapple with
the daunting challenges of increasing poverty, unemployment, preventable
diseases, deepening economic and security issues he inherited from his
predecessor. Unfortunately, APC leaders and government officials, instead of
honestly acknowledging that they grossly underestimated the enormity of
problems left behind by the immediate past administration and did not have any
well thought-out plan to deal with them, are still blaming former President
Goodluck Jonathan for every bad thing happening in the country right now and
insisting that Nigerians should continue to be patient with Buhari because it
“would take a minimum of eighteen months to revive the economy.” Special
Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, recently reminded
us that the President promised change but Nigerians want magic. The change
would come, he says, but it would follow a process and it would be enduring.
Things deteriorated in the sixteen years PDP was in power, and this is the
ninth month of the present government. Adesina claims that Nigerians want
everything to change for the better immediately, but that is unrealistic.
Furthermore, “Nigerians have always complained, and we should learn to stop
complaining and believe more. What government needs at a time like this is
cooperation and support. If you have elected government because you believe it
can bring change, and you have not allowed it to isolate what the problems are
and articulate what the solutions would be, and you begin to have all these complaints,
I think it is not natural. There must be realistic expectation, and realistic
expectation will demand that people are patient, supportive and encourage the
government. This government is working for the people. Rather than complaining,
let us cooperate, support and encourage.” Femi Adesina is a thoroughbred
professional doing his job to the best of his ability. However, I disagree with
the “sermon on the mount” he delivered at Radio Continental for the following
reasons. First, it is not completely right to blame PDP alone for the
deterioration in quality of governance since 1999. Of course, as the ruling
party at the federal level until May 29, 2015, PDP bears the biggest burden of
blame for mismanaging the country in the period under consideration. But
politicians in other political parties, including those that came together and
formed the APC three years ago, failed in their responsibility to use the
National Assembly as a platform to ensure that PDP Presidents performed their
duties creditably. Instead, federal legislators from these parties connived
with their PDP counterparts to despoil the country. Besides, unless one is
operating with the false assumption that corruption, mediocrity and ineptitude
exist only in the PDP, the decay in governance was not restricted to the
federal level. Before the last elections that swept the PDP out of power, many
non-PDP states and local governments were poorly governed. Thus, when Buhari
and his lieutenants blame PDP for everything that has gone wrong in the country
since 1999, they conveniently ignore the role politicians from other political
parties played in entrenching corruption, impunity, nepotism and mediocrity at
the three tiers of government. In addition, Femi Adesina is blaming Nigerians
unfairly for expecting magic from the new government. Now, responsible
leadership is about service delivery, not about wishful thinking or uncritical
belief in the exaggerated reputation of a single individual. Buharimaniacs
should be reminded of the Igbo proverb that says, “He who brings
faggot-infested firewood to his house has invited the lizard for a visit.” Has
Adesina forgotten so soon the fantastic promises made repeatedly during the
presidential campaign rallies nationwide by Buhari and prominent members of the
APC, and how they completely dismissed Jonathan as “clueless” and
“incompetent,” with the pledge to bring about rapid improvement in the economy,
security and job creation if Buhari wins? Because Nigerians are yet to
experience the rapid improvement promised by APC after about nine months in
office, with no sound economic blueprint for rebuilding the economy, it has
become fashionable for public officials with more than enough resources to
escape the brutal effects of expanding jaws of poverty to blame Nigerians for
having “unrealistic” expectations from government. They are condemning
Nigerians for trusting Buhari, for believing he is a man of his words who would
not deceive them by making promises he knew he cannot or would not fulfil.
Anybody who accuses Nigerians of complaining too much, of expecting President
Buhari to perform magic should go and re-read or listen again to the campaign
speeches of Buhari, Osinbajo, Bola Tinubu, and Lai Mohammed. The President
promised, inter alia, that Boko Haram would be defeated by the end of December
2015; but Boko Haram is still carrying out wanton destruction of lives and
property mostly in the North. APC promised that if the party wins the
presidency, the federal government will give free meals to pupils in public primary
schools nationwide and pay unemployment benefit of five thousand naira to
twenty-five million jobless Nigerians. It also pledged to eradicate fuel queues
and smash the wicked cabals responsible for fuel subsidy fraud and recurrent
fuel scarcity in the country. Not only has none of these promises been
fulfilled, the President himself has disowned some of them. Many Nigerians now
think that during the electioneering campaigns, chieftains of APC completely
obsessed with capturing power from the disorganised PDP were willing and
prepared to say anything, promise everything, to actualise their objective. Now
that Buhari has won, the party is in serious dilemma because it cannot deliver
on the promises, an object lesson to the effect that it is very easy for
politicians to promise heaven and earth when seeking for votes but much more
difficult for them to deliver on those promises after they assume power. In a
sense, Femi my friend is correct. Most Nigerians are gullible; they tend to
believe what they hear repeatedly from a “big man” or “thick madam,” especially
if the individual in question is from their ethnic group or belongs to the same
religion with them. That is why APC’s propaganda machine was effective in
making Buhari’s supporters believe that he is the messiah to rescue them from
the existential condition E.M. Forster described as the “slough of despond.”
When Femi Adesina accuses Nigerians of complaining too much even when the
government is trying “to isolate what the problems are and articulate what the
solutions would be,” he forgot that the same invalid argument was used to
justify the unnecessary delay of Mr. President in forming his cabinet. At that
time, we were told that Buhari was taking his time to select the very best and
avoid making mistakes in his choice of ministers. Judging by the antecedents of
some of the people in the ministerial list when it was eventually announced,
the five months delay was in vain. Similarly, it is still quite possible that
very little will change in the lives of suffering Nigerians after Buhari and
his team have “isolated our problems” and “articulated solutions” to them.
Consequently, President Buhari must be prepared for more headaches from now
until the end of his tenure. After all, he went round the country asking
Nigerians to put the load of being President on his head, when he should have
continued looking after his farm in Daura quietly out of public scrutiny.
Concluded.