After so much ballyhoo about President Muhammadu Buhari’s proclivity at pampering his ethnic stock over and above the other ethnic nationalities, he finally attempted to defend himself against the charge of ethnic bias. His defence was contained in a homily at a dinner he hosted in honour of leaders of the All Progressive Congress (APC) at the Presidential Villa on Thursday, January 18.
I probably know the reason Buhari mustered the will to host his party leaders at this time, even when he has not been able to ensure a properly-convened meeting of the National Executive Committee (NEC) of his party as the national leader in three years; or, cause the holding of the party’s national convention to, at least, ratify appointments into NEC positions; or, still, elect chairman of the party’s Board of Trustees.
The dinner was to serve as a precursor to other dress rehearsals that will culminate in his final decision on the 2019 presidency. The visit of the seven northern governors, led by Mallam Nasir el-Rufai of Kaduna state, amid the anguish of a grieving nation over the episodic genocides unleashed on hapless Christian population in some northern states to persuade Buhari to run, was the first in the series.
The media conference by his Special Adviser on media and publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, wherein he propped up a thesis that sought to validate the fact that the president is healthy enough to re-contest in 2019 is another one. The president’s ill-health has presented as the strongest reason that could encumber him from throwing his hat in the ring once more. If his health is not good enough to carry him through, that could become his exit strategy.
The third in the series of the dress rehearsals prelude to 2019 was orchestrated by Buhari himself: the January 18 dinner. Although, he has not declared his intention to seek re-election, yet the ticket of his party is secured in his hands. Except he exercises the right of first refusal, no one within his party, will gleefully jump in front of a moving train. To do so against Buhari, who is a power monger, would amount to committing political hara-kiri within the APC. Former vice president Atiku Abubakar, who is interested in contesting in 2019, was wise to resign from the party.
Now, with the way Buhari tried to dismiss allegations of ethnic bias against him, it was clear that the season of verbal political exhortations and sweet talks is here again. And, without surprise, those who should speak truth to power in defence of the collective position of their people, especially the Igbo stock, have positioned themselves in the corridors of power to mollycoddle the powers-that-be in protection of their enlightened self-interests. Some so-called Igbo political leaders had, in recent times, gravitated from the PDP to the APC.
Interestingly, the president took the joke straight to them when, in a manner I consider simplistic, he tried to absolve himself of ethnic bias by the fact that he appointed four substantive ministers from the southeast zone. I shuddered at that rationalisation. It does not matter whether the ministers appointed from the southeast are substantive or junior ministers, Buhari did not make the appointment at his own pleasure. The constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria compelled him to do so.
Any other person, for that matter, in that office, would have been required by the constitution to appoint ministers from the thirty-six states of the federation, even if nobody voted for him or her in all the states in a zone. It is thus the constitutional right of the Southeast people to be so appointed and I am at a loss to read the president deploy that to mitigate the charge of ethnic bias, especially viewed against the backdrop of strategic appointments he made many of which were not constitutionally circumscribed.
For instance, how many southeasterners are accommodated in the commanding heights of the nation’s security architecture where appointments are egregiously lopsided in favour of Buhari’s ethnic stock? The social media are inundated with the narratives of the nepotistic outlook of the president in the strategic appointments made at his pleasure. The chiefs of army and air staff are from the north, although it is argued that appointments in the military are based on seniority and hierarchy.
The Inspector General of Police, whose promotion interestingly was made at the expense of twenty-one or thereabout senior officers who had to be compulsorily retired for him to be enthroned, is from the north. Director General of the State Security Service (SSS), Director General of the National Intelligence Agency (NIA), Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Comptroller General of the Nigerian Custom Service and Comptroller General of the Nigeria Immigration Service, are northerners. The list is long.
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Nigeria’s recent addition to the list of holders of PhD (in Christian Theology), in his trending evangelical treatise, spoke about Buhari’s “nepotistic deployment bordering on clannishness and inability to bring discipline to bear on errant members of his nepotistic court.” Obasanjo also indicted Buhari for his poor understanding of the dynamics of internal politics, which has culminated in a much more divided nation afflicted by widened inequality under his leadership.
While I believe the Igbo leaders, who are not in support of Buhari for his anti-Igbo disposition arising largely from his claim that he got only 198,000 votes from them in 2015, would fight to the finish the nepotistic treatment the president has continued to mete out to the Southeast zone, I can imagine how ludicrous those who have moved to the APC, perhaps for “bread and butter” or for political survival to endorse Buhari, would feel now that the tides are against him.
The Buhari presidency has become encumbered. The president has squandered so much goodwill on which he rode to power in 2015. Apart from his achievements in substantially degrading the Boko Haram terrorists and half-heartedly or selectively fighting corruption, it is doubtful if Buhari has any other redeeming legacies to his credit. Impunity and mediocrity have become governance characters. The agents of the executive arm of government continue to brazenly disobey court orders.
Consider the impunity of the continued detention of former National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki (retd.) and the leader of Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), Ibrahim El-Zakzaky despite several court orders for their release. What of the impunity of Fulani herdsmen who continually maim and kill innocent farm/land owners in Benue, Plateau, Taraba and other places without any corresponding restraint by the federal government?
At the APC dinner, Buhari claimed that he was aware of the problems of the country and that he would always reflect on the historical antecedents before arriving at decisions. He said he would not hurriedly take decisions for the sake of clear conscience. If the president is aware of the problems, must he reflect ad-infinitum on them before taking decisions? It is sheer mediocrity on display in governance to so over-reflect, instead of acting expeditiously, while the nation burns or slides into extinction. That attitude is suggestive of lack of governance ideas.
It is mediocre decision by Buhari, who is not economy savvy, to appoint weak Nigerians, according to Obasanjo, who could not help him out, for instance, in the area of the economy, which is why there is worsening poverty in the land and Nigerians that have lost their jobs since 2015 have increased from 6 million to 16 million in number under his presidency. What can be more mediocre than a government that relishes only in bandying statistics of monetary accretion to the coffers without reflecting positively on the wellbeing of the people?
This is, sadly, the story of Buhari’s presidency, which many suffering Nigerians do not want to continue beyond 2019. A vast majority of Nigerians hope he will exhibit his much-vaunted integrity by honourably dismounting from the horse and going home to a deserved rest. The world waits for Buhari to make his historic decision on whether to run or not in 2019, a decision that will, either way, profoundly affect the presidential power calculations. [myad]
Ojeifo, editor-in-chief of The Congresswatch magazine, can be reached ojwonderngr@yahoo.com
Obasanjo Has Finally Met His Match In Buhari, By Maiwada Dammallam
Probably the luckiest Nigerian alive today is former President Olusegun Obasanjo. Despite his numerous documented atrocities and inadequacies he still remain a force to reckon with in Nigeria’s political permutations. Thanks to Nigeria’s reversed understanding of patriotism and service to fatherland, people like Obasanjo could afford to remain a recurring decimal in political affairs when they should only appear in the chapter dealing with ignominy in our history books.
To political observers it was not a matter of if but when he will go after President Buhari. No Nigerian President has ever escaped Obasanjo’s mischievous onslaughts except perhaps, Shonekan who outwitted him by moving out of the villa before his bags where unloaded. No Nigerian President is good enough for Obasanjo because he is set and determined to remain the best. You may roll Clinton, Obama, Mandela and Gandhi in one and donate to Nigeria still, the result will not be good enough for the prolific dancer. President Buhari’s impeccable quality made him a serious threat and a default target of Obasanjo’s acerbic attacks as I will explain shortly. So, who is Obasanjo?
Obasanjo is a megalomaniac operating with a nauseous sense of self-importance which could be picked from his regular outbursts each time elections are around the corner or when he feels his large reserve of consuming ego depleting. Far from the false signals of nationalism and patriotism these outbursts were meant to send to the public, the usually lengthy and carefully scripted sermons are developed to cunningly captivate and hypnotize readers with the specific motive to manipulate them and ensure the sustainability of Obasanjo’s alpha role in Nigeria’s political landscape and his place in history.
So far, President Buhari is the only threat to Obasanjo’s claim to political “perfection” in the context of Nigeria’s politics. He is the only contender to Obasanjo’s exclusive throne of honour given to him by fate which blessed him with the singular honour of leading Nigeria twice under different political arrangements. That Obasanjo schemed to remain the life Chairman of the PDP Board of Trustees by making the position to be exclusively preserved for former Presidents made this theory plausible. At the time he did so, the only possible threat to his selfish ambition to pocket the PDP for life was the meek Jonathan – if that’s a threat. I doubt if I need to explain that the motive of Obasanjo was to secure and guarantee a permanent role in the processes of leadership selection in Nigeria.
Of course, Obasanjo didn’t anticipate an upset from Buhari. The calculation back then was that PDP would rule for 60 years and despite his popularity and grassroot appeal, Buhari was effectively contained using the cumbersome and fully commercialised judicial system. Somehow, Buhari pulled a rabbit out of a hat. Against all odds he managed to organise a formidable force that sent PDP into an early grave along with Obasanjo’s dreams of eternal relevance.
To understand the OBJ/PDP arithmetic viz-a-viz Buhari/APC, one need to understand the two men and their political and moral identities. The two accidentally share some similarities. Both men led Nigeria while they were relatively young and later went into political hibernation only to return to power and prominence decades later and against seemingly insurmountable odds. Both men were traded and sold as non-negotiable democratic solutions despite their military backgrounds. However, the two are just as dissimilar. Whereas Obasanjo made his name and fortune by accident, Buhari worked and sweated for it. Obasanjo is a power monger while Buhari abhors it. Against Obasanjo’s magnetic attraction to scandal, Buhari is a levelheaded gentleman very sensitive and protective of his name and dignity.
One cannot make sense of Obasanjo’s latest attack to defend his alpha role without connecting his tantrums to those of Farooq Kperogi, a well known cyber-snipper that has been shooting aimlessly at President Buhari without hitting his target. I find it absurd that despite a large collection of assorted local critics, Obasanjo could only rely on Kperogi to inject credibility into his tantrums. It’s neither accidental nor coincidental that Kperogi featured in Obasanjo’s sermon as a credible and reliable base for intelligent argument. I have always suspected Kperogi’s relentless albeit, misguided and clearly needless attacks against President Buhari. Now I know the source of his inspiration. With his record arrogance, Obasanjo would mention Kperogi in this assault only if there’s an established connection between the two for the purpose of painting President Buhari in bad colours. Now that the cat is out of the bag, Kperogi may save us the pretence and concentrate on his ‘consultancy’ services to OBJ who is determined to always have a first timer in the villa; somebody he could easily keep in perpetual fear of a second term to be easy to manipulate.
Let’s analyse Obasanjo’s funny allegations. He accused Buhari of nepotism yet, he failed to provide a single provable case of nepotism beside the garbage concocted and fed gullible Nigerians via social media through people like Farooq Kperogi – the consultant he accidentally exposed in his tirade. Of course, he mentioned Maina. How could the manner in which Maina’s case was dealt with be described as nepotism. If it was such a mental exercise for OBJ to make sense of the legal and administrative aspects of Maina’s case, then we can easily understand why he expect President Buhari to turn the farmers/herdsmen imbroglio into a theatre for another Odi and Zaki Biam. Sure, Obasanjo would love to have President Buhari send the army to kill and maim communities wherever there is a clash between herdsmen and farmers just so his record of illegal deadly response to a similar situation in Odi and Zaki biam could be beaten.
On the economy, it’s repulsive listening to Obasanjo who supervised a colossal waste of $16bn under the pretext of revamping and upgrading generation, transmission and distribution of electricity yet, failed to make significant improvement in the sector, talking about Buhari not doing it well. Obasanjo should have dedicated a chapter in his message to ask President Buhari how he managed to be magical with the electricity situation by spending less and getting more than him. By the way, why shouldn’t President Buhari constantly remind Nigerians about the rot he inherited when the predators that left the rot are still prowling around searching for opportunities to scavenge on the remains?
The most laughable was Obasanjo’s call for President Buhari not to go for a second term on the account of his age. Obasanjo should have told Nigerians how old and fit he was when he dubiously attempted to secure a third term before he reluctantly left office as President. The question of whether President Buhari should contest or not is a question for Nigerian masses not for Obasanjo. Nigerian masses were there for Buhari before and they will be around for him to face whatever coalition Obasanjo have in his kitty.
Sure, this is a battle that would definitely demystify one of the two giants. I’m very excited and happy that Obasanjo has finally met his match.[myad]