
“So many in the political elites of this country cannot wait for the President’s second term in office to end.
“They yearn for a return to the “good old days” of helping themselves to public funds with abandon, the easy export of ill-gotten money to foreign bank accounts, of acting without responsibility, accountability, or censure. The last thing they want is “another Buhari.”
These are contained in a statement today, January 18, by the Senior Special Assistant to the President on media and publicity, Malam Garba Shehu.
He said that there is no doubt that the President will stand down after the election of a successor next year, but wondered whether or not the successor will live up to the exacting standards and example Buhari has set.
Garba Shehu argued that Buhari’s legacy “is strong and will be peculiarly tough to dismantle.
“Courts that hold those before it fairly and properly accountable regardless of their wealth or lack of it; the successful repatriation of stolen funds from decades of export abroad and its use to fund social, unemployment and welfare programmes for the poorest; reforms that have taken the steam out of centuries-long ethnic and tribal disputes – such as the farmer-herder clashes – long used to stoke ethnic and regional tensions by venial politicians for political advantage and the protection of millions through an effective vaccine roll-out programme, adding that these are just a tiny handful of the achievements of the President.
“But, perhaps, his greatest achievement of all is to break the belief that Presidents of Nigeria take the office and use it to enrich themselves and their accessories at the public’s expense.
“That wicked spell is broken for good. And it has offended politicians everywhere. They thought the state owed to them while the people provided for the state. ” “Instead, they have witnessed how, when the state owes to them nothing, it provides for the people.”