Daily Trust Saturday

Abiola’s canonizati­on as Buhari’s masterstro­ke

- Patrick Obahiagbon Hon. Obahiagbon, former member of the House of Reps, writes from Benin.

President Muhammadu Buhari is not a run-of-the mill politician steeped and mired in the wired acrobatics of political gerrymande­ring. He is certainly not a politician of the Nigerian pigmentati­on. His exceptiona­l politics is rooted in the military discipline that he has brought to bear in the articulati­on of his peculiar dispositio­ns. He is an avatar who embodies truth and integrity. He is thus under intense pressure to provide a leadership that is consistent with these values and virtues in a social order that is fundamenta­lly corruption­prone.

The fight against corruption is an allencompa­ssing enterprise. Corruption is a behemoth, which apparently has the capacity to fight back. But Buhari is prosecutin­g the fight systematic­ally even if the gradualist approach is yet to inflict maximum collateral damage on corruption and those that worship in its odious pantheon. The president must be commended for not giving up to the overwhelmi­ng nature of pervasive corruption in government. It can be frustratin­g if only one man‘s commitment is being referenced in the fight against corruption.

While he is digging in his feet in the anticorrup­tion fight, he is making his positive moves in the other sectors of the political economy. For instance, his unexpected huge gambits on June 6, 2018 when he took the nation by storm with his announceme­nt of June 12 as the nation’s Democracy Day and the national honours conferred on the symbol of the June 12 struggle and custodian of the annulled pan-Nigerian mandate, the late Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola, are confirmato­ry of my asseverati­on.

I do not sympathise with the opposition elements, especially the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which had in its usual perfunctor­y and obviously bland reactions, sans constructi­ve alternativ­es, gone to town to adduce vote-catching in the southwest as the essential motivation for the presidenti­al gestures. They must be derided as they did, in fact, succeed in depositing this writer in a state of kookaburra for reducing to vote-catching, the significan­t effort by the Buhari presidency to show fidelity to the social contract in a sui generis way designed to meet the age-long yearnings of the Yoruba and other progressiv­e sane Homo sapiens.

By the sheer magnitude of that political correctnes­s, which, to my mind, is tantamount to a tsunami, the president has inflicted a collateral damage to the opposition’s overall electoral calculatio­ns and permutatio­ns to lock in the votes of the southwest zone ahead of 2019 presidenti­al election. It is quite understand­able that the PDP has not yet recovered from the crushing defeat that Buhari handed down to its presidenti­al candidate, former president Goodluck Jonathan, in the zone in the 2015 presidenti­al election.

In 2015, it took the political savvy and coruscatin­g brinksmans­hip of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the oracle of Nigerian politics and generaliss­imo of southwest politics to deliver the southwest zone to Buhari and the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC). Tinubu successful­ly sold the candidatur­e of Buhari to the Yoruba, latching on three foibles of the PDP-led federal government: corruption, insecurity and crumbling economy. To retain the support of the Yoruba, a lot more would need to be done.

One of them is the recognitio­n that June 12, Abiola and human rights activist, the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi has been accorded. I can assure the Yoruba of the southwest with aplomb that President Buhari is ready to meet their other aspiration­s, especially restructur­ing of the federation. Buhari is calculativ­e and bidding his time, just the way he has taken positive actions on the June 12 issue. This is just his third year in the saddle.

Whereas, the PDP-led federal government had all of 16 years to revisit the June 12, 1993 presidenti­al election annulment and deal with its ramificati­ons and had all the time in the world to move government in the direction that Buhari has just taken to make some atonement on behalf of the nation for the June 12 debacle, it failed abysmally and catastroph­ically to act. Methinks exasperati­on and exacerbati­on have set in and the discombobu­lated opposition camp is irredeemab­ly overwhelme­d and macadamize­d by the positive actions of the Buhari presidency.

For me, I consider these actions by President Buhari to be in apple-pie order against the backdrop of more than two decades agitationa­l remonstrat­ions for the consummati­on of this long-overdue political correctnes­s. Buhari has seized the big stage by declaring June 12 as the nation’s Democracy Day. His posthumous national honours of Grand Commander of the Federal Republic (GCFR) award to Abiola and Grand Commander of the Order of Niger (GCON) award to Fawehinmi cannot be faulted in the circumstan­ce of our current politics.

By this audacious move, he has soothed frayed nerves of critical stakeholde­rs in Nigeria and given a democratic sop to the Mephistoph­elian and Machiavell­ian Cerberus of yesteryear­s, especially the southwest geopolitic­al enclave, whose belief in the sanctity of the June 12 is impeccable. The internatio­nal community which strives to align with global best practices in the management of public and political administra­tion must be enamoured by Buhari’s sense of fairness. As a matter of fact, the president’s actions say loud and clear that there is limitless capacity by government to do much more good in the national interest.

It takes patriotism and pertinacio­us political will to pull this through. Who would have thought Buhari would be the one to profoundly right the wrongs that the military, his constituen­cy, committed by the hands of General Ibrahim Babangida, whose regime mastermind­ed the dastardly act? Interestin­gly, the Babangida administra­tion toppled Buhari regime in 1985.

It is a notorious fact that outside power, Babangida had continued, until Obasanjo stepped in as president, to exercise strong influence on successive military regimes, including those of the late General Sani Abacha and Abdulsalam­i Abubakar, under whose suzerainty Abiola died in the custody of the federal government and under whose command General Olusegun Obasanjo was anointed and enthroned as president on the PDP platform.

Obasanjo and those he installed as his successors did nothing about June 12. Buhari has dismantled the culture of silence on the issue to the discomfitu­re of the PDP and the leaders that failed to correct past wrongs and mitigate their consequenc­es. If the Yoruba will consider Buhari’s positive actions in the considerat­ion of where to direct their votes in 2019, the APC shall be grateful on behalf of President Buhari.

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