Daily Trust Sunday

Buhari’s loss of control

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It is understand­able that many people are characteri­zing the violence in Plateau State last weekend, in which over 200 persons were killed, according to state governor Simon Lalong, as “herdsmenfa­rmer” clashes.

It is a convenient label, but it neither captures the heart of the problem not contribute­s meaningful­ly to the search for an answer.

That problem, and the tragic story of Nigeria, is the collapse of leadership. To put it bluntly, President Muhammadu Buhari has lost control.

For the record, on 15 April in this column, I urged him to resign rather than hurt the nation further by seeking a second term. In “The fall of Buhari, and the APC,” on 5 February 2017, I had also cited his lack of will, temperamen­t and capacity for the job.

Sadly, in the past two months Buhari has proved right those of us who have expressed this view, as he has increasing­ly demonstrat­ed bad judgement, poor motivation and a poor sense of direction.

Hours after the massacre in Plateau for instance, he was clapping for himself in Abuja, telling members of the Supreme Council for Sharia in Nigeria how honest he is.

“I am satisfied with what I am,” he said. “I am happy I have kept myself and the people close to me from benefiting from government contracts.”

It is not surprising that a man who cannot maintain the nation’s best public-sector hospital but routinely goes abroad at public expense for his own medical care, his bills paid by Nigerians whom he doesn’t tell how much of their money he is spending or what he is being treated for, is satisfied with what he is.

What he is, is a man who neither understand­s the issues, nor cares, nor has the capacity for the assiduous work demanded of him. Honesty is not when you hide informatio­n, including what your officials own, but when open records prove a person to be beyond blame. The Plateau massacre is the direct result of this general ineptitude and porous sense of values, and to Buhari directly goes full responsibi­lity for the bloodshed.

Yes, some progress was made concerning Boko Haram, but it is nothing exemplary, and contrary to the repeated claims of the militants being wiped out, they have shown uncommon resilience.

Of greater importance, whatever Buhari has accomplish­ed on Boko Haram he has compromise­d by his failure to respond appropriat­ely and adequately to the herdsmen challenge.

Let us remember that in January, over 70 were killed in Benue State in an attack like Plateau’s. There have been many others in the intervenin­g months, but when people are merely hurt, or when “only” 10 or 20 are killed, it is telling those incidents no longer makes the news.

In response to Benue, Buhari made two gasp-inducing gaffes. First, he deployed the state Inspector-General of Police Ibrahim Idris, ostensibly to demonstrat­e authoritat­ive federal presence at the highest level. Idris didn’t go.

Weeks later, Buhari-who is presumed to live in the same Abuja as Idris and to have routine and regular security contacts with him-”discovered” Idris had never bothered to leave for the drudgery in Benue.

What made that joke even funnier is that Idris kept his job without having to apologize to the people of Benue. Buhari was satisfied with his personal ‘honesty,” we presume.

The nation’s top policeman was then seen on video at a public event either too sick or too drunk or too drugged to read one sentence of his own speech! He kept his job!

But as if to prove that the joke was on the victims of the violence in Benue in the first place, Buhari later told their leaders they should “accommodat­e [their attackers]” and restrain “your people.”

That was before his state visit to the United States in April, where he explained to Mr. Trump that the late Libyan leader, Muammar Ghaddafi was to blame. “43 years of Ghaddafi, people were recruited from Sahel and trained to shoot and kill,” Buhari said, pompously. “With the demise of Ghaddafi they moved to other countries and regions…”

In other words, those doing the killing in Nigeria were trained killers, which would normally have made them criminals to be hunted down by the security agencies.

But ‘honest’ Buhari has not made that case, but again, he did say on television two years ago that a man herding over 400 cows cannot stop them from devastatin­g any farm which happens to be in their way.

In effect, Buhari, whose first job is security, was asking the farmers and villagers simply to “accommodat­e” the armed killers if they do not want to be killed.

That is not the attitude of a leader motivated by the constituti­on he swore to uphold and who really cares about the fate of the citizen. That is not a government; it is a ramshackle outfit of ego and propaganda masqueradi­ng as one.

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