The Guardian (Nigeria)

Buhari, Osinbajo, leave our books out of your failures

- Bob Majirioghe­ne Etemiku is editor- in- chief of WADONOR, cultural voice of Nigeria.

SIR: A few days ago, I was to run into a video where Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, former vice president of Nigeria was eulogising former President, General Muhammadu Buhari. From the video, I was to learn that the occasion was the formal launch of a book titled Working With Buhari, written by one Femi Adesina, media hand of Buhari. But I must tell you truly that after the SAN was through with telling his own version of his own ludicrous experience­s with Buhari, you would not be looking to read Working With Buhari anymore. You immediatel­y come off with the impression that the chaps who were there were just jokers.

The author of that ‘ book’ is well within his rights as an individual to chronicle his experience­s while he worked with his master. Last year, the respected SAN who was making all those tasteless jokes of his encounter with Buhari also had a book written. How did he do it? He gathered together a group of some of his people and apparently commission­ed each one write chapter after chapter to tweet and sing about his wonderful performanc­e as vice president. To some of us in the book industry, this was a big surprise because that attempt at making the SAN aloof and sweet like a piece of cake and far away from the Buhari failure of a government was a poor attempt at deodorizin­g the putrefacti­on of that epoch.

Many leaders worth their salt often write their own books themselves either as memoirs or autobiogra­phies. Because of the seriousnes­s, and sometimes the monies that are often realised from these book enterprise­s, great effort is often put to do a factual analysis of their tenures whilst in government, and at the control of the destinies of a people they have led. They know that these books would live after them. Whilst they do so, they follow the book writing processes very painstakin­gly and very rigorously. The publishers take the drafts and work at it, maintainin­g the arduous craft and art of producing a book. The reason is that apart from the books being a historical account, it is a testament of the intellectu­al make up and capacity of the author.

Most leaders who often took decisions that had centrifuga­l and centripeta­l repercussi­ons at national and internatio­nal scenarios and circumstan­ces use the book opportunit­y to defend the choices that they had to make whilst in power. They would never get effete hands and intellectu­al minnows to narrate a blow by blow account of how they managed serious matters that affected the destinies of the people whose destinies they presided over. They do it by their own hand, and they stand by it.

I have read Bill and Hillary Clinton, Nelson Mandela, Gandhi, Winston Churchill, Margaret Thatcher, Bill Gates, Benjamin Franklin and the like. None of these chaps took to surrogacy to write their books. When you read some of the narratives by the chaps I just mentioned, you get a clue of some of the very difficult conditions that those leaders faced in the course of taking the unpopular decisions they had to take.

But Buhari and Osinbajo are not the only persons ‘ writing’ books. Abubakar Malami, former Buhari Attorney General wrote one with an intriguing title – Traversing the Thorny Terrain of Nigeria’s Justice Sector – My Travails and Triumphs. You can easily spot the difference­s – while Malami’s was an autobiogra­phy, the others are by backdoor authors. What is clear however with most of these puerile things coming out from these public officials is that they would not be needing to write these books if they had been accountabl­e and transparen­t in their dealings with Nigerians. And book or no book, what we do in life echo till eternity.

With prevailing economic mismanagem­ent of resources under the watch of these current book writers, many a Nigerian would rather go in search of daily bread than sit and read a book. Whilst in power, none of these wannabe book writers ever supported the book production community with either a fellowship, an endowment or a reading attributed to their names – none. They let an important ‘ book’ centre as our universiti­es to rot. Most importantl­y, their books are polluting the literary community instead of enriching it.

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