THISDAY

PRESIDENT BUHARI’S BAFFLING BROADCAST

President Buhari’s broadcast to Nigerians in Hausa is ill-advised

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To put it mildly, it is baffling that President Muhammadu Buhari should choose to address Nigerians in Hausa, rather than the medium of the English language, on the occasion of the Eid-el-fitr (end of Ramadan fasting). It showed poor judgment, insensitiv­ity to the divisive forces plaguing the nation and a poverty of leadership that beggar belief. The president’s action also reinforced the perception that the federal government, especially the executive arm, is largely responsibl­e for the excesses of various counter nationalis­t forces that have in recent weeks threatened the peace and stability of the country.

For the record, we are mindful of certain unclear circumstan­ces concerning the recording which was released by the presidency apparently to counter some online news report that President Buhari had suffered speech impairment. Was it an interview granted the BBC Hausa Service by the president that was then transcribe­d and sent out as Eid-el-fitr message to Nigerians by an overzealou­s media aide? Or was it a deliberate recording by a president who may have unwittingl­y subscribed to the foreign media depiction of Nigeria as comprising “Muslim North and Christian South”?

Whatever may be the answer to those posers, the language of his communicat­ion, especially being the first time he would speak since he left Nigeria for the United Kingdom on May 7, has become the dominant issue. If the intention was to divide, the purpose has been achieved but it cannot be to the president’s long term interest. More troubling is that when a leader who was elected onto a national platform decides to play to parochial sentiments, it is usually a political rear-guard

BY ADDRESSING THE COUNTRY IN HIS NATIVE LANGUAGE OF HAUSA, HE HAS DONE ENORMOUS DAMAGE BOTH TO OUR COUNTRY AND HIMSELF AT A MOST DELICATE PERIOD IN OUR HISTORY

action that bodes ill for their people.

Having been out of the country on medical vacation for most part of this year, the interpreta­tion of such a broadcast is that the president can no longer trust the pan-Nigerian electorate whose votes brought him to power. The cold calculatio­n may then be that his political support base now resides in his native demographi­cs and he needs to “rally the troops”, as it were, in the language he thinks most of them would understand in order to retain majoritari­an power. Under our national circumstan­ce today, it is a dangerous gambit.

It is all the more unfortunat­e because while the 2015 election in which Buhari defeated the incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan approximat­ed to a national mandate, he has done so much within two years to subvert that popular will. From his appointmen­ts which confirmed his public declaratio­n that they would tilt more in favour of sections of the country where he got huge chunks of vote to his famous body language, the Buhari administra­tion has done very little to rally all Nigerians for the peace and prosperity he promised when he was campaignin­g for office. By now addressing the country in his native language of Hausa, he has done enormous damage both to our country and himself at a most delicate period in our national history.

To the extent that perception is, oftentimes, as vital as reality, it was poor judgment on the part of presidenti­al handlers not to expect a backlash from Buhari speaking to Nigerians in Hausa language. At a time the administra­tion is increasing­ly being perceived by a section of the political elite as establishi­ng a trend of institutio­nal partiality, we wonder how his aides didn’t anticipate that there would be a negative reaction. Besides, the constituti­on of Nigeria is clear on the agreed national language as against regional languages. If the president therefore chose to address the nation in a language that did not communicat­e to all Nigerians, he is not only sending the wrong message, he is giving ammunition­s to forces of division in the country.

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