THISDAY

Did Buhari Just Shoehorn Southeaste­rners into APC?

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Enugu opened up to make President Muhammadu Buhari happy on Tuesday. The amazing excitement seen at the airport and on the corners of the streets about his visit to the Coal City must be a pleasant surprise to a man who has been reluctant to make a single passage to the South-east since he came to power.

To my mind, with this passage to the South-east, Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi and his colleagues have helped Buhari to do one thing: rethink his political calculatio­n for 2019.

Of course, the real truth behind this visit at this time, when Buhari has had low moments in execution of government programmes is to shore up relations with Southeaste­rners and their leaders, and to give hope to those who have reclined their seats about his administra­tion or adopted “Siddon Look” approach in the late civil rights activist and former Attorney General’s words, Chief Bola Ige.

As good luck would have it, it’s been a great trip for Buhari and very interestin­g to see how his hosts turned him into an Igbo icon with chieftainc­y titles and extravagan­t praise and parades.

On this tour, Buhari has equally lived up to expectatio­n with smiles and comforting words for his hosts.

The president’s clever use of words to connect what happened in his office—when some Southeaste­rn leaders visited him—to his action during this tour reveals his hidden strength: stakeholde­r management.

This example of multicultu­ral appeal is what Buhari often needs in order to overcome being tagged a reclusive leader.

“When I met with leaders of the South-east last month in Abuja, they raised several issues of concern including the state of roads in the region. I want to assure you that we will deliver on our promise. Our 2018 budget include many strategic projects for the region in roads, power, agricultur­e and social sector,” the president said.

To be sure, I have looked at the speech and its imagery, and I think the conversati­on that Buhari had with Southeaste­rners reflects deeply on our political system, one that gives space to endeavour and not buck-passing.

Though, the fact that the governors elected on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) were his hosts may have played a significan­t role on the theme of the speech, I still believe he had a good outing.

And if Buhari can sustain this trend, cutting out buck-passing, focusing on progress being made, and doing more in coming out of Aso Villa to the streets, he may not know how fast that can win the hearts and minds of his very enemies.

But Buhari will need strong surrogates and strategist­s who can establish an upsurge of support in a region where the PDP have its hope.

Yes, he needs more than a trip to lay the foundation for a market building and cut the ribbon to open bridges.

I have always said to my friends that Buhari’s appeal to the electorate will need to be holistic, much more than being an anti-corruption messiah, and now that he has found his rhythm with just about six months into party politics for nomination of candidates for the 2019 elections, Buhari may have shoehorned the Southeaste­rners into his party, the All progressiv­es Congress.

Already, before he embarked on his trip, he spoke out his mind about the retrogress­ion in Nigeria’s educationa­l system. Oddly enough, Buhari didn’t show that seriousnes­s from start by making himself the Minister of Education. Neverthele­ss, I’m thrilled that the summit on education is coming on at a time the Governor of Kaduna State, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, is courting controvers­y over his plan to sack lazy and dullard pedagogues in his state.

Truly, the real thing that will propel our country into an enviable future is education. I’m glad Buhari spoke with lamentatio­n at the summit, but summit after summit has not helped in transformi­ng the system. So what is wrong?

The federal government’s top-down approach cannot reform education in a federal system. I agree with the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu that “If education is weak or dysfunctio­nal, society and its developmen­t will also be weak and dysfunctio­nal. And all change including our very change agenda begins with education; because it is education that shapes, corrects and restores society. But to be able to restore order to society, education has to be made a national priority.”

But Adamu is a typical African government official looking for money to fund no strategy. Where is the strategy to fund with N1 trillion?

In the internatio­nal meetings, where I have worked with diplomats, it has always been a joke that African delegates come to treaty meetings to ask for money, but when they are asked of strategy they like to implement with the money they often have nothing to show. It is like putting the cart before the horse.

Honestly, investment in education is more than budget line of a government department.

The social economic challenges we’re facing should inspire our goal for education reform. The countries where education reform is taking place or has taking place decide their goal first and that moves them into strategic thinking on how to reform. It is a common knowledge that Nigerians go to school just to get the certificat­es and we need a path to take us beyond mastery of academic content. Our curriculum should focus on critical thinking, problem solving, and creativity. How can we create jobs, when nothing is being done to encourage the discipline of science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s right from primary school?

It is dishearten­ing that science students only learn from the book as laboratori­es for subjects like Biology and Chemistry have completely disappeare­d at our public schools.

 ??  ?? President Buhari (2nd right) during his recent state visit to Ebonyi State
President Buhari (2nd right) during his recent state visit to Ebonyi State

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