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2019 and Buhari’s Freudian Slip

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Since mid-January, there has been a concatenat­ion of events whose denouement would decide, one way or another, the fate of President Muhammadu Buhari in the 2019 election. In no particular order, the events include herdsmen incessant attacks on farmers and destructio­n of farmlands and the federal government’s inability, if not refusal, to stop it, culminatin­g in the massacre of 73 people in some communitie­s in Benue State and the ensuing national outrage; the “no-apology” endorsemen­t of Buhari by the Nasir el-Rufai-led G7 governors from the north less than 24 hours after the state-organised mass burial of the Benue 73; the president’s consultati­ons with select APC (All Progressiv­es Congress) leaders in what has been interprete­d as subtle re-election moves; former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s public statement knocking Buhari’s poor performanc­e, advising him to forget about second term while proposing a different coalition; and former military President Ibrahim Babangida’s statement also canvassing the need to have a new set of leaders, amongst others. Lost in one of these series of events was Buhari’s Freudian slip while seeming to praise immediate past President Goodluck Jonathan for graciously calling him on telephone to concede defeat in the 2015 presidenti­al election.

On January 19, 2018, Buhari expressed surprise that his immediate predecesso­r, Jonathan conceded defeat in the 2015 presidenti­al election. Hosting to dinner some select leaders of the ruling APC at the Presidenti­al Villa Abuja, Buhari said he “went temporaril­y into a coma” when Jonathan telephoned to congratula­te him. “After being a deputy governor, a governor, vice president, and president for six years, … he could have caused some problems”, Buhari said of Jonathan before adding, “having stayed for so long in the corridors of power, he could have deployed all the arsenals within his realm to destabiliz­e the system”.

With that confession, hasn’t the president mistakenly opened a window to his deepest, darkest secrets, or what psychologi­sts call a Freudian slip - in common parlance, slip of the tongue? Was Buhari unwittingl­y telling us that he wouldn’t have conceded defeat in 2015 were he in Jonathan’s shoes? Or was he implying that should he lose re-election in 2019, as every indication shows he should, he may find it difficult to concede defeat and may “deploy all the arsenals within his realm to destabiliz­e the system”? Buhari’s antecedent­s made neither of these scenarios an unfair assumption. He never conceded defeat in the three previous elections he lost before winning in 2015, even while his support base was essentiall­y confined to northwest and northeast zones. His dispositio­n had always been any election he didn’t win was fraudulent. Such dispositio­n had always goaded his supporters to embark on violent protests, with that of 2011 in particular marred by hundreds of killings. Of course, rigging marred the elections Buhari lost, like every other election in the nation’s history. However, in none of those elections did Candidate Buhari have the required broad-based support across the nation that could have given him victory. If violence followed Buhari’s refusal to concede defeat in past electoral failures, what would happen should he fail to win as a sitting president in 2019 with power to “deploy all arsenals … to destabiliz­e the system”? Shouldn’t Nigerians be worried?

Indeed, there is every cause for worry. Although Buhari has not formally made known his 2019 plans one way or the other, there has been a loud shuffle by a cross section of APC leaders and government officials persuading and agitating and endorsing and campaignin­g for his re-election. The el-Rufai-led “no apologies” G7 governors have endorsed Buhari for second term. So have Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha, and the southeast APC leaders. Communicat­ions Minister Adebayo Shittu has even opened a Buhari Campaign Office in Ibadan. Following the growing opposition to a possible second term bid for the president, and the cold shoulders notable APC leaders are giving the idea, the administra­tion’s democratic temper, lukewarm at the best of times, has risen a little. The leadership of a cross section of the security agencies, which ordinarily should have their hands full arresting the deteriorat­ing security situation across the country in incessant herders’ attacks, in kidnapping­s for ransom, in kidnapping­s for rituals, in cult killings, and in violent robberies and rape, seem to be more concerned with harassing politician­s, blaming the victims of criminalit­y, and curtailing free speech.

Rabiu Kwankwaso, senator and immediate past governor of Kano State had planned to visit his constituen­ts January 30. However, the Kano police command advised him to stay away to prevent a breakdown of law and order. Kwankwaso has been having a running battle with Governor Umar Ganduje who had served as deputy governor when the senator was the state chief executive. It is improbable that the police stopped Kwankwaso’s visit to Kano solely on the strength of his disagreeme­nt with Ganduje. Kwankwaso’s problem may not be unconnecte­d with his 2019 presidenti­al ambition. In 2015, he came second to Candidate Buhari in the APC presidenti­al primary. He therefore already has a shared history with Buhari for the control of Kano, the president’s strongest vote grabbing machine, under aged voters and all. Like other political heavyweigh­ts in the coalition that helped deliver the Buhari

Almajiri

presidency, Kwankwaso was not only cut off from the internal workings of the ruling party and government, Ganduje his long time associate and deputy that he installed as governor almost single-handed, led the proxy war to whittle the senator’s political reach and influence in Kano. The state police command’s decision to stop Kwankwaso’s visit, ostensibly to prevent a breakdown of law and order from a possible violence that the maneuverin­g from the Ganduje camp could precipitat­e, could only have been one of the strategies to rein in the senator using an institutio­n of state. Is that the route to 2019?

Indeed, the police have been unduly hyperactiv­e on issues that have nothing to do with keeping law and order. Babangida’s spokesman Kassim Afegbua was declared wanted shortly after the statement he issued on behalf of his principal became public. Barely 24 hours after the police apologised, perhaps due to public outcry, when Afegbua reported at Force Headquarte­rs, Abuja, the DSS (Directorat­e of State Security) jumped into the fray. What offence did Afegbua commit in issuing a statement on behalf of a former president to warrant intimidati­on from security agencies? In a democracy? Did Babangida make a criminal complaint against Afegbua for Police Inspector General Ibrahim Idris to have ordered his arrest “for making false statement…?” If the police have issues with the contents of the statement, why leave Babangida on whose behalf the statement was issued to harass the messenger? When has it become a crime for a citizen to express an opinion on issues of national interest? Sometime last month, the police arrested the Bring Back Our Girls campaigner­s for no other reason than organizing a peaceful protest calling for the release of the remaining kidnapped Chibok school girls still in the custody of Boko Haram insurgents. Even the police spokesman, Jimoh Moshood, had the nerve to describe Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom a drowning man ostensibly because the governor called for the resignatio­n of police chief Idris. Are we running a police state now? Is that the route to 2019?

In their desire to curtail free speech, top administra­tion officials have taken off where the police stopped. Defence Minister Mansur Dan Ali recently directed security agencies to monitor social media postings of some notable Nigerians with a view to tackling what he described as “the propagatio­n of hate speeches”. What criteria qualifies one to be a notable Nigerian? Could that be a veil behind which to hound those opposed to Buhari as the 2019 elections draw near? Was the attempt not too long ago by state security personnel to arrest Isa el-Buba, general overseer of Evangelica­l Outreach Ministries Internatio­nal, Jos, for asking his congregant­s to use their voter cards to vote out “wickedness” in government the administra­tion’s way of tackling notable Nigerians promoting hate speeches? A presidenti­al spokesman, Garba Shehu, has accused a section of the media of promoting hate speech, disregardi­ng decorum and profession­alism in the reportage of security issues, and showing disrespect for journalism ethics and press laws. Is the administra­tion preparing the grounds to clampdown on the media? This was how the war against the press in the promulgati­on of Decree 4 started during Buhari’s first coming as military leader in 1984. It is curious that the headline (

of newspaper that Garba brandished as evidence of media propagatio­n of hate speech was an interview with Husaini Yusuf Bosso, a top executive of the Miyetti Allah Cattle Herders’ Associatio­n. Yet there was no indication that any arm of the security agencies arrested Bosso or questioned him for hate speech. Is that the route to 2019?

Officials of Miyetti Allah, an associatio­n in which Buhari has long been a life patron, seem incapable of doing no wrong since May 2015 when the president was sworn into office. Its leadership has been justifying the right of the herders to kill and maim and burn and rape, and they have been threatenin­g more bloodshed if the Benue State government failed to repeal the anti-grazing law. And herders have apparently taken that as a green light, particular­ly with the apparent indifferen­ce of government (until lately) to stop the incessant killings and bring those responsibl­e to justice. Since the killings of Benue 73, the body language of top administra­tion officials has done everything but imbue confidence. President Buhari, who ordinarily should have been mourner-in-chief at the mass burial of Benue 73, did not only fail to attend the ceremony, he rather preferred to, while receiving some grieving leaders of the State at the Presidenti­al Villa Abuja, invoke God’s name to enjoin those in mourning to be accommodat­ing of others. Police chief Idris attributed the killings to communal clashes. Defence Minister Ali took the position of Miyetti Allah and blamed the incident on the state government’s anti-grazing law. In all this, no government official has cautioned officials of Miyetti Allah to stop making incendiary statements, the security agencies have not told Nigerians the source and sponsors of the AK-47 rifles the herders carry around with ease, and the police do not appear to have the wherewitha­l, and the inclinatio­n, to prevent another attack, and yet another.

Some state governors, who have tied their political fate to Buhari’s apron strings, have unwisely put their states on the frontline. Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello, mostly nescient, was not only the first to accept cattle colony in his state without consultati­on with the people, he’s even threatened to remove traditiona­l rulers in communitie­s where there are clashes with herders. When government officials appear to justify, as Minister Ali has done, that it is right to take arms in protest against a law; when the No.1 police chief takes liberty with the facts of an incident as gruesome as the Benue killings; when officials of a tribal associatio­n, like those of Miyetti Allah, threaten other groups within the federation without repercussi­on in a rabid display of Fulani triumphali­sm perhaps because their kinsman is president; when a state governor is impervious to the concerns of his people simply to please the presidency; and when the president serially appeals to the goodness of the victims of aggression while seemingly not doing enough to bring the aggressors to justice, the administra­tion unwittingl­y creates the impression that some group of people are above the law.

Such an environmen­t creates room for all sorts of conspiracy theories capable of underminin­g national cohesion, if not jeopardizi­ng the country’s unity. Is that the route Buhari would want to take to 2019?

Bloodshed in Benue) Expect More The Sun

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