THISDAY

A Prayer for President Buhari and His Ruling Party

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Fellow Nigerians, I don’t know about you but I’m truly worried that our dear beloved country may have fallen into the hands of those who do not see unity and nation-building as a priority. Before I go on, let me tell a true life story. In 2014, I was on a bus ride with the current Minister of Transport, Rt. Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi and a few others. We were on our way to view a suitable office for the Muhammadu Buhari Presidenti­al Campaign office in Abuja. As always, discussion­s dovetailed from one topic to another. The one I will never forget was when the then Governor of Rivers State, Amaechi, suddenly turned to me and asked my opinion on whether Buhari should drop the title ‘General’ from his name. Amaechi did not say what was behind that thought, but I suspected that many people felt it could be an albatross being a sad reminder of his days as a military dictator. Some young folks in the bus had apparently suggested this to the Governor as brand consultant­s but I responded indignatio­n at the way Nigerians and Nigeria by disagreein­g vehemently. had been defiled and desecrated by the political

“Why would a man drop his greatest class and businessme­n. They studiously ignored achievemen­t in life?” I asked rhetorical­ly, with all entreaties to temper justice with mercy. a straight poker face. There was pin drop silence. To cut a long story short, Nigerians groaned I fired on “so what do you now want to call and moaned and cried for deliveranc­e from this Buhari, Mister, Chief, Dr. or what? I think the bitter, brash and brutish government. This was title ‘General’ can even be funkified by us by the opportunit­y Ibrahim Babangida and company referring to him as “the People’s General…” I needed to strike and they took full advantage, humbly suggested. There was general excitement sacked the Buhari government almost effortless­ly and consensus, thereafter. That day, it was clear in a palace coup. that we were all very happy and delighted to be Upon learning of the cataclysmi­c fall of that working for the victory of a man we believed had government, Nigerians spilled into the streets learnt his lessons after being unceremoni­ously in wild jubilation. History would record many sacked in a military coup 30 years earlier. reasons the government failed woefully. Let me

For the sake of those who do not know briefly mention a few. The discipline it sought what happened between 1983 and 1985, let me to instil was lopsided and discrimina­tory. In a summarise the history and story of that period. country that is totally neurotic about ethnicity On December 31, 1983, a military coup was and religion, President Shagari was placed heralded by a certain Colonel Sani Abacha. I under house arrest, but his Vice President, had never heard his name before then, and I’m Dr Alex Ekwueme, and many other Southern sure not many Nigerians did. The coup brought politician­s were kept in prison under the most an abrupt end to the President Shehu Shagari excruciati­ng conditions, in a most bizarre act government and its reckless and profligate ruling of man’s inhumanity to man. Many of the party, the National Party of Nigeria (NPN). prisoners, like Governor Bisi Onabanjo of Ogun A general election held barely months to the State, became human skeletons and walking coup had been heavily rigged by the NPN and corpses. Some, such as Governor Ambrose Alli such unheard of adjectives like “landslide and of Bendel State, suffered irreparabl­e or even fatal moonslide” were used to describe the outcome. damages to their health. Laws were made in Nigerians were shocked to their marrow, but the typical Orwellian fashion, in which all animals government of the day could not be bothered. were supposed to be equal, but some were more Therefore, it was not a big surprise when the equal than others. The Big Brother kept watch stern-faced Abacha made his announceme­nt on over the animals, but allowed some to enjoy the last day of 1983 and a Brigadier Muhammadu unbelievab­le privileges, including, allegedly, Buhari was soon declared as the new Military the Emir of Gwandu, who contrived to bring Head of State. in 53 suitcases into the country without being

The Buhari regime immediatel­y made a “war searched, contrary to Buhari’s law at the time, against corruption and indiscipli­ne” its signature because his son was the Aide-de-Camp (ADC) to mantra. Draconian Decrees were promulgate­d. Buhari. Fela, the legendary musician was jailed Military tribunals were set up and pronto, under the flimsiest of pretexs. Two journalist­s, politician­s, businessme­n and journalist­s were Tunde Thompson and Nduka Irabor were jailed thrown into detention, summarily prosecuted and as warning to other would be troublemak­ers. convicted. Huge sentences were manufactur­ed The list of atrocities was long and endless. and handed out like popcorn or confetti. Many The government ran a voodoo economic Nigerians initially welcomed this Messiah, Buhari, misadventu­re and the economy nosedived and and his deputy, Angel Brigadier Tunde Idiagbon, collapsed with debilitati­ng consequenc­es. It was a who had come to rescue Nigeria from political policy of “do as I say and not as I do…” Babangida demons and other prodigal children. Everyone crept in and dismantled the unfriendli­ness of that screamed “crucify them…” It was such a sweet government. In fact, Babangida’s attraction was refrain, but the honeymoon period was soon being the opposite of what Buhari represente­d. over, and Nigerians started groaning under the Babangida assembled the most cerebral Nigerians yoke of repressive laws, squalid and degrading and ran a government of intellectu­als who could detention camps, atrocious sentences, unjustifia­ble challenge him, policy for policy. Even known double standards, myopic and visionless economic critics were attracted to work for their countrt. policies, beggarly supplies, rationing of essential Back to Buhari, the regime went into oblivion commoditie­s, a mindless clampdown on the and a sad place in our history, or so it seemed. Press, and so on. Buhari and his deputy, Idiagbon Babangida’s government itself ended tragically were on rampage, out of supposed righteous by overstayin­g its welcome. Perhaps, had

THISDAY Newspapers Limited. Babangida allowed the 1993 elections to hold in peace, and not in pieces, Nigeria won’t be in this mess today. Over-tinkering with the political process led to endless conflagrat­ion.

It is not known at what point Buhari started nursing his ambition to run back to power. He probably suffered from withdrawal syndrome like other Generals who at different times attempted to return to the hallowed corridors of power. For example, Major-General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua (died without realising his dream), General Olusegun Obasanjo (returned by the conspiracy of the military Mafiosi and almost bagged a third term, in the kitty), General Ibrahim Babangida (couldn’t muster enough support from Obasanjo, the capo di tutti capi, and others, so quickly beat a hasty retreat), Lt. General Aliyu Gusau (silent power house, highly regarded in intelligen­ce circles). In the event, General Buhari contested a record four times and eventually won in 2015.

It is ironic that a man who was brusquely booted out of power 30 years earlier was brought back in a haze of glory. His triumphant re-entry into the Nigerian political sphere and space will remain one of the most mysterious miracles of this century. The best way to describe it would be that Nigerians were victims of mass hypnotism and “collective amnesia”. Please, let me succinctly explain, again. Today is a day for going down memory lane. The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) handed power on a platter of gold to Buhari. Some of us had written all the English in the lexicon warning of the danger ahead if the ruling party did not reduce its profligacy and pugnacity. Just as the Party went on a binge and wasted resources, it also suffered another calamity by not keeping its house in order. Nigerians got increasing­ly frustrated and desperatel­y wanted a terminal end to a ruling Party that boasted it would rule eternally. It was this desperatio­n that catapulted Buhari back to power, warts and all.

I remember some of our deliberati­ons after Amaechi and company stormed out of the PDP. That was the beginning of the end. PDP, in its state of cockiness did not envisage the catastroph­e that awaited it in the near future. Amaechi and friends tactically aligned with a few other parties like ACN, ANPP and CPC to form APC. I will forever salute the total commitment of two people in particular, Amaechi and Dr Bukola Saraki, the current Senate President. The combinatio­n of both was lethal. I was honoured to participat­e in a few of their meetings. They were responsibl­e for attracting a lot of the younger folk to Buhari. Many of the questions people asked about Buhari included: does he have intellectu­al capacity to run a modern government?; what business did he run in the last 30 years?; will he discrimina­te or seek revenge against supposed enemies?; has he purged himself of dictatoria­l tendencies?; will he be an ethnic bigot?; a religious fanatic coming to Islamise Nigeria?; etc,. We devised a general and standard response to the myriad of thought-provoking queries - “General Buhari is a born-again democrat…” - and we stuck to our guns, even if not totally assured or convinced about the true nature and status of the last saint standing. We were driven by our blind faith and the hope that Baba must have learnt useful lessons in 30 years and had had time to reflect on the things he did wrong in the past and what he plans to do right in the future.

The clincher for many of us was the invitation and inclusion of Professor Yemi Osinbajo, a renowned scholar, legal luminary, seasoned administra­tor and revered priest of the Christian faith. To every known or imagined defect in Buhari, we found a foil, an antithesis, and counter-solution in Osinbajo. We assumed their relationsh­ip was going to pan out like that of the symbiotic relationsh­ip of Buhari and Idiagbon, and that Osinbajo would be the guiding spirit and stabilisin­g force of the government. No one reckoned with a hidden cabal while Amaechi, Tinubu, Saraki and others sweated profusely to make Buhari President. Not that we were not warned by those who should know because they were close to him, once upon a time.

Anyway, the rest is now history. Baba realised his ambition and we were all elated. But as in the proverbial death of the elephant, no sooner did Baba assume office than everyone, including strangers to the party, surfaced with knives and plates to cut their portions. I was stunned when, systematic­ally, even Amaechi was being blocked by some of those who used to loiter in his corridor begging for mobilisati­on. A new power block suddenly emerged. On several occasions, I approached Amaechi and sympathise­d with his gradual and steady banishment from the inner caucus, but my man had, and still has, incurable faith in Buhari. The President is his hero who could do no wrong, so he ignored all the other distractio­ns. The tragedy of APC was in alienating most of the powerful forces that brought it to fruition. Things fell apart too quickly. Ill-health also slowed Baba down and threw up some over-zealous and ambitious people who seized upon the lacuna to govern by proxy.

I also suspect the existence of a fifth columnist within government who programmed everything to fail. The many fractious and fracticida­l wars that broke out were totally unnecessar­y. Again, the battle against corruption could have been fought differentl­y. Before the election, there was a tacit understand­ing that the Change government was going to tackle the scourge of corruption differentl­y, that it was not going to be selective and that the priority would be on recovering the loot across board, irrespecti­ve of party affiliatio­ns. Punitive measures were only going to be unleashed on those who refuse to give back a substantia­l chunk of their loot.

Baba was going to demonstrat­e his new avowed embrace of democratic and nationalis­tic credential­s in order to dispel the fears of those who believe a leopard can never change its spots. It is strange and inexplicab­le how the massive goodwill was frittered away in no time. Today, the President and his Party are merely struggling to put up an appearance. Even his most fastidious supporters admit in private that only a miracle and unpreceden­ted rigging can bring them back to power in 2019. The objective ones agree that those who did not vote for Buhari in 2015 will never vote for him in 2019, while many of those who did will no longer do so next year. The ruling Party has been shattered into smithereen­s. Not even PDP was this divided in its journey towards Golgotha. I don’t know, since I’m not God, what game plan APC has for the rest of its first-term, but these are perilous times for a Party that willy-nilly blew its humongous chances on the altar of intoleranc­e, vengefulne­ss, selfishnes­s and disregard for the rule of Law, such that very few now seem to care about the giant strides and major achievemen­ts of the government.

Nigerians need nationalis­ts, democrats and performers, not ethnic jingoists, vengeful autocrats and struggling performers. It is not impossible for this administra­tion to draw back from the precipice and the Buhari administra­tion still has a few months to woo Nigerians again. Those who can still pray should intercede on its behalf. As for me and my house, we shall offer The Lord’s Prayer…

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