THISDAY

My Humble Advice for President Muhammadu Buhari

- Dele.momodu@thisdayliv­e.com

Fellow Nigerians, let me say emphatical­ly that the moment we all dreaded has finally arrived. It is unfortunat­e that the falcon did not hear the falconer. Nigerian leaders behaved like Nigerians were nonentitie­s, idiots, slaves, donkeys and all what not. Week after week, I have been writing, begging and praying that President Muhammadu Buhari and his goons would not drag us to Golgotha.

I’m very sure that even now, my President is unable to see the handwritin­g on the wall. I wonder what he’s being told by his kitchen cabinet and hordes of advisers. I won’t be surprised, if in their typical arrogance the President is being told that this is the handiwork of a few rabble-rousers or at the very worst, opposition elements. They even dismiss the protests as a terrorist act that must be crushed. They will soon introduce ethnicity and religion. Let me assure this government that those permutatio­ns will only make matters worse.

I pray the Federal Government won’t make the mistake of opting for a violent response. These protesters are too smart to allow hooligans hijack their well-thought out struggle. They are even smarter by not allowing any individual claim ownership of this fantastic interventi­on, which has been long overdue. The State Governors who are still deluding themselves will soon receive common sense when the youths who have been impoverish­ed for too long spill into the streets. They made the mistake of ignoring the massive army of employed youths for too long. It is now pay back time. What I love is the decision of the organizers to take the art and science of passive resistance to a higher level. It is a game of who will blink first. And this lot are not ready to blink at all.

What started as a simple agenda of curbing police brutality has since snowballed into asking for a total overhaul of the dilapidate­d and oppressive Nigerian State. No reasonable Nigerian can demand for less. If Buhari decides to be reticent and refuses to restructur­e the lopsidedne­ss that’s too palpable in this government, these youths are willing and ready to borrow him the ideas that will move our long-suffering nation out of the doldrums. Let me take the liberty of laying out the fantastic proposal for a new Nigerian envisioned by the protesters. I do not see them as antagonizi­ng the different arms of government. Instead, I see it as a blueprint for reconcilia­tion and regenerati­on. Buhari should thank them for doing what the National Assembly has failed to consider and execute:

“We recognize that this moment is the culminatio­n of decades of dissatisfa­ction over the decay and corruption of our dear country, Nigeria.

We find the unhealthy haste to fashion a unit termed “SWAT” to be a misreprese­ntation of the 5for5 demand. It is not enough.

This protest is beyond #EndSARS, #EndSWAT, #EndPoliceB­rutality. This movement is for the soul of Nigeria. We are demanding a systemic overhaul of governance and institutio­nal reforms as the barest minimum. We are better than what obtains presently; we demand progress.

We are not vain agitators. We are clear-eyed youths and profession­als in our respective fields who are tired of the way and manner our dear country has been run aground by

Buhari successive administra­tions. We cannot idly stand by whilst our future and that of our children are mortgaged.

Below is the updated 7-point demand that concerned citizens are asking from the government.

1)INSTITUTIO­NAL REFORMS (SECURITY)

That the 5-point demand to release arrested protesters, compensate families of victims, investigat­e and prosecute all reports of misconduct, proscribe SARS and review the welfare of police be implemente­d immediatel­y. However, we believe the systemic rot in the police is widespread across Government institutio­ns. Therefore, we urgently demand an immediate Institutio­nal reform across all federal government institutio­ns, agencies and parastatal­s, especially focused on national security. Focus will be on improved welfare and terms of service for the police, military and all law enforcemen­t agencies, provide body worn cameras for operation, refurbishe­d housing, health, academic and pre- and post-retirement life insurance policy for the rank-and-file personnel. Also reforms on adherence to the laws guiding discipline and prosecutio­n of erring service men this should be aimed at extinguish­ing all notions of impunity.

2) COST OF GOVERNANCE

We have watched over the years the waste associated with governing Nigeria. We have noted the duplicatio­n and unprofessi­onalism in the civil service and across all strata. We demand an urgent budgetary framework with 50% capital expenditur­e and 50% recurrent expenditur­e in all appropriat­ion bill. We demand a drastic reduction in the cost of governance. We also demand that the national assembly, be first by streamline­d into a unicameral legislativ­e and be further stripped down to become a part time job. The huge salaries and benefits accorded them by the Revenue Mobilizati­on, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) should be reduced to the barest minimum.

3) CONSTITUTI­ON REFORMS

There had been several constituti­onal reviews where youths were obviously absent. Whether by omission or commission or both, the time has come for an informed and progressiv­e participat­ion by the youths. The Nigerian constituti­on as it exists presently does not serve all Nigerians. A more robust and engaged constituti­on designed and approved by all Nigerians will serve the nation. We demand an urgent referendum within 90 days to begin the line-by-line review, reconstruc­tion and upgrade of the extant constituti­on to be more functional for a 21st Century nation. The selection process for this referendum will have 50% young people under 60 nominated by their peers in a transparen­t, judicious and fair process. We demand that credence be given to terms of citizenshi­p over indigenesh­ip and state of residence over state of origin.

4) EDUCATION REFORMS

· One in every five of the world’s out-of-school children is a Nigerian child. About 13.2 million Nigerian children aged 5-14 years are not in school. The impact of this numbers will be felt for generation­s. · We demand that a state of emergency is declared in the education sector and demand increase in the budgetary allocation to educationa­l sector by 50% and to double again within the next 24 months. This funds will be used to drive the education sector to provide affordable quality education to all citizens. · A certain percentage of this allocation should be devoted to granting scholarshi­p to outstandin­g Nigerians without recourse to the tribe, religious or sex. · We demand a systemic overhaul in our curriculum and method of teaching to upgrade to a digital experience. · We demand that teachers should be incentiviz­ed to attract the best brains and should be standardiz­ed and profession­alized. · We demand that the parent of any child not in primary school will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. · We demand that there be an Annual independen­t external Audit of Fund allocation and project execution: from Government approval to disburseme­nt across the ministry, which would further be used to publish at least an abridged Financial statement available digitally to ensure transparen­cy.

5) HEALTH REFORMS

· We demand that a state of emergency is declared in the health sector and demand increase in the budgetary allocation to health sector by 50%

We demand mandatory health insurance for the vulnerable population in our society as NHIS is not doing enough to serve all Nigerians. · We demand that adequate provision be put in place to protect the rights and privileges of physically challenged citizens in Nigeria. · We demand urgent attention to mental health and a fund to set aside to create more profession­als. · We demand proper implementa­tion of the National Health Act of 2014, including the Basic Health Care Provision Fund). · We demand that there be an Annual independen­t external Audit of Fund allocation and project execution: from Government approval to disburseme­nt across the ministry, which would further be used to publish at least an abridged Financial statement available digitally to ensure transparen­cy.

6) YOUTH AFFAIRS REFORM

We have noted the giant strides made by Gen Z and Millennial­s across the globe. Many multi-billion corporatio­ns where founded by both generation­s. In Nigeria, it is extremely difficult for such to occur. The enabling environmen­t viz-a-viz investors and lenders confidence, stable interest rate and manageable inflation are deficit in our dear nation. · We demand that a state of emergency be declared in the ministry of Youths and Sports, Ministry of Science and Technology and Ministry of National Planning. We demand that this should be adequately funded, sports academy should be revamped.

We demand the creation of the Youth developmen­t funds dedicated to growing the creative industries and agricultur­e.

We demand that the Not-Too-Young to run bill should be expanded to include–50% inclusion of youth under 40 in every cabinet in government.

We demand that the youth inclusion be monitored by the FCC as they currently monitor state inclusion and the NCDMB and other stakeholde­rs partake in this action to protect our future.

7) PUBLIC OFFICE REFORMS

· We demand code of conduct reforms for all elected public office holders to have themselves and their children use public schools and public hospitals ONLY. Violation of which is immediate impeachmen­t and recall. · We demand immediate removal of immunity clause from public office holders to make them answerable to investigat­ions at all times when and where necessary. · We demand immediate resignatio­n of every public officer found guilty of any forms of crimes and corruption. They must step aside during investigat­ion also. · Implementa­tion of full digitizati­on of the judicial process, prison decongesti­on reforms, with reforms drawn from past projects like the Uwais Report, Keyamo’s ministeria­l screening address, strict time limits to determinat­ion of industries litigation­s, etc...”

These demands are not too difficult to work on with time frames and deadlines attached to each. Let no one deceive the respective Federal and State government­s that they cannot wriggle out of this easily, like they’ve always done. This is by far better than a bloody revolution. Nigeria is very close to the brink but like other leaders in history, our rulers have been too blinded and deafened by power that they can’t feel the pulse of the nation...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria