Business Day (Nigeria)

Amaechi tapes: A peep into why Nigeria is not working

- CHRISTOPHE­R AKOR

The dissonance between what Nigerian politician­s profess before the public and in front of the cameras and what they believe or admit to close aides and friends in the closet are worlds apart. And this goes to show the quality of leadership the country parades and why it is retrogress­ing despite its promise and the amount of resources available to it.

Rotimi Amaechi, minister of Transport and director-general of the Buhari-osinbajo Presidenti­al Campaign Organisati­on, was caught on tape decrying the dismal failure of the Buhari administra­tion while characteri­sing the president as one who does not read and is not moved by criticisms and complaints. He also dismissed the country as hopeless, helpless, and up to no good.

While the opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has been celebratin­g the release of the tape, the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) or, more appropriat­ely, media aides of the president, while not denying that the voice in the tape was Ameachi’s, maintain that it was doctored to present both Amaechi and the president in bad light.

Onhispart,theministe­rhasrefuse­d to either confirm or deny the authentici­ty of the tape, a time-tested strategy of waiting for the storm to blow over.

Regardless, the leaked tapes offer rich insights into the thinking and hypocrisy of the average Nigerian politician who puts up the appearance of being the most patriotic Nigerian with the zeal to transform the country but inwardly, does not believe in the viability of the country and is prepared to sell the country for a mess of pottage.

“Three years of Buhari o, everybody is crying: pressmen are crying, farmers are crying, workers are crying, politician­s are crying, students are crying, three years o! The rate of poverty is very high. The people are hungry. Nigeria will never change,” Amaechi was caught on tape saying.

He was, however, careful to warn his listeners that what he was saying was only meant for their ears alone and must not make it to the public space.

“These are not things you publish o. If you publish them, you will never sit with me any day,” he said in the tape that has gone viral on social media.

In another of the leaked tapes, Amaechi went personal, offering an insight into the president’s character.

“The president does not listen to anybody. He doesn’t care. You can write what you want to write. The president doesn’t care. Does he read? He will read, he will laugh. He will say, ‘Come, come and see, they are abusing me here.’ In fact, there was one case of somebody in Onitsha, a trader in Onitsha who couldn’t sell his goats during Sallah. And I was with Oga on the plane and the man was busy abusing Buhari. He said, ‘Amaechi, come, what is my business with Onitsha goat seller?’” the minister was heard saying.

Finally, and most telling of all, Amaechi dismissed the country as a failure and a lost cause.

“This country can never change, I swear. The only way this country can change is if everybody is killed. This country is going nowhere, I swear,” he said.

“Even if you divide the country into 10, it will still not change. I’m not joking o. When Magnus (Abe) was my SSG, I told him that this country is hopeless and helpless. He said, ‘Oga, stop it now. Coming from a governor, don’t be saying that.’ But two months in Abuja, Magnus said this country is hopeless and helpless. I said, ‘Why?’ He said, ‘You are right, the only thing they do in Abuja is share money, they don’t work.’” He was further heard saying.

Yet, in public, the same Amaechi will regale Nigerians with the good works of the Buhari presidency, assuring the youths that Buhari will secure their future.

“I only have a simple but candid advice to Nigerian youths and that is: come 2019 elections, they should vote for Buhari because their future is at stake,” Amaechi said at the 2018 Future Awards in Lagos.

This brings to mind the revelation by Eghosa Osaghae, vice chancellor of Igbinedion University, at the 2017 Platform, of his discussion with an unnamed American ambassador to Nigeria, who, as the professor narrated, challenged him to name any Nigerian, dead or alive, that truly believes in the country and has its interest at heart.

Osagahe said the ambassador pointedly told him that all Nigerians he had met before and while serving in the country were prepared to sell off the country for their private gains.

A Nigerian on Twitter, Collins, captured Amaechi’s hypocrisy succinctly when he queried, “You do not believe the country can get better unless everybody is killed, yet you receive taxpayers’ money every month as salary to do what you don’t believe in.”

That explains why, despite the effusive claim to patriotism by leaders and politician­s, Nigeria still remains a backwater country with broken education, health, and other critical infrastruc­ture necessary to help Nigerians lead meaningful lives, while the leaders ensure they and their families have access to these facilities in the developed countries of the world.

Perhaps, Vladimir Putin, the strongman of Russia, had Nigeria in mind when was said to have described Africa as nothing but a cemetery for Africans.

“When an African becomes rich, his bank accounts are in Switzerlan­d. He travels to France for medical treatment. He invests in Germany. He buys fromdubai.heconsumes­chinese.he prays in Rome and Mecca. His children study in Europe. He travels to Canada, USA, Europe for tourism. If he dies, he will be buried in his country of Africa. Africa is just a cemetery for Africans. How could a cemetery be developed?” Putin was quoted to have said.

Unsurprisi­ngly, in a fourth Amaechi tape, Thursday night, the minister was again heard boasting that all his children live abroad and his salary as a ministerca­nnotcaterf­ortheirexp­enses.

“My salary is N960,000. APC takes N100,000. How much will remain? It won’t pay; all my kids are overseas, all. My first son is in Dublin, my second son is in Canada, and my third son is in Britain. It won’t pay any of their fees,” he was heard saying.

Going by Amaechi’s claim of not earning enough to pay his children’s fees abroad, the rational step of action was for him to decline public office and go into private business to be able to raise enough money to cater for his family abroad. •Continueso­nlineat www.businessda­y.ng

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