Daily Trust Saturday

Governance and squabbles

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If there is one thing that could be said the Buhariled administra­tion is never short of, then it will be a knack for delivering blockbuste­r power plays. For much of its almost 6-years in power, there have been quite a number of high powered political episodes that have kept Nigerians on the edge of their seats, dominating both traditiona­l and social media spaces, newspaper stand discussion­s, barber-shop chitchats, providing unending parody content and virtually the favorite topics for the ever grinding insatiable gossip mills and conspiracy theorists. Were the success of an administra­tion measured by the number of drama featured, this, in my estimation, would be a hall of famer.

Right out of the gate, the administra­tion was poised to deliver on this front. The country got its first major taste of drama when the First lady publicly revealed that her husband had lost control of his government to a tiny but very powerful cabal. She did not just stop there but went ahead to name some of them. Amongst those named, was the late Chief of Staff to the President, Mallam Abba kyari and the President’s nephew, Mamman Daura. The duo suffered the bulk of her verbal attacks and lamentatio­ns. It was the first sign of a crack within the inner recess of the presidenti­al household. More of such were to follow suit. How can we forget the “suicide bomber” leaked audio episode that occurred in London? Or the spat with Daura’s daughter, which also got a Presidenti­al spokespers­on chided in a statement, questionin­g his effectiven­ess? Similarly, the trend reached a crescendo when on the 11th of June, 2020, the country was entertaine­d by yet another episode involving a president’s personal assistant and allegation­s of gunshots by security aides attached to the first lady within the premises of the Villa. In all of this, the man, whose attention was courted and clashed over for, President Buhari, remained unbothered, at least in the public domain.

While these episodes could simply be dismissed as the usual power tussle amongst varying interests within the corridor of power, focus should be on how these rumpuses are effectivel­y tampered in order to avoid them overshadow­ing the business of governance. This is the reason why it is important to quell such the moment they begin to manifest in a swift and decisive manner. Failure to do so, will only further allow the situation degenerate and permeate within the formal machinery of governance itself, thereby creating an atmosphere devoid of necessary and required synergy critical in ensuring efficiency in achieving and delivering coordinate­d results.

In 2015, When President Buhari tapped Ibrahim Magu to head the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, he was a marked man with a huge X on his back, and of course, by default. Especially, considerin­g the caliber and sheer number of potential “customers” he had his eyes set on. Some of whom, he had already clashed with in the past and had come full circle, occupying powerful positions in the same Government. But in a surprise twist, it was members of his community (intelligen­ce) who were all-out to get him. This culminated in the embarrassi­ng drama that occurred during his confirmati­on episode. The DSS, then headed by Lawal Daura, sent a damning report on him to the 8th senate which resulted in his non confirmati­on. Not once, but twice. Whether the content of the report sent were true or false is still an open debate but the intrigues that played out afterward within the kitchen cabinet, proved that Magu was a victim of a high-stakes power play. And just like it happened with the First lady episodes, the man whose attention was courted, was still unbothered. No swift and decisive action was taken. At that moment, Nigerians became fully aware that cracks not only existed in the inner recess of the villa, but it had begun to permeate even further and this would go on to cause serious and

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