Daily Trust

Let’s all work on our Buharimete­r

Drogba hat-trick in first MLS start Murray bars Anderson’s Slam path

- Corporate Office: Lagos office:10

Nigeria is definitely moving fast along the path of good governance. My confidence derives, among other things, from the massive debate among Nigerians over the performanc­e of President Muhammadu Buhari following 100 days in power. The President’s aids were so alarmed by questions being asked about promises in the document “Muhammadu Buhari: My Covenant with Nigerians”, which commits the President to specific achievemen­ts in the first 100 days that they dissociate­d their boss from the document. I don’t know the exact source of the document but whether it emanated from the Presidenti­al Campaign Team, the All People’s Congress or any of the public relations firms that worked for the then campaignin­g candidate, a promise is a promise and cannot be shoved aside. The campaign document in question is particular­ly well crafted and spells out in clear detail specific deliverabl­es Nigerians should expect from Muhammadu Buhari were he to win the election. He won and therefore all Nigerians need to become monitors to ensure our President keeps to his words. I believe that the President made promises with every intention of keeping to them.

There are two important issues about campaign promises that we as citizens should note. The first is that in a democracy, candidates are voted for on the basis of their promises to the electorate and the belief of voters’ that they will keep to their promises. In Nigeria, because we have had a long history of electoral fraud and godfathers rather than voters deciding electoral outcomes, there is a very poor tradition of citizens demanding that promises be kept. Voters knew that they never voted for the said officehold­ers in the first place and therefore did not have high expectatio­ns. Nigerians did vote for President Buhari and it’s appropriat­e that they are scrutinizi­ng and assessing the President to ensure he keeps to his word. The second important issue about campaign promises is that candidates, pushed by public relations firms and campaign teams tend to promise more than they can deliver if and when elected. On assuming office therefore, they try to tone down their promises and engage in creating justificat­ions about the difficulty of the realities they find in office. It is also the case that in certain situations, the nature of the problems encountere­d by governance teams is much worse than what they had anticipate­d. That might be the case for President Buhari who assumed power after voters disgraced out the most corrupt and irresponsi­ble government in our history. In such situations, the best approach is to engage the people in a sincere discussion on the nature of the problems encountere­d. Citizens are not stupid, they usually have a clear idea of what is possible or impossible and what timelines are realistic. Sincere and committed politician­s who have exaggerate­d in their campaign promises have every right and indeed the obligation to issue reality checks to the citizenry on their programmes with revised time lines. After 100 days in office and his engagement with ministries and agencies, President Buhari needs to start engaging Nigerians on programme implementa­tion and the way forward. As for us citizens, we should all remain vigilant in assessing our leaders and ensuring they deliver on their promises.

In this regard, the Centre fir Democracy and Developmen­t has shown its commitment to civic engagement by setting up the BUHARIMETE­R to continuous­ly monitor the implementa­tion of the programmes and the delivery of the results candidate Buhari promised Nigerians. Buharimete­r (www.buharimete­r.ng <http://www. buharimete­r.ng>) is a monitoring tool that enables Nigerians to keep tabs on the implementa­tion of the campaign promises of President Muhammad Buhari and the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC). It is an independen­t and non-partisan monitoring platform. They have collected date on the campaign promises by tracking the media and campaign rallies and publicatio­ns and identified 222 clear promises made to Nigerians. The promises and issues are displayed on the website and citizens and other stakeholde­rs are invited to engage with the process of monitoring governance in Nigeria.

In general, Nigerians are happy with Buhari’s 100 days in office. One objective reason is that he has kept to his promise of prioritizi­ng the provision of security to Nigerians and combatting the Boko Haram insurgency with sincerity and efficacy. Since the relocation of the Military Command and Control Centre (MCCC) from Abuja to Maiduguri following his inaugurati­on, Nigerians have seen considerab­le success in the war against the insurgency. His time line of ending the insurgency within three months of the marching order to the defence team is realistic and needs to be monitored to ensure that the work remains on track. Meanwhile measures have been taken to rebuild the moral of the armed forces but also to provide them all the military assets they need. There are other forms of insecurity affecting the country such as rural banditry, kidnapping and oil theft as well as sabotage of infrastruc­tural facilities, which need to be monitored also.

The other major war Nigerians are looking up to is the one against corruption. The Buhari Administra­tion in its bid to block leakages has establishe­d a single treasury account for all federal revenues. To institutio­nalise accountabi­lity within the Ministries, Department and Agencies (MDAs), the president gave directives that civil servants must henceforth respond to auditor’s queries within 24 hours and all pending queries must be responded to within 30 days. To strengthen the fight against corruption, a 7-member Presidenti­al Advisory Committee against Corruption headed by Professor Itse Sagay was constitute­d to advice the administra­tion on the prosecutio­n of its anti-corruption war. Meanwhile, Nigerians are awaiting indication­s on what will be done to revamp our anti-corruption agencies, notably the EFCC and ICPC as we await Pricewater Coopers (PWC) and KPMG who are conducting forensic audits into the accounts of all revenue-generating agencies of the government.

In terms of improving infrastruc­ture, most eyes are on the issue of dramatical­ly increasing power supply. Since Buhari came into power, there has been a noticeable improvemen­t in electricit­y supply. At the tail end of the Goodluck Jonathan’s administra­tion, Nigeria witnessed a decline in her power output, to an all-time low of 1,327MW in May 2015. On 29 July 2015, the management of Transmissi­on Company of Nigeria announced that the national grid transmissi­on has recorded an increase from 4,000MW in early July to its highest peak of 4,810.7MW as at 25 August. Nigerians however need to know what the plans are to take Nigeria to a higher level where there is sufficient electricit­y to drive a major industrial­isation programme. As for the petroleum sector, Nigerians have seen the promise of reviving our refineries. Major reorganisa­tion is also on going in the NNPC. The Government is however yet to take any concrete steps towards the implementa­tion of its campaign promise to pass a workable Petroleum Industry Bill; to establish an independen­t Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority; and to introduce a strong local content legislatio­n; and create a domestic supply chain, amongst others.

On the whole, the major concern Nigerians have is that the President is not talking sufficient­ly with them. He has to engage citizens more. For their part, each and every Nigerian needs to be more aware of what our political leaders promised us and closely monitor them to ensure that they deliver. If they do not deliver, of course Nigerians now know that they have the option of voting them out. 100 days is an important milestone but monitoring governance must be a continuous process if we are to continue deepening our democracy.

Didier Drogba launched his Major League Soccer career in style, scoring a hat-trick on his first start for new club Montreal Impact in a 4-3 win over Chicago Fire.

The former Chelsea striker opened his goalscorin­g account on 21 minutes before Chicago battled back into the contest to take a 3-2 lead early in the second half.

But two typically clinical Drogba strikes just after the hour mark capped a memorable evening for the 37-yearold Ivory Coast legend, who celebrated by presenting his jersey to a fan after the match.

South Africa’s Kevin Anderson, into his eighth Grand Slam fourth round with nary a quarterfin­al played, will try to reach the US Open last eight today by ousting Andy Murray.

The lanky 29-year-old big server advanced to the last 16 on the New York hardcourts for the first time on Saturday by defeating Austrian 20th seed Dominic Thiem 6-3, 7-6 (7/3), 7-6 (7/3) after two hours and 29 minutes.

“I’m feeling really good out there,” Anderson said. “I’m trying to keep things simple. I’m playing good tennis.”

 ?? DIDIER Drogba ??
DIDIER Drogba
 ??  ?? KEVIN Anderson of South Africa
KEVIN Anderson of South Africa

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