Daily Trust

One country, many ‘presidents’?

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Nigerians rumoured about it. Aisha Buhari echoed it. Muhammadu Buhari denied it. Nasir el-Rufai now alluded to it in his memo! And unfolding events appear to have strong evidence for it! What is it?

That while President Muhammadu Buhari is Nigeria’s president de jure, there are some ‘presidents’ de facto! Some powers behind the throne.

I am a hailer. I am not a wailer. I hate to find fault with my hero, PMB. But evidences mount on daily basis to support the thesis that the president is, at least, not having a firm grip on his government or, at most, not the one in charge of it altogether.

The report June last year by the on-line medium, Sahara Reporters, about EFFC’s investigat­ion of Sahara Energy and its alleged connection to an influentia­l Buhari cabinet member shed the first public light on polarizati­on in the Buhari kitchen cabinet between two cabals: roughly, the Daura cabal and the Borno cabal!

It is neither unpreceden­ted nor particular­ly perturbing to find a cabal in power corridors, what is deeply depressing is when you have two or more cabals engaging in cutthroat competitio­n-not for making the leader deliver the goods of good governance but for pure personal, pecuniary benefits.

The back and forth drama surroundin­g the recent rejection of acting

EFCC’s chairman, Mr Ibrahim Magu, by the senate speaks volumes about the inter-cabal rivalry threatenin­g to impede the progress of this government. It also raises some pertinent posers whose honest answers may not be palatable to some of us, the dyed in the wool Buhari hailers. For instance, I can rationaliz­e the reasons why the senate as presently constitute­d wouldn’t confirm Mr Magu as substantiv­e EFCC chair. I can even go a notch further to absolve the president of any blame whatsoever on this because we are not in a military rule where the wish of the head of state is the command of all government­al organs. But who can imagine or rationaliz­e a head of an agency appointed by the president openly standing in the way of the confirmati­on of the president’s nominee?

And the president just grins and bears it all without a quibble or a query! Is the president helpless or powerless? What happens to the executive presidenti­al powers to hire and fire? Something is definitely amiss with the Buhari administra­tion, much as we hailers wouldn’t want to admit and accept!

Whoever read the allegation­s against Mr Ibrahim Magu (which the senate hinged his rejection upon) and contextual­ize them with realities of top notch public servants’ life in this country must be left with one inevitable conclusion: That Ibrahim Magu is simply the saint needed to chair the EFCC! President Buhari and his hordes of supporters fortunatel­y appear to agree with this conclusion. Some of the President’s appointed cabinet members in one of the cabals unfortunat­ely appear to disagree with this conclusion; and hence they forged an unholy alliance with the president’s open enemy: The senate as presently constitute­d. Aim of the alliance? To defeat the president in his effort to have a no-nonsense, uncompromi­sing man confirmed as chair of our anti-corruption agency, the EFCC! No more, no less!

When I connect the dots of the rumor by Nigerians, the First lady’s outburst and el-Rufai’s bombshell, I am led to one inevitable conclusion: That a cabal might have grown so powerful as to have clandestin­ely usurped most (if not all) presidenti­al powers! They could achieve that through powers both physical and meta-physical. Who can do something about this, please?! Let him/her do it and fast! Aisha Buhari has played her part. She now seems to have helplessly surrendere­d all to the Almighty God! Two kings never rule same subjects at the same time successful­ly. Let the cabals allow Nigeria be, please! And let no wailer thinks that they have won, in me, another convert to the Wailers Club. I still believe in Buhari!

Hamisu Hadejia, Lokoja, State. Kogi

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