The Guardian (Nigeria)

The Case For Atiku Abubakar

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JUST recently, former vice president, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, the Waziri Adamawa, said he was not desperate to be president of Nigeria. But, to be sure, he is an aspirant on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The race for the office of the president is always tension-soaked. The incumbent president and his supporters tend to become hysterical and abrasive in the race for re-election. Atiku’s statement was, perhaps, made in the context of the usual do-or-die nature of such race.

Besides, I cannot wager that Atiku’s traducers were taken in by his statement. He might have intended to either construct a dignifying exit strategy for himself or make his traducers to imprudentl­y drop their guards in what should typically be a fight-to-the-finish race. I also do not think that those who are opposed to Atiku’s presidency are comfortabl­e with his political moves in recent times. They do not rest assured in their antagonist­ic fixation, knowing his capacity for politickin­g and political survival.

Any opponent who underrates the Jadaborn politician does so at his or her peril. Historical­ly, he has most of the times been on top of his political game. In the illfated Third Republic, he had wanted to be president. He had contested for the ticket of the defunct Social Democratic Party (SDP) in a race against the late M.K.O. Abiola and Ambassador Baba Gana Kingibe. In a bid to scale the primary hur- dle within the party and clinch the presidenti­al ticket, Abiola, who appeared to enjoy a countrywid­e support, had struck a political rapprochem­ent with the late Major General Shehu Musa Yar’adua, who was Atiku’s political leader.

The move had resulted in Atiku’s withdrawal from the race. His action and support had ensured Abiola’s victory at the expense of Kingibe in a subsequent run-off. But because of the massive support that Kingibe enjoyed within the party, it became inevitable that he should be nominated as the running mate, regardless of the fact that they were both Muslims. That was how the historic Muslim-muslim ticket that received nationwide approbatio­n crystalliz­ed. The presidenti­al ticket had gone ahead to win the annulled June 12, 1993 election.

In 1999, Atiku led the Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM), the political structure of the late Shehu Yar’adua, to work in partnershi­p with other groups to form the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Even though he contested and won election to be governor of Adamawa state, Olusegun Obasanjo, the presidenti­al candidate of the PDP, had nominated him as his running mate. That was how Atiku became the vice president from 1999 to 2007.

Atiku’s unsuccessf­ul moves to supplant Obasanjo in 2003 upset the governance architectu­re at the centre and altered his political trajectory. Although, he was able to lock in the position of running mate to Obasanjo in the 2003 presidenti­al election, once the election was won, Obasanjo strategica­lly sidelined him in their second term in office in a whiff of political vendetta. Obasanjo had, unchalleng­ed, pushed a corruption narrative about Atiku in the absence of concrete evidence to nail him. But presently, a vast majority of Nigerians are now at home with the fact that the Atiku-iscorrupt perception was the ingenious creation of Obasanjo to make his (Atiku’s) candidatur­e a difficult sell anytime he decides to contest for the position of president in Nigeria. Atiku’s initial undoing was that he never cared about that.

Today, the astute politician is jostling for the presidenti­al ticket on the PDP platform. He is, no doubt, formidable. He looks the best material that the PDP should deploy for the 2019 battle against President Buhari. Atiku has the experience. He has the grassroots and nationwide networks. He has the financial war chest. He has the gravitas. He has the courage to fight to the finish. He is well prepared for the job, armed with an organic economic blueprint with which to transform Nigeria into a balanced, stable and strong economy.

Besides, Atiku has clear political philosophi­es that he espouses regarding the future of the Nigeria as well as programmes of socio-economic reconstruc­tion. He is restlessly looking for an opportunit­y to translate them into pragmatic realities. From that prism, he is desperate, even though he said he was not. If truly he was not, I hereby call him out to be. Nigeria is presently being incompeten­tly managed and he happens to be in pole position ahead of other contestant­s for the job of redeeming Nigeria. Truth is, the massive battle to upstage candidate Buhari of the APC is not for lily-livered.

After the 2019 presidenti­al election, Atiku can no longer offer himself for the position, given his age. He is about 71 and this is his last and best chance of becoming president. If I were him, I would be desperate in the circumstan­ce of the national emergency to save Nigeria. I would deploy my human and political capital as well as my massive financial resources to get on the ballot in the PDP and go ahead to fund a massive coalition around my candidatur­e for the epic battle. The time for him to act decisively is now.

A cursory look at Atiku’s political trajectory will show a determined man who never says die. It will reveal an embodiment of a rugged political fighting spirit. It will show a display of raw guts. Atiku is, without a doubt, gutsy! How many of those seeking to dislodge Buhari had the guts to say they would probe him if they got to power before Atiku did? He said he would probe the arms procuremen­t contracts of the Buhari administra­tion.

Apart from Atiku, how many of the aspirants from the north have espoused restructur­ing of the federation as a campaign theme? Knowing full well that restructur­ing is not attractive to the northern political elite,

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