THISDAY

BUHARI: INYOUR FACE

Michael Egbejumi-David contends President Buhari is a sectional leader

- demdem@hotmail.co.uk

In the height of his very public fallout with then President Goodluck Jonathan, General Olusegun Obasanjo wrote in an 18-page open letter that one of his grouse with Jonathan was that the latter had set up himself as the president of only the Ijaws. I wonder how Obasanjo is feeling after Buhari unveiled a kitchen and store-room cabinet of 100% Northern males. As feared by some people, Buhari has quickly reverted to being a local champion, an unabashed sectional leader and not a broad-minded statesman president.

The true measure of a human being is what he or she does privately, when no one is looking. In other words, without the encumbranc­e of the dictate of the constituti­on that stipulates that ministers must come from all states of the federation, Buhari has chosen all his core appointmen­ts from the Northern part of Nigeria. He’s given a one-finger salute to the entire Southern Nigeria – including his All Progressiv­es Congress mates. It would appear his vaunted party supremacy only applies to legislativ­e officers.

For a president of a country to openly declare that he would favour only those that massively voted for him to the exclusion of others; you don’t need to look far to know what is really in his heart.

As a national politician, if people reject you, if they are not convinced by you, you should want to know why. Then you build bridges and begin to cultivate friendship, making necessary amends where possible. You do not go out of your way to emphasise parochiali­sm, reinforcin­g their original fears.

What irks is that no attempt at all was made to even pretend to be inclusive. The core appointmen­ts that Buhari has to make without worrying about federal character, he made exclusivel­y from his neck of the woods. The utter disdain shown to others is scary indeed. It is insensitiv­ity taken too far. When, before the election, some of us raised the issue of parochiali­sm, nepotism and all the other negative “isms” that litter Buhari’s public record, we were told that the man is not discrimina­tory at all, that his drivers, cooks and gardeners were from the South. Well, the man is here to reprise that wonderful formula.

Take for instance the Nigerian Customs. The most senior Custom officer in line to be the Comptrolle­r General of that service is a Yoruba fellow. Buhari completely ignored and bypassed him and brought in a retired (yes, Northern) Army officer to head Nigerian Customs.

How about that for gumption? The single-mindedness and the determined manner these lopsided core appointmen­ts are being made and the utter disregard for others and their feelings is quite troubling. At this rate, it is only a matter of time before the current Police boss is replaced by another ‘trusted’ hand.

Right under our collective nose, while we were still yammering about APC-PDP dichotomy, we were dragged right back to the era where one region lords it over all others. As we childishly focus solely on the War Against Jonathan’s Corruption, power is being consolidat­ed in just one place. And, wouldn’t you know, some of the folks that were shouting marginalis­ation less than a year ago have suddenly discovered the beauty of meritocrac­y?

One inelegant argument I heard was that because Umaru Yar’Adua appointed his people as Chief of Staff and as Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), and because Jonathan of the South-South appointed Pius Ayim from the Southeast as SGF, it is alright for Buhari to put only his Northern brothers everywhere. My response is: I thought this was supposed to be a corrective government?

Some people say that Buhari has assembled a team he feels he can work with. I say why contest a national post if you can only work with folks from just your region. Others say we should be patient and watch the president assemble a team to rescue the nation. I ask; rescue Nigeria from what?

Yet some others insist that we should wait as Buhari still has about 5,000 appointmen­ts to fill. I don’t know from where they obtained that figure, but the important point to note is that the core appointmen­ts have all gone to Northern males. The fluff and space-fillers will be thrown as token to others. Is this where we should be as a federation? Treating very sensitive matters with complete disregard for the notion of ‘one Nigeria?’ I can confidentl­y predict that Buhari will only unhappily and grudgingly obey the constituti­on when it comes to appointing his ministers. And even at that, the meatier ministries will all be handed over to older Northern males. Why? Action speaks louder than campaign promises.

If you take social participat­ion away from people, you make them slaves. Buhari must resist the temptation to continue treating sections of Nigeria like conquered territory. The president must not see some of his citizens as adversarie­s. He is president of all Nigerians and must always demonstrat­e that in all of his actions.

In the meantime, I hope that Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has enrolled himself in a suitably accelerate­d Hausa language lesson...

THE TRUE MEASURE OF A HUMAN BEING IS WHAT HE OR SHE DOES PRIVATELY, WHEN NO ONE IS LOOKING. IN OTHER WORDS, WITHOUT THE ENCUMBRANC­E OF THE DICTATE OF THE CONSTITUTI­ON THAT STIPULATES THAT MINISTERS MUST COME FROM ALL STATES OF THE FEDERATION, BUHARI HAS CHOSEN ALL HIS CORE APPOINTMEN­TS FROM THE NORTHERN PART OF NIGERIA

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