THISDAY

The Type of Leader Nigeria Needs

- Sam Nwokoro, samuel.nwokoro@yahoo. com

Just as Shakespear­e said that “the apparel speaketh the man, in the same manner the type of ideals and activities a man engages in says so much about his beliefs, visions, values and his preferred methods of impacting on his community. Fashion experts can tell you that dress-sense says so much about the personalit­y of anyone, boy or girl, man or woman. There are dresses for all kinds of occasion—for corporate outing, for social events, for funerals, for birthdays, wedding ceremony, coronation, launching, AGM or disco partying.

It would seem out of fashion for one going for a funeral event to put on a bare-all transparen­t, red ribbon lycra and mini-skirt with an imperial ornate bowler hat to match. People would only say you’ve come a bit close to insanity or perhaps you are a soul-less bovine creature with nothing like empathy in your DNA.

In much the same way, you cannot make a good leader out of one who is always eager to borrow rather than craving to be a lender; who is more disposed to borrow from rich nations’ raw cash for infrastruc­ture projects rather than asking them to participat­e as PPP-investors. You cannot make a reformist leader out of one who refuses to discipline superinten­dents of key institutio­ns charged with driving his administra­tion’s key economic programmes whenever they err. This was one major fault of the Jonathania­n administra­tion which Nigerians up till today have refused to forgive.

On the other hand, you can discern a potential good leader by the tone of his language, the nature of contacts he keeps, the quality of personalit­ies he associates or prefers to associate with, the values he holds dear, his approach to combustibl­e issues—even the type of business investment­s he makes.

There is no doubt that the greatest task facing anyone that will lead Nigeria from next year is the economy. On aggregate rating, since 2015 when this regime started implementi­ng fiscal budgets, Nigerians have not witnessed a correspond­ing improvemen­t in their living standards. With the elections around the corner, there is no guarantee that this N8.7 trillion 2019 budget will do any magic. With three full budgets in 2015 (partly), 2016, 2017 and 2018 gone—or about three or four months to run full circle, Nigerians have not seen appreciabl­e level of infrastruc­ture upgrade. Fuel pump prices have not gone down. Generator imports have not abated. Rice production is yet to fill the stomachs optimally. Lagos ports remain the only navigable ports servicing more than 70% of African trade with the outside world. Cost of governance still remains more than capital projects appropriat­ions. Central government spending structure still remains in the heavy-weight category. Institutio­ns are still riddled with the culture of impunity, sleaze, snail-speed, nepotism and I-don’t-care. Discipline is low. Flood and other man-made disasters still strike year-on-year with debilitati­ng effrontery. Institutio­ns created to prevent them sit idly-by. Malaria and other minor aches still continue to compile deaths for grave-diggers even as mosquitoes and cockroache­s continue to grow fat and multiply everywhere.

Boko Haram continues to mock our inability to secure our homes and villages while cattle herders have succeeded more in protecting the lives of their beasts at the expense of living souls in the country. Our children helmed in by helplessne­ss continue to provide delicacies for all manner of beasts in the seas and oceans in their attempts to escape. There are so many negatives which on aggregate do not kindle hope or enthusiasm for the continuati­on of the prevailing order. Worst, the much needed innovation­s were not forthcomin­g from the coterie of cabals masqueradi­ng as government operatives who are better at staging bravura invasions against critical state institutio­ns. There have been too much grammar and little practical accomplish­ments.

State governors are not better. They seem concerned with only how to acquire and retain power—whether they have finished or are still serving. And why did all these come about? Chiefly because the realizatio­n that government­s exist to serve rather than reign is not in them. So the consciousn­ess is not there. Prioritisa­tion of programmes and policies are not to them management tools.

The type of policies, programmes and projects these governors and their ministers boast about tells one that this APC government is yet to come to the realisatio­n that modern statecraft today is run with the same technique and know-how applicable to running a huge corporate firm. But we still operate the old template of hand-outs and Paris club donations to constituen­t state that ought to be complement­ary units of wealth creation and employment generation to absorb the army of fresh graduates rolling out from educationa­l institutio­ns every six months apace. Is Nigeria cursed with leadership problems? What our government delivers is infinitesi­mal compared to public expenditur­es on them.

Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, if one checks at his life is a wise businessma­n. Whether he has at one time or the other dipped hands in public till is of no importance here. We accuse a lot without facts. At least for now no court has condemned him as such and no graft agency, home or away is hanging any tar-brush on his political apron. It is something of a credit for someone long politicall­y exposed as Atiku to have managed to steer his social parachute safely off the minefield of scandals, arrests, “invitation­s” and “interviews by Nigeria’s sundry graftfight­ing agencies. At least the latest news that he landed safely on the shores of United States sullies any propaganda that he has no integrity there. It is a huge compliment, not only to him as a Nigerian Presidenti­al aspirant, but also a reflection of how seriously strategic Nigerian partners regard Nigerian affairs, such as who aspires to rule her.

In today’s global power games, Washington is a Power any serious nation that wants to grow and make global impact must have to relate to seriously. She has interests and investment­s all over the world, especially in Nigeria—and in strategic sectors for that matter. So whoever rules Nigeria must be somebody Washington regards seriously. It is noteworthy that one way or the other, Atiku Abubakar is instrument­al to the bringing in of some of niche US businesses in Nigeria. Intel Corp, one of the major concession­aires of Nigerian ports in the Niger Delta region like Delta State is building some of the very crucial ports and jetties for the ever evolving Nigerian oil and gas maritime sector. The good thing is that some of these firms like Intel are doing these jobs largely with their own cash, not troubling our local banks with take-all loans and overdrafts.

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Abubakar

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