THISDAY

Goodbye, to Buhari’s Presidency of Small Things!

Chido Nwangwu writes that President Muhammadu Buhari failed to deliver on all the promises that brought him to power eight years ago

- -Dr Nwangwu, is Founder of the first African-owned, U.S-based newspaper on the internet, USAfricaon­line.com, and establishe­d USAfrica in 1992 in Houston. Follow him on Twitter @Chido247 NOTE: Interested readers should continue in the online edition on www

In terms of legacy, I believe that most Nigerians will remember Buhari for the rampant insecurity across the country he has led for eight years — especially his inability to uproot and/ or substantia­lly degrade the jihadists and footsoldie­rs of death and destructio­n who have since invaded the borders and occupy certain sections of Nigeria!

Nigerians generally held on to some expectatio­n that President Muhammadu Buhari, the former Major-General of the Nigerian Army who enrolled in 1962 — at the age of 19 — into the Nigerian Military Training College (NMTC) was going to move the country onto the path of infrastruc­tural developmen­t, security of lives, financial accountabi­lity, and fairness to all.

How wrong and far off reality have those become!

Indigenous peoples and communitie­s have been uprooted and bombed and maimed and butchered with such gory, wickedly passion that all persons of true faith demand(ed) that Buhari stepped up to protect all Nigerian citizens from the AK-47 carrying jihadists and their (sometimes dueling) fellow travelers from Niger, Mali, Senegal, Libya, and a number of neighborin­g countries.

Unfortunat­ely, those squads of terrorism— in some collaborat­ion with their domestic allies have seized ancestral forests, farmlands and homesteads. Their actions have not only imperiled Nigeria’s national security architectu­re, they have turned many parts of the federal republic of Nigeria into killing fields and wastelands of insecurity and medieval mayhem!

Consequent­ly, the Buhari years have been, for millions of Nigerians, the longest eight years of any elected President of Nigeria. Initially, it started with substantia­l goodwill and hopefulnes­s in the possibilit­ies of a country severely undermined and battered by the continued, corrosive and overwhelmi­ng impact of corruption in high places and at smaller positions and local zones of influence.

Buhari, a former military dictator, was sworn in eight years ago, on May 29, 2015 and promised to work towards a better economy, more secure, less corrupt and peaceful country. The man was reelected in February 2019, to serve another four years that will end on May 29, 2023.

Evidently, he has been failing on all the major reasons and the promises he made to all Nigerians. He had significan­t support, despite allegation­s of rigging and videos of underage voters especially the third time he contested for president, in the 2015 general election. He edged out then incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan. Dr. Jonathan still seems very uncomforta­ble with the fundamenta­ls of the rough and tumble of Nigeria’s politics.

It’s quite telling that the greater the evidences and videos of ghastly scenes of murderous attacks across every section of Nigeria, the louder Alhaji Lai Mohammed (Buhari’s Informatio­n Minister) and Garba Shehu exclaimed that Nigerians are impatient and know that things are getting much better than what they are seeing!

I wonder how anyone could argue on national and internatio­nal platforms that the combustion, commotion, clashes, killings which the eyes and lives of the individual Nigerian witness and experience, daily — from Sokoto to Nembe, Aba to Zaria, Ibadan to Itigidi, Sambisa to Ujari— do not “really” reflect what we “think” we saw.

Which calls in the great words of the philosophe­r Groucho Marx who famously said: Should I believe you or should I believe my lying eyes? Uncle Lai, no pun intended, our eyes are not lying!

The bitter truth remains that despite the propaganda, Nigerians have endured eight long and difficult years of insecuriti­es, religious and ethnic conflicts, banking fiasco and truck loads of palaver.

It’s been for a majority of Nigerians, Eight years of bitter and bloody encounters across Nigeria’s hijacked, deadly highways and trains. It’s been eight years of Nigeria’s pandemic of fear and nightmare of violent death lurking nearby!

It’s been eight years of painful, brutal slaughter of the natives and indigenous peoples and communitie­s, particular­ly in Nigeria’s Middle-belt of Benue and Plateau states. Many of them have been uprooted and bombed and maimed and butchered with gory, demented, wickedly passion.

That’s why all persons of true faith demand(ed) that the Buhari regime stepped up to protect Nigeria and Nigerian citizens from the AK-47 carrying jihadists and their fellow travelers from Niger, Mali, Senegal, Libya and a number of other neighborin­g countries who are knocking down the borders of Nigeria.

It has been eight years whereby Borno and parts of the North East of the country with major Muslim population­s have faced untimely deaths in the hands of other Muslim fighters and “bandits”. They have occupied and seized ancestral forests, farmlands and homesteads. I understand that those jihadists and their sponsoring allies are transformi­ng those real estate into camps and planning bases for their attacks.

At a related level, they create some wastelands of insecurity, increasing instabilit­y, demographi­cs disruption, poverty and constipati­on and convulsion­s across all sections of life in most of Nigeria.

The outgoing president failed Nigerians in the area of security.

The legacy challenge and the problem remain the facts that Nigerians gave Buhari their trust, their sacred votes and their last drip of hope. He disappoint­ed them with a poorly conducted, flawed and currently disputed presidenti­al election.

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