THISDAY

May We not Miss Buhari

Anthony Kila writes that President Muhammadu Buhari is leaving Nigeria worse than he met it upon assumption of office on May 29, 2015.

- of ANTHONY KILA -Kila is Institute Director at CIAPS. www.ciaps.org. NOTE: Interested readers should continue in the online edition on www.thisdayliv­e.com

Dear Readers Regardless of whatever happens to anyone, today’s epistle will be the last that will be written and shared under the normal and legal tenure of President Muhammadu Buhari.

What will from after this weekend be termed as “Buhari era” in the 4th republic stated on Friday May 29th in 2015 and it is scheduled to finish by Monday 29th May 2023, that is barring any extraordin­ary occurrence.

It has been eight long years of wonders, pain, hope and disappoint­ments.To each their own, as we await the new administra­tion, there are those hoping and working to ensure it is the person declared by INEC as president elect (Aswiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu) that will take over from Buhari, there are those hoping and working to ensure it is some else that will take over from Buhari.

It must be said that President Buhari himself has shown all possible outwardly signs that he is ready to go.

Such are good signs that should be recognised and praised. Yes, an elected leader that shows he is ready to leave office at the end of his tenure should be an ordinary and automatic event not worthy of news let alone praise.

Alas too many other African leaders tend to struggle with the concept of obeying simple commandmen­ts: There appears to be something in the air that leads African leaders into a kind of psychosis that makes them want to remain in power beyond their constituti­onal or even decency tenure. Thankfully, not so with Buhari, the man even seems eager to leave office and head back to his country home in Dauara.

On his way out though, he has been saying things that makes one believe that he thinks we the people are going to miss him. I think such thoughts come from his idea of how well he has done for the country, maybe he is considerin­g his efforts and intentions. Some people tend to agree with him. Let me state very clearly so that all can hear and understand that my prayer, hope and plan for Nigeria is that “May we not miss Buhari”. The wishes and idea of those that say we are going to miss Buhari seem to me like a maledictio­n that needs to be prayed against.

There are two major reasons for my prayer and hope. One is objective and general the other is a subjective and peculiar reason. Objectivel­y and generally speaking, one misses the past when the present is not as good as the past.

For us to miss the Buhari era after May 29th 2023, the days and years that come after the last eight years for the country must be really bad. Just think about it, how bad must things get for one to miss Buhari?

Will it be due to his own performanc­e in office or will it be due to the performanc­e of his ministers? Will it be for the events that happened in world during the Buhari era? Heavens and earth forbid such future.

Let us even for pure hypothesis’s sake assume that Buhari was a great and inspiring president and his era a peaceful and prosperous one, the prayer not to miss Buhari era will still be a valid one because it will mean those coming after him will be worse. For anyone that seeks progress and developmen­t, the hope and prayer is for tomorrow to be better than yesterday not vice versa.

On a subjective and peculiar side, there are many things that President Buhari did that one hopes that his successor does not do, there are many things that he did not do that one hopes his successor does.

Let’s face it and tell the whole truth, I personally and strongly hope that the new president is totally different from Buhari.

In my view, being different from President Buhari is a prerequisi­te for being a better President in 2023 and onwards.

A good place for the incoming to start from for not being like the outgoing is communicat­ion. It would appear the outgoing president, somewhere along the line, developed an allergy for talking directly to the Nigerian press and people and for eight years he never found a cure to that allergy even in his many travels.

May we not have a new president that will find it difficult to speak directly to Nigerian press and people.

Recalling the number of months, the outgoing president spent in office without appointing ministers and other key positions to manage his government and cabinet is an embarrassi­ng experience for some us.

It becomes excruciati­ng when we note that most of the people that made his list were known suspects that worked with him during the merger and political campaign that made him president. The only surprises were some controvers­ial inclusions and some insensitiv­e and inhumane exclusion.

Please note that I say all these without dwelling on the perceived lop-sidedness of all appointmen­ts and nomination that was done under this administra­tion.

May we not have a president that will make us miss the Buhari method and content of nominating and appointing.

There are too many social and economic indices that went from bad to worse under the outgoing regime to make anyone that wishes Nigeria well to hope for the incoming administra­tion to make us miss the outgoing one.

Some people made money under this regime, others got fame, I wish them well but I am sure none of them will want the current rate of unemployme­nt or the level of inflation to be worse than the one the outgoing administra­tion is leaving us.

Lest we become guilty of what we accuse others of doing, it is important that we pause to ponder on the fact in all these, President Buhari was not a sole trader. There were people around him, his court that was made of various people and personalit­ies, some paid and charged to give counsel, some others, without any official role but still very important and influentia­l.

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