THISDAY

Buhari and Verdict of Posterity

Writes about the eight-year regime of former President Muhammadu Buhari with a verdict that the administra­tion performed below people’s expectatio­ns.

- Buhari -Egbe writes from Lagos NOTE: Interested readers should continue in the online edition on www.thisdayliv­e.com

It’s over 100 days since ex-President Muhammadu Buhari left office as Commander in Chief of the Nigerian Armed forces. Probably no Nigerian leader enjoyed as much goodwill as President Buhari when he started off as civilian President in 2015. His selling point was No to corruption. He didn’t appear ostentatio­us and indeed, was quite modest. Hardly were there reports of fiscal corruption traceable to his person.

This anti-corruption dispositio­n endeared him to people. For many, he was the true face of the leader that Nigeria needed.

For the Northern Talakawa or plebeian he was Mei-Gasikiya - the truthful, righteous person who keeps his words.

Nigerians rewarded him with endorsemen­t expectedly higher in the North during the 2015 and 2019 elections.

Nigerians started getting disappoint­ed when after an uncomforta­ble wait, rather than have profession­als that would deliver some good to the nation, he recycled largely old hands as Ministers. He also hardly made needed changes unless hounded.

Sadly, it is to Buhari’s discredit that the parliament had to enact a law which makes it mandatory for future Presidents to announce their ministers in 60 days after being sworn in.

We also remember his being ill for about six months while in office. It generated so much concern especially with requisite tax payers money expended on his treatment overseas. There were ugly sides to getting the nation to cope with a sickly President. Some scandalous­ly cooked up narratives around a mysterious look alike called Jubril from Sudan claimed to be ruling the nation in his stead! Luckily, he later got well and settled down to business.

There were disappoint­ing sides of the Buhari leadership. Appointmen­ts were divisive and were largely in favour of the North. Most appeals to him to have every part of the nation justifiabl­y have a piece of the action fell on deaf ears. In particular, he seemed to have an axe to grind with the East. Painfully, he would defend his punishment of Ndigbo with explanatio­ns that they also denied him at the polls! The developmen­t ignited much angst from the East. Painfully so.

The disenfranc­hisement catalysed dissonance and stoked the fire of restivenes­s by separatist agitators. Most Easterners simply lost faith in the union. They saw no future in the nation. Some unfortunat­ely made matters worse and have descended to the present ugly violent agitation and the overwhelmi­ng sit at home orders.

President Buhari tried to placate the East by delivering the much awaited 2nd Niger Bridge which he for exigencies of time didn’t physically attend its inaugurati­on even when the people directly benefiting from the bridge in unison named the bridge after him.

There were other bright sparks. There were quite a number of infrastruc­tural developmen­t. To his credit, he constructe­d several rail lines. He delivered functional Lagos – Ibadan standard gauge rail lines in record time. The railway modernizat­ion developmen­t story cut across several parts of the country.

It is also to President Buhari’s credit that he attempted carrying out reforms in the energy sector. He decided to supervise the oil sector directly. His reasoning for taking that decision could have been that as a former Petroleum Minister, he would know where the shoe was pinching and would plug loopholes.

During his Presidency, oil revenue plummeted to an all-time low which was a major economic management challenge.

His administra­tion must, however, be commended for initiating oil sector reforms. The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n was privatized, he achieved parliament­ary endorsemen­t of the Petroleum Act, and like his predecesso­r canvassed removal of fuel subsidy, the first challenge being managed by President Bola Tinubu.

There was the huge challenge of taming the Corona Virus which shut down the globe and plummeted oil prices. Twice the nation slipped into recession but bounced back. To his credit, there was visible infrastruc­tural developmen­t. Lagosians will remember him for the concrete paving of the Apapa – Oshodi - Lagos - Ibadan tollgate expressway which was fortified with massive iron network.

The Lagos – Ibadan express way which he inherited as the grave yard of several lives, unattended to by the Obasanjo regime, feebly attended to by the Jonathan regime, was virtually completed by his regime. Travel time on the road got reduced by over half. More important, motorists now travel safer, the road is largely no longer easily seized by robbers.

It is also to his credit that he insisted on growing the food the nation consumes internally. To encourage consumptio­n of local rice, he had to shut borders and got the Central Bank to support internal food production. The strategy paid off, but for challenges of insecurity especially in the northern, eastern and middle belt farmlands, Nigerians now relish eating their home grown rice in unpreceden­ted quanta.

Two issues namely insecurity and corruption dogged the Buhari regimeregi­me. He inherited rising insecurity involving bombings, murder of untold number of citizens and kidnaps. Criminal elements infiltrate­d the ranks of his Fulani herder kinsmen. There were rising cases of invasion of places of worship and countless incidences of kidnapping.Islamic fundamenta­lists in the names of Boko Haram and the Islamic State of West Africa terrorized the citizenry.

Inhabitant­s of axis of these mindless attacks hardly went to bed with their eyes closed.

The worst of such attacks was the cold blooded attack of St Catherine Catholic, Owo, Ondo State. The terrorist attack of Owo came across as a retaliator­y response to the forefront roles of Governor Rotimi Akeredolu of Ondo State in mobilising his Western Nigeria contempora­ries to set up Amotekun a regional vanguard to checkmate activities of marauding forces of evil in the face of failure of central government security agencies to adequately provide protection.

Nigerians were shocked and disappoint­ed about Buhari developing cold feet in checking criminal elements who had infiltrate­d his Fulani kinsmen who had become merchants of evil and kidnapping. There was hardly any part of the nation that didn’t record cases of kidnap and cold blooded murder by some base minded Fulanis. His condemnati­on were largely delayed and lame.

He was clearly ethnocentr­ic and protective of his ethnic grouping at the expense of the larger nation. Instead of heeding suggestion­s that Fulanis settle and embrace cattle ranching, he sought perpetuati­on of the nuisance and inefficien­cy in free ranging animals and thus, the attendant farmer -herder clashes. He thought of setting up Grazing reserves which the rest of the country resisted. His regime did so much damage that now, it will take wisdom to wholeheart­edly trust the Fulani especially over their hegemonic tendencies again. President Buhari got to the seat of power campaignin­g against corruption. Unfortunat­ely, the initial strange phenomena of animals swallowing monies, people burying monies in pits and cleverly stashing away money in a myriad of brilliant ways waned. At the twilight of his administra­tion, there were scandalous stealing of humongous sums of money. Buhari’s top government officials fed fat while the President characteri­stically looked on while the country burnt. The level of official meddlesome­ness was high to the extent of some of his ministers contemplat­ed contesting the Presidency. They paid huge sums as deposits to buy forms to the chagrin of an economical­ly challenged citizenry. Most of them had embarked on subtle campaigns only backing down when they realized that a bird in hand was greater than that which in the bush.

At the twilight of his administra­tion, there was heat on President Buhari from different fronts. He had sown the wind through currency change and was reaping an unexpected whirlwind. There was anger in the land and justifiabl­y so. Never had Nigerians had to suffer as much from an uncoordina­ted policy. It appeared a crime to spend monies they rightly owned.

The Presidency’s mission to frustrate money bags from buying positions hurt the innocent. It hurt the electoral chances of the ruling party. At a point, the candidate of the ruling party, the All Progressiv­e Congress (APC), Bola Tinubu, cried out that he was the target of the policy. The attempted currency swap was simply nightmaris­h, the pains excruciati­ng. So bad, that it took a Supreme Court interventi­on to save the nation.

At about the same period, there was an unpreceden­ted fuel scarcity in an election year. Unthinkabl­e in an election year!

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