Long read but quite revealing! In his Thisday Column this week, Ovation publisher Dele Momodu wrote about the quality of appointments we are seeing lately in Buhari's government, describing it as 'appallingly lacklustre'. He also criticized the way the president broke the Ramadan fast with so much fanfare at the State House and talked about Buhari's new fashion sense. The write up below..
"I’m back this week with my weekly epistle to fellow Nigerians and Africans. You must be wondering about the title of my article today, especially the word “they” and who it refers to ultimately. You don’t have to guess too much as I will explain to you in a jiffy. The “they” are those groups of men and women who litter the corridors of power in our dear beloved country Nigeria.
They are some wonderful people who understand how to
manoeuvre their ways through the labyrinth of power. They are professional
hijackers who know how to hold powerful people, particularly our leaders,
hostage. Nigerians usually call them the cabal or Mafia or whatever
nomenclature is in vogue at the time. Truth is, they exist in reality.
What is often baffling is that these folks perch like rattlesnakes
and pounce at the slightest opportunity on the men of power. They inflict their
poison and, sooner than later, their victim begins to behave unusually, even
sometimes irrationally. The more the poison permeates the body, the more the
victim sinks deeper into the abyss and onlookers begin to observe a complete
transformation and transfiguration. Surprisingly, these guys were and are never
around during the struggles. Once the struggle is over, they crawl out of
whatever holes they were ensconced in whilst things were hot! And they soon become
the greatest beneficiaries of a campaign they never partook of. Trust me, every
government has them. If you ask me, it is one reason most of our governments
have failed so spectacularly.
My preamble is predicated on my deep observation of what is going
on in Nigeria at the moment. I can say I know President Muhammadu Buhari
reasonably well even if I was a latter day convert to Buharism. But once I got
hooked like a drug addict, I was ready to go the whole hog and I have never
looked back. Buhari’s appeal is based on his populist credentials. We all saw
him as a man of the people and a Mr Scrooge who would never waste scarce
resources on frivolities. But the “they” of Nigeria have repackaged Baba to the
extent that many now refer to him as the “Gucci President”. Every fashion
designer’s delight, as he has become a veritable fashion trendsetter. Of
course, this is not to denigrate the President because his previous austere
style suits him as much as his now trendy look becomes him! The fact is that by
his handsome, gangling and fit nature, the President will always appear
impeccably turned out and well groomed. However, now, his paraphernalia of
power has become somehow bloated and overly flamboyant as well. How are the
mighty changing!
The existing theory is that President Buhari has inadvertently
fallen victim of political 419ners who have persuaded him about how powerful a
Nigerian President is and why he must play the part always by being overtly
fashionable. I’m sorry to say that they are stylishly setting Baba up for
monumental failure. I expect their agents to swarm the internet and abuse
anyone who dare say anything about the grand scam currently going on but it
won’t be strange. Every government I have known since I became an adult had
such acolytes to sing their praises and hold them up as infallible. But no
sooner than the baton of power changes than they disappear only to reappear
sometime and somewhere in the no distant future screaming adulations of the
unsuspecting new leader.
I vividly remember the period of the Shehu Shagari Presidency. The
poor teacher and humble farmer could do no wrong. There was a popular Yoruba
song specially composed and sang for him: “Oluwa lo yan Shagari, Shehu
Shagari…” Shagari’s apotheosis was instantly assured. Those who saw the rot in
the outlandishly profligate government were tagged dangerous dissidents and
told to shut their traps up. Wole Soyinka, our own William Shakespeare, was one
of the most vociferous critics at the time.
As days climbed days and months rode on months, the Shagari
government became neurotic and saw enemies everywhere real or imagined. Out of
fear for its safety and stability, the Nigeria Police Force was
over-militarised as if in competition with the Nigerian Army. We watched
incredulously as the police under the iron grip of probably the most powerful
Inspector-General Police Nigeria ever employed, Mr Sunday Adewusi,
became ostensibly omnipotent. The Shagari government controlled the heavens and
the earth. The 1983 general elections was the last straw that broke the back of
that government.
The end came on December 31, 1983. A terse announcement by a
relatively unknown soldier at the time, named Sani Abacha, shattered the
invincibility of the Shagari regime into smithereens. A new Head of State,
Muhammadu Buhari and his ‘deputy’, Babatunde Idiagbon were promptly installed.
They in turn wasted no time in pronouncing the direction of their government
which was predicated on ‘war against indiscipline’ (WAI). That war encapsulated
everything that was wrong with Nigeria. While it was a worthwhile, expedient
and necessary move, the government failed to understand the complexity of
Nigerians. Our people love the concept of change in the metaphysical sense but
not in any way that hurts them and their families or friends. That was the
reality that soon hit Buhari and Idiagbon like thunderbolts. While they were
busy jailing and punishing the corrupt politicians, they were undoubtedly
amassing enemies. They were goaded on by fifth columnists within and before
long, it was time to strike. The end came on August 27, 1985.
The same Abacha who announced Buhari’s arrival pronounced his
departure. It was such a cruel twist of fate. A supposedly friendlier, humane
and urbane Head of State, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, was catapulted on to the
national stage. He was projected as Buhari’s fairer alter ego. He opened up the
cells and disgraced and humiliated politicians in their various stages of
dilapidation spilled out like locusts. Buhari immediately became the bad guy
and Babangida the benevolent dictator.
Where Buhari was stern-faced, Babangida wore his famous toothy
smile like the archetypal good guy. That was it. Everything Buhari had built
got dismantled. The solid foundation of discipline and incorruptibility he was
laying was uprooted in one fell swoop! Nigerians’ penchant for good life and
happy living won the day.
It wasn’t long before the “they” started digging the grave for
Babangida himself. He assembled arguably one of the best teams ever, no doubt,
but it remains a mystery who his real advisers were that persuaded him to turn
Nigeria into a game of football. His sobriquet of Maradona, though very apt,
was also an albatross. He dribbled so much and resorted to endless transition
time tables. So much so, that he eventually dribbled himself into scoring
an own goal. Politicians were banned and unbanned according to the whims and
caprices of one man. When the elections eventually took place, on June 12,
1993, they were programmed to fail spectacularly.
Till this day no one knows what truly happened that led to our
best elections ever being truncated and annulled. Pity that none of the
influencers in the Nigerian polity could dissuade Babangida from committing
this unfortunate and costly hara-kiri. Even worse, no one or group has come out
to say they advised him against such perfidious act but he did not listen.
Nigeria is yet to recover from that stupendous tragedy.
The fall came on August 27, 1993, when he suddenly stepped aside
and handed over to a lame duck Interim National Government (ING) headed by
Chief Ernest ‘Degunle Shonekan.
This government was as weak as they come. It lacked the liver to
deliver on revalidating the annulled mandate freely given to the winner of the
Presidential election, Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola. This would have
enjoyed the wide support of the people but sadly such opportunity was missed by
the inept team and the interim government was soon sacked by General Sani
Abacha. Babangida had apparently set up the ING with a view to returning as a
civilian President but man proposes and God disposes. His nemesis was Abacha
his erstwhile compatriot and friend!
The understanding when Abacha seized power in a military coup was
that he was going to right the wrongs of the June 12 elections, clean up the
remnants of the Babangida loyalists and give power back to the man elected
freely by Nigerians.
That turned out to be a classic case of naiveté at its most
ludicrous. The man simply collected power pronto and sat down pretty. No
Jupiter was going to remove him from that gilded cage. The Abacha government
failed like others to learn the lessons of history and most importantly that no
leader had ever succeeded in enslaving Nigerians…
I’ve deliberately taken us down memory lane to demonstrate how the
demons of power have sentenced Nigeria perpetually to stupidity and
backwardness. And it seems a fool at 56 is almost irredeemable from its
tomfoolery unless a miracle happens. That’s the miracle we gave to President
Buhari last year on a platter of gold after his fourth attempt. But things seem
to be spiralling out of control. I know the President would be told all is well
by those benefitting from the current state of things but, walahi, I will
always tell Baba the truth. I’ve come to see him as the last hope of the masses
and if he fails we all fail.
The first truth is that this government is looking too elitist and
ceremonial. I’m not sure this is intentional. The amount of time, energy and
resources being deployed on hosting this and that is becoming ridiculous.
Whoever suggested that the President should break Ramadan fasts with so much
fanfare did not do any good for a government with too many horrendous
challenges. If I had any influence in this government, I will advise that
government needs to demonstrate its commitments and seriousness at tackling the
intractable problems. We should see pictures of brainstorming sessions. We
should have and see a brilliant economic team at work.
We should see the President supervising projects nationwide in his
jackboots. We should see the President appointing the many Nigerian geniuses
that litter every part of the world to assist him use the power God has
bestowed on him to benefit ordinary Nigerians. The qualities of appointments we
are seeing lately have become appallingly lacklustre. This is not the best
Nigeria can offer.
I do not really care if even if all appointees come from Daura, I
would leave that agitations to others, who may be myopic or selfish. I’m more
interested in the merit, competence and patriotism of such people. President
Buhari can make do with a star-studded team regardless of political and
religious affiliations. It is never too late to CHANGE!
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