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Monday, February 29, 2016

A PRESIDENT IN NEED OF DISCIPLES




BY DELE MOMODU

Fellow Nigerians, let me say right away that I do not envy President
Muhammadu Buhari at this moment. It cannot be easy carrying the burden of
nearly 200 million highly boisterous people. It is worse when your
predecessors had messed up big time thus almost snuffing life out of a
potentially great nation. What a shame!

I’m not trying to find and make excuses for the President. Far from it, but
it is pertinent to constantly remind ourselves of how we got to this sad
juncture. I seriously doubt if Mr President ever bargained for this
monstrosity that has confronted him so early in his long awaited and much
trumpeted second coming. The Naira has nose-dived in the most cataclysmic
fall ever in the history of our beleaguered country. And the disaster I
foresee and predict would be monumental if a miracle does not happen soon.
I won’t be surprised if our great leader is experiencing insomnia and
wondering what has hit him like a thunderbolt.

When I had the privilege of sitting with our President one on one, I was
reasonably persuaded that he has in him the right dose of passion and
patriotism necessary to reignite this great country. He also has the guts
to take on dangerous tasks. He wouldn’t have been a Major General if he was
lily-livered. There is no question in my mind that he has what it takes to
lead Nigeria out of the doldrums. But whenever I think of the debilitating
challenges he is currently facing what comes to my mind is that the man is
running a lonely marathon. I’m not sure he has enough disciples around
willing to imbibe his spirit of simplicity and integrity. The reason is
very simple. It is not so easy to be a Buhari devotee.

What do I mean? Buhari is a preacher who teaches what is quite difficult
for an average Nigerian to follow and obey. I already explained in my
column last week why corruption is very attractive in Nigeria. The
contradictions within our ruling classes make it almost impossible to be a
pontiff in our clime. The society makes silly demands of the public
officer. The public officer also has the mind-set of a demi-god. He knows
everyone sucks up to him and expects him to be a Santa Claus in office.
There are other expectations he must activate and actualise. In summary, he
is not expected to retire into poverty and perdition. Now Buhari is saying
that is no longer possible. And that Big Brother is watching everyone and
everywhere. How realistic this is, we are yet to see.

Corruption is not an easy scourge to exterminate especially when it has
become cancerous and malignant. Ours has spread far and wide. What is the
President doing? Fighting corruption has become an all-consuming agenda,
indeed, perhaps, the only visible agenda that is raking in all attention
and headlines. No one knows how much has been recovered, where it is kept
and what is being done with the humongous loot. The EFCC is working
frenetically on overdrive. I hope they are able to cope with the deluge of
cases that keeps unfolding almost on daily basis.

The President also seems to have placed his fate more in the hands of
Government technocrats. These civil servants are expected to propel the
policy directions of this administration. But is that working as planned
and expected? I can’t confidently confirm anything of the sort. I’m almost
certain they are already letting down the President. There is no other
evidence than the budget conundrum that has left this Federal Government
terribly exposed and heavily scandalised. Whoever participated in crafting
that horrific document has not done the President any favours. In fact, the
budget-drafting team has done incalculable damage to a government that rode
to power on the crest of frugality and accountability. Not only is the
budget outlandishly profligate it is atrociously hypocritical.

What Nigerians wanted from President Buhari is simple and straight-forward.
One, reverse the reckless spending in Abuja and replace it with prudent
spending on common-sense capital projects and investments. Two, make
corruption unattractive by establishing a workable regime of crime and
punishment. Three, tidy up the economy and create a conducive environment
for investors and their investments. Four, arrest the perfidious attacks of
Boko Haram and make every inch of the Nigerian landscape safer for every
citizen or foreigner. Five, upgrade our worthless educational system and
create substantial opportunities for our army of unemployed youths. Six,
fix our comatose infrastructure and restore aesthetic glory to our
environment. Seven, find some veritable alternatives to our over-dependence
on a monolithic economy in this season of oil commotion.

Unfortunately, I don’t think some of the disciples are working in tandem
with the Commander-in-Chief. Rather, they are skilfully wasting the
resources that are so difficult to come by. Worse still, they want Nigeria
to mortgage its future by borrowing money to fund their expensive habits. I
sincerely beg the President to cancel the rubbish budget and substitute it
with one that will reflect the principles and values upon which he was
elected. It is better late than never. Nigeria is in bad shape. There is no
point pretending to be a wealthy nation when we are miserably poor. We must
do what countries like China and India did, invest heavily in education and
food production. Education is the greatest leveller and the key that can
unlock a prosperous future. Remove hunger out of poverty and you would have
killed penury half-way and also energised the people.

I watched in utter amazement as theorists propounded some jejune thesis on
how to save the Naira against the US Dollar. They cleverly stood truth on
its head by recommending that those sending their children to schools
abroad should be ready to pay the full dollar rate. What stupidity? No
sensible country plays politics with sound education and good health. Even
at a time Nigeria had quality education most of those who later became our
elites schooled abroad. They travelled by sea and later by air. Most of
them enjoyed government or foreign scholarships. My own Brother left
Nigeria as an indigent student in 1965 after his A’levels and returned with
a PhD from Stanford University.

Those preaching that Nigerians should remain at home have refused to take
care of home. These preachers will still spend public money on sending
their own children abroad for studies and vacations. They will go for
medical treatment abroad at public expense. Education is a universal
phenomenon and no amount spent on it is ever wasted. It is a shame that our
politicians and members of the privilegentsia would rather punish Nigerian
students abroad instead of cutting their own excesses at home. They would
rather we produce half-baked illiterates than offer our youths the
opportunity to display their natural wizardry globally.  This is the worst
decision any government can make and President Buhari should veto the
shenanigan of the carpetbaggers who are trying to sell him a rubbish
legacy. What will save Nigeria ultimately is a well-educated citizenry and
not the beautiful government houses and bullet-proof cars. I can name
thousands of our icons who schooled abroad and returned home with bright
ideas needed to grow our economy.

The Chinese and Indians litter everywhere on this planet! You find them as
IT gurus today because their governments encouraged them to acquire
knowledge from the greatest institutions in the world. Only the children of
the poor would be affected by our ill-thought decision while the rich can
afford anything, anyhow.  Education would then become the exclusive
preserve of the privileged few and those who wish to join them would have
to steal to catch up. We should not push our people into more hardship.
Paying fees abroad is more verifiable and virtuous than budgeting billions
for over-inflated contracts and flights of fancy.

The President should please avoid enemies from every direction. In case he
is not aware, Nigeria is tension-soaked at the moment. The change we
promised was to reduce and not to escalate hardship. Nigerians are ever
willing to make sacrifices if and when the leaders are seen to be
reasonable and sincere. As promised, when I met our great leader after he
took office, I will continue to advise this government in order to avoid
the pitfalls of the past. There are huge challenges but they are not
impossible to tackle. The solution is not the type of jamboree and
propaganda that certain people are recommending. We finished campaigning
with drums and tambourines last year; it is now time to settle down to
serious work. Rebranding Nigeria every time a new government comes is
shambolic and myopic. There is nothing to campaign about again after
election. A beautiful work will always speak for itself.  

On a final note this week, the President should fast-forward the war
against corruption by recovering as much loot as possible very urgently. We
should decrease the raucous and riotous drama surrounding the corruption
crusade by revving up the substance of the war and establishing our goals
and destination. When tomorrow comes, no one would ask how many people were
jailed but everyone would always remember the hunger that ravaged the land
in the time of Lagbaja.

It is the bitter truth.







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