Nigeria: A Change to Disbelieve In
President Buhari |
The current political leadership
of Nigeria campaigned with an air of feigned respectability, change and a
somewhat arrogant sense of inevitability. Before the elections, some members of
the current ruling party and other leaders of thought opined that if the
erstwhile President of Nigeria [Jonathan] gets re-elected the country would disintegrate.
But for more than half a year, we
are still marking time where PMB met us. In a previous post, I pointed out that
a lot of noise and activities would mark Buhari's tenure but at the end, little
would change. This is because it is easy to display motion and emotion [Buhari's
body language] without progress in Nigeria, especially if you are the 'right'
leader.
Many contributors have written on
the vexed issue of national integration and the structural defects that were coterminous
with the birth of the nation. Yet, more than five decades on, we have
deliberately failed to address why we seem to live like stone-age men in a
century that has seen men going to the moon.
Buhari cannot save or change Nigeria
in its present form. Even if he succeeds in his anti-corruption crusade - a
very doubtful prospect, what happens when he lives the stage? Every leader in Nigeria
seems to have a theme or program while in office that often become a
smokescreen to deal with perceived enemies and maintain power. Anti-corruption
would only work within the crucible of enduring institutions that promote justice
and equity: a country where everyone matters and have equal opportunities coupled
with rights for self-fulfillment.
What sane men and women would
consider corruption in other climes is seen as a right or privilege in Nigeria
- just try getting any service from government offices across Nigeria.
Government is seen as a distant, irritating, unchallenging, unresponsive but
sometimes benevolent entity to be scammed or ignored without any fear of
consequence.
I do not buy into the hullabaloo
about PMB's incorruptibility, integrity and antecedent. This is because corruption
is not limited to not taking bribes or stealing the commonwealth blind. Incorruptibility
challenges you to identifying, and limiting corrupting influences no matter how
existentially close they are. In PMB's case, painting Abacha a saint, or
hobnobbing with former disgruntled but corrupt PDP members, or giving known protégés
[Jafaru Isa] soft landing with the EFCC doesn't exactly sound right.
The current spate of arresting corrupt
former PDP acolytes of the Jonathan government might be a necessary step in
fighting corruption. But Nigerians understand that corruption and corrupting
influences are attributable to Nigeria's structural defect and the ungodly 'trickle-down
paradigm' of our socio-political milieu - and this goes beyond Jonathan.
The average Nigerian neither
understands nor appreciates what human or civil rights mean. We live in abject
desperation and think only of survival. Coupled with a fatalistic
psycho-religious depression, Nigerians have become a believing people, who are fearful
of knowledge and the truth. The politrikcians understand that Nigerians would
not hold them to their promises nor challenge them, because in essence, there
is really no Nigeria, only a group of people known [for convenience] as Nigerians.
When a family that can afford rice [Nigeria's staple] only once in a couple of
months is suddenly saddled with a whole bag, cooking oil, salt and some money
to boot, they would do anything for their candidate - no be to just thumb print?
The imperial nature of our
presidency directly encourages impunity, personality cults and insulation from
the realities affecting common people. It gives the president the ability to
detain without charges, flout court orders or submit and withdraw budget
documents to the national assembly at will. When the president is blinded by
the intrigues of court, his concern for common people is bound to take a
backseat.
PMB was once minister for
petroleum and subsequently military head of state of Nigeria. Today, PMB is
both minister for petroleum and civilian head of state of Nigeria. For more
than thirty years, Nigeria has suffered fuel shortages, especially before the
yearly budget announcements. The same issue of fuel shortage occurred during
the last months of 2015 when Nigerians were virtually sleeping at fuel stations
in order to carry out legitimate human activities. For PMB not to have
anticipated this, or planned for it during his twelve years long campaign is a
testament to the fact that power-seeking is the only politics in Nigeria and
not statesmanship.
PMB has not demonstrated mastery
over pressing national problems, but Nigerians are still hopeful of a favourable
outcome from his presidency. The problem is that we have waited for more than
fifty years for the ruling class to get its act together.
If we are still talking of
security to lives and property, lack of power, roads, healthcare, sound
educational systems, petroleum products after more than five decades as a
nation then something is organically wrong!
The same people have ruled us,
either in uniform or civilian garb since independence. And if current feelers
from PMB's administration are anything to go by, there are no signposts yet, of
a resurgent nation, capable of taking its place in the world.
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