
Until recently, the Muhammadu Buhari Until recently, the Muhammadu Buhari brand was, perhaps, the most potent and compelling brand in the country. In the north, he was “Mai Gaskiya” (truth avatar). Even as he never gave anyone scholarship, never built a vocational centre or any industry to employ youths or get almajiris off the streets, he continued to get millions of votes from there.
In the south where he didn’t enjoy the same cult status, he was completely rebranded shortly before the 2015 elections so much so that the Buhari myth became so persuasive almost to the point of deification.
But time makes all
the difference in the affairs of not only men but also nations.
It took less than a month after he took oath of office as president for some discerning Nigerians to realise that Buhari’s unflattering tendencies portend danger for the country. Yet, some were not quite perspicacious. But three years hence, the brand has become toxic, having contaminated the country’s filial bonds, which, no matter how tenuous they were before now, endured. Nigeria, despite all its challenges, was work in progress. The problems we faced were the birth pangs of nationhood. They were bound to be difficult but not insurmountable. What was needed was unrelenting selflessness in pursuit of common good, an anathema to Buhari.
Those who voted for
him in 2015 believed they were electing a president for Nigeria.
But Buhari knew where
he was headed and gave a clue in his first major policy statement as
president-elect in a speech he delivered before an audience of exclusively
prominent northern Moslem leaders on May 2, 2015 at Queen Amina Hall, Ahmadu
Bello University (ABU), Zaria.
“I charge you to join
me as we build a new northern Nigeria in a generation … the best investment we
can make in the north is not finding oil in the Chad Basin … we will start with
one local government in each state until we get to every school in all of
northern Nigeria … To achieve this, I have secured a northern rehabilitation
fund … to rebuild the north after the devastation of Boko Haram insurgency …
Join me my brothers and sisters and let us finish the work our forefather,
Ahmadu Bello, started,” he exhorted his audience.
He didn’t seek the
presidency for 12 years to rebuild Nigeria. As Professor Ben Nwabueze
observed recently, this speech “portrays the picture of someone driven
by something more than the ordinary ambition to become President
of Nigeria.
“Buhari was driven by
a passion, the passion of religious fanaticism or a religious zealot, to become
president of Nigeria in order to carry on and finish the work started by his
forebear, Sir Ahmadu Bello, including the Sardauna’s fond idea to extend the
rule of the Moslem north throughout the country by means of a jihad.”
This dire portrayal
may seem outlandish, but some of the president’s actions, utterances and
postures since assumption of office on May 29, 2015, bear Nwabueze out. An
example is his appeal to Benue leaders who met with him at the Aso
Rock Villa on Monday, January 16, over the killing of 73 of their kinsmen by
Fulani herdsmen on New Year day.
Addressing the
delegation led by Governor Samuel Ortom, and which included Deputy Governor
Benson Abounu, former Senate President David Mark, former Governor George
Akume, Senators Barnabas Gemade and John Waku, Generals Lawrence Onoja and John
Atom Kpera, former Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice,
Michael Aondoakaa, Speaker of Benue State House of Assembly, Terkimbir Kyambe,
etc., the president admonished his grieving visitors to accommodate the
villains.
“Your Excellency, the
governor, and all the leaders here, I am appealing to you to try to restrain
your people … I ask you in the name of God to accommodate your countrymen. You
can also be assured that I am just as worried, and concerned with the
situation,’’ he said.
More than two weeks
after the fatal attacks by a group already labelled by the Global Terrorism
Index in 2015 as the fourth deadliest known terrorist group in the world – only
Boko Haram, ISIS and Al-Shabab terror groups were deemed deadlier – Buhari, the
same president whose regime declared the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB), a
self-determination group, a terror organisation could not muster the will to
declare murderous herdsmen same.
More than two weeks
after the cold-blooded and gruesome murder of hapless Nigerians, no arrest has
been made even when the umbrella group of the herdsmen, Miyetti Allah Cattle
Breeders Association (MACBAN), had on Sunday, January 14, 2018, admitted,
literally, that the massacre was in revenge for herdsmen and cows allegedly
killed in Benue and Taraba states by natives.
Yet, this is a
government that had severally claimed that these terrorists were not Nigerians.
When did they suddenly become fellow countrymen?
The implication of
the president’s plea is that he truly believes that the herdsmen are victims in
this war of attrition. That explains why rather than bringing the full weight
of the law on them, they are shielded. That explains why people who should be
hiding from the long arms of the law are brazenly addressing press conference,
threatening more violence if a law validly enacted by a state and which by no
means violates the Nigerian Constitution, is not abrogated.
Even if these
blood-sucking vampires were foreigners as the government often claims, isn’t
that the more reason why they should be vanquished? Why is a government that
hoists on a totem its trumped-up ability to secure the lives and property of
the citizens feigning helplessness in the face of unprecedented bloodshed in
the country? Truth is, this wanton spilling of human blood continues unabated
because Buhari’s government and its security forces have elected to do little
or nothing to prevent, investigate or hold perpetrators accountable. How can
anyone explain this lack of willingness to prosecute perpetrators of these vile
acts in the face of overwhelming and unassailable evidence?
Just as it was the
case in his first coming as military head of state, the arrogance of the Buhari
government is insufferable. Its insensitivity and imperviousness have led to
the elevation of ethnicity and nepotism to principles of state policy. The
consequence is negation of good governance. Or is the best government no longer
that, which for good or bad, carries the majority of the governed along?
Buhari neither means
well nor has a salvific agenda for Nigeria. His actions and utterances are
visceral, disrespectful and dehumanises Nigerians just as his presidency
remains the most potent threat Nigeria faces today. His body language
ratchets up tension in the polity. His sense of entitlement is exasperating. He
must be stopped or Nigeria is doomed.
President Buhari is
one man, who, despite the lofty heights God placed him – former military
governor of the defunct Northeast, petroleum minister, head of state, etc. – he
could not rise above debilitating and petty primordial loyalties. Here was a
man whose myth was so romanticized barely three years ago that many Nigerians
believed that he didn’t even need to talk to fix Nigeria. His body
language alone was the magic wand and he almost got away with the false
portrayal, until his prejudice, nepotism, clannishness, provincialism, bigotry
and absolute lack of empathy betrayed him.
Still, I believe that
President Buhari is a man to be pitied because it is apparent he cannot help
himself. But it behoves well-meaning Nigerians who are desirous of charting a
new course for their beleaguered country to salvage it by doing the needful as
2019 beckons if Buhari decides to hearken to the self-serving entreaties of
sycophants urging him to prolong the agony of Nigerians for another four years.
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