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If you know what I know:
Buhari will be next president
ByDr. Wunmi Akintide
wumione@aol.com
I consider myself a stakeholder in the enterprise called
Nigeria. I am also a believer in a fair and free election as the
very foundation of the ideal democratic system of government we
all wish to embrace in our country. A system in which the
incumbent president anoints a successor before the very first
vote is cast is a dictatorship, pure and simple, and should be
rejected by the majority of the Nigerian voters in 2007.
To do otherwise is to institutionalize rigging of elections at
both the local, state and federal levels of government in our
country. It is sad and strange that a president who claims to be
the very symbol of honesty and decency in our country would be
the first to be leading a concerted effort to impose his
personal choice of a candidate on a country of 140 million
people.
What, if I may ask, is the purpose of holding an election, if we
already know ahead of time who is going to win. That is an
invitation to anarchy. The president ought to leave that
decision to the voters, and to let the so-called Independent
National Electoral Commission do their work, and to let the
choice of the voters emerge through the ballot box in a free and
fair election that is totally devoid of all gimmicks and
manipulations. Since I am a registered voter in Ondo state, I
cannot, for the life of me, give my vote to the PDP or its flag
bearer, whoever that may be, in view of its abysmal record in
the last eight years, and I would urge the other voters to do
the same because democracy is all about choice.
We have so many parties registered in our country just to be
sure our right to free choice is not compromised. The PDP has
had its chance. It is time to try other parties and their
candidates like they do in most civilized countries of the
world. In the last mid term elections in America, for example,
the American voters demonstrated their freedom of choice by
going for the party in opposition for more than 12 years, as a
revolt against the policies of the current American president
and his Republican Party. That is the way to go, and that is
what Nigerian voters must emulate.
Democracy cannot thrive on a one party system like Obasanjo is
insinuating. That was why the whole nation rejected its bid for
a third term as unconstitutional and selfish because the job of
nation building is not a one man or a one party affair. It is a
collective effort passed on from one generation to another, and
no single person or party, however wise, has all the answers.
Our founding fathers like the great
Herbert Macauley, the three founding premiers in Dr. Nnamdi
Azikiwe, Sardauna Bello and Obafemi Awolowo, to mention a few
and not to talk of other leaders like Tafawa Balewa, Yakubu
Gowon, Murtala Muhammad and Shehu Shagari all played their part,
preparing the way like John the Baptist did for Jesus, before
General Obasanjo came on board.
The sweat and the labours of those leaders cannot be swept under
the carpet, and under no condition should any Nigerian leader be
allowed to give the impression, that without their input,
Nigeria cannot function or survive. After such leaders are dead
and gone, I can tell you, the nation would still continue to
soldier on.
Obasanjo must understand that from the get go that he must not
overstay his welcome, and he must allow democracy to really take
hold in our country not in the tradition of a Robert Mugabe and
other quasi dictators in Africa who behave as if they were the
only wise men in their country.
“Unto whom much is given, much is expected” I, for one, have
expected Obasanjo to play a much constructive role than he is
currently playing in our country. He was expected to be a role
model of a president who should have placed more emphasis on the
Nigerian constitution as the supreme law in our country. He
should have been the greatest champion of the rule of law in our
country by doing precisely what he did when he chose to let the
verdict of the Supreme Court on Governor Ladoja take hold in Oyo
state. But that was only the exception and not the rule.
Obasanjo as president has violated the constitution more often
than any other civilian president in our history. He appears to
only go by the constitution only when it favors him, and he
throws it overboard whenever the constitution does not suit his
whim and caprices or tally with its own personal agenda. That is
bad for our country, and that is why Nigeria must never allow
Obasanjo to mislead the country again for his own selfish
interest. Wole Soyinka in a recent expose on the excesses of the
President has said it all in very lucid language certainly more
than I can ever attempt. Obasanjo only loves himself more than
he loves the nation, regardless of what he may be saying to the
contrary.
It is true that he has accomplished a few things for Nigeria and
I give him credit for that. His debt relief effort has helped to
lighten the financial burden of our nation but such relief has
not, in any way, impacted the lives of the common man on the
street in any positive way. He has done more for his own wallet
and interest before leaving office than paying more attention to
the collective interest of our nation. He has chosen instability
instead of stability by nursing the ambition to ignore the
constitution and seeking a third term bid which is the major
cause of the schism or the irreconcilable differences between
him and his vice president. There is very little to choose
between Obasanjo and his vice because both have sinned against
the nation, and have enriched their own pockets at the expense
of our nation in their 8 years in office.
The pot is only calling the kettle black. That is not the kind
of transitional leadership we expect from Obasanjo. Today,
Obasanjo is behaving more or less like the late Houphet Boignac
of Ivory Coast, Emperor Jean Bokassa, or President Gnassingbe
Eyadema of Togo or worse still like. President Mobutu Sese Seko
Kuku Ngbendu Waza Banga who, at one point, was richer than his
whole country of Zaire. Obasaanjo has abused his presidential
office in raising money for his own personal Library using the
services and contributions from lobby companies and contractors
seeking favors from his own administration.
What corruption can be worse than that? In more civilized
countries of the world, Obasanjo would have been facing
impeachment proceedings for abuse of office, as we speak.
Either himself or one of his family members has purchased more
of federal parastatals and companies that are being privatized
including some shares in the Virgin Nigeria Airline that has
replaced the defunct Nigeria Airways. Yet Obasanjo has had the
effrontery to be investigating Atiku Abubakar for playing some
games with the funds of the Petroleum Task Force while he was
chairman. That is double standard... The whole situation stinks
and yet Obasanjo is asking the nation to give the PDP and its
gang of pen robbers another lease of life. I just don’t get it.
I am rooting for General Buhari for president in 2007. I am
saying so, because I know him the best of all the people
throwing their hats to the ring today.
He was Head of State for a little while, and he led one of the
most disciplined regimes our nation has ever known. His regime
initiated the War Against Indiscipline and he pursued the
initiative with the persistence of a demon with a deputy who was
one of the most courageous Nigerians you would ever know.
Buhari was a military governor with a distinction and he never,
for one day, abused his office. He was known in the military
circles at home as one of the most disciplined and incorruptible
officers of his generation. I worked for the federal government
as a senior public servant in the Army Headquarters along Marina
Lagos and I was privileged to be the first Nigerian child of
ex-servicemen in Nigeria to be awarded the British/Canadian
Legion Scholarship in 1963. That award saw me through my first
degree at the Obafemi Awolowo University from 1963 to 1966. I
therefore became very close to the military establishment in
Nigeria and I came to know General Buhari both as a junior
officer, and later on as a Colonel and Brigadier and much later
as a Major General and Head of State.
With General Buhari, what you see is what you get. If he
promises you anything he delivers on it, come rain or shine. He
is a man of honour and impeccable integrity. He is the kind of
man Nigeria needs at this time to lead the war against
corruption and to do so with honesty, integrity and fairness.
Those who have labeled him a Jihadist or an extremist, just
don’t know what they are talking about. It is in his DNA to tell
the truth always, and he could care less whose horse is gored,
but he would tell you like it is no matter what.
He is the kind of man we need at this time to lead our nation,
and I am not overtly concerned about the fact that his religion
or faith may render him unelectable. I would rather deal with a
man who is not afraid to identify with his faith than a man who
wants to be all things to all men. Yes, General Buhari is a
Muslim by faith, but he is neither a bigot nor a radical Muslim
in the strict sense of the word. He certainly does not belong to
Al Quaeda. He is the kind of a leader who would not judge you by
your faith or state of origin but only by the content of your
character.
Since going into politics, he has chosen to moderate his
military stance on issues because he understands even better
than Obasanjo where to draw the line and he understands like
Obasanjo that the unity and stability of our country, are very
paramount in his priorities. If it were not so, he would have
incited his supporters in the North to cause mayhem during the
last election when his party, the ANPP was openly robbed at the
polls by the PDP political machine.
Like a very principled man he was, he took his grievances to the
highest court in the land. But once the court ruled otherwise,
he took his fate like a man because to him the stability of the
nation was non-negotiable. He was not a sore loser and he
understands that sometimes even well qualified and good
candidates can lose elections and come back to win again, if
they persevere. General Buhari has paid his dues and he deserves
our votes, this time around, as a dependable leader who has
sacrificed so much for our nation in the past.
With the coalition of parties supporting his candidature today,
and there will be more, he has as good a chance as any candidate
to send the so-called ruling party to the turkey farm as they
say in America. I believe Buhari is electable and he can win,
with a rainbow coalition of support that are now lining up for
him across the country.
If Obasanjo would not let Atiku run for president, Atiku could
also play the leper for Obasanjo as wisely stated in a famous
Yoruba proverb which says “if a leper cannot milk the cow,
because he lacks the fingers so to do, he can at least overturn
the container of milk with some effortless ease." In that kind
of scenario, General Buhari would be the obvious beneficiary, if
you ask me.
Rigging of elections in our kind of society is only possible
when the opposition is not as articulate and strong as the
rigger, as the August 16, 1983 election rigging in Ondo state
should have taught the whole nation. Omoboriowo was pronounced
the winner only for a few short hours, before hell broke loose,
forcing the Shagari government and his INEC to quickly retreat
while the real winner, Michael Adekunle Ajasin quickly reclaimed
his crown with acclamation.
The same scenario could play out itself, one more time, at the
national level this time around, if Obasanjo and his PDP ever
got caught with their hands in the cookie jar. That would be the
day! I predict a scenario where that may occur, if General
Buhari is denied his well-deserved victory this time. You better
watch out! I rest my case.
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