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Buhari,
Obasanjo and Nigeria’s quest for leadership
By BabaGana M Monguno ngumati.critic@yahoo.com
On Mahatma Gandhi, Albert Einstein wrote; “Gandhi had
demonstrated that a powerful human following can be assembled
not only through the cunning game of the usual political
maneuvers and trickeries, but through the cogent example of a
morally superior conduct of life. In our time of utter moral
decadence he was the only statesman to stand for a higher human
relationship in the political sphere”.
I crave the indulgence of my readers to go back to the beginning
of the above quote and replace the word ‘Gandhi’ with ‘Buhari’,
change the verbs therein into present tense, and see how
perfectly the description fits Muhammadu Buhari, the true
messiah we are waiting for.
We have learnt, most painfully, over the past eight years of the
Obasanjo Administration that democracy in itself is no guarantee
for good governance. And although institutions and structures do
matter, the quality of persons managing these institutions is
paramount in ensuring that democracy works for the benefit of
the people in general, and not a few privileged individuals.
Democracy is an automatic car which nevertheless requires a good
driver.
So as we, Nigerians, prepare to elect leaders who will run the
affairs of our dear country for four years, beginning from May
this year, one man that has stood out is the ascetic general,
Muhammadu Buhari.
There are many reasons why Buhari is the man for the nation’s
top job. To begin with, Buhari will genuinely fight against
corruption. Nigeria under OBJ’s second coming has witnessed an
unprecedented boom in revenue, but sadly, there is not much to
show for it due to corruption and incompetence. The current
anti-corruption campaign is ineffectual largely because it is an
orphan. It is hampered by lack of a father figure in the form of
a morally upright leader who is himself above board, a leader
who embodies our ideals, inspires confidence and exemplifies our
aspirations for a corruption-free society.
It should be clear even to a blind man that Obasanjo only cloaks
his corrupt and greedy mien with lip service and hypocritical
rhetoric against corruption. Buhari will not buy up our
collective patrimony under the guise of privatization; his farm,
if he has any, will not suddenly start generating millions
monthly; and he will not dip his hands in the public till to
shamelessly patronize cronies and paramours. Leadership is not a
joking matter or a lecherous past time; it is a sacred duty and
a nation of over 140 million people ought to be led only by the
very best, a person who had opportunities in the past to
corruptly enrich himself but chose instead to serve his
fatherland with honesty and integrity. I am talking about
Buhari.
Wherever Buhari had served in the past, his footprints of
infrastructural developments are unmistakable, from the
refineries he built as head of state to the infrastructural boom
that was the result of his PTF years. In comparison the present
administration has, for instance, “spent” 300 billion Naira on
roads alone, but hear the result from the horse’s mouth: “I am
ashamed of Nigerian roads” said Obasanjo.So we are!
The crises in the power sector and its domino effects have
brought darkness and distress into our homes and lives;stifled
our large industries and hampered small and medium scale
enterprises. At the root of this proplem of electric power
supply are corruption and lack of political will.What Ghana can
do,Nigeria under Buhari can do even better.The man has sincerity
and will power in abundance. Today, people look back at Buhari’s
stewardship with wistful nostalgia. People are wiser today. They
will not sell their votes for a miserable price. And after over
46 years of independence, Nigeria’s basic infrastructures are in
a state of disrepair. We cannot afford to continue like that.
Recently my neighbour and his fellow travellers were waylaid by
armed robbers on one of our highways.
As soon as their vehicle was forced to an ominous halt, what one
of the bandits shouted out was quite instructive: “Come down and
give us what you have before Buhari comes and terminates our
job”. This is not a tall order or a baseless expectation.
Leadership is inspiration, the ability to inspire confidence and
move masses of the people in the right direction. Buhari will
bring about a comprehensive and sophisticated solution to the
crises of insecurity in our land. So we need a clean break from
the Obasanjo disaster. The failed leader is desperate to build a
“policy dynasty” and provide a soft landing for himself by
seeking to install Umaru Yar’adua who will remain in the shadows
of the corrupt puppeteer lurking behind as the chairman of the
board of trustees of the PDP. PDP is a byword for dishonesty and
for all the things that are wrong with our country.
Obasanjo’s cynical manipulations of our differences has left
deep and wide wounds in the nation’s body politic. He has
brutally demonstrated that no price is too high for his own
political survival as he divides and rules the people with
murderous impunity. He has played one group against another, and
in some instances, directly ordered the massacre of whole
communities. Buhari will definitely find it beneath himself to
place his personal political interest above national interest.
He will be just, honest and fair to all. Everybody will have a
sense of belonging such that it will make no difference whether
a leader comes from your area or not.
He will not be a Fulani, Katsina, Muslim or Northern president
in the parochial senses of these identities. He will be a
Nigerian president, a father for all. And this he has
demonstrated in the past, and he will use his strength of
character and force of personality to rebuild bridges across our
fault lines.
The average Nigerian farmer is the most hardworking as far as
physical human energy expenditure is concerned. Paradoxically,
he is among the poorest Nigerians because he is left to his
primitive devices by leaders who are good at indulging in
culinary delicacies but who do not care a hoot about where food
comes from. Obasanjo channels all the money for agriculture to a
few “anointed” cash crops. Buhari will give plant and animal
agriculture a comprehensive boost. Rural development is about
agriculture and Buhari has done it before and will do it again
to generate income and employment for our teeming rural
populace. He will empower our youths and women in both rural and
urban areas while preserving our culture and environment.
Until recently, Obasanjo was in denial of the alarming poverty
level in the country, let alone making appreciable efforts at
solving the menace. As far as he was concerned, we are not poor.
We were doing well like Ota farm and by the time he accepted the
grim undeniable reality, it was already too late. His government
is good only at reeling out empty acronyms: NEEDS, YES, NO, MAP,
CAP and other children of SAP. Even the workers at the
ambitiously named National Poverty Eradication Programme [NAPEP]
are poor like the over 70% of Nigerians who live below the
poverty line. Those of us who are said to be above the line know
that our feet are resting on the line. And although magnanimous
Nigerians continue to share the little they have in the spirit
of African and religious communalism, the poverty level is
beyond individual sense of charity, it requires a comprehensive
solution that seeks to harness the pentagon of assets: human,
natural, physical,social and financial. Buhari truly knows the
value and dignity of the human person and will do everything to
rescue a substantial number out of the poverty trap.
These are many other reasons why Buhari should be our next
president. Others will definitely write about them. So in
conclusion, I call upon Nigerians to entrust their affairs at
all levels only in the hands of genuinely honest people like
Buhari. Buhari and Gandhi share the attributes of simplicity,
honesty, selflessness, competence and vision. The difference
between a true messiah and a false one lies in the quality of
their second coming. Let us actualize Buhari’s second coming and
reap good fruits from the good tree. So help us God.
BabaGana Modu Monguno is with the Department of political
science University of Maiduguri. |
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