The Jonathan finale: No fuel, No electricity....
Nigeria will usher in President
Muhammadu Buhari tomorrow. Muhammadu Buhari’s inauguration should potentially,
open up new vistas of development for our country. And if the new
administration stays true to promises made during the campaign that preceded
the elections, we should see some positive changes in the general situation in
our country.
There was no denying the fact that
most Nigerians who voted Buhari saw in the man, his lifestyle and avowed
commitment to fight corruption amongst other promises, someone who could
provide the leadership for the process of change that Nigerians believe was
essential to arrest the drift that we have witnessed under President Goodluck
Jonathan.
Yet, it is also part of the
contradictions of contemporary Nigeria, that Buhari will inherit power at a
time when Nigeria’s indices have worsened and the resources available to drive
the process of change have drastically reduced. Buhari is about to inherit
presidency at a moment of incredible national downturn.
If ever there was an indication of
how broken the country became, under President Jonathan, the fuel and power
crises of the past week in Nigeria, confirm just how problematic the situation
is today in Nigeria.
All over the country, exasperated
citizens were practically turned destitute as we all confronted the unique saga
of Africa’s largest oil producing country, which has been manipulated into a
situation where we have become dependent on a cabal of oil importers for our
fuel needs. And as these problems have deepened on the eve of exit by the
Jonathan administration, we were also able to appreciate just what a lame duck
administration resembles.
Things appear contrived to go worse
on the eve of a handover of power to the incoming administration. It is also
looking like it has been programmed to ensure that the incoming administration
will never enjoy a honeymoon with the Nigerian people. Buhari will have to hit
the ground running to be able to convince the Nigerian people that he was
adequately prepared for power.
It is the backdrop of the rot in
practically every sector of our national life, that makes me worry forMuhammadu
Buhari. His tolerance will be tested as he discovers that the Nigeria of 2015
is dramatically different in every manner, from the Nigeria of 1983.
Heist and barefaced theft
Today, heist and barefaced theft
have become central to the governance process in our country. This problem does
not only reside with the PDP; there are also individuals at the top echelons of
the APC too, that ordinarily wouldn’t or shouldn’t have been seen in the Buhari
camp at all. In politics, individuals will carry baggage we might not want to
be seen with, but whose presence had contributed to victory.
Dr. AbubakarAliagan is a lecturer in
Islamic Studies at the University of Ilorin and he also presents a widely
popular programme weekly on Radio Nigeria, in the Ilorin area. A few weeks ago,
he drew analogy from religion to describe the Nigerian situation. Aliagan said
we have elected an incorruptible ‘Imam’, but the line behind him at prayer has
too many compromised individuals.
He was asking how Buhari would be
able to carry out change when there are too many controversial individuals in
his camp. Given what we have all gone through this past week, with fuel and
electricity supply, that analogy has become even more poignant. Who are the
individuals that will be recruited in the process of national reconstruction
that we all envisage for the next four years.
It is the backdrop of a week of
difficulty that has made me re-examine the Goodluck Jonathan years. In June
2012, I had participated in the PRESIDENTIAL MEDIA CHAT during which we
examined several aspects of national development. When I asked why the
President refused to publicly declare his asset, he answered me that he didn’t
give a damn what people felt about his refusal.
The outlandish answer would become
one of the defining phrases of the Jonathan presidency and one that would haunt
him through his tenure. But I was not really surprised about the general
pattern of leadership which the president presented. My first ever encounter
with Goodluck Jonathan was towards the end of 2009; he was vice president and
had led a delegation to attend a Nigerian Awards ceremony in South Africa. It
was also my first opportunity to see at close quarter the ‘cluelessness’ that
became first nature with the man who became Nigeria’s president a few months
down the line.
Nigeria’s leadership recruitment
process promoted Goodluck Jonathan beyond his competence and our country
suffered the consequences in the five years that he ruled us. It was therefore
no surprise that we arrived at the sorry pass he would exit from by tomorrow.
If these are the worst of times, and I think they are, Nigeria faces the very
serious task of ensuring that we are not brought through this same route again.
Jonathan’s leadership style
President Jonathan has not only
become casualty of his style of leadership in power, by losing the last
election, he also exposed the underbelly of the largest vote rigging political
machinery in Africa, the PDP. Those who used to arrogantly boast that they
would rule this land for 60 years managed 16, during which they instituted a
kleptocracy, the type of which Africa has never encountered.
While electoral manipulation took
them to dizzying heights of irresponsibility in the management of Nigeria,
their loss of power has seen them turn against themselves. Party National
Chairman, AdamuMuazzu, who was named the “game changer”, soon after he
inherited the whited sepulcher of the PDP, literally ran for dear life, when a
PDP lynch mob, decided it was the end of the road for him.
Even the colonial era policeman,
Chief Tony Anenih, the party’s ‘Fixer-in-Chief’, also bit the bullet. There was
no political Viagra he could have ingested to raise an expired political
manhood! So thoroughly beaten was Goodluck Jonathan, that he simultaneously
shrunk his party into a pale shadow of its old boastful self; it will take a
miracle or a monumental loss of face by the APC, for the PDP to rediscover
anything close to the arrogant, hegemonic dominance that it enjoyed over the
past sixteen years!
Tomorrow beckons
The finale for President Jonathan
has not been a merciful one. What Nigerians are likely to remember of his time
in power look likely to be the more negative side. The deprivations of the past
week, when petroleum products disappear from the pumps, leading to the
disruption of economic and social life for millions, just underlines why
Nigerians voted for the change that Muhammadu Buhari promised.
This is the dawn of a new era in
Nigeria and the hope invested in the process that will be underway from
tomorrow is very high indeed. We have experienced the worst of times over the
past five years; that is why Muhammadu Buhari needs a reminder that in voting
for him, while rejecting the incumbent president and his political party,
Nigerians have also seen the tremendous possibilities they can bring about with
their votes. If the change slogan leads to a turn for the better, then Buhari’s
place in our history as leader for the process of change will be secure.
The obverse is to be visited the
fate of President Jonathan. There can be no hiding place anymore for those who
rule Nigeria. Goodluck Jonathan’s defeat at the polls by Muhammadu Buhari has
firmly instituted people power in our country! As Muhammadu Buhari assumes
power tomorrow we can only wish him the very best, over the next four years, as
President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Ben Bruce: Once upon a Don Quixote
BEN BRUCE has spent a long time in the make believe world of show
business. I recall how he used to promote shows by American musicians during
the 1980s; he made some cool money as groups like Shalamar strut the stage of
the National Theatre at Iganmu in Lagos. Students from the University of Lagos
used to pack the shows!
Then the man’s Silverbird
Productions expanded in other directions, just as Ben himself would reap political
capital after the 1999 transition, when he warmed his way into the inner
recesses of power under Obasanjo, to become Director-General of NTA! Several
useful contracts of expansion of NTA later, the man moved on, opening cinema
halls; running radio and television stations. Ben Bruce is the successful
impresario and media mogul, rolled up into one!
And if one felt it ended there, we
are underrating the dandy, because so well loved is Ben Bruce, that he has won
his senatorial election recently and has become one of the newly minted
senators hoping to take Abuja by storm: huge salaries, allowances, oversight
buck and other ‘dividends of democracy’ in tow! But wait a minute! Ben Bruce is
not only coming into town, he is doing so in style. The man is the latter day
DON QUIXOTE! And he is mounting the steed, ROCINANTE into town, to fight the
elite!
Last week, Ben Bruce was quoted as
saying that he is fighting the elite, because “they” consume the resources of
the country at the expense of the poor: “I am fighting against the elite.
Definitely, I am fighting them. When they drink that champagne that can educate
a child, they should know that I am fighting them. You don’t fly first class in
government while in your private life, you fly economy. I am totally against
their lifestyles”, Ben Bruce was quoted in a Vanguard interview.
I think we should all rise and give
our good old impresario a standing ovation. Or maybe, we should wait to ask
appropriate questions first. As DG NTA, did Ben Bruce fly economy?
Or was he then a member of the
“elite” and only just getting his conversion as one “who is known to champion
the cause of the masses”, as the report described him? Does Ben Bruce not drink
champagne? Or as a man of the masses, he stays close to them by quaffing “Sapele
Water”? I am just curious! And what about the heavy remuneration that befits a
Nigerian Senator? What will our latter-day Don Quixote do?
Will he tilt against the windmills
of Senatorial emoluments kicking up a huge storm as he charges stoically, mounted
on Rocinante, good old Rocinante? And perchance, if there is any injury as he
discovers, just as Don Quixote did, that the windmill wasn’t a monster, will
there be a wonderful lady, Dulcinea del Toboso, to help nurse our latter-day
Don Quixote back to health?
Political society is not likely to
accept an over zealous titling at windmills, but we will keep monitoring Ben
Bruce’s latter day Don Quixote adventures.
Source:http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/05/the-jonathan-finale-no-fuel-electricity-adminished-pdp/
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