With a few
days to May 29, the handover date, two major talking points have gained
prominence and remained in the front burner of public discourse as Nigeria
marches to a new start at the presidency. Surreptitiously though, there is a
third.
One, the
possible composition of General Muhammadu Buhari’s new cabinet. and, who is
qualified in character, experience, exposure and acceptability, to lead the
Senate, as well as the Lower House, and other leaders of the National Assembly.
Understandably,
these deserve the scrutiny and attention they are getting seeing that any
mistake by whatever means and proportion, would spell doom and largely put a
clog on the wheel of the incoming administration. Equally, such mistakes will
equally hamper the delivery of the much elusive dividends of democracy and put
the nation at grave risk having walked this far in search of people-centred
leadership.
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This is why
it has become expedient that one gives the President-elect, General Buhari, a
helping hand, and make him aware of some dangerous political bumps likely to
pose a threat to his government; if for nothing, to assist him steady himself
in this crucial time when decisions that will make or mar his administration
are taken.
The covert
talking point among most discerning Nigerians is the possibility of our man of
the moment, GMB to rebound. Those who expressed this concern are probably
phobic of the military background of the in-coming president, forgetting that
for the general to submit himself to the democratic process of selection of
candidates of his party depicted readiness to abide by democratic norms. Though
only time and happenstance will vindicate him, it is critical that GMB be
cautitious and govern by the law of the land.
While
everyone who contributed to the success of the All Progressives Congress party
(APC) at the election deserves a pat on the back, a moment comes and that
moment is here, when national interest is allowed to stand taller than
parochial or party interest anyone might have as the nation considers who will
lead it at all the strategic positions in the new administration.
There is no
doubt that this season calls for a deeper reflection before deciding who
becomes which minister or not. While GMB seems transparently concern about the
future and progress of Nigeria, it is not impossible that certain personalities
who see the emergence of the APC as an opportunity to either accumulate more
wealth or remote control Nigeria, might work at cross lines. These are
speedbrakers Buhari must be weary of.
In all
democracies, beyond the passion to serve fatherland, the equitable distribution
of political offices plays critical role in determining the speed, shape and
manner of progress by any administration. However, this must not be above
competence, dignity and resourcefulness.
It is on this backdrop that care must
be taken by the new APC government and President-elect to ensure no individual
or group it on the party and nation as intense lobbying continues over
political offices and appointments at the presidency and the National Assembly
leadership.
Since the
buck stops on the president’s table – vilified or applauded – for the success
or otherwise of his government, the President-elect must take a studied look
and critically examine the issues that led to the failure of President Goodluck
Jonathan’s government and avoid them as best as possible.
As a highly
principled and incorruptible man, character traits that endeared him to
Nigerians, it is important that Buhari watches out for booby traps that some
greedy and selfish politicians might put on his path to undermine him. Not just
that, it is also important to avoid walking the same path that burnt President
Jonathan’s fingers and gave PDP the bloody nose. Today, everyone can see that
those who misled President Jonathan are,without qualms, already jumping ship
and directly and indirectly fraternising with the incoming government,
abandoning the man they once praised to high heavens. This is a big lesson for
the President-elect.
And, one
quick lesson to take away here, is that if he bends too low to feather the
interest of any politician at the expense of national interest, such a
politician like those who advised President Jonathan, will not be there when
Nigerians begin to throw stones at his government when it falters. Invariably,
such a politician will not stop the PVCs when they make a return to the polling
booths after four years.
There is no
doubt that critical to establishing himself as a leader who means well, the
President-elect must fight some urgent battles, especially the battle against
graft. Good, as this is, given that corruption has been the bane of Nigeria’s
development, care must also be taken to ensure that it is not turned into a
political witch-hunt tool.
Records are well too clear on how the President
Jonathan’s anti-graft battles and those of previous governments ended and the
costs to Nigerians. It is also well, too clear, the costs, politically, to
those who oiled the battle wheels rather deceptively.
President
Jonathan, for instance, where he ever showed the will to fight graft, was
deceived into fixing his guess on the wrong people, while those who walked his
corridors and dined with him, daily, had their ten fingers on the national
till. It cost him re-election. Therefore, when the President-elect is sworn in
on May 29, he must avoid these pitfalls like a plague. There should not be any
form of persecution of perceived political opponents or supposedly corrupt,
except those already indicted.
One recalls
how strangely, President Jonathan ran unjustifiably after perceived political
adversaries with the EFCC, while in a typical case of double standards, his
government openly fraternized with those who were arraigned, tried and
convicted of financial crimes!
In
Jonathan’s government, we had the allegation of missing $20 billion from the
Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Account by former governor of
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sanusi Lamido Sanusi ignored, while the banking
czar was forced on compulsory leave for blowing the alarm.
Sen. Asiwaju Bola
Ahmed Tinubu, the political strategist and democracy wizard was also invited,
four years after leaving office, by the EFCC on fathom charges, but only
because he remained an unapologetic democrat with an aversion to the impunities
perpetrated by the out going administration.
In his case,
Jonathan unleashed the EFCC on Sen. Bukola Saraki of Kwara State, two years
after he left office. Curiously, even when the same Saraki had got a clean bill
from the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in 2006, Jonathan’s
government made him their prime target after the former governor activated the
alarm over the fuel subsidy scam. Today, the same alarm has yet to stop
sounding over the fuel subsidy scam!
While these
cases and many more present a picture of a government that was irredeemably on
auto self-destruct, perhaps, the case of Chief James Onanefe Ibori, a former
governor of Delta State, typifies another wrong move in the name of anti-graft
battle by President Jonathan.
When Ibori still enjoyed a rosy relationship with
President Jonathan, he was treated as a saint to a point that his case files
were missing in government records! But when their paths crossed, President
Jonathan pretended that he did not know what to do to save him, but backed
people like Chief DSP Alamieseghia and Chief Bode George, convicted of
financial crimes, to run for Senate and become a pillar in the party. Ibori,
today, is still serving a jail term in the United Kingdom after a ridiculous
and curious trial process in Nigeria.
Not only
would the President-elect steer clear of such parochial and self-serving
leadership style, for truth remains that Nigerians wanted a change and the
President-elect presented a better alternative to what President Jonathan provided.
It therefore means that no politician will save the President-elect from defeat
if Nigerians feel he has failed to deliver on his promises. This underscores
the need to allow whatever pending cases against any politician to run full
circle without undue interference.
Having
overcome a government defined by years of needless manipulation and
witch-hunting, there is no better way to start afresh than building structures
that engender respect for due diligence and due process, devoid of any form of
the impunity that eventually destroyed the PDP.
Indeed, in
all steadily advancing and working societies around the world, systems were
never built around individuals, but made to be independent such that it gives
everyone, irrespective of religious or party affiliations, room to achieve
their God-given potentials.
This is why
the President-elect and by extension, those who mean well for Nigeria, must do
well by ensuring that the selection of Ministers, Advisers, National Assembly
leaders enjoy popular participation rather than manipulation and parochial
primordial sentiments.
Mr. Victor
Peter, a publiccommentator, wrote from Ilorin, Kwara State.
Vanguard
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