Thursday, December 26, 2024
Custom Text
Home COLUMNISTS Candour's Niche Sadly, President Buhari does not get it

Sadly, President Buhari does not get it

-

By Ikechukwu Amaechi

To the most strident supporters of President Muhammadu Buhari, the only thing that recommends him for a second term is his much-vaunted ability to catch thieves.

To them, if “corruption” is banished from Nigeria, the country will become an Eldorado, and, therefore, they are not worried if the president becomes a single-agenda demagogue.

Sadly, these flamethrowers who cling tenaciously to this position seem to be entirely unaware of how incredibly out of his depth the president actually is, a problem seriously compounded by his total fixation on catching those who pillaged our patrimony, and utter cluelessness about almost every other thing that has to do with governance.

- Advertisement -

He is so deeply out of the loop, a fact that has become evident to everyone else except those who revel in the animus that is the perimeter wall of the Buhari bubble.

Why would anyone who claims to mean well for Nigeria insist that Buhari’s tenure be extended beyond May 29, 2019?

I digress.

On May 12, 1995, Prof. Anya Oko Anya, one of Nigeria’s most erudite and eclectic scholars, delivered the Awolowo Memorial Lecture.

Titled “Reinventing Nigeria for the 21st Century: Politics, Science and Development in Nigeria to 2014 AD,” the chartered biologist clinically dissected Nigeria’s socio-economic and political problems and made projections.

- Advertisement -

That lecture is reproduced in the Volume One of the book, Times, thoughts and ideas (Selected Papers of Professor Anya O. Anya), and I strongly believe it is a must read for anybody who wishes to understand why Nigeria continues to plumb the depths of anomie.

“Those who have been in leadership positions have failed so signally because there does not exist at present a leadership class, responsive, and responsible with shared values, embodied in a shared vision of the society and its future,” Anya lamented.

“Rather, what we have are men (and women) with common vested interests amplified by their greed often locked in self-serving strategies and tactics of self-aggrandizement.”

The consequence was that: “The political, social, economic, cultural and spiritual outlook of the nation has never been gloomier.”

Anya said “The social environment has never been more dangerous. Armed robbery, banditry, assassinations, lawlessness and the senseless parade of brutal force even by the forces of the state sworn to protect the citizens must give us all cause for worry. It is true to say that no Nigerian over 50 years has felt so palpable a sense of insecurity at any other time – in his or her life – as now and that includes those of us who were in the Biafran enclave in the period of the civil war.

“ … The economic outlook cannot be more dismal … As incredible as it may sound, the quality of life of the average Nigerian in 1962 is an improvement on his circumstances in 1995.

“ … In the moral and spiritual domain of the nation’s life, there is an even greater evidence of collapse in our social and moral values. Integrity has been supplanted by mindless opportunism. Excellence and merit have given way to irredeemable mediocrity at all levels of our national life. Freedom and social justice are strange bedfellows as far as the movers and shakers of the Nigerian society are concerned.”

The lecture was delivered in 1995 when late General Sani Abacha held sway as the maximum ruler.

Take away the date, the remarks speak to the Buhari era as much as it did to Abacha’s, the only exception being that, to borrow Anya’s exact words, as incredible as it may still sound, the quality of life of the average Nigerian in 1995 is an improvement on his circumstances in 2018.  The problem with Nigeria is that the more we claim things are changing for the better, the more they remain the same or even worse.

But the chartered biologist proffered solutions.

To reinvent a Nigeria that will be 21st Century-compliant, Anya said, to borrow the expression popularised by former U.S. President, Bill Clinton, it is still the Leadership, Stupid.

“Any strategies to hasten the evolution of a Nigerian-wide leadership, responsive and responsible must start from a vision of a more just and equitable nation of equal opportunities for its citizens.

“Such individuals with wide knowledge and experience must encompass a wide-range of formal, informal and inter-personal relationships which shores up their reciprocal mutuality of vision and interests as the national establishment incorporating the intellectual, political and economic elite.”

To prepare for a functional role in the 21st Century, Anya said Nigerians needed to jumpstart the polity and the economy. “We need to draw up a plan for re-entry and to pursue it with discipline and with the energies and skills of all our people, mobilized for the effort, their spirits raised and their hopes restored.”

He delivered the lecture five years to the dawn of the 21st Century and warned that if we insist on taking the forlorn road of self-deceit and mediocrity, which ultimately leads to the wilderness of abject poverty and misery, the consequences will be too horrendous to even contemplate. I agree.

Now, back to the present.

Today, we are almost two decades into the 21st Century and our circumstances are most dire with evident indications of cynicism, helplessness and hopelessness amongst the people.

If all the development jigsaws were to fall into place today, it will take the country well over quarter of a century to turn its fortunes around.

For this to happen, the country needs a leader who is rigorous, yet quick-witted, a man who has the capacity to dream lofty dreams, a visionary who will not only be perspicacious enough to interpret those dreams but translate them into action plans. That leader must be imbued with the psychological, social and mental stamina for the race which is not a 100-metre dash but a marathon. He must be intellectually sagacious, a deep thinker that can conceptualize and articulate his vision in such a way that does not leave any member of his team in doubt. His roadmap must be clear enough, not hazy.

That is what the 2019 elections should be about. Who is that man that has the capacity to pull Nigeria out of the cesspit?

When faced with difficult challenges, countries parade their best eleven.

Nigerians must know that the decisions they take next year may define the country forever. It is about the survival of the country and the solution boils down to the capacities and capabilities of the individuals who are aspiring to lead us.

The problems facing the country are huge. Who created them is not really the issue now because truth be told, there is no Nigerian leader, past or present (and that includes General Muhammadu Buhari), that can wash his hands off the malaise.

What is important now is; who has the capacity to engineer the critical shift in the country’s leadership paradigm that will orchestrate the much-illusive Nigerian renaissance?

That leader cannot be a man described so unflatteringly by a foreign colleague as “lifeless.” The issues here are way beyond the ken of President Buhari. What Nigeria needs now is not a leader whose only measure of fitness is ability to trek 800 metres.

The problems are so enormous and require skill sets that go beyond catching thieves. While it is important, for our collective sanity, that those who converted our commonwealth to family fortunes are made to account for their crime, that cannot be the sole agenda of a turn-around leader.

After all, is it not true that while President Buhari and his minders are busy flaunting his thief-catching prowess, Nigeria became the world headquarters for extreme poverty (according to the World Economic Forum and the World Poverty Clock) and the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics reported in December 2017 that Nigeria lost 7.9 million jobs in the 21 month period under review?

While the president deliriously flaunts his core – thief-catching – competence, Nigeria slipped into recession for the first time in 25 years.

The president Nigeria needs at this critical moment is a lodestar that has not only the inclination but also the competency to restore righteousness and honour to our national discourse.

The Muhammadu Buhari that has been president of the republic in over three years has shown no such proclivity because he simply does not get it.

 

 

 

 

 

Must Read