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The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? - Politics - Nairaland

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The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by incomintop: 5:29pm On May 28, 2016
article from azubuike ishiekwene

I once shared a story with readers of an incident that took place at the height of the Buhari/Osinbajo campaign last year. Candidate Muhammadu Buhari and his running mate, Yemi Osinbajo, had visited the traditional ruler in Gusau. They stayed longer than they had planned – far into the night – and were hoping that the crowd would have dispersed by the time the visit was over.

They were wrong. The boisterous crowd had defied sleep and besieged them, surging closer and closer as they tried to leave. Buhari reportedly said to Osinbajo as their convoy snaked through the wildly excited crowd: “From the look on their faces, these people expect everything to change from the first day we take office!”

The mood of the crowd in Gusau that night was largely a reflection of the mood across the country. Nigerians were down and almost out on good luck; they desperately needed change.

One year on, the honeymoon – quite extraordinary by Nigerian standards – appears to be ending. It’s doubtful if anything Buhari imagined when he put himself forward or said when he was campaigning prepared him for the weight of expectation and the scale of the mess he found when he eventually took office.

The naira has lost over 35 percent of its value to the dollar, inflation is in double digits, the economy has retracted, unemployment has risen and new tensions and fault lines appear to be replacing old ones. The promise of change is beginning to look like a mirage.

Was Buhari a mistake?

In the midst of the daunting challenges facing the country, it is easy to forget where we’re coming from. Or to underestimate the extent of repair for the damage inflicted by many years of misrule.

Nigeria was fighting for its life. Although Boko Haram pre-dated former president Goodluck Jonathan, on his watch, the murderous group seized over one-third of the North, an area the size of Northern Ireland, and hoisted their flag. It all seems like distant memory now but this time last year, swathes of the North Eastern part of the country was desolate; there was only one road left linking Borno State with the rest of the country. The North was effectively a war zone, with roadblocks and soldiers everywhere and over two million people displaced.

Abuja suffered a string of deadly attacks, too. Key buildings, even military installations, were hiding behind huge concrete barricades hurriedly redeployed from Julius Berger construction sites. It was inconceivable that while the country was under siege from Boko Haram and our collective security was left to God, hunters and neighbouring countries, our Commander-in-Chief Jonathan, with his four angels and foot soldiers, were either in denial or very busy gorging themselves on funds meant to fight the war. But we know that it happened.

Sure, we should be asking Buhari what he has done for us lately but it would be a disservice to our collective memory to take our recent past for granted. I remember Nigeria’s former ambassador to the US, late Professor Ade Adefuye, sharing with me his frustration that arms supply and training for Nigerian soldiers at the frontlines had been hopelessly and needlessly impeded.

Why? Either out of indifference or willful negligence the authorities in Abuja had refused to respond to a request by the White House on what the Nigerian government was doing to deal with the allegations of abuse and corruption leveled against the military high command.

Jonathan appears to have looked the other way, while our soldiers were fighting with bare hands and our girls and boys were being kidnapped or murdered in their school dormitories.

To be sure, new tensions have flared – renewed violence in the Niger Delta and deadly attacks by so-called herdsmen, for example. We didn’t take Nigeria back from Boko Haram only to hand it over to any other criminal franchise.

The government must be tough on these criminals, but Abuja must also admit that it doesn’t have all the answers. The only way it can free itself from the blackmail of ethnic warlords is to restructure the country and let each region bear the primary burden and responsibility for the choices of its own people.

If the pipelines were privatised, for example, it would be the responsibility of the new owners, who may include the state government, Asari Dokubo, Tompolo and the rest, to manage it. The federal government, through DPR, could retain residual interest, if it wishes. The country cannot continue to create and indulge a haven of aristocratic criminals.

We must thank Prime Minister David Cameron for reminding us that Nigeria is fantastically corrupt. At this time last year, we were still splitting hairs over the difference between stealing and corruption. Of course, the hairsplitting is not over yet – it’s now whether the war against corruption is a witch-hunt or not – but it’s hard to deny that for the first time in years there is action against impunity.

In launching the war on corruption, Buhari had obviously underestimated how weak and rotten key institutions had become. He has had to ruffle feathers and dare principalities and powers in the media, judiciary, the military and even his own party, to send a message that it will not be business as usual.

It’s a long, hard road, guaranteed to get even more difficult in his second and third years. Yet, in the fight to reclaim the country’s moral soul, Buhari must move quickly and unwaveringly to strengthen the relevant institutions without which we would soon be back to square one.

More than anything else, Buhari has taken a heavy beating on his pace and the economy, especially in Q1 2016, when the economy slipped into negative growth combined with rising inflation and unemployment.

Some of the factors, like falling oil prices, low reserves and poor harvest, are beyond the president. But if he has learnt any lesson at all, it must be that he needs more pace than the tortoise on the front page of the Sunday Guardian cartoon of his first 100 days in office. His prolonged misery over the adjustment of petrol price must also have taught him to let go quickly of ideas that are not working. He can’t always get it right, but not getting it is not an option.

The fixed exchange rate is not working – or at least not working for non-speculators. It is heartening that, finally, the government will allow some flexibility, however gradual. As part of efforts to increase the forex pool, the CBN may need to relax the rule, which forbids non-oil exporters from selling forex outside the inter-bank market. By doing so, non-oil (mainly agricultural produce) exporters, would have better control of their forex and may choose to sell outside the inter-bank market.

Also, to regain his footing on the economy, Buhari must spend massively on infrastructure and target policies that improve productivity and disposable income, especially because of higher energy costs.

If Buhari were to make another visit to Gusau today, I’m not sure how large the crowd would be or what their faces would look like. But I know that the country is certainly a more promising place today than when he made that visit last year.

source: http://leadership.ng/columns/530872/road-change-buhari-mistake

1 Like

Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by bondingman: 5:40pm On May 28, 2016
The state of the economy should answer that question! Surely it was a mistake electing him as president.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by Jirate(m): 5:46pm On May 28, 2016
A big Mistake, no Doubt about that.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by todayboy: 5:55pm On May 28, 2016
Big mistake but zombies don't want agree

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by modath(f): 5:56pm On May 28, 2016
All ye dullard and insult chanting crew should endeavour to read before commenting... cool

It won't make una happy oooo!!! EG...



Jonathan appears to have looked the other way, while our soldiers were fighting with bare hands and our girls and boys were being kidnapped or murdered in their school dormitories.


We didn’t take Nigeria back from Boko Haram only to hand it over to any other criminal franchise.




Especially this part...

But I know that the country is certainly a more promising place today than when he made that visit last year
Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by aloeman15(m): 5:57pm On May 28, 2016
This is what I told my dad on Sunday-
God sent buhari to us so that we can learn through suffering.
Clearly, it's the only way to teach the black mind.
You wait till end of june, when the 'deregulated' petrol hits us. Just get ready for more, much harsher fuel scarcity, increased pump prices and the ripple effects on the naira.
Somewhere in the bible, it says-
Winter is coming from the north...

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by chriskosherbal(m): 5:59pm On May 28, 2016
I still think we are going to get it right as Nigerians.
Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by malton: 5:59pm On May 28, 2016
...
Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by Splinz(m): 6:05pm On May 28, 2016
This one na question? Of course it is crystal clear to even the blind that Buhari is such a terrible mistake that must be rectify asap. Else, he spells more doom for us as a people.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by Nobody: 6:18pm On May 28, 2016
No op, President Muhammadu Buhari (slayer of ipob and Jonathan) wasn't a mistake.

It is your hard working parents that made a big mistake not aborting but instead allowed you to come desecrate this holy earth with your ........

Cheers!

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by Jerrymax01(m): 6:31pm On May 28, 2016
I'm not a political bigot, but I think our calls for speedy change is ridiculous, to me I see Nigeria as a faulty jalopy, which the engineer couldn't figure out what the fault is, the engineer will keep trying all means to get it fix, this is exactly what PMB is doing. How can we judge PMB, within his first year in office, to me, it's like expecting a baby of a month old to start crawling and talking fluently within he or she is a month old! Aside that he assumed power when things ain't favorable in the world, many countries all over the world are in mess, but they ain't washing their linen in public like we Nigerian and we all keep saying investors are not coming to invest! We just have to stop been tribal and put an end to the disdain within ethnic groups and see ourselves as one Nigeria and hope for a better country, to me I can't score PMB yet till he finishes his tenure.

God bless FRN
Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by tirocino(m): 7:06pm On May 28, 2016
Good write up n post....The mistake Nigerians keeps on repeating is jumping the wagon to a seem greener pasture. Right now am still a spectator.. hoping to see a brighter future. God bless Nigeria, God bless the governance with wisdom n keep us us
Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by Curlieweed: 7:37pm On May 28, 2016
Mumuharri wasn't a mistake. He's doing a wonderful job of supervising the disintegration of this fraudulent racist experiment called Nigger-area.
Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by todayboy: 7:47pm On May 28, 2016
Kid is a question the author is asking is buhari a mistake the change mantra

kinginvalhala4:






No op, President Muhammadu Buhari (slayer of ipob and Jonathan) wasn't a mistake.

It is your hard working parents that made a big mistake not aborting but instead allowed you to come desecrate this holy earth with your ........

Cheers!
Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by TheEclectic: 8:28pm On May 28, 2016
Saying Buhari is/was a mistake is an understatement. He is/was a disaster!

1 Like

Re: The Road To Change: Was Buhari A Mistake? by thelinguist: 11:32pm On May 28, 2016
Nope

1 Like

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