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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Its Too Late For Buhari To Change - Junaid Mohammed (697 Views)
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Its Too Late For Buhari To Change - Junaid Mohammed by dunsman(f): 1:08pm On Jul 19, 2015 |
Dr Junaid Mohammed, a second republic lawmaker of the Coalition of
Northern Politicians, Academics, Professionals and Businessmen, has
said some things about President Buhari that might interest you.
Dr. Junaid Mohammed
Mohammed, in a new interview with Punch talks about the ruling All
Progressives Congress (APC), President Buhari, his administration and
some other crucial national issues. He also talked about the
president’s appointment so far and many more.
Read excerpts from the engaging interview below:
Do you see another crisis in APC over appointments into President
Buhari’s cabinet, apart from the current one on National Assembly
leadership?
Incidentally, many of them do not know the implication of making
Buhari the President. If you want to make somebody a president, you
must know his character and you must also accept that he is not
going to change at 73 years. People don’t change their character at
such an age. If you want a president who will win an election, after
which you will go ahead to nominate people for appointments as
ministers and those that would hold key positions for him, then, you
should not have looked for Buhari.
You should have gone to look for some lousy crooks that can do that
for you. I want to assure you; as long as Buhari is the President, there
is no way you can change him. And you cannot stampede him
because the man is transparent. He is not rich but he always takes
the interest of the country to heart. And anybody who thinks that at
this age, Buhari who ‘suffered’ from 1985 to 2015, will now bend his
principles simply because he wants to satisfy some people within or
outside APC is making a mistake. I know him. I know Buhari well
enough that he will rather leave the presidency than to compromise
his principle and integrity. If he had wanted to compromise his
integrity, he should have remained in power since 1985. Now, the
country had to go and beg him to come back and he stood to win the
(presidential) election after four attempts. As far as I am concerned,
we all have to be very realistic.
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This is the man we elected and nobody has come to say he won the
election because he had the money. If you must win an election like
that, you need to have people, you need to have the money, and you
need to have the organisation. I don’t believe Buhari has any of these.
He won the election fair and square. Now asking him to change at 73
is asking for the impossible. Let those who brought him; let those who
campaigned for him; let those who financed part of his campaign
accept the reality that this man, barring anything unforeseen, will be
the President of Nigeria for the next four years. So, we have to learn
to adapt to his style of management and governance. That is the only
realistic thing. Anything beyond this will only lead to frustration all
round.
There is the perception that Buhari’s appointments so far have been
favourable to northerners. Can you also see any lopsidedness in his
choice of appointees?
Can anyone confirm to me in all the appointments made – they are
very few– how many of them (appointees) are not Nigerians? Do we
have anyone who is not a Nigerian? Is there any law or any section of
the constitution which stipulates that a certain proportion of
appointments must come from the North or from the South? Can
anyone also tell me that these appointments made were not on merit?
Were these persons just appointed because they are northerners? If
there is any breach of any law in the constitution about some of these
appointments, I will be glad to know. I will lead the charge against the
appointments; that they were not made on merit. Unless we clear this
nonsense about nepotism, about where somebody comes from, we are
not going to make headway in Nigeria. That is why Nigerian Army fails
to control Boko Haram.
In appointing the service chiefs, we are more concerned about where
they come from and not their ability to command. We had a disaster
then they brought the late Gen. Owoye Azazi; it was another disaster
when brought Gen. Kenneth Minimah. Everybody knew these were not
the kind of people to be service chiefs. Then, we also had someone
from the North, who was made the National Security Adviser and
became the de facto, ‘super super’ chief of the Armed Forces. He had
more power than the Commander-in-Chief, more than the Chief of
Defence Staff and the Chief of Army Staff; and he was a bloody
mediocre. Before people start making any comments, let them wait
and see the total number of people who have been appointed. If not,
we are going to stampede the President into making monumental
disasters he will regret and all of us will regret.
Let us learn for a moment to be Nigerians. Look at ability; look for
the people who can do the job; that is the only way Nigeria can make
progress. I am not saying all these people (appointed so far) are the
best, because I don’t know most of them. There was a time when two
brothers from the same town and house in Zaria; one was appointed
the Minister of Transport, the other was appointed Presidential Adviser
on Petroleum, given by gazette under the administration of Shagari.
Imagine if Buhari were to give two brothers such appointments now;
there will be an outcry.
The anti-graft agencies seem to have suddenly become aggressive in the
prosecution of corruption cases under the new administration. Do you
think it has anything to do with the new President?
Let me be honest with you, there is a Buhari factor. And this is an
important area in which I want Nigerians to wake up. There is nothing
like an independent Economic and Financial Crimes Commissions or
an independent Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related
Offences Commission. The performance of these agencies and similar
agencies, including the Police and the Department of State Security, is
entirely dependent on the integrity, sincerity and honesty of the head
of government – the President. If the President is determined that
these agencies are important and must do their job and do it well,
they will. If the president is a liar and a crook, just as the people
surrounding him, even if you have angels from heaven to man these
organisations, nothing will happen.
I know for a fact that all the governors who have been detained; their
investigations were commenced and completed years ago. Nothing
happened to them because the President did not want anything to
happen. I want to assure you also that you will see the Nigerian
judiciary doing its job now. The Chief Justice of Nigeria, like the
woman before him, is a judge who is incorruptible. But more
importantly, the investigative agencies, which will carry out the
investigations and submit the files to the judges, are doing their job
now for the first time. Former President (Olusegun) Obasanjo was
selective but now we are seeing that even persons who are very close
to Buhari, like Murtala Nyako, are facing the law now. All the
investigations are there. If we are serious, we will do it; if we are not
serious, nothing happens. The fact is that they now know that both the
criminals and those who are investigating the criminals – Police,
EFCC, ICPC – if they renege, Buhari will simply walk over them and
that will be the end of the story.
What is your take on PDP’s advice that Buhari should launch its anti-
corruption campaign from within the APC fold?
Which people? Can they mention the names? In the common law
system, the English system we inherited, a suspect is innocent until
proven guilty. To prove somebody guilty in a criminal case, which can
earn him a jail term, you have to prove the case beyond reasonable
doubt. Can they point out the guilty persons in APC that they want
prosecuted? They should tell us who are the guilty ones and what
evidence they have against those to be prosecuted.
Does it mean that there is no corrupt person close to Buhari that he can
use as a scape goat?
That is again a double standard. If you look at those close to Buhari
and start to prosecute them, then, you have applied double standard.
Why should you punish a man only because he is close to Buhari?
When somebody commits a crime, we have the prosecuting agencies.
But to prosecute the person, they have to apply the statutes of the
law. I do not believe that people who are close to Buhari, just for the
sake of being close to Buhari for over a decade, should now be
prosecuted just to demonstrate that Buhari is a no-nonsense person;
that is not true. But if they have any evidence against anybody,
whether in APC or PDP, let them bring the evidence. They were in
government for 16 years, how many people did they prosecute? How
many people did the PDP prosecute when they were in power? I want
to know.
Some economists have advised the President to work more on blocking
the leakages in the economy than pursuing looters and their loots…
How do you build a system when the economy itself is in danger?
When Buhari came, there was no money. Most of the states cannot
even pay salaries of workers, including APC states. If there is no
money to pay people, what leakages are you planning to block? Tax-
paying workers should earn their salaries as at when due. It is after
that you can start talking about what actually happened. How come
states cannot pay salaries for several months? Is the revenue
allocation formula wrong? I think it is a bad revenue allocation
formula. I have looked at it since 2000 and I will tell anybody who
wants to listen that we cannot build the nation with the current
revenue allocation formula. This is the situation: Akwa Ibom, Rivers,
Delta, Bayelsa and other states with oil are loaded with money. And
the monies are being stolen, laundered and taken to outside banks.
They do not even invest the monies here; they take them outside the
country, while the remaining states in the country cannot afford to pay
their salaries.
I know they are (also) corrupt but that does not mean that because
there is corruption, the poor states have the right to be corrupt too.
That is not making a rational judgment. Change the revenue allocation
formula. Make sure that every Nigerian has a feeling of being a
citizen and set the minimum of what every Nigerian is entitled to—
free education, free health care services and security. Use a
benchmark to determine what every state in Nigeria is entitled to,
instead of giving extra monies to states like Delta, Akwa Ibom,
Bayelsa and others. These people have received these monies and
they have not added value to Nigeria’s governance or to the security
of the country.
It leads to instability. I do not believe that Aregbesola is the worst
governor in Nigeria. But look at the stabs he is taking because he
cannot pay salaries. Has anybody asked whether the amount of money
Aregbesola gets in terms of internally generated revenue and from the
federation account is enough to maintain the staff population in Osun
State?
But some of the governors are said to be wasteful with their huge cabinets
and huge salaries and allowances regularly paid, while the civil servants
are owed salaries?
I agree but the government should issue a guideline; no state should
have more than six to eight commissioners; no governor should have
more than four advisers. Scrap all these because they add no value to
the governor. I agree with you entirely. There is no justification for
bogus staff strength when they cannot pay basic salaries.
Now, we are in a very difficult situation and I am glad that in Kano –
my state – the governor, who was my classmate, has slashed his
salary, that of his deputy and every other appointee by 50 per cent.
Governors must pay salaries. They must also slash the number of
political appointees. They should not blame Buhari for that. Nigeria is
a federation with three tiers of government. Each has its sources of
revenue. The fact that someone misbehaves does not mean it should
affect the whole country.
Recently, Junaid Mohammed, who was a critic of the President
Goodluck Jonathan-led administration, cautioned the President Buhari
to implement immediate steps to flush out political figures from the
Nigerian Armed Forces in order to form room for democracy to
flourish in Nigeria. |
Re: Its Too Late For Buhari To Change - Junaid Mohammed by Nobody: 1:09pm On Jul 19, 2015 |
Re: Its Too Late For Buhari To Change - Junaid Mohammed by Faremisodeeq(m): 1:10pm On Jul 19, 2015 |
Too lateee keee |
Re: Its Too Late For Buhari To Change - Junaid Mohammed by poiZon: 1:25pm On Jul 19, 2015 |
As usual, the defenders of mr dictator n oga slowmo. |
Re: Its Too Late For Buhari To Change - Junaid Mohammed by Harkindeylee(m): 1:53pm On Jul 19, 2015 |
B |
Re: Its Too Late For Buhari To Change - Junaid Mohammed by chernest2002: 3:45pm On Jul 19, 2015 |
And uneducated notherners will take all post and rule over the educated south something they did for over fourty years without progress. As for me this regim means backward for nigeria. |
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