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The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. - Politics - Nairaland

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The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by ofegge73(m): 10:12am On Jan 10, 2018
The Rise and Fall of Buhari.

This write up coming from the London Economist, a magazine that endorsed Buhari for President in 2015, is perhaps the most significant, objective, unbiased, unsentimental and deeply incisive analysis of the policies and actions of this president so far. The facts are unimpeachable by any objective mind.

The Unprecedented Level of Patience Shown to Buhari---the ECONOMIST

Nigerians have never shown such level of patience and tolerance towards any of their past leaders for his record and strange policies as that shown to their current leader, Muhammadu Buhari – a former military dictator now self-confessed democrat who said he came to fight corruption.

Buhari, 75, is being plagued with failures across every single sector in the economy, the like as has never been seen before. Less than a year into office, the economy plummeted into recession, an economy which had till then grown at an average rate of 7% in previous years (2011-2014). The nation’s currency lost 70% of its value, unemployment rose from 6.5 to 26%, commodity prices tripled across many quarters and the state-regulated premium motor spirit prices were hiked by 67% without practically anybody batting an eye.

There have been stern opposition to his policies however and to his very personality as well, notably in the South East and South- South regions in the country as they are called, where he both received less than 5% of the votes cast at the last Presidential election and where he has always been sternly unpopular for his history of bigotry against the people, perceived incompetence and dictatorial tendencies. But in many other regions across the country the people have rather resolved to suffer patiently, drawing up excuses for him at will, blaming everyone including his hundreds of political appointees, anything and anybody but never the man himself.

Buhari’s party, the APC, promised Nigerians unprecedented swiping changes in government and the eviction of all corrupt individuals.
One possible explanation for this could be his party’s hope narrative in the 2015 General election where citizens were promised an unprecedented crackdown on corruption and the abolition of all government waste by a man whose financial worth they declared to have been less than N30million ($150,000 then), a historical low for a former top official in the country and most especially a former leader.

In a country plagued by acute corruption problems and with the unremitted crude oil revenue scandal of 2014 still fresh in the people’s minds, many were eager for an abrupt change, the like as never been seen before. He was seen an army general, already experienced in government, with a great strength of will, tough to take on the nation’s cabal of hardened criminals. He promised to appoint only technocrats to head the country’s departments and to see out the lingering Boko Haram insurgency from the warfront. For a nation lacking basic amenities such as power supply in spite of its huge energy resources and with the lingering insurgency crises, the choice seemed easy to many- the general with integrity was the man for the country.

Talk was cheap then but now reality has taken its course. His earliest opponents pointed out to his track record and not to his speech, noting that the last time Nigeria fell into dismal failure, currency woes and commodity shortages was when he had seized power as a military general in 1983 and stating that the facts of that record contradicted the poems of his image brokers.

Many however just wanted “change” as it was then called and so voted the General and sat to wait for the sung promises. But from the onset of his government, the course was as his critics had predefined: Incompetency, bigotry and dictatorial tendencies plaguing the country.

He ignored the newly born genocide in the middle belt of the country perpetuated by the Fulani herdsmen of his kindred against the Christian communities in Benue, Plateau and later on Kaduna. He breached the Central Bank’s 2007 Act of Independence, telling it to suspend forex disbursements to steel importers and other manufacturing sectors in a bid to defend the Naira, a disastrous action which kick-started a spiral of recession.


He took 3 months to appoint his Chief of Staff, 6 months to appoint a cabinet and now 23 months and yet counting to appoint heads of agencies and board members he was so eager to fire upon his assumption into office and rose import duties on the most basic of commodities in a bid to raise government revenue.

And as for the corruption fight, the facts on ground do not show any one at all. Apart from a few officials harassed or imprisoned without court order, the country is yet to witness the first victim of the said campaign at the court stands.

Government waste is on the rise, officials publicly caught in graft acts were swiftly excused, the 2016 Budget year passed without implementation and most worrisome, the Central Bank’s foreign reserves were being shared among unknown Bureau De Change operators at variable rates at the detriment of critical manufacturing, business and banking sectors.

The government continues to praise itself but the people seem to be increasingly tired of the paraded self-righteousness. The President’s recent illness was greeted with cheers by many. Many are just tired of the government. But the remarkable level of patience shown so far has been unprecedented and many a times the general reactions towards acts of constitutional violations was one of calmness or insensitivity.

If the Change narrative of the 2015 election and the songs of man of integrity are to account for this, then Nigerians may have just certified themselves on the world map as a nation easy to fool with propaganda. An adult should be judged on his track record not on his tongue.

Culled from The Economist

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by dukie25: 10:13am On Jan 10, 2018
Link to the original economist article would be helpful.

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by SalamRushdie: 10:14am On Jan 10, 2018
This article has been circulating for weeks now on nairaland but is often avoided by the BMC crew

2 Likes

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by sarrki(m): 10:16am On Jan 10, 2018
Rubbish

Emiefele is better than him

Kemi is better than the glorified economist
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by ofegge73(m): 10:16am On Jan 10, 2018
Let s take an objective look and comment on the write up.

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by baralatie(m): 10:19am On Jan 10, 2018
ofegge73:
The Rise and Fall of Buhari.

This write up coming from the London Economist, a magazine that endorsed Buhari for President in 2015, is perhaps the most significant, objective, unbiased, unsentimental and deeply incisive analysis of the policies and actions of this president so far. The facts are unimpeachable by any objective mind.

The Unprecedented Level of Patience Shown to Buhari---the ECONOMIST

Nigerians have never shown such level of patience and tolerance towards any of their past leaders for his record and strange policies as that shown to their current leader, Muhammadu Buhari – a former military dictator now self-confessed democrat who said he came to fight corruption.

Buhari, 75, is being plagued with failures across every single sector in the economy, the like as has never been seen before. Less than a year into office, the economy plummeted into recession, an economy which had till then grown at an average rate of 7% in previous years (2011-2014). The nation’s currency lost 70% of its value, unemployment rose from 6.5 to 26%, commodity prices tripled across many quarters and the state-regulated premium motor spirit prices were hiked by 67% without practically anybody batting an eye.

There have been stern opposition to his policies however and to his very personality as well, notably in the South East and South- South regions in the country as they are called, where he both received less than 5% of the votes cast at the last Presidential election and where he has always been sternly unpopular for his history of bigotry against the people, perceived incompetence and dictatorial tendencies. But in many other regions across the country the people have rather resolved to suffer patiently, drawing up excuses for him at will, blaming everyone including his hundreds of political appointees, anything and anybody but never the man himself.

Buhari’s party, the APC, promised Nigerians unprecedented swiping changes in government and the eviction of all corrupt individuals.
One possible explanation for this could be his party’s hope narrative in the 2015 General election where citizens were promised an unprecedented crackdown on corruption and the abolition of all government waste by a man whose financial worth they declared to have been less than N30million ($150,000 then), a historical low for a former top official in the country and most especially a former leader.

In a country plagued by acute corruption problems and with the unremitted crude oil revenue scandal of 2014 still fresh in the people’s minds, many were eager for an abrupt change, the like as never been seen before. He was seen an army general, already experienced in government, with a great strength of will, tough to take on the nation’s cabal of hardened criminals. He promised to appoint only technocrats to head the country’s departments and to see out the lingering Boko Haram insurgency from the warfront. For a nation lacking basic amenities such as power supply in spite of its huge energy resources and with the lingering insurgency crises, the choice seemed easy to many- the general with integrity was the man for the country.

Talk was cheap then but now reality has taken its course. His earliest opponents pointed out to his track record and not to his speech, noting that the last time Nigeria fell into dismal failure, currency woes and commodity shortages was when he had seized power as a military general in 1983 and stating that the facts of that record contradicted the poems of his image brokers.

Many however just wanted “change” as it was then called and so voted the General and sat to wait for the sung promises. But from the onset of his government, the course was as his critics had predefined: Incompetency, bigotry and dictatorial tendencies plaguing the country.

He ignored the newly born genocide in the middle belt of the country perpetuated by the Fulani herdsmen of his kindred against the Christian communities in Benue, Plateau and later on Kaduna. He breached the Central Bank’s 2007 Act of Independence, telling it to suspend forex disbursements to steel importers and other manufacturing sectors in a bid to defend the Naira, a disastrous action which kick-started a spiral of recession.


He took 3 months to appoint his Chief of Staff, 6 months to appoint a cabinet and now 23 months and yet counting to appoint heads of agencies and board members he was so eager to fire upon his assumption into office and rose import duties on the most basic of commodities in a bid to raise government revenue.

And as for the corruption fight, the facts on ground do not show any one at all. Apart from a few officials harassed or imprisoned without court order, the country is yet to witness the first victim of the said campaign at the court stands.

Government waste is on the rise, officials publicly caught in graft acts were swiftly excused, the 2016 Budget year passed without implementation and most worrisome, the Central Bank’s foreign reserves were being shared among unknown Bureau De Change operators at variable rates at the detriment of critical manufacturing, business and banking sectors.

The government continues to praise itself but the people seem to be increasingly tired of the paraded self-righteousness. The President’s recent illness was greeted with cheers by many. Many are just tired of the government. But the remarkable level of patience shown so far has been unprecedented and many a times the general reactions towards acts of constitutional violations was one of calmness or insensitivity.

If the Change narrative of the 2015 election and the songs of man of integrity are to account for this, then Nigerians may have just certified themselves on the world map as a nation easy to fool with propaganda. An adult should be judged on his track record not on his tongue.

Culled from The Economist
source
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by potent5(m): 10:28am On Jan 10, 2018
Is it happening already?

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by Nobody: 10:30am On Jan 10, 2018
Even without reading that,I know this government has failed Nigerians

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by odogwubiafra: 10:42am On Jan 10, 2018
Oh Lord, last month was 2017, this month is 2018, please will next month be 2019? God abeg!

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by DWJOBScom(m): 10:53am On Jan 10, 2018
Source please....

Very important!

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by sarrki(m): 10:54am On Jan 10, 2018
odogwubiafra:
Oh Lord, last month was 2017, this month is 2018, please will next month be 2019? God abeg!

Till 2023 bro

Live with that
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by sarrki(m): 10:55am On Jan 10, 2018
BabaOwen:
Even without reading that,I know this government has failed Nigerians

Governors and previous administration have failed Nigeria
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by sarrki(m): 10:56am On Jan 10, 2018
ofegge73:
Let s take an objective look and comment on the write up.

What rubbish write up

Somebody in London writing about what he read online

I SMH for all this enemies of the state turned emergency analyst
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by DLondonboiy: 10:56am On Jan 10, 2018
Buhari scammed Nigerians.

The old man wanted to be president for so long....and we thought he had something upstairs, we never knew we were dealing with a dullard.

2 Likes

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by sarrki(m): 10:58am On Jan 10, 2018
DLondonboiy:
Buhari scammed Nigerians.

The old man wanted to be president for so long....and we thought he had something upstairs, we never knew we were dealing with a dullard.

Did you vote him ?

I challenged the southeast and South south not to vote for him the way they did in 2015

Their votes are inconsequential
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by DLondonboiy: 11:01am On Jan 10, 2018
sarrki:


Did you vote him ?

I challenged the southeast and South south not to vote for him the way they did in 2015

Their votes are inconsequential

See the way you are just running naked all over nairaland....Don't let poverty kill you o.

Send me your CV lemme see if we can find something for you...

6 Likes

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by sarrki(m): 11:02am On Jan 10, 2018
DLondonboiy:


See the way you are just running naked all over nairaland....Don't let poverty kill you o.

Send me your CV lemme see if we can find something for you...


Lol

Normal chest beating
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by blaqoracle: 11:10am On Jan 10, 2018
ofegge73:
The Rise and Fall of Buhari.

This write up coming from the London Economist, a magazine that endorsed Buhari for President in 2015, is perhaps the most significant, objective, unbiased, unsentimental and deeply incisive analysis of the policies and actions of this president so far. The facts are unimpeachable by any objective mind.

The Unprecedented Level of Patience Shown to Buhari---the ECONOMIST

Nigerians have never shown such level of patience and tolerance towards any of their past leaders for his record and strange policies as that shown to their current leader, Muhammadu Buhari – a former military dictator now self-confessed democrat who said he came to fight corruption.

Buhari, 75, is being plagued with failures across every single sector in the economy, the like as has never been seen before. Less than a year into office, the economy plummeted into recession, an economy which had till then grown at an average rate of 7% in previous years (2011-2014). The nation’s currency lost 70% of its value, unemployment rose from 6.5 to 26%, commodity prices tripled across many quarters and the state-regulated premium motor spirit prices were hiked by 67% without practically anybody batting an eye.

There have been stern opposition to his policies however and to his very personality as well, notably in the South East and South- South regions in the country as they are called, where he both received less than 5% of the votes cast at the last Presidential election and where he has always been sternly unpopular for his history of bigotry against the people, perceived incompetence and dictatorial tendencies. But in many other regions across the country the people have rather resolved to suffer patiently, drawing up excuses for him at will, blaming everyone including his hundreds of political appointees, anything and anybody but never the man himself.

Buhari’s party, the APC, promised Nigerians unprecedented swiping changes in government and the eviction of all corrupt individuals.
One possible explanation for this could be his party’s hope narrative in the 2015 General election where citizens were promised an unprecedented crackdown on corruption and the abolition of all government waste by a man whose financial worth they declared to have been less than N30million ($150,000 then), a historical low for a former top official in the country and most especially a former leader.

In a country plagued by acute corruption problems and with the unremitted crude oil revenue scandal of 2014 still fresh in the people’s minds, many were eager for an abrupt change, the like as never been seen before. He was seen an army general, already experienced in government, with a great strength of will, tough to take on the nation’s cabal of hardened criminals. He promised to appoint only technocrats to head the country’s departments and to see out the lingering Boko Haram insurgency from the warfront. For a nation lacking basic amenities such as power supply in spite of its huge energy resources and with the lingering insurgency crises, the choice seemed easy to many- the general with integrity was the man for the country.

Talk was cheap then but now reality has taken its course. His earliest opponents pointed out to his track record and not to his speech, noting that the last time Nigeria fell into dismal failure, currency woes and commodity shortages was when he had seized power as a military general in 1983 and stating that the facts of that record contradicted the poems of his image brokers.

Many however just wanted “change” as it was then called and so voted the General and sat to wait for the sung promises. But from the onset of his government, the course was as his critics had predefined: Incompetency, bigotry and dictatorial tendencies plaguing the country.

He ignored the newly born genocide in the middle belt of the country perpetuated by the Fulani herdsmen of his kindred against the Christian communities in Benue, Plateau and later on Kaduna. He breached the Central Bank’s 2007 Act of Independence, telling it to suspend forex disbursements to steel importers and other manufacturing sectors in a bid to defend the Naira, a disastrous action which kick-started a spiral of recession.


He took 3 months to appoint his Chief of Staff, 6 months to appoint a cabinet and now 23 months and yet counting to appoint heads of agencies and board members he was so eager to fire upon his assumption into office and rose import duties on the most basic of commodities in a bid to raise government revenue.

And as for the corruption fight, the facts on ground do not show any one at all. Apart from a few officials harassed or imprisoned without court order, the country is yet to witness the first victim of the said campaign at the court stands.

Government waste is on the rise, officials publicly caught in graft acts were swiftly excused, the 2016 Budget year passed without implementation and most worrisome, the Central Bank’s foreign reserves were being shared among unknown Bureau De Change operators at variable rates at the detriment of critical manufacturing, business and banking sectors.

The government continues to praise itself but the people seem to be increasingly tired of the paraded self-righteousness. The President’s recent illness was greeted with cheers by many. Many are just tired of the government. But the remarkable level of patience shown so far has been unprecedented and many a times the general reactions towards acts of constitutional violations was one of calmness or insensitivity.

If the Change narrative of the 2015 election and the songs of man of integrity are to account for this, then Nigerians may have just certified themselves on the world map as a nation easy to fool with propaganda. An adult should be judged on his track record not on his tongue.

Culled from The Economist
economist don't write like that. This is a write up of a frustrated and farnished IPIG.
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by DLondonboiy: 11:11am On Jan 10, 2018
sarrki:



Lol

Normal chest beating

Do you know the meaning of chest beating? Abi you no get CV? You no go school? Abi na school of zombies you go?

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by NaoSlay: 11:11am On Jan 10, 2018

Fake article.

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by odogwubiafra: 11:11am On Jan 10, 2018
sarrki:


Till 2023 bro

Live with that

By Gods grace, making use of some opportunities some see as threats to live better than you. Just concerned about some reasonable and sensible Nigerians that are suffering, and most importantly, concerned about Nigerias present image globally.
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by dignity33: 12:21pm On Jan 10, 2018
Beware of leuretta Onochie media outlet BMC on Nairaland they open alot of Username to operate and assemble there comments together to distract people from the topic against this evil Government by calling the author names like pigs, afonja, IPOB to create room for tribal media war within the tribes and make the topic useless.

2 Likes

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by abes(m): 12:27pm On Jan 10, 2018
There's no such article on the London economics website. This article is fake.
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by taurusmena1(m): 12:46pm On Jan 10, 2018
Mugu5
sarrki:


Till 2023 bro

Live with that
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by taurusmena1(m): 12:47pm On Jan 10, 2018
Who has cursed thee with such gullibility?quote author=sarrki post=64060955]

Governors and previous administration have failed Nigeria[/quote]

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by Man2utd(m): 12:48pm On Jan 10, 2018
@ sarki is been paid to protect the image of this government, but there are actually smarter ways you can do this...

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by AdolfHitlerxXx: 1:15pm On Jan 10, 2018
Would make an interesting read if it is for real, please post the original link. Most foreign journalists research and investigate very well.

BUT

I am almost sure it won't be titled "Rise and Fall of Buhari"

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by Jesusloveyou: 1:16pm On Jan 10, 2018
Culled from idiotic pigs of Biafra
Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by KingNom(m): 1:25pm On Jan 10, 2018
THE MAIN SOLUTION TO NIGERIA'S PROBLEM

We all know the main problem behind nepotism and widespread killings in Nigeria (especially in the Northern part).

Kindly read this:
A Very powerful man, named Saul in the Bible was seriously persecuting the Christians after Stephen died.

When he later got converted by Jesus Himself, he turned out to be the Greatest Apostle in the New Testament after Jesus!

This is where our answer lies! These killers (Herdsmen, Cultists Ritualists and other terrible elements), their sponsors and their sympathizers were raised and trained to do what they do by their environment and influencers, the same way you do the things you do because you were trained so.

Now to change a grown person is very Herculean if not impossible. The only way a person can change is if God changes the person from his heart.

But God needs us to pray so He can have the permission to intervene and Change these killers, their sponsors etc.

If we start spending MORE AND MORE TIME PRAYING FOR THE CONVERSION OF ALL THE KILLERS, THEIR SPONSORS AND THEIR SYMPATHIZERS like Paul (Saul the former Church Persecutor) rather than just criticising the situation, in NO distant time, We will have a lot of them converted to Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace!

Imagine the Strong Political Leaders fully embracing Jesus Christ! NIGERIA will be PARADISE!!

Kindly spread this message and start praying continuously as this is our most viable SOLUTION.

NIGERIA WILL BE GREAT AGAIN in Jesus Name, Amen!

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by deji68: 2:42pm On Jan 10, 2018
Buhari, 75, is being plagued with failures across every single sector in the economy, the like as has never been seen before. Less than a year into office, the economy plummeted into recession, an economy which had till then grown at an average rate of 7% in previous years (2011-2014). Th e nation’s currency lost 70% of its value, unemployment rose from 6.5 to 26%, commodity prices tripled across many quarters and the state-regulated premium motor spirit prices were hiked by 67% without practically anybody batting an eye.

1 Like

Re: The Rise And Fall Of Buhari; An Analysis From The London Economist Magazine. by adelacuna(m): 2:55pm On Jan 10, 2018
Nigerians are really easy to be fooled we just saw the reality of this and some are asking for source up and down source khor sauce ni, but truth be told this government really played on our intelligence and our patience as a nation I can remember vividly how I campaigned for this guy when I was serving in Warri putting my life at stake thinking that Buhari is the messiah that we need, but look at how disappointing his reign has been. For me I really hope we get it right soon.

1 Like

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