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Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi (25459 Views)

I Won’t Govern Like A Dictator – Fubara / NLC Protests: Why Nigeria's Economy Is In Such A Mess - BBC News / 'Tinubu Can’t Hold A Teacup’ — Najaatu Muhammad (2) (3) (4)

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Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 11:34am On Feb 10
In today's Saturday Tribune, I warn Tinubu that he risks a mass rebellion because of his unfeeling economic policies and won't be as lucky as Buhari whose cult saved him from the consequence of his misgovernance. Plus, why is CBN Gov. Cardoso such an airhead who is out of his depth, who reads from a script to answer simple questions?

Twitter: @farooqkperogi

The biting hunger and unnaturally rising price spiral in Nigeria instigated primarily by the removal of petrol subsidies and the floating of the naira are threatening to spark off seismic social vibrations across the country.

The spontaneous, hunger-induced eruption of seething communal anger in Minna over hunger in the land a few days ago, which inspired a massive protest by market women in Lokoja and smaller but nonetheless consequential protests by distraught citizens in Suleja, Kano, Osogbo—and counting— is a warning sign.

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s swift order for the release of “102,000 metric tons of various grain types from the National Food Reserve and the Rice Millers Association of Nigeria” to bring down the cost of food in the aftermath of these strings of protests suggests that he is aware of the danger that lies in the offing for him.

Had the current president been Muhammadu Buhari and not Bola Ahmed Tinubu, chances are that the worst that would happen amid the adversity people are going through now would be suppressed, barely audible murmurs. It’s because Buhari is a political cult leader with a firm grip on his followers who worship him and surrender responsibility for their lives over to him. Tinubu has no such appeal.

A psychologist by the name of Steve Taylor came up with a concept he called “abdication syndrome,” which he said disposes people to invest total, child-like trust in a political figure, a cult leader, an opinion molder, etc. in ways that mimic how children idealize and idolize their parents as unblemished paragons of perfection.

According to Taylor, “abdication syndrome stems from the unconscious desire of some people to return to a state of early childhood, when their parents were infallible, omnipotent figures who controlled their lives and protected them from the world. They’re trying to rekindle that childhood state of unconditional devotion and irresponsibility.”

Buhari is lucky to benefit from abdication syndrome in Muslim northern Nigeria, broadly conceived, which explains why he got away with murder for eight years. When he increased petrol prices by a steep margin in 2016, for instance, there were protests in Kano, Bauchi, and other places in SUPPORT of the increase and AGAINST people who planned to protest the increase. Nigeria had never seen anything like that before.

Even protests against the unabating descent of northern Nigeria into a theater of bloodshed and abduction on Buhari’s watch provoked counter protests from people who have abdicated the use of their brains in the service of Buhari.

Tinubu not only does not have the benefit of abdication syndrome anywhere in Nigeria, but he also has the misfortune of having to contend with a peculiar character of Muslim northern Nigeria: we feel the pain of, and react violently to, bad policies only when the policies are hatched and executed by people who have no filiation with our natal region.It’s no surprise that the hunger protests against the Tinubu administration started from and spread in the North.


A powerful indication of Tinubu’s lack of firm emotional support base emerged when Osun, his state of birth where he lost the last presidential election to PDP’s Atiku Abubakar, became the first southern state to join the hunger protests. Should the resistance to his punishingly heartless neoliberal economic policies ignite a nationwide convulsion, the Southwest is unlikely to constitute itself as his bulwark. In fact, I hazard a guess that should Tinubu’s unfeeling policies activate the sort of destabilizing national upheaval that we saw in 2012 during Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, the Southwest won’t be aloof. It is likely to join in.

And, of course, Tinubu is deeply unpopular in the Southeast, the South-south, and Christian northern Nigeria. In other words, Tinubu is essentially floundering into the most treacherous of social quicksands.

His only fortification against danger is not just good governance but compassionate governance. The release of thousands of metric tons of grains is a good first step, but it’s not nearly enough to stem the tide of mass rebellion that is brewing in the country. At best, it will only delay the inevitable.

The truth is that Nigeria can’t survive a total withdrawal of petroleum subsidies without an adequate, systematic, well-planned public transportation system. To do away with petrol subsidies, the government must first create conditions where car ownership and patronage of commercial transportation are a luxury.

Let’s take Canada as an example. Although Canada is an oil-producing country, it doesn’t subsidize the petrol consumption of its citizens. And it’s precisely because it has great public transportation that meets the transportational needs of its people. I met a Canadian here in Atlanta last year who, like most Canadians, doesn’t know how to drive because government-subsidized public transportation is the primary means of moving from point to point. Car ownership is a luxury, and people who choose to shun public transportation deserve the high price they pay for petrol to fuel their cars.

It’s the same situation in most of Europe. The availability of government subsidized public transportation insulates citizens from the effects of high petrol prices and obviates the need for petrol subsidies. It is not so in the United States. Here, as I pointed out in many past columns, petrol is subsidized because most Americans have their own cars and resent public transportation except in such big cities as New York.

Without first building an efficient, government-subsidized public transportation infrastructure within cities and towns and between cities, towns and states, removing petrol subsidies will always result in the kind of mass affliction that Nigerians are going through now.

That is why countries like Kazakhstan, Ecuador, Bolivia, Indonesia, and Brazil, which the World Bank and the IMF had forced to remove petrol subsidies, have backtracked and re-instituted subsidies. That is inevitable in Nigeria if the government wants to survive.

Is Olayemi Cardoso Nigeria’s Worst CBN Governor?
I know awfully little about current CBN governor Olayemi Cardoso. I’d just assumed that to deserve being appointed the governor of the CBN, he must at least be minimally competent and conversant with economic policies.

But he is shaping up to be the most inept and least intellectually prepared for his job. It isn’t just that he is supervising the free fall of the naira through inconsistent policies, he also doesn’t seem to be able to explain to anyone what exactly he is doing, indicating he doesn’t know what he is doing.

On Friday, I watched Cardoso’s meeting with the senate where he couldn’t answer questions from senators without reading from a prepared script. "I object to this!” a senator yelled in response to Cardoso’s lifeless regurgitation of a prepared speech he obviously didn’t understand. “Let him go back and answer the question!"

Anyone who can’t respond to a question without reading a prepared text obviously has no understanding of what he is talking about. Albert Einstein famously said, “if you can't explain it simply then you don't understand it well enough." Cardoso’s case is even worse. He can’t explain it at all. It explains why the economy is in a mess and the naira is in a worse shape than it has ever been.

Cardoso’s most important qualification for the job appears to be that he was Economic Planning and Budget commissioner in Lagos when Tinubu was governor, but the job seems to be above his intellectual and experiential paygrade.

I know of no CBN governor in my lifetime (until Cardoso) who couldn’t articulate economic policies effortlessly. Even Godwin Emefiele had no difficulty defending his policies. You may question his competence or disagree with his policies, but he could at least clearly formulate thoughts about what he was doing. Cardoso gives me the jitters. Nigeria is in way worse trouble than it realizes with an airhead like that as CBN governor.
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2024/02/hunger-protests-why-tinubu-cant-govern.html

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Kukutenla: 11:36am On Feb 10
The north are hypocrites. And that is why Nigeria is not a country. To claim Buhari got away with murder because of cult followership is to deodorise the pungent tribal and religious fundamentalism that's at the base of his followership. Most of Buhari's followers in the CPC they formed are clueless, dumb and sectional. Just check out their performance as ministers and heads of agencies.
The only appeal they had in the north was based on tribal and religious ideology and not any superior group interest.

It is also disheartening that after the maladministration CBN went through under Buhari and Emefiele is lackey, Tinubu couldn't get a better fit for the job of repositioning such a critical institution. What's worse is his elevation of CBN above NNPCL which has fared better previously in terms of audit and compliance.
However, it is obvious Cardoso is not running a one man show. He's under the tutelage of Edun. So it's more like the voice of Cardoso but the hands of Edun. And this is not to say I agree with Kperoogi's assessment of him

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 11:37am On Feb 10
Same Tinubu that proudly made Buhari president? What does a country expects from someone who simply bulldozed his way to government on the basis of emilokan and using his turn to take care of his failing health?

Like Buhari, Tinubu is unprepared for governance despite all the relentless noise the two leaders had made castigating their predecessor, Jonathan who had done far better in addressing the county's problems. Just as Buhari used the Presidency to take care of his health, Tinubu is doing same. So no matter the suffering today in Nigeria it is not his business.

Guess Tinubu's zombies said he was the alpha and omega of how Lagos was built. He would build Nigeria. Yeyeyen! Today fowl yansh have been blown open and his cluelessness is more legendary than the Buhari he said he made president.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 11:39am On Feb 10
Buhari is lucky to benefit from abdication syndrome in Muslim northern Nigeria. When he increased petrol prices by a steep margin in 2016, for instance, there were protests in Kano, Bauchi, and other places in SUPPORT of the increase and AGAINST people who planned to protest the increase. Nigeria had never seen anything like that before.

Buhari is a political cult leader with a firm grip on his followers who worship him and surrender responsibility for their lives over to him. Tinubu has no such appeal. Tinubu not only does not have the benefit of abdication syndrome anywhere in Nigeria.


He has the misfortune of having to contend with a peculiar character of Muslim northern Nigeria: we feel the pain of, and react violently to, bad policies only when the policies are hatched and executed by people who have no filiation with our natal region.It’s no surprise that the hunger protests against the Tinubu administration started from and spread in the North.

Tribalism(ethnic, region, religion) kills, incapacitates and destroys a nation.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Faiththatworks(m): 11:42am On Feb 10
Thanks very much Oga kperogi for the wonderful suggestions in this article.
I appreciate Oga kperogi for not going back to the need to reintroduce Petrol Subsidy,most of his articles used to always criticize the removal of Fuel subsidy,but I appreciate him for going past that suggestion,and instead proffering solutions to the hardship in Nigeria.
I have always said Nairaland should be the bastion of intellectual discourse online in Nigeria.
Nairaland should be a forum where Government officials resort to when they are trying to assess the mood and tension on what's going on all over the country.
Back to the topic,Oga kperogi has chipped in his own opinion,which is affordable and subsided Transportation in these hard times and I really believe Government should look at his suggestions.
I want to call on The Government of Lagos state to please go to subsiding The BRT buses all over the state,I know they tried a lot last year especially during the campaigns but I believe this is the best time to reintroduce the subsidy,that will really help the citizens in this crushing times.
I end by saying this,last week I read an article about the free fall of the Naira on Nairaland,and I was amazed at the wonderful suggestions made by some patriotic Nigerians.
I was suprised there are still very very intelligent people on this platform,God bless you,I really hope we keep proffering Solutions to the Problem of Nigeria instead of this unending complains,I know there's hardship but Now is the time to offer solutions and not join the bandwagon.
Nigeria must be great again, Asiwaju will be there for the next 3 years, we owe it to Nigeria to make sure it comes out better not worse under him.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by brain54(m): 11:44am On Feb 10
"I know of no CBN governor in my lifetime (until Cardoso) who couldn’t articulate economic policies effortlessly. Even Godwin Emefiele had no difficulty defending his policies. You may question his competence or disagree with his policies, but he could at least clearly formulate thoughts about what he was doing. Cardoso gives me the jitters. Nigeria is in way worse trouble than it realizes with an airhead like that as CBN governor."

This part off me...

Anyway Tinubu also has a cult like following. But not as loyal as Buhari's. Many are beginning to shift loyalty!

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by nairalanda1(m): 11:47am On Feb 10
Buhari is lucky to benefit from abdication syndrome in Muslim northern Nigeria, broadly conceived, which explains why he got away with murder for eight years. When he increased petrol prices by a steep margin in 2016, for instance, there were protests in Kano, Bauchi, and other places in SUPPORT of the increase and AGAINST people who planned to protest the increase. Nigeria had never seen anything like that before.

Whereas in 2012, when GEJ did same, there were protests against the same increase in the North.

It's the way the game is played. Nigerians don't want change, they want their side to win, meaning some 'benefit' would come.

(Same attitude exists in other parts of Africa...when Obama became president of the USA..someone in his home village in Kenya was thankful because that means new road would come. QUestion is, what were all the previous governments of kenya doing?)

Running a resource dependent economy , like NIgeria, fosters the attitude of 'when my son is in charge of the sharing of money, I will get some of the cake easier...

The sooner Nigeria becomes a nation where taxes are the main source of income, not oil, the better.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 11:57am On Feb 10
-Buhari: Shege.

-Tinubu: Shege promaximus

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by DatNiggaDaz: 12:01pm On Feb 10
Cut the long grammer short Farooq kperogi. In simple terms;

One is a muslim caliphate master while the other cannot/never unless permitted to sight the moon in the presence of the muslim caliphate. In other words like a master servant relationship thingy

Tinubu see your life. Chanting where are the cows. I dont have pity for Ronu Tinubulators defending the government of Tinubulation

grin grin

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Beremx(f): 12:04pm On Feb 10
Ebi n pa wa OOO!! That is all I have to say. It is not only Yoruba people that are hungry. The hunger has spread to all geopolitical zones.

No strength to read big grammar abeg.

Tinubu should do something because Lagos residents will hit the streets soon. No time!! angry angry

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Nvestor02: 12:07pm On Feb 10
Well, Tinubu is really trying in the Aso Rock. His Confidence to remove oil subsidy will forever melt the heart of reasonable Nigerians forever.

Now, He has increased the State allocations by 41percentage and that would surely lead to building of more infrastructure in the country.

We are already seeing the good result of this because there are many federal road and state road under construction. If not the governors that have wounded local govt chairman. The infrastructure would have been taken to the lowest part.


I'm very sure that before March, another Minimum wage would have been implemented, the negotiation is already going on.

If Only Tinubu can now focus on the security and lower it to the minimum, then he will be the best president forever.

Talking about Electricity, Light will be good when Nigerians are ready for it. Vast majority of them don't pay nepa bill.

If they start paying, the Private company that's holding power will invest more and it and make electricity be 24/7.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Houseontherock1: 12:07pm On Feb 10

It’s the same situation in most of Europe. The availability of government subsidized public transportation insulates citizens from the effects of high petrol prices and obviates the need for petrol subsidies. It is not so in the United States. Here, as I pointed out in many past columns, petrol is subsidized because most Americans have their own cars and resent public transportation except in such big cities as New York.

Without first building an efficient, government-subsidized public transportation infrastructure within cities and towns and between cities, towns and states, removing petrol subsidies will always result in the kind of mass affliction that Nigerians are going through now.

That is why countries like Kazakhstan, Ecuador, Bolivia, Indonesia, and Brazil, which the World Bank and the IMF had forced to remove petrol subsidies, have backtracked and re-instituted subsidies. That is inevitable in Nigeria if the government wants to survive.


When the 102,000metric tons of grains finishes, what next? Is that sustainable? For how long?

Abrupt subsidy removal on petrol is too harsh because the government is simply I'll prepared for it. The easiest way out now is to go the way of Kazakhstan, Ecuador, Bolivia, Indonesia, and Brazil by backtracking and re-instituting subsidy, then gradually working towards a better transportation system which will subsequently prepare the people.

Also, improvement should be made on light because the constant dependence on generator also causes price hike!

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Kenochi(m): 12:07pm On Feb 10
The Nigerian Economy is in a serious quagmire,I want to sincerely look through what prof kperogi wrote and try to dissect the problems and offer my humble suggestions

1) Increase in food stuff prices
It seems this Government is struggling to really understand why food prices are increasing on a daily basis.Even food stuff produced in Nigeria is becoming unaffordable
Solution:
Government must intervene by creating a short term measure to evacuate food from the hinterlands to the city
This will involve working with food logistics operators, subsidizing their operations where necessary
Also,state and local governments must remove all levies and taxes paid on food for now

2) Open Borders
This government must take a very bold move and open our borders,let people find food to eat
Even if it means subsidizing this food,then you should do it.
Government needs to know that there is a cabal in the food industry who buy and hoard food just like people hoard the dollars
Once an announcement is made of opening borders,it will restrain this group from further inflicting harm

3) Continue the Emefiele policy of money change
This government must give a specific timeline to change all the old currency
There is simply a lot of liquidity in the Nigerian Economy and we must begin to mop it up
Government should start by encouraging digital transactions,it should be gradual but with timelines
The low hanging fruits like petrol stations, supermarkets and even educational institutions should be encouraged to start migrating to digital transactions
There should be a reward system for organisations to embrace this process, Nigerians did transactions worth 600 trillion naira digitally in 2023 so the infrastructure is already there

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 12:08pm On Feb 10
Beremx:
Ebi n pa wa OOO!! That is all I have to say. It is not only Yoruba people that are hungry. The hunger has spread to all geopolitical zones.

No strength to read big grammar abeg. Tinubu should do something because Lagos residents will hit the streets soon. No time!! angry angry
KWAM-1, Alfas, Gbajumos, Arugbojo, omode, Ronu and Awalokan disciples are all lamentation now. Imagine market women threatening to beat their beloved emilokan in Ogun state. While Lagos women say they go expose their privacies to protest hardship.

https://youtube.com/shorts/J4JxWZbJ28k?si=xmGsIfmd0udhoR1k

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by DatNiggaDaz: 12:09pm On Feb 10
Beremx:
Ebi n pa wa OOO!! That is all I have to say. It is not only Yoruba people that are hungry. The hunger has spread to all geopolitical zones.

No strength to read big grammar abeg.

Tinubu should do something because Lagos residents will hit the streets soon. No time!! angry angry
Abeg lower the volume. grin grin

Stop giving dem clue what will soon happen in Lagos

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Civetcat: 12:13pm On Feb 10
A prodigal son who is unwilling to accept the consequences of her actions.
The policy is working as it is supposed to . People are learning the harsh truth. The party is over. Get up and be productive or waste away trying to benefit from what you didn’t produce .
The same policies are being applied globally but why is Nigeria’s case different?
As someone who left Nigeria for 10 years and came back.The greatest shock was the newly acquired taste in the period I was away.The lacasera ,Omo detergent ,Bourvita ,Gulder , had been replaced by more fashionable imported brands. People I know spend so much on leisure,frivolities and luxury in a way that I cannot comprehend.
Instead of factories and cottage industries,Everywhere is dotted with mosques ,churches, hotels and event centres.
The current polity highlights so many structural issues.

The upper middle class who are supposed to be the engine of the economy only spend on lifestyle; designer clothes, holidays and schools abroad ,expensive cars , beverages and Rolexes.They add little or no value while getting so much out of the system .
Take a look at Alibaba and see all sort of Manufacuring plant and Machineries that are available for sale . Yet we import stuff that add no value .You can probably build to 200 small factories for the price of 100 cars parked in front of a church in Lekki on sunday.

Food security is another one . How did we manage to acquire an unhealthy taste for foreign food like rice which we do not have the geographical advantage to mass produce while ignoring our local food.

Why are citizens protecting the civil service when much of it is simply not adding any value . The salaries of civil servants and politicians consumes much of our national budget.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by slivertongue: 12:14pm On Feb 10
both are mega disasters

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by slivertongue: 12:25pm On Feb 10
Cardoso gives me the jitters. Nigeria is in way worse trouble than it realizes with an airhead like that as CBN governor.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by slivertongue: 12:27pm On Feb 10
I know of no CBN governor in my lifetime (until Cardoso) who couldn’t articulate economic policies effortlessly.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Adamux: 12:30pm On Feb 10
Farook is right. Tinubu has no such appeal even in his native South-West. Same as Atiku in the North.

Only two Politicians enjoy cult followership aka abdication syndrome in their region in Nigeria.

Buhari and Peter Obi. They can never do wrong in the eyes of their ardent followers even though both of them lack the grit. You either support their incompetences or you get ostracised.

Most of the President's trusted Lagos boys have failed. He has to fire Cardoso before the remaining little support he has in the North vanishes completely.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by RepoMan007: 12:41pm On Feb 10
Cardoso is a victim of politicization of appraisal of CBN performance.
Historically, the performances of all CBN governors has correlated with the petrol dollar availability. To me, Emefiele was the only guy who performed beyond the level of available petrodollar in his time. All other governors of the CBN were simply lucky to have the dollar available.
Not one of them influenced inflow of dollar in any significant way. Cardoso's case is agrevated by what Emefiele and Buhari did with loans and cash in circulation. They created a huge problem by spending out of recession and into crippling debt that eats revenue.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Ckonnet: 12:55pm On Feb 10
Disaster that could have been avoided!!

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Liammm: 1:29pm On Feb 10
cheesy
Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Bobloco: 1:31pm On Feb 10
Racoon:

Is Olayemi Cardoso Nigeria’s Worst CBN Governor?
I know awfully little about current CBN governor Olayemi Cardoso. I’d just assumed that to deserve being appointed the governor of the CBN, he must at least be minimally competent and conversant with economic policies.

But he is shaping up to be the most inept and least intellectually prepared for his job. It isn’t just that he is supervising the free fall of the naira through inconsistent policies, he also doesn’t seem to be able to explain to anyone what exactly he is doing, indicating he doesn’t know what he is doing.



Tinubu brought an individual with a patch patch CV to head the Central Bank of Nigeria

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Throwback: 1:31pm On Feb 10
Ckonnet:
Disaster that could have been avoided!!

Avoided by implementing the same policies?

Or did the other top candidates for Presidency not support the subsidy removal and floating of the Naira?

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Ckonnet: 1:32pm On Feb 10
RepoMan007:
Cardoso is a victim of politicization of appraisal of CBN performance.
The performances of all CBN governors has historically correlated with the petrol dollar availability. To me, Emefiele was the only guy who performed beyond the level of available petrodollar in his time. All other governors of the CBN were simply lucky to have the dollar available.
Not one of them influenced inflow of dollar in any significant way. Cardoso's case is agrevated by what Emefiele and Buhari did with loans and cash in circulation. They created a huge problem by spending out of recession and into crippling debt that eats revenue.


Nobody is asking for magic, what we expect from them is a thoughtful approach and not the trial and error method they embraced.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Klington: 1:32pm On Feb 10
From the horses mouth.

APC is eeV!l.

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Rejoice28(f): 1:33pm On Feb 10
Friends Jesus Christ loves y'all and he want you to accept him as your personal lord and saviour by giving your life to Christ, believing in him and repenting of your sins.remember tomorrow might be too late. Shalom

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Ckonnet: 1:33pm On Feb 10
Throwback:


Avoided by implementing the same policies?

Or did the other top candidates for Presidency not support the subsidy removal and floating of the Naira?

Did you also find out how they wanted to go about and the timeline they gave or is it the normal apc blame game

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by GoodLife4live: 1:33pm On Feb 10
Racoon:
Same Tinubu that proudly made Buhari president? What does a country expects from someone who simply bulldozed his way to government on the basis of emilokan and using his turn to take care of his failing health?

Like Buhari, Tinubu is unprepared for governance despite all the relentless noise the two leaders had made castigating their predecessor, Jonathan who had done far better in addressing the county's problems. Just as Buhari used the Presidency to take care of his health, Tinubu is doing same. Whoever and whatever the suffering today in Nigeria is not his business.

Tinubu's zombies said he was the alpha and omega of how Lagos was built. He would build Nigeria. Yeyeyen! Today fowl yansh have been blown open and his cluelessness is more legendary than the Buhari he said he made president.

cry cry babe.. Your criticism no dey get sense than to dey abuse person wey beter pass you br of that agulu thief

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by Victerica(m): 1:34pm On Feb 10
These days, I don't even know what to read again. It's like the more I read, the more my being is deteriorating.

RIP to Truth

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Re: Hunger Protests: Why Tinubu Can’t Govern Like Buhari By Farooq A. Kperogi by nairalanda1(m): 1:35pm On Feb 10
IN a way, we are seeing the effects of paying subsides after subsides for decades, without thinking about where the money comes from.

Now, we are all paid out, the economy is not diversifed, corruption is at an all time high, and debt is eating 90% of our revenue.

We are seeing the effects of bad decisions, and of repeated sacrifices of the economy on the altar of power. NOw, either we make sane decisions or we keep on going on

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Tension As Oil Spill Destroy Communities In Niger Delta / IPOB: Nnamdi Kanu To Drag Buhari, Security Agencies To UN, ICC / Imo Youths Turn Out En Masse To Get Thier PVC (Photos, Video)

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