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Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera - Politics (2) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsWill Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera (4837 Views)

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Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by Kagarko(m): 9:59pm On Dec 31, 2014
God bless you for this piece.

Very apt and concise.

GMB Insha Allah is our next president.
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by BashirAhmad1(op): 10:01pm On Dec 31, 2014
iluvnaija:
Change is here
Like this
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by rayopt(m): 10:02pm On Dec 31, 2014
Neldrizzy:
But pls, next time don't try it again, i beg you.... #happyNewYr
.
.
Cancelled word noted!. . .
.. .. ..same to u oga!!!!!
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by Dollarjunkie: 10:03pm On Dec 31, 2014
I heard the year is ending tonight, is it truehuh


It came as a surprise oooo grin
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by Collynzo22: 10:05pm On Dec 31, 2014
Article written by Fisayo Soyombo
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by Neldrizzy(m): 10:07pm On Dec 31, 2014
rayopt:
.
.
Cancelled word noted!. . .
.. .. ..same to u oga!!!!!
aren't you going to church?? cheesycheesy or na beer palour you wan enter new year grin
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by rayopt(m): 10:12pm On Dec 31, 2014
Neldrizzy:
aren't you going to church?? cheesycheesy or na beer palour you wan enter new year grin
na redemption camp i dey oooo. . .getting ready to hear wat baba has to say for this country cos in truth. . .i fear for diz nation on val's day oooo, sumhow i beliv it is a form of revolution in nigeria!!!!
.
,
.
#InGodITrust #ItsChangeISeek
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by Neldrizzy(m): 10:17pm On Dec 31, 2014
rayopt:
na redemption camp i dey oooo. . .getting ready to hear wat baba has to say for this country cos in truth. . .i fear for diz nation on val's day oooo, sumhow i beliv it is a form of revolution in nigeria!!!!
.
,
.
#InGodITrust #ItsChangeISeek
hehehehe pray 4me abeg
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by smohammed1(m): 10:19pm On Dec 31, 2014
Those who are shouting for GEJ shold kindly tel us what GEJ hs achieved in d last. 6yrs, may b we may have a change of heart. Until then GMB all the way.....
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by BashirAhmad1(op): 11:01pm On Dec 31, 2014
Boss13:
Buhari should be president for a lot of reasons. First, to let the political class be aware than power actually belongs to the people and when an elected person under-performs as promised, he will be voted out. Second, to reduce corruption.
Correct
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by kenex4ever(m): 11:10pm On Dec 31, 2014
Dreamers
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by zantama05(m): 11:11pm On Dec 31, 2014
CAPITAL :YES

VOTE FOR GMB2015 IF NOT HUNGER,KILLING,KIDNAPPING AND POVERTY WOOOOOO

Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by BashirAhmad1(op): 2:28am On Jan 01, 2015
zantama05:
CAPITAL :YES

VOTE FOR GMB2015 IF NOT HUNGER,KILLING,KIDNAPPING AND POVERTY WOOOOOO
Man of the people
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by ANBAKO: 2:44am On Jan 01, 2015
BashirAhmad1:
With Goodluck Jonathan's collapsing popularity, Muhammadu Buhari actually stands a chance of winning the 2015 elections.

For the first time in Nigeria's 16 years of democracy, there is real chance that the president could be someone other than the candidate of the People's Democratic Party (PDP).

Many times, I have described Muhammadu Buhari, the man who will face Jonathan in 2015, as a "perennially-losing presidential candidate".

In 2003 he emerged as the sole candidate of the All Peoples Party (APP), after two candidates Rochas Okorocha and Harry Akande were pressured into stepping down, while Yahaya Abubakar failed to show up on the date of the primary. In the elections, Buhari lost to then incumbent, Olusegun Obasanjo of the PDP.

In 2007, he was consensus candidate of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) after Bukar Ibrahim and Pere Ajunwa were made to back down on convention day. Buhari then lost to PDP's Umaru Musa Yar'Adua.

In 2011, he contested the elections on the platform of the Congress for Progressives Change (CPC), which he formed, losing again, to Goodluck Jonathan. In all three cases, his emergence was without intra-party opposition.

But I am first to admit that Buhari's story has changed. By contesting and winning the presidential primary of the All Progressive Congress (APC) - the first time his presidential ambition has been challenged - Buhari has recorded the most important victory of his political career. And if the 2015 election is free and fair, he could well better that record.

Why Buhari may win

Buhari remains the single most popular man in northern Nigeria. Despite lacking real party structure, Buhari, with CPC in 2011, defeated Jonathan in Yobe, Zamfara, Sokoto, Niger, Kebbi, Katsina, Kano, Kaduna, Gombe and Jigawa. He single-handedly polled a total of 12,214,853 votes, which amounted to 54.3 percent of Jonathan's tally. Riding on the back of APC's nationwide structure backed by 14 governors and their war chest, a Buhari victory in 2015 is quite possible.

Buhari is popular outside the north as well. Four days after he created his Twitter account (@ThisIsBuhari), he had already amassed 45,000 followers. This is testament to Buhari's growing national - not just northern - acceptability, because the north remains Nigeria's least literate zone. The north, therefore, has a sparse population of Internet users, which means that Buhari's crowd of Twitter followers probably come from across the country.

In truth, Buhari cannot take full credit for his popularity outside the north. Full marks should go to Goodluck Jonathan, the man who has unravelled as the antithesis of his opponent's unique selling point.

Presidential spokesman Reuben Abati can deliver the floweriest prose about his boss's aversion to corruption while his colleague Doyin Okupe hurls the foulest words at the opposition and other Nigerians daily puncturing the president's professed incorruptibility. But the majority of Nigerians have come to accept that Jonathan, even if re-elected for 10 terms, will never fight corruption. The courage is lacking, the political will is nonexistent, the desperation for re-election is so consuming that he would not hurt the weakest of his corrupt political allies. So Nigerians are prepared to turn to Buhari, unarguably the least stained presidential aspirant in the eyes of the people.

When APC was formed in February 2013, senior PDP figures dismissed it as a failure-bound union of four parties. Who would blame them? Many were sceptical that this merger would not survive even a year. Yet, in another two months, this merger would be two years old. But that is not the story.

The story is that all APC presidential aspirants defeated by Buhari have offered him their support. Few expected it. Atiku Abubakar, the man most expected to bolt out of APC in the event of a loss, congratulated Buhari the moment the ex-general's vote count overtook his, even though the winner had not yet been officially announced at the time. There is a massive movement for Buhari, which Jonathan didn't face in 2011.

Negative perceptions

That Buhari stands a good chance of winning does not mean he is not facing challenges. Nigerians, though forgetful, are largely an unforgiving lot. Their memories only need to be reignited by reminders of an individual's past indiscretions.

That was what Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka did, first in 2007; and his thoughts have been massively re-circulated since Buhari's emergence as the APC candidate. The unjust execution of Lawal Ojuolape, Bernard Ogedengbe and Bartholomew Owoh, through a retroactive decree, will haunt Buhari ahead of February.

There is nothing Muhammadu Buhai can do - and he himself knows - to extricate himself from his perception as a religious bigot. For the second time running, he has chosen a pastor as his running mate. But even if he chooses a pope, there are Nigerians who won't pick Buhari for fear of enthroning a religiously extreme president.

In 2011, Buhari was accused of inciting the violence that followed his loss to Jonathan. The following year, he said "the dog and the baboon would all be soaked in blood" should the 2015 election be rigged. Buhari has shed blood before for his presidential ambition, some people believe. And they think he would do it again. Such man, they reason, should never taste power.

And there are those who would never vote for a 72-year-old. How can APC be trumpeting change while fielding a man who was military president more than three decades ago? That's no change; it's recycling.

The candidature of a septuagenarian is a dent on whatever progress we think we have made as a democracy. And although there have been arguments on the immorality of voting for either Buhari or Jonathan, Nigeria badly needs the "recycled freshness" that voting Jonathan out would herald!

Fisayo Soyombo edits Nigerian online newspaper TheCable. 

Culled from: http://m.aljazeera.com/se/2014123191647111939
Bolder are fact. Nigeria rethink!!!!
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by bondingman: 3:47am On Jan 01, 2015
With his words of kill, blood, sharia n co., buhari is only fit to rule cows, not Nigerians.
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by omejeo: 3:56am On Jan 01, 2015
Pa buhari where is ur certificate its forge one that u ar using now u will know the value of education fake pple everywhere.
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by sojjy: 4:09am On Jan 01, 2015
Nigeria deserved to be rule by a patroit not somebody like GEJ.


BUHARI 2015 TOO SURE.

SAI BUHARI
SAI APC
SAI NIGERIA.
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by sufido123: 4:12am On Jan 01, 2015
Buhari's dream of winning will definitely turn to nightmare come February 14, 2015. He stands no chance against GEJ. VOTE GEJ And continue with Goodluck.
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by PassingShot(m): 4:23am On Jan 01, 2015
Boss13:
Buhari should be president for a lot of reasons. First, to let the political class be aware than power actually belongs to the people and when an elected person under-performs as promised, he will be voted out. Second, to reduce corruption.
And to fight the insurgency and improve security
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by LRNZH(m):
brojero:
Nigerians are Truly stuck between a rock and a hard place. However, the killer point is that GEJ has let us down massively.
Those of us who fought both online and by financial contribution to ensure that he was not pushed aside when Yar Adua passed on, have looked on in amazement as he has gone on to surpass all corruption records in his blind desire for power at any cost.

His 'stealing is not corruption' speech will go down in history as one of the most unfortunate remarks to be made by a leader of any country, not just Nigeria.

His biggest redeeming factor has been the inclusion of NOI in his cabinet, and most of the so called progress we see is down to her.

I feel sad that all we have to look forward to is GMB, however it is a massive indictment of GEJ that he cannot hope to win, despite the power of incumbency.
I would have sworn- we are twins except for one minor point.....NOI.

If NOI understands the concept of integrity, she would have tactically pulled out of GEJ's corrupt and failed system a while back now.

I've lost respect for her to be honest. Especially for (appearing to) defend the missing $10Billion or $20Billion in the NNPC missing funds saga.

[size=15pt]HAPPY NEW YEAR EVERYONE![/size]
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by Nobody: 5:16am On Jan 01, 2015
We dey know the result before the election proper, I already knew the winner so everyone in naija know, who pays the piper
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by chernest2002: 6:53am On Jan 01, 2015
BashirAhmad1:
With Goodluck Jonathan's collapsing popularity, Muhammadu Buhari actually stands a chance of winning the 2015 elections.

For the first time in Nigeria's 16 years of democracy, there is real chance that the president could be someone other than the candidate of the People's Democratic Party (PDP).instead of falling from frying pan to fire then is better to remain in frying pan, we need change for better not for worst,gej is still better than buhari.

Many times, I have described Muhammadu Buhari, the man who will face Jonathan in 2015, as a "perennially-losing presidential candidate".

In 2003 he emerged as the sole candidate of the All Peoples Party (APP), after two candidates Rochas Okorocha and Harry Akande were pressured into stepping down, while Yahaya Abubakar failed to show up on the date of the primary. In the elections, Buhari lost to then incumbent, Olusegun Obasanjo of the PDP.

In 2007, he was consensus candidate of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) after Bukar Ibrahim and Pere Ajunwa were made to back down on convention day. Buhari then lost to PDP's Umaru Musa Yar'Adua.

In 2011, he contested the elections on the platform of the Congress for Progressives Change (CPC), which he formed, losing again, to Goodluck Jonathan. In all three cases, his emergence was without intra-party opposition.

But I am first to admit that Buhari's story has changed. By contesting and winning the presidential primary of the All Progressive Congress (APC) - the first time his presidential ambition has been challenged - Buhari has recorded the most important victory of his political career. And if the 2015 election is free and fair, he could well better that record.

Why Buhari may win

Buhari remains the single most popular man in northern Nigeria. Despite lacking real party structure, Buhari, with CPC in 2011, defeated Jonathan in Yobe, Zamfara, Sokoto, Niger, Kebbi, Katsina, Kano, Kaduna, Gombe and Jigawa. He single-handedly polled a total of 12,214,853 votes, which amounted to 54.3 percent of Jonathan's tally. Riding on the back of APC's nationwide structure backed by 14 governors and their war chest, a Buhari victory in 2015 is quite possible.

Buhari is popular outside the north as well. Four days after he created his Twitter account (@ThisIsBuhari), he had already amassed 45,000 followers. This is testament to Buhari's growing national - not just northern - acceptability, because the north remains Nigeria's least literate zone. The north, therefore, has a sparse population of Internet users, which means that Buhari's crowd of Twitter followers probably come from across the country.

In truth, Buhari cannot take full credit for his popularity outside the north. Full marks should go to Goodluck Jonathan, the man who has unravelled as the antithesis of his opponent's unique selling point.

Presidential spokesman Reuben Abati can deliver the floweriest prose about his boss's aversion to corruption while his colleague Doyin Okupe hurls the foulest words at the opposition and other Nigerians daily puncturing the president's professed incorruptibility. But the majority of Nigerians have come to accept that Jonathan, even if re-elected for 10 terms, will never fight corruption. The courage is lacking, the political will is nonexistent, the desperation for re-election is so consuming that he would not hurt the weakest of his corrupt political allies. So Nigerians are prepared to turn to Buhari, unarguably the least stained presidential aspirant in the eyes of the people.

When APC was formed in February 2013, senior PDP figures dismissed it as a failure-bound union of four parties. Who would blame them? Many were sceptical that this merger would not survive even a year. Yet, in another two months, this merger would be two years old. But that is not the story.

The story is that all APC presidential aspirants defeated by Buhari have offered him their support. Few expected it. Atiku Abubakar, the man most expected to bolt out of APC in the event of a loss, congratulated Buhari the moment the ex-general's vote count overtook his, even though the winner had not yet been officially announced at the time. There is a massive movement for Buhari, which Jonathan didn't face in 2011.

Negative perceptions

That Buhari stands a good chance of winning does not mean he is not facing challenges. Nigerians, though forgetful, are largely an unforgiving lot. Their memories only need to be reignited by reminders of an individual's past indiscretions.

That was what Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka did, first in 2007; and his thoughts have been massively re-circulated since Buhari's emergence as the APC candidate. The unjust execution of Lawal Ojuolape, Bernard Ogedengbe and Bartholomew Owoh, through a retroactive decree, will haunt Buhari ahead of February.

There is nothing Muhammadu Buhai can do - and he himself knows - to extricate himself from his perception as a religious bigot. For the second time running, he has chosen a pastor as his running mate. But even if he chooses a pope, there are Nigerians who won't pick Buhari for fear of enthroning a religiously extreme president.

In 2011, Buhari was accused of inciting the violence that followed his loss to Jonathan. The following year, he said "the dog and the baboon would all be soaked in blood" should the 2015 election be rigged. Buhari has shed blood before for his presidential ambition, some people believe. And they think he would do it again. Such man, they reason, should never taste power.

And there are those who would never vote for a 72-year-old. How can APC be trumpeting change while fielding a man who was military president more than three decades ago? That's no change; it's recycling.

The candidature of a septuagenarian is a dent on whatever progress we think we have made as a democracy. And although there have been arguments on the immorality of voting for either Buhari or Jonathan, Nigeria badly needs the "recycled freshness" that voting Jonathan out would herald!

Fisayo Soyombo edits Nigerian online newspaper TheCable. 

Culled from: http://m.aljazeera.com/se/2014123191647111939
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by cocoduck: 6:55am On Jan 01, 2015
Religious fundamentalism is really bad, all Nigerias are corrupt in one way or the other, but Buhari is one of the most corrupt Nigerians.
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by HALLofFAME: 7:40am On Jan 01, 2015
In his dream...Jonathan till 2019...No vacancy in ASOROCK
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by Biggty(m): 7:47am On Jan 01, 2015
Vote Buhari
Vote change

#APC #CHANGE
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by fr3do(m): 8:10am On Jan 01, 2015
.

Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by Nobody: 8:18am On Jan 01, 2015
reshare

Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by jamace(m): 8:58am On Jan 01, 2015
The Military board is located in Abuja yet Buhari prefers to go to Abuja high court to swear to an affidavit instead of going to the board to collect his credentials. Does Buhari thinks Nigerians are dunce like him?
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by omololu2020(m): 9:09am On Jan 01, 2015
dagentility:
Not in his life time, he will never rule this country.
gal speak for ursef and ur family or tribe alone.and am so sure u r from d south south or east.is either we av a free n fair election next year or to hell wit nigeria
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by lyricalpontiff(m): 10:30am On Jan 01, 2015
Recycled freshness, I like that.
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by utenwuson: 11:59am On Jan 01, 2015
dagentility:
Not in his life time, he will never rule this country.
y
Re: Will Muhammadu Buhari Be Nigeria's Next President? - Aljazeera by cosmatika(m): 12:58pm On Jan 01, 2015
''QUESTIONS I KEEP ASKING MYSELF ABOUT
BUHARI
Can someone who REFUSED to ATTEND OPUTA
PANEL when invited talk about justicehuh
Can someone whose statements are loaded with
VIOLENCE assure peacehuh
Can someone who promised he would ensure that
SHARIA LAW gets to all part of the country tolerate
people from other religionhuh
Can someone that asked MUSLIMS TO VOTE ONLY
MUSLIM be voted for by other religion?
Can someone that put Shagari in HOUSE ARREST
and DR Alex Ekwueme in PRISON be absolved of
tribal sentiments?
Can someone who used retroactive laws to KILL
PEOPLE be trusted with our lives?
Can someone who says FIGHTING TERRORISM is
against his people be allowed to be in charge of
this countryhuh
Can someone who executed 75% of PTF projects in
the NORTH and distributed the remaining 25%
among other regions when he was the PTF
chairman be allowed to take charge of all projects
in the countryhuh
Can someone who as a military head of state who
knows he would be overthrown but COULD NOT
DO ANYTHING because his deputy was not around
be classified as courageous?
Can someone who says ACN is corrupt but
because of his presidential ambition now surrounds
himself with ACN thieves be ABLE TO FIGHT
CORRUPTION?
Can someone who as head of PTF DID NOT KNOW
how billions of Naira got missing be trusted with
our entire wealth as presidenthuh
Can someone who could not allow the economic of
demand, supply and internal production factors to
determine the prices of commodities but used
SOLDIERS TO FORCE price control be able to
handle present economic challenges??
Can someone who did not allow his government be
criticised and UNJUSTLY ARRESTED those who
criticised his government be given that opportunity
to lead again,etchuh?
Honestly, Buhari is NOT the RIGHT person.''
1 2 3 Reply

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