MY people have a saying which I will tell in my “inner” Igbo dialect and then translate. We say: “leruo enya akala nari zuru ife”.
When you visit someone and you are about to depart, he will usually
tell you: “fare well” or “take care” or “be careful as you go”. In some
cases, a departing visitor also expects a parting gift, especially if
the gift was the original reason for the visit.
When you tell such a visitor: “take care” without the parting gift,
he feels disappointed and will usually consider visiting you a wasted
effort. Leruo enya akala nari zuru ife is a reminder that a
person who wishes you well gives you something that is more precious
than silver and gold. A person who wishes you well will probably also
give you a parting gift if he could afford to.
I wish to seize this opportunity to offer our President, Muhammadu
Buhari, an unsolicited and unpaid-for piece of advice. I will say it in
our Nigerian patois: “Presido, look your front”.
We have entered the sixth month of the four years he was given to try
and fix Nigeria in line with his campaign promises. He was not elected
to come and keep drumming how bad the Jonathan administration and the
sixteen years of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was.
If Nigerians thought Jonathan and his party were the best for them,
they would have renewed their mandate in the 2015 general election. It
was because they felt that the former “largest party in Africa” had
exhausted its goodwill with the people that Buhari and his party were
elected in the first comprehensive democratic regime change in our
history.
Since Buhari came back to power, he and his party have told us little
else except the “depth of rot” left behind by the dethroned PDP, the
magnitude of “looting” perpetrated under Jonathan and the PDP and
Buhari’s determination to recover stolen public funds and jail looters.
Meanwhile you look around, and, apart from one or two political
opponents such as Bukola Saraki who rebelled against the wishes of Bola
Tinubu, you do not see the “looters” who have been apprehended or put
behind bars.
The former Minister of Petroleum, Mrs. Diezani Madueke, who is
alleged as the “chief looter” of the Jonathan regime has not even been
arraigned for trial in London, where the law actually rules. If
anything, what you see is a large number of APC politicians with
mindboggling cases of corruption to answer being made ministers in total
disregard of the touted “zero tolerance for corruption”, on which he
campaigned.
You look around and you ask yourself: where is the Itse Sagay
anti-graft panel? Have they gone to sleep? Why has the federal
government failed to disclose the identities (and amount) that
Jonathan’s former officials and friends “returned” as claimed by
Governor Nasir El Rufai of Kaduna State?
Why hasn’t the Jonathan minister who allegedly stole six billion
dollars been identified, arrested and put on trial with efforts to
recover the money made public? Six billion dollars or over N1.2 trillion
can give our economy a massive shock therapy for recovery from
depression.
The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) is still high on its
triumphal euphoria, and never misses any opportunity to remind us how
they defeated PDP. Do you hear Barack Obama of the US or David Cameron
of the UK make any reference to the elections that returned them to
power in 2012 and 2015 respectively?
APC leaders should show some maturity. When a party wins an election
it immediately faces the challenges of victory. Election victory is not
an end but a means to an end: a platform for delivering on campaign
promises.
It is in the interest of President Buhari and the APC to take my advice: Look your front.
Start governing. Get to work. Start solving the problems of the country
for which you were elected. There is nothing more you can tell us about
the “rot” allegedly left by PDP that can justify six months of serious
economic decline and roller-coaster ride towards depression.
Instead of the two million jobs per year we were promised (by now
about million jobs should have been created going by the APC campaign
promises) there have been massive job losses, especially in the banking,
media and real sectors of the economy.
The Naira, which Buhari once boasted gained in value when he was
elected is under pressure to be devalued to save our foreign reserves.
Whatever rot the PDP might have left behind is being exacerbated by the
cluelessness, directionlessness and actionlessness of the Buhari regime.
This tendency of Buhari and the ruling APC to keep talking about
corruption, deep rot and what not, especially when the president visits
foreign countries inflicts heavy injuries on Nigeria’s image. Buhari
should change emphasis and tell the world his strategies to right the
wrongs he met and put Nigeria back on the path of rectitude.
This is what we want to hear, and that is what our prospective
foreign partners are waiting to hear. We want a genuine war on
corruption, not a manhunt of political enemies and the use of coercion
to capture some juicy oil-producing states for the ruling party.
Nigeria is not the only country that has corrupt people. But Nigeria
is probably the only country in the world whose president spends
primetime damaging its image.
Is Buhari really telling “the truth” or merely trying to ensure that
the opposition never recovers to challenge him in 2019? If you have a
household full of daughters and you keep telling everybody their mother
is a thief and a prostitute, you must be ready to take the blame if
suitors stay away.
But Nigerians are beginning to lose their patience after waiting for
six months. Unless Buhari begins to address the “deep rot” left by past
administrations (including his own) his 2019 dreams will be dead even
before the date arrives.
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