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Opinion Politics

Run or Run Away, Now Buhari has Declared

Femi Adesina
Femi Adesina

 

Run or Run Away, Now Buhari has Declared

 

By FEMI ADESINA

There are two options for those in contention for the presidency in 2019: run, or run away. Now that President Muhammadu Buhari has indicated his intention to run, dwarfs trying to wear a giant’s shoes should simply run away. The cat has returned from a journey, let the rats scamper for safety.

Show clean pairs of heels? But this is a democracy! Everybody is free to run in the direction he or she fancies. True. So, what I’ve said is mere advice, which they can take, or choose not to take. Nigerians will decide early next year. The greater the challenge, the sweeter the victory.

I have always said it privately and in public. If President Muhammadu Buhari decides to run for a second term in 2019, I would support him. It doesn’t matter whether I am in government or not. For some of us, the man Buhari is a conviction, a resolution, a man to admire and adore since 1984, when he became military head of state.

Is he perfect? Show me the man who is. Is he running a perfect government? Show me the government which is. Is he sincere? Very. Does he love the country? Dearly. Will he take Nigeria to the Promised Land? As the good Lord helps. And he is on the way there. Does he need more time? Sure, he does. The rot was too much, benumbing.

Nigeria is doing a lot more with a lot less today. There was a time we were awash with money. Oil sold for as high as $120 dollars per barrel, and we produced up to two million barrels per day. For many years. But we had no roads, no electricity, no health care, no security, nothing. The money was simply looted. They sat round the table, as if gathered for lunch, and hundreds of billions of dollars were shared.

Now, after oil prices crashed to as low as 30 dollars per barrel in 2015, and currently oscillates between 50 and 60 dollars, Nigeria is doing great things. Electricity has been taken to over 7,000 megawatts, from the inherited 3,000. The economy is now being truly diversified, after five decades of lip service. Agriculture is now the second biggest thing after oil, and is poised to become number one in the not too distant future. Farmers, in their millions, now smile to the banks. The farmer is now king. He sends himself on pilgrimage to Mecca or Jerusalem, paying his own way. Those who want more wives among them have even taken. And not on credit. Lol.

With income standing at about 60% less than what we used to earn, N1.3 trillion was spent on capital in 2016. The 2017 budget will close with about the same amount being expended on capital projects. Simply because you have a honest man in leadership. Not that corruption has been wiped out, no, but it has been drastically curbed. And anyone serving with the man knows that stealing is now corruption. When fish rots, it starts from the head. But we now have a head that shows the way. Mai Gaskiya. The Honest Man. Shine the light, and people will find the way.

How about our foreign reserves? They say we should stop talking about the past, and simply face the future. So that Nigerians would not be reminded of how they ran the country into a hole? With oil at its highest prices for many years, what they left in foreign reserves was a miserly $29.6 billion. It dropped to as low as $24 billion about a year ago, because of collapsed oil prices. But then, by divine mercies, prices began to inch up in the international market. It reached $60 per barrel, just about half of what they earned for many years. We cut unbridled importation of what can be produced locally. Prudence became the watchword. And foreign reserves now stand at over $46 billion. Why? Simply because the money is not being pocketed by those in power, as it once happened.

And then, some voodoo priests came: don’t run for a second term. Give way to younger people. Take a well deserved rest. Blah blah blah. As if they were the beginning and end of democracy. The motive was simple: we must dissuade this man from running, so that he wouldn’t become the greatest ever Nigerian leader. He must not become the authentic national hero. All types of cards were being flashed, yellow, green, red, purple, as if they had become emergency referees. But President Buhari kept his peace. No abuse for abuse, no railing for railing. When you are in the marketplace, you concentrate on the person you are transacting a deal with, and ignore the noise of the market. Now, the Tower of Babel has been resoundingly ignored, and democracy will be the victor.

Early next year, Nigerians will decide what they want. Go ahead on the journey to Canaan, a land flowing with milk and honey, or go back to Egypt, a land of eternal bondage, and excruciating pains? Nigerians will do it again. They will freely elect the leader they want, without pandering to ethnic, religious, and other primordial sentiments being currently whipped up. There will be no doomsday, as the election will be free and fair. No wuru-wuru or mago-mago under Buhari’s watch, no matter what. A man that swears to his own hurt.

Nigerians, President Buhari is on the march again. For the sake of our tomorrow and the ages to come, for the sake of our children and generations yet unborn, let’s do it again.

Femi Adeshina is the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari

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Editorial Latest News

Nigeria should deploy this $1billion to fight menacing insecurity

Buhari must ensure that the money is used for the purpose it is meant for and not for any other purpose, no matter how beautiful any other argument may seem. Nigerians and the world are watching.
Buhari must ensure that the money is used for the purpose it is meant for and not for any other purpose, no matter how beautiful any other argument may seem. Nigerians and the world are watching.

 

Nigeria should deploy this $1billion to fight menacing insecurity

 

It is interesting that Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday approved the sum $1 billion for the procurement of military hardware for the purpose of fighting insecurity in that West African country. The money is about N360 billion according to today’s Dollar to Naira exchange rate. It is interesting because if this money is deployed judiciously, it could go a long way in procuring relevant arms and ammunition needed to ward-off rampaging Boko Haram and other bourgeoning threats to security in the country.

However, the timing of the release of the fund is ominous. And this calls for fears about the sincerity of the government to use this money for the said purpose. Election time is drawing closer and there are temptations to use available money to fund election. It was about this time in the life of the Goodluck Jonathan administration that $2.2 billion was also approved for the same purpose. The now infamous $2.2 billion arms deal, for which many players in the former administration are being tried is a bad precedent which must not re-occur. $2.2 was released to the former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki to procure arms and ammunition but the money never got deployed to fight insurgency. Instead, it was shared among stakeholders for the opposite purpose of Jonathan’s re-election—which did not happen. While Soldiers danced to the macabre tune of the Boko Haram at the Sambisa forest trying to combat highly motivated terrorists with their bare hands, politicians were in Abuja and abroad sharing the slush fund meant for arms. Many Soldiers were killed mercilessly and the insurgents grew in number.

Already, some vocal politicians are already nursing some fears that this N360 billion may go the way of the Dasuki’s $2.2 billion. Governor of Ekiti State, Peter Ayodele Fayose solely voted against the approval of this $1 billion, stating that the fund will be used for Buhari’s re-election, not to fight insecurity. other members of the opposition questioned the All Progressive Congress led-government for voting N360 billion to fight Boko Haram which the government said has been defeated and are being negotiated with to grant them amnesty.

The truth which is open to everyone is that insecurity in Nigeria is still high and menacing. And chances are that the security situation may get worse as the election time draws closer. That is why it is a right move to be on the alert. On the part of the government, voting this large sum to fight insecurity which includes Boko Haram, herdsmen activities, cultism, armed robbery, militancy and other forms insecurity, is another way of telling Nigerians that insecurity is far from being over.

There is insecurity everywhere in the country. Boko Haram and herdsmen are snuffing lives out of innocent people every day. It is happening even as this is being written. Politicians, who believe that elections cannot be won on free and fair basis have stockpiled arms and procured gunmen to do hatchet jobs during the elections. The government should have a counter-response programme to guarantee the safety of the people before, during and after the 2019 election.

We believe that President Muhammadu Buhari has taken a right step to vote this money for security reasons. But the government should do more to ensure that the fears expressed by Fayose did not materialise. Buhari must ensure that the money is used for the purpose it is meant for and not for any other purpose, no matter how beautiful any other argument may seem. Nigerians and the world are watching.

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Editorial Latest News

Chibok, Dapchi: It is bad to play politics with kidnapping, insecurity and death of common people

Insecurity in Nigeria
Insecurity in Nigeria

 

 

Chibok, Dapchi:  It is bad to play politics with kidnapping, insecurity and death of common people

The Senior Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria on Media and Communications, Mallam Garba Shehu, a week a go made some startling revelation about the state of the nation and said that insecurity, which comprises the activities of the Boko Haram and herdsmen, is a creation of some politicians who want to exploit opportunities to win elections in 2019.

At the point Mallam Shehu made the remarks on a national television, the 110 schoolgirls who were kidnapped in Dapchi, Yobe State by Boko Haram were still not found, their parents and loved ones were still nursing the anguish of losing dear ones in terrible circumstances. Even a number of the schoolgirls who were kidnapped in Chibok in 2014 by same Boko Haram men were still not found. It is instructive to note that these girls who are involved in this violence are human beings who are entitled to protection by government.

On Wednesday, when the Dapchi girls were reportedly released by their captors, five of the innocent girls were said to have died and one was in a critical health condition following the conditions they were subjected to during the process. There is no gainsaying the fact that the kidnapped schoolgirls together with their family members, friends, relatives and concerned local and international bodies go through some serious trauma over the abductions, yet, flicker of information from the authorities is that some people are behind the kidnapping and sundry insecurity drama in the country.

At least 25, 000 persons have died directly as a result of activities of Boko Haram in Nigeria from 2009 and property and livelihood have been razed down too. The activities of the Fulani herdsmen are upsetting locals and farmers, especially in the Northern part of the country since 2015. The cases of Benue State, Taraba State, Plateau State, Niger State among others are quite regrettable.

The nature of the kidnap and release of the Dapchi schoolgirls is equally disturbing. The opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) called it a poorly written script and while the ruling party, the All Progressive Congress (APC) attacked the PDP for failing to appreciate the enormity of work done by the federal government in procuring release of the girls. All these arguments are coming from the highly placed while the victims are the common people. It is sad and must stop. Every human being is entitled to life no matter the state of birth.

It is ridiculous that some educated people and leaders in the country come on the national media to show support in favour of some elements who orchestrate violence like the Boko Haram and militants in Nigeria. Some people even argue a life-line for them.

Nigeria has had more than its own fair share of insecurity. It is sad when this violence could be traced by some highly placed people who live a cosy life with their families and friends while the common people are used as pawns in the game of chess to score some political goal. Whether it is true or not that these dramas are being stage-managed, it is more horrendous to imagine that humans use other humans as baits to hunt political offices. This is the height of man’s inhumanity to man and perpetrators of these dastardly acts should stop forthwith.

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Editorial Latest News

Clean, safe water is a right of everyone in Africa

Water should be available to everyone
Water should be available to everyone

Clean, safe water is a right of everyone in Africa

It is again March 22 and the United Nations is once again marking the World Water Day to remind the world of the importance of water in its different uses and also advise on good water management. The theme for this year’s World Water Day is “Nature for Water”, created by the UN-Water to encourage people to “look for the answer in nature”.

Discover Africa News notes poignantly, that one nature of water is life. Water is life. As long as one wishes to have life, they wish to have water at the same scale.

But it is unfortunate that the common people, especially in Africa, do not have access to clean water. Their leaders have taken away the luxury of life as well as the necessities of life. The common people do not have access the beautiful houses, roads, quality healthcare, quality education and most unfortunately, the people do not access quality water.

In the Nigerian experience, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) today issued a statement, saying that 69 million citizens do not have access to safe water and 19 million have to walk long distances to get water, adding that about 40 per cent of households do not have access to clean water sources.

UNICEF added that lack of safe drinking water contributes to stunting or shortness in the child’s development stages, an experience that is preponderant in Africa.

It is important to note that stunting is not the only problem associated with lack of safe water. Waterborne diseases like Guinea worm, Cholera, Diarrheal among others abound in Africa.

In 2017, Federal Government of Nigeria budgeted the sum of N104,245,803,11 for the Ministry of Water Resources. How did the Ministry of Water Resources utilize this budget to increase access to clean and safe water by the common man in Nigeria? We do not expect that number of people who do have access to good water in Nigeria should be as high as the figure above: “69 million citizens do not have access to safe water and 19 million have to walk long distances to get water, adding that about 40 per cent of households do not have access to clean water sources”. It is quite unfair.

We agree with UNICEF that for Nigeria to achieve the global goal of providing access to safe water for every citizen by 2030, it needs to make water, together with sanitation and hygiene, a national priority. This goal is closely linked with three key results for the country-good health, environment sustainability and economic prosperity. And this is not peculiar to Nigeria but to other African countries whose citizens cannot boast of access to good water.

UNICEF also notes that “Waterborne diseases also contribute to stunting. A stunted child is shorter than he or she could have been, and will never be able to reach his or her full cognitive potential. Lack of safe water and sanitation also make children vulnerable to other threats beyond health. Many children in rural areas spend several hours daily collecting water, missing out on the opportunity to go to school… Children without access to safe water are more likely to die in infancy and throughout childhood from water-borne diseases. African leaders should note that Diarrhoea remains the leading cause of death among children under five years of age in Nigeria”.

We challenge governments of Africa to note that water is life and it is essential that every person, every household should have easy access to clean, safe and heathy water. If the office holder can’t provide other basic things for the people who elected them to the office, please, they should provide water.

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Latest News Opinion Politics

When the people said no to their president: from Arab Spring to African Political Sentience

There is no force as strong as the collective will of the people
There is no force as strong as the collective will of the people

 

When the people said no to their president: from Arab Spring to African Political Sentience

By Kelechi Okoronkwo, Nigeria

There is no force as strong as the collective will of the people. Political theorist, John Locke, who ascertained the domicile of power, eventually discovered that power is domiciled with the people. Locke, in his Two Treatises of Government, published in 1690, argues that it is the people that give power to the ultimate ruler. And in extension, the ultimate ruler can only exercise that power to the extent he is allowed by the people.

Appraisals of events around social contracts from the Arab Spring in the wake of this decade to the current political sentience in parts of Africa, could persuade our thinking to align with Locke’s and other liberal thinkers that there is no force as strong as the collective will of the people.

So, we cannot over-emphasize the place of the people in any social contract. Lord Acton says Power tends to corrupt and absolute Power corrupts absolutely, yes. But the absoluteness of power rules and corrupts the society where the people have not made a collective decision to stand up to power.

We may take a look at the leadership revolutionary waves in parts of Africa and the middle east in 2010, technically called the Arab Spring or Arab revolutions. There were both violent and non-violent demonstrations, protests, riots, coups, foreign interventions, and civil wars in North Africa and the Middle East that began on 17 December 2010 in Tunisia with the Tunisian Revolution. This saw the overthrow of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali who fled into exile in Saudi Arabia.

The Tunisian Revolution effect spread strongly to five other countries: Libya, Egypt, Yemen, Syria and Bahrain, where either the regime was toppled or major uprisings and social violence occurred, including riots, civil wars or insurgencies. Sustained street demonstrations took place in Morocco, Iraq, Algeria, Iranian Khuzestan, Lebanon, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman and Sudan. Minor protests occurred in Djibouti, Mauritania, the Palestinian National Authority, Saudi Arabia, and the Moroccan-controlled Western Sahara. A major slogan of the demonstrators in the Arab world is ash-shaʻb yurīd isqāṭ an-niẓām (“the people want to bring down the regime”).

Three things ran through the Arab Spring power experiment: one, long overbearing rulership of the people, characterised by taking the people for granted in the decision-making processes such as in the electioneering processes and also in the policy executions. The second part is the point of satiation where the people got fed-up and pushed to the wall. That was the point the people realised that they could not take the oppression any longer. The third part is a reaction. It might be premeditated or unpremeditated. There might be hope or no hope of success at the end of the reaction. But the people had to react in a certain way. And the rest is the story.

This decade too saw a wake into increasing political awareness and participation and ‘exorcisation’ of the spirit of obstinate tolerance with breaches of democracy principles. Examples are Ghana (2009), Nigeria (2015), Zambia (2016), Zimbabwe (2017) and South Africa (2018).

In West Africa, Ghana’s election in 2009 was a spike to possibilities of an incumbent president losing re-election. Prof. John Atta Mills of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) won Ghana’s presidential election, narrowly defeating Nana Akufo-Addo of the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP).  Kissy Agyeman, Africa analyst at London-based consultancy Global Insight, told Reuters before the result was announced that the people needed change in power ‘outages and corruption’ and they had voted for change. “I think there is demand for change … power outages and corruption in the NPP have really been the key issues for people,“ she said.

In Nigeria, 2015 was remarkable. An incumbent president, Goodluck Jonathan was defeated by the collective will of the people. Former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari became the first opposition candidate to win a presidential election in that West African country. Gen Buhari beat Jonathan by more than 2.5 million votes.

Nigeria returned to democracy in 1999 after some 13 years of military rule. The newly formed party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) won the election and remained in power till 2015. The PDP often boasted to hold power for 60 years. Opposition elements accused the PDP of monumental corruption. The government of Goodluck Jonathan was most vilified on corruption and incapacity to fight insurgency. Buhari rode to power on the back of change.

The year 2017 saw the end of a 37-year rule of Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe. Mugabe perpetuated himself in power amidst official corruption and high-handedness. At 93, Mugabe was weak and senile. But instead of organising a popular democratic transition, Mugabe started working towards his wife, Grace, succeeding him. But the people said no to that. The people preferred that Emmerson Mnangagwa, Mugabe’s deputy who had fallen out with Mugabe, should become their president. The people called this forth until Mugabe was forced to resign on November 21, 2017.

In South Africa, former President, Jacob Zuma did not retire in peace. The people forced him to resign following allegations of corruption. The people preferred Zuma’s Deputy, Cyril Ramaphosa, who was seen as a more honourable person, to Zuma. First, Zuma was stripped of his position as the leader of the ruling African National Congress (ANC). And ahead of the country’s general election in 2019, Zuma was forced to resign on February 15, 2018.

In Gambia, dictator Yahaya Jammeh was in power for 22 years. And he became a sort of demi-god. But the people deposed and sent him on exile in December 2016 after he refused to hand over to a popular government of Adama Barrow. Barrow of the opposition party, the United Democratic Party (UDP) won the country’s election with 263,515 votes (45.5%) while President Jammeh took 212,099 (36.7%) A third party candidate, Mama Kandeh, won 102,969 (17.8%). But Jammeh refused to handover power. The people stood strong with Barrow until the baggy-wearing Jammeh was sacked completely.

The people wield enormous powers therefore. The power to make the ruler and the power to mar the ruler. But in political spaces where the people fail to understand the enormity of their powers, ultimate rulers hold sway and continue to take the people for granted.

Again, there is no force as strong as the collective will of the people. This has been demonstrated in several fronts and it will continue to test valid. The earlier, we the people understand this, the better for all of us.

Kelechi Okoronkwo, a writer and Public Relations Executive sent in this piece from Abuja.

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Africa Contributors Features

WHY WE CAN’T TRUST BUHARI AGAIN WITH OUR VOTES IN 2019

In Benue State Nigeria, Buhari government mass-buried 70 persons killed by Fulani herdsmen in the wake of the New Year. Photo/CNN
In Benue State Nigeria, Buhari government mass-buried 70 persons killed by Fulani herdsmen in the wake of the New Year. Photo/CNN

 

WHY WE CAN’T TRUST BUHARI AGAIN WITH OUR VOTES IN 2019

By Orochi Chikaodiri, LAGOS. Once bitten, they say, twice shy. Preparatory to 2015 general election in Nigeria, we all paid deaf attention to insinuations that the handlers of General Muhammadu Buhari might just be deceiving us. There were indications that the All Progressive Congress (APC) was just a mere propagandist party, but Nigerians trusted the ‘incorruptible Buhari’ and we gave him our votes with trust that he would give us security and economic growth.

The APC and Buhari handed down to us, many full baskets of promises. But three years down the line, Nigerians cannot boast of getting any of those promises. Instead, things are getting worse on all sides.

In my view, the greatest undoing of the Nigerian state is the recycling of the political class. Just like every other recycled material, recycle politicians are ineffective, inefficient and toxic to our political, economic and social security. President Muhammad Buhari is another recycled politician, who in a fiercely contested 2015 general election defeated the incumbent Goodluck Ebele Jonathan and emerged as the president after trying for three consecutive times to no avail. His emergence would rather be described as somewhat miraculous.

Before 2015, Nigeria had been plagued by Boko Haram insurgency and molehill of corruption, thus Nigeria and Nigerians were in dire need of a Messiah and President Muhammad Buhari and his party, the APC, promised “Change”.  His “change” campaign promises revolve around; National security, employment, economy, corruption, health, etc.

On National security, the president promised; “Ensure that under my watch, no force, external or internal, will occupy even an inch of Nigerian soil.”  It is important to note that since President Buhari’s inauguration, Boko Haram still makes its presence felt with suicide bombings.  In addition, in other parts of the country attacks and killings associated with Fulani herdsmen have increased, with attackers sometimes laying siege to series of communities. In fact, the problem under his watch has assumed a Hydra headed monster with its attendant effects telling on the innocent citizenries. Thus the Nigerian state is at the verge of disintegration if we keep on thinking she’s only slightly indisposed.

On Employment and economy, he promised to “Target the creation of 3 million new jobs a year through industrialisation, public work and agricultural expansion.” and “to make N1 = $1.”  There is no gainsay Nigeria went through recession and is still in recession, even though theoretical statistics says Nigeria is out of recession. The president himself insists that, until there’s a corresponding increase in the living standards of the citizens, only then will he believe the country is out of recession. And that is yet to happen. In the same vein, Nigeria’s unemployment rate rose from 8.2% in the period Buhari was sworn in to 13.9% in the 3rd quarter of 2016 and up till now according to the country’s National Bureau of Statistics. This is the highest unemployment rate recorded since 2009. 

On Corruption, the story is not different. Mr President has failed to deliver on his promises. You would agree with me that corruption is a thing of the mind, hence everybody has the tendency of being corrupt. According to Chinua Achebe in his book, the trouble with Nigeria, “Nigerians are corrupt because the system makes corruption easy and profitable. Nigerians will cease to be corrupt when the system make corruption hard and unprofitable.” Thus, corruption is a systemic problem and you can only fight it by strengthening all the institutions, not by political witch – hunting. You do not fight corruption by throwing people into jail. Corruption is not a person. But how under President Buhari’s government, opposition elements are the only ones that are seen as corrupt while those in the ruling APC are saints is a clear case of political witch hunt and dishonesty.  And it will not continue come 2019.

On Health, Mr President Promised to “Ensure that no Nigerian will have a reason to go outside of the country for medical treatment.” Buhari himself hasn’t even kept the promise. In the past few years alone, he went abroad 3 times to seek medical treatment. In June 2016, Buhari went to London to consult an ear, nose and throat specialist about an ear infection. Earlier in 2017, he spent 51 days in the British capital on extended medical leave and returned on 7 May on indefinite medical leave.  In May 2017, Nigeria’s minister of state for health, Dr Osagie Ehanire, admitted that the country’s health sector is still battling with many issues and he alleged that the giant of Africa loses over US$1 billion every year to medical tourism.  That’s worrisome, isn’t it?

From all indications President Muhammad Buhari has not been able to deliver and will never be able to deliver on his campaign promises.  Once bitten, twice shy. We cannot again mortgage our future with Buhari. We cannot again trust Buhari with our votes in 2019. The President and his APC have fooled us once, we cannot be fooled again. We are tired of recycled politicians and their empty promises. In the light of the above concerns and the determination to redirect the country on the path of development, it is obvious that the Aso Rock that President Muhammadu Buhari sees today, he will see it no more come 2019.

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African Campus Report Opinion

CRIMES OF BUHARI AGAINST NIGERIAN PEOPLE

Joshua Omenga says " I enter no caveat, for there is no risk of overstatement in the telling of the crimes of the Buhari government; one fears, on the other hand, the dearth of statistics to quantify before the reader the human loss occasioned by Buhari’s misgovernment and insouciance"
Joshua Omenga says ” I enter no caveat, for there is no risk of overstatement in the telling of the crimes of the Buhari government; one fears, on the other hand, the dearth of statistics to quantify before the reader the human loss occasioned by Buhari’s misgovernment and insouciance”

 

CRIMES OF BUHARI AGAINST NIGERIAN PEOPLE

By Joshua Omenga, LAGOS:  What even the most shortsighted observer of the Nigerian affairs finds difficult to understand is not the many crimes the Nigerian State has committed and is committing against its residents but the fatuous defences that the recipients of these wrongs put up in defence of these crimes. This doubtlessly emboldens the errant State so much that it imagines itself persecuted by the feeble few who, perhaps not out of reason but of the instinctual desire for self-preservation, protest in any form the irresponsibleness of the State. It is a perennial affair, intenser in proportion as the nation’s annihilation becomes not a matter of possibility but of time that has become foreseeable. The spiritual have no difficulty adjudging the Nigerian problems a national curse; the faithful have no option but prayer; but we the observers have nothing to offer but the testimony of our eyes.

The crimes of the Nigerian state are in all fronts: political, economic, insecurity. It is however the recent carnages – genocidal in proportion – that prompts this article. And it is no less in commiseration with the inconsolable direct victims of the show of violence, nor of the greater populace who pay the price by default than of laying the crime at the door of those in power, of the one in power, President Muhammadu Buhari.

 I enter no caveat, for there is no risk of overstatement in the telling of the crimes of the Buhari government; one fears, on the other hand, the dearth of statistics to quantify before the reader the human loss occasioned by Buhari’s misgovernment and insouciance. It is a terrible realisation that Nigerians have reached such level of degeneracy that such data, if available, are no longer newsworthy as to attract any outrage beyond the muffled cries of those directly affected. God then takes the blame (or the praise according to one’s creed) for it all, seeing as ‘all things happen according to his will’.

 Leaving then this superhuman influencer, let us concentrate on his human agent, avatarized in Muhammadu Buhari. Without venturing much into philosophy or sociology, the social contract doctrine creating the relationship between Muhammadu Buhari and the Nigerian peoples can be summarised thus: In primeval society, people lived on their own, each his own government; the mighty preyed on the small. The people reached a consensus to confer right on the powerful among them to be their leader, protect them from the mighty and provide security for life and property; in short, curb arbitrariness of existence. In exchange, the people gave their individual governance to the powerful (the sovereign) who now gives laws to control the people. This is purely a contract, and each party was to keep the terms of the contract (which are more elaborate than this summary) for the contract to subsist.

The Nigerian peoples, going by the election results (it is distracting to think otherwise) have conferred their mandates on the sovereign, Muhammadu Buhari, and under the social contract doctrine, the people can no longer be laws unto themselves, otherwise they stand in breach of the contract. Those who have ventured to question Buhari’s power have thus found themselves clamped down by the State Police, or rather, its Military – a realisation that the sovereign is not unaware of the power conferred on him by the people. It is therefore not in doubt that there is a subsisting contract binding on both the people and the sovereign. The people have fulfilled their obligation – and are fulfilling it by continual obedience to legitimate commands – but has the sovereign fulfilled his obligation under the contract? Put crudely in the Nigerian context, Has President Muhammadu Buhari fulfilled his obligations as the sovereign of the Nigerian State to the Nigerian peoples?

The prime desire of every person, contract or no, under any pyramid of priority, is the preservation of life. The sovereign ought therefore to make this the priority of the state. No amount of the state resources garnered to secure the lives of the residents of such state is superfluous. Only when lives are secured does the urgency of other needs arise. What then has been the attitude of Muhammadu Buhari to this prime need of the society? Indifference! Indeed, something worse than indifference, for not only does he not protect the lives of the people with the state resources but he lends tacit support to those who undermine the lives of the citizens! There is nothing monstrous in this accusation when one pauses for a moment to analyse the attitude of President Muhammadu Buhari – I attach ‘President’ with much reluctance – to the activities of those who take the lives of others in the Nigerian State.

You may obtain the harrowing details of these carnages from journalists of any calibre, but here is a minuscule version of the Buhari’s attitude to the atrocities committed under his watch. Boko Haram is a deadly terrorist group – at least I believe our collective conscience does not need any supranational proscription to label that group a terrorist organisation – which Buhari used as a campaign slogan that he would see to its destruction in the first few months of his inauguration to power. Months have gone, and now more than a year and the reason we no longer hear of the atrocities of the Boko Haram group is because they have become so commonplace as to interest any editor as headline in any paper.

One pretends out of the desire to present a factual account that those who claim to be fighting the group are not in fact those responsible for the explosive empowerment of the group. One asks without much dubiousness how in a technologically barren country such a group acquires sophisticated weapons without the awareness of the security forces of the state; how the group acquires security information available only to the highest echelon of the State’s security – these are things that pique one’s imagination. But leaving aside these questionable show of ignorance on the part of those who should be held culpable for the continued perpetration of atrocities by the Boko Haram group, what efforts, even pretended, has the Buhari government made in fulfilling its campaign promise to annihilate Boko Haram?

I cite the Boko Haram example not in accusation of Buhari but merely as a prologue in understanding his present attitude to the carnages perpetrated by the ‘herdsmen’ of the Fulani or whatever extraction.
Several social commentators have noted with historic figures how the State Forces have been used in curbing criminal activities when the state is inclined to doing so; and were not our collective memory short, we need no prodding for such facts. The State Forces are never as active as when the ‘criminal’ is an enemy – even a perceived one – of Muhammadu Buhari or of his. Kidnappers or murderers of political figures rarely go uncaught; protesters against the Buhari’s government, no matter how peaceful, never go unmolested by the State Military machine with passion that would terrorise the real enemies of the state; corrupt figures in the opposition party were never clever enough to escape the incompetent anti-corruption machine of the state. It is therefore untrue that when Muhammadu Buhari refuses to act, he does so out of inability; he refuses to act out of desire! So puerile is the mind-set that attributes Buhari’s crimes to incompetence!

Buhari’s greatest demonstration of his negative exercise of power as the sovereign of the Nigerian state is with regards to the activities of the Fulani herdsmen who have been object of terror to Nigerians everywhere they are found. I do not intend to reproduce even minimally the statistics of their destruction of human lives; that can readily obtained by simple clicks on the internet media. But it is worthy of note that Fulani herdsmen who are not hunters by profession, bear arms that even the members of the state police do not bear in defence of the citizens. These sophisticated weapons, according to those conversant with the market of such wares, are not only difficult to come by but not affordable by even the middle class. Who then have equipped the herdsmen with those weapons? If Buhari does not know, has he tried to find out? Secondly, the Nigerian law is clear – and common-sense is clearer in this regard – that bearing arms dangerous to the lives of others are forbidden the citizens. Even those authorised to bear arms – the state security forces – are licensed for it. How then can these cattle herders bear such sophisticated weapons in full glare without the intervention of the state security, if the commander in chief of the state security, Muhammadu Buhari, has not placed his imprimatur on their activities?

What has Buhari done on the wake of the killings by the herdsmen? He labels them communal clashes. For a moment, let us exercise our imagination and take Nigerians for the greatest fools on earth who will accept such labelling for clearly premeditated acts – are communal clashes outside the purview of the state intervention? What steps has Buhari taken to arrest both sides and do the right thing – subject them to the court’s determination and punish the guilty ones as stipulated by law? Or should we now, our level of foolishness notwithstanding, take this to mean that clashes between parties are to be resolved by the parties according to their whims, according as they are armed or otherwise? The excuse usually paraded by those in support of the murderous activities of the herdsmen is that they do so in defence of their cattle from being rustled by the host communities. For a moment, incredulous as the claim is, if we accept that they are in fact defending their cattle from being rustled, does that entitle them to use lethal weapon in defence? Those who use the proviso in s. 33(2)(a) of the Constitution in defence will have a nice time in criminal defence establishing the proportionality of their actions.

In all these killings perpetrated by the herdsmen, the number of persons killed is more than the number of cattle claimed to have been rustled – I stand to be corrected if otherwise. This leaves us with no choice but to agree with the new catchphrase that the nation’s conscience, Wole Soyinka, has coined: ‘All lives are equal, but a cow’s life is more equal than others’. Yes, the lives of the cattle of the herdsmen are more valuable than the lives of the citizens of Nigeria, in Buhari’s estimation. And let us make no mistake about it: Buhari’s senility or his pretence of it has not reached a level that he does not distinguish between figures in human loss and figures in cattle loss; he merely places priority on the cattle rather than on the humans. This is the sovereign of the Nigerian state, the one who, by the mandate of the people, ought to be in the forefront in protecting the lives of the citizens.

What Buhari and his cohorts call clashes are merely the feeble attempts of the pillaged villages to protect their pates, which fails ninety-nine out of hundred times. Yes, it is just a clash when robbers attack a household; it is just a clash when armies invade a civilian village; it is just a clash when band of adult molest a group of children; it is just a clash when the truck crushes the bicycles. But we know on whose side of the clashes Buhari is. That is what makes the difference. But the future consequences of this clashes Buhari seems not to have realised. Buhari does not know that the household will one day prepare for the robber; that the child will one day grow to a man, that the bicyclist will one day acquire a truck – and then the story will change. The imbalance in power will not continue. The clashes will then take on their real lexical meaning.

Then shall the minority take up arms in reprisal. Then shall the sovereign who cannot punish the group butchering others now lack the power and morals to mediate between equally-equipped groups. Then shall no one be indifferent, for the bloodletting will be on all sides. It is then, when Buhari sees the blood of his friends, will he feel the pains of his enemies.
The process has been set in motion. The people no longer think that they have a sovereign to protect them. Each man has learnt to be his own police, according as his ability. The contract between the sovereign and the governed has been frustrated by the sovereign’s deliberate actions; and as the sovereign has failed to fulfil his obligations under it, the people are gradually resiling out of it. They are creating alternatives for themselves. It is only a matter of time before the sovereign finds himself totally stripped of the people’s mandate.

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Africa Contributors Politics

Country in Limbo: Newsman’s Prognosis of Zimbabwe’s Future

Zimbabwe's situation today is confused
Zimbabwe’s situation today is confused

 

Country in Limbo: Newsman’s Prognosis of Zimbabwe’s Future

By Bassey Godwin

It’s pretty difficult and funny to say what might become of Zimbabwe in the nearest future. Even Zimbabweans, both the man on the street and the elite do not know. The only thing Zimbabweans are aware of, and grateful about is that ‘the despot is out’.

But, is the despot truly out? For how long will he be gone? Is the Crocodile or the Gucci taking Mugabe’s place? Or will General Constantino Chiwenga take charge completely. These are tacky questions that beg for answers.

This is the situation now: Zimbabwe is in limbo. The army has not taken full control of the government. Robert Mugabe, the ‘president’ who under house arrest is insisting that he remains Zimbabwe’s only legitimate ruler. The ‘ousted’ Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa, known as the Crocodile, is in exile, gathering support from Africa and the West. The Gucci, Grace Mugabe’s whereabouts is unknown, she is said to be hiding somewhere, probably in Namibia.

Although Zimbabwe’s atmosphere is calm, even calmer now, there is thick uncertainly in the air about the future of the country.

However, Zimbabwe’s political indices have not suggested that the army will take over completely. The military might only want to threaten the Mugabe hegemony, bring Mnangagwa back to Zimbabwe and restore peace and calmness in the troubled country ahead of Zimbabwe’s election next year.

First, Zimbabwe is aware of the position of the African Union (AU) on coup and military takeover. An attempt on coup will end them a sack from the continental body. This may be why the military did not want to call their action, a coup, and to a large extent, that is why coup may not happen. Military rule is getting progressively out of fashion in Africa.

Second, it is likely that the military may have truck on the invitation of the ruling party, and may go away when their job has been done. The ruling party, Zimbabwe African National Union Progressive Front (ZANU-PF) is fully in support of the military action. It tweeted that “@zanu_pf handle. “Neither Zimbabwe nor ZANU are owned by Mugabe and his wife. Today begins a fresh new era and comrade Mnangagwa will help us achieve a better Zimbabwe”

Third, the ouster of the Crocodile, who is said to be close to Zimbabwe’s military authority is the immediate cause of the problem in Zimbabwe. The military is reported to be sympathetic of the Crocodile. There is a likelihood that the military may not like to usurp the power evidently due to Mnangagwa.

Newsman believes that the military action will enable Mnangagwa come back to Zimbabwe soon. Mugabe’s flag might continue to fly on a half-mast until the next year election, where possibly, Mnangagwa may win Grace Gucci Mugabe.

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Africa Opinion

Fulani Herdsmen? Here are the grim statistics

Herdsmen
Herdsmen

 

Fulani Herdsmen? Here are the grim statistics

By Dan Agbese

You probably thought it could not get more unsettling. You were wrong.

Here is some evidence. Former head of state, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, addressed a one-day forum organised by a group known as the Search for Common Ground on his farm October 30. In it, he released some grim statistics about the killings and maiming in clashes between Fulani herdsmen and peasant farmers in four states – Plateau, Nasarawa, Kaduna and Benue – in just one year. These figures are certain to chill your bones and make your eyes go rheumy for the present and the future of our country.

Here are the details he gave for 2016 only: 2,500 people killed; 62,000 people displaced; $13.7 billion lost to the clashes and 47 per cent of the internally-generated revenue in the affected states lost.

The problem with statistics is that when they are about human beings, you cannot put faces to them. Human beings are thus reduced to stark, impersonal numbers. The death of 2,500 Nigerians and the displacement of 62,000 others may do no more than give you a momentary jolt only for you to shrug it off. You are not likely to think of them as struggling Nigerians in our rural areas who were doing nothing criminal but pursuing their legitimate livelihood as peasant farmers who fed the nation.

The real shock is not that these killings, maiming and displacements go on with impunity but that the Federal Government seems to be doing Rip Van Winkle in the face of this critical national challenge. Abubakar rightly warned that these killings are spreading beyond the four states. They have already gone beyond the four states. He omitted killings in Taraba and parts of Adamawa states and, yes, Imo State. Perhaps, he does not have the figures for those places. His statistics could go chillingly higher if he adds Taraba and Adamawa to what he has.

I think it is wrong to describe these killings as clashes. A clash is a violent conflict between two groups of people and usually leaves casualties on both sides. From what I have read about these attacks and killings, the attackers suffer no casualties and there is no evidence that those attacked ever faced the attackers or that they had a chance to fight back. These attacks and killings are unprovoked and the attackers choose where and when to strike. They attack when their intended victims are most vulnerable. In several cases in Plateau State, for instance, the attackers came at night when the villagers were asleep and killed and sacked whole villages and disappeared before day break. They did the same thing several times in Agatu in Benue State. In no case was there any evidence that Agatu people provoked them or had a chance to engage them.

In December 2015, they attacked parts of Southern Kaduna. The vicar-general of the Catholic Diocese of Kafanchan, Rev Ibrahim Yakubu, said 880 people were killed; 53 villages destroyed, 1,422 houses burnt down and that 18 churches and one primary school were also torched.

It would be naïve to suggest that these killings are without rhyme or reason. Why are they concentred in the north-central geo-political zone? Why, as in the case in Southern Zaria, if the problem was between Fulani herdsmen and farmers in the area, did they burn down churches? I wonder if this was intended to give a false religious coloration to these murderous enterprises.

General Abubakar stressed that these killings were wake up calls to all “relevant stakeholders, state and Federal Government, legislatures, traditional rulers, civil society organisations, security agencies and communities to address these deadly conflicts.”

I hope his voice has been heard where it matters. I am glad though that the former head of state cares enough and is worried enough to underline the dangers they pose to the nation. These killings, in his own words, are “…threatening the fragile peace of the nation.” No country would tolerate these bands of killers or pretend they pose no threat to the nation.

I find it baffling that we have refused to find out who these Fulani herdsmen are and why they kill and destroy without the slightest provocation. I do not think it is a coincidence that they have concentrated their operations so far in the five states of Taraba, Plateau, Southern Kaduna, Nasarawa and Benue. Their choice of these theatres of their mayhem must be consistent with their dark objectives unknown to the rest of us. Are these the other ugly face of Boko Haram?

I may be naïve but I am unwilling to accept that the killers are Fulani herdsmen. The times might have changed but these simple rural folk seem unlikely to arm themselves with AK-47 and periodically engage in a killing spree and sending those with whom they have no previous or current quarrel to their early graves. I have always known that the Fulani herdsmen respect the fact that they are strangers in an area where they find a suitable grazing ground for their animals. I know they have always made efforts to be at peace with farmers.

So, what has changed? I have this nervous feeling that Fulani herdsmen are now a franchise. People kill and do other dirty jobs and find it easy to conveniently blame Fulani herdsmen for them. Fact is, we do not want to know the truth.

In my column for the Daily Trust after the attack in Southern Kaduna, I called them phantom Fulani herdsmen. I am not aware that any of these attackers have ever been arrested and charged with the heinous crimes of murder, arson and mayhem. Why is the Federal Government unwilling to wake up to what the situation portends for the country? Why are these men allowed to kill and destroy whole villages with impunity?

Dan Agbese is Nigerian writer, based in Lagos, Nigeria.

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Latest News Opinion

Nigeria: Presidency Double-Speaks on Whistle-blower Policy

Whistle-blower will get mad over N860m, Chairman, Presidential Advisory Committee on Against Corruption in Nigeria, Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN) has said.
Whistle-blower will get mad over N860m, Chairman, Presidential Advisory Committee on Against Corruption in Nigeria, Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN) has said.

Nigeria: Presidency Double-Speaks on Whistle-blower Policy

 

The Chairman, Presidential Advisory Committee on Against Corruption in Nigeria, Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN) has said the delay in payment of a whistle-blower was an official decision to save the whistle-blower from getting mad when paid N860 million due to him

But the country’s whistle-blower policy released December 2016 does not provide that payment of commission due to the whistle-blower should be delayed or denied for whatever reason

Its’ been eight months after operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) acting on a whistle-blower’s tip-off found $43,449,947, £27,800 and N23,218,000 hidden inside an apartment at Osborne Towers, Ikoyi, Lagos Nigeria. The sum was valued at N13 billion based on prevailing exchange rate set by the Central Bank of Nigeria.

But the person who provided the information has not been paid his commission according to the law.

The policy provided that there is reward for reporting fraud: “The whistle-blower will get between 2.5 per cent (minimum) and five per cent (maximum) of the recovered loot, provided that “there is a voluntary return of stolen or concealed public funds or assets on the account of the information provided”

But Sagay, defending why the Federal Government has not paid the whistle-blower said: “What I gathered from my inquiry is that the man is not sufficiently stable to receive such a huge sum of money. He is like someone who will almost run mental when he gets the money and will use it in an irresponsible manner, attracting not only undesirable people but even danger to himself.

“The sight of huge amount of dollars can make a mere security guard run mental. I think what they wanted to do for him was to provide counsellors. Not just counsellors for character and mental situation but counsellors who would be like consultants that would help him to really invest the money and plan in such a way that he doesn’t throw it away in five minutes.

“They are trying to help him. Nobody is denying him anything. They are trying to help him but he just misunderstands the intention and like everyone that has been deprived for a long time, he is so desperate to have it, but from what I can see, if they just give him everything, it won’t last more than a month or two because so many people will start finding ways to get to him and taking their portions from him. So, they were just trying to help him but he became hysterical.”

Sagay told Punch that the Federal Government has decided to pay the whistle-blower in tranches, adding that such a method of payment would deter him from spending it all at once.

He added, “It is better to pay him in tranches. I agree with the government because if not, he will throw it away. This is valuable money that government could have used for millions of unemployed and wretchedly poor people.

“One man is getting it and he just wants it so that he can blow it all in five minutes? No, the government has a responsibility to see that his excitement does not end in seeing the money being thrown away irresponsibly. So, I agree with the government.”

 

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