As
President Muhammadu Buhari marks his first 100 days in office, we note
with joy the positive atmosphere that has enveloped the nation and the
renewed hope and optimism it has engendered among Nigerians that
‘change’ has indeed come and that we have begun the journey
to achieving our deferred dream of making Nigeria a great country.
Since after Nigeria’s independence in 1960, never has there been such a
groundswell of optimism in our collective ability to resurrect the
‘crippled and sleeping giant’ of a nation and begin to position it to
achieve its manifest destiny of being the voice of and leading Africa
and the black world.
Right from the day of his swearing-in,
President Buhari made it clear that this would be a new beginning for
the country
and that he would wage a relentless war against insecurity,
corruption and impunity. True to his words, he set about almost
immediately on a shuttle diplomacy to rally Nigeria’s neighbours to act
in concert to defeat the Boko Haram insurgents that had been terrorising
the country and, recently, neighbouring countries. He visited Chad,
Niger, and Cameroon, and hosted a summit on the Lake Chad Basin
Commission. These visits achieved the important aim of starting and
deploying the Multi National Joint Task Force (MNJTF) with headquarters
in N’Djamena, Chad, to comprehensively tackle the Boko Haram menace.
Between these, he also travelled to Germany, South Africa, the United
Kingdom, and the United States – all aimed at winning key supports,
assistance and friends for the country in the fight against insurgency.
Expectedly, the president wasted no time
in sounding the battle cry in the war against corruption and impunity,
which many Nigerians have identified as among the main reasons for our
national malaise. Through his body language and some concrete steps
taken, like the change of guards at the NNPC and other institutions, the
president indicated clearly that it would no longer be business as
usual and that his administration would vigorously pursue and prosecute
corrupt and erring officials. He has been particularly successful in
building a national consensus against, and intolerance of, corruption
and impunity encompassing the media, civil society groups and the
general public. He is also determined to see to the recovery of looted
funds stashed in foreign accounts/countries by corrupt government
officials and has sought the help of the international community,
particularly the United States and United Kingdom, to achieve this.
However, we are constrained to point out
that despite the groundswell of support for the war on corruption and
the posturing of the administration in this area, no one has as yet been
charged to court for corruption. What appears to be happening is a
carefully orchestrated campaign of calumny, terror, and media trial that
may not conform to the rule of law.
For instance, there was a media blitz
against the former National Security Adviser (NSA), Sambo Dasuki, to the
effect that he purchased fake military hardware and could not account
for a large cache of funds meant for the purchase of military equipment.
This led to a commando-like storming of his house in Abuja and his
father’s house in Sokoto by the Department of State Security with all
the drama that went with it. To our utmost shock, when he was charged to
court, he was only charged over offences relating to possession of
firearms without licence and not the corruption/mismanagement the
administration had earlier touted. This is a dangerous signal.
Government must stop the smear campaign and media trials on citizens and
take its cases to the courts if there is evidence of corruption on
anyone.
Again, even after several denials, and
despite our best efforts to ignore the trend, the president’s
appointments thus far have shown a tendency towards provincialism, and
this is already generating tension among Nigerians, on social media and
elsewhere. We are strictly in favour of merit-based appointments as sine
qua non for the country to move forward. However, we urge the president
to take into account the fragile nature of Nigeria’s unity and extend
his searchlight to other sections of the country as he seeks to appoint
only highly qualified people of good repute and integrity.
It can bear stressing that President
Buhari is not the president of Northern Nigeria alone and must not allow
himself to be seen as such. We recall the resounding line in his
inaugural speech: “I belong to everybody and I belong to nobody”. We,
therefore, urge the president to live up to the letter and spirit of
those words and not fritter the goodwill that came with his elections
and the early days of his administration. Understandably, many people in
his party are now angry and embarrassed at what they termed his
unilateral and sectional appointments and actions. As one of the
president’s backers recently commented on social media, “A president who
ran for election on the mantra of change can’t continue the tradition
of invidiously clannish appointments and expect to continue to enjoy
national goodwill.”
All said, we agree with Gregory Kronsten,
an analyst, that “the president has been very active in the three
months since the handover on 29 May”. Even though he has not appointed
his ministers, he has, however, “wielded the axe at leading public
agencies and indicated policy preferences for a number of industries
such as textiles and aviation”.
Going forward, we urge the president to
seize the opportunity of the moment to build a national consensus and
unite the entire country around the quest for growth and development.
The clock is ticking.
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