Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Nigerians are intensely
political people, full of fire and outrage in their support or ability
to undermine any figure of authority. Ours should have been the greatest
of democracies, given our profound interest in public affairs. Unlike
many Western countries where belief in any ideology is waning and voter
turn-out is lacklustre, Nigeria is a country where fortunately and
unfortunately dogma endures: we believe in many things (many
unsubstantiated, antiquated convictions with destructive powers) but we
differ from our Western counterparts in our unwillingness to critically
assess and scrutinise said beliefs, hiding behind ethnicity and religion
to justify those mysteries which enrich a few at the expense of the
many.
Our rigid support system, based on how we worship, or what part of the
country we come from, shows our mistaken understanding of political
participation which is more a conspiracy to commit, support and justify
theft than anything else. Politics rarely goes beyond, in the immortal
words of Patience Jonathan: “na we time” (to do what? I’ll leave that to
the readers’ imagination).Now a crucial question poses itself: in the
battle between the old, corrupt ways and the new, can the President rid
himself of those undesired elements, even if they may be his nearest and
dearest, who could ultimately cost him his re-election?
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI
Our society is not educated (or mature) enough to turn partisan debates
into civic engagement: country first, rather than party first, is a
concept which continuously eludes us. However, APC must be wary of
Nigerian disillusionment. Nigerians have slowly begun to realise their
power: if they no longer believe in the APC because its narrative is
unconvincing (a far cry from its fervent pre-election sense of national
urgency), because, it seems, many in APC look all too comfortable with
the old ways they campaigned against, then this would spell the end for
the party. Nigerians won’t accept to be fed the romanticised notions of
ethnic or primordial loyalty which dictate support based on everything
other than rational considerations of performance: it’s already
happening. A party that consistently gets votes in the modern world
isn’t one that puts food on the table by sporadically donating relief
items, it is, instead, one that empowers and prepares people for
self-reliance.
What Nigerians really need, right now, is for the real Muhammadu Buhari
to please stand up. I’m following the aftermath of the political
conventions in America. There are so many lessons to be learned about
what involvement in politics truly means, about the part every
individual citizen has to play in mending a country and telling a new
story. Ours (both our tragic story and heart-breaking country) needs
Buhari, if he can let go of some of his friends before it is too late.
Perhaps his experience of being removed from power by striking at the
heart of the cabal which enjoys and profits from Nigeria’s dysfunction,
made him more of a realist. Perhaps it turned the soldier into a
politician who is more ready to compromise by keeping some of those
undesirable elements close, despite the scandals and unanswered
questions, because of the greater damage they could do behind his back.
Perhaps the strategist in Buhari can still surprise us. But we need the
man who doesn’t pander to the interests or fear-mongering of corrupt
individuals who either use militants or separatism as blackmail. He
doesn’t have to have all the answers (those who voted for Buhari were no
fools, no one mistook him for a policy wonk) but he must surround
himself with more qualified, talented people who can provide said
answers. Enough of the recommendations and placements based on rumoured
or alleged familial connections, etc.
His communications team never tapped into his strengths and never sold a
post-election plan or vision. The cynics might say there wasn’t one.
But Buhari’s personal narrative, his knowledge of the civil war and all
it wrought upon us in ethnic politics, could serve to unify this
country, if he had the right people to articulate and sell his personal
thoughts and memories to the masses. Obama once said: “There is not a
Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America —
there’s the United States of America.” I doubt many around our
President fully understand the power of words. Many of the criticisms
currently directed at the President, including the perceived lack of
economic direction, would be far less if only there was someone
regularly speaking to Nigerians, explaining the reasons for the
hardships and detailing a way out, as opposed to ignoring the problems
in the “Jonathanesque” way previously criticised.
The President does occasionally mention our values but not enough in
connection to economic realities. Everything about the collapse of our
economy, our reliance on FX dependent imported goods, etc, is a direct
consequence of our shallow mind-set, never mind the elite schools many
in our society will tell you they attended. We think and behave like
paupers, semi-illiterates, awed by meaningless things. We’re paying the
price for it now. A communications team should have used the President’s
personal story, his humble beginnings, to inspire us to think
differently about money and its uses. Very few people remember policy in
detail but they remember the stories told about said policies: the
intellectual passion, the storytelling prowess shown in the US when
discussing the American idea is totally absent in Nigeria. Those few
would-be intellectuals Nigerian Presidents have around them are often
relics of an unfortunate past. Few are creative enough to craft the new
policies we need to catapult ourselves into modernity and by extension,
prosperity. The Muhammadu Buhari we need at this point must find a way
to synthesize the old and the new. Not by providing jobs and
opportunities for his friends’ children as is often the case in Nigeria
but by allowing real talent to thrive. If the best man can get the job
in Nigeria, half of our problems would be solved.
Dogara
In Nigeria, offensiveness seems to be a legitimate form of engagement or
even defence. The idea that padding the budget isn’t illegal isn’t just
a dangerous one, it’s a testimony to the mind-set of politicians who
think Nigeria is a country to be ruled rather than governed. Is
decriminalising an accusation not a form of self-indictment? It amounts
to saying “even if I did do it, it isn’t a crime”. Either way, one now
sees the legislature has little grasp of its true functions. Only the
executive is allowed to re-write the budget and replace projects, etc.
Lawmakers are only empowered to trim sums, not allocate money
themselves! Then of course there’s:”You mean I can’t come and see my
President? Do I need any reason to come and see my President? It was a
private visit.” Therein lies the problem. Without a doubt, Obama
receives private visits—many in private locations. The White House or in
this case, State House, belongs to every citizen and it is their right
to scrutinise what goes on within it. But to a Nigerian politician, the
state is often a private rather than a public affair. How this all ends
will undoubtedly reveal who the real Buhari is and either bode ill or
well for APC’s future.
CBN
Either not everyone in government is on the same page or the “real”
Buhari is someone else entirely. After being told that subsidised rates
would be reserved for more essential and productive functions of the
economy, and that parents who send their children abroad can “afford” to
source for FX in the parallel market, subsidised rates are given to
pilgrims (both Muslims and Christians). Prayers can’t on their own boost
Nigeria’s revenue, never mind what some fanatics, hiding under the
cover of religion to help themselves to Nigeria’s resources, will tell
you. Prayers are immaterial in a country of hypocrisy and generalised
stealing. Sai Baba who so hated waste, where are you?
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Will the real Muhammadu Buhari please stand up
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/will-the-real-muhammadu-buhari-please-stand-up/
Boko Haram threatens to attack infidels of the West African countries, Buhari’s Presidential Villa
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/boko-haram-threatens-attack-infidels-west-african-countries-buharis-presidential-villa/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/boko-haram-threatens-attack-infidels-west-african-countries-buharis-presidential-villa/
No comments:
Post a Comment