Fellow Nigerians!!!! President Buhari Needs Patience - Dele Momodu
Fellow Nigerians, you must be wondering from the title of my Column this
week if I am missing Madam Patience Faka Jonathan, our erstwhile
indefatigable First Lady, less than two weeks after she left office
alongside her husband. Your guess would definitely be wrong, if you
think so. This article is not about any human being called Patience. It
is on that inner attribute which makes it possible for people to calm
down and look deep before hurrying to nowhere.
I’ve been visibly disturbed by the spate of unnecessary and unwarranted attacks on the leadership style of our dear President Muhammadu Buhari who was sworn in barely a week ago. What is his offence? He’s said to have been slow in announcing his cabinet, Special Advisers and personal aides as well as formulating policies that his government intends to follow. I read this firstly on social media, as early as last Sunday, just 48 hours after the President received the baton of power from former President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan.
I was totally flabbergasted because some Nigerians did not realise that
President Buhari’s first official working day should be June 1, 2015
even though the business of governance started immediately the President
was sworn in on 29 May. Those castigating President Buhari also failed
to appreciate the fact that he would need some time to settle in and
examine the realistic state of things as opposed to the guess work that
electioneering campaigns engender, since the opposition did not have
access to raw government data before assuming office.
Back to my discourse, while I agree that certain offices could have been
immediately allocated and announced such as media team (which was the
first to be announced) alongside State Chief of Protocol, Principal
Private Secretary, National Security Adviser, Secretary to the Federal
Government and Chief of Staff, there are always processes and procedures
to be followed and complied with. If the President had woken up the day
after May 29 to roll out names of all his appointees, I’m sure many
would still have challenged the reasons for unilateral decisions without
constitutional adherence, due process or enough consultation. His
political party in particular and the cynics in general would have
frowned at his “dictatorial” tendencies and find an excuse to snooker
him. The Nigerian Constitution requires the President to obtain the
approval of the National Assembly before appointing Special Advisers.
More fundamentally, his Cabinet must be approved by the Senate and there
is therefore no point announcing names until the National Assembly has
been inaugurated.
As a matter of fact, we need to appeal most passionately to members of
the APC, to take it easy with President Buhari and have mercy on
Nigerians by reducing the palpable tension in the land as a result of
the battle for political posts and party supremacy. If Buhari is put
under too much pressure, it may turn out to be an invitation to
unmitigated disaster because he is bound to make appointments based on
pure sentiments rather than unadulterated merit. Sadly, it is no longer
hidden that the new governing party is being torn apart by this
self-immolating fiasco over who controls what. That itself is affecting
the polity and stoking up disaffection. An average Nigerian would hold
only one man responsible for the action or inaction of this government
and that is Mr President.
The impatience being displayed from Day One by Nigerians should be
instructive. It is not going to be an easy ride for the President and
his Vice President, Professor Osinbajo. All eyes are on them and the
expectations are very high. As I mentioned last week, we are dealing
with a generation of impatient and temperamental youths who won’t listen
to, or take, lame excuses. All they want is positive action that can
change Nigeria for the better. And they want this change sooner than
later. It is certain, therefore, that the honeymoon is going to be brief
if this affair is not carefully managed.
My prayer is that the President is able to build a team that would be
largely acceptable to the generality of the people for its credibility
and competence. Once that is settled, the rest should be easy to deal
with. I will suggest a mass attack approach in handling our myriad of
problems. The team must work together, strike together and defend
together. In short they must speak with one voice. Let me break it down.
They must not operate at a tangent. The challenges are intertwined and
can only be jointly disentangled.
The first sign of seriousness would be when this government comes up
with its plans to cut down on the atrocious costs of running government
whilst pledging to ensure that ordinary public servants are regularly
paid their salaries. I believe that Government has a duty to pay its
workers regularly each month. Even if they cannot do so, for reasons
beyond their control, one would expect that they pay those workers at
least half of their salary every month, until situations normalise and
the accumulated arrears can be settled. I salute the resilience of all
our longsuffering public servants. I never cease to marvel about their
selflessness in turning up at work, day in day out, despite not being
paid for many months. If our political office holders could demonstrate
the same diligence and discipline, our country would be well on the way
to recovery.
The days of leaders living large and going on a binge should be over.
Salaries are never the issue but the allowances and perks of office. The
tradition of going around in a long convoy of official cars together
with employing a large retinue of aides must be stopped in order to
reduce and discourage profligacy. Every effort must be made to convince
the people that this is not going to be the typical way of running
government in Nigeria where leaders have lived outlandishly while the
people wallow in abject poverty and squalid conditions.
The second priority should be to have the right people in the right
positions by bringing on board people with veracity and expertise
business and leadership. Those privileged to serve their nation should
begin to see beyond the glamour and appurtenances of power. Power has
become too psychedelic in our clime and this does not augur well for
growth and development. It distracts from the serious business of
governance. The flamboyance of politicians should be curtailed as much
as possible. There is no reason why any soul should travel around with a
battalion of government security personnel while an entire region of
Nigeria is absolutely abandoned to the rarefied savagery of terror gangs
from far and near. Every Nigerian needs protection, not just the
leaders and their families. When leaders downgrade their ribaldry, the
citizens would gladly take a cue from them and begin to emulate the
right and edifying attitudes they evince. For now, everyone is his own
government until the change we craved and fought for materialises.
The third is to fortify our institutions. Institutions make a society.
The different arms of government must respect one another. The executive
must recognise the sanctity of the legislature. The legislature must
respect their constitutional role and engage only in laws that can make
our nation more virile and respectable. The Federal Government, State
and Local Governments should co-exist as Federating units and eschew the
present master/servant relationships Each must get its allocations
independently and as at when due instead of the beggarly arrangement at
the moment. The interference from Federal to State and from State to
Local is reprehensible.
The Judiciary is supposed to be the last hope of the common man but it
has not been accorded the importance it deserves. Without justice, we
live in the jungle where might is right all the time. We shall be ruled
by kangaroos and mad dogs instead of men and women of conscience and
decorum. A nation where justice and equity are for sale, and readily
available to the highest bidder is living a calamitous existence. The
much touted independence of the judiciary must be made a reality. A
situation where civil servants who work under Judges are paid more than
the Judges themselves must stop. The Judiciary must control its own
budget. No more should there be the need for Presiding Judges to go cap
in hand to the Executive for solace and succour. In most civilised
countries, Judges earn more than any other public office holder or
politician. The rationale is simply to provide them with enough to
ensure their independence and impartiality. Any errant, greedy Judge can
then feel the full weight of the law.
The Police as the law enforcer must be properly empowered to do its job
well. All the noise about power and energy, infrastructure, education,
health, agriculture, and others are desirable but nothing could be more
important than the rule of Law and there can be no Law without an
enforcer. The almost incurable inferiority complex being suffered by our
Police must be exorcised urgently. They have been subjected to so much
indignity that has rendered them rudderless and ineffective. A lot of
the big or petty crimes in our society would have been better tackled if
the Police was allowed to do its job without undue interference from
the top. The personnel, resources and training necessary to improve our
police must be speedily implemented.
Once we strengthen our institutions, we shall then be able to
concentrate on physical development. The fortification of these
institutions doesn’t require much money but only the will to protect
their sanctity as it is done elsewhere. If the Commander-in-Chief can
set this in motion swiftly and explicitly, we would have started the
journey towards our restoration and beatification as a people. The
President is fortunate to have a Vice President who is well grounded in
most of those sectors and he should seize that uncommon opportunity to
hand him the task of spearheading that restoration.
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