By Femi Adesina
Some call it the Buhari bounce.
Others describe it as the Buhari effect. Yet some others say it is the Buhari
aura. One thing is however crystal clear. Things have not been the same in the
past 100 days in Nigeria ,
since Muhammadu Buhari assumed the presidency. A new sheriff has truly come to
town.
Exactly 100 days ago, he climbed
the podium at Eagle Square
in Abuja and
got inaugurated as president, 30 years after he had been toppled from power as
military head of state. He promised to belong to nobody, and to belong to
everybody. It is a pledge that still resonates loudly today, and will surely
echo for a long time to come.
*Buhari and his wife, Aisha
On a day like this, you would
expect a presidential spokesman to chronicle the achievements of his principal
in office. He has turned stone to bread, slain the dragon, and climbed Mount Olympus
in ten seconds. But that is not what I want to do. There are some intangible,
almost imperceptible achievements, but which run very deep, and are quite
fundamental. Those are the ones I’ll rather talk of, while we leave the
tangibles till some other day.
Oh, he’s escaping. There are no
concrete achievements, some wailing wailers would cry. True? Not true. I could
have decided to focus on the bloody nose being given to Boko Haram in the
North-east, which would see the country rid of insurgency soon, the rallying of
leaders of other neighboring countries to deploy a Joint Multinational Task
Force, the openness displayed about government finances and the welfare package
instituted for states that couldn’t pay salaries, the Treasury Single Account,
which would promote transparency and accountability in governance, the
disappeared fuel queues, fast-tracking of the cleanup of Ogoni land, reduction
in the cost of governance, and many others. But I will not focus on all those.
The day cometh!
When a new sheriff comes into
town, disorder gives way to order. Chaos flees. Impunity is swept away. Laxity
gives way to diligence, and people change their old, unedifying ways. When you
have a Wild, Wild West situation prevailing, the new sheriff comes, and stamps
his authority. Old things then pass away, behold, everything becomes new.
*Femi Adesina
(pix:lagosdailynews)
But what is bred in the bones
never goes out through the flesh. Immediately Buhari returned on May 29,
Nigerians knew that discipline was back. The bird of the homestead told the
ones in the bush, and they all sat up. No unnecessary chirping. Stealing is now
corruption, they whispered to themselves. God help you if you get caught.
Now, consider the situation with
electricity and with our refineries. Electricity has climbed to about 5,000
Megawatts. Some refineries, which had not produced a drop of fuel for years,
have cracked into life. Even the perennial queues in our petrol stations have
disappeared, vanished. Is it because Buhari threw billions of dollars at the
problems? No. Those things simply responded to the presence of the new sheriff
in town. Those who manned those schedules could afford to be laid back in the
past. But not anymore! The music has changed, and the dance steps must follow
suit. And would Buhari take credit for the newfound zeal and efficiency? Not
the plain and honest man from Daura. The broadcaster Omotayo Omotoso had come
to the presidential villa to interview him sometime in July. And she had asked
what the magic wand he waved was, that refineries, long comatose, had sprang
back to life. The President responded that it would be dishonest of him to have
claimed he did anything. He had not touched refineries at all. But unknown to
the President, he did something. He had swept into town with his reputation for
efficiency, and for achieving results. And the refineries, fuel supply,
electricity supply, responded to the new sheriff. May things continue to get
better till the change becomes enduring and irreversible. Amen somebody!
Another imperceptible but
momentous achievement is the faith that Nigerians now have in their leader.
Yes, the opposition numbers in millions, and naturally so. A political party
had held power at the centre for 16 years, and its loyalists would not simply
disappear, or get converted overnight. About 12 million Nigerians had voted for
the presidential candidate of that party in the March 2015 general elections.
Would they just cross over to the winning side? It often takes awhile. But
despite all that, a great deal of Nigerians, a vast majority, believe in the
new sheriff. And that is great achievement. A big deal. When the citizenry
believe in their leader, and almost can swear by him, it is no mean feat. The
NOI polls, in a survey in July, revealed that over 70% of Nigerians were happy
with the Buhari administration. And I can bet that the percentage would rise,
as the months and years roll by. Faith in leadership is something that does not
come cheap.
And this one! Even our foreign
reserve knows that a new sheriff is in town, and has responded appropriately.
In June, just one month into office, and with the plugging of some leakages and
loopholes, foreign reserve surged from $29 billion to $31.89. Holy Moses! Just
in one month. Well, that is what a new sheriff can do. He brings sanity,
confidence and probity to the system. And you would agree that Nigeria
needs such shot in the arm, if we consider recent past experiences, when our
treasury was like a bag filled with holes.
An evidence of the believability
of the new sheriff, and the confidence reposed in him, is the disclosure that came
this week from Ambassador Godknows Igali, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of
Power. He said since Buhari came to office, not a single sabotage of the power
infrastructure has been recorded, and it is one of the reasons that electricity
supply keeps improving. But did Buhari line up soldiers across the power
infrastructure? Did he hire a combination of OPC, Egbesu, MASSOB, MEND and
Arewa youths to keep vigil? No. Just believability. Those who are so angry with
the country, and would go to any extent to sabotage development, have decided
to give the sheriff a chance. They have heard of his reputation. A man that
believes in fairness and justice. He would do right to all parts of the
country.
Can you imagine the respect our
sheriff commands on the international scene, and how it redounds to the glory
of the average Nigerian? American President, Barack Obama said Buhari came onto
his job with reputation of integrity and a clearcut agenda. Ambassador Johnny
Carson, also during the U.S trip in July, said the Nigerian President was a man
of honour and integrity. Everywhere he goes, the Nigerian President is lauded
and garlanded for his virtues. And the image of the country is burnished and
repositioned in the process. Surely, greater days are ahead.
Some people say the sheriff did
not hit the ground running, as he is yet to constitute his cabinet in 100 days.
And I usually ask such people: when you hit the ground, and you land in mud,
how do you begin to run immediately? You can only sink deeper, if you attempt
to run. The thing to do is to first clear the mud, till you get to terra firma,
and then you can begin to run.
President Buhari has spent time
trying to clean the Augean stable he inherited. And he is succeeding. Sheriffs
can either come in with guns blazing, shooting malefactors to kingdom come, or
simply stamp their authority on the situation by sheer force of personality and
presence. The Nigerian sheriff seems to have opted for the second option for
now. But we should never forget that sheriffs are licensed to shoot. And those
shots can be lethal for lawbreakers. In a matter of months, you can ask those
who had bled our treasury to the point of death. They’ll have stories to tell.
- Adesina is
Special Adviser, Media and Publicity to President Muhammadu Buhari
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