By
Reuben Abati
President Muhammadu Buhari’s strategists, if
they are at work at all, are chasing ants and ignoring the elephant in the
room. They do him great disservice. Their oversight is hubristically determined
either by incapacity or a vendetta-induced distraction. It is time they changed
the game and the narrative; time they woke up. *President Buhari |
It’s
been more than 15 months since the incumbent assumed office as President, but
his handlers have been projecting him as if he is a Umaru Musa Yar’Adua or a
Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, first time Presidents who could afford the luxury of a
learning period before settling down to the job, and who in addition must prove
themselves to earn necessary plaudits. In making this mistake, President
Buhari’s handlers created a sad situation whereby they have progressively
undermined his image.
The
truth is that Muhammadu Buhari is neither a Yar’Adua nor a Jonathan. He may
have sought the office of President in three previous elections, before
succeeding at his fourth attempt in 2015, but he came into office on a
different template. He had been Head of State of Nigeria (1983-85) and had
before then served his country at very high levels as military administrator,
member of the Supreme Military Council, head of key government institutions and
subsequently from 1985 -2015, as a member of the country’s Council of State,
the highest advisory body known to the Nigerian Constitution.
In
real terms, therefore, General Muhammadu Buhari did not need the job of
President. If he had again lost the election in 2015, his stature would not
have been diminished in any way. His place in Nigerian history was already
assured. That is precisely why it was possible to package him successfully as a
man on a messianic mission to rescue Nigeria from the People’s Democratic Party
(PDP) and whatever is ascribed to that in the emotion-laden field of Nigerian
politics.
He
might have acquired many IOUs when he assumed office in 2015, as all
politicians do, but he was not under any pressure to pay back and he was so
well positioned in the people’s reckoning and historically that he could call
anyone’s bluff and get away with it. That much is of course obvious. Many of
the persons and groups who could claim that they helped him to get to power a
second time are today not in a position to dictate to him.
Long
before such persons left their mother’s homes for boarding school, he had made
his mark as a Nigerian leader. He could look them straight in the eye and
cleverly put them in their place. Corrupt patronage is a strong element of
Nigerian politics and so far, President Buhari has shown a determination to
limit the scope of such politics. Whether that is right or wrong is a matter of
political calculations, and if current intimations are anything to go by, that
may even prove costly in the long run.
Nonetheless,
when a leader assumes office with his kind of helicopter advantages, it should
not be expected that he would hit the ground like a tyro in the corridors of
power. Not too many persons in his shoes get a second chance to return to power
after a gap of 30 years. As it happened in his case, he would be expected to
run the country as a statesman, not as a party man, as a bridge-builder, not as
a sectional leader and as father of all.
*Reuben Abati |
The
writer of his inaugural speech alluded to this last point in that borrowed
statement about belonging to everyone and to nobody. Charles de Gaulle of France originally made that statement in 1958
when he returned to power as President and founder of the Fifth Republic .
Charles de Gaulle had been an army General and one of the key figures in the
drama of World War II. In his second coming, De Gaulle built an unforgettable
legacy.
President
Buhari’s handlers may have had an idea of going in such direction but so far,
they have taken their eyes off the legacy project. The best way to remember a
President of the incumbent’s status is with regard to the legacy he leaves
behind. We do not need to travel to 20th century France to borrow an elaborate example.
We
have the home-made example of former President Olusegun Obasanjo. Like Buhari,
Obasanjo had been Head of State. Like him also, he returned to be civilian
President. Obasanjo did not try to impress Nigerians with the daily grind of
governance or obsession with the past. He played a legacy game from the first
day. The military had been excused out of power. Nigerians by 1999 were so
angry with military rule, they just wanted change. Obasanjo capitalized on that
and helped to prepare the foundations for the consolidation of the democratic
process.
In
doing this, he cultivated the image of a strong, charismatic leader. He also
refused to be trapped by ethnic or religious considerations. He had his own
faults and there was a lot to complain about as I did at the time, but looking
at the big picture, Obasanjo was a good manager of complex relationships, and
he had a good sense of humour. Out of office, it is possible indeed to speak of
the Obasanjo legacy in Nigerian history in rich and detailed terms.
There
are parallels between the circumstances that brought General Obasanjo and
General Buhari back to power, and if you wish, you could tease out the connections.
But while the former immediately began to build a legacy out of the
opportunity, the latter is yet to embark on a defined legacy mission. No
political leader ever built a legacy out of complaints and excuses.
An
obsession with the past does not produce a legacy; it defeats it. Nor is the
restriction of human freedom a legacy-building gesture. General Sani Abacha
violated the dignity of virtually every institution in the country but he is
remembered more for stabilizing the economy and for creating additional states,
particularly Bayelsa, where he is considered a hero. Obasanjo often deployed
power as if it was a whiplash, making his politics ambiguous, but that is not
the substance of his legacy.
A
leader’s legacy lies in those steps he takes to transform society for good and
for the people’s benefit. President Buhari’s handlers should begin to think of
what legacy he intends to leave behind. A legacy is something big and
memorable, not routine exertions or bland ceremonies, the type civil servants
are perpetually bringing before a sitting President to keep him in motion, in
the absence of movement. I do not intend to construct a possible legacy project
for the Buhari administration: a legacy is meant to be the product of careful
deliberation, vision and resolve, not something to be thrown up casually in a
limited newspaper copy.
But
there are grand moves to be made, and that should be done, because a legacy
cannot possibly arise from the mere fact of being President of a country twice
between the 20thand 21st centuries. If I must make a few suggestions, however,
it seems to me that there is a legacy-building opportunity in the same National
Political Conference Report that the government of the day seems determined to
ignore.
Even
if that 2014 Report is ignored: the issues relating to the restructuring of
Nigeria have been on the table since independence and more coherently since the
2005 Political Conference which was aborted due to a controversial attempt to
hand over a Third Term to the Obasanjo administration through the back door.
President Buhari has both the pedigree and the courage to take some bold steps
about how Nigeria is presently constituted and ensure not limited reform but
far-reaching transformation: create new states, merge some states, if possible,
review the revenue allocation formula, embark on legacy infrastructure
projects, introduce some alterations in key areas of national life, merge
parastatals to reduce cost and duplication, take up some neglected ideas about
public finance and give effect to them, revisit the oil and gas sector and
further reform it, crush Boko Haram.
*Dr. Reuben Abati was special
adviser on media and publicity to former President Goodluck Jonathan
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