Some compatriots say we wouldn’t know
the real man we have as our president until the chickens come home to roost in
2023. In that year, would President Muhammadu Buhari have removed the veil to
succumb to the current sacrilegious clamour to go for a fatal tenure extension?
Would he have given in to calls to trash the Constitution so he can walk on the
slippery ground euphemistically termed third term? Would he be the Buhari of
the wailers? Or of the hailers?
*Buhari |
In 2023, is Buhari going to remain the man we’ve always
known as our beloved president? Or a stranger foisted on us? Would he be the
bride we didn’t pay our dowry for? Would the husband discover he’d been
shortchanged at the point where only God would be the Unseen and Silent
Onlooker? Would there be a supplanter at work?
I disagree that time will answer these posers.
We don’t have to wait for 2023. We have the answers already. All we need to do
is not to consume script on offer that would consume us in return. So what are
we being given to satisfy our curiosities on Buhari’s third term theories?
The president says it’s a ‘hellish’ idea to
suggest he’d go for a third round. He won’t fall for it, he says. His words:
‘’…You should read the Constitution because I am not going to make a mistake.
Besides the age, I am not going to contest for third term because I will go by
the Constitution. The Constitution says two terms. I’m going to be frank here
because I won’t be needing anybody’s vote.’’
Can he be believed not to renege on a contract with himself? With the
Constitution? With the country? And with God when he swore on the Holy Book?
Can Buhari confront the coming army of praise-singers and call them to order?
Will he indeed go the whole hog in the interest of the nation and brand them
enemies of the state? That’s what they are, haters of the peace and order we
enjoy in the comfort of a document that has guaranteed seamless seasonal
transitions these past two decades of our democratic experience.
A member of his governing All Progressives
Congress, APC, has turned to the law court to remove the key constraints to
tenure elongation for Buhari, namely the relevant sections in the 1999
Constitution as amended. National Assembly member, Charles Enya, has filed a
suit at a Federal High Court in Abakaliki, Ebonyi, seeking the amendment of the
Constitution to enable Buhari go for an extended mandate. He wants an ‘’order
of the court nullifying and setting aside Sections 137(1)(b) 182(1)(b) of the
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, (as amended). These are
the sacrosanct provisions that deny a two-term president or governor from a
third. He wants the defendants in the suit, Attorney-General of the federation
and Justice Minister, Abubakar Malami, and the National Assembly, ‘’to delete
and expunge Sections 137(1)(b) and 182(1)(b) of the Constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria, (as amended).
This ranking member
of his own party is actually daring the president. On whose side will Buhari be
when it has to do with choosing between those who want to disrupt the peace of
the land by breaching the Constitution and his own avowed decision to uphold
that sacred document? He is calling Buhari to a duel over the soul of Nigeria.
The nation’s soul hangs on what honour we give the grundnorm that holds us
together for now, regardless of the tenuous grip of its threads. If, therefore,
the president has pooh-poohed another term after 2023, he would be sending the
wrong signals if he fails to move in indignation against those asking him to
deny himself. He must deal with them with heavier sledge than he has the
El-Zakzakys and Nnamdi Kanus.
A contrary body language would breed discontent, suspicions and less sublime
comments from the populace. We’ve recorded a few already. Rights activists and
senior lawyer, Femi Falana, says that from the subtext he reads, ‘’some forces
within the nation’s political landscape are preparing the grounds to launch a
third term campaign ahead of the 2023 Presidential race.’’ He says ‘’those
behind the moves have activated the process by a deliberate attempt to oppress
the media and whittle their influence and other perceived obstacles…Our country
has gone to the dogs.’’
Yoruba socio-cultural group, Afenifere, has questioned
Buhari for his ‘’inconsistency’’ on the third term debate. Its spokesman, Yinka
Odumakin, has looked back to the recent past of the president, and his verdict
is that he can’t be trusted to keep his word. He declared on behalf of
Afenifere: ‘’We have not forgotten that General Buhari told this country in
2011 that he would do only one term if he became President. He is now on a
second term…We have seen this fire before for this smoke not to be strange to
us…(We call on Nigerians to be vigilant and thwart any attempt to take Nigeria
for a ride once again.’’
It’s grave when citizens don’t trust their leaders. Both
parties would never be on the same page. It would be the riot of the language
of Babel all over again between them. Why aren’t most of our people believing
Buhari when he says third term is not part of what he’s thinking of after 2023?
Why can’t we believe that, as former Secretary to his government, Bababchir
Lawal, has assuredly told us, Buhari has an irrevocable appointment with his
cows in Daura, his village in Katsina, at the end of his 8-year tenure in
Abuja?
The problem is with a succession of Nigerian
leaders and governments that have failed in delivering the own end of the
social contract. We vote them into office and expect them to serve us with
commonly owned state resources. But they grow into blood-sucking leeches. Now,
parasites and their prey don’t speak the language of peace. The leech must
forsake its habit of destroying its host. First, our leaders must forsake their
preying inclinations in office. They have fleeced the people for too long. Then
let Buhari leave a lasting legacy on the vexed matter of tenured elective
office. Let him begin a campaign for a constitutional amendment that allows
only one term of five years in office for the president, governor, their vices
and lawmakers.
These are the noble and enduring legacies that
the Buhari Administration-and its successors-should pursue to return both the
governed and the government to where we were before Babel brought the
destructive leeches into the system.
*Ojewale
writes from Ogun State
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