By Bello Maigari
Senator Kashim Shettima has again amused serious-minded
Nigerians, this time, opening up on how his principal in the All Progressives
Congress, APC presidential ticket, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu would combine the
hospitality of General Sani Abacha and the competence of Muhammadu Buhari as
president.
*Shettima and Tinubu
Speaking last Thursday at the 96th-anniversary celebration of
the Yoruba Tennis Club in Ikoyi, Lagos state, the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN
quoted him as saying Nigeria needs the “hospitality” of Abacha. For Nigerians unfamiliar with Abacha, a slight recall of some of
the worst abuses in human rights are easy to recall.
The extra-judicial killings of Mrs Kudirat Abiola, Alfred Rewane
and many others recorded and unrecorded are living testimonies of the
hospitality that Shettima wants Nigerians to remember. Shettima’s principal, Tinubu was driven to exile like many other
Nigerians who kicked against the military regime’s decision to usurp the
mandate given to Chief MKO Abiola.
How Abiola’s children and the many, many Nigerians who felt the
direct kicks from Abacha would consider him hospitable is one that is bound to
be perplexing. Shettima also said that Nigeria needs a leader with a commitment
like Buhari.
Mentioning Buhari as a reference for a good leader is one that
is bound to amaze anyone, and certainly not in the matter of commitment.
Has Shettima forgotten that it was Buhari’s commitment in not
naming his ministers for six months after he was sworn-in in 2015 that was
blamed for the loss of investors’ confidence and other related economic
reasonings that led Nigeria into the first of the Buhari recessions?
Or is it commitment to the principle of Federal Character that
has seen Nigerians of every hue cry out over marginalisations? It is even
ridiculous that the Fulani beneficiaries of Buhari’s lopsided appointments have
recently been shouting out over his unbiased favouritism.
Or is it commitment to the three key election promises he made
in the advent of the 2015 election of security, improved economy and anti-corruption?
One may well ask Shettima which one of these three key promises
has Buhari’s commitment helped to address? Is it in the importation of
petroleum products that even with Buhari as minister of petroleum that Nigeria
has now ballooned importation of products and with it raised oil subsidy
payments to dubious levels that have left many in awe?
Shettima may have forgotten that not too long ago, President
Buhari openly said that he was tired and looking forward to retiring to his
Daura base. That certainly is not the image of one who has a commitment to
Nigeria and its problems.
One would not go the length here to suggest as some say that
with his approvals to our neighbours, especially Niger Republic, that Buhari is
more committed to foreigners around us than Nigerians living from Bama to Benin
many of whom have not seen his gestures in governance.
We also do know that rather than a holiday in Lagos or Langtang
that Buhari would rather holiday in London. Enough of Shettima on Buhari’s
commitment.
If anyone needed any more insight into what is a Freudian Slip,
Shettima’s verbal evocations are no better.
A Freudian Slip is defined as “an intentional error regarded as
revealing subconscious feelings.”
For a man who not too long ago admitted that he would handle the
nation’s military war against Boko Haram while Tinubu as president would handle
the economy, this is another revelation.
For a man who has been credited with many controversial
statements ranging from the subjugation of the Igbo to the revelations from the
leaked tape with Senator Ibikunle Amosun, the latest verbal emission from
Shettima needs proper interrogation.
Every appearance of Shettima on the national stage seems to
provoke some sort of verbal explosion that draws incredulity.
Rather than these verbal bombs, one would rather expect Shettima
to explain what he did with his mandate as governor of Borno State and the
legacy he left there. One would expect him to explain what happened that he
ignored the advice of the then minister of state for education, Nyesom Wike for
him to close the Government Secondary School, Chibok but rather left it open
for Boko Haram to pick the innocent girls.
One would also want him to speak on his legacy in the Senate and
what he has done so far.
We would also expect others on the tickets of the other major
political parties to weigh in and also give their accounts. One may be familiar
with the SMART agenda of Governor Ifeanyi Okowa, the Peoples Democratic Party,
PDP presidential running mate in Delta, and also, his legacies in his single
term in the Senate including pushing through the National Health Bill.
These are the kind of discourses and verbal assertions one would
expect from Shettima and not the kind of verbal assault of combing the worst of
our leaders, Abacha and Buhari for us in the next dispensation.
•Maigari,
an activist, writes from Abuja
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