Opinion
Nigerians’ Fate In Buhari’s Second Tenure
On December 14, 2018, President Muhamadu Buhari summoned governors of the 36 states of the federation for a meeting at the Presidential Villa, Abuja. ln the said meeting, the president reportedly unequivocally informed the state governors that the country’s economy was in a bad shape.
The president, no doubt, may have chosen to lay bare the real state of the nation’s economy so as to propel his lieutenants; the various state captains, to a reorientation towards governance.
On account of this, he challenged the governors to redouble efforts in addressing infrastructural deficiencies in their respective states in order to revamp the nation’s economy.
For merely admitting that the nation’s economy was in a bad shape, Atiku Abubakar, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate in the last presidential election, called for the resignation of the president.
Atiku’s reason was that the President had failed to apply new methods in addressing the challenges facing the country, and so the only tenable interpretation is that the president cannot fix the economic problem of the nation.
In a statement by his Special Assistant on Public Communication, Mr Phrank Shaibu, Atiku said the president’s confession that the economy was in a bad shape was a very sad one, stating that what Nigerians need now is leadership which has the political will, administrative experience and sound economic acumen to get Nigeria working again.
Presenting Buhari as one bereft of the technicalities in fixing the nation’s economic decay, a reason for which he ought not be re-elected, Atiku reminded Nigerians of a prediction he allegedly credited to the British multinational bank, HSBC, which states that “re-electing President Buhari in 2019 could plunge Nigeria into a deeper economic hardship”.
His words, “Or do we need a prophet to tell us that the President’s admission is a vindication of our long-held position, and indeed the forecast by HSBC recently cited by the Nigerian media where the bank said a second term for Buhari would greatly affect the economy of the country?”
While Atiku ruminated in his conviction of Buhari as a no longer viable material for the Aso Rock villa, he had people who, though privately, shared same thought with him.
For Mr. Donald Duke, presidential candidate of Social Democratic Party (SDP), the situation in Nigeria is so frightening. He described as unthinkable, any attempt to leave the fate of Nigeria in the hands of the current administration for yet another four years.
Duke was said to have hinged his own fears on the security and economic circumstances of the country, which to him, tend to expose the ineptitude of the government in power.
He is of the view that there is currently a general disenchantment in the country – the rich, the poor, the not-too-rich , the not- too- poor, all feeling that we can do better than we have been doing in the last 20 years or thereabout.
Duke tries to explain that the PDP was roundly rejected in 2015 because it was squandering the nation’s resources; and thereafter, a lot of hopes were placed on the APC and the reputation of President Muhammadu Buhari.
Unfortunately, in spite of this administration’s purported fight against corruption, Duke regrets that three years into the administration, “we are back to the way we felt in 2015”. He continues to see the country even more corrupt than ever.
He complained that Nigerians are rather learning to live with the security situation which has failed to improve. According to him, it was recently reported that Nigeria has the largest concentration of poor people in the world, a situation he foresees would rather get worse even as the population grows by the day.
The Bishop of Living Faith Church (aka Winners Chapel), Bishop David Oyedepo, had also in one of his interviews with newsmen, expressed his grouse with the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari.
Oyedepo alleged that the Buhari government has, since 2015, handled the killings of Nigerians especially those from the Middle Belt states with kid gloves. Speaking on the killings in some parts of the country, Oyedepo said: “Nobody is qualified to lead by morality without a feeling for people’s life”.
Howbeit, amidst complaints and criticisms, it is quite obvious that the ship of governance is such an enormous one to steer, just as we know that many make better players while they remain outside the field of play.
Nigerians have spoken, it is their pulse that is being expressed no matter how. The president, whose efforts the masses tend not to be satisfied with is also not deaf. I do not want to conclude that President Buhari’s intention for a second outing in power is to frustrate Nigerians.
Therefore, for those who ab initio adjudged him capable or otherwise, it is case closed. I think further acrimony via hate speech or overt insult may no longer be necessary. The president needs our cooperation as much as we need his.
The only credible means of choosing a leader, in a democratic setting like ours, is by election and President Muhammadu Buhari has, through this sole credible means, been returned the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Like every other leader would have an agenda for his subjects, President Buhari is not without a mission for Nigeria, only time will tell.
It is ,therefore, our own part to pray God to endow him with the political will, administrative experience and sound economic acumen to get Nigeria working again. Congratulations, Nigeria!
Sylvia ThankGod-Amadi
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