Opinion
Political Choices And Consequences
Darkness, long queues, and dirty fuel are now our current reality in the so-called, Giant of Africa; and by May 29th, 2022, we would have been reaping the consequences of the terrible choice we made seven years ago.
This past week, while Mr President was in the UK for his routine medical checkup, the National Grid collapsed twice. The first, around 10 am on Monday, March 14th, and the second at about 5 pm on Tuesday, March 15th, throwing Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt, and other major cities into darkness. This is happening at a time when the whole country is still reeling from the effects of the dirty fuel saga caused by the phenomenal negligence of this same government.
It is hard to blame everything on President Buhari, but anyone who understands the process of government knows that the buck stops on his table. Either he articulates his policies, or they are articulated for him, but in any case, he must approve them before any implementation. Even those who are saddled with the implementation of policies are also appointed by him. Therefore, Mr President cannot be exonerated from the failure of any agency of the Federal Government.
In the first instance, as the Minister for Petroleum, his policies, actions, and inactions in the past seven years led to this national embarrassment of dirty petrol. Up till now, no one has been sacked or suspended; and the firms accused of importing the off-spec petrol have denied their involvement, even Duke Oil which is a subsidiary of NNPC. This particular national misadventure is another major stain on President Buhari’s government; and knowing what we already know about this government, this is another open door for corruption at a scale never seen before.
I have always argued with people in my inner circle that the best way to judge politicians or governments is through their own utterances, policy statements, and actions. We must hold President Buhari’s government accountable for everything he said, policy statements from him or his spokesmen and his actions, and also his body language. Remember they told us when he took office in 2015 that his body language was enough to eradicate corruption. Really? Looking through the prism of these parameters, even a blind man who voted for Buhari in 2015 is now fully aware of his mistake.
During his inauguration, when he stated that, he was for nobody, but for everybody. Everybody was elated; some said our long awaited messiah had finally come. We were deceived because he never told us the truth from his heart? He has actually proven himself to be the most divisive and worst nepotistic president ever to occupy Aso Rock? In every appointment, he made sure to let us know clearly that some sections of this country exist only at the mercy of a particular section. In my more than four decades of existence, I have never seen our country divided as it is today; nor have I ever imagined our green white green stained as it is today.
Before the elections in 2015, President Buhari stated that there was nothing like subsidy. Today, in the face of rising crude prices, occasioned by the war in Ukraine, the IMF has projected that if nothing is done, Nigeria will spend as much as N4 trillion in subsidy in 2022. Bear in mind that this figure is almost 25 per cent of the 2022 budget.
This government also promised to get our refineries working in six months, but almost seven years after taking over power from the PDP, and millions of dollars in maintenance, we are still importing fuel instead of being a net exporter, going by the promises made by then candidate Buhari. They also promised to build modular refineries in the six core Niger Delta states; now at the twilight of their tenure, this is still a mirage.
Even though it hurts to discuss the war in Ukraine, due to the loss of lives, and damage to historical sites and infrastructure; the truth remains that the Arab nations are smiling to the bank, while we are crying. Why? Because the pimple of subsidy has now become a cancerous tumour threatening our current and future survival.
Most of us are trying very hard not to call our fatherland a failed state, but how else would you describe a country where those in power act with reckless abandon, void of any real form of accountability. It is sickening trying to comprehend the recent staggering revelations by the Accountant General of the Federation in a report to the National Assembly, showing a litany of discrepancies, and thereby putting in full display the monumental corruption in the NNPC under President Buhari as Minister of Petroleum Resources. In a saner clime, the bill for his impeachment should already be on the floor of the Senate by now; and the masses would have been on the streets, calling for his resignation. But no one would entertain such a thought because of the fallout of the #EndSARS protest.
The AuGF is asking the National Assembly to compel the MD, of the defunct NNPC, now NNPC Ltd, Mele Kyari, to account for 107.2 million barrels of crude meant for domestic consumption, explain how it remitted only N608,710,292,773.44 to the Federation Account, as against N1,272,606,864,000 on its record, millions of liters of premium motor spirit sent to various depots across the country, but missing without a trace, and a sundry of other discrepancies in 2019 running into hundreds of billions of Naira.
Recently, Bola Ahmed Tinibu, responded to those criticising his presidential ambition on the grounds of his age and recent ill health, saying that he was not seeking a menial job that requires so much physical energy. In a sense, I agree with him to a very large extent, Buhari’s failure is not due to his age, rather, due to his aptitude, nepotism, and most importantly, his ineptitude at picking men. After all, former president of the US, Theodore Roosevelt led from the wheelchair, and the current governor of the state of Texas, Greg Abbott, is also leading from the wheelchair, and doing very well.
Buhari’s policies, these seven years have orchestrated an exchange rate that has gone out of control, from N197 per dollar in 2015 to more than N500 per dollar today. The inflation rate is hovering around 17 per cent currently, but it was 9.01 per cent in 2015; and as a consequence, the cost of living is rising at an alarming rate. Remember also, that due to unprecedented maladministration under this government, we were named the poverty capital of the world; but before APC took office, Nigeria was not only the largest economy in Africa, we were also among the global best destinations for foreign direct investment.
By: Raphael Pepple
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