Opinion
Buhari’s Reckless Rhetoric
General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd.) seems to have a penchant for violence unlike our President Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan, GCFR. Buhari wants a revolution in a democracy he once fought so hard to kill and then killed in 1983. That was not his first coup de’etat.
In 1975, a group of Colonels of the Nigerian Army namely, Col, Muhammadu Buhari, Col Abdullahi Mohammed (then Director of Military Intelligence), DMI, Col. Joseph Nanven Garba, Col Shehu Musa Yar’Adua and Col Ibrahim Taiwo conspired to overthrow General Yabubu Gowon after which they transfered power to General Murtala Muhammed as Head of State.
In 1983, barely months after President Shehu Shagari was re-elected as President of Nigeria for a second term, General Buhari, then General Officer Commanding (GOC), 3rd Armoured Division, struck with his military boys again.
Barely two years in his military government, the boys with whom he struck out President Shagari in 1983, struck him out. Since then, he kept quiet. He knew what the boys would do to him if he opened his mouth.
On October 17, 1986, Dele Giwa, Editor-In-Chief of Newswatch Magazine was summoned to the offices of the Ismaila Gwarzo led State Security Service (SSS) in Lagos where Colonel A.K. Togun accused him of planning a social revolution and of smuggling arms into the country. On October 19, 1986, two days later, Dele Giwa was killed by a parcel bomb which was delivered to his front door.
In 1984, General Buhari, in a campaign to brutally repress the press, promulgated Decree No.4 On July 4, 1984. The Guardian Newspaper and two of its journalists, Tunde Thompson, the Senor Diplomatic Correspondent and Nduka Irabor, who was Assistant News Editor, became the first victims of this very obnoxious decree. The two jouranlsits were eventually jailed for one year without an option of fine! Guardian Newspapers was fined Fifty Thousand Naira (N50,000.00). What was their crime? They had published in The Guardian of April 1 and 8, 1984 stories with the headlines “Eight Military Chiefs Tipped as Ambassadors” and “Haruna to Replace Hannaniya”. Imagine what would have happened to them if they had called for a revolution if the military did not leave power!General Buhari (rtd.) did not stop there in his drive to crush free speech and free press, he began to allocate import licence for the importation of newsprint to newspaper organisations. Media houses that were critical of his government were denied import licence while some other newspaper houses had their newsprint seized and shared by the federal government-owned newspaper houses.
Today, this same despot and dictator enjoys the beauty of free speech and even has the effrontery to call for a revolution in a democracy which he once fought hard to kill. We will not allow him again! If need be, we will take the war to his doorsteps.
General Buhari (rtd) went hungry for a long time. He went so hungry that he jumped up to Abacha when Abacha dangled a survivial carrot. He agreed to serve under a despot and dictator, late General Sani Abacha in whose watch Shehu Musa Yar’Adua was murdered and in whose watch, one of Nigeria’s most legendary politicians, businessman and philanthropist, Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola was thrown into jail. He died in that jail.
Now Sani Abacha instructed General Buhari to make sure that 20 per cent of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) proceeds should be channelled to the Military. Buhari, did not ask questions. General Buhari served as PTF boss under the worst leader that the Black African continent has ever produced. It took the Almighty God to take that leader down.
In that time, General Buhari kept quiet. He could not even dare talk about a revolution. He knew he had to survive. The same way he tossed others like Fela Anikulapo Kuti and many others who his press decree haunted and hounded.
When he (Buhari) was Head of State, he had no plans to hand Nigeria over to a democracy but he wants to enjoy the gains of our democracy. When Abacha suddenly decided to retire and automatically become civilian president, General Buhari did not call for a revolution. When Abacha was framing soldiers and civilians for coup plots, General Buhari did not call for a revolution. When Abacha’s killer squads were rampaging the country, killing and assassinating Nigerians, General Buhari did not call for a revolution.
While Buhari was pretending to be busy at work at PTF, Kudirat Abiola, Pa Rewane, Alex Ibru and many others were gunned down in cold blood, Buhari kept quiet. Now that we are working hard and across the clock to re-build a democracy which would have been far more matured by now if General Buhari and his leeches had not truncated the democratically elected government of President Shehu Shagari, this former dictator-general wants to call for a revolution.
Only in Nigeria!
George wrote from Port Harcourt.
George Kerley
Opinion
Man and Lessons from the Lion
Opinion
Marked-Up Textbooks:A Growing Emergency
Opinion
Humanity and Sun Worship

-
Maritime3 days ago
Minister Tasks Academy On Thorough-Bred Professionals
-
Maritime3 days ago
Customs Cautions On Delayed Clearance, Says Consignees May Lose Cargo
-
Maritime3 days ago
Lagos Ready For International Boat Race–LASWA
-
Maritime3 days ago
NCS Sensitises Stakeholders On Automated Overtime Cargo Clearance System
-
Maritime3 days ago
Shoprite Nigeria Gets New Funding to Boost Growth, Retail Turnaround
-
Politics3 days ago
I Would Have Gotten Third Term If I Wanted – Obasanjo
-
Sports3 days ago
Bournemouth, Newcastle Share Points
-
Sports3 days ago
Zidane’s Son Switches Allegiance To Algeria