Saturday, 12 December 2015

A Wedding Proposal

By Adamu Adamu

(This was first published by the DailyTrust Newspaper on January 4, 2014. The article followed the multiples of wedding events that occurred on December 28, 2013. Given that it is another December and wedding invitations are already in the air signalling a repeat of what happened that year, the Editor thought it right to reproduce here the article. Do have a nice time reading.)

Last Saturday, I had more than fifteen invitations to wedding ceremonies taking place on the same date at almost the same time in six different towns. It has in fact become a regular fact of current living that there is hardly any weekend without a multiplicity of invitations to weddings or to naming ceremonies. Many people now do more work during the weekend—driving, attending, witnessing, donating and feasting—than they do during week days.

And so regularly do these invitations come that for those who wish to accept them, especially if they have to drive to do so, the invitations defeat the logic behind a no-work weekend on which workers are supposed to wind down after a strenuous, five-day, 40-hour working week. And in any case, it will be impossible for anyone to attend so many functions at the same time in so many different places. Clearly, this is not sustainable: you cannot attend ten functions every weekend; and if you can decide to refuse to attend some, you can decide not to attend any—and do something better for all.

Before the subtle bureaucratisation of the wedding culture marriages used to be solemnised on Thursday afternoons. But all this was to change with the rise of the bureaucracy and its work free Saturdays, the rise in the number of university graduates in the region, the development of pan-regional friendships, the rise in inter-ethnic marriages, the rise of the old-boy network, the creation of states, the ease of communications, the development of road networks and, now, the rise of tokunbo.

Now, if the groom is Kanuri, the bride may be Nupe, the two having been classmates in ABU, Zaria or the groom is a bank worker in Lafiagi. Or the bride may be from Kogi, the groom from Adamawa and the best man from Sokoto. And it is all like that all over the place; and when a particular date is fixed, it wouldn’t be known that five other classmates are getting married on the same day in different states. But even if it is known, there are more marriages than there are days in the year.

First of all, having to travel every weekend to weddings can be a waste of precious time. Second of all, and for those having to travel distances in excess of 500 kilometres, it becomes a cause of travel fatigue and toll on health. Third of all, accepting the invitations comes with the possibility of accidents, the probability of armed robberies and other equally fatal dangers.

And it is such a waste of precious resources: because the new family that the wedding is supposed to join in wedlock can do with the fortune that is spent on fuelling vehicles, feeding on the road, repairs after breakdowns and several other travel-related expenses incurred on the way to the wedding; so, instead of travelling and exposing themselves to danger and unnecessary losses, invitees should stay at home and add the cost of fuel, feeding and repairs that they will have spent if they travel to the quantum of gudunmoya, the contribution and wedding presents, that they intend to give the couple.

It is hereby proposed that all Muslim parents and guardians accept to fix subsequent wedding dates for their children and wards only twice in the year—at the times of the two eids—Eid al-Fitr and Eid el-Kabir; and for Christian parents, Christmas and Easter; or, indeed, vice versa, since it is the fact of the holiday not sacrament that is at issue here. Unless it is for the first child getting married or for those who are intimately involved by way of close family ties or ties of best friendship or the people of the bride or the groom, no one outside town should be invited—and any invitations sent to persons out of town should be for information only—not least because those in other towns will also be busy with arrangement for their own wedding ceremonies. Henceforth, marriages should be local affairs—for the people of the town and surrounding villages.

After starting at an experimental level, it should be extended so that at every local government or divisional level, mass weddings should be arranged at these stated times so that people have only two occasions to attend; and on these two occasions all the tens of marriages to which people will have been invited several times during the year will now be solemnised in a one-off ceremony.

The advantages of this type of wedding are so many and so obvious that perhaps they don’t need demonstration: a mass wedding encourages matrimony, which is the greatest institution in the world and which is now under a determined cultural existential attack that enjoys the support of the entire Western modernist tradition; it helps focus attention on the family unit, that circle of love, and the sacredness of its creation and necessity for its perpetuation; it helps make the cost of marrying bearable for the less fortunate members of this society; and it creates an avenue for the wealthy and for the state to encourage and contribute to raising the moral tone of society.

But the objective of mass weddings is not just to cut the travel time of well wishers or even put a man and a woman into legal cohabitation; it is to create a family that becomes a building block for a strong society that is independent and productive.

Through economies of scale, mass weddings can go a long way in helping to mitigate the cost of wedding for the individual needy groom; and the state or local government can help subsidise the whole process by paying the dowry, contributing towards paying rent , the purchase of furniture or accepting to provide—or, better still, augment—start-up family capital.  This intervention should be in the nature of a contribution by society to someone in need of it but who will have, if necessary, shouldered it on his own, but with difficulty. For, if someone cannot pay the dowry or provide the bare basic necessities, it should be feared that he will not be able to support a spouse; and such a person should be helped to get, not a wife but, some work to do—and only marry when he can support a family.

It therefore makes little sense, for instance, to embark on a journey for a wedding, spend 30,000 Naira on the way and give the groom 50,000 Naira when you can stay at home and send him 100,000 Naira—saving yourself manifold dangers, your car wear and tear and making the groom richer at the time he needs to be. While our marriages are not exactly profit-motivated enterprises, and nothing done for love or friendship will ever be wasted or become in vain, we shouldn’t allow this society to become married to practices that are counterproductive.But the mass wedding suggested here is different from the one pioneered by Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso of Kano State for divorcees and widows and emulated by Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo of Gombe State, though it shares all its advantages; and in order to avoid the situations the governors are seeking to remedy, this society must learn to give woman the respect and dignity that God has given her and which she deserves.

However, as this ceremony-addicted, fun-loving society revels in marriage parties and wedding receptions, it cares nothing about the high and easy divorce rate, especially in Hausa society, which claims to follow the Islamic law of marriage. There is nothing Islamic and nothing legal about what is being done to women: the truth is that here women are vulnerable, defenceless and beautiful—and no one is doing anything about these except the last, which is the height of selfishness; but an even bitterer truth is that while Islam has given woman her greatest freedom, Muslims have put her under the worst form of bondage. That is why today the activity they do with the greatest zeal is the marriage ceremony.

This enthusiastic, comprehensive and elaborate nature of the involvement of women, especially our purdah-imprisoned hapless womanhood, in the biki maelstrom is only symptomatic of the closure and denial to them of all other avenues of more productive self-expression by this society. While the get-together and the gift-exchanges do strengthen the bonds of blood and friendship, our womenfolk should be more dignified and held in greater reverence than be restricted to trifles and such inconsequence. Surely, the man hours, and even more especially the woman hours wasted in the wedding process could be put to better cultural and economic use—for the upbringing of children, for instance or for the self-actualisation, the confidence and the independence that come with earning a living.

But even while seeking to ease the difficulties encountered in the effort to tie the knot of holy wedlock, the society must do all it can to protect the sacredness and sanctity of the marriage institution from pollution by the encroachment of the baseless claims of such moral and cultural distortions as the same-sex marriage being promoted by the worldwide, Zionist-inspired homosexual movement, the psychosis that is called single-parenthood and other unsavoury cultural fallouts of the gender nonsense that seeks to create needless, uncreative tension within the family unit. As it does all this, it must keep in mind that culture is dynamic and it is our duty to help change it to make life and living more convenient for everyone—so, everyone should pray for the success of new couples wherever he happens to be. But don’t forget to send the cash.

Friday, 31 July 2015

Letter to Bauchi State Governor

By Mukhtar Jarmajo

Your Excellency may wish to accept my hearty congratulations as you assume the mantle of leadership. It is my hope and prayer that you will succeed in the attempt to reposition Bauchi state to greater heights. Sir, before I delve into the meat of my epistle, let me quickly remind you that whilst it is true that as governor you call the shots in Bauchi, before God however, we are all mere mortals whose fates are in His hands.

As such, Your Excellency should remember that ultimate power belongs to God and He thus has knowledge and control of every affair. It pleases Him to see you governor today not because you are the wisest or most educated person in Bauchi state, but because that was His wish. Remember that whilst it is His wish that you are governor today, He is also testing you as a servant. So as your reign lasts, tamper justice with mercy and seek guidance and wisdom from Him in every matter so you are right in every decision.

As a governor you are by interpretation the state chief executive who is by default the chief accounting and security officer of Bauchi state. Therefore, the safety, well-being and happiness of the entire people of this state rest on Your Excellency as a responsibility. Hence, from you we expect nothing short of commitment and dedication to the Project Bauchi state. We expect Your Excellency to go to every constitutional length and breadth in pursuit of a greater Bauchi state.

It is hoped that Your Excellency will work relentlessly and assiduously in the coming years at the expense of your comfort, health and even popularity just to meet the yearnings and aspirations of Bauchi people. Given this, there is no gainsaying the fact that the task before you is daunting especially with the fact that you inherited a state which immediate past was run much like a private estate. But with determination and a formidable team, I trust no challenge is insurmountable.

Your Excellency, the success of a regime is majorly determined by the tendencies of the people drafted in to give you a helping hand in delivering democratic dividends to the good people of Bauchi state. In simpler terms, the quality of your lieutenants will vehemently determine the extent to which you can meet the yearnings and aspirations of the people.

Given this, when constituting a team, you must make sure it comprises people of experience and proven integrity. They should be people of vast knowledge in government, the society and life generally. Thus at this juncture, I would want to say without any fear of contradiction that your Deputy, Nuhu Gidado is vital to this regime just as Garba Gadi was to the erstwhile Yuguda government.

With him and others yet employed who expectedly will be of almost equal expertise and commitment to nation building, you will find it interesting the effort at unveiling the package of promises made in the cause of campaigns. Indeed, Your Excellency has made so many promises and I assure you that as politically alert as we are, Bauchi people are watching you steer the affairs of our state.

In few years to come, Bauchi state expects to witness unprecedented improvement in education, health, security, pipe-borne water supply, rural development and electrification, agriculture and roads to mention a few. And of course for you to get a good grade on your score-card in the end, Your Excellency must understand that you have a micro-economy to manage where an enabling environment for economic activities will be created with a view to consolidating the state`s Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).

It is thus only obvious that one of the ways to halt Bauchi state`s drift towards economic collapse resulting from years of reckless economic tendencies is diversifying its economy. Rather than rely on monthly financial grant from Abuja, Your Excellency can think of enhancing and exploring the state`s agricultural and mineral deposits potentials. Like many other northern states, Bauchi is blessed with mineral deposits as well as vast arable land that if properly utilized can provide food security and as well generate internal revenue enough to cater for the state's financial demands.

Bauchi state has over forty mineral raw materials including Gypsum, Granite, Iron-ore, Gemstone, Kaolin and Galena to mention a few. Sir, any of them if well tapped can turn around the state into an economic heaven. All that is needed is political will and policies to protect miners and create an enabling market for selling the tapped resources. The first step towards doing this is to churn out an efficient data base that can portray the tripod-stand of the mineral deposits so that the true potentials of the deposits can be ascertained. Your Excellency, whilst I am aware that federal government laws do not favour state governments as far as mineral deposits are concerned, I believe nothing is impossible with cooperation and understanding.

Meanwhile, at elementary level, agriculture is referred to as the cultivation of crops and rearing of animals for the use of man. Cultivation of crops and rearing of animals provide thousands of employment opportunities for both skilled and unskilled labour. From the farm work itself to agro-allied industrial activities and to manufacturing of chemicals and fertilizer, a lot of human resources are involved.

If Your Excellency is serious about creating employment opportunities show interest in agriculture by heavily investing so much time and resources in it. Government should establish farms and in a manner as to lead by example, Your Excellency, commissioners, permanent secretaries, state legislators and other top government functionaries should also establish your respective farms; then legislations and policies be made to make a ready market for farm produce. And in this regard, I recommend the resuscitation of the defunct Commodity Board.

Your Excellency, once Bauchi state government puts enough weight on mining of mineral deposits and agriculture, the state will obviously become a hub of economic prosperity. And naturally, infrastructures will spring up. But as it were, to make any meaningful achievements you must be patient, courageous and altruistic. And very importantly, you must also be steadfast as a leader; for it is only when you stand for something that you can achieve so many things.

Jarmajo is on Twitter: @mukhtarjarmajo

Saturday, 18 July 2015

An afternoon with President Buhari

By Dele Momodu

Fellow Nigerians, let me confess that in over 30 years of writing no President has ever reacted directly or positively to my constant admonitions, lamentations or commendations. Rather, most of the time, their aides, cronies and acolytes used to fire darts and barbs at us from every direction. We were called unprintable names that our parents did not give us and by now we are so used to being abused and harassed by those who can never learn useful lessons from the past. You can thus fathom a guess as to how I must have felt when Femi Adesina’s call sneaked in on me like a thief in the night.

I had written an article titled “A Desperate Memo to President Buhari” in which I tried to let the President feel the pulse of the people, especially those who felt he was being too sluggish about running the affairs of state. This memo to the President came on the heels of an earlier intervention titled “In Search of Patience” which unfortunately failed to achieve its objective. My mission had been to persuade my fellow citizens about giving the President some time to settle in before they start complaining about the pace and tempo of governance. I soon realised that rather than the dust settling down matters actually got exacerbated. In the desperate memo, I then attempted to tell the President some home truth about the things he could do urgently and without much ado. I took that chance because of the fact that I knew him to be a voracious reader of news, especially if it pertained to him. The gamble certainly paid off.

The President and his key aides read the “Desperate memo” which had gone viral. A particular online newspaper chose to sensationalise and slant the story in a manner I never intended or envisaged. Their version was garnished with salt and pepper by exhuming an old picture of mine in which I had cried for my mentor, Chief Moshood Abiola, and it was now tilted and titled “Dele Momodu Weeps for President Buhari”. If the idea was to draw a wedge between me and the Presidency, it actually backfired and failed woefully to paint me as someone who has dumped President Buhari within weeks of attaining power. One influential man in the Presidential villa, Nura Rimi, actually saw the post and felt sufficiently alarmed that a key supporter like me should not be allowed to turn his back on the Presidency. He mentioned his fears to Special Adviser Media, Femi Adesina, a childhood friend and brother from our early days at Ife. They decided to intimate the President on the necessity to reach out to me immediately. The President gave his instant approval.

I was away from the country when I received Femi Adesina’s call. My initial reaction before answering was that he was going to complain and grumble like most of his predecessors who only called whenever they felt you had written an unsavoury piece about their principal. At the very best, they would engage you in meaningless rigmarole, or issue veiled threats, by accusing you of being paid by their enemies. But Femi was refreshingly different. After exchanging pleasantries, he said “Bob Dee, the President would want to have a one-on-one meeting with you after reading your latest article.” The message sounded too unusual to be true because I had always seen Nigerian Presidents as the most unreachable human beings on earth. I told Femi I would be more than happy to head back to Nigeria to meet a man who has restored hope and dignity to every Nigerian.

The only problem was how to find a slot to squeeze me into the President’s over-tight schedule. I waited for about a week without an appointment and then suddenly I got a text from State Protocol: “Good morning sir. A window for you to see Mr President on Wednesday 15th July between 14.45 and 15.00hrs in his office has been created. Kindly note accordingly… SCOP” A similar text was also forwarded to me from Femi. I was pleasantly surprised when I received a written notice of audience from Permanent Secretary, State House, Engineer Nebolisa O. Emodi. Subsequent follow-up calls were made to my Lagos office as reminders to me.

The level of professionalism and efficiency displayed was commendable. It was a radical departure from the past when I met a previous Nigerian President in London and was invited to meet him in Abuja. I came for the appointment at the scheduled time but was unable to see him for days. The Chief Security Officer at the time was not so friendly. He took me into his office and lectured me on all the no-go areas of discussion in the Presidential Villa, which rendered my visit totally useless.

The Aso Rock I returned to last Wednesday was virtually transfigured. All the security checks were professionally handled. The guys were strict but friendly about it. Some even joked about following me on social media. In a matter of minutes, I was welcomed into Femi Adesina’s office by Senior Special Assistant, Media and Information, Garba Shehu. It was a happy reunion for the three of us old friends and I felt very much at home. I told Femi I wanted to pay courtesy call on the State House correspondents before meeting the President. I always give priority to my colleagues no matter how junior and went round shaking hands with most of those on duty. I promised to address them after meeting the President.

The day was made extra-special by the presence of the iconic diplomat and former Secretary-General of The Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, whose appointment to see the President was just ahead of mine. A great fan of my column, he came into the waiting lounge and he spoke for a couple of minutes with Femi and I. He inspired me as usual with his oratorical skills. “Dele, I continue to read your column with relish” he said matter-of-factly!

Thereafter, I was soon invited to climb the stairs leading to the President’s office. Since there was no prior agenda sent about the topic of discussion, I had visualised the likely scenario and rehearsed accordingly. I also jotted down some salient points because I was determined to maximise the 15 minutes allotted to me without overstaying my welcome. For me, it was a rare honour and privilege to sit down all by myself with the President of Africa’s greatest nation. It was important to pour out the boisterous content of my soul in a jiffy.

As time ticked away while I waited, I engaged myself in an interior monologue, otherwise known as stream-of-consciousness in Literary Appreciation. Then came the appointed time and I was ushered into the President’s room. I was stunned to see the President already waiting for me by the door. Though we had met on two previous occasions, I didn’t quite know how this particular meeting was going to pan out because on those occasions he was still a co-contestant at first and an aspirant/candidate on the latter visit in London.

I’ve met several Presidents in and out of power but the aura is never the same. The Buhari I met at his holiday apartment in London about four months ago, after his speech at Chatham House, was not the Buhari I met and discussed with last Wednesday. The new Buhari has the power to do and undo. As the aphorism goes, he can turn a certified and certificated pauper into an instant billionaire with a mere stroke of the pen, and vice versa. More importantly, the destiny of nearly 200 million complex beings resides within his palms. Yet here was the powerful man himself welcoming and leading me to a chair very close to him.

President Buhari fired the first shot right from the second I walked through the door: “Let me tell the truth that I was forced to see you by your friends here…” Wow, he would rather give credit to his aides. That was uncommon in our clime. The President was not yet done on the issue because as soon as I sat down, he fired another salvo: “I don’t know if I should tell you this but I suspect Femi is working for you!” and we both exploded raucously. I’m loving this man more and more, I told myself. By then, he had inadvertently relaxed me totally and we were like two old buddies. I had been told endlessly about his supposed taciturnity; that you could sit with him for hours doing all the talking while the President would respond in only a few words. But to my biggest bewilderment and pleasant surprise, the President actually opened up to me and responded to my suggestions. In short we had a dialogue rather than the monologue I had programmed myself to expect in a worst case situation.

I was glad he had allowed two wonderful photographers, Bayo Omoboriowo and Sunday Aghaeze, to join us, as well as a cameraman from NTA. It would have been sad to tell the world the cordial nature of my meeting with the President without solid evidence. This is because he had asked everyone out after the photo-opportunities were comprehensively dealt with. I seized the opportunity to present a copy of my forthcoming book, PENDULUM: A Book of Prophesies, which is a compilation of some of my landmark essays in the last five years or thereabout. Not only did he show some excitement, he actually requested for my autograph: “Please, sign it for me so that people could see I got the original copy from you…” he said with that inimitable tinge of childlike innocence. I couldn’t believe this was the same over-demonised Buhari who had been superfluously described in lurid colours by political opponents. If he was play-acting before me, then he must be a damn-good-actor, I thought to myself coolly.

We went into our discussions proper after the general interlocutions. I told him why I wrote the “Desperate Memo” to him; Nigerians were getting restless and impatient; they expect an instant miracle; the momentum he gained during the election was nose-diving and affecting his super-brand; the opposition was already creeping in and trying to take advantage… and so on. The President said he was aware of people’s expectations but they should exercise some patience as they would realise his vision and mission as events he was directing begin to unfold. He sounded like a man who knows what most of us don’t know. He’s the man in the driver’s seat and only he can see the blind spots.

I told him it is important to us that he succeeds because our opponents don’t believe things can be done better. I reiterated my belief that he cannot hand over Nigeria to typical politicians to run because they will wreck the entire process. I’m certain his Party is going to witness another combustion soon when he begins to assemble his team because political leaders prefer their lackeys to competent professionals. In spite of Party supremacy, he should not allow them to dump some garbage at his doorstep. He must insist on nominations that meet his avowed standards.

I suggested he should involve Nigerian academics in governance like he did as Head of State when he appointed Tam David-West, Ibrahim Gambari and others as Ministers before President Ibrahim Babangida repeated the same style by appointing Wole Soyinka, Olikoye Ransome-Kuti, Bolaji Akinyemi, Tai Solarin, Sunday Olagunju, Sam Oyovbaire, and others in various capacities. I theorised that the relative success of INEC is attributable to the fact that Professor Jega brought in many Professors who did not have the propensity for accumulation of wealth.

I told the President that he should do everything possible to carry the youths along. I suggested he could move a few of his important public functions from campus to campus. I mentioned how American Presidential debates and major Presidential interactions are often held in a university community with students in attendance. I observed that this helps to inspire the youths in no small measure. Any government that has the youths behind it will ultimately succeed.

The aspect of my submission that gave the President amusement amidst the seriousness was when I spoke about the importance of searching for bright women to bring on board: “Sir, I think women are better managers of people and resources for several reasons…” I posited that a woman cannot marry two or three men simultaneously but a man can have four wives and ten concubines at a go and this would encourage corruption. I also elaborated further by stating that women are more afraid of going to prison than men. The President was filled with mirth and exploded in laughter whilst acknowledging the sense and sagacity of my words.

The President confided in me that his three biggest worries are insecurity, corruption and power. He spoke a bit about how he planned to address these issues. Finally, as he saw me off to the door, he spoke about his efforts at combating crime and terrorism and had kind words for the Chadians in particular. He felt proud about Chadian interventions on behalf of Nigeria. He would love to see such cooperation from other African countries.

On the whole, I had spent more than my allotted time of 15 minutes but I believe both of us concluded that we had a good and fruitful discourse. Before I departed, I promised the President my support and assured him that I would always alert him of sensitive developments needing his immediate attention through my articles and Column.

May God grant our President favour to do that which he fervently desires for Nigerians and Nigeria! God bless our nation.

Twitter: @DeleMomodu

Thursday, 25 December 2014

Buhari: Three scores and twelve

By Mukhtar Jarmajo

Soon after the 2011 presidential election which General Muhammadu Buhari amongst others lost to President Goodluck Jonathan, the General`s political future became a topic of debate amongst his friends, political associates and supporters. All agreed that Buhari lost that election and those of 2003 and 2007 not on a level playing ground. In 2003, they opined, the Abel Guobadia led INEC connived with the presidency to organize a joke then named it election. They went further to assert that the presidential election supervised by Maurice Iwu in 2007 witnessed unprecedented rigging that even the ultimate beneficiary of the maneuver, late Umaru Yaradua had to acknowledge before the United Nations Assembly of the irregularities involved in it. And for the election supervised by Attahiru Jega in 2011, the rigging involved a lot of sophistication culminating in figures doctoring at polling units and collation centers, both schools of thought noted emphatically.

On whether or not Buhari should remain in active politics however, two schools of thought emerged. Some were of the conviction that having lost presidential contest three times, the tooth-gapped General should quit active politics but should remain on the nation`s political turf to motivate the masses work against injustice. Contrarily, believing Buhari remains the last option if matters were to change for the better in Nigeria, others argued he should remain in active politics stressing that if he should quit, the pages of history may not record another Abraham Lincoln in contemporary times. This thought held that all the Daura born General needed was a better political platform with trustworthy cohabitants who in the long run will not sale Nigeria`s future to the People of Deception and Prestidigitation (PDP).

Quite alright, apart from the fact that the nation`s election umpire – the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has been subservient to the powers that be, Buhari has also suffered political setbacks as a result of party leaderships who in the cause of time metamorphose the party to a mere extension of the ruling Peoples` Democratic Party (PDP). Thence, with a more reliable political platform, the retired General can expect a successful political outing.

Meanwhile, in the cause of his campaigns ahead of the 2011 elections, Buhari at a point mentioned that that was going to be his last political outing. With this and being a man many see to always mean what he says and says only what he means, the latter school of thought may not have that requisite confidence to confront Buhari with its proposition. In the end however, perhaps hearkening to the Hausa mantra that says “magana biyu ce dattijo”, he returned to the trenches.

The mantra literally implies that a gentleman should always have two decisions to consider, first his and then very importantly that of his people. For, all one is doing is for the interest of the generality of the people. Therefore it is gentlemanly to take a second position when the people say no to yours. 

Thus, in a manner that suggested he hearkened to the gospel of the latter school of thought, Buhari involved himself in efforts aimed at creating a formidable opposition political party in Nigeria. In the end, the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), Alliance Congress Of Nigeria (ACN), his Congress for Progressives Change (CPC) and factions of some political parties merged together to form the now major opposition political party, the All Progressives Congress (APC).

And that he joined and won in a manner that was reminiscent of a political coup-de-grace the race to pick the APC presidential ticket is no news. Today he poses the greatest challenge the ruling PDP has ever encountered. Whilst President Jonathan has not been able to handle the baton of leadership with the requisite courage, sincerity and competence, Buhari`s credentials are a synopsis of leadership ability, altruism, sincerity and dedication.

Within and without the Army, he carried out all his assignments with diligence and willingness and as if he was blessed with a Midas touch, all projects he laid his hands on, end up a success. As Military Administrator of the defunct Northeastern state and later that of the former Borno state, Buhari administered public trust incorruptibly.

And as Federal Commissioner for Petroleum Resources, Buhari constituted the NNPC Board thus became its first Chairman. He gave the institution a solid foundation as a result of which until recently when money thirsty politicians came on board, the oil and gas sector of the economy was a bit healthy. And here we must remember that fine civil servant, the late Chief Sunday Awoniyi, Aro of Mopa, who as his Permanent Secretary gave him the needed support. 

When Buhari came in as Head of state at the eve of 1983, he sought to give the nation`s façade a new rendering. Fully aware of the fact that the economy of a nation means everything to its people, his government began making meaningful economic policies which though were radical both in theory and practice. But in all ramifications, the policies were very realistic in that the same approach was used in taking countries like Taiwan, Thailand and Indonesia to great heights.

Nigeria`s former economic czar, now Emir Of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi had this to say in 2002 in his article captioned “Buharism: Economic Theory and Political Economy”; “Buharism represented a two-way struggle: with Global capitalism (externally) and with its parasitic and unpatriotic agents and spokespersons (internally). The struggle against global capital as represented by the unholy trinity of IMF, the World Bank and the multilateral “trade” organizations as well that against the entrenched domestic class of contractors, commission agents and corrupt public officers were vicious and thus required extreme measures.”

"Draconian policies” Sanusi continued “were a necessary component of this struggle for transformation and this has been the case with all such epochs in history…..To this extent Buharism was a despotic regime but its despotism was historically determined, necessitated by the historical task of dismantling the structures of dependency and launching the nation on to a path beyond primitive accumulation.”

Ever since he joined the Army in 1962 till August 1985 when his regime was truncated in a bloodless coup, Muhammadu Buhari worked enthusiastically and patriotically towards defining better paths for enhanced development and liberating the people from the shackles of post-colonial slavery.  He was to later again prove this when he was made the Executive Chairman of the defunct Petroleum (Special) Trust Fund (PTF).

In 1994, the PTF was established to manage “monies received from the sale of petroleum products less the approved production cost per liter…” to improve the sectors of education, health, food supply, road and road transportation, water supply, security services “and such other sectors as may be approved from time to time.” Buhari was picked to chair the PTF Board and as usual, he performed creditably well. Fifteen years after it has been scrapped, there are projects of the PTF that are still standing today and  that was to tell of the success the PTF recorded.

 Indeed, it raises no eyebrows that he was successful at the PTF for as seen earlier, through dint of hard work and diligence, Buhari gets the best results. And now that he is in the race to the presidency with these credentials, Nigeria and Nigerians have our hopes for better days ahead rekindled. But to ensure this dream comes true, we must unite as a nation to support this rare gem who last week celebrated his seventy-second birthday. Thus, whilst wishing him success in next year's election, here is also wishing Buhari a happy birthday! 

Jarmajo is on Twitter: @mukhtarjarmajo

Wednesday, 19 November 2014

Buharism: Economic theory and political economy

By Sanusi Lamido Sanusi

I have followed with more than a little interest the many contributions of commentators on the surprising decision of General Muhammadu Buhari to jump into the murky waters of Nigerian politics. Most of the regular writers in the Trust stable have had something to say on this. The political adviser to a late general has transferred his services to a living one. My dear friend and prolific veterinary doctor, who like me is allegedly an ideologue of Fulani supremacy, has taken a leading emir to the cleaners based on information of suspect authenticity. Another friend has contributed an articulate piece, which for those in the know gives a bird’s eye view into the thinking within the IBB camp. A young northern Turk has made several interventions and given novel expressions to what I call the PTF connection. Some readers and writers alike have done Buhari incalculable damage by viewing his politics through the narrow prism of ethnicity and religion, risking the alienation of whole sections of the Nigerian polity without whose votes their candidate cannot succeed.

With one or two notable exceptions, the various positions for or against Buhari have focused on his personality and continued to reveal a certain aversion or disdain for deeper and more thorough analysis of his regime. The reality, as noted by Tolstoy, is that too often history is erroneously reduced to single individuals. By losing sight of the multiplicity of individuals, events, actions and inactions (deliberate or otherwise) that combine to produce a set of historical circumstances, the historian is able to create a mythical figure and turn him into an everlasting hero (like Lincoln) or a villain (like Hitler). The same is true of Buhari. There seems to be a dangerous trend of competition between two opposing camps aimed at glorifying him beyond his wildest dreams or demonising him beyond all justifiable limits, through a selective reading of history and opportunistic attribution and misattribution of responsibility. The discourse has been thus impoverished through personalisation and we are no closer at the end of it than at the beginning to a divination of the exact locus or nexus of his administration in the ebb and flow of Nigerian history. This is what I seek to achieve in this intervention through an exposition of the theoretical underpinnings of the economic policy of Buharism and the necessary correlation between the economic decisions made and the concomitant legal and political superstructure.

Let me begin by stating up front the principal thesis that I will propound. Within the schema of discourses on Nigerian history, the most accurate problematisation of the Buhari government is one that views it strictly as a regime founded on the ideology of bourgeois nationalism. In this sense it was a true offshoot of the regime of Murtala Mohammed. Buharism was a stage the logical outcome of whose machinations would have been a transcendence of what Marx called the stage of primitive accumulation in his Theories of Surplus Value. It was radical, not in the sense of being socialist or left wing, but in the sense of being a progressive move away from a political economy dominated by a parasitic and subservient elite to one in which a nationalist and productive class gains ascendancy. Buharism represented a two-way struggle: with global capital (externally) and with its parasitic and unpatriotic agents and spokespersons (internally). This was a vicious struggle and thus required extreme measures. Draconian policies were a necessary component of this struggle for transformation and this has been the case with all such epochs in history. The Meiji restoration in Japan was not conducted in a liberal environment. The Industrial Revolution in Europe and the great economic progress of the empires were not attained in the same liberal atmosphere of the 21st century. The "tiger economies" of Asia such as Taiwan, South Korea, Indonesia and Thailand are not exactly models of democratic freedom.

To this extent Buharism was a despotic regime but its despotism was historically determined, necessitated by the historical task of dismantling the structures of dependency and launching the nation on to a path beyond primitive accumulation. At his best Buhari may have been a Bonaparte or a Bismarck. At his worst he may have been a Hitler or a Mussolini. In either case Buharism drawn to its logical conclusion would have provided the bedrock for a new society and its overthrow marked a relapse, a step backward into that era from which we sought escape and in which, sadly for all of us we remain embedded and enslaved. It is not enough to accuse Buhari of being a dictator (as his detractors are wont to do) or to pretend that he was never one (as his admirers so fallaciously claim). What is required is a dispassionate analysis of the true nature and source of such despotism and its problematisation within an intellectually vibrant political discourse.

One of the greatest myths spun around Buharism was that it lacked a sound basis in economic theory. As evidence of this, the regime that succeeded Buhari employed the services of economic "gurus" of "international standard" as the architects of fiscal and monetary policy. These were IMF and World Bank economists like Dr. Chu Okongwu and Dr Kalu Idika Kalu, as well as Chief Olu Falae (an economist trained at Yale) and the famous "Triple A" (Alhaji Abubakar Alhaji). At the time Buhari’s Finance Minister, Dr Onaolapo Soleye (who was not a trained economist) was debating with the pro-IMF lobby and explaining why the naira would not be devalued I was teaching economics at the Ahmadu Bello University. I had no doubt in my mind that the position of Buharism was based on a sound understanding of neo-classical economics and that those who were pushing for devaluation either did not understand their subject or were acting deliberately as agents of international capital in its rampage against all barriers set up by sovereign states to protect the integrity of the domestic economy. When the IMF recently owned up to "mistakes" in its policy prescriptions all patriotic economists saw it for what it was: a hypocritical statement of remorse after attaining set objectives.

Let me explain, briefly, the economic theory underlying Buhari’s refusal to devalue the naira and then show how the policy merely served the interest of global capitalism and its domestic agents. This will be the principal building block of our taxonomy. In brief, neo-classical theory holds that a country can, under certain conditions, expect to improve its balance of payments through devaluation of its currency. The IMF believed that given the pressure on the country’s foreign reserves and its adverse balance of payments situation Nigeria must devalue its currency. Buharism held otherwise and insisted that the conditions for improving balance of payments through devaluation did not exist and that there were alternate and superior approaches to the problem. Let me explain.

The first condition that must exist is that the price of every country’s export is denominated in its currency. If Nigeria’s exports are priced in naira and its imports from the US in dollars then, ceteris paribus, a devaluation of the naira makes imports dearer to Nigerians and makes Nigerian goods cheaper to Americans. This would then lead to an increase in the quantum of exports to the US and a reduction in the quantum of imports from there per unit of time. But while this is a necessary condition, it is not a sufficient one. For a positive change in the balance of payments, the increase in the quantum of exports must be substantial enough to outweigh the revenue lost through a reduction in price. In other words the quantity exported must increase at a rate faster than the rate of decrease in its price. Similarly imports must fall faster than their price is increasing. Otherwise the nation may be devoting more of its wealth to importing less and receiving less of the wealth of foreigners for exporting more! In consequence, devaluation by a country whose exports and imports are not price elastic leads to the continued impoverishment of the nation vis a vis its trading partners. The second, and sufficient, condition is therefore that the combined price elasticity of demand for exports and imports must exceed unity. These two conditions are known in neo-classical international economic theory as the Marshall-Lerner conditions for improvement in a country’s balance of payments through devaluation.

The argument of Buharism, for which it was castigated by global capital and its domestic agents, was that these conditions did not exist clearly enough for Nigeria to take the gamble. First our major export, oil, was priced in dollars and the volume exported was determined ab initio by the quota set by OPEC, a cartel to which we belonged. Neither the price nor the volume of our exports would be affected by a devaluation of the naira. As for imports, indeed they would become dearer. However the manufacturing base depended on imported raw materials. Also many essential food items were imported. The demand for imports was therefore inelastic. We would end up spending more of our national income to import less, in the process fuelling inflation, creating excess capacity and unemployment, wiping out the production base of the real sector and causing hardship to the consumer through the erosion of real disposable incomes. Given the structural dislocations in income distribution in Nigeria the only groups who would benefit from devaluation were the rich parasites who had enough liquidity to continue with their conspicuous consumption, the large multi-national corporations with an unlimited access to loanable funds and the foreign "investor" who can now purchase our grossly cheapened and undervalued domestic assets. In one stroke we would wipe out the middle class, destroy indigenous manufacturing, undervalue the national wealth and create inflation and unemployment. This is standard economic theory and it is exactly what happened to Nigeria after it went through the hands of our IMF economists under IBB. The decision not to devalue set Buharism on a collision course with those who wanted devaluation and would profit from it - namely global capitalism, the so-called "captains of industry", the nouveaux-riches parasites who had naira and dollars waiting to be spent, the rump elements of feudalism and so on. Buharism therefore was a crisis in the dominant class, a fracturing of its members into a patriotic, nationalist group and a dependent, parasitic and corrupt one. It was not a struggle between classes but within the same class. A victory for Buharism would be a victory for the more progressive elements of the national bourgeoisie. Unfortunately the fifth columnists within the military establishment were allied to the backward and retrogressive elements and succeeded in defeating Buharism before it took firm root. But I digress.

Having decided not to devalue or to rush into privatisation and liberalisation Buharism still faced an economic crisis it had to address. There was pressure on foreign reserves, mounting foreign debt and a balance of payments crisis. Clearly the demand for foreign exchange outstripped its supply. The government therefore adopted demand management measures. The basic principle was that we did not really need all that we imported and if we could ensure that our scarce foreign exchange was only allocated to what we really needed we would be able to pay our debts and lay the foundation for economic stability. But this line of action also has its drawbacks.

First, there are political costs to be borne in terms of opposition from those who feel unfairly excluded from the allocation process and who do not share the government’s sense of priorities. Muslims for example cursed Buhari’s government for restricting the number of pilgrims in order to conserve foreign exchange.

Second, in all attempts to manage demand through quotas and quantitative restrictions there is room for abuse because there is always the incentive of a premium to be earned through circumvention of due process. The reason for this is simple to understand. The only reason quotas are necessary is because the demand for the product exceeds its supply, which means it is priced below equilibrium (the level at which the market is cleared). In theory, if the price is allowed to increase some consumers will be priced out of the market and some producers priced in leading to a closure of the demand gap. Keeping the price low by fiat creates what is known in economics as "artificial scarcity". In the case of the foreign exchange market, this was addressed by the federal government through the system of import licensing.

Precisely because of the existence of a repressed demand, there will always be economic agents willing and able to pay a much higher price than the official one for scarce foreign exchange. Import licence becomes a "hot cake" and the black market for foreign exchange highly lucrative. The policy line chosen by Buharism could only succeed if backed by strong deterrent laws and strict and enforceable exchange rules. So again we see that the harsh exchange control and economic sabotage laws of Buharism were a necessary and logical fallout of its economic theory.

I have tried to show in this intervention what I consider to be the principal building blocks of the military government of Muhammadu Buhari and the logical connection between its ideology, its economic theory and the legal and political superstructure that characterised it. My objective is to raise the intellectual profile of discourse beyond its present focus on personalities by letting readers see the intricate links between disparate and seemingly unrelated aspects of that government, thus contextualising the actions of Buharism in its specific historical and ideological milieu. I have tried to review its treatment of politicians as part of a general struggle against primitive accumulation and its harsh laws on exchange and economic crimes as a necessary fallout of economic policy options. Similarly its treatment of drug pushers reflected the patriotic zeal of a bourgeois nationalist establishment.

On the other hand, the policy also has major drawbacks, particularly if not well managed. As happens in all such cases a number of innocent people become victims of draconian laws and sweeping policies. Some honest leaders like Shehu Shagari, Clement Isong and Balarabe Musa were improperly detained and treated like common thieves. Whatever the crimes Umaru Dikko was alleged to have committed, the humiliation visited upon his innocent father was totally inexcusable. The government also went overboard in its sensitivity to constructive criticism and, in cases like the Irabor case, took measures far out of proportion to the actual damage done by the alleged offence. The same can perhaps be said of the government’s sanctions on two respected traditional rulers who went on a private trip to Israel. The reality however is that many of those claiming to be victims today were looters who deserved to go to jail but who would like to hide under the cover of a few glaring errors. The failure of key members of the Buhari administration to tender public and unreserved apology to those who may have been unfairly treated has not helped matters in this regard. Buhari owes it to himself, as a human being and a Muslim, to seek forgiveness from those who may have suffered injustice at the hands of his agents.

I will now address a question I have often been asked. Do I support Buhari’s decision to contest for the presidency of Nigeria? My answer is no. And I will explain.

First, I believe Buhari played a creditable role in a particular historical epoch but like Tolstoy and Marx I do not believe he can re-enact that role at will. Men do not make history exactly as they please but, as Marx wrote in the 18th Brumaire, "in circumstances directly encountered, given and transmitted from the past." Muhammadu Buhari as a military general had more room for manoeuvre than he can ever hope for in Nigerian politics. I am not sure that sterling performance as head of a military junta translates into the same level of competence in a liberal environment where the tools are persuasion rather than coercion, and negotiation rather than suppression. There is also the reality that globalisation and liberalisation, which Buhari so correctly fought against, have swept across the third world and emasculated nation states thus reducing the scope for independent sovereign action. The agents of international capital are much stronger and far more pervasive than in 1984 and their international support has increased with the new arrogance of their patrons who still bask in the glow of their victory in the so-called cold war. The days of regulation are now history and the hands of the clock, as they say, cannot be turned back.

Second, I am convinced that the situation of Nigeria and its elite today is worse than it was in 1983. Compared to the politicians who populate the PDP, ANPP and AD today, second republic politicians were angels. My view is that Nigeria needs people like Buhari in politics but not to contest elections. Buhari should be in politics to develop civil society and strengthen the conscience of the nation. Everywhere you turn you see elements who have amassed wealth at the expense of the nation: be they legislators, local government chairmen and councillors, or governors and ministers. But these are the heroes in their societies. They are the religious leaders and ethnic champions and Nigerians, especially Northerners, will castigate and discredit anyone who challenges them. The problem is not so much that leaders are corrupt and useless, but that the followers refuse to recognise this fact. In the North in particular, illiteracy and ignorance is so widespread that almost anyone can use slogans of religion and ethnicity to gain mass support, which is in turn betrayed. My fear is that Buhari has greater potential for changing the North than is offered by the opportunistic tapping of this wellspring of primordial loyalty. Anyone can campaign on a platform of ethnicity and religion, especially if the political environment is ripe for it. Few have the courage to stand on a platform of principle, even if they risk alienating the majority in their own constituency. It is this minority, which is being gradually extinguished through blackmail, misrepresentation and outright elimination that needs to be strengthened by the likes of Buhari. Unless we start by educating our people and changing their value system, those who speak the truth will remain outcasts in their own society, castigated by the very people whose interest they seek to protect at great personal cost.

Having said all this let me conclude by saying that if Buhari does succeed in getting a nomination he will most probably have my vote (for what it is worth). I will vote for him not, like some have averred, because he is a Northerner and a Muslim or because I think his candidacy is good for the North and Islam. I am a Nigerian and I believe anyone who wants the presidency must be willing to serve all Nigerians fairly, without regard to creed and ethnicity. I will vote for Buhari as a Nigerian for a leader who restored my pride and dignity and my belief in the motherland. I will vote for the man who made it undesirable for the "Andrews" to "check out" instead of staying to change Nigeria. I will vote for Buhari to say thank you for the worldview of Buharism, a truly nationalist ideology for all Nigerians. I do not know if Buhari is still a nationalist or a closet bigot and fanatic, or if he was the spirit and not just the face of Buharism. I do not know if he can cope with a Nigeria (and a world) that has changed since he was last in office. I do not even know if Buhari himself has changed and if such a change was for better or for worse. My vote for him is not based on a mythification of the man, a fossilisation of his image in an ideal state. It is rather, and more fundamentally, a celebration of what his government was and what it gave to the nation.

Now Emir Muhammadu Sanusi II wrote this and was first published by the dailytrust edition of Tuesday 20th August, 20002 and gamji.com

Monday, 17 November 2014

As easy as PDP (to defeat)

By Sonala Olumhense

Is there really an electoral contest in Nigeria next February?

Yes, the electoral commission, fulfilling its constitutional duty, has listed an election on its calendar for that month, but it is really a referendum on 15 years of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in charge of Nigeria.

The event should be re-cast as a festival, a celebration of the opportunity for Nigerians to regain their dignity by inflicting on the PDP the most lopsided defeat in modern democratic warfare. Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Adamu Muazu and President Goodluck Jonathan

I do not mean that 2015 should be seen as the coronation of another party simply because it claims to be in opposition, but that it is an opportunity for Nigerians to reaffirm their dignity and express their indignation at the polls.

 

The PDP should be easy pickings, but anyone seeking to replace it should show imagination.  The PDP has already shown cause.

 

Everyone, including the PDP, knows that Nigeria has become the butt of jokes around the world on account of its character as a looting gallery.

If you do not know they are laughing at Nigeria, that is probably because you lack literacy skills, not because you are in the PDP.  There is no reason on earth why a party that is held in such contempt for various reasons ought not to be humiliated out of relevance with at least 80% of the popular vote.

 

This is the report card it has earned in 15 years of malice and malfeasance.  This is the precinct not even of politics, but of common sense: if someone hurts you, you seek vengeance, or avoidance.  If someone loots your family, you want your heirlooms back, and you want the thieves in prison.

 

If someone insults your mother, or rapes your wife, or kills your sons, or abducts your daughters, you do not give him the keys to your heart: you want him dead and his carcass thrown to the hyenas.  You do not give drink with him.  You do not give him a bed in your home.  You do not let him gloat about his exploits.

There is no other way to describe what the PDP has accomplished in Nigeria.  Under its watch, Nigeria has moved from a nation of hope to one of doubt; from one which enjoyed the respect—sometimes admiration—of other countries to one that is now routinely called names.

 

Under its watch, Nigeria has moved from a nation which labored under gross mismanagement and overwhelming corruption to one where they are now merely an opinion.

   

Under the watch of the PDP, reports are merely to be written, not implemented; a budget just a speech to be read, not an obligation to be fulfilled; and good governance is just a concept, not a principle.  Was there ever a report by a Presidential Projects Assessment Committee about at least 11,886 projects?  Do the many reports about the rot at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation have any relevance to the quality of life of the people?

 

Did anyone ever debate former Minister Oby Ezekwesili over her allegation that that $67 billion left by the President Olusegun Obasanjo’s government has been squandered by the current one?  Yes, the government removed Central Bank governor Lamido Sanusi, but did anyone ever establish whether the NNPC actually failed to remit to the federation account from 2012 to 2013 the sum of $50 billion?   $21?  $10?

If nothing is clear, that is exactly what is intended by the PDP because in no enquiry can the party and its practices face the facts.

Under the watch of the PDP, Nigeria has ground to a halt, even to a fraction of its size.  In full view of the PDP government, intrepid militants are taking over Nigeria, village by village, child by child and town by town, chasing Nigerians out of their homes and out of their country.

 

Under the PDP, Nigeria is giving away everything: self-respect, territory, refugees, children, dreams.

Under the PDP, propaganda is the only mission in order that it might look immensely better than it has accomplished.

 

A transformation was promised four years ago, but in its place, Nigerians got a Tantalization Agenda.  Fifteen years ago, the Nigerian president and his wife enjoyed their healthcare in European hospitals; today, the Nigerian president and his wife enjoy healthcare in European hospitals.

But perhaps what is worse is what no longer exists: 15 years ago, Nigerians could travel around their country in relative safety; today, they are told to travel by air.

The country is in disrepair and in division, but what may be called the future is considerably worse unless the PDP is crushed by Nigerians so that it may be re-invented by those who care.

   

I do not know who will contest against the PDP, but it is an easy, almost unfair, battle. Between the popular disenchantment and the divisions within the PDP, there is no reason why it should not now lose more than 70% of the electoral gains it held in 2007.

What is exciting about 2015 is that many of the parties outside power can exploit the PDP’s scorched-earth incompetence, lootocracy and abysmal arrogance over the years.  The challenge is to go where the PDP does not, and will not go: directly to the voters whom they have betrayed

The choice could be no clearer: the offer of hope where only despair exists, and where the only other choice is hopelessness.  This is the time for the Nigerian voter to invest in his own dignity and future.  The PDP has had 15 years, and Nigerians who are not dipping their hands into its soup pot know they are considerably worse-off than they were 15 years ago.

The one thing the PDP cannot tolerate, but the only language it understands, is electoral defeat.  There is no better time than the present to inflict it.

 

One approach is to write up 774 reports, each no longer than half a page, on the last four or 15 years.  That is the number of local government areas in the country, and they will make clear the depth of the government’s irresponsibility so far.  Consolidate them into manageable sectoral campaign research.  Contending political parties can take a look at the national budgets for those years here or here.  At the local levels, it is easy to demonstrate how suddenly-wealthy legislators are in dissonance with mounting poverty.

What parties need to do is to campaign intensively at the grassroots: village to village, house to house.  Not on social media, as tempting as that is, or on television.  Encourage voters to accept PDP money and food, but to vote it out.  Drag the PDP into running on its record, at the same time demonstrating a clearer commitment to serving the people.

 

The PDP may well be the most scandalous party in modern political history.  It is not the only sinner in the world, but it is the only one that advertises its sins, and pays itself for them.

The PDP is a pushover right now, and it should be pushed.  Because there was a country.

sonala.olumhense@gmail.com

Twitter: @SolanaOlumhense

Saturday, 15 November 2014

The scope of Jonathanian continuity

By Mukhtar Jarmajo

Last Tuesday, President Goodluck Jonathan officially declared his intentions to seek reelection in the general elections slated for early next year. The declaration which came only a day after over fifty secondary school students were killed in a bomb blast incident in Potiskum, Yobe state, was greeted with mixed reactions. Whilst many saw it as a good action in the right directions believing he had performed wonderfully in the last six years, others believe the president has no record to show as to make Nigerians want him to come back.

In a true democratic setting, for a politician to contest any political office, they most have an excellent record of performance to justify their capability to deliver. Whilst for first time runners, their past work experience remains a reference point, for those seeking reelection it is their performance in the lapsing tenure. This is especially imperative given that for success, contestants most use all available means to convince and canvass for votes of electorates. Thus Mr. Jonathan’s record of performance is of significance here.

Frankly, most Nigerians are today suffering untold hardship courtesy of an unhealthy economy. The people are seriously in want and need. Abject poverty is what most Nigerians are in today. Whilst according to the indices of Finance Minister Okonjo-Iweala our economy is improving, practically, her words remain unbelievable. There was no way an economy will get healthier amidst inadequate electricity supply. Ditto, with the number of unemployed graduates increasing by the day, you are sure the minister wasn’t sincere.

Ever since he assumed power in May, 2010, Mr. Jonathan had shown very poor leadership qualities. And over the years, he proved beyond reasonable doubts a lame in administration that has no capacity to deliver. He allowed corruption, which is mortally dangerous to the entire human species, to become a prominent structure in the nation`s political and socio-economic landscapes. On the fault lines of religion, region and ethnicity, President Jonathan successfully polarized Nigeria and Nigerians cannot be more divided.

And whilst the future of a nation solely depends on its youths, Nigeria, under President Jonathan isn’t making any efforts at nurturing us. Education standard here has continued to helplessly drop with incessant strikes by lecturers of institutions of higher learning. Much the same, there is nothing to write home on President Jonathan’s efforts at improving Nigeria`s health system. Even in cities, standard healthcare services are hardly accessible let alone in rural communities.

In the last six years in short, Mr. Jonathan supervised this nation with mediocrity. As a result, his regime has failed to carry out even its primary responsibility of protecting the territorial integrity of Nigeria and ensuring the safety of lives and property of Nigerians. Under the watch of Mr. Jonathan, a part of Nigeria is now under the control of some faceless insurgents just as everyone in the rest parts of the country never sleeps with both eyes closed. And ever since all these started, the only action government has been taking to stop it was pointing accusing fingers at the opposition blaming it of sponsorship for political gains.

It had remained insensitive to the plight of ordinary Nigerians who bear directly the consequences of this insurgency. While thousands a Nigerian have lost their dear lives in this, thousands more have been displaced. Thus another term for Mr. Jonathan means a continuation of insensitivity to the plight of Nigerians by government authorities. Another term for Mr. Jonathan means continued decay of government infrastructures owing to a non-performing economy. Another term for Mr. Jonathan means another turbulent ride for Nigerians in the journey to 2019.

Jarmajo is on Twitter: @mukhtarjarmajo