There
are numerous disgruntled Muhammadu Buhari supporters straddling the social
media space. Worried by a series of controversies in a government they placed
high hopes in, many of Buhari’s supporters are penitent.
“Throwback
to when I used my bike to campaign for Buhari preaching change. God forgive
me,” one named ‘Hur’ recently wrote on social networking site Twitter,
accompanied by teary emoticons.
But
did people like Hur really have a choice in 2015?
The Jonathan
years
It
was always clear to the neutrals that Buhari was not Nigeria’s best-possible
presidential proposition in 2015. But weighing him against Goodluck Jonathan,
he was the perceptibly better choice. Two disappointing Buhari years are not
enough to exorcise the ghost of the Jonathan years. A quick rundown, for those
who have forgotten.
What
collective progress would Nigeria have made under a man who personalized and
institutionalized corruption? This was a man, who, speaking of his aversion to
assets declaration for public officials, as mandated by the Code of Conduct
Bureau, said: “The issue of public asset declaration is a matter of personal
principle. That is the way I see it, and I don't give a damn about it, even if
you criticize me from heaven.” That was in 2012.
Two
years late, at a presidential media chat, he made a woeful attempt to separate
corruption from stealing, saying: “Over 70 percent of what are called
corruption, even by EFCC and other anti-corruption agencies, is not corruption
but common stealing.”
Under
Jonathan, common stealing was the norm — left, right and center. It was so bad
that a returning minister, seeing the scale of looting all over the place,
would say in private circles: “I have come not come to Abuja this time around
to count the bridges; I must get my share.”
Of
the numerous corruption cases under his watch, one was particularly problematic
for Jonathan. Stella Oduah, his Aviation Minister, was found guilty of
procedural breaches in the purchase of two bulletproof cars for $1.6m — about
$1.2m more than the market price. Still, Oduah prospered under Jonathan and in
fact played a big role in his 2015 campaign; he only dispensed with her when he
sensed her baggage could hurt his reelection bid.
Let’s
not even talk about Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, the Bayelsa ex-governor convicted
for multi-million-pound corruption who disguised as a woman to jump bail in the
UK but was eventually granted state pardon by Jonathan. In that administration,
the nation’s treasury was national cake and anyone bold enough to approach it
with a knife was free to have his cut! That is why there is nothing to show for
the periods in his reign when crude oil prices were favorable; Buhari
nevertheless ended up inheriting an economy in tatters, many states unable to pay
workers’ salary.
How
can we forget Jonathan’s handling of the Boko Haram insurgency? For so long, he
viewed it as a plot of the opposition to hunt him down. And the Chibok girls’
abduction? As former President Olusegun Obasanjo would eventually reveal,
Jonathan, for 18 days after the kidnap, insisted that no abduction took place.
By the time he finally accepted he had the largest-scale abduction since the
start of the insurgency on his hands, the girls’ captors were well and truly
beyond overhauling.
That
wasn’t just an odd error of judgment; it was the archetypal Jonathan. Remember
when more than 80 people were bombed to death in Nyanya, Abuja, in April
2014? Two days later, the President was dancing away at a PDP rally in
Kano. And only a day after at least 48 were killed in a blast in Potiskum in
November 2014, Jonathan organized a colorful ceremony to announce his
reelection ambition. What about parents of the abducted Chibok girls? The
President refused to meet with them — until Malala Yousafzai, a 17-year-old,
came here to beg him. Security of lives is one the simplest responsibilities of
a government. And when a government cannot guarantee this (and its head
literally rubs it in), thereby leaving the people in a perpetual state of
panic, such President deserves to be shown the exit door.
It will
be déjà vu in 2019
Why
is it so important to harp on the talking points of an election that was staged
two years ago? Because we’re inevitably going to find ourselves in a similar
situation in 2019.
Like
the litany of unfulfilled promises under Jonathan, Buhari has underwhelmed in
that office. He promised to fight corruption but he didn’t tell us he would
only fight it in the camp of his personal and political enemies; he didn’t tell
us his cabinet members were immune from the much-vaunted anti-corruption
campaign, that the war would be restricted to the PDP and the Jonathan regime.
We didn’t expect that the economy would regress under his watch or that he
administration would be so disjointed that government agencies would overtly
and covertly antagonize one another. We didn’t expect that the regime of
Buhari, a former military strongman, would be hijacked by a cabal.
Buhari
has brought a new dimension to the people’s dissatisfaction with governance. To
his credit, Jonathan assembled a fairly technocratic cabinet but Buhari’s is
inferior by a distance. Buhari made enormous progress with limiting the Boko
Haram damage but cronyism and ethnocentrism are some of the hallmarks of his
reign. We chased Jonathan away and got rid of his problems; with Buhari, it’s
fresh man, fresh problems.
The
rising disillusionment with the current administration means Buhari’s long-time
and newfound haters will likely be fixated on getting rid of him in 2019 — not
necessarily finding the best possible replacement. That would mean we haven’t
learnt a thing from the desperation to eject Jonathan and the disappointment of
electing Buhari. It would also mean that rather than upgrade our political
leadership from one election cycle to another, we’re only stuck in the vicious
cycle of unseating one underwhelming government to make room for another.
Looking ahead to
2023
For
all the attention that the 2019 election has been recently generating, I’m
struggling to see how it can become a watershed in Nigeria’s political history.
Any serious challenge to Buhari’s reign will likely come from the PDP — a party
still in tatters more than two years after losing power.
All
those who have so far showed interest in the PDP ticket are the usual suspects
— regular faces that have graced the political scene for years or sometimes
decade; same old, same old! As it stands, none of the other registered parties
is strong enough to gatecrash the PDP-APC hegemony. In 2019, the options will
be either returning to messy way of old or sticking with the sticky patch of
now. Neither is attractive prospect. We’ll be torn between the devil and the
deep blue sea, like we were in 2015.
This
is why, ahead of 2023, the electorate need to gravitate towards selection
rather than election. There is an urgent need for a non-partisan movement to
identify a genuine presidential material among us, and subsequently raise a
partisan platform with which the selected material can challenge the PDP or
APC. It is a long-term project, and it is far more difficult to achieve in
reality than it looks on paper. But something is no longer difficult to see: we
can no longer be satisfied with picking one of the two candidates thrown at us
by the APC and PDP. It’s time we picked our candidate and threw it at them!
Soyombo is the
Editor of the International Centre for Investigative
Reporting (ICIR). You can follow him on Twitter @fisayosoyombo.
Source: Sahara Reporters
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