Much
of the prods generated by Mrs Aisha Buhari’s interview with the BBC centred on
inappropriateness rather than correctness. Having read and listened to several
responses by ‘analysts’, I have sparingly found a denial about the focal point
of Mrs Buhari’s argument – that her husband’s government had been hijacked by
those who neither sweated at campaign venues, nor kept vigil during nocturnal
party strategic meetings, nor oiled the wheels of electioneering with their
shekels. In this case, silence is a loud form of agreement.
Interestingly,
the public did not need the president’s wife’s outcry to easily conclude that
the president does not belong to everybody but a few people who are taking the
semantics of the word “cabal” to a whole new apogee. And it is the constitution
of the presidential group of plotters – not its existence – that surprised
many.
Those
who thought key ‘investors’ in the Buhari Project, such as Bola Tinubu, Atiku
Abubakar, Rotimi Amaechi and others, ought to be the imperative constituent
elements of President Muhammadu Buhari’s kitchen cabinet have expressed
displeasure at the president’s choice of inner chamber of eggheads.
In
fact, political investors themselves have had reasons to “wail” every now and
then – Tinubu, Atiku, and Senate President Bukola Saraki have, at one time or
the other, sent out distress signals concerning those who sowed nothing pre-May
29, 2015, but were now eminent members of the Buhari government.
But,
how come they didn’t see it coming? In fairness, that some politicians were
willing to collaborate and wrestle power from the then ruling party epitomized
awareness of Nigeria’s teetering on the brink of collapse. And, we do not have
to totally rely on the “strange bedfellows” premise to antagonize a seemingly
noble reaction to our country’s crumbling.
However,
there were too many members of the opposition whose individualism in conducting
public affairs was well-documented. In fact, critics had reasons to conclude
that many of the then opposition elements moving for consolidation were driven
by hunger for power than the desire for a better Nigeria.
The
argument then that there were too many captains in the merger ship might create
a bigger problem after all said and done. As we know, too many captains rock
the ship. All it takes is an internal rancour and the ship would be left to the
mercy of the wind. It is happening already.
Those
who posited that people who hurriedly converged to chase the “evil” away do not
know what to do next, because the scope had been narrowed to “chasing the evil
away” from the outset, should not be discountenanced.
Because
marriages of convenience have the shortest of lifespans, the question we should
ask is: had the leaders who threw their weight behind the president not
committed their political clout and resources into his election, would Buhari’s
new men, who were pessimistic about his chances, enjoy the exclusivism of his
government?
What
about the 15 million+ electorate who voted for President Buhari; the main
stakeholders on whose behalf Mrs Aisha Buhari was disappointed and vowed not to
support her husband unless things change?
No
matter how well-intentioned our aspirations are, neither these 15 million
voters nor the over 167 million of us could all become local government
councillors, chairmen, commissioners, state and federal lawmakers, governors,
ministers and the president.
However,
our only shot at pushing for the greatness of this country is to, according to
Robert Browning, “…rise to the completer life of one…” who shares our good
intentions and is poised to put things right, no matter the obstacles. Those
building walls around the president can’t be said to represent this category of
people. They are rather opportunists who, despite not sowing where they are
reaping, still have the effrontery to scheme out those who sowed and are not
reaping.
In
the lifespan of this democratic dispensation, we’ve seen leaders who rose to
the occasion and distinguished themselves in service to their country. Though
few and far between, we’ve watched courageous men and women make ferocious
enemies for greasing our common wheel of progress and removing the clog set to
it by their assailants.
According
to a Nigerian proverb, marrying more than once affords one an opportunity to
ascertain which spouse is better than the other.
It
is common knowledge that there is a plot to undermine the sacrifices of those
who engineered President Buhari’s journey to Aso Rock by a section of hijackers
who didn’t see his presidency coming. However, such plotters could not have
emerged in the first place if the president did not undermine his core
supporters in the first place by drawing the cabal close to him and according
them the powers they do not deserve.
Let’s
hope that this conflict of interest is resolved soonest “the other room”.
Source: DailySun
I don't think i will blame anyone who decides to leave the ruling APC because the President and his trusted allies(CABALS) has hijacked the soul of the party making it incondusive for the other party members especially those that gave their all for the APC to emerge victorious in 2015.
ReplyDeleteThe First lady has said it all in her interview with the BBC and we heard the Mr President reply.
God save Nigeria