President Buhari And His Letter Writers – By Dele Momodu
My Fellow Nigerians, let me start by
welcoming our dear leader,Mr President Muhammadu Buhari, back home from
his medical vacation in London. We have every cause to be thankful to
Allah, the Merciful. The Yoruba have a very apt adage for what happened
to President Buhari: we should be grateful to the death that wanted to
kill us but chose to blow off our cap only. President Buhari is a very
lucky man. Indeed, he is a cat with nine lives. From the pictures, we
saw of him while he attended to his ubiquitous visitors, it must have
been a close shave. I’m happy Baba was given another chance by the
Almighty. Not everyone gets that fortunate.
As I wrote before Baba came back, many
Nigerians were beginning to give up on his government. They believe this
ruling party, APC, has virtually derailed. That they have failed to
deliver on the phantasmagorical promises made when we all conspired and
collaborated to sack the government of President Goodluck Jonathan. But
surprisingly, things began to look better during the short span the Vice
President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo acted as President. The synergy
between him and the team appeared very cordial and proactive. His
biggest achievement in Baba’s absence was the effort he put into uniting
Nigeria and Nigerians. Everything he did looked too good to be true.
Knowing a bit about how things work in the corridors of power, I was
troubled about the possibility of a few powerful people misreading and
misjudging Professor Osinbajo’s innocent moves and great intentions. It
is to the Vice-President’s credit that he did not let those kinds of
people detract from the good work he was doing probably because he knew
he had the full backing of President for the steps he was taking. After
all, as the Vice-President has pointedly remarked he was in constant
consultation and dialogue with the President even though Baba had told
him not to bother and carry on as he was doing.
I saw in Professor Osinbajo a man
determined to rescue this government from the terrible jinx that
befuddled its predecessors. I saw a perfect gentleman who wanted to
hold fort for his boss by ensuring that things did not fall apart before
his return. I did not see a man scheming to take the position of his
boss for whatever reason. It was apparent that Professor Osinbajo’s
only desire was for the nation to progress and for his boss to meet a
better country and continue from there upon his return. This is the type
of deputy we all pray for in life. This is the kind of assistant every
leader would wish for, and be proud of any day. Therefore a few of us
wrote to support and encourage the Vice President but some persons
misconstrued our motives. That is no longer news. It was the same way we
were pummelled in the past for speaking truth to power. But we must
continue to do so because this is our government.
Baba needs to take his time to feel the
pulse of the nation. I plead, in the name of Allah, that he listens
carefully to the wailers, as his people have labelled those who have
been advising government and grumbling aloud about the seeming inertia
of this government. He can afford to ignore the messengers but should
never discard the loud messages. They can’t all be wrong even if we read
right or wrong motives to their action. The truth is that we all want
Baba and his team to succeed because his success is the success of the
nation. I find it difficult to understand why people cannot appreciate
that simple fact. It is not everyone that would be forced out of power
and can return triumphantly after 30 years. It is one of those miracles
we only read or dream about but never witness. This more so, after four
attempts of presidential campaigns.
I was particularly moved by the letter
from the Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir El Rufai. Here is a
well-known protégé of President Buhari. Here is a man projected as a
possible successor in case President Buhari decides not to seek a second
term. I shuddered as I read and raced through his 30-page missive to
our President, I couldn’t believe anyone that close to Buhari could fire
those salvos. In that massive letter, I read the bitter truth even if
many would read sinister undertones to it. Governor El Rufai really
poured out his heart as candidly as decorum permits. Baba should in fact
thank him for this. It takes love to openly criticise, even chastise,
what is yours. It was an admission of acute frustration in the system
that has long experienced systemic failure. Baba should find time to
read and digest that letter. I’m sure he would know how to sift the
grain from the chaff. Undoubtedly, El Rufai is one of the brightest
stars we have in Nigeria despite the many controversies around him. When
he speaks, we should not discountenance his wise counsel. I’m
reasonably convinced that he means well for the President and our
troublesome country.
Many things are being said behind Baba
that he would never get to hear or read due to the hypocritical nature
of human beings. Only the bold ones would dare speak up and damn the
consequence. But anyone who loves Nigeria and the President would stand
up at this difficult time to be counted amongst the brave. Baba should
maintain the tempo he met on ground when he landed last week. He should
encourage Osinbajo to carry on with a system that was already bearing
fruits, by delegating more tasks to him. His health challenges, for now,
would not permit him to operate optimally and he should not even
overstretch his luck. It is too dangerous to overwork when one is just
returning from such an intensive medical check-up. I pray Baba and his
team, including the Vice President, are already working at that same
speed and tempo that we have become accustomed to in his absence and
that some of us are just paranoid for nothing.
Nigeria was in a big mess when President
Buhari took over the reins of power and in nearly two years, we’ve not
even scratched the surface of dealing with the sorry state of affairs
that he inherited. Yet, the battle for 2019 elections has already
started in earnest. This government has so much work to do in less than
two years if the APC is to retain power at the Federal level and this
can only be done if all hands are on deck.
Let us pray for President Buhari and praise the letter writers for their uncommon courage in this season of anomie.
A TOAST TO GOVERNOR AMBODE
I know this would come as a surprise to
the Governor of Lagos State, Akinwunmi Ambode, but that is the whole
idea. If a man is doing well, the least we can do is to support and
encourage him.
I wish to confess today that Ambode has
surpassed my expectations in under two years. I remember getting an
invitation to meet with him sometime in 2014. A call came through to me
in Ghana from his close aide, Idowu Ajanaku. The caller was very
confident that the next Governor of Lagos State would like to meet me at
my earliest convenience to solicit my support. I had wondered what
support ordinary me could render when the man was amply surrounded and
motivated by political juggernauts, especially the irrepressible Asiwaju
Bola Ahmed Tinubu. All the same, I accepted the invitation, if only out
of curiosity and left everything to fly to Lagos.
I met Mr Ambode somewhere on Glover
Road, Ikoyi. We had never met nor spoken before then. He came across to
me like a very simple and humble personality. He divulged his plans and I
felt honoured that he consulted me at all. He spoke eloquently about
his plans for Lagos. I knew he was going to have to fight a major battle
to become the Governor of Africa’s most powerful state government but
he had God and the human backing of the former Governor of Lagos,
Tinubu. I believe only God can bequeath or take power and so knew he had
a good chance. Ambode radiated pure confidence and at the end of our
meeting, he saw me off to my car and I wished him well.
He fought a gallant battle to get his
party’s ticket. Between Senator Tokunbo Afikuyomi, a political wizard,
and I, we did everything we could to support him. I was particularly
willing and ready to back him up heavily on social media. I couldn’t get
over his simple mien and this made his matter compelling for me.
Besides, Asiwaju Tinubu, had mentored a few of us while we were in exile
in London after the June 12 imbroglio and this was payback time. The
general elections came and Ambode won and we were all happy and
jubilant.
Since then, I visited him once on a
courtesy visit, in company of my best friend, Prince Adedamola Aderemi,
and we met the same Ambode I had met before he became Governor, humble
and simple. Like the first time, he saw us off to our car, and we
chatted freely. On another occasion, I saw him on the Third Mainland
Bridge and sent him a text and he called immediately to exchange
greetings. But what has impressed me the most is not his interpersonal
relationships but the manner he has simplified governance. In less than
two years, he has improved drastically on the great Lagos the then
Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola handed over to him. Fashola himself had
laboured hard to emulate the giant strides of Tinubu in Lagos.
I’m very proud that the three Governors
of Lagos since the return of democracy in 1999 have all done a lot to
make Lagos such an enviable city and a success story. Governor Akinwunmi
Ambode is obviously determined to surpass the humongous achievements of
his predecessors, including the great veteran journalist, Papa Alhaji
Lateef Jakande, and the legendary military Governor, Brigadier Mobolaji
Johnson.
Prince Adedamola Aderemi and I were
stunned when we drove recently through Epe, from Ijebu-Ode, where we had
gone for the 40-day funeral festivities of Bimbo Ashiru’s mum. The
transformation we encountered was truly massive and impressive, more so,
because we had passed that same route a few months earlier. Within the
Lagos Metropolis itself one can see the stellar work that Ambode is
doing but our experience in Epe made us realise that the Governor is
touching all parts of the state and not just the showpiece capital.
Ambode’s operational smoothness,
typified by the novel but simple way in which he has changed the traffic
situation on the Lekki-Epe Expressway by removing roundabouts and
replacing them with intersections and flyovers, shows the lack of
clutter in his mind and a willingness to innovate and be creative.
Lagos used to be badly polluted but
Ambode is working at the speed of light to clean up the environment
urgently. Cleanliness is said to be next to Godliness. The Cleaner Lagos
Initiative is a bold and ambitious project that seeks to rid Lagos
forever of its traditional filth. The plan is to expand the scope of
LAWMA and enforce the regulation of the waste management process to the
highest international standards. This will also create jobs for
thousands of residents.
The vision of Ambode is very impressive
and he has started driving a social infrastructure revolution in Lagos.
His style is recommended to his colleagues who must think outside the
box to improve on their states. While I agree that Lagos is a rich
state, Ambode must be commended for spending the resources of Lagos
judiciously and positively.
He deserves our support and prayers.
POSTED BY:OPUOMONI PRIYE
DATE:01/04/2017
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