''Why I will vote for President Buhari again and again'' Femi Adesina
Read his article below...abeg
The greatest talking point in our country this week has been the
declaration by President Muhammadu Buhari that he would seek a second
term in office next year. And naturally so. Desire by any President,
whether positive or negative, should elicit great interest in the
citizenry. The President that should be pitied is the one that says
something, and the people just shrug, unconcernedly. He is of all men
the most miserable.
As to be expected, the notice given by President Buhari has
engendered diverse emotions and reactions. The joy kiln has ben kindled
in the hearts of many millions. They are exultant and ecstatic. I am in
that number.
While millions are like Romeos beholding their Juliets, others on the
flip-side, however, are like King Leah at his worst. It was as if they
got blows to the solar plexus. Ouch! And they are wailing, kicking and
screaming. Mournfully so. The days of their rustication from power will
be extended, and they can't bear it. Doomsday is elongated, doors to
freebies shut again. They are quite vocal, but much smaller in number,
and the elections next year will so prove. There's still plenty where
the bloody nose of 2015 came from.
Now, despite the challenges in the country (and very many of them),
from Enugu to Borno, Benue to Zamfara, Oke Ogun farmlands in Oyo to
Mambilla in Taraba, Plateau to Edo/Delta, virtually everywhere, why is
President Buhari still the man to beat? That is the purpose of this
piece.
Some of the challenges in the country are genuine. Some others are
orchestrated by those the President would say are playing "irresponsible
politics." For such people, they would first urinate inside the well
they want to draw drinking water from. They would gladly step into
power, treading on skulls and crossbones, and on the flowing blood of
innumerable countrymen. Ogres! But Nigerians are wiser. They know those
who are serving them, and who wish to serve more for altruistic reasons.
They also know those who just want to grab power, so that the country
can return to business as usual, and their snouts can be dipped in the
honeypot once again.
I'll vote for President Buhari over and over, again and again,
because he can be trusted. You can trust him with the resources of the
country. He won't filch them. You can trust him with power. He won't
misuse it. You can trust him with the well being of the land, he cares. I
remember one night, I had gone to the residence to see the President.
It was about 8 p.m, and there were just two of us in the waiting room.
The other elderly fellow has held power at very senior levels in the
country. He had even aspired for the highest office in the land. So, he
knows what he's talking about.
He told me: "Look at this sprawling place. Just two of us waiting to
see the President. It didn't use to be like this. Up to 3 a.m daily, the
place used to be like a market, filled with men, women from within and
outside the country. They would come to seal all kinds of deals on
petroleum, power, transport, iron and steel, and all others. And of
course, the President and his household would always have a cut. The
wheeler-dealers would also have their cut. Who dares approach this
President with such proposals? That is why you see so much sanity here."
A President who won't sell our collective patrimony while the rest of
the country is sleeping. That's the one I want. And we all know that
man.
Accountability is another reason. Under some presidents, the rich
gets richer, while the poor gets prison. Not under Buhari. The resources
of the country are for the people of the country. Greatest good to the
greatest number of people. The last administration (we won't and can't
stop talking about them, never!) sat over resources in billions of
dollars. Oil prices hit $140 dollars per barrel under their watch, and
stabilized at about $100-110 for a number of years. They met our foreign
reserves at $62 billion. When they left, it was just $29.6, yet oil
prices had hit the rooftops. What happened? Thievery. Today, with oil
prices having dropped to about $30 per barrel in 2015, and now
oscillating between 60 and 70 dollars per barrel, our reserves have hit
$47 billion, and still growing. Prudence. Transparency. Resourcefulness.
Accountability. Will I then exchange this type of government for
another? That would mean willful blindness, after our sights had been
amazingly restored. That would mean willful backsliding into perdition,
after we had been wonderfully saved.
Still talking of accountability, you must have heard of the billions
and trillions of naira that accrued to government from agencies like
Customs, Federal Inland Revenue Service, NIMASA, JAMB, and many others
in recent times. These agencies are not newly created. So, what happened
to revenues they made in the past? Your guess is as good as mine. Will I
then leave terra firma for terra incognita? God forbid! Because an
accountable man is in the driver's seat, the virtue is now flowing
downwards.
Elections are coming. And there's no need to fear. Why? Because the
will of Nigerians will not be subverted. Never! A President once told us
in this country that the coming polls would be do or die. Not with
President Buhari. Fair is fair. No foul play. Under his watch, his
political party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) has lost
gubernatorial elections in Bayelsa and Anambra states. At the last
Council of States meeting, Gov Willie Obiano publicly registered his
appreciation to President Buhari, for the level playing ground he made
available during the election in his state. With do or die apostles, and
a certain political party in power, such would never happen. Not with
their garrison mentality. All states are territories that must be
conquered, willy-nilly.
APC has won gubernatorial positions under Buhari in Kogi, Ondo and
Edo states. The victories were fair and square. The party lost in
Bayelsa and Anambra. This President would never manipulate victory for
anyone, not even his own party. And you ask me not to trust him? I will,
and no mistake.
Global respect. That is what Nigeria has today. I've accompanied
President Buhari to over 30 countries in about three years. And he has
been resetting the buttons, relaying the foundation of relationships
with those countries. And how the leaders respect him. And they say it.
Barrack Obama, the then American President said the Nigerian leader came
to his job with a "reputation of integrity." At another time, while
introducing our President to the Canadian Prime Minister, Justin
Trudeau, he said:"Meet the Nigerian President, who is doing a very good
job." And the latter concurred.
In Britain, when David Cameron was Prime Minister, he had made a faux
pas when he named Nigeria and some other countries as being
"fantastically corrupt." And who rose in defence of the Nigerian leader?
The Archbishop of Canterbury, His Grace Justin Welby, who said; "but
this particular President is not corrupt." And you ask me to throw away
such President when he still wants another term? I'll vote for him again
and again, no matter what naysayers claim.
What of the personal virtues? I sit with him, speak with him, and I
know. Discipline. Simplicity. Love of country. Lack of greed. A heart
for the poor and downtrodden. A realization of the ephemeralness of
power, and of life itself. These are things that resonate in his
speeches. They don't make them like this anymore. And then, I should
prematurely jettison the one I have? Even the Heavens will hold a people
who take such decision in derision.
Some people ask; where are the achievements? Well, if they are of
such mindset, unfortunately they can't be helped. We don't have the
authority to mix spittle with clay, put on their eyes, and direct them
to go to Siloam pool, wash, and come back seeing. Once anybody decides
to be willfully blind, no matter what you push in front of his eyes, he
wouldn't see. If he decides to be willfully deaf, even if there are
thunder peals by his ears, he won't hear. Those of us that manage the
media of the President put all the activities and achievements in the
public domain. They claim not to know. Good luck to them. Those who
know, really know. And they are the millions who will stand by the
President any day. Strides in security, agriculture, anti-corruption,
infrastructure, and many others are evident. When they drive on
Enugu-Onitsha Expressway, Enugu-Port Harcourt Expressway, Aba Port
Harcourt Expressway, and hear that early works on the Second Niger
Bridge have reached about 45% completion, and still refuse to believe,
what then can anybody still do? But thankfully, those who believe far
outnumber the inveterate cynics.
They talk of the economy, and make it appear as if the heavens were
falling upon them. But the economy, according to pundits, began to slow
down in 2012. By 2014, it was poised for recession. Before the last
administration left, Nigeria was already borrowing to pay salaries, as
confirmed by Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. And that was in spite of trillions
earned from oil. By 2016, recession was inevitable. But for how long did
it last? Just one year. Due to deft footworks,sound economic policies,
transparency and accountability, we were soon out. Today, inflation rate
has fallen for the 13th month running. The auguries are good for the
economy, but all they want to wail about is hunger, to deceive and
beguile. But Nigerians know. They know where food self-sufficiency is
coming from. They know where their future and those of their children
will be guaranteed. The polls would prove it next year.
When we were awash with money, what happened to infrastructure?
Simply nothing. Power, roads, rail, bridges. Nothing! Now, when we are
earning about 60% less than what we used to earn, those things are
coming. Power was inherited at about 3,000 megawatts, with a large chunk
of it not distributable. Today, power generation stands at over 7,000
megawatts, and over 5,000 MW is distributed. Rail projects will cover
the national landscape within the next one year. Abandoned projects are
being resuscitated nationwide. Recently, the N8.5 billion water project
in Otuoke, Bayelsa State, came on stream. It was not achieved when a
native of the area was President. The Lagos-Otta-Abeokuta road has been
awarded. It was not done when a son of the area was in power. The
dredging of Warri port for N13 billion has been awarded. Was it awarded
when a native of the region was in office for six years? Nigeria is
making tremendous progress, and things can only get better.
For the first time in the history of the country, stealing has become
corruption. It didn't use to be so, particularly in the last epoch. No
wonder the Excess Crude Account was looted dry. Foreign reserves drawn
down. Federation Account, emptied. And the economy was set on an
irreversible path to recession. And they say; don't talk about it. Focus
on the present and the future only. How we miss Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. He
would have said: "I go shout o, I go shout plenty o." If we don't focus
on the past, we are then liable to make the same mistakes. "Those who
cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it." (George Santayana).
Stolen monies are being recovered in billions of naira and dollars,
and being appropriated and spent on infrastructure. Properties acquired
with laundered funds are being seized. President Buhari has promised to
sell them, and return the funds into public treasury. No wonder some
people are running scared, and had tried earnestly to dissuade the man
from going for a second term in office. But the die is cast. Let each
mother warn her child. Days of reckoning will come.
A party left the country in ruins after 16 years. It is now crying
that the edifice has not been rebuilt in three years. Is it not easier
to destroy than to rebuild? The rebuilding of Nigeria is proceeding
apace. Another term for President Buhari will take the job very far.
Consolidation of the good works is good prospect, not only for us, but
also our children. Things may be tough for Nigerians now, but they are
like birth pangs, which begin to fade at a point. And they are fading. A
woman brings forth only with pains, tears and groaning. But when she
beholds her baby, all those pale into insignificance. A new dawn, new
visitation is coming our way. We can see the Promised Land. Nothing
should stop us from stepping into it.
Archbishop Justin Welby, Head of the Anglican Communion Worldwide,
told President Buhari in London this week: "Great statesmen are those
who run for the good of their country." Spot-on. The 2019 race is not
for self, but for the good of the country. Discerning Nigerians did it
in 2015. In greater numbers, they are poised to do it again in 2019.
No comments:
Post a Comment