Does Our President-Elect
Intend To Keep His By Femi Aribisala
Word?,
Buhari asked for the vote and got the
vote. But now that the election has been
won, it is excuses galore!
During the presidential election campaign,
General Buhari observed in his
“Manifesto and Vision for Nigeria” that:
“The general trust level of politics,
politicians and political leaders is at an
all-time low. One may ask why? And we
can as well understand why after years of
broken promises.”
But now that the election is over,
Vanguard reports that, in a confession to
APC governors: “President-elect, Major-
General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd), has
said that he is currently at a loss on how
best to tell Nigerians that his promise of
turning the economy around quickly upon
assumption of office on May 29 may not
be feasible after all.”
In effect, our president-elect himself
provides the latest edition of the broken
promises he derides in his manifesto.
Many of those promises were made in
complete disregard of the parlous state of
the Nigerian economy given dwindling oil
prices.
Father Christmas
During the election, Buhari promised that
under his administration, the Nigerian
economy would achieve GDP growth-rate
of 10-12% annually. He would create a
Social Welfare Programme providing
5,000 naira monthly for the 25 million
poorest Nigerians; provide allowances for
unemployed Youth Corps graduates for
twelve months; provide one meal a day
for all primary school pupils; and create
one million jobs for Igbo youths by
revamping the huge coal deposits in
Enugu State.
He would also bolster the Nigerian
middle-class by an additional four million
new home-owners benefiting from a
national mortgage of single-digit interest-
rates; generate, transmit and distribute
electricity on a 24/7 basis; and build
5,000 km of super-highway and up to
6,800 km of modern railway all by 2019,
among other absolutely wonderful things.
But when APC governors went crying to
him that their treasuries are empty, in
spite of the fact that they either emptied
them themselves, or are in no position to
determine their status because they are
yet to take over the reins of office; Buhari
pleaded for understanding. He said: “The
expectation is too high and I have started
nervously to explain to people that Rome
was not built in a day. For this to be
corrected, please, give the incoming
government a chance.”
However, the expectation is high because
Buhari and the APC built them up during
the campaign. They should blame
themselves if they are now victims of
their own deceitful success. PDP Publicity
Secretary, Olisa Metuh observed that:
“The APC has successfully used
propaganda and lies to get to power.
Now, let us see how they will use the
same strategies to sustain it.”
Apparently, many of Buhari’s promises
during the election were never intended
for fulfilment. Many of them were made
for the singular purpose of winning the
election. Having won the election, Buhari
clearly has no more use for them.
Therefore, he has been busy discarding
them one-by-one. Recently, he advised
Nigerians on a TV Continental interview
that, unlike the Quran and the Bible, the
APC position during the election is now
subject to change.
One chance
At the APC South-East rally at Dan
Anyiam Stadium in Owerri, Buhari
declared that he would make the naira
equal to the dollar if voted into office. He
continued: “It is sad that the value of the
naira has dropped to more than 230 to
one dollar. This does not speak well for
the nation’s economy.” But now that he
is president-elect, Buhari no longer talks
about naira-dollar parity. All he does is
complain about the devaluation of the
naira.
When a Channels TV presenter asked him
during the election campaign how he
would manage the economy in the face of
dwindling oil prices, he replied that he
would first stabilise the oil market. But
instead of telling us how he proposes to
do this miracle now that he is president-
elect, all Buhari does is complain to the
newly-elected legislators of the Senate
and House of Representatives that the
decline in Nigeria’s revenues due to
falling oil prices poses great danger to
his development agenda.
Buhari even promised during the
campaign to kill corruption in Nigeria. He
said: “If we don’t kill corruption in
Nigeria, corruption will kill us. So, the
choice before us is to resolve to kill
corruption and free our country from the
firm grip of corrupt men and women.”
However, Buhari is no longer talking
about killing corruption. All we are
getting from him is that he and his
ministers will declare their assets, and
corrupt officials will be prosecuted. Surely
Buhari knows that in no country in the
world has corruption ever been killed;
least of all in Nigeria. When he said he
would kill corruption, he was merely
using hyperbole to pull the wool over the
eyes of Nigerians. But now the time for
hyperbole is over.
However, Bola Tinubu does not seem to
have received the memo to that effect
from APC HQ. Speaking after the election
at the Ladoke Akintola University of
Technology, Ogbomosho, Tinubu declared
that the APC would eradicate poverty in
Nigeria. He said: “A progressive
government must turn its face from the
austerity policies of the outgoing
administration that tried to manage
poverty, but not end it. Such policies
serve only to deepen and prolong the
hardship of the average person.”
APC eradication of poverty is yet another
pie-in-the-sky. There is no template from
any APC-controlled state in this regard.
On the contrary, virtually all of them are
in arrears with workers’ salaries for
several months. Even Jesus the Messiah
admits that poverty cannot be eliminated
in this world. He says categorically: “You
will always have poor people with
you.” (Matthew 26:11).
Read Buhari’s lips
At a Town-Hall meeting in Abuja in
March 2015 during the presidential
campaign, Buhari made a solemn
promise to bring back home the
kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls. He said: “I
will give all it takes to ensure that our
girls kidnapped from Chibok are rescued
and reintegrated with their families.”
However, with the election over, Buhari is
now the paragon of caution and “double-
speak.” In a speech made during the
one-year anniversary of the Chibok
kidnapping, Buhari said: “We do not
know if the Chibok girls can be rescued.
Their whereabouts remain unknown. As
much as I wish to, I cannot promise that
we can find them.”
What are we to make of this volte face
from our president-elect who
nevertheless fashions himself as a man
of integrity?
In an interview with Christiane Amanpour
on CNN during the campaign, Buhari
boasted that he would defeat Boko
Haram within two months if elected. Hear
him: “We know how they started and
where they are now and we will rapidly
give attention to security in the country.
And I believe we will ef¬fectively deal
with them in two months when we get
into office.”
But now that he has been elected, Buhari
categorically denies ever making such a
promise. He now says in an interview
with journalists: “I think I am too
experienced in internal security to give
two months deadline on Boko Haram. I
don’t think I would have made that
statement. I didn’t.”
However, the record of his interview with
Christiane Amanpour speaks for itself. It
shows our president-elect can be
economical with the truth.
Anti-corruption flip-flops
In order not to scare off dodgy members
of his party with his anti-corruption
rhetoric, Buhari promised to let corrupt
sleeping dogs lie if elected. In his
Manifesto, he says: “I, Muhammadu
Buhari, have resolved that the task ahead
of me is that of securing our nation and
prospering our people, not looking
backward to the failed policies and
promises of the past.”
At the North-West APC rally in Kaduna,
Buhari declared: “Whoever that is
indicted of corruption between 1999 to
the time of swearing-in, would be
pardoned. I am going to draw a line,
anybody who involves himself in
corruption after I assume office, will face
the music.” This means as long as you
steal money between 1999 and 2015, you
have nothing to fear under a Buhari
presidency.
But now that he has been elected, Buhari
is singing a different tune. He now says
he will revisit the issue of the allegedly
missing $20 billion from NNPC accounts.
At a meeting with APC stakeholders from
Adamawa, Buhari insisted that: “This
issue is not over yet. Once we assume
office, we will order a fresh probe into the
matter. We will not allow people to steal
money meant for Nigerians to buy shares
and stash away in foreign lands.”
This shows our president-elect is not a
man who believes in keeping his word.
He says whatever is expedient for him to
say at any given moment. With so many
failed promises, even before the
inauguration of his government, it is clear
that Buhari is in for a very short
honeymoon. Nigerians are not likely to
accept having excuses for breakfast,
lunch and dinner.
Excuses galore
Buhari asked for the vote and got the
vote. But now that the election has been
won, it is excuses galore! However,
Nigerians voted for change: they did not
vote for excuses. When you go to a
restaurant, you don’t go there to listen to
excuses. You go there to eat food. It is
really not the business of the clientele to
know the difficulties encountered in
cooking it. Buhari asked repeatedly to be
president, making all sorts of promises.
Now he is president-elect, we need no
excuses from him.
If everything is so bleak and bad, why did
he ask for the job? Why did he make all
those highfalutin promises to a gullible
electorate? What Fela said about
Buhari’s first-coming is equally
applicable to his second-coming. He
said: “The people wey no sabi dey
jubilate, the people wey sabi dey shake
their head.”
Buhari discouraged Nigerians from being
patient with Goodluck Jonathan. It is
unrealistic for him to now expect
Nigerians to be patient for him. What he
promised during the election was magic.
What he needs to provide now is that
magic. We want to see the magic and we
want to see it now. This demand is
necessary in order to ensure that
Nigerians will not fall for this same trick
any time soon in the future. We must hold
Buhari and the APC accountable for every
single one of the empty promises they
made during the election campaign.
http://scannewsnigeria.com/opinion/does-our-president-elect-intend-to-keep-his-word/
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