Inauguration Blues, By
Adewale Ajadi
In recognition of the state of the country, the task at hand
quite simply sets the platform for some assertiveness rather
than aggression, which was expressed with the confidence
of a man who does not waste his words. Mr. President is
definitely committed to ending the Boko Haram insurgency,
giving recognition and support to maintaining peace in the
Niger Delta. The level of detail was just about right and
bearable for such an occasion.
Over the past few weeks of travel and commitments, it
has become more difficult to write my contributory
columns. The pressing subject has been to write about
Malcolm X but there are so many things I want to say
about him and his legacy that I am totally spoilt for
choice. So for now my focus inevitably is the
inauguration of President Muhammadu Buhari and the
criticisms of the All Progressives Congress’s policy
dialogue that preceded it. Like most Nigerians, I watched
the inauguration on television – a vantage point that
allows one to make object of the event. The story that
emerged was one of authenticity, sincerity and humility.
Authenticity because, of all Africans, Nigerians
symbolically and instinctively express themselves in their
cultural identities and finery. It was great to see the
New President and his Vice President, as well as their
spouses represent our indigenous glamour. The
subsequent shame was that the New York Times, in one
of its columns, misrepresented the Babanriga worn by
Mr. President as a Muslim attire, consistent with the
false, misleading and disingenuous dichotomy that
polarises Nigeria in the mind of a badly informed world.
Well, ignorance is a cloak many wear in African matters,
one which the New York Times should be ashamed to be
associated with. Far more endearing was the tone, mood
and accent of the President’s speech. In a country where
people are greatly taken by even badly copied western
accents, it was quite endearing to hear the President’s
sincerity, without any affectation of foreign or other
intonation patterns and the honesty of his regional
infection, a cementing of his resolute solidarity with the
everyday Nigerian. As trivial as these might sound, it
offers sharp relief from the Nigerian elites’ obsession
with external validation, and affirms a level of integrity,
not just in the substance of what it said but in a form
and cadence that is genuinely us.
I would truly have loved something of Mr. President’s
vision of what kind of Nigeria he expects to see at the end
of his tenure. It would have been even greater if he called
the country to sacrifice, support and being part of the
solution to national concerns.
The inaugural speech was also revealing in its content. It
was expressed with sincerity, clarity of purpose and a
spirit of good will. The gratitude to the people, kind
words for the former President and now definitive
remarks about being owned by everyone and by no one.
Magnanimous, big hearted, and with the abundance or
generosity of spirit that plays very well for the President,
whose austere visage hides a heart of gold. In recognition
of the state of the country, the task at hand quite simply
sets the platform for some assertiveness rather than
aggression, which was expressed with the confidence of
a man who does not waste his words. Mr. President is
definitely committed to ending the Boko Haram
insurgency, giving recognition and support to
maintaining peace in the Niger Delta. The level of detail
was just about right and bearable for such an occasion.
In line with constitutional obligations, he set out his
planned priority and goals with different arms of
government and also different levels of executives, from
the Federal to the Local Government. I think his choice of
state and local government funding and jurisdictional
issues highlight something that must have an irritating
antecedent to find its arcane qualities in such a defining
speech.
Whatever his faults, Dr. Fayemi has put himself at the
centre of designing policy solutions, organising our best
angels to actualise these and grounding these efforts by
institutionalising them. Even with its most cynical
interpretation as being self-serving, the pay off is immense
to any government focussed on service.
I would truly have loved something of Mr. President’s
vision of what kind of Nigeria he expects to see at the
end of his tenure. It would have been even greater if he
called the country to sacrifice, support and being part of
the solution to national concerns. His speech at the
Chatham House event had more of the soaring of vision,
clarity of purpose and invitation to partnership that I had
hoped for at the Inauguration but maybe that will come
later. I have been informed by those present that his
speech – from the heart – at the Banquet in the evening
was quite one to listen to.
As one of the participants and discussants at the policy
dialogue held in Abuja a few weeks ago, I am totally
surprised at how this intervention has been badly
misrepresented in the efforts to discredit Dr. Kayode
Fayemi. As people jockey for positions in the new
administration, this most essential of priorities is being
tarnished as part of the indictment relating to the Tony
Blair angle. This is unfortunate because whatever the
politics being played, the search for viable solutions to
seemingly intractable national problems cannot be
acceptable as the casualty. The participatory exploration
of ideas, solutions and the creation of policies is a critical
way ahead for anyone who is committed to our people,
their development and prosperity in the country. Our
security challenges, our teeming unemployed, our
depleted treasury and badly organised efforts at
collaboration will not be served by investing in
discrediting rivals. Whatever his faults, Dr. Fayemi has
put himself at the centre of designing policy solutions,
organising our best angels to actualise these and
grounding these efforts by institutionalising them. Even
with its most cynical interpretation as being self-serving,
the pay off is immense to any government focussed on
service. At the very least, it is far more beneficial than
reams of newspaper invested only in the purpose of
discrediting rather than building up. Granted there will
be the politics of personalities as offices are being
pursued, however the real service to our people is the
restoration of the disciplined efforts to identify effective
solutions that address the problems we incessantly
complain about.
There are many who say we are stuck in analysis paralysis
but root cause analysis is going to be critical; we must
stop treating symptoms and focus on root causes. The
critical root cause in the Niger Delta is not amnesty but a
sense of injustice that must be engaged with, challenged
and addressed. Whether amnesty helps or not will be
determined by an objective review and assessment with the
people, not just vested interests and middle men.
I do not even think the policy dialogue went as far as we
need to go. The reasons are these: the solutions to the
problems we face today are not found in current
conventional wisdom or accepted ways of thinking. The
progress that we seek will only emerge from a process of
continuous testing, learning and improvement, not just
wholesale implementation of popular approaches. There
is no problem faced by a complex country such as
Nigeria that is not systemic in nature, so compartmental
or departmental approaches are doomed to longer-term
failure. Anything that is done without the participation,
contribution and ownership of a broader spectrum of
Nigerians cannot be managed and sustained on the
longer term. Dr. Fayemi and his team offered a start and
it was a platform to give priority to issues and ideas.
Whether Tony Blair or his representatives should have
been invited or not, their contribution on the journey of
New Labour was insightful and helpful. We build these
strawmen of personalities, design or process flaws, but
they are distractions. President Muhammadu Buhari will
only serve this country effectively in the battle for
solutions and a departure from the unfortunate Nigerian
obsession with being all knowing at doing the variation
of the same things over and again. Our solutions will
often come from our curiosity about the unknown. The
real change emerges firmly from these spaces.
We, most certainly, will not address structural
unemployment without changing an economic system in
which over 50 percent of our productive activities are
within an informal economy that we largely ignore.
Mr. President seems a man who loves simplicity but it
must be an elegant and holistic simplicity. He must not
allow the kind of counsel that confuses complexity with
complication. There are many who say we are stuck in
analysis paralysis but root cause analysis is going to be
critical; we must stop treating symptoms and focus on
root causes. The critical root cause in the Niger Delta is
not amnesty but a sense of injustice that must be engaged
with, challenged and addressed. Whether amnesty helps
or not will be determined by an objective review and
assessment with the people, not just vested interests and
middle men. Boko Haram is also a fundamental issue of a
breakdown of the culture of rule of law when, as the
President identified, the extra judicial killing of its leader
became a catalyst for the murder of tens of thousands of
people.
We, most certainly, will not address structural
unemployment without changing an economic system in
which over 50 percent of our productive activities are
within an informal economy that we largely ignore. We
are a country that rarely engages in original design,
piloting and experimentation, learning the lessons of
failure, and the discipline of continuous review and
improvement. We barely engage in maintenance or
effective management. We are all obliged to work
together with the people serving at the discretion and
pleasure of the President and his agenda. We will not
allow these things to be reduced by rivalry, jealousy or
cynicism.
Back to the inauguration, as I watched President Buhari
steer from the former President Obasanjo to greet
dignitaries in the box, it is clear we have a truly learning
and humble President. I, like many millions of Nigerians,
will truly do well to take to heart the wisdom from the
example that such an evolved character gives. Far more
significantly for me, it is an honour to sacrifice and
support this government as its ideas start to fully
emerge. It will be a privilege to say President
Muhammadu Buhari is a true Omoluwabi.
Adewale Ajadi, a lawyer, creative consultant and
leadership expert, is author of Omoluwabi 2.0: A
Code of Transformation in 21st Century Nigeria .
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