The attention of Mallam Nasir El-Rufai has been drawn to statements from
Generals Muhammadu Buhari and Ibrahim Babangida purporting to be
responses to the advice he gave both men to retire.
Since
Babangida libelled whole generations of Nigerian youth as being unfit
for leadership, age has become an issue in the coming elections. While
it is true that neither youth nor age supplies wisdom on their own, it
makes sense to ask those who have been recurring decimals in our
country’s sorry history to leave the stage. That is all El-Rufai asked
of these men who seem to think that their failure to do their best for
Nigeria when they had the chance qualifies them for a return to office.
Our people surely deserve better.
El-Rufai is amazed that General
Buhari cannot debate this matter without scurrying to the gutter,
making
claims that are baseless and unsupported by any facts. Mallam
El-Rufai’s tenure as FCT minister was a period of stellar performance in
remaking our federal capital. Despite the difficult decisions that had
to be taken to restore Abuja, Mallam El-Rufai continues to receive
deserved praise and recognition for his achievements in restoring the
Abuja master plan, introducing Nigeria’s first computerised land
registry and helping thousands of Nigerians achieve their dreams of home
ownership in the federal capital. Buhari is perhaps one of a tiny few
blinded by their prejudice from recognising the quality of El Rufai’s
service.
That same prejudice accounts for the baseless claims of
corruption Buhari levels against El Rufai. The fact is that Mallam
El-Rufai served Nigeria with integrity and has never been convicted of
any corrupt act. He is boldly contesting the false charges which the
Yar’Adua government filed against him in court. It is strange that a
Buhari who protests when unproven claims of N2.5 billion (about US
$3billion in those days!) missing oil funds are levelled against him can
gleefully elevate similar claims into facts when it concerns another.
How would Buhari feel if the corruption allegations made against him by
Group Captain Usman Jibrin, then a board member of PTF, are today
reported as if they were proven facts? So much for “corrupt background”
and “shoddy performance”.
Mallam El-Rufai wishes to remind
General Buhari that he has remained perpetually unelectable because his
record as military head of state, and afterwards, is a warning that many
Nigerians have wisely heeded. His insensitivity to Nigeria’s diversity
and his parochial focus are already well-known. In 1984, Buhari allowed
53 suitcases belonging to his ADC’s father to enter Nigeria unchecked at
a time the country was exchanging old currency for new. Against all
canons of legal decency, he used retroactive laws to execute three young
men for drug-peddling after they were convicted by a military tribunal
and not regular courts of law. Buhari was so high handed that he gave
himself and his officials immunity even from truthful reporting. That
obnoxious Decree 4, against which truth was no defence, was used to jail
journalists and attempt to cow the media as a whole. That tyrannical
legislation shows the essence of his intolerance. These are facts of
recent history.
The story of counter-trade and import licensing,
the cornerstone of Buhari’s stone-age economic strategy and those whose
interests it served, is a tale for another day.
Mallam El-Rufai
respects both Generals Buhari and Babangida as elder statesmen. He
believes their age, experience and guidance may contribute to the
success of any future government. El-Rufai however believes that it is
time for a new generation of leaders with new thinking and wholesome
democratic attitude to move our nation forward. The vicious response by
the Buhari camp to a simple statement that their almost-70 principal
should retire is proof enough that a Buhari, the new Democrat, tolerant
of views different from his own, is yet to evolve. And that is sad, for
his fledgling party and its leadership. Buhari and his cohorts may wish
to reflect that it will take more than attacks on personalities to
become electable. Having seen his version of discipline, Nigerians are
not likely to cherish an encore. But they will welcome an engagement
with the issues and problems of everyday life that have hobbled the
peoples of this land.
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