When 15 million plus Nigerians voted for President Muhammadu Buhari in
the 2015 General elections, their expectation was that he would be
available to serve them 24/7/365, and that those who fielded him as
their candidate had done their home work to avoid what is curiously
becoming the Katsina problem in Nigerian politics. Katsina! But we have
now found ourselves in a situation whereby our President is now in
London, for more than one month sir, ma, and we are here, and we have an
acting President, who according to everybody, including the extremists
and the mischievous, and the politically partisan, is beginning to try
his best, with his admirers, now praying for the worst.
For that
reason alone, we have an emotionally, politically and spiritually
divided country on our hands. Don’t mind what they tell you, and don’t
deceive yourself, the Nigerian Presidency is in turmoil. It is not our
wish. It is not what the voters asked for. But that is how democracy
works. You cannot predict the results that democracy produces. Not even
in America. Or Russia.
Now that we have found ourselves in this
situation, anyway – an absentee President trying to remain relevant and
an acting President struggling to put up appearances, and struggling
harder not to be seen to be ambitious (sorry, Prof. I was your student
but I have something to say sir, I don’t mean any harm – truth be told),
where should the Nigerian people stand? For the past one month, we have
all been trapped in a post-truth situation, pretending as if all is
normal. We should stop pretending.
Those who supported and are
supporting the APC that brought President Muhammadu Buhari to power and
office cannot talk. They cannot talk due to embarrassment and shame.
They are busy putting up a face. But for how long can they do this? The
Nigerian media is also on its knees, looking so pitiable, with the
exception of a few blogs, newspapers that we can’t even trust,
professional media consultants who are in disarray, a few bloggers and
then some gentlemen: Pa Ikhide, Farooq Kperogi, Sonala Olumhense,
Omoyele Sowore, Pius Adesanmi and Okey Ndibe who have since been
specially illuminated as they journeyed to Damascus.
I will
return to this subject some other day. But I think right now, we should
begin to take the subject of the absence of President Muhammadu Buhari
more seriously. Bukola Saraki, our Senate President has visited him in
London, twice, within two weeks. I don’t think we should leave this
business of visiting the President to party chieftains, the executive
and the Federal Legislature. If care is not taken, Senator Saraki may be
tempted to visit the President again next week. And the week after and
he may even be tempted to travel with all the members of the National
Assembly. There must be equity in this matter.
Figure it out as
follows: we all know that President Buhari is now in London and he is
the man Nigerians chose as their President in 2015. We cannot forsake
him. He is in London on working leave, for more than one month now, and
we don’t know when that leave will end. We have been told it will end
soon. Later. One day. Whenever. We are not God. Let the leave end when
it will. But we, the people, have a duty to stand by our President. This
is the point of this article. We are Africans. We have traditions. We
respect elders. We don’t joke with old age. The time has come, right
now, for Nigerians to behave like Africans.
We should therefore,
not leave this business of visiting to Senator Busola Saraki alone.
Party chieftains have visited Mr. President. The leadership of the
National Assembly has also gone to London to be part of President
Buhari’s working leave. I think Vice-President-Acting-President Yemi
Osinabjo should also visit his boss, this week, next week, or ASAP.
Henceforth, he should be in London at least once a week. Let us stop
pretending that the President is not in charge. He is. If Aso Villa is
now in London, let us make it work. The Acting President and the real
President need quality face time. If the acting President must go to
London everyday, let him do so, but don’t let us run Nigeria by
telephone or DHL Am I making sense? I am not talking about common sense.
I mean real sense. So, do I make any sense at all?
After the
Acting President’s visit, all former Presidents should also start going
to London to see the President. Those former Presidents are not as
harmless as they pretend to be. They are projected to the public as
advisers but they are more than that: they all left something in Aso
Villa that makes them eternally powerful. It is like leaving your DNA in
a woman’s body. They should be allowed or perhaps encouraged to visit
President Buhari while he is on working leave. I think our Baba in
Abeokuta, Ota and Ibogun should be the first to visit. That may negate
the order of seniority, but trust the Ebora Owu to return from London
with front-page news! After him, the others can start visiting and
probably advise on the possibility of holding a Council of State meeting
in London. As it were, the Nigerian Constitution does not insist that
the Council of State Meeting must be held inside Nigeria. The main
subject of that first historic, diaspora, Council of State Meeting
should be phrased by OBJ in his own unique way: “Momodu: are you well or
sick?”
There is something called the separation of powers. I
don’t want to disrespect mi’lords but I think they too should go to
London. The National Judicial Council (NJC) should put together a
high-powered delegation of judges from every part of the country, from
all divisions, and level, to proceed post-haste to London to visit, no,
to confer with President Buhari on matters of judicial interest to the
nation. But Sirs, don’t go there and talk about the welfare of judges,
or the non-payment of your entitlements – if you try that, well, I won’t
be in a position to tell you what awaits you on your return. You know
mi’lords, as well as I do, that the law in Nigeria is now being made to
look truly like an ass!
After the judges, okay may be the
Nigerian Bar Association should also send a delegation, but I don’t
trust many of our lawyers. They think they know the law, and they could
go to London and say things that will disrupt the President’s working
leave. To make that impossible, members of the NBA should be booked on
an Arik flight to London, please. But if they get there, fine. The next
delegation should be that of Permanent Secretaries. These ones should
spend more than a week in London with the President. In fact, they can
stay with him till he returns. If they also have medical issues, they
should use the opportunity to ask for tests, with the condition that
they must return immediately the President leaves London,
notwithstanding the status of their own medical tests!
Once the
Permanent Secretaries have been fully accommodated in London, the
Ministers, those who were once dismissed by their own employer as
“noise-makers”, and who have proven to be no better, should also visit
London. They can go ahead and make as much noise as they wish in London
and even enjoy the benefit of a full Federal Executive Council Meeting. I
suspect that this will be a particularly productive FEC meeting. If the
people in the Foreign Affairs Ministry know what they are doing,
however, they would arrange ahead of that meeting in London, a special
meeting with Theresa May, Prime Minister of Great Britain, followed by a
dinner with Her Majesty the Queen of England, with a proviso, please,
please, please, that nobody should bring up the issue of Biafra or
Southern Kaduna after shaking the Queen’s hand, and there should be a
strict guarantee that President Buhari will be accompanied by his
extremely beautiful wife, Aisha, and he will not, meeting the Queen, no
matter how excited, make the mistake of referring to “za oza room”.
Stop
laughing, my friend; this is how you people cause problems for innocent
writers. What I am now trying to add having made all these points
above, is that the Governors’ Forum should also visit President Buhari
in London. The Governors have already signified their intention to do so
and that seems to be fine with the Nigerian public. The Governors
should therefore appoint representatives who should proceed to London.
When they meet with the President, they should hold a special prayer
session with three prayer points: one, that President Buhari will not
work for another person to come and eat; two: that the demons of Aso
Rock will spare and forgive him and his family; three: that President
Buhari will return to Nigeria with his two feet. The Governor to lead
the prayer should be Peter Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State.
If he
starts sounding as he has been sounding in recent times, Nasir el-Rufai
should be asked to take the microphone from him. And if Nasir sounds
like he is playing politics, as he has been doing, Adams Oshiomhole who
will like to be there anyway, as a Governor ex-officio, should be given
the microphone and asked to pray for the President as best as he can or
as best as Trotsky could.
I have left out some people. In the
past month, some Imams and ulamas and concerned relatives have been
reported in the media, holding prayer sessions for a hale and hearty
President who is just in London to enjoy the weather and do some quality
check-ups, private and public. These prayer warriors have prayed and
prayed in Abuja, Daura, Borno and everywhere else. The matter is so
serious that nobody should be surprised if Rochas Okorocha or James
Ibori organizes a prayer session for Muhammadu Buhari. This is the
biggest business in Nigeria at this moment.
I think, therefore,
that we should also encourage the ulamas and the imams to visit. Let
them go to London and pray for their President. We have been told they
have been sending prayers through skype, whatsapp and the air, the same
channels that GSM service providers in Nigeria now want to block. Let
the imams go to London then and let the verses of the Holy Quoran rain
down. It will be unfair not to allow Christian leaders to go to London
too. They are also anxious to go to London. Pastor Tunde Bakare, my
beloved, secondary school senior should lead that team. His job should
be to screen out any Pastor with Biafra, or Southern Kaduna or pro-PDP
blood in him or her. I mean Pastors like Reno Omokri, Ebun Adegboruwa….
you get what I am saying? The prayer should be commissioned!
Traditional
rulers, bloggers, public intellectuals, trolls, and journalists! Oh, I
almost forgot. I think we should also be invited to London to have tea
with the President. I volunteer to lead that team but if I am considered
unpopular, since they say I am not one of them, let @ikhide, @akaebube,
or @dejiadeyanju, @realFFK, or @YeleSowore, be the team leader. But
please, ....
Written by Reuben Abati
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