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President Buhari |
By SKC Ogbonnia
For full disclosure, I
am an Igbo man. I am also one of the pundits currently being lampooned for
cheering President Muhammadu Buhari to democratic power. Yet, knowing what I
know now, I will lend that support all over again—and even more. Unless we have
begun to view the history from a tainted lens, the thought of the very
alternative, which was to bring back Goodluck Jonathan, remains a portent of
much bigger crisis. More relatively, I strongly endorse Buhari’s latest mantra:
“Change begins with me.” And that is exactly what this piece is set to
accomplish.
Let me quickly wet the
ground by first defining effective leadership as the ability of the leader to
maximize the available resources within the internal and external environment
and be recognized by the followers as meeting the expectations. Please notice
that this definition has two components. One is for the leader to do a good
job. The other, and probably more instructive, is for the leader to be seen by
the follower as doing a good job.
Like every Nigerian
leader, Buhari assumed the presidency with good intentions. The president is
also working hard. Despite the economic mess left behind by the previous
government, he is soldiering on with measurable progress on many areas.
Regrettably, most Nigerians see the efforts as busy doing nothing. Accordingly,
Buhari is making changes beginning from his very self. But there is one
critical problem the General has continued to ignore that is firmly woven into
the fabric of our current quest for economic revival: His Igbo problem.
For obvious reasons, the
problem was initially waved off as a typical Igbo palaver. Sadly, it has now
widened with untold social, political, and economic consequences. Before
getting to the main gist, here is a cursory glance at the Igbo—just in case.
As one of the major
Nigerian ethnic groups, the Igbo are the natural inhabitants of the Southeast
and some areas of South-South and North-Central zones of Nigeria . The people
are predominantly Christians and uniquely boast of being the first or second
largest population in most parts of the country. Known for their unique
resilience, resourcefulness, can-do spirit and, of course, unbounded
technological and scientific acumen; the Igbo represent the hybrid engine
of Nigeria ’s commerce. These diverse traits help in no small measure as
they forge social, political, and economic influence around Nigeria .
But the influence is
even beyond. The Igbo have embraced the reigning economic gospel that we no
longer merely live in a country but in a world. Thus, with a heavy presence
around the globe, they gleefully play a commanding role in nation’s foreign
exchange, foreign trade, foreign investment as well as relationships. Not
surprisingly, the Igbo in the Diaspora are a leading block contributor to the
yearly amount of foreign money remitted to Nigeria , which is ironically
more than the national budget. Very significantly, the people are one of the
key drivers of Nigeria ’s media home and abroad and thus have the potential to
influence how the country is perceived anywhere.
The foregoing attributes
are more than enough to discern that the Igbo is as important as any other
ethnic group and ought to be carried along in the current change agenda of the
government. Chinua Achebe was more eloquent in the book, There Was a
Country: The perennial tendency to undermine the unique role of the Igbo in
Nigeria “is one of the fundamental reasons the country has not developed as it
should and has emerged as a laughingstock.” But events thus far suggest
that Buhari might have been ill-advised to challenge the theory from the onset.
This apparent dissent is
rooted in the 2015 presidential elections where a vast majority of the Igbo
joined the South-South to vote en masse against Buhari’s winning candidacy.
However, rather than use the historic mandate to rally the different political
divisions towards common purpose, the president would shock the democratic world
by revealing his plan to marginalize the zones that voted against him. Many
pundits thought his statement was a mere gaffe. But the records afterwards seem
to suggest that Muhammadu “Okechukwu” Buhari actually meant the threat of
vendetta against the Igbo, particularly those from the Southeast.
Critics are free to join
here. But there is no gainsaying that the Igbo people are truly marginalized in
the current scheme of things. As I had penned in October 2015, the upper
echelon of Buhari’s government is a preview. “The underlying rationale in this
case is that the positions of the President, Vice-President, Senate President,
Speaker, Chairman of the ruling party, and the Secretary to Federal Government
have been staked in the past 16 years as the main thrust of the party in power
and thence rotated among the six political zones of the country.” Yet, the
Southeast was conspicuously denied its share. Moreover, it is no
coincidence that the same Southeast Nigeria , the mainstay of the Igbo
nation, is the only zone without a personnel presence in the nation’s security
leadership apparatus.
This outlook coupled
with a stoic indifference by the president triggered outrage in the land. It
straightaway provoked the Movement for the Actualization of Sovereign State
of Biafra (MASSOB), then a sedate outfit, to declare “that Buhari is not
seeing Ndigbo as part of Nigeria .” The Indigenous People of Biafra
(IPOB) was not to be left behind, as it heightened its call for secession
from the country. Their activities, however, were met with brute force,
including the detention without bail of its leader, Nnamdi Kalu. This plight is
today commonly linked to the birth of a new militant group under the auspices
of Niger Delta Avengers. We are all living witnesses to the economic
repercussions of the Biafran movement and their Avengers ever since.
The title of this piece
will not be apt if the empathy for the current wave of Igbo marginalization did
not flow past east of River Niger . Recognizing that the ruling party treated
it as business as usual, the opposition from the highly influential
Southwest Nigeria led by the trio of Ayo Fayose, Femi Fani-Kayode, and
Femi Aribisala capitalized on the saga to strike back. What just took place
here, and painfully so, is that Muhammadu Buhari had inadvertently provided a
lifeline for the corrupt brigade of the immediate past regime—from the east,
north, and west—to resurface and now grandstand as latter-day fighters of what
is widely believed as naked injustice to the people of the Southeast. And what
followed, thereafter, was a montage of propaganda that successfully painted the
president as an unapologetic bigot determined to punish not only the Igbo but
also the entire Christian-dominated South.
The development caught
the attention of the Northern zone of the Christian Association of Nigeria,
which lamented as follows: “while there were volumes of allegations from the
South that the appointments made so far were in favour of the north, facts on
the ground revealed that those appointments were lopsided in favour of Muslim
north to the detriment of Northern Christian community.” More dauntingly, many
blame part of the current crisis on Buhari’s economic policy, particularly
foreign exchange, which is believed to be tribally skewed to specially benefit
his Fulani kinsmen who control bureau de change across the country.
Today, not only is the
national economy in recession, the negative opinion of Buhari is growing beyond
our shores. Although a number of world leaders showered praises on him during
the recent UN session in New York for giant strides against corruption and
terrorism, which is very gratifying, a creeping concern within the
international community remains that Nigeria’s president is a dictator,
tribalist, sectionalist, misogynist, and religious bigot—all in one
person. This emerging view—whether real or not—explains why US Congressman Tom
Marino, a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee, on a September 1, 2016
letter, would warn the United States to withhold selling arms to Nigeria until
Buhari demonstrates true “commitment to inclusive government and the most basic
tenets of democracy: freedom to assemble and freedom of speech.”
This spectre is gloomy,
square. It does not bode well for an economy in recession. In short, it scares
away investment whether local or foreign, especially in this era of economic
globalization where millions of Nigerians in the Diaspora, the Igbo well
included, represent the convex lens through which the world sees Nigeria
. This also goes to say that even as President Buhari might have done a good
job on the area of corruption, the fact that he is generally perceived as
condoning gross injustice at another area renders his entire effort pyrrhic.
The central problem is
complex and thus difficult to capture at once. But the solution is quite
simple. For every question raised in this essay sufficiently answers itself.
Buhari has to simply trek back to where the rain started beating him and make
amends. Allowing the problem to linger not only threatens the chances of
economic revival but also the hard-earned change. Even if he is not thinking of
2019, which he should, Mr. President cannot feign ignorance of the fact that
his queasy quandary with the Legislature has his Igbo problem written all over
it. Very true!
(Ogbonnia can be
reached via: SKCOgbonnia@firsttexasenergy.com)
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