Prolific
writer, Okey Ndibe, has joined in the debate on whether or not
Nigeria's president Muhammadu Buhari should resign from office.
President Muhammadu Buhari
There’s a chance that President Muhammadu Buhari would have come
back to Nigeria by the time you read this column, but the fact that he
had twice postponed his return date encourages one conclusion: that the
man is really, really sick. So here’s a humane proposal for the
president: consider handing in your resignation letter.
I’m aware that some Nigerians still consider Mr. Buhari essential,
if not indispensable, to our country’s prospect of rebirth. To these, a
suggestion that the man ought to quit office must sound heretical—indeed
seem like a prescription with a dollop of ghastly mischief. But such
people are grandly deluded. Concrete ideas, not the cult of any
particular personality, are best for a polity in need of ethical
rejuvenation. And two years of Mr. Buhari’s tenure as president are
adequate to demonstrate his paucity of ideas.
In place of robust and organic ideas for transforming Nigeria, he
has merely offered us the pabulum that his reputation and goodwill are
enough.
That idea, of the transformative power of President Buhari’s
supposed moral gravitas, is hollow. What significant transformation have
Nigerians witnessed, in any sector of their life, in the two years of
Buhari’s presidency? The so-called war on corruption, Mr. Buhari’s best
calling card, has failed to achieve the conviction of one significant
political figure from the recent past.
After all the public drama of Dasukigate, what is the status of the
case against former National Security Adviser Sambo Dasuki? If Mr.
Buhari’s government has not been able to prosecute Mr. Dasuki to date,
is there much hope of his administration making a noticeable dent in the
war against corruption via prosecutorial means? I don’t think so.
Worse, Mr. Buhari’s much-vaunted crusade against graft has neither
dampened nor discouraged the appetite for corruption in Nigeria. Police
and customs officers still farm out on the road and extort bribes from
hapless commuters and traders. Under Mr. Buhari’s watch, the Central
Bank of Nigeria and other agencies corruptly handed out jobs to children
and wards of the most privileged. Elections are still fraught with
fraud, with the police and army rolled out to serve the ruling party’s
partisan interests. Judicial processes operate at snail-speed; lawyers
and judges collude in using incessant adjournments to derail justice.
Mr. Buhari has done little more than yawn when political appointees
close to him have been accused of corrupt acts.
If the Buhari brand ever represented antipathy to corruption, that
image is now profoundly tarnished. At its core, corruption in Nigeria
remains as vibrant and resilient as ever. If there’s a scaling back in
levels of embezzlement, it owes less to the Buhari effect than to the
significant decline in oil revenues.
As I have argued before, a government that disdains judicial
orders, that turns the military on unarmed civilians, whether Shiites or
Biafran agitators, is engaged in egregious acts of corruption.
The case for President Buhari’s resignation is unassailable. Any
seriously sick president deserves the time and space to focus on his
health. He can hardly do so while shouldering the burden of running a
complex and beleaguered country. Besides, Nigeria is beset by grave
crises that appear to worsen by the day. Nigerians deserve a leader at
the height of mental and physical fitness, a president endowed with the
agility and energy to wrestle with his country’s deep-rooted problems.
The trouble is not just that Mr. Buhari is enfeebled by age and
illness. The greater issue is that he presides over a country that is
manifestly sicker than he. The idea that an ailing man can effectively
mind the business of a more seriously sick country is, quite simply,
absurd. Should anybody doubt the graveness of Nigeria’s sickness, the
fact of President Buhari’s prolonged medical trip to Britain should
settle the matter.
Consider the facts for a moment. Mr. Buhari, Vice President Yemi
Osinbajo, their families and all employees at Aso Rock enjoy the most
generously funded health facility within the Nigerian space. On February
2, 2016, Premium Times reported that the Presidency’s clinic “will get
N787 million more in capital allocation than all the 16 teaching
hospitals combined.”
According to the report, the “State House Medical Center is a
facility that provides healthcare for President Muhammadu Buhari, Vice
President Yemi Osinbajo, their families and other employees of the
Presidency, all possibly less than a thousand.
“Federal teaching hospitals cater for the heath needs of
millions of Nigerians, train medical doctors and other health
professionals for the nation while also serving as top medical research
centers.
“A breakdown of the 2016 Appropriation Bill shows that a total
of N3.87 billion has been allocated for capital projects at the State
House Clinic.” That allocation, I emphasize, exceeded the budget for the country’s 16 teaching hospitals.
In June 2016, Mr. Buhari hopped off to Britain to be treated for an
ear infection. On this, his latest medical excursion to London, neither
he nor his aides specified the nature of his malaise. Instead, his trip
was portrayed as a vacation during which the president was to undergo
“routine medical checkup.” Mr. Buhari wrote to tell the Senate, in foggy
phraseology, that he was extending his stay in the UK “until the
doctors are satisfied that certain factors are ruled out.”
The doleful implication should not be lost on anyone. The
best-funded clinic in Nigeria does not suffice to treat the president’s
ear infection. Nor does the president have enough confidence in the same
clinic to do his “routine checkups” there. Imagine, then, the fate of
Nigerians who have no choice, but must seek treatment at the
ill-equipped, wretchedly funded hospitals in our country. Are these
Nigerians not simply woebegone, bereft of hope?
Let’s be fair: President Buhari is no sole author of the mess that
is Nigeria. But let’s be honest: he has contributed, quite richly, to
the creation of that mess. He has been a player as a military and
civilian ruler. There is no evidence in his public career that he paid
attention to bringing about a sound healthcare system for Nigerians.
Instead, he has been content to travel to the UK for the kind of
healthcare that he and his fellow cast of misrulers should have
envisioned for all Nigerians.
The management of a country’s affairs should never be a part-time
task. Even the most stable and developed nations require vigilant
leadership. Nigeria, with its broken educational system, non-existent
healthcare policy, terrible roads, shameful power supply etc, can ill
afford a leader who, frequently, must choose between attending to his
private headache or his country’s.
It makes eminent sense that Mr. Buhari resign in order to look
after his frail health. Nigeria should be in the hands of a leader who
shows no sign of physical or mental debilitation.
If this would serve as encouragement to do the right thing, I’d
support giving Mr. Buhari a gift that he—like other former rulers of
Nigeria—has not earned. I would propose that the Nigerian people
continue to pick up his healthcare bills after his resignation. But
acting President Osinbajo should begin, immediately, to outline a viable
healthcare system for Nigerians. It should be designed for humans, a
humane replacement for the current morass whereby Nigerians see
hospitals as hopeless locations where they are condemned to suffer and
die needlessly.
**********
Written by Okey Ndibe
Please follow me on twitter @okeyndibe
(okeyndibe@gmail.com)
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