Perversive aura of power We must
not grant President Muhammadu Buhari too much comfort. We cannot afford
to blink or take our eyes off the ball. Not anymore; not after all the
tormenting disappointments that have emanated from that Aso Rock
Presidential Villa since 1999. Why should a President Olusegun Obasanjo
have failed so woefully having rode into the scene with cognate
experience none else in Nigeria’s history had? Yet he managed to set us
back many years. Did we not think that President Goodluck Jonathan
brandishing a PhD, and all that shoelessness, was indeed a breath of
fresh air? But he fouled our air so much we are still choking.
The mere fact that the sheer aura and majesty of power would
circumscribe both the holder and beholder is enough reason we must be
even more on our guards now and not assume that the long-awaited messiah
has finally arrived. It is true that comparatively, PMB is imbued with
finer character and personal integrity, but there are a dozen other
virtues begirding transcendental leadership and transformational
governance.
It is for these reasons that we, the watchers of all the Estates of
the Realm, must wear our skeptic’s cap always and set it askew at an
irreverent and annoying angle. Now more than ever before, we must not be
afraid not provoke and run against the grain of popular leaning. And
like my brother Azu Isiekwene once said, we must not stop at ruffling
feathers, we must make sure to pluck some feathers. Especially so when
we are sure we are doing so in the interest of both the man in the
pristine prison of the Villa and the hapless fella on the street.
The breeding a benign dictatorship This is why we
must not fail to sound the alarm about what is clearly an incipient
one-man government and the making of a leviathan; a benign dictatorship.
It is not acceptable and neither is it justifiable that PMB would take
almost half of a year to form a government. We simply do not have that
luxury of time. He tells us he will not appoint members of his cabinet
till September. We hear the Senate may not complete ratification of
nominees till end of October and we know that it would take these men
and women upmost of another six months to master their not so simple
environment and begin to deliver any reasonable result.
Why should we hand over one full year of our lives to a man we
elected to office to play around with as he wishes? There is absolutely
nothing PMB is doing now that he could not have done with the full
complement of his cabinet in tow. It is a dangerous fallacy for one man
to imagine he could reform a deeply rotten system all alone in a few
months.
In fact, the dangers and shortcomings of the President discharging
executive functions in the manner he has been doing are numerous and
indeed, scary. First, most of the activities so far – wholesome and
positive as they may be – are at best ad-hoc and direly limited. He does
not have the option of robust debate and a weighing up of numerous
alternatives to arrive at the best options.
One example was the setting up of the Adams Oshiomhole-led panel to
probe the management of the Excess Crude Account during the Jonathan
era. It had one month to report back to the National Economic Council
(NEC). But it took all of one month to find out that the panel was
inadequate and indeed awkward for that assignment. It took one month to
know that audit firms are better suited for the job. That was one month
wasted and several opportunities lost.
Another shortcoming is that the country has remained at a standstill
and will be so till a cabinet is formed. A visit to federal secretariats
will prove this. It was not that diligent activity was the hallmark of
the Nigerian civil servant, but ask anyone of them now and he will tell
you there is nothing doing since the new dispensation. Again, it is not
for fun that the weekly cabinet meeting is held: it is for setting broad
policy guidelines, tracking implementation and reviewing performance
and progress taking place simultaneously in all sectors. No one person
can do this alone.
What really is the purpose of the current exercise of having
permanent secretaries review their ministries before the President one
at a time? This exercise, which is taking months to carry out, would
have been better accomplished in a one week summit under a full cabinet.
This way, even the ministers would benefit immensely and at the end of
the day, the President would set the tone for his presidency and
government in the purview of all – the appointees and civil servants. So
we would have done in one week (and with better result) what we have
been grappling with for months.
And there is the more foreboding danger of the President getting used
to the current situation of ‘working’ alone and all the minnows around
him falling all over themselves when he sneezes. He is in danger of
creating a debilitating environment that does not allow for debate,
questions and a weighing of options. If he gets used to dishing out
instructions and people jumping, his cabinet would be ineffectual and
he, as much as Nigeria, would be the worse for it.
Now and for as long as the President’s slow motion lasts, the budget
is in abeyance, most projects are abandoned, work cycle is lost and
funds are disbursed whimsically from the presidency.
APC’s slumbering new era? If PMB is taking things
slow to dredge the rot in the system, are governors too, who have
followed his example, also dislodging sludge? It is worrisome that most
of the ruling APC governors have conveniently neglected to initiate
governance; even second term governors.
If Governor Nasir El Rufai of Kaduna State (a first timer) could get
started immediately, what is holding up Governors Akin Ambode (Lagos),
Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun), Abiola Ajimobi (Oyo), Rochas Okorocha (Imo),
among others? Why is it taking Governor Rauf Aregbesola (Osun) almost
one year to form government? This precedent is dangerous and
unacceptable. Apart from the fact that they are running government from
their breast pockets, some fellow will come tomorrow and take all of two
or three years to form an executive council (exco), standing on
Aregbesola’s example.
One sees absolutely no benefit in a president or governor hedging to form government upon inauguration. None.
PRESSID: Let’s not throw Jonathan away with bathwater
One of the most ingenious initiatives of former President Goodluck
Jonathan was setting up of the Presidential Special Scholarship Scheme
for Innovation and Development (PRESSID).
The scheme, which is in its third year, selects about 100 best of
Nigeria’s first class graduates for scholarship in the best universities
abroad. The idea is simply to harness a critical mass of thinkers and
leaders in all spheres of life for Nigeria’s future. The US has
perfected this strategic initiative, reaching beyond their borders to
poach the best from around the world.
The successful candidates for the third batch for the 2014/2015
academic session, who have been offered admission in universities across
the world, have been left hanging since President Buhari came to power.
If these young Nigerians are being denied their well-merited national
scholarship, which they have already won, by the new government, they at
least deserve to be informed formally so that they may move on with
their lives.
America, Israel, China, etc., lead the world because they make
serious effort to select and groom their very best minds. It is hoped
that PMB would sustain PRESSID.
Ref: http://thenationonlineng.net/pmb-the-dangers-of-one-man-show/
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