Your Excellency, it’s been months since I wrote my desperate
memo to you. I wish to thank you once more for reacting promptly and swiftly at
that time and for giving me the honour and privilege of meeting you in your
office. I remember presenting you a special compilation of my articles,
especially the many admonitions to your immediate predecessor, President
Goodluck Ebele Jonathan. After handing over the book to you, Sir, I promised to
continue acting in my self-appointed capacity as Special Adviser because of the
need to tell you what those very close to you might not be able to say.
They might be afraid of you and your reaction. The truth is you are a plain and
simple man imbued with a mission and a passion to save this great country but
you cannot do it on your own. You can only do it if people close to you, who
should be advising you, tell you as it is so that you can do that which you
were elected to do.
Sir, it is on the above basis that I’m back today for
reasons some of which you probably know already from your own personal
observations and readings. But before I go further, kindly permit me to set
some records straight before some conspiracy specialists step forward to
ascribe other people’s opinion to me. I shall clearly expose my personal views
and state where I belong or stand for any avoidance of doubt. Everywhere I go
people refer to me as Buhari’s man and ask “what’s your Baba doing ooo?”. I
seriously have no problem with that. I’m proud that I joined so many other
Nigerians as well as foreign friends in supporting a man of impeccable pedigree
and solid integrity. No matter your view of President Muhammadu Buhari, one
thing his bitterest enemies give to him is the fact that he is way above the
level of most mortals in matters of uprightness.
This is why many of us volunteered to scream your name to
high heavens and we were ready to follow you to Golgotha. Many of your
opponents have not gotten over the thrashing you gave them and would forever
seek everything and anything to smear you with. It is therefore not surprising
that there has been so much noise about what you’ve done or left undone.
Whether they are right or wrong in their assessment, I feel it is right and
proper to let you know what people are saying about you including your most
ardent fans and supporters. Sir, please, let’s not dismiss them as mere rabble-rousers.
A groundswell of public opinion can easily metamorphose into an ocean of
disenchantment and cataclysmic confusion. In short, I believe your enemies are
skilfully setting you up for failure in order to be able to taunt your
supporters later by saying we “we told you so!” In this regard it is pertinent
to always bear in mind the Yoruba saying ‘ehin kunle l’ota wa, ile ni a se ni
ngbe’! Loosely translated it means “the enemy lurk outside in the backyard but
your foe resides inside your house.”
What is the matter this time? Many Nigerians are lamenting
that the change you promised them is fast becoming a mirage. It is certainly
not what they are seeing right now. They insist that your style and methodology
appear too slow for a nation in dire straits and in need of urgent and
miraculous deliverance. They are not happy that you are no longer the prudent
man they used to know. They think you’ve already capitulated by frolicking with
members of the bourgeois class and junketing around the world while Nigeria
burns like Dante’s inferno. They are miffed that you are still keeping the
Presidential fleet when you are supposed to have sold most of them off, if not
all. They are worried that the mandate of four years they gave you is being
unwittingly frittered away and before you know it all the goodwill you garnered
would have evaporated and vamoosed. Time, they say, waits for no man!
The economy and the free fall of the Naira have become
worrisome. There are all manner of rumours that may make matters worse, if
true, about the current state and status of our banks. Though the Central Bank
of Nigeria has come out forcefully to dispel the dangerous rumours, they want
you to unleash your economic master-plan as soon as possible, so that what was
once a baseless rumour does not somehow become harsh reality. They are
expecting a blue-print that would guarantee a farewell to poverty. On this I
agree with the opinion that something drastic has to be conjured up to arrest
this drift to perdition. Nothing amplifies this monumental tragedy than the
debit card fiasco which stipulates that Nigerians cannot live in a civilised
world by walking into any international hotel or shop of their choice and
paying with their cards. This is terribly depressing.
What this means in plain terms is that Nigerians must
patronise the black market and run the risk of carrying cash recklessly
whenever they travel abroad. It makes a mockery of the cashless society that
the CBN has fought so hard to put in place and jeopardises your fight against
corruption because government officials who travel abroad must of necessity
carry large sums of cash if they are not to be embarrassed or even disgraced.
Sir, the most important thing is that this is not healthy at all. The last
thing your Government should be telling the world is that we are so broke that
we are on our knees. The world laughs at us and treats us with derision
because we have resources other than crude oil which should make us one of the
richest in the world if we properly harness them. We must stop giving the
impression that we are so impoverished when it is leadership, brigandage and a
lack of focus that has failed us.
The other matter that continues to embarrass Nigerians is
the issue of Boko Haram. The matter is made worse by the fact that you are a
retired army General who should know and have what it takes to drastically
reduce if not exterminate the cankerworm. But rather the menace has
exacerbated. It has snowballed into a seemingly unquenchable conflagration. I
had argued repeatedly that the military alone cannot achieve this result.
Intelligence seems to be the key word here. Also identifying and locating some
of the cells and prominent sympathisers is crucial. Those who arrogantly and
naively say that no form of negotiation should take place are very far from the
theatre of war. They have probably not heard of a group called IRA, the Irish
Republican Army, that terrorised Great Britain for God knows how many years. I
and my directors at Ovation International were lucky to escape a massive
explosion that shattered the peace and tranquillity of London Docklands when a
bomb went off inside the South Quay light rail station which was next to our
office at Beaufort Court. The battle of wits and the war of attrition had to be
fought using the carrot and the stick approach. It was the carrot approach that
eventually succeeded and the United Kingdom has now been rid of that hitherto
interminable scourge for many years!
The Boko Haram issue has defied every effort made so far and
it is time to expand the options for the sake of our fellow citizens in the
heart of this conundrum. When over 200 girls vanished into thin air, we were so
sure they would return very soon but that has remained an illusion. This should
tell us that this issue is not a joke and that we need to keep all windows
open. Sir, Nigerians want to see government show a different approach and
better compassion than what we had in the past. They are waiting to see how you
will do this with minimum collateral damage.
Sir, you have a herculean task ahead but it is not a mission
impossible. Other nations are experiencing almost similar challenges and they
are forging ahead. The first indicator to exhibit our seriousness is when we
stop the business as usual syndrome and tighten the belts of government
officials and politicians. If the idea is to continue along the path of
profligacy then Nigeria is contagiously jinxed. The Republic of Tanzania has
already taken the lead. I will publish a report that has already gone viral
below this letter as a veritable example of what is possible.
I wish you well as always Sir.
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