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For God And
Country , Resign! |
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By Colonel Abubakar Umar
Newsdiaryonline Tuesday Dec
29,2009 |
Not too long ago, I was approached, as
were a number of other Nigerians, by a
group of human rights activists to sign
a statement calling on President Umaru
Yar’adua to resign and hand over to the
Vice President, Mr. Jonathan Goodluck on
account of his worsening health
condition.
I interpreted their bold move to have
been stirred by one or two issues. One,
a reaction to the dangerous and
unfounded rumour that a section of the
country was opposed to the
constitutional provision regarding
Presidential succession which would
transfer power prematurely to another
section thereby depriving it of
exercising Presidential power for 8
years. Alternatively, a genuine
frustration with the negative impact
that the President’s protracted illness
is having on governance. My response was
that, in as much as I am one with them
on the concern for the adherence to the
constitution and the need to
reinvigorate governance and set the
nation on a more dynamic footing, I
would rather wait for a more complete
assessment of the situation. In the face
of the very sketchy information
available on the President’s medical
condition, thanks to the deliberate
suppression of information on the
matter, one needs to avoid giving the
impression of insensitivity towards the
President’s predicament and playing into
the hands of ethnic jingoists and
sycophants.
It is now five weeks since the President
once again took seriously ill and had to
be rushed to King Faisal Specialist
Hospital, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, where he
remains, according to some accounts,
bedridden. Whatever the conditions in
which the President may find himself, it
is one more trip too many. Since May
2007 when he took office, the
President’s ill health has become
increasingly manifest - frequent medical
trips, absence from important national
and international functions, ghostly
looks and lack of vigour in his body
language. Former Minister of Mines and
Power in General Yakubu Gowon’s
government and elder statesman, Alhaji
Shettima Ali Monguno, was quoted as
having said that “President Yar’adua is
visibly working under stress.” He does
not believe that “there is any human
being watching him (the President) on
the screen that would not feel sorry for
him.” Like most Nigerians watching, I
share Alhaji Shettima’s observation. The
President is a tragic and pitiful sight
to behold. The only conclusion anybody
can reach is that the President is a
very sick man and we don’t need Mr. Sam
Nda-Isaiah and his Leadership newspaper
to persuade us of the fact.
The President’s aides, cronies and
beneficiaries of his condition may
persist in denial but the truth is that
his dismal failure in the past two and a
half years could only be the result of
his failing health. A charge of
malingering would do injustice to the
man famed for credible performance as
the governor of Katsina state.
Yar’adua’s predicament is not a family
or PDP affair as his aides would have us
believe. They need to acknowledge the
terrible suffering Nigerians have to put
up with on account of his very dismal
performance and having to watch
helplessly the pitiful sight of their
President on television screens. The
important role played by a charismatic,
dynamic and knowledgeable leader in
giving direction to a nation in crisis
cannot be overemphasised. This is more
so in developing societies which are
characterised by weak democratic
institutions.
The contribution of such leaders in
crisis time was well documented.
Britain’s Winston Churchill during World
War II, U.S. President Abraham Lincoln,
John Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, Bill
Clinton and now Barrack Obama, Nigeria’s
General Yakubu Gowon, et al. More than
at any time in its chequered history,
Nigeria stands in dire need of a
redeeming leader; a charismatic,
energetic and diligent figure ... that
is what Yar’adua is not. He is
introverted, reclusive and too frail to
serve as the mobilising president for a
nation under deep stress. The
perpetuation of this overburdened and
weak leadership is not in our national
interest. The impact of Yar’adua’s poor
health on the fortunes of this country
is everywhere. I will mention a few
major examples especially in the areas
where he himself had chosen to make as
the focus of his attention, under the
well advertised 7 Point Agenda. To be
sure the Yar’adua administration
inherited a lot of rot from previous
administrations more so from the
immediate past administration of
President Obasanjo, his mentor.
At his inauguration on the 27th May
2007, Yar’adua had the modesty to
acknowledge that he was the beneficiary
of a very fraudulent election. He could
not therefore be said to have a
legitimate mandate, that alone could
make the task of mobilising the nation
towards national resurgence quite
arduous. But Nigerians had been
traumatised; they were willing to place,
for the moment at least, those concerns
on ice. After all, they are not new
comers to electoral scams in the past.
Although honesty and integrity in public
conduct were of great concern to them,
they were willing to live with a flawed
electoral process if it were to deliver
a true messiah. Eight years of President
Obasanjo’s false messianic rule had left
the economy prostrate. Physical
infrastructure had all but collapsed.
And despite the hype of the government’s
war against corruption, the scourge grew
and grew, making good governance all but
impossible. Any little effort on the
part of the new President would have
assuaged the very low morale of the
nation. But two and a half years later,
the situation has grown worse in all
sectors. Power. This is the most pivotal
infrastructure and the only sector in
which the President chose to give
himself both a target of delivering
6000MW and a deadline of December 31st
2009 to do so. Without adequate power
nothing else could be achieved in the
much desired national economic
development. President Obasanjo‘s
government inherited a power generation
capacity of about 2600MW, it was able to
achieve a tiny increase to about 2900MW
after an expenditure of well over 10
billion U.S. dollars.
A far cry from its mission objective of
power outages being a thing of the past
in six months. It came as no surprise
when President Yar’adua declared his
intention to proclaim an emergency in
order to address the crisis in that
sector. Two and a half years after, and
a further investment of about $5
billion, there has been no visible
improvement. This has forced over 70% of
our manufacturing industries to shut
down compared to about 65% under
Obasanjo. The rest are producing below
25% installed capacity. We have watched
as many industries are relocating to
less endowed countries like South Africa
and Ghana. It is easy to see how this
has thrown more Nigerians into the
jobless market and deepened poverty
across the country. Roads. The Obasanjo
administration was accused of serious
neglect of roads rehabilitation and
construction. Instead, it used money
voted for such purpose as slush fund.
Over N500bn taken from the treasury over
eight years produced little to show. The
Yar’adua government was expected to hit
the ground running in the rehabilitation
and construction of roads. Hopes were
raised with the early inspection tours
of the Minister of Transport, Mrs. D.
Maduekwe. She reportedly came close to
tears on seeing the deplorable state of
the Benin-Shagamu road. And yet, after
two and a half years, not a single
federal road project has been delivered
nor has the President ever visited any
of the sites to see progress of work if
any. The public is still left wondering
what is holding up work on the much used
Benin-Shagamu, Apapa-Oshodi, Gombe-Yola,
Ibadan- Ilorin, or any of the South
Eastern Federal roads. Even more
shocking is the choice and
implementation of the projects. Ongoing
road projects are suddenly abandoned in
favour of less critical ones which
anyway suffer similar fate before
completion. Education. There is a
paradox to the government’s approach to
this sector.
Under a teacher President, education
appears to be the worst hit. Our
universities were closed down for about
4 months due to government’s failure to
address genuine demands of academic
staff unions for the improvement of
working conditions in the universities.
Budgetary allocation to the education
sector remains below 10% of the total
national budget as against the 26%
recommended by UNESCO. Health. It is a
measure of the decay in our health
services that our ailing President and
senior government officials seek routine
medical checks and minor treatment
overseas. Other hapless Nigerians have
largely resorted to self medication, use
of traditional medicine and prayers.
Service delivery. Under President
Yar’adua’s watch and ‘meticulous’
planning, budget implementation and
project execution limps along at 25%
according to data collected by the
National Assembly. All sectors of the
economy, not surprisingly, are showing
signs of severe decline. The only
industry that seems to be growing is
poverty; now some 70% of the population
have fallen below poverty line and still
counting. Life expectancy has fallen
below 45 years; 1 out of every 10,000
women die at childbirth as against 1 in
100,000 in developed countries or 1 in
20,000 in Ghana.
The UN mandated programme of combating
extreme poverty, child and maternal
death, endemic diseases etc under the
MDG programme, all seem tall and
unrealisable dreams. Even the
uncharacteristic success the President
seems to be achieving in the resolution
of the Niger Delta crisis appears to be
unravelling. Anti corruption. Corruption
is established as the bane of our
national development. It was therefore
expected that the Yar’adua
administration would take seriously the
fight against this malice. CBN Governor
Sanusi Lamido Sanusi’s commendable
efforts in the sanitisation of the
banking sector has done little to
ameliorate the harm being caused to the
nation by the government’s failure to
prosecute the war against corruption.
The prosecution of the war against
corruption has remained very selective
and unserious almost exactly the same as
under the Obasanjo administration.
Stealing by public officers goes on with
greater impunity due to and not in spite
of the feebleness of the war on
corruption. Palatial buildings being put
up by public servants in Abuja and other
capitals, their frequent junketing round
world capitals for spurious conferences
and holidays as well as the exotic
vehicles they ride are their way of
proclaiming that the war on corruption
is on recess. Nigeria’s waning influence
on the international stage. Gone are the
days when the World sought our opinion
on all important issues concerning
Africa. The frequent absence of the
President has once again isolated
Nigeria.
Our inability to influence events in the
ECOWAS region is evidence enough of our
waning international influence. Nigeria
was unable to dissuade the President of
Niger Republic, Alhaji Tandja Mamadou,
from illegally amending that country’s
constitution in order to perpetuate
himself in office. We looked helplessly
on while a Captain seized power in a
military coup d’etat in Guinea and went
on to engage in serious abuses of human
rights including the recent massacre of
over 150 peaceful demonstrators who were
protesting his plan to succeed himself
through what would definitely be a sham
election. Succession.
While the country is drifting on account
of the President’s lack of capacity as
evidenced by his frequent absence and
lacklustre performance, our political
leaders are compounding our problems by
declaring that the nation would be
thrown into crisis if the President
fails to recover. This, to say the
least, is irresponsible and can only
succeed in once again pushing the nation
to the precipice. It is difficult to see
how the ill health and possible
incapacitation of an individual, even if
he is the President, may lead to the
kind of crisis our leaders prophesy.
After all our democracy is guided by a
constitution and therefore governed by
laws. We also have in existence
democratic institutions which are
superior to any individual. Provisions
contained in sections 144-146 of our
current constitution are clear on the
issue of presidential succession.
Luckily, this government has laid claim
to being a stickler for observance of
the rule of law. Undoubtedly, the nation
will be thrown into crisis if we fail to
allow the constitution to prevail in
this matter for whatever reason. Our
leaders must eschew any actions or
utterances that can only result in over
heating the polity. Contrary to what
some sycophants believe, the country is
greater than any individual. The
President is not Nigeria and Nigeria is
certainly not the President. Since the
President’s medical trip to Saudi
Arabia, some of our leaders have turned
into prayer warriors. They have engaged
in desperate, mostly self serving calls
for prayers. Such calls or command as
they appear are also capable of sending
the wrong signal to the public about a
possible impending crisis on account of
the President’s illness. Nigerians are
renowned for the zealousness with which
they pray; they would willingly resort
to prayers at the slightest perception
of adversity, they need not be prompted
to pray for the sick. At any rate, how
may we pray for the President whose
health condition has been deliberately
shielded from us? What prayers do we
offer a President who is well enough to
be watching soccer matches in Saudi
Arabia? No, the President’s aides must
respect our right to know his current
state of his health and leave us alone
to pray the right prayers as we deem
fit.
These people must also know the Good
Lord cannot be intimidated. He knows our
motives and intentions and will judge
and answer our prayers accordingly. Our
prayer for now is to deliver us from
selfish people and sycophants who have
continued to idolize every leader even
when such leaders are not doing well.
Most irritating of all are such
senseless and insulting submissions
which seek to remind us that President
Umaru Yar’adua had once stayed away on
overseas medical treatment for six
months while he was governor of Katsina
state. He returned and successfully
completed his first term and went on to
secure a second which he also
successfully completed.
What this means is that we should expect
to keep Nigeria in its current
rudderless state as if the President’s
office is hereditary. Others say that
the President can continue to exercise
his powers from anywhere in the world in
whatever condition. It does not seem
that anything is too absurd or too
shameless in this desperate struggle.
Way forward. The constitution is very
clear as to what should happen in the
event that the President is unable to
discharge the duties of his office. It
is however difficult to see how a
cabinet appointed by the President and
exists at his pleasure can summon the
courage to declare him unfit to hold
office. The contradictory messages
coming out of the Federal Executive
Council since the President’s
hospitalisation attests to this. Nor can
we hope to have the successful
activation of Section 144(1)(a) of the
constitution if statements coming from
the Senate and to some extent the House
of Representatives, are anything to go
by. All of which go to show that a
resolution of this matter through such
constitutional provisions is wishful
thinking.
There are no nice ways to tell President
Umaru Yar’adua what has to be said: he
has proven too ill to function
effectively. His poor score card and the
very pathetic state of the nation are
proof of the evidence to which all can
attest. While we wish and pray for the
President’s quick recovery, we do not
believe it is in the nation’s interest,
nor even in his to hang on to power. He
should do what is patriotic, sensible
and right and voluntarily resign
forthwith - for God and Country. Any
thought of a temporary handover pending
his recovery can only sustain the state
of disorder in the country, quite apart
from creating the conditions anarchists
often seek to exploit. Those who will
choose to accuse me of working against
the interest of one section of the
country or the other; I need hardly
stress my innocence. The guilty ones are
those who decided to impose poor Umaru
on the country knowing too well his poor
state of health and Umaru himself for
accepting to be used. May God continue
to guide us aright
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