For a long
time now, the voice of General Muhammadu Buhari (retd) has been a constant buzz
on the Nigerian political scene. Actually, for a while — after the election of
2007 — the erstwhile autocratic military head of state rescued himself from the
political scene, complaining bitterly and implausibly that he had been cheated
out of presidential election victory.
Then,
propelled by his unfulfilled appetite for power, he re-emerged soon after. It
is entirely understandable that he couldn’t stay away for long.
Any observer
of the Nigerian political scene in 1984 has to know that Buhari is a man with
an imperial bent and an oversized ego. During his short-lived tenure as
Nigeria’s military head of state, he imposed his will as no other had done
before or after.
His War
Against Indiscipline (or WAI) permeated every aspect of Nigerian life, for
better and for worse. He brooked no dissent. His Decree No. 4 was as draconian
a law as Nigeria has ever witnessed. Under the decree, many a journalist was
imprisoned for questioning Buhari’s policies or even inveighing against
military rule.
Some pundits
have claimed that many of the dictatorial excesses of Buhari’s tenure were
actually attributable to his second in command, the late General Tunde
Idiagbon. I am more inclined to believe that Buhari was the ideologue behind
the policies and Idiagbon was his strategist.
Not that it
matters that much. Buhari was the head of state, and whatever happened under
his watch should duly be credited to (or blamed on) him.
The important
point now is that Buhari’s tenure was too short to quench his appetite for
power. And that’s why, even after publicly shedding tears in 2007 and vowing to
leave politics, he came back with more doggedness than ever before.
While Buhari
was the flag bearer of the All Nigeria People’s Party, he had little chance of
being elected president. His political fortunes improved somewhat when he
bolted from the ANPP to form the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) in 2010,
but it was not enough to hoist the presidential banner.
That’s why
Buhari’s claim of being cheated out of the presidency in 2007 and 2011raised
serious questions about his political astuteness.
Then Buhari
started to push harder for the merger of parties that could challenge the PDP.
He must have realised at last that his losses in previous contests had little
to do with being rigged out and much to do with his narrow electoral base.
Now with the
merger of the CPC and the Action Congress of Nigeria and two other parties to
form the All Progressives Congress, Buhari has overcome the problem of a narrow
base. And for the first time since his overthrow in 1985, he has a
better-than-realistic chance of becoming Nigeria’s president.
Problem is
that while Buhari has solved the problem of his narrow electoral base in terms
of party formation, he has not shed his narrow political ideology. Rather than
truly reaching out and positioning himself as a healing force in Nigerian
politics, he is demonstrating ever so convincingly that he is too provincial to
be president.
If the APC
nominates Buhari for the presidency in 2015, it would be opting for someone who
is anything but progressive. And the party is likely to lose the very advantage
of its prospective size by the fact that Buhari continues to be divisive and
alienating.
There is no
better evidence of this than his interview last Sunday in Kaduna with Liberty
FM’s Hausa Service Programme, ‘Guest of the Week.’
In the
interview reported in the Punch, Buhari blasted the ongoing military campaign
against Boko Haram, claiming that they are getting harsher treatment than the
Niger Delta militants. Moreover, he attributed the rise of Islamic militancy to
the Niger Delta insurgency.
Perhaps,
Buhari is not aware that the Joint Task Force that was deployed in the Niger
Delta to combat the militancy there used jets, naval gunboats, and armoured
vehicles. Perhaps, he has not heard of the razing in 1999 of Odi village in
Bayelsa State by the Nigerian military and many more such communities since
then.
Buhari
rightly points out in the interview that the arming of Niger Delta youth by
politicians who were running for office played a major role in the
militarisation of the region. What he doesn’t explain is how that gave rise to
the ethno-religious campaign being waged by Boko Haram.
The Niger
Delta militancy arose in support of a negotiable demand for a more equitable
sharing of revenue from the region. And so the militants focused their military
campaign against the oil industry and infrastructure. They did not target
Muslims or Northerners.
In contrast,
Boko Haram is demanding the un-negotiable: the Islamisation of all of Nigeria.
And they are bombing churches and killing Christians to advance that cause. How
do such demands and atrocities compare with the activities of the Niger Delta
militancy?
From his
current and previous utterances, it seems certain that Buhari will be a
disaster for Nigeria if he becomes president. His apparent disregard for the
need for equitable redress of the Niger Delta’s grievances will certainly
precipitate a titanic clash in the region.
Significantly,
it was during the presidency of fellow Northerner, Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, that an
amnesty agreement was reached with the Niger Delta militants, resulting in the
beginning of a draw down in their insurgency. If Buhari becomes president, the
opposite will happen: he would stoke the militancy by words and action.
Buhari’s
evident sympathy for Boko Haram also suggests that he would use his power to
push Nigeria ever closer to a theocratic state (in the Muslim mould) than a
secular one.
Yet, as is
evident in the uprisings in Egypt and Turkey against theocracy-leaning regimes
in those countries, Nigerians, including Northerners, will revolt en masse
against theocratic encroachments on civil liberties. And so a Buhari presidency
is certain to unleash a level of civil unrest that Nigeria has not witnessed in
a long time.
In external
relations, a Buhari presidency is also certain to damage Nigeria’s relations
with the Western world, especially the United States. In fact, it is not an
overreach to speculate that Nigeria could become listed as a terrorist state.
The US
recently announced a $7 million bounty on Boko Haram’s leader, Abubakar Shekau.
If Nigeria elects a president who cuddles the group, the bounty would in effect
be on the country.
In the
interview with Liberty FM radio, Buhari said that he didn’t
join the APC because he wants to be president.
“If APC fails
to give me the ticket, I will remain in partisan politics and in the party,” he
said. “Anyone the party picks as its candidate, I will support him because I
will remain in the APC.”
Buhari is, of
course, being coy about his presidential ambitions, and it is hard to take him
seriously. What with his early and intense campaigning — with posters all over
Abuja, I understand. Buhari does indeed belong in partisan politics, but not in
the presidency.
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