Today, May 29, 2016 marks President Muhammadu Buhari’s first year in office. It has indeed been an all-round exhilarating year, not only for the government but also for the generality of Nigerians.
There is nobody in Nigeria today who does not agree that the current challenges that the government face stems from deep seated rot in the system which pervaded the entire nation prior to President Buhari’s assumption of power.
Precisely one year ago, President Buhari took over the mantle of office to wide acclaim from Nigerians. Before that fateful day, Nigerians had watched aghast and rather helplessly as the country continued a fast downward spiral, as if racing to join the ignoble category of failed nations.
A year ago, though the sorry state of the economy was partly due to the falling prices of oil, Nigeria’s biggest foreign exchange earner, a bigger part of the problem, however, was unbridled corruption, mindless depletion of our foreign reserves and gross mismanagement of the country’s dwindling resources.
To compound our people’s woes, Nigerians lived in fear.
In the Northern parts of the country, especially in the North East, it was the fear of the dreaded terrorist group, Boko Haram. In the southern parts of the country, the fear of being kidnapped was rife, while armed robbery completed the pathetic picture of insecurity in the land. As if that was not enough misery in people’s lives, the perpetual darkness the country was plunged into due to the ever present power failure made living in Nigeria almost unbearable.
In the knowledge of the truth that Nigerians deserve better, President Muhammadu Buhari campaigned vigorously round the country using the slogan “Change”. Nigerians embraced that change by voting massively for President Buhari. One year after, the President is not unmindful of the fact that “change” which he is midwifing has come with some necessary pain. Changing a system that has decayed beyond the widest imagination of even the most fertile minds comes with some pain.
It is this pain that Nigerians now face.
However, this fleeting pain shall pass. President Buhari has stated repeatedly that he feels the pain that we feel. He is assiduously working to mitigate and calm our pains with the proverbial ‘balm of Gilead’.
It requires great courage for a leader to tell his people an inconvenient truth. The truth is that the reality of the times demands some measure of sacrifice from every citizen, if the country is to be returned to the glorious path to prosperity. President Buhari, characteristically, has shown his mettle as a courageous leader even as he tackles the numerous challenges that confront the country.
When the history of Nigerian Presidency is written, President Buhari will be remembered as the most consequential President in Nigeria who stepped in at a critical time to change the unfortunate trajectory of a nation that was on a downward spiral.
Taking stock of the past 365 days; while it cannot be said that the country is out of the woods, there is no denying the fact that the hemorrhaging in the system has been stopped. On the day President Buhari mounted the saddle of office as the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, he promised to deal decisively with the godless terrorist group, Boko Haram. That promise which he put into action immediately by relocating the military high command to Maiduguri is almost a “fait accompli”.
There is no doubting the fact that the Nigerian military with the coalition of neighboring countries which President Buhari forged, have routed Boko Haram. What remains is to clean out the fleeing remnants of the group. President Buhari has been able to achieve this feat by restoring the dignity of the Nigerian Armed Forces and equipping them properly to combat this unprecedented and unconventional warfare. The rescue of one of the Chibok girls from the den of terrorists is a flicker of hope that the rest of the girls would be returned safely to their parents and loved ones.
Another battle which the President promised to wage on his inauguration day is the war against corruption that has permeated and eaten so deeply into the Nigerian socio-economic and political fabric. President Buhari has also kept faith on this. Since his assumption in power, he has relentlessly waged this “non-negotiable” war against corruption. It is the President’s belief that the battle against corruption holds the key to the reconstruction of Nigeria’s economic and social systems destroyed by past governments.
The Billions of Naira of Nigeria’s stolen money that has so far been recorded bears eloquent testimony to the huge successes recorded in this area. Gone is the era of looting the country’s treasury with impunity.
In line with his promise to cleanse the system, President Buhari’s searchlight has beamed brightly on the Nigerian National petroleum Corporation (NNPC), cleaning in the process the national scam that was the fuel subsidy regime. In the fullness of time, Nigerians would start reaping the benefits of the deregulation of the Oil industry. Without a shadow of doubt, this is an area that past Nigerian governments refused to touch, even with a ten foot pole. President Buhari has shown tremendous courage by dealing with this issue once and for all.
Critiques of President Buhari’s administration harp on his foreign trips as costing the country money. What they fail to point out are the huge benefits that have continued to accrue to the nation as a result of these trips. Close watchers of President Buhari’s government will readily admit that Nigeria’s leadership position in the world stage and at the Sub-Saharan Africa level has been restored. The frosty relationship between Nigeria and many world powers no longer exist. In the recent past, the country’s near pariah position in the world stage made it impossible for a country of Nigeria’s stature to purchase even the most rudimentary armaments for its military that was prosecuting a war against terrorism.
One of the greatest achievements of President Buhari’s first year in office is that of reducing the size and cost of governance. No longer is Nigeria running an over bloated political system that bogs down the economy. The President has reduced the number of Ministries, Departments and Agencies, thereby saving the country billions of Naira now being channeled towards other developmental projects and infrastructure. In addition, the introduction of the Treasury Single Account (TSA) has helped block many leakages in the system through which the country’s funds were siphoned into private pockets. Reportedly, about 2 Trillion Naira has been saved as a result.
As Presidents Buhari’s government enters its second year, Nigerians will begin to see the positive impact of various policies measures that the government has put in place to restore the country’s economy and strengthen our democracy. While his first year in office has been spent cleaning the Augean stable, the coming years will see Nigerians benefitting from the government’s programmes to create employment for the teeming youths; strengthen the institutions of government; revitalize the economy by encouraging indigenous and foreign investments and improve the energy situation in the country.
With the current passage of the budget and other measures so far put in place by the government, Nigerians will have cause to smile again. The best is yet to come.
-by Senator Babafemi Ojudu
Senator Babafemi Ojudu is the Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters
Hmmmm... it is well with our great country.
ReplyDeleteI dey go church biko. Make I no lie, I'm straining my ears to understand our amiable president make the democracy day speech. The man voice haf tire. Eheheh
ReplyDeleteOK bye
Story for the gods
ReplyDeleteMtsheeeeeew. One year of failure. One year of hardship, one year of cluelessness, one year of lies, one year of stupidity. I could go on and on but I'm already late for church and d person that invited me won't take it easy with me if I don't attend
ReplyDeleteLol
DeleteI was almost scared that this article was from Stella.
ReplyDeleteNow I found its this man, my answer is
"He who pays the piper, dictates the tune"
Now in his needless treatise, he just summed up the pain and anguish of Nigerians in 2 sentences "It is this pain that Nigerians now face.
However, this fleeting pain shall pass. ""
More excuses.
No balance in this article.
No reference to the monetary and fiscal policies that have impoverished Nigerians.
No reference to Buhari's way of changing policies everyday n rechanging it to the extent his policies are undeterminable and no investor can trust.
No reference to our fall in ranking of corruption.
Fall into economic abyss.
All we hear is fictitious sums returned. Fight against corruption. When smugglers still operate, policemen still collect bribe, lecturers still maim students, people still pay to jump queues, jobs still go to the elite, banks still embezzel our funds. The man on the street hasnt felt the corruption fight; if anything, it has increased due to increasing poverty, its only natural.
If Buhari did much good, he needs not even say it sef. People would extol him. All these write ups by croonies; did he believe his words even when he was typing them?
Your last sentence killed me
Delete"did he believe his words even when he was typing them?". Ofcourse they will say it's just one year only, he still has time. Come down to rivers state and see what one man achieved under one year. Even apc cabals are praising him@gov wike
Your last sentence killed me
Delete"did he believe his words even when he was typing them?". Ofcourse they will say it's just one year only, he still has time. Come down to rivers state and see what one man achieved under one year. Even apc cabals are praising him@gov wike
Hmmm.. if the police are still corrupt, then it'll take the collective effort of the citizenry to completely eradicate that. It starts from YOU and I.
DeleteYou'd agree that if we stopped giving them stipends, in time no police would expect or demand bribe.
It is amazing how we push the bulk of the blame on the federal government at all times. Now this has nothing to do with the present or past administration. I'm talking in general terms.
The state governments down to the commissioners and local government reps are idle. Grassroot is where the change should begin from. Before it can filter to the federal level.
Perhaps if we become more strategic in dispatching our individual responsibilities as Nigerians, only then would we effect the much needed change.
But I agree that the fiscal and monetary policies be addressed with utmost urgency. The country is indeed bleeding. And I hope that Adeosun is capable.
Happy Sunday.
@crownwonder: I heard about it. Kudos 2 him.
Delete@sisi Eko:
"It is amazing how we push the bulk of the blame on the federal government at all times."
But is it fair to seek praise for fighting corruption and push the rest on the citizens when the chips are down. As much as it is a collective effort, which we all know, Its funny how they take praise and make such lists when we know the problems in the grassroot are yet to be solved. And the causative factors are clear: poverty and bad orientation. Isnt it same corrupt people that will rise up and take govt positions.
E.g you ban frozen food but there are no farms to cater for the populace because it takes a lot to set them up and there's no enabling environment. The people producing poultry cant meet up and they jack up prices. Plus 5,000 poultry farms cant cater for 100million people who demand of it daily. So the traders who know they cant sell life chicken for 2500 and get patronage, turn to the borders to get the kind they can sell for 800 naira and make gain and people dont mind and prefer it. At the border, its banned item but they pay smugglers to bring it in. The smugglers settle the police and custom men who earn meagre salaries and are not even being supervised and dont even care or believe the good intention of banning these things(people dont share the philosophy of the govt or see the reason behind the rules). So they bribe at 10 checkpoints cos honestly, thats the only business they are equipped to do. Getting home, they put in transportation cost and sell the chicken at a higher price. Custom woman's wife buys it expensive, goes home and demands more money from her husband, man resolves to collect bribe from more people because his salary isnt growing.
So yep, many of these simple problems we are having can be solved in part by a better economy and better orientation and empowerment of citizens(education and environment for business). Whose duty to provide these?
Its easy to make good principles but difficult to keep when the harsh reality hits. Its easy to say "i'll be good today". People dont even feel like part of nation building and stuff. People dont see why they should pay tax when they fuel their generators(no light), dig their boreholes (how many places have portable water: Lekki is one example. No govt prescence), pay vigilante for protection. Then we still have to pay toll gate fares, FIRS. What exactly is the govt doing for us? Think of it. We pay for every single thing we do. Our kids cant go to govt schools, govt doesnt give us jobs, we set up our own place, pay rent, pay land use charge to them and they still come for levies and tax and anytime they want the land, they mark an 'x' with red on your building and tell you to vacate within 7 days.the only thing they ever did was keep this country together by force and avoid war but these days, they are failing.
I can go on and on. But If the fragments that bind the society are not tightly fitted and the basic issues that cause rot are not tended to, there will never be progress and corruption will persist. No matter how many people you drag to court, it will be a personal thing of individuals not cleansing of institutions. You can bet people are still looting now as we speak, just people closer to him. Its like changing people not changing the system. Apples for oranges
@Bona .. Honestly I cannot fault ur argument because you've raised very salient points. Well said dear.
DeleteBunch of fools and liars
ReplyDeleteOne year of lies, economic hardship and poverty. I watched osasu show yesterday and I couldn't hold back the laughter as an igbo trader berated this change govt for the hike in prices of commodity. The unfortunate truth is buhari can't rule this nation, he has a very poor economic and agricultural team. Power has gone down and all he can do is nag and blame gej like a frustrated housewife, yes gej is not perfect and yea he and his cabinet looted money(who wouldn't,we all are nigerians *rme*) but like other past regime they moved on. Buhari lied that gej left an empty treasury but he ran d govt al most one year on the "empty treasury". He met with newspaper proprietors and osinbade met with social media influencers to do what? He obviously gave them big envelopes when they left and those who couldn't make it got their credit alert. This govt has failed and bribing journalists proves it. Apc control the media and some blogs thats why we always read one sided news sometimes. God help us oh, I watched east meets West instead of listening to buhari hausa english cos my tv doesn't have google translate to help me translate it to proper English. As for the idiot apc rat that came to die under my comment yesterday, my mum is ibo so yea call me biafran if u wish but im more nigerian. Buhari u are not God, u are not perfect. Surround ur self with brains, nigerians are suffering. Make my comment no vanish
ReplyDeleteOne year of lies, economic hardship and poverty. I watched osasu show yesterday and I couldn't hold back the laughter as an igbo trader berated this change govt for the hike in prices of commodity. The unfortunate truth is buhari can't rule this nation, he has a very poor economic and agricultural team. Power has gone down and all he can do is nag and blame gej like a frustrated housewife, yes gej is not perfect and yea he and his cabinet looted money(who wouldn't,we all are nigerians *rme*) but like other past regime they moved on. Buhari lied that gej left an empty treasury but he ran d govt al most one year on the "empty treasury". He met with newspaper proprietors and osinbade met with social media influencers to do what? He obviously gave them big envelopes when they left and those who couldn't make it got their credit alert. This govt has failed and bribing journalists proves it. Apc control the media and some blogs thats why we always read one sided news sometimes. God help us oh, I watched east meets West instead of listening to buhari hausa english cos my tv doesn't have google translate to help me translate it to proper English. As for the idiot apc rat that came to die under my comment yesterday, my mum is ibo so yea call me biafran if u wish but im more nigerian. Buhari u are not God, u are not perfect. Surround ur self with brains, nigerians are suffering. Make my comment no vanish
ReplyDeleteNice write up.
ReplyDeleteBig lie the treasury single account has cut down many peoples salary,alot of people are now being paid half their salary, ask around, what nonsense law is Buhari passing that is making things worse for people?the single account made things rather worse for people, this new government have no vision, they don't think before acting, the last government can never do this, they think and plan, they made the economy better,the single account made many federal workers to receive half their usual salary which is very bad
ReplyDeleteFunny how some of you still give people hope that things are going to change for good,meanwhile many insiders,Apc people are secretly saying we should expect worse things, I am planning to leave this country cos the true hardship is on its way.learn to speak the truth and stop giving us false hope,the worse is on its way and you know it like many of you do, I really blame the yorubas who voted for Buhari if not we won't be in this cruel state, the last government were not perfect but I give it to them the way the economy was,they made things easy for a common man,many of you in Nigeria don't even know what u have gotten yourselves into till the end of this year, things are not the same and will never be till Buhari leaves.
ReplyDeleteAn APC chieftain I called told me to consider moving permanently from Nigeria
Delete@siseko, do you know how many Nigerians have died in the hands of police for not giving stipends as you called it? The system is not working and your change agent is clueless period.
Delete@Oluchi. Hmmm so we have to keep encouraging bribe for that reason?
DeleteLiars and thieves.
ReplyDeleteThis man must be related to Lai mohammed
ReplyDeleteRubbish, liars, am out.
ReplyDeleteOne full year of hardship, clueless, lies, neglet, nonchalant, moving from one country to another, rigid policy not minding if people are dying or surviving. And APC supporters keep deceiving themselves tthat Buhari is going to make the economy good. One year is gone, we are going to be like this until his last 6months, that is when he can do something so as to secure seat again in next election but no way. That blood he has been clamoring of shedding if he loose election must spill but this time in his family, generation and all terrorist supporters. Nigeria is too big for this man I swear.
ReplyDeleteI am tired of cussing them biko, I will just reserve the small energy I av to observe.
ReplyDelete