PRESS
STATEMENT--
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Sowore
And Revolution: As Buhari Forgets Why And How He Became President
By
SKC Ogbonnia
August
8, 2019
Most
of us who held our noses to support President Muhammadu Buhari again in the
last election had hoped for true change, if he was re-elected. Two months into the
second tenure, while it may appear as if though Buhari is indeed incorrigible, it
is definitively clear that he has forgotten why and how he became democratic
president in the first place. If that were not the case, there is no way Buhari’s
regime would be colluding with the courts to detain Omoyele Sowore, the
presidential candidate of African Action Congress (AAC) in the last election--without
bail.
Flash
back to how we got here. The 16-year reign of the People’s Democratic Party
(PDP) was an embarrassing failure. Yet, the then ruling party was boasting that
it would rule Nigeria for 60 uninterrupted years whether we “like it or not.” Elections had become mere charade. Though the
country was in dire need of change, the change appeared impossible.
Many prominent politicians aspired to wrestle power from the center during that
era, but none was more consistent than General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) who had
always garnered massive votes from northern part of the country by tapping into
a visceral anger provoked by gross misrule of the PDP under southern leaders. Yet,
Buhari needed broader opposition to win the presidency. One of the patriots that
answered that call was the publisher of the New York-based Sahara Reporters,
Mr. Omoyele Sowore, a globally celebrated anti-corruption advocate, well-known
for speaking truth to power.
Armed
with an activist pedigree, Ivy League education, and a cult-like army of social
media warriors, Sowore became a torn in the flesh of various PDP regimes. Together
with his popular tabloid, Sowore keyed into the vanguard of the political
revolution that made it possible for Buhari to make history by unseating an
incumbent president in Nigeria. Even though they had ideological differences, Sowore
saw Buhari’s anticorruption record as a common ground. More essentially, removing
PDP from power was an ultimate compromise.
Throughout
Buhari’s quest for the presidency, from 2002 to 2015, he adopted a
revolutionary approach replete with inflammatory rhetorics. For instance, he is
on record to have urged Nigerians to emulate the example of Arab Spring
Revolution to oust the regime of President Goodluck Jonathan in 2011. He
followed in May 14, 2012 to charge that “If what happened in 2011 should again
happen in 2015, by the grace of God, the dog and the baboon would all be soaked
in blood.” Even his victorious 2015 presidential campaign was prosecuted with
revolutionary credo. In fact, a simple scan of the internet still shows many
sites and incidents relating the president to revolution, including a Face Book
page boldly christened “The Buhari Revolution”. Of course, there were some
calls for Buhari’s arrest, but President Jonathan recognized that the
Constitution guarantees the former military dictator freedom of speech.
The
problem, however, is that upon gaining the power, Buhari did not, and still does
not, seem to remember why he was elected. For example, while the history will
cast Goodluck Jonathan as the president who condoned corruption, Buhari might
eventually be remembered as the man who assumed power with a singular purpose to
eradicate corruption but ended up as the most shameless promoter of corruption
in the annals of national existence.
Today,
acute corruption and crass impunity are the other of the day. Today, the ruling
party has as its chairman a virally corrupt and morally bankrupt figure who
goes around brandishing the party as a sanctuary for treasury looters. Today, notorious
corrupt kingpins standing trials at various courts are being recycled as
ministers in nation of abundant qualified manpower. Moreover, the degree of political,
tribal, ethnic, social, and religious divisions in the country is unrivalled in
the national history, thanks to the prevailing naked injustice under Buhari.. In
short, things are truly falling apart. Not only is the president leading a
visionless regime, he can no longer claim to have the capacity to guarantee the
safety of lives and properties of the Nigerian people, let alone being able to
cater for the welfare of a deserving nation.
The
truth is that the nation is deep crisis, with helpless citizens being
kidnapped, maimed, and killed with reckless abandon. The situation has provoked
some prominent organizations and figures, including royal fathers and former
military leaders, to challenge the citizenry to defend themselves instead of depending
on the failing state for protection.
Rather
than toe the path of violence or emulate Buhari’s incendiary style, Omoyele Sowore
called for a peaceful revolution with the goal to awaken an unresponsive
government towards change. Unfortunately, similar to the pattern under military
dictatorship, the president ordered the arrest of Sowore, naively claiming that
the word revolution suddenly translates to only a call for an overthrow of
government. But if Buhari’s new vision of revolution is not stark hypocrisy, one
can then come to terms on why he toppled Shagari’s government which had Green
Revolution as a cardinal policy. He might as well occasion the arrest of the
Leader of APC, Bola Tinubu, and many well-documented Nigerian presidential aspirants
or candidates, including Buhari himself, who pitched revolution as a rallying
call for action in their quest for power. From his prison cell, Mr. Buhari can be
at the liberty to dial US President, Donald Trump, to quickly arrest a current
Democratic presidential candidate, Senator Bernie Sanders, whose campaign theme
is “Our Revolution”.
The
Sowore saga is simply a case of hyper-hypocrisy, but the crisis conundrum is
that Muhammadu Buhari does not listen. In a widely celebrated essay, “Buhari
And Nnamdi Kanu Fighting The Wrong Enemies”, I had cautioned the president during
his first tenure that “fighting the right causes through the wrong courses
usually creates more problems than solutions.” Today, Kanu and Indigenous
People of Biafra (IPOB) have only grown worldwide by leaps and bounds, and the
toll on national economy continues to mount. As he begins his second term, President
Buhari needs to equally understand that Nigeria’s problem is neither Omeyele
Sowore. The true problem is the failure to wage a true war against corruption;
failure to lead a just, transparent, and responsive government; the failure to
protect the lives and property of ordinary Nigerians; and the failure to be
president for all. The solution is true change. The president can begin with atonement
and immediate and unconditional release of Sowore. Anything less only goes to
worsen the growing crisis.
SKC Ogbonnia, 2019 APC presidential aspirant, is the
author of the Effective Leadership Formula.