SHEIKH AHMED GUMI DROPS ANOTHER BOMBSHELL:Buhari Leave Biafra And Niger Delta Militants Alone, You Will Fail
Sheikh Ahmad Gumi has criticised
President Muhammadu Buhari for the way he is ripping Nigeria apart and
the method he is employing in fighting corruption. In an interview with
Sahara Reporters, Gumi accused President Buhari of not making the unity
of Nigeria a priority and that this has given birth to agitation by
different regions.
He said: “The government should
have formed a Government of National Unity right from the beginning. For
example, tell the South-East to bring whoever they trust to represent
them in the government. The South-West brought Prof. Yemi Osinbajo as
running mate; he was not the choice of Buhari.
“The same way that you did with
South-West do with the South- South and South-East. This is what I mean
by Government of National Unity because if the militants believe that
they are represented well in the government, they will allow the oil to
flow.
“If the crude oil flows, our
refineries will work. The President needs to listen; he can’t afford to
be adamant anymore. He should listen to knowledgeable individuals and
not sycophants who supported him. Nigeria is for everybody. It is not
for any single political party or the President.
” On President Buhari’s order that
Niger Delta militant bombing pipelines be crushed, Gumi said it was not
the best way to deal with the situation.
“How can they deal with the
militants in the first place, when they are holding the nation’s
umbilical cord? You are fighting Boko Haram in the North, and you want
to fight the militants in the creeks. You don’t fight on two fronts at
the same time. That was one of the reasons why Adolf Hitler failed in
the Second World War. The government should sit down with them and ask
them the reasons for their agitation.
“Don’t forget; they were embittered
that their man Goodluck Jonathan was defeated. Their argument now is,
‘if you hate our man, then leave our oil.’ No section of the country has
the solution of Nigeria’s problem.
“So, everybody should be brought on
board. Even if the South-South brings Government Tompolo as their man,
we should accept him, so long as they trust him; so that we will have
stability.
“A military solution is not the best
option in this circumstance. Former President Umaru Yar’adua could
swallow his pride as president and negotiate with the militants.
Jonathan also did it. But a military man cannot do it because it will
hurt his ego. But if he doesn’t do it, he will kill the nation.
” Sheikh Gumi said Buhari was
treading a precarious path as president because there is a tussle
between the rich and the poor and his fight against corruption needed a
new dimension. He insisted diplomacy is the right way to handle
corruption so rich people would pump money into the country.
“Buhari’s coming into politics has
accentuated the class struggle in Nigeria. The antagonism between the
rich and poor can sometimes be more dangerous that religious
differences. I saw this class struggle coming because the masses will
always rush to Buhari because they believe that he will bring justice
and food on the table for them. They want him to emasculate the rich for
them; he either does it, or they will categorise him as a failure.
“So, once you put a leader in that
kind of situation, then you are already introducing a class struggle
into the already compounded problem. In addition to our tribal problems,
our religious differences, and the North/South divide, there is now a
class problem because the talakawa just want to see the rich imprisoned.
And if they are tasking the president to do that, and if he does not do
it he is a failure, then he will definitely fail because he cannot do
it.
“So, the kind of leader that we
needed at that time was one who will pacify the rich and still have the
confidence of the poor. By so doing, the rich will help in building the
economy by setting up companies that will generate employment.
“That is why the Prophet (SAW) said
that you can get with leniency what you can never get by force. He said
that when leniency enters anything, it decorates it. And strictness,
violence blemishes and destroys the beauty of whatever they enter.
“So, what you get with diplomacy,
you cannot get with violence. If you want to deal with corruption in
Nigeria, you have to deal with it in a diplomatic way. No one should be
afraid of returning the money that they have looted. But when the poor
is always rating your administration by the number of people you have
caught, then you are in trouble because you cannot catch the big ones.
“Because if you do so, you will
destroy your government and if you don’t catch them, the poor will say
that you have changed. The president is even fighting the war on
corruption the wrong way. When you fight corruption, it will naturally
fight back. Corruption has become an international institution. You will
hear foreign leaders condemning corruption, but they are engaging in it
because their countries benefit from it.
“So, the President needs to tread
carefully in fighting corruption with the way things are now because it
will frighten the upper class of the society. It will put them on pause,
and this is not healthy for a developing economy like our own.
“You need the rich to infuse money
into the system and fund projects. For example, I went to a fundraiser
for an Islamic school. Big men came, but not a single one donated a
Kobo, not even a pledge because they may be asked where they got the
money from.
“So, there is fright, and this is
hurtful to the economy. The war on corruption should purely be a law and
order issue. Right now, if EFCC invites someone, the next day it is in
the newspapers. “The damage this kind of thing causes to people’s
reputation is very severe, especially if they are found to be innocent.”
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