We are making the situation in Nigeria worse than we met it - El Rufai tells Buhari
In a recent development, a powerful 30
paged memo was disclosed to have been sent from Kaduna State Governor
Nasir El-Rufai to President Muhammadu Buhari in September 2016 stating
that their party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) has made the
situation in Nigeria worse than it met it by failing to be proactive in
taking key decisions in a timely manner.
According to Saharareporters, the memo
contained a blunt introspection of what would be regarded as errors on
the part of the presidency which has affected the confidence of the
masses in the present administration.
“In very blunt terms, Mr. President, our
APC administration has not only failed to manage expectations of a
populace that expected overnight ‘change’ but has failed to deliver even
mundane matters of governance outside of our successes in fighting BH
insurgency and corruption,” he said in the 30-page memo, which was
essentially a follow-up to an earlier one he sent to the president.
“Overall, the feeling even among our
supporters today is that the APC government is not doing well,” he
declared, before proceeding to an analysis of the key areas: Politics,
National Economy and Governance, and then making suggestions for Mr.
Buhari’s consideration and action.
Listing his reasons for the memo, he
said, the final one was his opinion that President Buhari is Nigeria’s
only hope now and in the medium term of saving the Nigerian nation from
collapse, and enabling the north of Nigeria to regain its lost
confidence, begin to be respected as a significant contributor, and not
the parasite and problem of the Nigerian federation.
“Mr. President, it is also clear to many
of us that have studied your political career, that so long as you
remain in the political landscape, no Northerner will emerge
successfully on the national scene,” Governor El-Rufai said.
“All those wasting time, money and other
resources to run in 2019 either do not realize this divinely-ordained
situation or are merely destined to keep others employed and rich from
electoral project doomed to certain failure.”
He noted that President Buhari’s
relationship with the national leadership of the party, both the formal
and informal, as well as with former Governors of ANPP and PDP which
joined, and the ACN, is perceived by most observers to be at best
frosty, as many of them are aggrieved due to what they consider to be
total absence of consultations with them on the part of the president
and of those he has assigned such duties.
Observing that that many not be Mr.
Buhari’s intention or outlook, the governor affirmed that that is how it
appears to those that watch from afar.
“This situation is compounded by the
fact that some officials around you seem to believe and may have
persuaded you that current APC State Governors must have no say and must
also be totally excluded from political consultations, key appointments
and decision-making at the federal level,” he said.
“These politically-naive ‘advisers’ fail
to realize that it is the current and former state governors that may,
as members of NEC of the APC, serve as an alternative locus of power to
check the excesses of the currently lopsided and perhaps ambivalent
NWC,” he continued, adding that alienating the governors so clearly and
deliberately ensures that you have near-zero support of the party
structure at both national and state levels.
Advising the president that it is not
too late to reverse the situation, El-Rufai told the president that he,
however, appears to have neither a political adviser nor a minder of his
politics.
“The two officials whose titles may
enable them function as such generally alienate those that contributed
to our success,” he declared, dismissing the Secretary to the Government
of the Federation as not only inexperienced in public service but
lacking in humility, in addition to being insensitive and rude to
virtually most of the party leaders, ministers and governors.
“The Chief of Staff is totally clueless
about the APC and its internal politics at best as he was neither part
of its formation nor a participant in the primaries, campaign, and
elections,” El-Rufai said. “In summary, neither of them has the
personality, experience, and the reach to manage your politics
nationally or even regionally.
Among many others, the governor also
noted that in this era of global interconnections, nations compete
viciously in the economic arena – for a larger share of international
trade, investments, maritime and aviation services, and a whole raft of
knowledge-based services and industries. He noted that this competition
is neither moral nor fair, even if the advanced nations pretend to
present it as such to those that are gullible.
“No one cares about, or will ‘help’ us
unless we get our act together and organize our political economy and
national affairs to be regionally,” the governor said. He added that
these troubling perceptions, whether accurate or not, must be addressed
frontally by the president, and no other person.
To that end, he asked Mr. Buhari to
consider communicating actively and directly with the Nigerian public
about his vision – the government’s plans, strategy, and road map to
take the country out of the current, dire economic situation, suggesting
a five-year national development strategy and plan urgently.
“The President should speak to the
nation – something akin to a State of the Union address on December 1 or
January 1,” El-Rufai also said in the memo, dated September 22,2016,
“preferably in a joint session of the National Assembly during which he
will explain away some of the perceptions and lay out the national
plans, strategies, and roadmap [contained in this memo].
He noted that the memo might be
misunderstood, misinterpreted and even perverted, but said he was
willing to accept the usual accusations of arrogance and ambition,
adding that the President knows that none of those arguments hold water.
“I ran for state Governor because you
directed me to do so,” he said. “From 2010 when we joined your team, I
have no other interest other than your place in history as our
President. I believe in your integrity, commitment and sense of duty to
make our nation better.”
“I am distressed that our government is
seen not to be succeeding mostly due to the failures, lack of focus and
selfishness of some you have entrusted to carry on and implement your
vision. I am troubled that our own missteps have made the PDP and its
apparatchiks so audacious and confident.”
Calling on the president to “act
decisively,” and expressing the hope that his memo will “contribute in
some way in regaining our governance momentum,” the governor told Mr.
Buhari, “You have both a crisis and opportunity in your hands to turn
around our country in the right direction. We pray that Allah gives you
the strength and good fortune to succeed. This is an honest, frank and
objective view of an admirer, a mentee, and a loyalist. I hope it helps,
and I apologize if it displeases you. My duty to you is to tell you the
truth as I see it. I have no interest other than the progress of our
party, our president, our government, and our country.”
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